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March 21, 1972 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-21

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Rage Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday; March 21, 1972

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 21, 1972

I

Briins s oot for sixth strai

i tle

A Profile by Alan Adelson
The first book to be published on the
SDS traces its tumultuous history in a
dramatic, in-depth report by a young
radical journalist.
$2.95 paperback; $10.00 hardcoverI
SCRIBNERSj

By DAN BORUS
Little Johnny, the slicker from
Indiana who coaches the Uni-
versity of California at Disney-
land, is caught on the collect-
ing bug again. Wooden, who
collects national championships
in basketball the way ITT col-
lects insurance companies, and
this year's version of the
G R E A T E S T COLLEGIATE
TEAM E V E R ASSEMBLED
head into the Nationals to be
held in Pauley Pavilion, the
house that Alcindor stuffed,
again the unanimous favorite.
Winning is to UCLA as smog
is to the California freeways. In
fact, UCLA has won seven of
the last eight championships,
and the last five straight. (A
trivia question: who won the
national championship that
broke the. Uclans string, who
opposed them, and what was
their starting lineup?)
The Uclans earned their berth
in the finals by swamping Long
Beach State, 73-57. Ed Ratleff
was the only consistent 49er as
the inside domination of soph
sensation Bill Walton and the
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outside shooting of senior Hen-
ry Bibby, insured the 30th
straight Bruin victory in NCAA
championship competition.
It was a typical victory for the
defending champs. Countering
with Walton's defensive control
of the boards and Bibby's shoot-
ing, the Bruins overpowered
Long Beach. When the 49ers
tried to smother Walton in
close, Bibby pounded from the
outside. But Walton is not the
run - of - the - mill white cen-
ter. Unlike Kresimir Cosic of
Brigham Young, which Long
Beach stopped in the second
half a week before in the pre-
liminaries, Walton is not intim-
idated by an elbow here and
there.
Facing UCLA in the semi-
finals will be the Cardinals of
Louisville, the victors of the
Mid-West regional. The game
will be built up as 'mentor ver-
sus pupil', as Louisville coach
Denny Crum learned his ball as
an assistant and player at
Johnny Wooden's knee. Crum
has been making some noise
about how he was a driving
force in the champs of past
UCLA days. so the emotions
will run deep.
Louisville earned the dubious
distinction of facing the Bruins
by destroying Kansas State in
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the Midwest final. Finding
themselves up by twenty points,
the Cardinals had to withstand
a furious Wildcat rally in or-
der to latch on to the final po-
sition. Jim Price, who was the
tournament's most valuable
player, picked up twenty-five
points in the winning effort.
The key to the game was the
inability of K-State's soph.
guards to hit consistently. Louis-
ville shut off Danny Beard and
Lou Kruger with twenty-two
points between them.
In Morgantown, West Virgin-
ia, the second and third ranked
teams tipped off against each
other for the championship of
the East. Depth was the key as
North Carolina smashed third
ranked Pennsylvania. D e a n
Smith's charges, who number
three deep and are strong at
each position, consistently bored
away at the Quakers until they
finally toppled them, 73-59.
Down by two at halftime, the
Corky Calhoun-led residents of
the City of Brotherly Love,
came back to knot the score at
40-40.
The Tar Heels then poured it
on, reeling off seven straight
points. Dennis Wycik knotted 18
for the Carolinians and Robert
McAdoo had 17.
As it has been all season,
defense was the key for North
Carolina. The Tar Heels use a
variety of defenses, predomi-
nately man-to-man, but using a
zone after an in-bounds play.
The man-to-man was superb as
the high-scoring Quakers began
quaking when faced with the

NCAA
Semifinals-Thursday
UCLA (27-0) vs. Louisville (24-3)
Florida St. (26-5) vs. North Carolina (24-4)
NIT
Quarterfinals-Tonight
Oral Roberts (26-1) vs. St. Johns (18-9)
Princeton (20-6) vs. Niagara (19-8)

hard pressing of McAdoo and
senior Bill Chamberlain. The
press that Dean Smith continu-
ally employed forced the Penn
ballclub into foolish errors in
the crucial second half. Penn's
varied man-to-man did not fare
as well.
The Tar Heels have worn well
under pressure. First they sur-
vived the exhausting and dan-
gerous ACC tournament dump-
ing both Duke and Maryland
in games that were not even
close. Next they faced South
Carolina, a team that only last
year beat the Tar Heels in the
ACC. The Tar Heels rose to the
occasion, obliverating the cocky
Gamecocks, and holding All-
American Tom Riker scoreless
for 33 minutes in a 92-69 romp.
Adolph Rupp, up against the
mandatory retirement age for
panicky basketball coaches,
came against Florida State in a
game that was decided fairly
early. The Seminoles whipped
Rupp's boys by a 73-54 score.
The Wildcats, who turned , the
ball over 22 times, were also
cold from the floor. Only Jim
Andrews was consistent on a
team of shooters that went
much farther in National com-
petition than any one reason-
ably expected.
The Seminoles, powered by the
shooting of Ron King and Reg-
gie Royals, put the game away
early, capitalizing on Ken-
tucky's faltering zone.
Rupp attributed the Florida
State victory to their speed and
consistency. How good the
Seminoles really are, will be
seen Thursday night when they
go against the Tar Heels in Los
Angeles.
The runner-up bowl promises
to be more exciting since the
outcome is not so obvious. Fav,
ored teams bit the dust, as lit-
tle regarded teams flexed their
muscles in some exciting con-
tests at the N.I.T.

4r

CO-CAPTAIN SAM McCAMNEY (52) of the ORU Titans scores
over another poor soul. The Titans exorcised Memphis State
Saturday by a score of 94-74, and will meet St. John's tonight. As
Oral says, "When things are going good, always remember how
bad you really are."

4

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The trend was started Friday
night when Lafayette, a team
ousted by Temple in the Mid-
Atlantic Conference play-off,
took the Cavaliers of Virginia by
one point, 72-71. Tracy Tri-
pucka, the most prolific scorer
in the General history, lead the
way with, what for him was a
sub-par performance. The key
to this game was the poor shoot-
ing of Virginia's All-American
guard Barry Parkhill. Parkhill,
the player of the year in the
talen-laden Atlantic Coast con-
ference, was held to a mere 11
points and Scott Mandlish could
not control the boards for the
Cavaliers.
Jacksonville, using the domi-
nating blocking ability of David
Brent, high school star from
Sumner High School in St.
Louis, and racked up Fordham
in front of the hometown fans.
On Saturday the upset trend
continued. Oral Roberts, bad-
mouthed by people who don't
have the faith, put together
their usual running game
against the co-favorite Mem-

phis State. Richard Fuqua snak-
ed the ball into the basket for
42 big ones and Slim Mont-
gomery ripped the boards for
thirteen rebounds as the Tigers
saw why ORU is the leading of-
fensive team in the country.
After Maryland disposed of
Syracuse with help from Lenny
Elmore and Tom McMillan, the
stage was set for the finale of
the evening. Home-grown St.
Johns,;faced the Tigers of Mis-
souri who had the finest season
in their history. Led by John
Brown, Missouri jumped into
the lead, but the Redmen stuck
with the Tigers and forced the
game into -overtime. With a
minute or so to go, Mel Davis
laced in a lay-up that gave the
Redmen, an 82-81 victory to the
rapture of thousands of slightly
inebriated New Yorkers.
Big Ten representative Indiana
had a Foggy Mountain break-
down at guard, and were unable
to hit big men Joby Wright and
Steve Downing. Princeton, on
the other hand, had All-Ameri-
can Brian Taylor and won go-
ing away.

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