Saturday, December 11, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven THE--M-CHI--A- |||LY|Page||Eleven t Icers By JOE PHILLIPS Led by tough PunchuCartier, Michigan skated to a surprising 9-6 win over North Dakota last night before 2,817 fans at the Michigan Coliseum. Punch picked up a goal and three assists as seven Wolverines scored. Randy Neal gave Michigan a 1-0 lead in the first period thanks to some hustling play by linemate Buck Straub. Straub raced for a loose puck and banged it off the pads of Sioux goaltender Dave Murphy. Neal was in the right place at the right time to con- vert the rebound. To assess the Buckeyes' chancest of repeating as Big Tenbchamps and to learn something about to- day's exciting wrestling match against Ohio University, see pagef nine. It was the beginning of a longE night for Murphy.l Brian DePiero took a feed-outl from Greg Cameron and beat Wolverine netminder Karl Bagnell1 to tie up the game at 17:10. Mich-1 igan skated to the dressing room blitz NoDaks, 9-6 -Daily-Rolfe Tessem MICHIGAN FORWARD Gary Connelly (20) fires a shot past Sioux defenseman Rick Wilson (3) but Dave Murphy (1) makes one of his infrequent saves. Connelly had the last laugh though, when he scored in the third period to give Michigan a comfortable 7-3 lead. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BOB ANDREW S with a slim one goal lead how- ever, as Frank Warner scored at 18:33 on a weird play. Warner had an open net to shoot in as Bob Falconer was shoved into Murphy, knocking him to the ice. Ironically, Falconer was credited with an assist on the play. In the second period the high- flying Wolverines struck for four goals and the rout 'vas on. Bernie Gagnon got things start- ed when he smoked a slap shot past Murphy from the edge of the right face-off circle. Three min- utes later, Cartier scored on a power play as he took a pass from Michel Jarry and slapped one in from the point. Some poor puck handling in front of the net allowed North Da- kota to cut the margin to 4-2 when left-winger Earl Anderson scored. Sioux FIRST PERIOD - 1. M-Neal (Straub, Donnelly) 6:52; 2. ND-DePiero (Cam- eron) 17:10; 3. M-Werner '(Falconer) 18:33. PENALTIES: 1. M-Falconer (body check) 8:21; 2. M-Connelly (Interf.) 11:30; 3. ND-Miller (Interf.) ' 15:02; 4. M-Jarry (Tripping) 19:49. SECOND PERIOD - 4. M-Gagnon (Cartier) 4:14; 5-Cartier (Jarry) 7:20 & (Mallette) PP; 6. ND-Anderson (John- son, Cahoon) 7:46; 7. M-Paris (Gag- non, Jarry) 8:59; 8. ND-Bragnalo (Cross) 13:19; 9. M-Gagnon (Jarry Car- tier) 17:39. PENALTIES:- 5. M-Neal (Charge) 4:47; 6. ND-Miller (Cross-Ck) 7:06; 7. M-Skinner (Interf.) 10:56; 8. M-Gagnon (high stick) 17:56. THIRD PERIOD - 10. M-Connelly (Cartier, Lefebvre) 2:12 PP; 11. M-Neal (Dunbar) 6:28; 12. ND-Cameron (De- But at 8:59, Jarry took a pass from Gagnon, -raced in all alone on Murphy and caught the lower right hand corner of the net. Aft- er Dave Bragnalo scored for the Sioux, Bernie Gagnon got his sec- ond goal of the night converting a goal-mouth pass from Jarry to make the score 6-3. The final period was just as wild as each team scored three more times. Gary Connelly tipped in another slap shot by Cartier while the Wolverines were again enjoy- ing a man advantage. By now North Dakota was con- sistently getting caught up ice in a frantic effort to catch up. Ran- dy Neal got his second goal of the night while the Wolverines had a 4-3 manpower advantage, to make the score 8-3. Pete Dunbar set up the goal with a smart pass to Neal who was all alone at the inner edge of the right face-off circle. After Cameron poked a rebound underneath a sprawled Bagnell, a shell-shocked Murphy actually scored a goal for Michigan. Try- ing to clear the puck, Murpiy got all flustered and accidentally knocked the puck in his own net with his glove. Physical contact got much rougher for the rest of the period, and the Wolverines took four con- scalped :ecutive penalties that they could have done without. North Dakota rose to the occasion to score two meaningless goals in the last four minutes of play. Despite the lopsided score, the Sioux outshot Michigan 52-44. Karl Bagnell was severely tested throughout the night and he re- sponded with 46 saves; Murphy was credited with 35. The victory was Michigan's third straight and all of them have come over teams which were oc- cupying first place in the WCHA witn the Game o'clock. tig saves. timel tonight is eight Professional League Standings Boston New Y Philade Buffal Baltina Clevelaa Cincinr Atlanta Milwau Chicag Phoeni; Detroit NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct i 17 11 .604 ork 14 12 .538 elphia 13 15 .484 lo 11 16 .408 Central Division lore 11 16 .408 nd 10 18 .357 nati ' 9 17 .342 a 8 19 .296 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Ikee 25 4 .862 o 19 8 .704 [x 15 11 .577 L 11 16 .408 GB 2' 4 5/ 1 1 3 5 8 13 71/ 10 18 19 Yesterday's Games Cleveland 112, Detroit 111 Portland 101, Buffalo 100 (ot) Chicago 118, Baltimore 102 Houston 95, Atlanta 881 Cincinnati 113, Philadelphia 105 (ot) Milwaukee 120, Boston 104 Phoenix at Los Angeles, inc. Golden State at Ceattle, inc. ABA East Division at the time. With a victory tonight over the NoDaks the Wolverines could move right into the thick of the race. But last night Michigan coach Al Renfrew wanted to savor this victory before thinking about the next game: "We made a lot of mistakes tonight but whenever we had a good shot on net, we didn't miss. We made the most of our opportunities and Karl came up WILU +hn hils auvnc ISAAC BETTERS OWN RECORD Tankers sink By GEORGE HASTINGS Iied about the Salukis, was elated over the style in which his team "We swam like hell," were the completely swamped the invaders first words which came to Michi- from Illinois. gan swim coach Gus Stager in de- scribing his team's resounding "They could've won, but our big 75-38 triumph over tough South- swimmers beat their big swimmers, ern Illinois at Matt Mann Pool our little swimmers beat their l little swimmers, the entire team last night, in what was supposed came through," he said. to be the Wolverines' first real In all, the Wolverines outswam test of the young season. the Salukis in nine of the thirteen Stager, who had admitted be- events, including both relays. In fore the meet that he was wor- four of the eleven individual Salukis tidal-waved Sa lukis, events. Michigan copped the top two places. The outstanding individual per- former in the meet was Stu Isaac, who took first place in both the 200-yard breaststroke and 200- yard individual medley. In the breaststroke, Isaac bettered his own pool and school records with a time of 2:11.2, while he timed 1:59.2 in the medley. Isaac also teamed with Chris Hansen, Larry Day, and Byron MacDonald in the victorious 400- yard, medley relay, which was clocked in 3:38.64. A big duo for the Wolverines was the pair of freestylers, Jose Aranha and Ray McCullough, sweeping the short freestyle events between the two of them. Aranha was victor in the 50-yard event with a time of 22.12, while Mc- Cullough was only seven one- hundredths of a second behind. However, in the 100-yard free- style, McCullough turned the tables, edging the second place Aranha with a clocking of 48.45. The two then participated on the 400-yard freestyle relay squad, 75-38 Los Angeles Seattle Golden Stat Houston Portland Pacific Division 25 3 18 11 to 16 14 7 22 6 22 Kentucky Virginia Pittsburgh Floridians New York Carolina Utah Indiana Memphis Dallas Denver .893 .621 .533 .241 .214 W L 20 7 18 11 14 16 12 16 11 16 9 18 West Division 21 8 15 12 12 15 11 17 10 17 Pct .741 .620 .467 .422 .408 .333 .724 .555 .444 .393 .370 GB. "3 '/z 8 9 11 9 10 SWIMMING STATS 400 yard medley relay - 1. Michi- gan (Hansen, Isaac, MacDonald, Day) 3:38.64; 2. Southern Illinois........ 1 Meter Diving (required) - 1. Creede, M, 181.10; 2. Crawford, M, 176.65; 3. Dick Quint, M. 1000 yard freestyle - 1. Miles, SI, 9:59.5; 2. Anderson, M, 10:31.29; 3. Fish- burn, M. 200 yard freestyle .- 1. Magnuson, SI, 1:47.65; 2. Tingley, SI. 3. McCarthy, M. 50 yard freestyle - 1. Aranha, M, 22.12; 2. McCullough, M, 22.19; 3. An- derson, SI. 200 Individual Medley -- 1. Isaac, M, 1:59.26; 2. Dickson, SI; 3. Korner, SI. 200 yard butterfly - 1. MacDonald, M, 1:54.49; 2. Dickson, SI. 3. Day, M. 100 yard freestyle - 1. McCullough, M, 48.45; 2. Aranha, M; 3. McGinley, SI. 200 yard backstroke - 1. Tingley, SI, 1:57.92; 2. Hansen, M. 1:59.41; 3. Miles, SI. 500 yard freestyle - 1. Miles, SI, 4:53.66; 2. Anderson, M; 3. Fishburn, M. 200 yard breaststroke - . Isaac, M, 2:11.23 (Pool and UM record); 2. Kor- ner, SI; 3. Whitaker, M. 400 yard freestyle relay - 1. Michigan (Anderson, McCullough, Fairman, Aran- ha) 3:13.99; 2. Southern Illinois. 1 Meter Diving (optionals) -- 1. Quint, M, 248.20; 2. Crawford, M, 237.05; 3. Schenthal, M. which came from behind on the final length to win the closest race of the night, timing 3:13.9. Byron MacDonald gave the Michigan team a big lift in the 200-yard b u t t e r f 1 y, defeating Southern Illinois' Rob Dickson, rated number three in the coun- try, in a time of 1:54.4. Diving was also a source of Wolverine strength, as Michigan took the maximum points in both diving events. In the one-meter re- quired diving, Jim Creede got 181.10 points to grab first spot, while Joe Crawford was second with 176.65. In the one-meter optionals, Crawford appeared headed for victory until he caught his finger on the board, taking a low score on that dive. The miscue dropped him to second, and allowed Dick Quint to take first for the Wol- verines, 248.30 to 237.05. The Sa- luki divers finished well behind in both events. Meanwhile, the only events Southern Illinois could win were the 200,500, and 1,000-yard free- styles, along with the 200-yard backstroke. Pat Miles, one of the best dis- tance freestylers in the country, i was too much for the Wolverines in the 500 and 1,000-yard free- styles, winning both with excellent times. However, the fine Michigan rt~n o Mal-Anlrn d nr d D i , l Piero) 7:56; 13. M-Jarry 10:02; 14. ND- Johnson (Cahoon, Anderson) 16:07; 15. ND-Hangsleben (Un.) 19:40. PENAL- TIES: 9. ND-Henry (Interf) 1:39; 10. ND-Henry (Interf.) 5:44; 11. ND-Wilson (Cross Ck) 6:15; 12. M-Falconer (Rough) 6:16; 13. ND-Lundby (rough) 8:38; 14. M-Werner (slashing) 8:38; 15. M-Werner (roughing) 8:38; 16. ND- Johnson (hook) 10:58; 17. M-Donnelly (tripping) 15:17; 18. M-Cartier (elbow- ing) 15:44; 19. M-Trudeau (interf) 17:54; 20. M-Jarry (cross-ck) 18:28. SCORE BY PERIODS MICHIGAN 2 4 3-9 N. Dakota 1 2 3-6 GOALIE SAVES 1 2 3 F M-Bagnell 12 19 15 46 ND-Murphy 10 10 16 35 MICHIGAN UNION BARBER BI LLIARDS BOWLING FOOSBALL TABLE TENNIS OPEN REGULAR HRS. DURING EXAMS U Rockets' Davis sent to Pistons; Dalton deals Fregosi to Mets By The Associated Press x HOUSTON - The Houston Rockets announced yesterday that forward Jim Davis has been trad- ed, to Detroit in return for the Pistons' No. 1 choice in next year's college draft. The National Basketball Asso- ciation Rockets also said they had signed former Milwaukee Buck forward McCoy McLemore as a free agent. It was the second transaction in as many days for the Rockets, who II have won only six games while losing 22 this season. The Rockets and the Bucks completed a trade Thursday in which the Rockets obtained Greg Smith, a starting forward for the world champion Bucks the past two years. * * s Ryan's an Angel NEW YORK - The New York Mets obtained veteran infielder Jim Fregosi from the California Angels yesterday for four players, including right-handed pitcher Nolan Ryan. Pitcher Don Rose, outfielder Le- roy Stanton and catcher Francisco Estrada also moved to the Angels in the inter-league transaction. Fregosi, 29, a six-time American League All-Star at shortstop, had an off-season in 1971. Plagued by injuries, he played in only 107 games, batting .233 with 33 runs batted in and five home runs, Stanton, 24, batted .324 with 101 RBI and 23 homers with the same club. Estrada, 23, a catcher, batted .260 with six home runs and 21, RBI with Tidewater and hit .252 with seven homers and 28 RBI at Memphis of the Texas League last season. * * * Twins get Arcia SAN DIEGO - The San Diego Padres sold infielder Jose Arcia and catcher-first baseman Ron Drake yesterday to the Minnesota Twins for cash and first baseman{ Jerry Schiegelmilch. auo of Mark Anderson ana van Fishburn was able to salvage im- portant points for Michigan in both events. Anderson took second in both races while Fishburn copped third, but for a while in the 500 it looked as though Anderson might be able to pull an upset. The Wolverine freshman took a slight advantage into the last 50 yards, but Miles was able to just nip him in the final few strokes. The Michigan swimmers; who now have three wins in their three outings for the year, will have a month off before their next meet, the Big Ten Relays at Indiana on January 8. II LEVI'S For the student body: CORDUROY Slim Fits ... $6.98 (All Colors) Bells .......$8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans . $10.00 Bells ...... Boot Jeans Pre-Shrunk Super Slims $8.00 $7.50 $7.50 $7.00 Mets Manager Gil Hodges said he plans to use Fregosi at third base. Ryan, 24, was 10-14 last sea- son with a 3.97 earned run aver- age with the Mets. The hard- throwing Ryan struck out 1371 batters in 152 innings. Rose was 11-10 with a 3.33 ERA with the Mets Tidewater farm club of the International League while ROS sored by: B.S.U. & B.A.T.A. 3rd Floor-Michigan Union MALE UNDERGRADUATES WANTED for a One-Hour Experiment. Make $3.00. TAKE A BREAK, EARN SOME MONEY, HELP SCIENCE. CALL Susan at 761-4409 Friday between 8 and 10 p.m. Saturday between 5-7 p.m., Sun. or Monday between 8-10 p.m. CHECKMATE I State Street at Liberty IVE A LITTLE E BOWL 1972 Administrative Services by: Students International 621 Church Street 769-5792 low Room 3K I $115 + $14 Administrative Fee: includes during Flight: DETROIT/L.A./DETROIT ROUND TRIP JET MEALS; OPEN BAR SERVICE I STUDENT PLAN: $169 + $10 Administrative Fee 6 Days/5 Nights Accommodations at the Commerce Hyatt House Hotel, air-conditioned rooms and heated pool ... five minutes from downtown featuring LA... extra nights available at $6 per night. * Coach transport between airport and hotel i Coach transport to and from parade, game, hotel; box lunch " Al I taxes tins .and aratuities 44i7~UI1