Saturday, February 26, 1972 THE MICRIGAN DAILY Page Seven) Satuday Febuar 26 197 TH MICIGA DALY Pge eve Maplemen ready for showdown Gophers with Big Ten-leadin By DAN BORUS Shrouded in controversy con- cerning due process, racism, and proper conduct on a basketball court, Minnesota's big bad Gophers tangle with Michigan's cagers to- day in a game that will present to the winner undisputed control of the Big Ten lead and the easiesI path to the championship. The Gophers, apprised that their appeal to the Big Ten ath- letic directors had failed by a 7-0 margin to sway the decision of Commissioner Wayne Duke, will be playing without the services of Ron Behagen and Corky Taylor, who were banished as a result of their roles'in the Minnesota fracas with Ohio State. The focus for the game has been clouded the entire week by the uncertain status of the Gopher duo. The game presents the classic confrontation of basketball philoso- phies: the conservativie, defensive orientation of Minnesota versus the freewheeling running game that the Wolverines employ. Both teams lead the Big Ten in their chosen pursuits. Favoring a 1-3-1 zone trap among a variety of zones and traps, Minnesota's scanty 57.5 points allowed is the nation's7best defensive perform- ance. Although the Gophers currently are cellar ranked in rebounding, fans should be forewarned that the statistic is most misleading. The Gopher defense, anchored by 6-7 Clyde Turner, 6-8 Jim Brewer and baseball pitcher - basketball walk- on, Dave Winfield, is so awesome and their offense so patiently slow- ig da~ily sports NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS down that few shots are left to be rebounded since few shots are ever arched basketward. But this vital perimeter under the boards is the area that has caused Minnesota mentor Bill Mus- selman some headaches this week in planning for today's gundown. "They (Michigan) may be the strongest rebounding team we have faced." The difference between the frontlines is the explosiveness of the Michigan trio of Brady, John- son and Lockard. Although not as polished as their Minnesota coun- terparts, the Wolverines are quick- er, "more willing to make things happen," as Wolverine assistant coach Fred Snowden put it. The Gophers, despite their weight and height, are better out- side shooters. Possessing a bit more poise, they tend to wait for the good high percentage shot. The backcourt matchups seem to favor Michigan. Wilmore and Gra- briec are bigger and faster than their Gopher opposites, Bob Nix and sophomore Keith Young. Wil- more, despite the fact that he has not had ! the same stellar season that he had last, still commands the overwhelming respect of the league and especially of Mussel- man. Speaking of the danger of Wil- more, Musselman responded, "If we do not contest his every shot and give him extra room, he'll kill us from any place on the court. Wilmore has every shot in the book, has speed to burn, and can rebound with anyone." This last comment suggests the possibility that Musselman may institute a chaser to neutralize Hammerin' Hank. The key to the game, according to Snowden, is which team can dictate the tempo of the game. If the maplemen from the Twin Cities can slow down the tempo, forcing Michigan to play the Goph- er deliberate style, then Minnesota should be in fine shape at the con- clusion of the contest. However, if the Wolverines can run and continue to gun with suc- cess, then the big Gophers would be forced to abandon their conser- vative patient game and hustle with Michigan. That deed is a trick that Minnesota might not be able to turn. When asked which single player must deliver his best performance in order to insure a Michigan tri- umph, Snowden replied without a moment's hesitation, "Ken Brady." Michigan's performance, he con- tinued, was dependent upon Ken- ny's neutralizing, though not ne- cessarily dominating the Minne- sota frontlinemen. If Brady can rebound and shoot effectively, he could open up the tight Minnesota defense. The battle between Brady and Brewer for possession of the round- ball may be the individual conflict that will determine the result of the most important contest yet played in he Big Ten this year. A Michigan defeat combined with Purdue's Bill Franklin's decision to turn pro (Minnesota has two contests with the oBilermakers) would put Minnesota in the driver's seat, suspensions and all. -Daiy-Role Tessen MICHIGAN FORWARD Henry Wilmore. (25) looks on while teammate Ken Brady -fights for the ball during the Wolverines 105-83 pasting of Illinois. Wilmore will attempt to duplicate his 31 point performance of that contest when the Wolverines take on Minnesota today. IRISH ROMP: Visiting Icers fall gain -Daily-Rolfe Tessem WOLVERINE CENTER Ken Brady cans a layup in the Wolver- ines thumping of Illinois two weeks ago while Bill Morris (35) hopelessly,defends. Brady will be battling Minnesota's Jim Brewer in the lane today as the two squads tangle for the Big Ten con- ference lead. MSU MONDAY NIGHT: Frosh set for Central By GEORGE HASTINGS Fans have been looking for-. ward to the clash of the Michigan freshman basketball team with Michigan State Monday night for some time, but the Wolverines can't afford to be looking ahead when they take on Central Michi- gan today at Crisler Arena in a game preceding the Michigan- Minnesota varsity duel. The Wolverines have a perfect 10-0 record, but the CMU frosh came very close to marring it when the two teams met Feb- ruary first in Mt. Pleasant. In that contest, the Chips missed a free throw with no time left on the clock that would have given them the game, and Michigan came back to win in overtime, 10 -98. Freshman coach Dick Honig, however, thinks that his team will definitely have their minds on, the game at hand today, rather than Monday's outing. "There's no question that the team is eager to play Central again. We didn't feel we played our best ball at all the first game." Since that game, Central's lead- ing scorer, Danny Roundfield, has; _Gym--nasts edge State* Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Despite an uncharacteristic poor showing by all-around man Ted Marti, the Michigan gymnastics team downed cross - state rivals MSU, 161.75- 160.65, in a meet held last night at Jenison Fieldhouse. However, a sparkling performance by Ray Gura saved the day for the Wol- verines. The floor exercise was, as usual, grabbed off by Ward Black as he garnered a score of 9.2. Terry Boys equalled him in this respect as Michigan took an early 27.45 to 26.70 lead. But the smile on Coach Loken's face faded as MSU outscored the Wolverines by one point in the side horse. Despite Kaziny's classy 9.35 and Gura's 9.05, Michigan, as a result of Marti's surprising and unfortunate 7.45, could not match State's consistency. Faced with a situation they had not encountered since Iowa, the Wolverines broke the Spartan lead with fine performances on the rings by Sale and Falb. Michigan State's Charlie Morse, swinging in his last home meet to the stand- ing ovation of the highly partisan and boorish crowd, garnered a 9.25, good for second best. aWith the score then tied, a rel- atively unknown gymnast cata- - pulted Michigan into the perma- nent lead in the vaulting com- petition. Peter Rogers received a 9.3 for his efforts and Michigan led the Chippewas to four more fine performances. The CMU team.. 11-4 on the season, has rolled up three wins by big scores, and also came extremely close to upsetting the Michigan State frosh, losing 101-96. In that MSU game, Roundfield came up with one of the most in- credible 'performances ever by a CMU frosh, playing the Spar- tans' heralded Lindsay Hairston head to head and scoring 40 points, making 17 of 18 shots. Roundfield, a 6-7 center from De- troit Chadsey, has been averag- ing 19 points. a game, grabbing better than 12 rebounds, and shooting a fantastic 70 per cent from the floor. But the battle Monday night at East Lansing still remains first i in the hearts of the Michigan freshmen. The Spartan frosh, now 7-1 after losing 98- 5 to Pur- due last week, represent the first opponent really in the same class with the Wolverines, and besides matching two of the better frosh teams in the country in a tradi- tional Michigan - Michigan St~ate rivalry, the game offers one of the state of Michigan's classic basketball one-on-one rivalries: Cainpy Russell vs. Lindsay Hairs- ton. When the two were in high school. they were the two domi- nant figures in the state, and when Russell's school, Pontiac Central, and Hairston's Detroit Kettering played, their individual duels were played up heavily by the press. Central took two of the three meetings, but Kettering took the final one, so this rematch has been looked forward to for quite awhile. However, the rivalry has always been a friendly one, as Camny and Lindsav are good friends who at one time planned to -o to the same colleoe. Tronieslly. the roles of the num- bor two men in the previous Rus- sell-Hairston duels will be re- versed for this contest. Joe John- son used to be the ball handling guard for Kettering, while Bill Glover filled the same role for Central. Monday the two will be in the opposite positions, with Johnson teaming with Russell at Michigan, and Glover with Hairs- ton at MSU. Hairston, a 6-8 center, domi- nates the Spartan frosh statistics much as Russell does those of Michigan, scoring 31 points and hauling down 12 rebounds a game. He is backed up by Glover, who scores 21 points, and for- ward Lovelle Rivers, who helps on the boards with twelve caroms a contest. By FRANK LONGO Special To The Daily SOUTH BEND - The Michigan Icers took it on the chin, in the eye, and across the back once again last night, as the Wolverines dropped a 7-2 decision to Notre Dame in their first appearance ever in the new Athletic and Con- vocation Center here. The Irish opened up a 4-0 lead after two periods and held on for their first victory in five weeks, and first home win in 1972. Even so Notre Dame coach Lefty Smith was convinced it could have been more of a rout. "I think the players respected Bagnell as a goalie; they tried to get too cute." Michigan and Notre Dame each have 24 points in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and are tied for seventh place with Colorado College. Referees Chuck Meadows and Jerry Walker called 19 penalties in the game, ten of them in the brutal third period. Early in the game, the officials were letting quite a bit of the pushing go unpunished. "A couple times Meadows was looking at the other guy to make the call," said Michigan coach Al Renfrew. "He never did." But towards the end the refs sent three men from each team to the penalty box within two min- utes, causing- mass confusion among the tkme keepers and dis- gust among the 3,526 fans. Michigan couldn't c o m p1a in about not having enough chanc- es to score during the contest, however. The first stanza presented nu- merous 'opportunities for the Blue, but the period ended with Notre Dame on the' long end of a 2-0 score. John Noble and Paul Re- gan notched the first two Irish tallies. The Wolverines' inability to clear the puck out of their own zone aided Notre Dame in taking the lead. Michigan did have scoring chances, but Irish netminder Mark Kronholm proved equal to the task as Frank Werner, Bob Falconer, "Punch" Cartier, and then Werner again were robbed on various plays. Kronholm played a strong game stopping 37 Wolverine shots. Only two "fluke" third period goals Smiling Irish FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. ND..Noble (Williams, Bumbacco) 3:09; 2., ND-Re- gan (Nyrop, Cordesl 17:17. PENALTIES: 1. ND-Green (interference) :49; 2. M- Skinner (interference) 5:03; 3. ND-No- ble (tripping) 5:20; 4. M-Jarry (elbow- ing) 11:05; 5. M-Werner (roughing) 19:21; 6. ND-Bumbacco (roughing) 19:21. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 3. ND- Delorenzi (Green, Steinborn) 3:09; 4. ND-Delorenzi (Campbell. Conroy) 6:35. PENALTIES: 7. ND -Green (holding) 11:00; 8: M-Werner (roughing) 4:53; 9. ND-Campbell (roughing) 14:53. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 5. M-Wer- ner (Straub, Neal) 2:55; 6. ND-Nyrop (Larson, Williams) 8:55; 7. ND-Noble (Bumbacco, Williams) 9:26; 8. M-Paris (Werner, Trudeau) 11:44; 9. ND-Williams (Noble, Bumbacco) 13:34. PENALTIES: 10. ND-Regan (highsticking) 3:28; 11. M-Paris (highsticking) 3:28; 12. ND- Delorenzi (tripping) 9:53; 13. ND-Noble (interference). 13:59; 14.. ND -Schafer (roughing- 4 minutes) 16:35; 15. M- Dunbar (highsticking) 16:35; 16. ND- Regan (highsticking) 17:00... kept him from registering his second shutout of the year. The second period began to pro- duce evidence as to why Michi- gan has won only one game on the road this season. The Wolves' lapsed into some sloppy defensive play, backchecking poorly and al- lowing Notre Dame to get a num- ber of two-on-one breaks. Ray DeLorenzi. added two more goals to the Irish total to stretch the lead to 4-0. , Werner scored 'the: first Michi- gan goal at 2:55 of 'the third per- iod, his fifth of the year, on an along the ice shot which appeared Lo be deflected by a Notre Dame} defenseman. After the Irish made it 6-1, Paul Andre Paris scored his 15th of the season, a power -lay goal on a rebound from a' Werner shot. The third period produced , a little more rough action. Paris and Regan were involved in one high- sticking scuffle, while Pete Dun- bar and Rick Schafer tangled in another. The play got exceptionally hot in the final two minutes when Bernie Gagnon took to harrassing Notre Dame's Noble. No penalty was- cled ,when Gagnon -hit No- ble in' the face *ith his stick, but Noble was thrown in the -box a few seconds later for checking Gagnon in the offensive zone. A shoving match ensued, and Gag- ion and Michel Jarry were also sent out. Grapplers seeking second place) By RICH STUCK Special To The Daily BLOOMINGTON-The Michigan wrestling team bounced back from a disappointing preliminary session yesterday afternoon with some strong grappling last night to re- kindle their bid for second place in the Big Ten tournament. Michigan State, repeating what they have done the past six sea- sons, leaped out to a commanding lead and has all but assured them- selves another year in the Big Ten throne room going into this after- noon's 'finals. The tournament, being held in Indiana's magnificent Assembly Hall, before a crowd of 2,000, finds Michigan entering the finals with three wrestlers having a shot at individual titles. Defending 150 pound champ Jerry Hubbard surged past three opponents to boost himself into the finals for the second straight year. He started the day by pin- ning Indiana's Rich Thomas in 6:47, and followed that up by blast- ing two old nemeses. Mark Malley of Michigan State was the first to fall, losing to the Michigan sophomore 3-2. Hubbard then tast- ed sweet revenge with a 5-3 dis- posing of Iowa's Dan Holm. Mitch Mendrygal weaved his way past two unseeded foes to gain a second berth in the finals for the Wolverines. He whipped Purdue's Brad Havig 5-0 .in the semifinals to earn the 158 title match against the Spartans' Rick Radman. Today's 118 pound final will pit Michigan's mighty - mouse Jim Brown against the King-Kong of Michigan State's team, Greg John- son. Brown wrestled well to nudge second-seeded Dan Sherman of Iowa 6-5 in the semis, while John- son has literally destroyed his three adversaries. Johnson, two time NCAA champion, recorded two pins in times of 1:21 and of 3:56 and smashed Indiana's Marty Hutsell 16-3. Michigan's chances for a second place finish seemed to disappear after favored Bill Davids, Rick Neff, and Gary Ernst all lost their first round matches. But the skies brightened when the Wolverines placed three men in the finals and had several advance well in the consolation rounds. The chief rival for second place. Iowa, did well in the preliminaries, but faltered in the semis and advanced only two in the finals. Michigan State's claim to the title' is virtually assured as they grabbed seven spots in the finals. The big surprise of the meet has been the two upsets turned in by Hoosier hometown hero Jim Clary in the 177 pound class. He upset first seeded John Panning of M~in- nesota 6-2, and followed it with HILLEL PRESENT a heart-stopping overtime victory over the fourth seed, Michigan State's Greg Zindel. Coach R i c k Bay expressed guarded optimism over the battle for second place with Iowa. "The difference between second and third will be decided by the conso- lation matches," he commented. Bay also remarked that "the sec- ond place finish would be a great accomplishment for this Michigan team."r Swimmers 'take a dip Murray equals mark at Michigan Open By SANDI GENIS The Wolverine track team, only a week away from the Big Ten championship meet, took a night off from conference activity to sponsor the first annual Michigan Open last night at Yost Field House. Hosting teams from Eastern Michigan, the Ann Arbor Track Club and Genesee State College, the Michigan thinclads tuned up for the crucial clash with a number of outstanding races. Literally getting the Wolverine attack off the ground, shot-putter Steve Adams, one of the leading conference title contenders, hurled the shot 59 feet to tie the Michigan varsity record of Dave Owen. Highlighting a night that saw three new Yost Field House re- cords, Eastern Michigan's Gorden Minty turned the premier per- formance of the meet. Capturing the two-mile title with a blistering 8:43.7 race, Minty smashed Sid Sink's field house record of 8:48.2 set last year to out- distance Britain's fine distance runner Paul Lightfoot, representing Special To The Daily DALLAS - The Michigan swim team was treated to a rough brand of Texas hospitality last night as they dropped a crushing 68-45 meet to SMU. Michigan's chances against the Mustangs had appear- ed to be fairly good. The Wolverines could win but four- individual events in the shel- lacking. Two of the four blue rib- bons came in the two diving events. Probably the key to the final outcome came , in the freestyle events. The Mustangs captured all, but one place in these short sprints. The lone Wolverine who placed was Dan Fishburn, who re- corded his best time of the year of 10:07.86 in finishing second in the 1000 yard freestyle. Another Wolverine standout was sophomore Stu Isaac. The lanky New York native also recorded his best time of theyear (2:10.32) in capturing the 200 yard breast- stroke. Mike Whittaker garnered a third here for the Wolverines. Michigan's diving corps did a great job in finishing 1-3 in the s A BERATE ON two diving events. Joe Crawford won the one meter with a score of 316.90, while Dick Quint grab- bed the three dieter with 324.95 points. Each total was the best effort of the season for both Craw- ford and Quint. Another Michigan victory came in the 200 yard butterfly. Byron MacDonald won it for the Wolver- ines with a time of 1:57.49. Augus- to Gonzalez finished second. The fourth and final Wolverine victory came in the medley relay. Coach Gus Stager's men should have an easier time this afternoon in Austin against the Longhorns of Texas. It would tke a very con- vincing triumph, however, to erase memories of yesterday's debacle.' For the Student Body: LEVI'S Corduroy P al le Nice.. (1Co~rkv Corky Taylor, Minnesota basketball plakter suspendeq followging the now-infamous Ohio State-Minnesota brawl, arrives with his at- torney Ron Simon for a meeting at which the Big Ten, athlete" directors heard the rejnstatemeut appeal of Taylor and Ron .e hagen. The directors denied the appear by a vote of 7-4 - --Associatecl Press -BRING THIS COUPON- ' - ,." . Mr. Mini's.. Submanrines FREE sandwich*.. Buy two of any item (sandwich, Coke, chips, etc.) and get the third one FREE. nILLGL rRh 7CI I 1Ta^ w6-u'. UG- * "Internationalizing the Latke and the Hamentash" -ALSO- i