Sunday, February 13, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Nage Nine 3 Classy By ELLIOT LEGOW to pull Michigan's c a g e r s put to "We gether their greatest team ef- day,"s ge . gny Orr fort of the season yesterday them, and trounced: Illinois 105-83 to est ganr stay in the middle of the Big Orr C Ten title chase. player Fine individual performances by five put all five starters and a true team Henry effort on offense, defense, and re- guard bounding gave the Wolverines their while t largest point total and victory mar- his 23 gin of the season as they rebound- with'ni ed from last week's loss to Purdue ing floc cagers crumple Illinois to a 6-2 conference record. weren't to be denied to- said Wolverine Coach John- . "We are very proud of this was one of our strong- mes of the year." couldn't single out any one for special praise for all it on excellent performances. Wilmore came to life at and poured in 31 points hitting a phenomenal 14 of shots and also was credited ne assists for his outstand- or play. "Wilmore was absolutely great,"l Orr beamed. "He got tired of peo-1 ple saying he couldn't play guard. This was the first time since hel got hurt that he really 'did it'." 1 "Wilmore, (Ernie) Johnson, and; (Wayne) Grabiec really passed beautifully," Orr said as the Wol- verines succeeded continuously at hitting the open man. Grabiec had four assists and also grabbed seven rebounds while scor- ing 19 points on his outside shoot- ing. Johnson's five assists were concentrated midway in the sec- ond half when the Wolverines roll- ed out to a 20 point advantage. From the start it was obvious Wilmore was hot as he pumped in four of his first five shots to] keep the game -even for the first ten minutes. Illinois Coach Harv Schmidt who had little to be happy about after the game did praise his team's start. "We had the tempo for the first ten minutes, but we turned it over a couple times, and let them get, the easy layups." The break in the game came just after the ten minute mark when Illinois took its last lead, 20-19. Michigan then outscored the Illini 13-2 while shutting them out from the field for nearly three minutes to spurt to a 32-22 lead. Three consecutive steals, first two by Wilmore and then one by Johnson seemed to be the turning point in the game. All three re- sulted in Wolverine baskets and with Ken Brady and John Lockard dominating play in the Illini end the Wolverines kept pouring it on. Lockard played his best half of the season as he scored 12 points, took down four rebounds, and con- nected on all five of his field shots. A knee injury restricted Lockard's mobility against Purdue last week but yesterday he was in fine shape. Near the end of the first half the Illini cut the lead back to six, 36-30, but another torrid streak by Michigan in the last five minutes propelled the Blue.to a 49-36 half- time edge. Wilmore was the key to that streak, too, as he scored six more points, two on a full court drive for a layup, and finished the half with 18 points, on nine field goals. For the first half Michigan shot an incredible 61 per cent of its shots, twice the percentage the Wolverines made in the initial stanza at Purdue, while holding Illinois to 36 per cent. lliniiniiniini .... --,ad t t 'eect4' i The Wolverines .. . . off the hook ohn papanek E WAY THINGS in the Big Ten are going this basketball campaign, nobody really knows what the heck's happening frin one day to the next. lere's Michigan, picked by many to rank with the top ten back in the preseason polls, and for a while, a long while, it was struggling to keep its head above water. Before last Saturday, the Wolverines were on top of the conference, with a 5-1 record, thanks largely to the melee at Minnesota, which left front-runner Ohio State disabled enough to buckle under Michigan's muscle. But last week, the Wolverines took a bruising from Purdue, and damned if it didn't look like they were all but washed up. The truth was that nobody had' seen Michigan play a good' game all year. Well, all that changed yesterday. The Wolverines put it *ll together, rebounding, running, shooting, and even passing their way to easily the best game the Maize and Blue has played all year. So that should help to take some people off the proverbial~ hook. Let's start from the top. Johnny Orr, who has seen his team win some tough ones and lose some easy ones, now knows what his team can do, and he really might not have to be embarrassed If Michigan ,manages to make some noise in that Big Ten Championship race. Beating a down-trodden Ohio State, which many observers felt Was the superior team, was kind of an empty way to get into contention. And the loss at Purdue added credence to that idea. But now things look a bit different, and it may be that Miohigan deserves to be where it is. "That was by far our best showing yet," a happy Orr noted. "We just weren't to-be denied. Their defense didn't make a bit of difference. Whether they pressed us or zoned us, pur passing was just super. I wish we could play like that all year." Michigan shot at a 55 per cent clip, their best of the year, while everyone on the court was making Bob Cousy passes. And considering the play of Henry Wilmore, let's take him down off the rack, too. Tabbed in the preseason as a can't miss All-American (after grabbing that honor as a sophomore), Henry just has not been playing up to par. Before yesterday, he had only played one "super-game" - his 38 point show in Michigan's ,first home game against Western Michigan, plus a 22-point first half agaiist Ohio Univer- sity before he injured his knee. Wilnore played the kind of game his name warrants, hitting 14 of 23 shots and rifling nine assists. Henry's All- American chances may have been hurt when he switched to guard, but he's becoming more and more at home now, thanks to some intensive tutoring. "I've been learning a lot .about playing guard from the other guards, especially Dave Hart, and Greg Buss," he said. "Hart was playing defense on me in practice this week, and he'd play hard and tell me the things I was doing wrong. He might be the reason I played so well today." So, you can add the Michigan Athletic Department to the list of who gets off the hook, because it's tough to convince the country that someone should be an All-American when he isn't playing like one. "Wilmore was absolutely great, there's 'no doubt," Orr trumpeted after the game. "Ite got tired of people saying that he couldn't play guard." Wilnore is convinced now that guard is his position. "I think with the way (Ien) Brady, (John) Lookard and (Ernie) Johnson have been playing, I'm most valuable to the team at guard. The coaches told me to control the ball more than I have been. I've been looking for the pass to the forwards too much. Now, I'm setting up and looking for my shots. "This was definitely my best game of the year," he con- tinued. "I wasn't thinking about what the other guard would do, I made him think about what I was going to do." And then Orr, who was genuinely happy about a game for the first time this season, shuffled into the lockerroom for a little friendly kibbutzing. (To Wilmore): "I told everyone I was going to give you one more chance at guard." Then he screeched at Johnson, "Ernie Johnson! Five assists! What's he trying to do, Henry, take over the back court?" Then he roasted Lockard: "Johnny Lock! You would have had five more baskets if the ball didn't keep slipping off your hands!" Well, it's good to see the big family happy again, but gloomier days lurk ahead, and in the Big Ten, gloomy days us- ually accompany road games. It's Northwestern, Indiana, Mich- igan State and Iowa in unfriendly territory, and those games will determine just how super the Big Blue Machine really is. The second half was simply more of the same as the Wolver- ines ran their fast break the best they have all season and showed no self-interest with their fine pass- ing game. Olympic hockey The U.S. claimed a silver medal in hockey last night to close out the Winter Olympics. The medal came as a result of Sweden's upset loss to Finland Sunday afternoon and the U.S.S.R.'s 5-2 dumping of Czech- oslovakia later that day. llinois' top scorer, forward Nick Weatherspoon finally came to life :h ::i' {> in the second half to score 17 points, and finished with 23 but his hot streak wasn't nearly enough to lead the Illini past the inspired Wolverines. Schmidt employed a variety of defenses, and a variety of com- binations of players in an attempt to shut off the Michigan attack ; . ;:1 },;'. " ;;.: ;. .;s>,z>{ '; z p,< "}- i," but as Orr said, "It didn't make r, .; }: any difference what kind of defense,;: ;: : {" ยข}.". ? . \ < they used today. When you're op- Daiy-Roife Tessem erating it doesn't make any dif- Lockard eases it through-swish! ference." GOPHERS BURY CATS Buckeyes weld Riveters Johnson Lockard Brady Wilmore Grabiec Hart Bazelon Buss Whitten Amaradio Bernard Team TOTALS Veatherspoon Foster Conner Krelle Schroeder Morris Roberson Dedecker Cohen Rucks Wente Team TOTALS MICHIGAN Illinois MICHIGAN fga fg fta ft 5-4 4-3 17-9 6-4 12-6 5-2 23-14 4-3 16.7 5-5 3-1 0-0 1-0 0-0 2-2 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 80-44 24-17 ILLINOIS fga fg fta ft r 6 13 17 6 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 55 r 8 5 4 2 1 4 2 3 0 1 1 42 49 37 pf 4 4 3 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 tot 11 22 14 31 19 2 0 4 2 0 0 17 105 20-8 11-4 7-4 12-S 4-1 13-3 6-1 3-1 3-1 0-0 1-1 8-7 3-3 2-1 5-4 0-0 4-3 1-0 2-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 J pf 4 5 1 3 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 tot 23 11 s 20 22 9 12 3 0 2 -Daily-Rolfe Tessem HENRY WILMORE (25) goes up for the shot, but Jim Krelle (25) and Bill Morris of Illinois seem intent on stopping him. The tactic rarely worked, however, as Wilmore score 31 points. 80-32 25-19 20 as 56-105 46 i3 Huskies hustle leers By JOEL GREER Special To The Daily HOUGHTON-With the elimina- tion of the red line in collegiate hockey, practically all of the games result in high scoring affairs. But when a goaltender is unusually hot, an evenly played game is easily turned into a rout. It was Michigan Tech's Morris Trewin who played spectacularly between the pipes last night as he led the Huskies to "a misleading 8-3 victory. In complete opposition to the Student Ice Arena crowd, Huskie coach John MacInnes was first to admit that the score failed to in- dicate how close the game should have been. "It was no 8-3 game by any; means," commented the former Michigan goaltender. "It was more like a 4-3 game, and I'm not saying who should have had the four." Both squads had trouble defen- sively close, but Trewin suc- cessfully handled the Wolverines' point blank shots, while Bagnell was less fortunate. "Trewin had an excellent night," MacInnes add- ed, "he showed more confidence dailly sports NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL OLIN out there tonight than he has in the last month and a half." The Huskie win, their second straight over the hard-luck Wol- verines, gives them a firm hold on sixth place with a 10-10 league record and 28 points. The Wolver- ines, who finally put together two well-played] road games, dropped to a 9-13 slate with 22 points in their quest for a spot in the WCHA playoffs. Already trailing 4-1 the Wol- verines saw their playoff hopes nearly take a serious tumble. Vastly improving Bob Falconer crashed to the ice in a heap after colliding with Jim Nahrgang. Un- conscious from the pain Falconer stayed in a prostrate position while Michigan trainer Mike Wil- lie administered care to his in- Jured ankle. Falconer was re- moved from the ice on a stretcher and taken to a nearby hospital for X-rays. Fortunately for Michigan it was later learned that the ex- pected hairline fracture hadn't oc- curred. The Huskies scored first while shorthanded, suggesting the em- barrassment that was to plague the Wolverines all night. Mike Usitalo outdistanced Michel Jarry to the puck which was cleared from the Michigan Tech Zone. Usitalo hit Gary Crosby with a perfect centering pass and Bag- nell was easily beaten. Michigan got the equalizer mo- ments later as Detroiter Frank Werner deflected home Bucky Straub's shot from an almost im- possible angle. The Huskies snatched the lead for good on a play that made Jerry Lefebvre wishehe hadn't gotten out of bed yesterday morning. FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. MT- Crosby (Usitalo) 11:29; 2. M-Werner (Straub, Neal) 13:50; 3. MT-Nahrgang (unassisted) 15:00; PENALTIES: 1. MT- Nahrgang (interference) 0:36; 2. MT- N.hrgang (hooking) 11:15; 3. M-Wer- ner (hghsticking) 14:27; 4. MT-Wise (highsticking) 14:27. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 4. MT- Hartviksen (Wise, 1'Alvis) 7:06; 5. MT- D'Alvis (Wise, Hattviksen) 12:20; 6. MT-Stamler (Chestolowskl, Lorimer) 19:43. PENALTIES: 5. M-Bagnell (hold- ing) 5:56; (served by Nixon); 6. MT- Abbey (interference) 8:08; 7. M-Cartier. (holding) 17:07. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 7. MT- Chestolowski (Mott) 3:58; 8. M-Tru- deau (Gagnon, Skinner) 10:33; 9. MT- D'Alvis (Pushie, Nahrgang) 16:07; 10. M-Neal (Straub, Werner) 17:19; 11. MT- Crosby (Lishinski, Nahrgang) 19:1&. PENALTIES: 8. M-Jarry (slashing) 14:27. SAVES Trewin 11 14 10-35 Bagnell 13 12 13-38 ~Attendance3,450 By The Associated Press; COLUMBUS-Luke Witte grab-' bed the rebound of a missed foul shot and put the ball in the bucket with 58 seconds remaining to give the Ohio State Buckeyes a hard earned 64-62 Big Ten basketball victory over Purdue yesterday. The Buckeyes were forced to shoot outside against the Purdue zone with Hornyak, Witte, Dan Gerhard ~ and Mark Minor doing. most of the damage. Witte, despite sitting out much of the first half with three personal fouls, con- tributed 17 points to the Ohio State" attack. Bob Ford, who had been aver- aging nearly 20 points per contest, was held to 6 by Minor. Franklin, the Big Ten's leading rebounder and scorer, settled for 1 six re- bounds. Gophers gallop EVANSTON -- C 1 y d e Turner pumped in 25 points and the Min- nesota Gophers played one of their best games of the season last night to whip Northwestern 78-5 and retain a share of the Big Ten basketball lead. The Gophers, still playing with- out Ron Behagen and Corky Tay- lor, who were suspended in the fight with Ohio State last month, took a 12-1 lead at the outset and never trailed. Northwestern managed to pull within two points in the first half and trailed only 30-24 at the half but Turner opened the second half with eight straight points to send the 19th-ranked Gophers winging. Hoosiers hike MADISON - Indiana squandered SCORES SCORES NHL Boston 5, Buffalo 1 Montreal 6, Los Angeles 5 New York 8, Pittsburgh 3 Toronto 3, California 0 Chicago 3, Detroit 3 Minnesota 5, Philadelphia 1 St. Louis 5, Vancouver 4 NBA Milwaukee 123, Golden State 100 New York 106, Cleveland 91 Chicago 117, Atlanta 106 Detroit 113, Buffalo 87 Phoenix 117, Cincinnati 95 Portland at Seattle, inc. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Minnesota 78, Northwestern 55 Eastern Michigan 105, Stout 88 Ohio State 64, Purdue 62 Indiana 84, Wisconsin 76 Long Beach State 85,,San Diego St 68, Georgia 98, Vanderbilt 91 Michigan State 100, Iowa 91 Marquette 79; Air Force 56 a 13-point second-half lead and was forced intosan overtime to turn back Wisconsin 84-76 in Big Ten basketball yesterday. The Hoosierg jumped to a quick lead at the outset of the extra. period and won going away by' sinking eight of 10 free throws in the overtime. Wisconsin took a lead early in the game, but Indiana fought back to knot the score at 33-33 at half- time. The game was tied 68-68 at the end of regulation play. Junior John Ritter led the bal- anced Hoosier, attack with 17 points, penetrating Wisconsin's de- fense close . to the basket for im- portant second half baskets. State stomps IOWA CITY.- Sophomore Mike Robinson poured in 38 points and Michigan State survived squander- ing a 21-point lead last night to down Iowa 100-81 in a Big Ten Conference basketball game. Michigan State moved to 4 55-41 halftime lead and twice held 21- point leads in the first three min- utes of the second half. Iowa, how- ever, reeled off 16 straight points to take a 72-71 edge with 9:25 left. Robinson, who had 23 points in the second half, scored the Spar- tans' go-ahead basket with 8:58 left and Michigan State then' added five straight points for a 78-72 lead. Iowa never again got closer than three. t. __ Sparkling Spar tans spatter "M' grap piers IMPORTANT REMINDER The Frankin Mint's $500,000 Bicentennia MedalDesign Competition CLOSES MARCH 31,1972. Draw your design idea in pencil or ink for a Bi- centennial Medal honoring your state's contribu- tions to our national heritage. You will compete Only against other artists from your own state ... in one of 50 separate state contests. You may win a sizable cash prize and a once-in-a-lifetime oppor- tunity to become the artist from your state whose creativity will be represented on the face of an Im- portant commemorative medal that will receive world-wide attention. $500,000 IN PRIZES There will be a total of 20t cash awards-four in each of the 50 states of the nation: First prizein each state ........... S 5,000 Second prize in each state :........ $ 2,500 Third prize in each state ...........$ 1,500 Fourth prize in each state .......... $ 1,000 Total of prizes in each state ........ $ 10,000 Total of prizes for all 50 states ......$500,000 In these 50 simultaneous state competitions, each artist will be competing only against other artists from his own state. All entries must be submitted on an Official Entry Form not later than March 31, 1972. If you have not yet entered and wish to obtain an Offi- cial Entry Form and the complete set of rules and instruc- tions, mail the coupon below.W By MARC FELDMAN Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - "We were beaten by a superior team."r These were Michigan's coach Rick Bay's solemn words moments after his matmen were disposed of by the awesome Michigan State Spartans, 25-6. Although Michigan was a decided underdog in the clash of Big Ten talents, a few breaks might have given the Wolverines a chance for a surprise. Bill Davids, Rick Neff, and John Ryan each' absorbed close defeats in their bouts which could have turned the tide. Each match was tight all the way and a few ques- 'M' TRUCKS ON: Spartans streak to dash marks tionable escape calls by referee Mike Koval seemed to have some bearing on the outcome. The Michigan victories were gar- nered by Jerry Hubbard at 150 and Mitch Mendrygal at 158. Both wrestlers had lost to their State counterparts before and gained re- venge in the most exciting matches of the evening. Midway through the final period of Hubbard's match, he was lead- ing by a 5-3 count. Then Mark Malley scored a takedown to knot the score and suddenly Hubbard was writhing in pain with a sprain- ed ankle and time was called. This turn of events did not draw any sympathy from the overflow crowd at the Men's Intramural Building. Hurriedly, the Michigan trainer taped up Hubbard's ankle. Hub- bard seemed inspired when he re- turned to the match, and within a minute, he wrapped up the victory with an escape and takedown. Mitch Mendrygaldavenged a one- point loss to MSU's Rick Radman last season by scoring a 4-2 vic- tory over his nemesis. Freshman Jim Brown put up a good fight, against two-time NCAA champ Greg Johnson at 118 pounds before bowing 11-5. Grizzly bears? 118-Greg Johnson (MS) defeated Jim Brown (M), 11-5 126-Pat Milkovich (MS) defeated By SANDI GENIS Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Pandemonium reigned in Jenison Field House last night as Spartan super- stars Herb Washington and Marshall Dill brought the Partisan crowd to their feet with two world record smashing performances. Washington, the former world's record holder in the 60 yard dash with 11 others at 5.9, claimed the title solely for himself crashing through the tape &t 5.8. in the 300 yard dash Olympic hopeful Dill strides behind Murray to take second with an 8.5 performance. Commented Michigan assistant coach Ken Burnley, "We are pleased with Godfrey's Big Ten mark, but we are talking about running against the best and Godfrey has to improve his technique." Another Wolverine team sparkled as Eric Chapman pulled the Wolverine two-mile relay team to the fastest time on a flat track this sea- son, 7:32.1. Chapman posted a fine 1:51.9 half mile leg. Bicentennial Medal Design Competition I Box 1976 Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19063, I E SPlease send me an Official Entry Form, contest rules and i instructions. g INI III