Tuesday, February 29, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, February 29, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY i Frosh flash past Green, 102-92 !The Texas, Wedge MSU's Grady. . .s. keeps winning By RICH STUCK GRADY PENINGER is a cool character. Grady Peninger is a greedy man. Grady Peninger is a tough guy. Grady Pen- Inger's team has just won his seventh consecutive Big Ten wrestling championship. After observing Michigan State's phenomenal streak on the mat and talking to the coach himself it is not difficult to understand why the Spartans are moving ahead in the sport while the other teams seem to be at a standstill. Peninger, besides being an excellent coach, is also a pro- gressive one. He is in strong disagreement with the current NCAA rule on grooming, one which does not allow hair to exceed the collar of an ordinary shirt, and not to extend over the ears. The rule also states that no mustaches shall be worn. The State mentor thinks this rule is ruining the sport of wrestling. "We're Just chasing butterflies; kids with their styles nowadays lose a little of their motivation when the first thing they have to do in order to wrestle is cut their hair. Peninger wonders "What the heck is wrong with side- burns and hair over the ears? I'm against a beard, though, because I got burned by one once. But there is nothing wrong with long hair unless it is so long that it affects the wrestler's performance." Because Peninger is a progressive coach he is trying to fight the rule rather than sit back and wait for something to happen while at the same time making them cut their hair. "I'm going to fight it at the NCAA meetings because it's out- dated. In the 40's and 50's it was okay but if it isn't changed now our sport will continue to go down the drain. A young man al- most ostracizes himself by being a wrestler." Peninger and his assistant Doug Blubaugh are no differ- ent from most coaches as they realize the necessity of tough, grueling work. Blubaugh boasts matter-of-factly that there is no place in the country where the athletes are worked as had. He should know what hard work is since he was an NCAA champ at Oklahoma State. To Peninger the key word is sacrifice. Peninger believes, "We try to work them hard. At the beginning of the season we had about a dozen guys who weren't ready to pay the price. "We believe in complete self-sacrifice. In this day and age it's hard to find a young man who is willing to sacri- fice.". He sympathizes with his wrestlers along this line, however, and this may be one reason why his teams have stood head and shoulders above everyone else for the past seven years. "It's really difficult for a wrestler to go back to the dorm and be normal like the others. I realize that it's pretty hard to come back from a rugged workout and be able to drink only one glass of water." Respect is an integral part of the Spartans' success. No team can be a champion on hard work alone and the athletes themselves consider Peninger a master at building respect. The Big Ten 142 pound champion Tom Milkovich says there is an atmosphere of mutual respect on the team. "On many teams it Isn't a two-way street. On our squad there is a coach-respect- team relationship and also a team-respect-coach attitude. This gives us a freer frame of mind and I think we learn quite a bit as a result." Milkovich also praises Peninger and Blubaugh as being great on the technical aspects of wrestling. "They know what we need to work on. If we need work on takedowns they are right on the spot with some helpful points. If we need escapes they'll have us work on them." Both Milkovich and two-time defending NCAA 118 pound champ Greg Johnson think an added ingredient that helps the teamimmeasurably is the great combination Peninger and Blu- baugh form as a coaching duo. "They complement each other real well," says Johnson, while Milkovich adds, "They're a great team working together." There is little to argue about concerning the powerhouse Peninger has turned the Spartans into. He has been at State 12 years and in that time the Green Men have won seven Big Ten titles in a row as well as bagging the NCAA crown in 1967. Under Peninger, Michigan State has become to Big Ten wrestling what Michigan and Newt Loken have become to gym- nastics and what DocsCounsilman and his fantastic Indiana Hoosiers have been in swimming. Don't get it in your heads, though, that all of these titles in a row start to be a little boring. Peninger makes it em- phatic that this is not the 'case. "It doesn't get boring; this one Is Just seven times more gratifying than the first one." Maybe it would be good for the other coaches in the conference to take notice of the winning philosophy in- stalled by Peninger at the East Lansing school. Although he is doubtless a top notch recruiter, Michigan Coach Rick Bay has also held his own the past two seasons in the recruit- ing battle since taking over for the retired Cliff Keen. Bay has gotten some pretty good talent to attend Michigan but his problem seems to be keeping them on the team. Bay lost three of last year's best wrestlers this season. Rob Huizenga, Walt Sexton, and Rick Bolhouse all left the team which, at the least, indicates that Bay has not done a good Job of motivating the team. While his knowledge of the sport is unquestionable, the loss of the three promising grap- plers shows a lack of either communication or respect between Bay and the team.' Contrast this to Peninger's situation at State where he has all ten starters back from last year's championship team. Peninger's statement that "Keeping them is harder than winning them," seems to apply both to the athletes he guides and to the Big Ten championship he continues to hold.. So, if the other also-ran coaches don't at least try to adopt some of .Peninger's forward thinking philosophy in coaching and relating to the athletes it looks like Michigan State will continue to dominate Big Ten 'wrestling while the others look in from the outside.- By RANDY PHILLIPS Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Combining a balanced scoring attack and a sparkling fast break, Michigan's undefeated freshmen dealt herald- ed Lindsay Hairston and the rest of his Spartan crew a convincing 102-92 drubbing. While the victory margin was only ten points at the final buzz- er, the Wolverines were in con- trol most of the game and ran up a twenty point spread with about nine minutes left in the contest. The win was the twelfth is an many games for Michigan, and Wolverine coach Divk Honig was ecstatic about the outscome. He offered in a somewhat hoarse voice, "That was a great ball- game. I just can't say enough; it was completely a team effort." Indeed it was a team effort as all five starters ended up scoring in double figures, and Campy Rus- sell led the Wolverines with 30. The contest didn't give a clear cut answer to who was the best SCORE S Kentucky State 121, Eastern Michigan 76. South Carolina 109, Notre Dame 83 Oral Roberts 100, Harvard 99 Marquette 63, Xavier, Ohio 55 Western Kentucky 83, Austin Peay 74 Jacksonville 110, Houston 108, ot SW Louisiana 90, NW Louisiana 73 Alabama 73, Kentucky 70 daily sports, NIGHT EDITOR: FRANK LONGO player - Russell or Hairston. The game, billed as the match-up be- tween the former Pontiac Cen- tral star and Hairston, the for- mer Detroit Kettering whiz, end- ed with the two playing to a stand-off. Hairston was devastating under the basket with his quick moves and turn around jumpers from the baseline; he finished up with 32 points and 13 rebounds. Rus- sell hadtrouble hitting from the outside at the start, but finally began to find the range. Joe Johnson, Hairston's high school teammate at Kettering, sparked the Wolverines to sever- al easy fast break buckets, and that proved to be the difference in the contest. Both teams began the game in a hot running style. Michigan State opened up a brief lead, but a jumper by C.J. Kupec put Mich- igan out in front 5-4, and the Wolverines kept that lead the rest of the way. A couple of goaltending calls and two missed calls on State aroused the mixed crowd of 8,206 early. Hairston and Lovelle Riv- ers apparently were trying to in- timidate Michigan inside with the blocks, and they managed to get away with two blocks that seemed to be obvious goaltending viola- tions. Michigan increased its lead to eight with four minutes left in the first half, 37-29, as Johnson scored an easy lay-up on a fast break and then stole the ball and drove in for another two points. The Wolverines came away at in- termission leading 52-41. STATe HEADed MICHIGAN Midway through the second half the Wolverines broke loose for a 9-2 tear to up their lead to 85-65. But the Spartans came back with ten unanswered points to pull within ten with 5:17 left. State couldn't get any closer, though, and the Wolverines hit the 100 point mark for the sev- enth straight time. The contest was marred with several defensive lapses, and nei- ther squad played tight defense. Both Michigan and the Spartans tried pressing, but without little success. The few times that State employed the press Michigan was able to break it for easy two-on- one breaks. Despite the over-all loose de- fense, Michigan's Doug Ashworth turned in a fine day on boards, and also forced Spartan forward Joe Shackleton to go to the bench early in the second half with four fouls. Ashworth was credited with only four caroms, but easily had twice that many. Russell Ashworth Kupec Kantner Johnson Ayler Wolff Rahn McParlan TOTALS fg 11-23 4-12 6-8 7-11 9-16 3-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 40-75 ft 8-13 5-5 2-2 0-1 7-11 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 22-32 r 8 4 10 4 3 3 0 0 0' 32 MICHIGAN STATE p I 2 3 4 0 3 2 0 0 0 4 P1 4 4 2 5 2 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 22 pts 30 13 14 14 25 6 0 0 0 102 pts 6 15 32 6 16 13 2 0 0 0 2 0 92 -Daily-Mort Novepk WOLVERINE FROSH STAR Campy Russell (40) goes up for onw of his 30 points in yesterday's 102-92 conquest of the Baby Gree in East Lansing. Leaping in a futile attempt to block 'the bucket is Lindsay Hairston (45). The rest of the Spartans were equally unable to stop Michigan's 12th win. Shackleton Rivers Hairston Borenstein Glover Davis Scholten Martin Morehead Hubbard Mort Schilling TOTALS fg 3-9 6-15 15-27 3-5 6-17 5-14 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 40-92 ft 0-0 3-5 2-4 0-0 4-5 3-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 12-18 r 13 13 1 2 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 43 This Week in Sports TONIGHT BASKETBALL-at Indiana THURSDAY SWIMMING-Big Ten Championships at Michigan State FRIDAY HOCKEY-Minnesota at Coliseum, 8 p.m. TRACK-Big Ten Meet at Ohio State SWIMMING-Big Ten Championships at Michigan State GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Championships at Illinois SATURDAY BASKETBALL-at Michigan State HOCKEY-Minnesota at Coliseum, 8 p.m. TRACK-Big Ten Meet at Ohio State SWIMMING-Big Ten Championships at Michigan State GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Championships at Illinois SCORE BY PERIODS Michigan State MICHIGAN 41 51-92 52 50--102 For the student body: FLARES by , Levi SFarah Wright 'Lee Male State Street at liberty Monday thru Friday INPUT Noon to Five (763-4384) We aren't "Dial-a-Doctor," but if you have a question, complaint, or suggestion about the Health Service, give us a call L U N Aapi r 11 Applications Are Being Accepted For RESIDENT DIRECTOR or RESIDENT ADVISOR POSITIONS in the Edited by Donald L. Rice Editor, Schism Magazine Contributors. ANGELA DAVIS People's World BERNARDINE DOHRN The Spoken Natural ....-!!' >1 . . , Afro-American &African Cultural Houses of South Quadrangle DAVE DELLINGER Liberation is As a collection of writings whicfh-.'/ a (regential action pending) Anyone interested in this cultural situation may apply. Pick up application blanks at the University Housing Office, 3011 SAB. Deadline for applica- tions-March 13, 1972. Applicants should phone 764-0166 between j March 14-17 for an interview appointment. agitate for social change, this book will give you an insight into the mind e4 y L Please call between 10 oa.m. and 2 p.m. J I .1 A. of individuals who are white racists, black nationalists, arch conservatives,-_- an eDO cen' s -- ists, technocrats and paci Allexpect to change your opinions__ and beliefs in one way or another-- - and somema sce. an~ 80rn ay SUCceed, ____ Pick Up a copy of this extremey "-_.... provocative collection of diverse opn- ions at your local bookstore and at consider the ideas L OOD ORconained EL BELL OR.SAD. . inference Board HALL 'orid Review .. fnUAMneD AIM N . . . STUDENT SERVICES POLICY BOARD t-npdn (ci on cnr ein n the W DANE The Co GUS I New Wi PARK I1 I 11