/, I1 9/ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wolverines stagger past W ildcats, 82-81 I r The best laid schemes .. . gang aglee By AL SHACKELFORD Northwestern's domesticated Wildcats might have walked away from Crisler Arena the upset winner over Michigan yester- day had Coach Brad Snyder not made a serious mistake. Snyder wasted his team's last time-out with about two minutes left in the game. As a result, his Wildcats spent the last 15 seconds of the game behind 82-81 and scrabbling around the floor like decapitated chickens. Don Crandall threw up a desperation shot at the last second but it fell a good two feet short. Comment after the game on his questionable use of the last time-out, Snyder said that plans had been mapped to feed guard Mark Sibley in the event of a last second shot. "We decided ahead of time to get the ball to Mark," said Snyder. "He was red-hot and we'd been trying to feed him for the last ten minutes of the game." Snyder's plans blew up in his face when the Wildcats couldn't get the ball to Sibley and instead began to toss it around without any plan of attack. The sphere finally ended up with Crandall in the extreme right corner, and the Wildcats' 6-3 forward is by no means the man to take anybody's last shot. Going into the game he was hitting a hot 36 per cent from the floor. The eleventh hour boner, costly as it was for North- western, was lost in the shuffle amidst Michigan's numerous bumbles. The Wolverines were leading the Wildcats 67-49 with 9:30 left, but came apart at the seams and were outscored 32-15 the rest of the way. Michigan's downhill slide was caused both by a defensive breakdown and Sibley's heroics. A mix-up in defensive assign- ments left a Wildcat open to pepper away unpressured; Sibley and Barry Moran each converted some big buckets from close in. Sibley put a kink in Michigan's offense by pressuring Dan Fife so that the Wolverine guard had trouble getting the ball to Henry 4 Wilmore, the offensive whirlwind. Dominating play at both ends of the floor during the final eight minutes, the 6-1 Sibley pulled off a few steals and, according to Michigan's Johnny Orr, "shot our eyes out." Defensive troubles, difficulty handling the zone, too few shots for Wilmore-the elements which almost did Michigan in yesterday-are problems which have been re-occurring lately. Although these problems seem mechanical, Orr indi- cated after the game that Michigan is getting the traditional "front-runner headache." "The reason we weren't smooth today is the 6-0," commented Orr. In other words, everyone is gunning for the Wolverines and the Wolverines are getting a little nervous. Orr at least said he is "more nervous" now that his team has six wins under its belt. Complacency, another problem Inherent in winning, also may have zeroed in on Michigan. Orr was not pleased at his squad's lack of aggressiveness against Northwestern (Michi- gan was outrbounded 4843) and indicated that the Wolverines were la little too loose before the game. "The players were joking around and laughing during the freshman game," said Orr, and added that their consequent un- aggressive play did not surprise him. One Wildcat who found Michigan aggressive enough was gunning guard Ron Shoger. Averaging 25.2 in previous Big Ten games, the stooped Shoger could garner but 12 against the defense of Dan Fife and later Wayne Grabec, Michigan's tw9 guards hounded Shoger so unmercifully that he found only eight opportunities to fire away from the floor, and converted only four of his seven attempts from the foul line. Yesterday's game may have seen a slight switch in the coaching strategy of the Orr-Fred Snowden tandem. The play- ing time of Dave Hart was sheared to the advantage of Harry Hayward whenever a guard was needed from the bench. Hart, whose small stature handicaps his ability to direct Michigan's offense, appeared only briefly; Hayward saw quite a bit of second-half action. While he had an unharacteristically bad day from the floor (1-7), Hayward handled himself well and may be the answer to Michigan's third-guard problem. Still, as Orr commented, "any win is a good one." Yester- day's cliffhanger put the Wolverines at 6-0 in the Big Ten and, coupled with Purdue's 85-81 conquest of dangerous Indiana, make them look more and more like the real thing. Every week those dreams of seeing the Wolverines in the NCAA Tournament come March get harder to put down. Hoosiers knock off WR trackmen with late n By ELLIOT LEGOW Michigan's basketball team sur- vived a frantic Northwestern comeback effort and eked out a 82-81 victory yesterday to keep their hold on first place in the Big Ten basketball race. The spirited Wildcats, winless in their six conference battles, surg- ed back from an 18 point deficit in the last ten minutes to give Michigan fans as well as coach Johnny Orr cause for a nervous collapse. The issue wasn't decided until the final buzzer when a desperation shot from the corner by North- western's Don Crandall missed connections and fell into the arms of Wolverine center Ken Brady. Michigan seemed to have an easy victory in hand after an ear- ly second half spurt built the Wolverines' lead up to 67-49 with' 9:45 remaining. But then things changed. Orr explained simply, "They took the aggressiveness away away from us. Our defense broke down, it was great in the first half, but then just broke down in second half. We had the aggress- iveness and then just lost it." Northwestern outscored Michi- gan 15-1 over the next four min- utes to pull back within range at 68-64. One important factor in this spurt was that Michigan guard Wayne Grabiec fouled out, and Brady was playing with four fouls. The Wolverines came back to SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: AL SHACKELFORD life and held the lead by no fewer than six points until Crandall moved Northwestern to within three at 80-77 with a free shot with 1:25 remaining. The Wild- cats stole the rebound of Cran- dall's second shot and fed it into Barry Moran who dropped in a layup to make the count 80-79. Dan Fife was fouled as Michi- gan came down court, and the Wolverine sank both free shots to put Michigan back up by three. But The Wildcats moved back within one when Moran dropped in another bucket with less than a minute remaining. The aggressive Northwestern de- fense pressured Michigan and forced Rod Ford to throw a pass away. The Wildcats tried to set up their offense for a last shot attempt, but Rich Sund's jumper missed with fifteen seconds to go. Michigan's Henry Wilmore grab- bed the carom, but stepped out of bounds to give the ball back to Northwestern under the basket. No good shots were gives to the Wildcats and Crandall was forced to pump his long jumped in des- peration. "We played great in the last fourteen seconds," Orr said. "We didn't really give them a shot. They didn't even come within five feet of the basket." Until the Northwestern rally yesterday's game followed the pat- tern of Michigan's last four con- ference wins. The first half start- ed out fairly even, but the Wol- verines moved ahead 23-16 mid- way through the stanza and fin- ished the rather lackluster half on top 40-33. Then they put on their typical second half rally to pull into a big lead, led as usual by Wilmore. The sophomore sensation hit for nine points in the whole first half, but added nine more in the first seven minutes of the second as Michi- gan built up its 18 point margin. During Michigan's ten minute end-of-game slump, the Wolverines' had trouble passing the ball into Wilmore. Rich Sund played a tight defense on Wilmore all day and the Wildcats also were keeping two men on Fife toprevent him from passing off to Wilmore underneath. Fouls again caused trouble for Michigan and Orr again waged a verbal battle with the referees, drawing one technical, foul as a result. Fife, Grabiec, Brady and Ford were all in foul trouble at one time or the other, and at game's end all starters save Fife had four or five fouls. Fife picked up three violations in the first eight minutes of the game, but missed only three min- utes and never picked up a fourth foul. Grabiec and Brady had more problems with the referees and Orr was forced to go Ernie John- son and Harry Hayward to spell his starters, Hayward, making his season's debut at guard, played effective defense, but was cold from the floor. Ford and Wilmore each scored 22 points to lead the Michigan at- tack and Brady helped out with 17 points and a game high 12 re- bounds. Mark Sibley led Northwestern's balanced scoring with 16 points, and hit 12 of his points during the Wildcat rally, during which time he also came up with several key steals. Barry Moran and Barry Hentz added 15 apiece and helped the smaller Wildcats to a 48-43 re- bounding advantage. Sund hit 10 points in the first half, as well as playing a strong defensive game. Now winners in eleven of their last twelve outings and sporting a season mark of 12-4, th Wolverines will take their 6-0 mark to West Lafayette Saturday for a game with Purdue. A barnburner MICHIGAN -Daily-Terry McCarthy Henry Wilmore snaps off a rebound fg Wilmore 7-18 Ford 10-14 Brady 6-9 Fife 3-9 Grabiec 4-s Hart 0-1 Hayward 1-7 Lockard 0-0 Johnson 0-1 Team TOTALS 31-67 ft 8-10 2-2 5-5 5-6 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 20-25 f tp 10 22 S 22 12 17 2 11 1 S 0 0 5 2 0 0 1 0 4 43 8z ILLINI DOWN GOPHERS: Pu rdul By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON - Purdue, slowed down Indiana and held sophomore George McGinnis to 21 points to score an 85-81 Big Ten basketball victory over the Hoos- iers yesterday. The victory pushed the Boiler- makers to 4-1 in the conference, while Indiana fell to 2-2. Indiana took a 23-16 lead mid- way through the first half before Purdue switched to a zone defense and caught up with the Hoosiers. The Boilermakers built up a 38-33 halftime lead and never trailed again. Indiana moved to within one point, 73-72, with 3:13 left in the game. Weatherford led all scorers with 28 points Purdue is 11-4 overall, and In- diana is 10-4. pummels Indiana NORTHWESTERN Moran 5-12 5-8 Sund 5-15 0-0 Hentz 5-14 5-5 Shoger 4-8 4-7 Sibley 6-11 445 Ludy 1-3 0-0 Crandall 4-5 3-8 Berg 0-0 0-0 11llini ignite CHAMPAIGN - Sophomore Nick Weatherspoon pumped in 27 points yesterday to lead Illi- nois to a 93-78 victory over Min- nesota in a Big Ten basketball game. The Illini trailed only in the early minutes before jumping to a 31-20 lead which Minnesota narrowed to one point at 38-37 be-} fore the Illinois spurted to a 44-37 halftime advantage. Illinois blasted to a 61-49 lead early in the second half but the Badgers, led by Ollie Shannon, kept coming back and once shav- ed the Illini advantage to three points at 65-62 before Weather- spoon and Rick Howat ignited another Illini rally. Any chance the Gophers had of catching up was lost when Shan- non, who finished with 25 points, fouled out with a little more than five minutes to play. From then on the Illini were in complete command as they post- ed their fourth Big Ten triumph against one loss. Minnesota suf- fered its sixth straight conference loss. * * * Badgers broiled MADISON -- On-rushing Iowa fought back from a nine-p o i n t deficit to over-haul Wisconsin in the final two-and-one-half min- utes yesterday for a 93-91 Big Ten basketball victory. The Hawkeyes, winning their third conference outing in a row, tied it up at 84-all on a Fre d Brown jumper, then got quick baskets from Gary Lusk and Ken Grabinski to open an 88-84 lead. Wisconsin closed to within a point at 90-89 with 33 seconds left to play on a pair of free throws by Bob Frasor, but Lusk retaliat- ed with three gift shots of his own in the waning seconds. Brown maintained his scoring average with 28 points, followed by Lusk with 24. Wisconsin's Clarence Sherrod, a former back- court mate of Brown's at Mil- waukee Lincoln High School; had 24. The Hawks climbed to a 3-2 Big Ten record and 8-7 over all, while Wisconsin fell to a 1-4 and 6-8. Bucks buoyed EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Turn- abopt is fair play, but it h u r t Michigan State's Spartans Satur- day as guards Allen Hornyak and Jim Cleamons paced Ohio State's cagers to an 87-76 Big Ten bas- ketball win at East Lansing. Last week, MSU downed Ohio 82-70. MSU coach Gus Ganakas sum- med it up after the game: "There were two big differences in this game from last week's," Ganakas said. "The first was Ohio's controlling the tempo of the game and the second was the play of Jim Cleamons. "Last week, Rudy Benjamin dominated Cleamons, but tonight it was the other way around. Clea- mons dominated his team's at- tack." Big Ten Standings 10 13 9 I 4 0 7, 4 ,48 15 10 15 12 16 2 1 0 81 81 Team Team MICHIGAN Northwestern 30-68 21-33 40 42 33 48 Frosh massacre Auburn Hills By JIM EPSTEIN Michigan's freshmen cagers ut- terly demolished a motley crew from Auburn Hills Community College yesterday by a 120-59 score. Coach Dick Honig pulled h i s regulars with more than half of the second half remaining. The reserves, playing approximately 12 minutes, amassed over 40 points in continuing the rout of the vis-j i 3 of seven straight points before Au- burn cut loose. After hitting for their first bucket with nearly four minutes gone, the Auburn squad averaged almost two points a min- ute, finishing the half with 26 points. The Wolverines managed; 50. Auburn started a 6-10 center, but Michigan, with Jake Whittenf the tallest man at 6-4, still out- rebounded Auburn 74-53. By SANDI GENIS Michigan's track team got a taste of big time competition yesterday afternoon as they squared off against Big Ten outdoor champs Indiana, but it was a hard one to swallow as the Wolverines came out on the short end of a 74- 66 score. After taking a quick lead after the first four events, the Wolverines' lack of depth and some surprisingly good Indiana distance runners squelched Dave Martin's and Michigan track fandom's upset hopes. Leading the Wolverine early challenge, Mich- igan freshman Mike Pierce posted his second successive outstanding performance with a 4:12.3 run for first place in the mile run, setting a new meet record, eclipsing the old mark by 3.6 sec. Rick Storrey, a two-time NCAA All-America, *finished on his heels to give the Wolverines another three points for second place. Another member of Michigan's outstanding freshman contingent, Jamaican speedster Kim Rowe, picked up another five points with a first in the 440 yard dash. Wolverine track captain Lorenzo Montgomery finished third with a time of 50.5. Hurdle ace Godfrey Murray avenged fresh- man teammate Mel Reeves' win over him last weekend in the Michigan relays, capturing field for a surpris Among the finis verine middle di cond in the Big T who was appeari: Cornwell copped Dispelling the bare-footed high been having prob to clear the bar a meet record. But typifying V Red, Mike Goodr finish in the 300. the Wolverine's b break the meet a itors. John Bridges led Michigan with The Auburn squad was crippled 24 points, 16 in the first h a If. by academic ineptitude, which Bridges played only 13 minutes of sidned fplu r of their starters. the opening period and about 26' Fromtheplayof he suad itminutes in all. wasn't exactly evident who the re- Forward Terry Tyler h a d his maining starter was. second consecutive outstanding The Baby Blue ran off a string performance, pumping in 19, points and snaring 12 rebounds. * John Bernard also pulled down 12 lt/rIqJ~.IUAuburn was an unnecessary prop for the first five minutes of the second half, as the Baby Blue out- pointed the visitors 21-2. The only eet sp u rt scorer for Auburn in the first eight minutes of the half was 5-8 sing victory in the 600-yard run. guard Gary Roberts, who hit for hers hnine points. he outdistanced was Wol- By the end of the eight minute stance ace Norm Cornwell, se- span the score was 93-39 and the Ten in that event for two years, Michigan subs w e r e having a ng in his first meet this season. merry time. In all, the Wolverines third with a run of 1:13.1. took Auburn 70-28 in the second gloom somewhat, Wolverine half. jumper John Mann who had Honig, grinning widely, s a i d simply, "We were just physically lems jumping of late, managed and basketball-wise better than at 6-10 to cop first and set a new them." While he had no' delusions about the comeback spirit of the Big the calibre of the opponents, Hon- ich led an Indiana one-two-three ig was pleased with his team's per- yard run that essentially broke formance: "You have to play well back. Goodrich also managed to _ nd Yost Field house record with 1T HE RETINAL CI Casey Bernard Taormina Sylverton Amaradio Wi unias Scaslett Tot A Remus McKeever Lutkenhoff Roberts Ususan Liddy Sutherland Klintworth Million Cain Lecure Tot MICHIGAN Auburn Hi Tea tals 5 UBUR Teat us 5-6 3-3 3 3-5 2-4 12 5-13 0-0 5 2-7 4-6 6 4-5 0-0 2 0-1 0-0 3 2-4 1-3 3 5 50-98 20-29 74 N HILLS 8-14 0-1 10 0-8 1-1 5 2-9 4-6 6 4-5 2-2 1 0-13 2-10 7 0-3 0-0 1 3-9 0-1 3 0-1 0-0 0 5-18 0-0 6 0-0 1-2 0 0-0 0-0 1 mn 13 22-80 10-23 53 50 70 - 26 28 - to score 70 points in a half, re- gardless of who you are playing." Michigan again had a host of hoopsters in double figures. Aside from Bridges a n d Tyler, Kevin Casey, Jake Whitten, Dave Clancy and Jim Taormina were the big point producers. For the day, the freshmen shot 50-98 from the floor, an average of 51 per cent, with Auburn Hills guiding only 22 of their 80 shots in, for an anemic 28 per cent. The victory for the freshmen brings their record to 4-5. They will go after a .500 record next week against a .tough Bowling Green squad at Bowling Green. Baby Blue blaize MICHIGAN FROSH fg ft r tp Bridges 11-22 2-4 7 24 Tyler 8-19 3-4 12 19 Clancy 6-8 0-0 5 12 Whitten 4-8 5-5 11 13 13 8 10 8 8 0 5 120 16 x 8 10 2 0 0 10 10 0 54 120. 54 MICHIGAN Illinois Ohio State Purdue Iowa Indiana Michigan State Wisconsin Minnesota Northwestern W 6 4 4 4 2 0 0 L 0 1 1 1 2 2 4 6 Pet. 1.000 .800 .800 .800 .600 .500 .400 .200 .000 .000 MICHIGAN'S KEN BRADY lays a shot up over Northwestern's Barry Hentz (53) in yesterday's Michigan victory over the Wild- cats. Barry Moran (34), of Northwestern jockeys for posi- tion under t h e basket. Brady had a good offensive game for the Wolverines with 17 points, and also snagged 12 rebounds to lead Michigan. The Wolver- ines, now 6-0 in Big Ten play held onto first place in the con- ference with their narrow 82- 81 victory. -Daily-Terry McCarthy I For the student body: Genuine Authentic Navy PEA COATS $2S Yesterday's Results MICHIGAN 82, Northwestern 81 Purdue 85, Indiana 81 Iowa 93, Wisconsin 91 Ohio State 87, Michigan State 76 Illinois 93, Minnesota 78 SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE Hear MARTIN PERL, a group leader at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Laboratory and co-founder of Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action, speak on "The Polities of Technology" A discussion of the science advisory system of the federal govern- ment . . . its virtues and its deficiencies, and how it might be improved. Sponsored by the Federation of American Scientists 8 *P.M. o February 10,1971 296 PHYSICS-ASTRONOMY BUILDING I I Sizes 34 to 46 RCUS AND THE CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty an outstanding 30.5 performance. Earlier In the afternoon, Goodrich had pulled off another great performance, beatingGene Brown and teammate Mike Hiller in the 60 yard dash, in a finish fraught with controversy. In the final two field events, the Wolverines picked up two second place finishes as Steve Rosen leaped 43-11%/ in the triple jump and Bob Mitchell vaulted 14-6 in the pole vault. Larry Wolfe, Wolverine vaulting star attempting a comeback after being injured last season failed in his attempt to place. In a desperate comeback effort, Wolverine Storrey put on his second great performance of ANN ARBOR FREE UNIVERSITY PRESENT: SENSORY SOUP Multi-M edia Happening RAGAMOFFYN AND OTHER BAND(S) 9 TWO LIGHT SHOWS 11 I. -opo Airrr .. it#jIitICu6 Presents: Fantastic Ski Flick 66.QK T hTT 7R .IMI'TW MOVIES * 100 FOOT PLASTIC INFLATABLE SCULPTURE