Saturday, December 4, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rage fleven lCers By BILL ALTERMAN Bernie Gagnon wasn't supposed: to be on the ice at 6:13 of yester- day's overtime period, but no one, certainly not Coach Al Renfrew, is g o i n g to castigate Michigan's super speedster from Montreal. The 5-9 senior was so caught up in the drama of the game that he stayed on the ice during a line change and proceeded to steal the puck and score the winning goal' in a dramatic come-from-behind 6-5 Wolverine victory. "I got excited so I decided to stay on the ice," a happy Gagnon said after the game, "I had mo- mentum.'" Actually it was Bernie's third chance on a breakaway but the only one he converted on. Although scoring the hat trick, Gagnon twice in the third stanza had a chance to score a decisive goal but the first time his shot hit the crossbar and the second time it bounced off Notre Dame goalie Dick Toma- soni's pads.: "I had two breakaways I should have had," Gagnon commented after the game. "Both times their goalie just sort of laid back, he did it the third time too and I waited. I figured the' third time, you know, you should make it." Things looked bleak for the Wol- verines earlier in the game as the Irish held a 4-2 lead well into the second period. But then, it seemed to Renfrew, "We started to play better when we were a man short. They were resting on a two goal blast Irish in overtime promie ishw left but Wolver- M__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ;Hell made a fine , lead and we were putting pressure on them even though we were a1 man short. We figured when we' went even up we should get them." The Wolverines did just that as they proceeded to score two goals in two minutes to tie the game at 4-4. The first goal was a strange one, as Gagnon took a shot from the right side that Tomasoni appeared to catch. The whistle blew which should have ended the threat but Tomasoni dropped the puck and Gagnon knocked it in. "I thought I heard a whistle," said a grinning Renfrew after- with four secondsl I .ine goalie Karl Bag d i ysave to send the game into over- time and set the stage for Gag- non's heroics. sp o rtsBagnell had been the goat earlier in the game when he twice strayed too far from the net allowing Irish NIGHT EDITOR: scores. JOHN PAPANEK The Wolverines had taken an early 1-0 lead when Bucky Straub . nescored on a power play with only a nightmare for the Wolverines as. 3:28 gn ntegm. penalties kept the Icers a man gone in the game. down until nearly eight minutes in- But halfway through the period to the period. Michigan, however Bagnell wandered out from the net did an excellent job killing the to clear the puck and succeeded lti d i t flp h only in knocking and deflecting a I' ' { , x -_1u----1..116L4U ±vLW-L Lox- -pe-a--es-ana mnu-esatert ev------- -- -- wards, "but I'm not going to sec- tables were reversed with Notre shot to Ray Delorenzi who whipped ond guess the referees." Dame being the ones two down. it by the hapless goalie. The Irish protested to no avail Freshman Pat Donnelly picked up But then, reported a smiling Ren- and the rejuvenated Wolverines a deflected shot from Gagnon with frew, "from the middle of the took life and quickly tied it up. 11:20 gone in the third period and I second period on, it became a good However, Michigan soon found neatly flicked it in. hockey game."! themselves two men down and, Michigan put tremendous pres- with time running out on the pen- sure. on Tomasoni in the remainder Erin go bleCChhh alties, Notre Dame went ahead 5-4 of the stanza but failed to end it . First Period - Scoring: 1. M-Straub (Donnelly, Neal) 3:28 PP; 2. ND-De- on a goal by Ric Schafer. all in regulation time. Notre Dame lorenzi 9:46 (Green) PP; 3. ND-Bum-I The third period started off as had an excellent chance to score bacco (Campbell, Curry) 17:22. Penal- ties: 1. ND-Williams (Interf) 2:45; 2. ND-Curry (Interf) 4:47; 3. M-Donnelly This 1(Interf} 7:59; 4. M-Lefebvre (Interf) S Weekend in orts: 5. ND;-Wim (rough) 1650 6. M-Jarry (elbow) 16:50; 7. M-Don- nelly (slash) 18:21. TODAY Second Period - Scoring: 4. ND- Williams (Nyrop, Bumbacco) 2:43 PP; BASKETBALL-Western Michigan at Crisler Arena, 2:00 p.m. 5. M-Gagnin 5:51; 6. ND-Regan (Delor- rDame at Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. enzi, Schafer) 6:38; 7. M-Gagnon (Jar- HOCKEY--NotreDaetCsm : ry) 8:19; 8.M-Straub (Donnelly, Neal) WRESTLING-at Pittsburgh 11:15; 9. ND-Schafer (Williams, Camp- SWIMMING-Wisconsin at Madison bell 13:40 PP. Penalties: 8. M-Trudeau GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Invitational at Illinois-Chicago Circle (i:4erf) 1232 9. ND-reen (Interf) 3:4310NDNrp(nef142; 1 1. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL-Western Michigan at Crisler Arena, M-Gagnon (holding) 8:36; 12. M-Cartier 11:45 a.m. (charg) 12:03; 13. M-Neal (hook) 12:03; - -14. ND-Campbell (cross ek.) 14:42; 15. ND-Regan (rough) 15:34; 16. M-Tru- deau (hold) 15:34; 17. M-Skinner (in- terf) 17:29; 18. ND-Regan (rough) 19:58; H ou to19 M-eal (rough) 19:58. c.Tird Period - Scoring: 10. M-Don- nelly (Gagnon, Neal) 11:20 PP. Penal- ties: 20. M-Gagnon (interf) 3:45; 21. M Cartier (elbow) 5:50; 22. ND-Regan ball Association winning streak at Angeles Lakers, down by as many (hook) 10:46; 23. ND-Green (tripping) five games. as 17 points in the third quarter, 11:09; 24. ND-Nyrop (interf.) 14:59;N25. ralliedt eette hldlhaM-Falconer (rough) 14:59; 26. ND-I to defeat the Philadelphia Steinborn (interf) 16:50. Bucks blister , 76ers 131-116 last night, extend- Overtime-Scoring: 11. M-Gagnon . 1.-" T' .I ing their National Basketball As- 6:13 OT By SANDI GENIS- It's a little early to start thinking of the Big. Ten. track chlin- pionships, but in their first appearance of 'the season the- Wolverine track team shows signs of greatly improving upon last season's dis- appointing eighth place finish., . Sparked by mid-season form performances from^ tseveral of the veterans, the team, under the tutelage of new head coach Dixon Farmer, looked promising in their annual pre-season time' trials last night. . . Picking up where he left off last season, junior Gdfrey Murray, the conference's premier hurdler, easily won the 70-yard high hurdles. Murray finished with time of 8.4, amazingly quick far. this -early in the season and a mark that would have captured ..the first spot in the Big Ten indoor finals last season. Competing in the 300-yard dash as well, Murray tu'fied in a fine 31.9 clocking to finish second behind sophomore Kim we who fin- ished fifth in the Big Ten last spring. Another junior, Greg Syphax, had an outstanding night, cap- turing the 440 title with a speedy 49.6 and posting a,49.1; leg on the junior's mile relay squad to capture the second slot' iti "that event. In the field events, high-jumper John Mann copped that honor with a 6-10 leap, despite knee problems that plagued hin" allfall. Basically, the field events were the most disappointing of:; the evening, particularly due to the absence of shot putter Steve Adams, one of the best hurlers in the conference, who {is' ecovvring from mononucleosis. . . In the two-mile run, one of the fiercest competitions of the meet, freshman Keith Brown exhibited the same form that led him to an eighth place finish in the Big Ten Cross Country chaiipionships. Brown posted an all-time personal best with a 9:10:8 winnirig per- formance. Another freshman, Mike Taylor, took the second. spot with a 9:25.4 performance. Sprinter Gene Brown, co-captain of this season's teani along with a 6.3 sprint while capturing third in the 300 yard dash with with Mann, had a good night, finishing first in,'the 60-yard dash with a 32.0 run. In surveying his squad's performance, Farmer was conservative in his assessment, pointing out that it was a little early to tell about his team's chances, but he emphatically admitted, "I guarantee we'll score more than 13%/2 points in the Big Ten's this year." Detroit By The Associated Press DETROIT - Erwin Mueller, i taking over for injured center Bob Ianier in the third period, tossed, in 16 A ints last night to spark , -Daily-David Margolick MICHIGAN CAPTAIN Brian Skinner (2) attempts to catch up to the puck before Notre Dame goalie Dick Tomasoni clears it from the side of the net in last night's match with the Irish. The Wolverines who won 6-5 in overtime, finish their series with the Irish tonight. in 10PMSlst 1r -- MILWAUKEE - Detroit to a 113-112 victory over 27 points led a bal the Houston Rockets, snapping a the Milwaukee Buc five-game Pistons losing streak. services of league Zanier suffered a torn neck Kareem Jabbar, r muscle in the third period and cinnati Royals 120 was taken to a local hospital for al Basketball Assoc X-rays. night. Mueller collected 12 of his points * * in the final period, putting the Pistons ahead for keeps with two La r y free-throws and a dunk shot after PHILADELPHIA the score had been tied at 104-104 with three minutes to go. r7r Bob Dandridge's anced attack as cks, without the scoring leader 'outed the Cin- -82 in a Nation- ciation game last * sociation winning streak to 16 games. Bulls soar CHICAGO - The Chicago Bulls stole a page out of the book of the New York Knicks last night, using; a tight defense to record a 122-96 National Basketball Association triumph. - The Los * * * Cans technicled BUFFALO-Walt Hazzard sank a technical foul shot with four seconds remaining last night, lift- ing the Buffalo Braves to a come- from-behind 91-90 victory over Cleveland that snapped the sur- prising Cavaliers' National Basket- SCORES ABA I anK4 ers drown Gophers Memphis 117, Utah 114, OT Virginia;128, Indiana 121, OT New York 134, Carolina 122 Kentucky 105, Dallas 91 COLLEGE BASKETBALL San Diego State 63, Nebraska 61 creighton 101, Montant State 78 Penn State 72, Princeton 70 St. Joseph, Pa. 64, Pacific 58 Marion, Ind. 77, Hillsdale 68 Wyoming 90, Idaho State 79 Coe 79, Carleton 62 South Carolina State 102, Clafin 87 Texas El Paso 71, McMurray 47 Grambling 85, New Orleans Xavier8 Oakland University 117, Saginaw Valley 74, Lake Superior St. 107, Olivet 96 Augustana 71, Dubuque 58 San Francisco State 68, U.S. International 66 Missouri Baptist 69, Ozark Bible 63 Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - The Michi- gan swim team Jumped off to a good start for the 1971-1972 sea- son with a convincing 72-51 thrashing of Minnesota. Coach Gus Stager, who looked at the meet as an indicator both of overall team conditioning and freshman ability, was quite pleased with the performance as a whole. Stager expressed approval of the times turned in by freshmen Mark Anderson and Pat Bauer. Ander- son took the 1000-yard freestyle and had a hand in the freestyle relay victory, while Bauer was im- pressive in the 200-yard breast- stroke, winning it handily. The tankers tangle with tough Wisconsin in a meet at Wisconsin this afternoon. Blub, blub, blub 400 yard medley relay - 1. Michi- gan (Hansen, Issac, MacDonald, Mc- Carthy) 3:38.3; 2. Minnesota. 1 meter diving - 1. Lincoln, Min- nesota, 297.45; 2. Crawford, M; 3. Ham- ilton, M. 1000 yard freestyle - 1. Anderson, Michigan, 10:17.2; 2. Stone, Mn., 3. yyThompson, Mn. 200 yard freestyle - 1. Kronstadt, Minnesota 1:48.9; 2. Day, M; 3. Malban, Mn. 50 yard freestyle-1. Isaac, Michigan, 23.0; 2. Riishfield, Mn. 3. Grant, Mn. 200 yard individual medley-1. Mc- Cullough, Michigan, 2:02.8; 2. Hodgson, Mn.; 3. Hanson, Mn. 3 meter diving-1. Lincoln, Minne- sota, 331.60; 2. Crawford, M; 3. Johnson, Mn. 200 yard butterfly-Peterson, Michi- gan, 2:00.1; 2. Gonzalez, M.; 3. Gar- naas, Mn. 100 yard freestyle-1. Pietso, Minne- sota, 48.3; 2. Aranha, M.; 3. Miller, Mn. 200 yard backstroke - 1. McCarthy, Michigan, 2:04.1; 2. Nelson, Mn.; 3. Dor- ney, M. 500 yard freestyle-1. Fishburn, Mich- igan, 5:03.2; 2. Stone, Mn.; 3. Kron- stadt, Mn. 200 yard breaststroke -- 1. Bauer, Michigan, 2:17.0; 2. Whitaker, M.; 3. Grand, Mn. 400 yard freestyle relay - 1. Michi- gan (Anderson, McCullough, Fairman,' Aranha) ?:17.1; 2. Minnesota. SCORING BY PERIOD 1 2 3 OT F Michigan 1 3 1 1 6 N. Dame 2 3 0 0 5 GOALIE SAVES 1 2 3 OT Total M-Bagnell 14 7 12 3 36 ND-Tomasoni 13 12 11 2 38 Make your With the MGB, the sports car for the man who likes to go his own way. At our showroom now. Overseas Imported Cars, Inc. 936 N. 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