Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 25, 1972 Bruins, Terrapins favorites in ca e finals Uclans seeking sixth straight aganist ambitious Seminoles Maryland hoping for Purple Eagle dive By DAN BORUS Contrary to public opinion, in the beginning John Wooden did not create collegiate basketball, the heavens and the earth. Nor did he invent the zone defense or the jump shot. And one can sincerely question the validity of the tale that he singlehand- edly defended the fortunes of Kokomo, Indiana in the state high school tournament when his comrades had been banished do the bench for excess viola- tions. Each year at this time, in conjunction with the vernal equinox, one hears faint rumbl- ings that Wooden can dribble a ball on aqueous solutions or /some equally splendorous feat. This year's precipitating factor in the apocryphal stories is one gangly red-head from the heart- land of Republican California, who may be the most dominat- ing force to ever play the game since one Lewis Alcindor (Ka- reem Jabbar). NCAA Tournament Consolation Game: North Caro- lina vs. Louisville, 3 p.m., Channel 4 Championship Game: Florida State vs. UCLA, 5 p.m., Channel 4 NIT Tournament Championship Game: Maryland vs. Niagara, 1 p.m., Channel 2 Michigan High School Championships Class A: Pontiac Central vs. Flint Northern,3 p.m., Chan- nel 2 Class B: Muskegon Heights vs. River Rouge, 11 a.m., Chan- nel 2 Class C: Saginaw St. Stephen vs. Shelby, 8:30 p.m., Chan- nel 2 Class D: Flint Holy Rosary vs. Ewen-Trout Creek, 7 p.m., Channel 2 Walton, coming off one of his finest games of the season, ir, which he stuffed six Louisville shots and converted all but two of his thirteen attempts from the floor, is much more aggres- sive on defense and much more of a team player on the outlet pass than his gargantuan pre- decessor in the pivot. Like all good big men, once he estab- lishes himself as the force in the middle, even his shadow be- comes intimidating. Joining Walton are super sophs Lee, at guard Farmer and Wilkes at forward, and senior Henry Bibby, a bona fide genu- ine streak shooter. Together they play such an awesome zone coordinated defense that all play funnels to Walton. Wilkes and Farmer are peipetually present by the boards when the bal ricochets out. The only thing that separates Wooden and this year's crop of precocious sophs from their cus- tomary top-of-the heap posi- tion is an upstart club from the swampland of Florida. The Sem- inoles, just pardoned for a re- cruiting violation that involved Ed Ratleff who never deigned to matriculate at FSU, come into the finals after demolishing a highly rega'ded North Carolina. Led by the highly nifty and speedy dribbling of guard Otto Petty, who lines up with the tape measure at a scant 5-7, the Seminoles laughed at the vaunt- ed Carolina man to man press that had shut down such drib- blers as Barry Parkhill of Vir- ginia and Howie White of Mary- land. Once the press was disposed of, Florida State shooters could concentrate on wearing down the Carolina defense. With Ron King, 6-4, Reggie Royals, 6-10, and Larry McCray, 6-11, all go- ing to work, even a fully stocked Carolina bench was hard putto keep up with the flying fast break. Can Florida State break all odds and drop the Bruins?, To do such they will have to neutralize Walton on defense, placing McCray and Royals open for high arching jump shots that would force the friendly giant away from his lay and wait role. But Royals and Mc- Cray, though fast and strong for big men, probably cannot match the quickness of UCLA defense. The Bruin Zone is one of the fastest adjusting marvels of the maplewood. And with the red-head as quarterback and SCOIt4ES sports NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK DRUKIS overseer, it is one of the coolest, least likely to fall apart in a pressure situation. North Carolina, instead of us- ing a zone press to trap the Seminole dribblers Petty and Samuels, used a man to man. The Bruins will not be as fool- ish, but still the Seminoles should have no trouble with the Bruin press. They will run at it and their pint-size guards will relish the opportunity. Scoffing at advice that one can't run with the Uclans, Flor- ida State. mentor Hugh Durham. commented, "We're not planning to slow the ball down. If you run against them (UCLA), you might catch Walton away from the basket, but if you slow down, he'll be there and gobble every- thing up." Durham feels that if he can get the ball to either Petty or Samuels in the middle, no press can put a vise-like clamp on his offense. Both Wooden and Durham feel that defense will be the key. Playing a sticky and quick man to man, the Seminoles will be hard pressed to keep up with the overpowering Bruins. Wilkes and Farmer, who have been sec- ondary to the big man, are quick enough that Royals and McCray must keep them off the offen- sive boards if the game is to stay even. Failure to do this al- lowed North Carolina to stage a comeback in Thursday's thrill- er. UCLA, on the other hand, must slow down the Seminoles, forcing them to the outside. "If,".as one famed observer so aptly put it, "the game gets de- liberate, Florida State must take the outside shot, at which they are not particularly exception- al." The advantage that the Sem- inoles have is that they are the possessors of great quantities of pure, uncontrolled speed and should be able to counteract the Bruin fast break, the team's most prized offensive weapon, by returning quickly to defen- sive roles. Bibby and Lee will be inhibit- ed by the quickness of the Sem- inoles but they have the big man in the post to cut off from. Picking and rolling with some ease, North Carolina thrice saw the gnat-like Petty filch the ball away from them to put the Seminoles in a commanding po- sition. So the game comes down to poise (UCLA) versus speed (Florida State). But the game is in Los Angeles and John ,Wooden's shoes have been wat- erproofed for spring walking. By GEORGE HASTINGS It will be the scrappy little guys against the big bad giants today at Madison Square Gar- den in the finale of the Na- tional Invitational Tournament, when unheralded Niagara tries to pull another upset against the powerful Terrapins of Mary- land. The Purple Eagles, certainly not expected beforehand to reach the tournament finals have had to struggle through four tough contests to reach the final, and have done it largely on tenacious defense and clutch last-minute play. Meanwhile, Maryland, the pre- tourney favorite, has shown its power by blasting three of its four tournament foes out the gym. Perhaps the toughest of the tests for Niagara was 'their semi-final win over St. John's of New York, a 69-67 sweat job which was not decided until Al Williams hit a pair of free throws with five seconds to go. Maryland gained the finals with a rather easy 91-77 pun- ishing of Jacksonville. The Purple Eagles have put together their unexpected per- formance on a combination of a fierce defense and a 6-7 for- ward named Marshall Wingate. The pressing defense was the difference in both the quarter finals and the semis, as Niag- ara held heavily favored Prince- ton to 60 and St. John's to 67, as the Eagles fought from be- hind in both contests. Wingate has been the team's top scorer and leader all year, and has kept it up in the NIT. He pumped in 20 of the Eagles' 62 points against Princeton, and followed with 22 more in the St. John's contest. He is also a fine rebounder and defensive player. But despite their heroic ef- forts of late, Niagara goes into today's game a decided under- dog to the Terps, who hold wide advantages in height and in scoring punch. The *big reasons for Mary- land's edge are big indeed, at 6-11 and 6-9. Those are the heights of Terp forward Tom McMillen and center Len El- more, respectively. This big pair has been tearing up op- position in the tournament and makes Maryland a tough club to stay with. McMillen and Elmore domi- nate the. Maryland stats coin- pletely, both in the scoring and rebounding departments. In the slaying of Jacksonville, for in- stance, the powerful duo com- bined for 48 points, 25 for Mc- Millen and 23 for Elmore. Terp coach Lefty Driesell has expressed confidence in his team's chances, and it will be no surprise should it come out on top. But Maryland will have to hang onto the ball long enough to move it inside for their big men to score, and that may not be the easiest task against Niagara. The Eagles' chance for anoth- er upset depends upon the abil- ity of their defense, led by Win- gate and little 5-9 ball-hawk Al Williams. to. force Maryland in- to mistakes and to keep the ball from getting to McMillen and Elmore. If they succeed here, the Eagles will be in the game. But if Maryland can avoid a rash of turnovers and bad shots, the Terps will be very hard to beat. -Associated Press UCLAN'S HENRY BIBBY (45) and Larry Farmer (54) move in for the kill during a semifinal game this week against Louisville.;Bibby will be quarterbacking the Bruins against FSU as the "UCLA invitational" climaxes with the finals to day. ISAAC STROKES FIFTH: NCA ,/ By CHUCK BLOOM Special To The Daily WEST POINT, N.Y.-The mys- tery and intrigue was in the air yesterday at the NCAA swimming and diving championships, and the action in the pool was record- breaking. Four new American rec- ords and one NCAA record were set in action last night. The mystery centered around tanl kors sot marks M/ I%-,W s a,/ w I the eligibility of Tennessee's super- swimmer Dave Edgar. It seems that Edgar failed to pass enough classes to be eligible for the spring quarter at Tennessee. That quarter begins today, but because the meet began last Thursday, Edgar will swim tonight. A ruling from the NCAA insured that. Meanwhile, back at the pool, records were being broken like Pistons hang on to drop Braves; Bulls stampede 76ers, 116-99 skeets on a cadet shooting course. of UCLA, the former record hold- The first race the 400-yard in- er, turned the tables on Job in dividual medley, was the most ex- winning the event. This reverses citing, even though no records their 1971 finishing order and con- were broken. Indiana's Gary Hall tinues the battle over breast :,troke repeated his championship, but supremacy. had to come from behind to do so. The Michigan 800-yard freestyle- Dick Colella of Washington and relay team knocked seven seconds Steve Furniss of USC caught Hall off their own varsity record in in the breast stroke portion of *he finishing a surprising tenth. The medley. Hall then came on in the team of Steve McCarthy, Jose freestyle portion to nip Furniss by Aranha, Dan Fishburn, and Ray one-tenth of a second. McCullough came in with a time The first American record to be of 6:56.99. broken and the biggest upset of the night was recorded by Jerry Hidenreich of Southern Methodist The Cincinnati Reds traded in the 200-yard freestyle. Hiden- hurler Tony Cloninger to the Teich blew away from the opening St. Louis Cardinals for second gun and established the record sacker Julian Javier. Javier time of 1:38.35, clipping over a batted .259 last season while second off Mark Spitz' record. Cloninger posted a 3-6 record. Jim McConica of Southern Cal and teammate Frank Heckel both Another new American record beat the old mark in finishing was set by the Southern California 2-3. Last night's 500-yard freestyle relay squad, beating their old rec- winner, John Kinsella of Indiana, ord by .7 seconds. They beat fa- was fourth. Hidenreich received vored Indiana by three lengths, two standing ovations from the even though their best swimmer overflow crowd in the academy watched from the sidelines. The pool. re~lQ team of Ed McCleskev Steve By The Associated Press DETROIT - Guards Dave Bing and Jimmy Walker combined for 49 points last night as the Detroit Pistons closed out their National Basketball Association home sched- ule by rallying to defeat the Buf- falo Braves 112-105. Bing finished with 27 points and Walker 22, while center Bob La- nier chipped in with 19 for the Pistons, Randy Smith tossed in 33 for the Braves, who played with- out star center Elmore Smith, out with a strained knee. After Buffalontook an early 24-9 lead, the Pistons closed to within five at halftime and went into the final period with an 80-79 edge. The score then changed hands 10 times before a basket and free throw by Lanier and two baskets by Walker put Detroit in front for keeps. Lanier wound up with 12 re- bounds, leaving him three shy of breaking the all-time single-seasop Piston record of 1,111. The Pistons still have two more games to go before ending their season Son- day. Bulls ba shfour baskets and Bob Dandridge two in the first 1:30 of the thirdI PHILADELPHIA - Bob Love quarter as Milwaukee rolled to an scored 14 of his 29 points in the 89-58 lead.! third period last night as the Chi- _ , * cago Bolls rallied for a 116-99 vic tory over the Philadelphia 76ers Rockets roar in a National Basketball Associa- CLEVELAND - Rudy Tomjano- tion game. vich and Calvin Murphy combinedj *, * * Bucks bop MILWAUKEE - Lucious Allen and Oscar Robertson propelledl Milwaukee to a. 20-point lead in the first 11 minutes last night, and the Bucks rolled to a 131-88 Na- tional Basketball Association vic- tory over the New York Knicks. Allen poured in 14 of his 28 points in the first period for the Bucks, whose victory was only their sixth in 27 meetings with New York in four years and their second in five games this season, Robertson, after missing the pre- vious six games with a stomach ailment, contributed 10 points to the big first quarter and finished with 21. The Bucks sank 30 of 45 shots- 67 per cent-in the first half for a 68-49 lead. Robertson dropped in for 68 points last night as the Houston Rockets defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 127-119 in a National Basketball Association contest. Bullets blah CINCINNATI - Nate Archibald who scored 38 points, and team- * ' 1, Not to be outdone, Mark Spitz of Indiana set his own American rec- ord in the 200-yard butterfly. His} clocking of 1:46.89 beat Hall's mark of 1:48.44. Fellow Hoosier fRnh AfiniPrld An zuoc.rnnnA onr1 Ken Tyrrell, Tom lycBreen, and Mc- Conica set the record pace, even though ace swimmer Heckel was withheld. UCLA finished third and Tennessee was fourth. mates Sam Arsdale all tions when1 Lacey and Tom Van received standing ova- they left the court last night as the Cincinnati Royals played their last home game in Cincinnati, beating the Baltimore Bullets 132-114. Cincinnati, which gained permis- sion from the National Basketball Association Thursday to move the franchise to Kansas City, played before 4,022 fans in its last game after 15 years in the Queen City. Archibald, with 11 assists, paced the' Royals, who hit 53 of 118 shots compared to Baltimore's 48 of 86 attempts. Hawks hum ATLANTA-The Atlanta Hawks, -continuing their longest winning streak of the season, won their fifth straight National Basketball Association game by beating the' Golden State Warriors 118-102 last night. Gfers putter into tw~pvs4elfth Sws uane wa.Indiana still leads Southern Cal- Winsfield of Michigan State was ifornia, 257-225. This is an increase third. In the second upset of the night, of only 13 points, mainly due to Paul Gilbert of Yale set a new the relay and Hidenreich. UCLA is NCAA record in whipping Mark third, and Washington is fourth by Stamm of Indiana in the 100-yard one thin point over Tennessee. backstroke. His time of :51.29 beat Michigan continues in tenth place. Stamm's old mark. The ABC-staged spectacle is fast Michigan's Stu Isaac repeated becoming the premier swim event his fifth-place showing in the 100- of the year, possibly even better yard breast stroke. In the pre- than the Olympics themselves. liminaries, Brian Job of Stanford Records are falling as fast as the established a new American record temperature, and with one more with a time of :56.83. In the chain- day of competition left, hell might pionship heat, however, Tom Bruce freeze over. 1TWT Tr QT t -Associated iPress MARK SPITZ OF INDIANA, swimming in the 200-yard butterfly at West Point last night, shattered his own record which he set in the afternoon trials, by posting a 1:46.89 time in the NCAA meet. 1(hT VINTA T C tllljrll ZnUriVVL V IlrAU:l Soothsayer By SWAMI HOWILUVYUH * Salami, salami, baloney and all that Far Eastern jazz. Coming off a 7-for-8 semi- final prognostication performance and an abortive celebration of the Hash-In, the Swami will pick himself up off the rug for a quick peek at his infallible high school crystal ball. Maybe you say, if Swami's crys- tal ball is infallible, why didn't he take Pon- tiac Central over Lansing Sexton last Sat- urday? Well, although the Swami is very new to this country, he is very polite in the} phoney swami Hal Schram look too bad.- After all, the Free Press swami is an old American ways and didn't want to make ?man with bad digestion. Swami crows 4 lin and Company for the boards. Rouge may be a little weak in the backcourt, so watch out for a Heights press. Somebody once told me that the Rouge players are afraid of great Heights, but I don't believe it. * EWEN-TROUT CREEK 73, FLINT HOLY ROSARY 62: I'm picking this D game out of order because my crystal ball got funky with me on the C game and wouldn't come tharough with the goods. Ewen's irrepressible Brookies are ranked first in the state and haven't yet tasted defeat on the season, so they are a good bet to excommunicate Flint Holy Rosary. Flint got by North Adams in overtime and haven't exactly been pounding anybody off the court. The initials "ETC" formed in my alphabet soup this morning, but whe- ther that means Ewen-Trout Creek or et cetera I don't know. * SAGINAW ST. STEPHEN'S 70, SHEL- BY 69V,: Due to my crystal ball breakdown I'm relying on chicken entrails to pick this one. Let's see. what does a gizzard and a colon mean? What if the colon has burst? 4 MIAMI - Michigan fell -two So, without further muckabuck or boog- more places yesterday in the Mi- aloo, the pickeroos: ami Invitational Golf Tourna- * FLINT NORTHERN 80, PONTIAC CEN- ment. Tenth at the start of the day's action, The Wolverines TRAL 68: The key to this game may be dropped to twelfth with a total of Pontiac's Larry Russell, who netted only 313 on the thirdday of play. three points last Saturday. If Russell re- Florida appears to be "walk- gains his twenty-point form and All-Stater ing away with it," explained Larry Cole has another hot-as-lust night, Michigan coach Bill Newcomb. the Chiefs could pull another upset. Re- The 0ators' total of 865 is 17 member, upsets are the rule in Michigan -Associated Press Hail, Swami and playmaker Wayman Britt pitched in with five assists. " RIVER ROUGE 74, MUSKEGON HEIGHTS 71: Just as the NCAA tourna- ment has been dubbed the "UCLA Invita- tional" the Michigan Class B championships urn .. .~.. '~,