Page Seven Sunday, February 27, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 27, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sev~n w 1 Stingy h busted Wolverines By BOB ANDREWS ' Henry Wilmore and Ernie Johnson ignited a second-half barrage as the Michigan Wol- i verines buried the Minnesota isguise Gophers 64-52 yesterday after- IJN D noon before an SRO crowd at lford Crisler Arena. NIGH Almost totally reversing their slap PAY SPORTS HT EDITOR: DAN BORUS Defensive wonders ... ... indt 1 e E al' shacke BILL MUSSELMAN, the former Ashland, Ohio whiz-coach and current bad boy of the Big Ten, is not a great defensive coach. Minnesota, despite its meager allowance of only 56.8 points per game, is not a great defensive team. Michigan is a great defensive team. Throw up your hands in disbelief, shake your head and walk away, but the Wol- verines are a great defensive team. Not on all days; or even most days, but yesterday, when it counted. The Gophers, as physically imposing as any team around, were slit down both sides and up the middle by an incredible Michigan second-half defensive effort. Clyde Turner,, a 6-8 forward with big-league moves, got kicked downstairs by Ernie Johnson after clipping the Blue for ten points in the first half. Playing like Turner's second skin, Ernie bumped him away from the basket and used his super-quickness to hawk the ball On every possible occasion. And what about Henry Wilmore, recently subjected to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune? Wilmore hounded Gopher Keith Young unmercifully in the backcourt, forcing him into clumsy fumbles and punts, and gave Jim Brewer .a hard time despite a four-inch height disadvantage. Henry swiped the ball outright about half a dozen times and, my my, ne's faster with the ball than anybody I've ever seen! "For once I'm satisfied with my defensive game," com- mented Henry after the game. Not only was his defensive game just right, but for the first time this season Wilmore controlled the game, and gave the fans dividends on their investment with a" late-game ballhandling show that had people flipping, out of their seats in delight. But it was Johnson who really broke the game open in the second half. He stole a pass intended for Turner and flew in for two to give Michigan a 36-36 lead, then set up Ken Brady inside for two more and a 38-35 edge. After Wilmore and Young traded free throws, the big E did it again from inside and the Wolverines were off to the races: Ernie had that spaced-out look 'in his eyes again. Minnesota connected on only 7 of 38 shots in the second 'half, but Musselman was unwilling to hand any credit to the Michigan defense. "We just let up," said the tight-lipped Gopher coach. "I could feel it when we came out of the lockerroom for the second half." Orr had a few compliments of his own for Musselman after the game: "Minnesota is not a great defensive team.. They hold the ball - that doesn't make them great defensively." Besides lacing into his own team, Musselman praised the Wolverine board game, saying "they, beat us on the boards. They outreacted us and forced us outside." After getting thumped 24 to 16 on the boards in the first half, Michigan ganged up and gave it back in the final stanza. The official scorer had it even at 19-up for second-half boards, but we all have our off days. While he still doesn't have his shooting at last year's form, Wayne Grabiec did another tuff job on the boards, out-fighting the big Gophers for seven. Grabiec and Wilmore did a credit- able job of breaking the Minnesota press, especially in the second half. Since the Wolverines have been troubled off and on all year by the press, things looked bad when Minnesota clamped on a tight one in the first half. Michigan made eleven turn- overs in that half, mostly attributable to its incompetence at breaking the press. The Wolverines passed the ball backwards and often failed to find a man upcourt; maybe it's simplistic, but why couldn't the Wolverines just post a big man in the middle and then pass out to guards breaking down the sides? The freshmen worked that maneuver well in yesterday's pre- liminary. t* * The vocal Michigan crowd welcomed the big bad Gophers in typically bush fashion yesterday, shrilling a round of boos to' the rafters when Minnesota took the floor. When the refs blew a call against Michigan, the fans went crazy and even tossed litter onto the floor. On several occasions the bleacher bums booed Minnesota free throw attempts and cheered the misses. Bush. And .the Gophers didn't get all of it. When Dave Hart stripped off his jacket and got ready to go in during the first half, an embarrassing chorus of boos swelled through Crisler Arena. From Michigan fans, if you can believe it. first - half style of play, the ubiquitous Wolverines utilized' the fast break, then retreated Young who scored on an easy lay- an defense just as quickly to up nine seconds later. bontle def e Gusteasaquickto With baskets by John Lockard bottle up the Gopher attack and Grabiec, the Wolverines knot- for the rest of the contest. The j ted the game at 10-10 at 12:30, but dramatic comeback not only once again fell behind as their earned Michigan the victory, inability to break the press en- bualsodundisputhleaerhipyabled Minnesota to score four but also undisputed leadership points in 11 seconds. in the Big Ten with an 8-2 rec- Dave Winfield and Turner in- ord. tercepted Michigan passes and Throughout the first half, the scored, sending the Gophers on a Wolverines committed numerous streak which gave them their big- m i s c u e s and found themselves gest lead at 20-12 midway through trailing 31-23 at the intermission. tthe half. Coach Johnny Orr explained the reason for his team's early un-, steadiness, saying, "We were ner- vous and didn't move the ball well to our two main shooters, Wilmore and (Wayne) Grabiec. In addition, the Minnesota pressG played havoc with the Wolverines as steals in the backcourt led to easy Gopher baskets. The Wolverine attack sputtered in the initial stan~za, 'and the crowd expressed its displeasure with both the home team and the officiat- ing. After Wilmore hit on a side jumper at 16:32 of the half tol Gophers Johnson Lockard Brady Wilmore Grabiec i Hart Buss Bazelon Whitten Bernard TEAM TOTALS burrowed MICHIGAN fg ft r 8-4 1-1 6 7-3 2-2 3 11-7 3-3 11 16-8 8-4 3 7-3 2-2 7 1-1 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 1-0) 0-0 0 0-() 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 5 51-26 16-12 35 MINNESOTA fg ft r 17-5 2-0 4 10-6 5-3 14 14-2 1-1 8 8-2 0-0 3 16-6 2-2 7 5-1 4-2 1 6 70-22 14-8 43 pf ,pts 2 9 1 8 2 17 3 20 2 8 0 2 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 64 I However, Ken Brady's tip-in and Wilmore's two jumpers brought Michigan right back and cut the Gopher lead to 20-18 in a span of just over a minute. Nevertheless, t h e Wolverines still displayed signs of being rat- tied. Even when they managed to break the press, they missed easy shots, committed turnovers, and even had a shot stuffed by Gopher center Jim Brewer. The Gophers capitalized, going on another tear, this time 7-0-to give them their widest lead of the afternoon, 27- 18 with 4:22 remaining. Not only was Michigan outshot 46.9 to 37 percent in the half, but the Gophers controlled the boards as well, 24-16. But the deciding factor which determined the final outcome was that, as Wilmore put it, "we were confident not that we were going to win, but rather that we would come out and play our game." And play their game they did, as the Wolverines outscored, outrebound- ed and outhustled the Gophers the rest of the way. The tempo of the second half was set, as Johnson and Wilmore hit on two straight baskets to nar- row the gap to 31-27 at the 17:13 mark. But this time Michigan would not allow the Gophers to rebuild their lead. The defense tighteded up con- siderably-it was the Wolverines' turn to steal the ball and control the boards. Down by a point at 35- 34, Johnson stole the ball in the Minnesota offensive zone and drove in all alone to give Michigan the lead for the frist time since the early moments of the contest. This brought the crowd to its feet, and Minnesota called time. But the breather did not allow the Gophers to regroup their forc- Goph es as the Michigan defense seemed to be growing stronger every mo- ment. Now the Gophers were being forced into mistakes and turnovers .and Michigan put the kiss of death upon their foes with a 12-3 streak to build their lead to 48 38. During the stretch Wilmore be- gan an exhibition for the delirious fans with some fancy dribbling and shooting, including a beauti- ful 10-foot jumper which resulted in a three-point play and a 60-44 Michigan lead. Orr suggested why the Minnes -ota press was ineffective in the last half: "They couldn't press us because they couldn't make the baskets. The only time they press- ed was when they scored from the floor or from the line." In addition, Orr emphatically denied that Minnesota was as great a defensive team as everyone had thought them to be. He added, "We were the ones with a pretty good defense. It's not often that we hold foes to just 50 points." The defense did excel, led by the fine play of Ernie Johnson, who held Turner scoreless in the sec- ond half after he had scored ten in the first half. But 'the other four starters contributed as well, with, many heads-up plays. Wilmore paced Michigan with 20 and Brady added 17, while the Gophers' top scorers were Win- field with 15 and Young with 14. ers, ( 'rtuff Turner Winfield give Michigan a 3-2 lead, the Go- Brewer phers retaliated with six quick Nix points to take the lead they were Murphy to hold well into the second half. T sAM Clyde Turner hit on a jumper to TOTALS pf 3 3 1 5 1 0 pts 12 15 5 4 14 4 HOME, SWEET HOME!: Dame decks put the Gophers ahead 4-3 and SCORE BY PERIODS Michigan, flustered by the back- MICHIGAN 23 court press, lost the. ball to Keith Minnesota 31 13 52 41--64 29-52 By FRANK LONGO Special To The Daily SOUTH BEND - The Michigan icers have lost their final road game of the 1971-72 regular sched- ule. Last night Notre Dame defeated Michigan, 9-4 before 4,179 fans at, the Athletic and Convocation Cen- ter. Michigan finished with a 1-13 road record in league play, but Franklin signs agent; lost to Boilermakers -Daily-Terry McCarthy ERNIE JOHNSON (30) puts one of his pattended moves on a stunned Jim Brewer of Minnesota. Ernie, using his ole magic, duplicated this feat many times as he and his mates trounced the Gophers. By The Associated Press When Purdue. took the floor Saturday afternoon to face arch- rival Indiana, notable for his ab- sence was William Franklin, who had decided that shoring up his future financial interests was worth more than playing basket- ball for the Boilermakers. Franklin, a 6-foot-8 senior and the Big Ten's leading rebounder, and No. 5 scorer, revealed Friday afternoon he had signed a contract with an agent. Under NCAA rules, that made him a professional; Purdue coach George King immediately declared the Norfolk, Va., center ineligible for the remainder of the season. Franklin, averaging 18.8 points and 15.6 rebounds a game, told King that he signed with CGary Donna of Indianapolis, the same agent who steered 6-8 George Mc- Ginnis to the Indiana Pacers of the American Basketball Associa- tion after his sophomore year at Indiana last year. Donna said Franklin signed with him Feb. 19, following Purdue's 92-68 victory over Michigan State, in anticipation of the ABA player draft. "William had heard Kentucky and Virginia were interested in him and he was interested in the best possible deal he could make," Donna said. "After New York signed Mar- quette's Jim Chones, and with the draft so near he felt he would be better off if he signed with an agent." Donna said he believes Frank- lin was justified in signing with an agent because "he can now be contacted directly by 4 team as soon as he is drafted." King said, "I don't blame Wil- liam and I appreciate his honesty which saved the school possible embarrassment." .Bil Billboard The Michigan rugby football club is holding practices id Yost Field House every Tuesday and Thursday evening between 9-11. Anyone who is interested in playing, whether you're exper- ienced or desiring to learn the game, is urged to attend. Lookin' Really Fine Dave Sorenson scored 14 points and pulled down 6 rebounds while playing only 19 minutes in a game against the Cincinnati Royals. Gophers on the Road Northwest Airlines is the offic- ial team airline of the University of Minnesota and when playing Nebraska at Lincoln, the Gopher team sojourns at the Holiday Inn, 5250 Cornhusker Highway. has two remaining games bothI with last place Minnesota, at home} this weekend. Each game is worth four points. The win moved the Irish two points, up on the Wolverines in the WCHA standings. Michigan is now 'tied for eighth place with Colo-. rado College. The Wolverines' offense and overall play was greatly improved over the previous night's contest, a 7-2 loss but the result was pri- marily the same. Notre Dame scored twice in the first three minutes and after fall- ing behind, Michigan had to press and made some crucial mistakes. Backchecking, for the most part, was nil; forechecking, weak, and Notre Dame headmanned the puck well and earned many of its own breaks. John Noble opened the scoring for the Irish with only 40 seconds gone on a pretty passing play with Ed' Bumbacco. The Wolverines were bottled up in their own zone when Frank Werner failed in an attempt to clear the puck. Bumbacco made it 2-0 at 2:41 by tipping in a rebound off Noble's shot immediately following a face- off in Michigan's end. From here on in, the Blue had to play catch-up hockey, and, when Jerry Lefebvre was sent to the penalty box for tripping Notre Dame's Paul Regan scored a pow er play, poking the puck past net- minder Karl Bagnell. But then Michigan defenseman Pete Dunbar, who along with teammate Randy Neal received quite a bit of heckling from the partisan crowd, changed the com- plexion of things slightly when his 80 foot slap shot skipped past goal- tender Dick Tomasoni for the first Wolverine tally. When Michel Jarry slapped in a power play goal five minutes later to close the gap to 3-2, it looked like the Wolverines might spoil a dream come true weekend for Notre Dame Coach Lefty Smith. But Regan slipped by -Le- febvre at the blue line and put one past Bagnell to give the Irish ~ 4~, Daily-sara Kruwich I8 sai a two goal lead and they were never headed. Notre Dame added two more goals in the second period before Bucky Stroaub notched one after receiving a pin-point centering pass from Neal on a two-on-one break. Bernie Gagnon, who leads the WCHA in goal production, scored of the over-all season in the third stanza, but the Irish countered with three more to wrap up only their second home victory in 1972 and' fourth win in their last 14 games. ~Referees Chuck Meadows and Jerryl did-o call asmany enalties as they did Friday night, 4 as opposed to 19. But they re- ceived almost as much abuse and criticism. Much of it had to do with Mich- igan's Dunb r. 'A six foca 180 pound freshiman from Toronto, Dunbar is fairly strong and likes to hit. But right now he is haimpered by a cast which protects a mending right thumb and he tries to limit the nmbrdof punches he throws with Next weekend tells it all, though If Michigan wins two, they'll be scheduled for some post season ac- tion, no matter what anyone else does. Otherwise, they might spell the season's end for the Wolver-. ines. Irish Luck FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. ND-No0- ble from Bumbacco and Williams 0:40. '.eNi umbacco from Nydrp an i o- Williams 7:42. 4. M-Dunbar from ery a d a r i 12 23. 6 . D Ra 1 aw SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 7. w D- Campbell from DeLorenzi 6:23, 8 D- Williams from Noble and Green ih4; 9u-straub from Neal and Cier 18:20. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 10. D- Nobel (Steinborn) 0:49; 11. M-G on (Paris, Jarry ) 1:10; 12. N.D.-Bum co (Noble) 7:55; 13. Israelson (Cordes - gan 10:31. SAVES MICHIGAN (Bagnell) 14 121 37 Notre Dame (Tomasont) 8 0 mo- 8 Notre Dame (Kronholm) 16 11-28 Attendance 4179 CE wI~ w SPARTANS DISRUPTED: Bucks edge Wl' 4 EVANSTON - Wardell Jackson from-behind, 102-98, Big Ten bas- scored the tying bucket with one ketball victory over Michigan State second left in regulation play yes- last night. terday, then scored the decisive After trailing, 60-51, at half- goal in an overtime period as Ohio time, the Hawkeyes shot 65 per State kept alive its Big Ten bas- cent to rebound and take the lead ketball title hopes with a 76-74 with 11 minutes still to play. Mich- victory over Northwestern. igan State never caught up there- Northwestern, now 2-9 and in after. the conference cellar, appeared to But junior guard Ruck Williams have won the regulation time when led Iowa from behind by scoring sophomore Greg Wells scored a 23 of his 33 'points in the second layup with seven seconds left. half, including the two to put the Ohio State called time with four Hawkeyes ahead for good. seconds left and Jackson got the State closed the gap near the ball at the baseline for a perfect end, 100-96 with 1:04 left to play, five-foot jump shot with only a but Williams hit on two free click left on the clock. throws to ice the victory. About 100 black students de- The Buckeyes and Wildcats layed the start of the Michigan traded buckets at the start of the State-Iowa Big Ten basketball overtime 'and with the score tied game about 45 minutes by mass- at 72-72 and with :49 seconds ing on the court and chanting, left, Jackson scored a layup and "Reinstate Ron and Corky." Mark Wager later added two free The students, who walked on throws. the court after the National An- them was played, walked off the Hawks fly court after a black student EAST LANSING - Hot second- spokesman, Sam Riddle, wasgiv- half shooting led Iowa to a come- en permission to speak over the public address system. " ~!1 4Fr +:W/+"~rrYSY73 1b' * * k rldcats Badgers blipped CHAMPAIGN - Illinois weather- ed a late rally by Wisconsin yes-I terday and hung on for a 91-86 victory in a Big Ten Conference basketball game. Weatherspoon led Illinois scorers with 26 points. Kim Hughes of Wisconsin led all scorers with 27 points. Penn 79, Columbia 62 South Carolina 88, Davidson 82 Florida State 49, Stetson 47 :Memphis State 92, Tulsa 90 Fordham 106, Georgetown, D.C. 78 Navy 61, Aarmy 60 Duke 68, Maryland 59 Kansas State 80, Oklahoma 71 Harvard 88, Yale 72 . Michigan 108, N. Michigan 87 Princeton 90, Cornell 65 LIU 78, St. Francis, N.Y. 64 Wake Forest 70, Clemson 63 SW Louisiana 103, Dayton 86 St. Peter's N.J. 83, Seton Hall 71 Florida 88, Mississippi State 80 Air Force 59, Denver 54 Georgia 79, Mississippi 69 Pitt 78, Penn State 70 I ,: Y as, ; :.;h = ti: r t " r, ' h. "+ RENT 1/p CANT ft Can't 'Cl A c' ALL TENANTS of the following management compan- ies are advised to deposit March rents into the Tenants Union Rent-Freez-Violation Escrow Account: Hall Management Co.-Ambassador Co.-Ann Arbor Trust- Arbor Forest-Campus Management-Charter Realty-Dahl- mann Apartments-Hamilton Apartments-Summit Associates- Walden Management-Wilson White Co.-Bell Development- Student Inns Inc.-Post Realty-McKinley Associates-Roberts Managers-Art Carpenter-Raymond Harary-Sarah Seingold :h eck Out The Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN Minnesota W L 8 2 8 3 Pct. .800 .727 Boilermakers steam LAFAYETTE- A three-point play by senior Bob Ford brought Purdue from behind in the final minute and gave the Boilermakers1 FOR A NEW EXPERIEN IN CO-ED LIVING 1345 WashtAnn I