ip Sunday, January 24, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pnge Nine Sunday, January24, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paoe Nine o wolverines rally past Wildcats, 97-87 Wilmore lifts cagers from 12 pont deficit By MORT NOVECK Special To The Daily EVANSTON-Michigan had more trouble with North- western than they expected, but the Wolverines rallied from a seven point halftime deficit to defeat the Wildcats 97-87 here last night. Led by Henry Wilmore, who tallied 17 of his game-high 25 points in the second half, the Wolverines took a 61-60 lead with 12 minutes remaining after trailing by as many as 12 4 points in the first half. Although the Wolverines led from that point on, they didn't put the game out of reach of the Wildcats until the very end. Northwestern kept fighting back: and closed the gap to 82-78 with! about two and a half minutes left, aily Sbut the Wolverines managed to increase their lead even though Wilmore fouled out with almost three minutes left in the game. Harry Hayward, subbing for Wilmore, and Wayne Grabiec each NIGHT EDITOR: sunk a pair of key free throws in ELLIOT LEGOW the final minutes of play to help preserve the victory. More import- lead ant, the fouls caused the Wildcats , but Michigan came back to to lose Ron Shoger, who finished within one, 27-26, with 8:15 re- the game with 24 points, and Mark maining. Sibley, who contributed 14. Shoger, who was a perfect 10 Dan Fife also played a key role for 10 from the charity stripe, in the Wolverines' comeback as he sank a pair of free throws to give rebounded from a poor first half Northwestern some of its momen- in which he scored only four points tum back, but Wilmore got one to hit for 16 points in the second back for Michigan with a free stanza. throw of his own. The victory boosted the Wolver But then the Wildcats sank five Ines into a four way tie for first straight baskets to run their lead place in the conference with Pur- to 39-27. due, Ohio State and Illinois. All Despite 11 first half turnovers, four teams have perfect 3-0 marks. the Wolverines took six more shots Michigan had trouble from the from the field than the Wildcats,' opening tip-off in the first half, but they had trouble putting the and never really managed to get ball in the basket. going. Except for a brief 8-7 lead Grabec, who is usually sccur- at the beginning of the game, they ate from the outside, missed on trailed the Wildcats through the five of six open shots before be- first half. ing benched with three fouls. Fife, The Wildcats then went on a who was forcing most of 'us shots, Ouch! Denver drubs lethargic leers, 6-3 1 i i f 1 E -Associated Press KENNY BOOKER (23) of UCLA deflects a pass from Notre Dame's Austin Carr (left) intended for Irish center John Pleick (right). Notre Dame upset the number one ranked Bruins 89-82. seven point spurt to take a 14-81 Sund Moran Hentz 4 Sibley Shoger Berg Douglas Ludy Cats caged NORTHWESTERN ft ft 6-14 4-5 5-16 5-10 5-9 3-3 4-11 6-7 7-14 10-10 2-5 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 Totals 29-70 29-37 MICHIGAN 4' 9 10 5 2 1 0 0 32 tp 16 15 13 14 24 4 A 0 87 missed six of seven. Except for the play of Rod Ford, who scored 10 of his 14 points in the first half on five of five, field goal shots, and Ken Brady, who snagged s e v e n rebounds and dumped in as many points, de- spite spending some time on the bench, Michigan would have been even further behind. The Wolverines had trouble get- ting the ball to Wilmore in the first half. The sensational 6-3 sophomore, who went into the contest as the conference's lead- ing scorer with a 39.5 average, got off only six shots, sinking three of them. The Wolverines have now won nine of their last ten games and sport a 9-4 mark overall. Their next game is against Purdue Tues- day at 8 p.m. at Crisler Arena. UCLA, SOUTH BEND UP) - Inspired Notre Dame, with brilliant Austin Carr exploding for 46 points, knocked top-ranked UCLA from the undefeated ranks with a stun- ning 89-82 basketball victory here yesterday. Before a mind-blowing Irish ca- pacity crowd of 11,343, the aggres- sive ninth-ranked Irish led all the way except for a 47-47 tie early in the second half to break the Bruins' current season victory string at 14 and shattered the NCAA champions' two-year vic- tory streak at 19. Carr almost single handedly put the erratic Bruins down by pouring in 17 field goals and 12 of 16 free throws. UCLA's Sidney Wicks, who was supposed to have a showdown with Carr to see who is the nation's, premier college player, was effec- tively checked by Notre Dame's Collis Jones. Wicks went without a field goal the first eight minutes but wound up the Bruins high scorer with 23 points. Jones contributed 19 points be- sides his harassing of Wicks who was so frustrated in the first half. Ford 6-13 Wilmore 9-14 FBrady 6-0 Fife, °5-13 Grablec 1-6 Hart 4-8 Lockard 0-2 Hayward s-i Totals 32-66 SCORE BY PERIODS: Northwestern MICHIGAN 2-4 7-10 3-4 10-13 2-2 3-8 0-2 6.7 33-50 46 41 39 58 11 14 6 25 14 15 7 20 0 4 4 '1 2 0 1 8 45 97 - 87 - 97 arr rip 89=82t that he was yanked late in the period by Coach Johnny Wooden. UCLA, guilty of 15 turnovers, seemed to settle down when the Bruins clawed to a 47-47 tie with the second half little more than three minutes old. But Carr kept up his machine- gun fireato keep the Bruins battl- ing uphill the rest of the way. Halfway through the final half the Irish led by four points, 62-58, and with less than three minutes left in the game the Bruins still were threatening as they trailed 82-78. However, Carr rang up a pair of free throws and one field goal in less than a minute and then put the frosting on the cake with a pair of game ending free throws. It was the first UCLA defeat since the Bruins bowed to South- ern California March 6, 1970, by an 87-86 shading. After that the Bruins wove together 19 straight victories. Wicks, held to 11 points in the first half, had to struggle for 12 more in the closing half before he fouled out trying to check Carr with 1:07 left in the game. Although Notre Dame's 6-foot- 8, 235-pound center John Pleick scored only nine points, all in the first half, his rugged work under the boards was a big factor in the Irish triumph. It was a three-point play by Pleick that widened Notre Dame's margin to 12 points at 35-23 with six minutes left in the first half and he helped Jones dominate both the boards in the second half until he went out on fouls midway in the last half. Notre Dame, keyed up despite a modest 8-4 record, jumped ahead at the outset, leading 11-5 in a cautiously played first five min- utes. Then the pattern of the game developed with the Irish forcing frequent Bruin miscues and get- ting phenomenal shooting from Carr from every angle and point on the floor.I ABA signs cage stars, paper says CHARLOTTE, N.C. (JP) - The Charlotte Observer reports in to- day's edition that 7-foot Jim Mc- Daniels of Western Kentucky and Howard Porter of Villanova, two of the nation's top college basket- ball players, "apparently h a v e signed professional contracts with the American Basketball Associa- tion." The paper, in a copyrighted story by sports writer Frank Bar- rows, written at Greensboro, where the ABA All-Star Game was play- ed yesterday, said both collegians "apparently accepted large c a s h bonuses from the ABA." The story said the contracts are with the ABA and not with member teams and that the ABA apparently will assign them to the teams that selected' them in Friday's secret draft in Greens- boro. The Associated Press learned that both were first-round picks in the draft, McDaniels by Utah and Porter by Pittsburgh. Such signings are contrary to rules of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, governing body of collegiate athletics. The story said McDaniels ap- parently signed before Dec. 1, when the college season began, for $900,000 for five seasons - with payment spread over 15 years for tax purposes - and other bene- fits. The Observer said ABA C o m- missioner Jack Dolph, asked to comment, said, Howard has not, to the best of my knowledge sign- ed any contract with any team in the ABA. The league office does not have a team." Asked about signing by Mc- The paper said the ABA de- cided at a Nov. 18 meeting at Memphis, Tenn., to sign players before their final season of eligi- bility was completed and author- ized a $2 million, five-year con- tract for 7-foot-2 Artis Gilmore of Jacksonville University. By BILL ALTERMAN Two quick scores by Denver's Pete McNab late in the first period spelled doom for the Michigan icers last night and the Wolver- ines succumbed for the second! night in a row. 6-3.. "We played pretty well for the first 10 minutes and the last 20, but in between we were bad," said an unhappy Wolverine coach Al! Renfrew after the game. Michigan has now lost three in a row. Indeed in those first 10 minutes it appeared Michigan would blow the Pioneers right out of the rink as they easily outskated them. It took all of 47 seconds for the Wolverines to light the red bulb as team captain Paul Gamsby dug the puck out from the left corner and brought it to the front edge of the point where he slapped it by Denver goalie John McWilliams who was screened by one of his own defensemen. Seconds later Rick Malette slip- ped a pass to Tom Marra but the Wolverine winger missed the open net on the right. But then, with 10:30 gone, Den- ver's Mike Christie zoomed in over center and gave a perfect lead pass to .Bob Krieger coming in on the right. Krieger's slap shot from the top of the circle easily beat Mich- igan goalie Karl Bagnell. Quickly the momentum switch- ed over to the Pioneers' side and McNab capitalized on it. With 17:19 gone in the first period the Wolverines couldn't handle the puck behind their net and Tom Peluso passed it out in front to McNab who easily pushed it in past Bagnell. Then, only 42 seconds later, Mc- Nab picked up a pass from the point and knocked the puck in from the top of the circle to Bag- nell's left. From there on out the Wolver- ines had to resort to catchup hockey and Denver was able to take advantage of it. When Michigan's Gary Connelly went out for crosschecking in the second period, it took the oppor- tunistic Pioneers only 14 seconds to score as Rick Bragnelo put in a shot from the center of the right circle. Same old tune FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. M - Gamsby (Falk, Slack) 0:47; 2. D - Krieger (Christie, Hays) 10:30; 3. D - McNab (Peluso, Venasky) 17:19; 4. D - McNab (Helm, Venasky) 18:01. PENALTIES: 1. M - Marra (2, el- bowing) 6:35; 2. D - Christie (2, highstickng) 13:05; 3. D - Palmer (2, charging) 18:38. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 5. Par (Morenz, Brag n a IG)5:33; 6. M - Slack (Gamsby, Falk) 6:31; 7. D - Busniuk (Christie, Venasky) 8:10. PENALTIES: 4. M - Connelly (2, crosschecking) 5:19; 5. D - Woodley (2, highsticking) 7:55; 6. M - Marra (2, highsticking) 7:55; 7. D - Lampman (2, roughing) 7:55; 8. M - Cartier (2, roughing) 7:55; 9. 41 - Woodley (2, crosschecking) 14:21. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 8. D - Lampman (Christie, Venasky) 4:59; 9. M - Mallette (Lefebvre, Cartier) 8:44;. PENALTIES: 10. D - Brag- nalo (2, interference) 4:06; 11. D - Lampman (2, crosscheck) 7:06; 12. M - Skinner (2, holding) 12:46; 13. ) - Peluso (check in off, zone) 19:22; 14. M . Gamsby (2, slash- ing) 19:51. SAVES: MICHIGAN 10 11 8 - 29 DENVER 8 8 14 - 30 Michigan momentarily was re- vitalized when. with 6:31 gone in the period, McWilliams stopped a shot from his left byMerle Falk but was unable to keep it from rebounding out to Brian Slack wo put it in. A minute and a half later a minor skirmish broke out 'nd when it was finally broken up each team had lost two men. Michigan seemed listless, andI with each team down to three players, it took Denver only 15 seconds to up the score to 5-2. It came with 8:10 gone when Vic Venasky passed from right front over to Mike Busniuk stationed 15 feet in front of Bagnell and: the 6-2 freshman poked it in. Michigan started to press hard- er in the third period as they sought to catch up. Renfrew moved his players around, switc.- ing Marra back to defense and moving Michel Jarry up to cent,3r, but to no avail. With 4:59 down and Michigan a man up, Venasky picked up the puck and sped on down the middle where he passed off to Mike Lamp- man streaking by him on his left. The freshman wing blasted it in from the inner edge of the circle. Still, the Wolverines continued to press and registered their final tally on a power play at 8:34 of the last stanza. A shot by Jerry Lefebvre came out to Rick Malette who poked it into the left corner of the net. From there on out Denver ef- fectively held Michigan- in check as McWilliams turned aside 14 shots in the final period, nearly half of the Wolverines game total of 30. On several occasions a Wol- verine missed the open net as his shot went on by the backboard. A big disappointment for Wol- verine fans last night was the failure of center Bernie Gagnon to hit the scoring column. Gag- non sat out Friday's game with a game misconduct and it was hoped that the team's leading scorer would be fired up for yesterday's contest, but the 5-9 junior was unable to crack the suddenly tough Pioneer defense. Next week, Michigan will end its home stand with a two game series against Duluth. Murray takes first Michigan's three entrants in the U.S.; Track and Field Fed- eration Midwest Invitational fared well in competition yes- terday. Godfrey Murrey wyon the 70 yard high hurdles in 8.4 seconds. Greg Syphax placed second in the 600 yard run, finishing in 1:12.2, while the third Wolverine, Gene Brown finished fifth- in the 60 yard dash. STAY UNBEATEN: Tankers slam MSUI 71-52 Special To The Daily The Michigan tankers remained unbeaten in dual meet competi- tion by submerging Michigan State at East Lansing yesterday. The mermen capture top honors in 8 of the 13 events, including both relays. In crushing the Spartans 71- 52, coach Gus Stager rested some of his best performers and pre- vented a humiliation of the cross- state rivals.. Freestyler Ray Mc- Cullough and backstroker Chris Hansen were idle and Stu Isaac competed in the individual med- ley rather than his normal event, the breaststroke. All three of those swimmers ranked nationally in the latest statistics released by Swimming' World. McCullough's clocking of Pitt pins grapplers, 19-16; ,injuries reshuffle line-up Special To The Daily weight, with Gary McClure decis- PITTSBURGH - The youthful ioning Bill' Davids by a 12-4 score. Michigan wrestling team fell pray Davids, a freshman wrestling in to fate for the second week in a his first varsity match, is normally row, as they lost last night to a a 118 pounder, but had to move highly regarded Pittsburgh squad up in weight due to King's injury. . 19-16. Hampered by injuries, Jim Hagen, wrestling for the which forced a number of lineup Wolverines at 134, was edged by changes, the Wolverines put up a NCAA runner-up Randy Payne strong showing, but could not beat 11-9. At 142. Mark Payne of Pitts- a combination of the Pittsburgh burgh defeated freshman R i c k team and questionable refereeing. Neff '-15-3, puting t h e Panthers The loss was the second f o r ahead 9-3. Michigan in as many weeks, and That lead increased in the next gave the team a 3-2 record in match, as the death blow was dual meet competition. A g a i n s t delivered to Michigan. Jerry Hub- Northwestern last Saturday, the bard was defeating Bud Smeltz 11- loss came as a result of two for- 3 in the third period, and had a feits. Both men who had to de- cradle on his opponent when the fault last week, Mark King at 142 referee called a pin on Hubbard. and Walt Sexton at 190, were ab- A sellout crowd had intimidated sent from yesterday's meet, and the referee earlier, according to *their loss forced five of the Wol- Wolverine assistant coach B i11 verines to wrestle out of t h e i r Johannesen, and this was one of weight classes, a series of questionable calls that The meet got off to a good start went ag Michigan 48.2 gives him the eleventh b e s t time for the 100 yard freestyle among college swimmers. Of the Blue natators who did compete yesterday, two, Larry Day and Byron MacDonald, were par- ticularly dazzling. Day won the 200 yard butterfly with MacDon- ald touching right after him. Their times, 1:55.14 and 1:55.75 respectively, were just fractions of a second off the times which rank them second and fourth in the event. The relay teams Stager slat- ed against the Spartans yesterday were not the powerhouses t h e y sometimes are, but both pulled off victories, the 400 yard medley re- lay team with relative ease. Michigan has registered the fastest time in the event t h i s year, 3:32.4, nearly seven seconds faster than the clocking against Michigan State. The 400 yard free- style relay squad, also full of sub- stitutes, swam the course in 3.21.95, six seconds off Michigan's best clocking this season. Diving coach Dick Kimball's trusts performed well, especially for road competition. Dick Rydze was the best of the aquatic acro- bats, winning the one meter event, and copping second in the three meter equivalent. Joe Crawford finished a dis- appointing fifth at one meter, but came back strong to capture the three meter competition. The mermen, very impressive sG far this season, will try to extend their untarnished dual meet status next Saturday against an oppon- ent from the Ivy League, Prince- ton. the upperheck ..:i ."'.+4'"..:.v:ri:'r"+ih:s'.sViv:} "+ i:':r.^.:.v rr v..x... . .."h ::}'+ ''. .p ' Armstrong's Denver.. ... young, big, a team By RICK CORNFELD The refs last night said ice-whiz Bern' Could to the hockey game return; We still couldn't quite reach parity For Denver showed no charity. One of these days Al Renfrew is going to win his 200th game as a Wolverine hockey coach and maybe It will even happen this year. But against the bigger and stronger Denver team, Renfrew's smaller players were clearly outclassed. "Against a quick little man, the quick big man always has an advantage," said Denver coach Murray Armstrong, the dean of college hockey coaches. Not only is Armstrong's team bigger, but it plays better as a team as well. The team is also young. Armstrong uses six freshmen and has only two seniors on the team. Before this weekend Denver was wallowing in seventh place in the Western Col- legiate Hockey Association, with the second worst defense. In fact, the only impressive part of the Pioneer team was the coach, but that is like saying the only impressive thing Alex Johnson does is hit. Armstrong's team hasn't finished lower than second in the league in five years. In two months that will be six years, for Denver is a team on the move and, according to Armstrong, it will not be stopped, short of the runner-up spot. "If you'd have played us earlier, you'd have beaten us," Arm- strong said, pointing out that three weeks ago he revamped his lineup and changed the style of play. The chief ingredient in the Pioneer way of playing seems to be teamwork, underscored with timely, accurate passing. For example, eight minutes into the second period, Denver's Christie skated down the ice in the Michigan zone. With Paul Gamsby in front of him, Christie faked a shot from about 20 feet out. Gamsby sprawled on the ice trying to block Christie's shot, but the Denver defenseman skated past him and passed to Mike Busniuk on his right. The pass hit Busniuk perfectly, and the goal was child's play, giving Denver a 5-2 lead. A couple minutes later, Gamsby took the puck in the Wolverine zone and skated quickly down the ice on a poten- tial breakaway. Near the Pioneer zone he spotted Mike Jarry speeding ahead of him on his right. He passed to his wide-open teammate, but the puck was too far in front of Jarry by five feet. The Wolverines missed a great chance, but then they're used to that. Near the start of the third period, Denver's passing attack showed its superiority in an even more dramatic way. Vic Venas- ky picked up a loose puck and skated toward the Michigan zone. Somewhere near center ice he shouted back at teammate Mike Lampman, 10 feet behind him. Venasky then slowed to let Lampman get ahead of him, then hit Lampman with a pinpoint pass on the fly at the blue line. Almost before anyone could say, "What a play!", Denver's lead was increased to four. For his own part, Renfrew thought Denver's pretty plays were a result of the Wolverines giving them the opportunities. "They got two goals a minute apart (in the first period)," Ren- frew said, "and it took the strength right out of us. We let up and we had to gamble." During the Wolverines' protracted slump, their desire to win apparently has been strong. "They are doing their damn- dest," Renfrew said, "but it just isn't working." Last night the Wolverines came out skating fast and hard, but after they got behind, they started floundering. "I didn't think we'd come here and win two straight," Armstrong said. He figured his team would split at best, probably only taking Friday's game, in which Michigan was without the services of Bernie Gagnon. DENVER MICHIGAN SCORING~ 3 2 1 - 6 1 1 1 - 3 for Michigan, as Jpr':-y Hoddy tore apart the Panther's Al Cox 18-3 in the 118-lb. cl1a s s Pittsburgh came right back in the n e x t The wrong pin 118 POUNDS - Jerry Hoddy (M) dec. Al Cox, 18-3. YYG1U "5Citltl U llt~tt(1 l. t11}'" ty ": " k1"":"'e ++' , y; ,+ JIV, 1' ' v.' S fi ;;q.,:.^., ". ,q. " y wv v 1.;.,., v ,: " .01" OEM :;11${ SCORES HOOPE PICKINGS Ohio State 68, Minnesota 66 Notre Dame 89,. UCLA 82 Duquesne 89, St. Bonaventure 68 wavy 85, Baltimore 73 Michigan Tech 91, Bemidji State 67 Murray State 73. G. Kentucky 71 Marshall 80, Bowling Green 64 w M ..:... .......... ......:viY . ... , :..: .:...,. . ..... : ...::'.. .. . .. ...