Saturday, February 13, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Icers fall to B Struggle in def Special To The Daily ceived a tripping penalty. Fifteen MADISON - Michigan's be- seconds later Michigan captain leaguered icers, struggling in the Paul Gamsby took a pass away throes of a "disappointing" sea- from Badger captain Jim Boyd son according to coach Al Ren- in front of the Wisconsin goal and frew, suffered through another slammed a shot past goalie Gary loss last night. This latest, their Engberg. This play, however, did 13th in WCHA play, was admin- not set the tone for the remainder istered by Wisconsin's Badgers. of the night. The Badgers, playing their first game without the services of star Engberg, getting his first WCHA Murray Heatley, who had com- start, rose to the occasion admir- pleted his eligibility, did not seem ably stopping 24 shots. He was re- adversely affected by this or by placing the regular Badger net- the presence of the Wolverines on minder, John Anderson, who was the ice.declared academically ineligible at the cnte tthe start of Wisconsin's current, Thie contest started out on a term. bright note for the Wolverines, - however. At 11 seconds into t h e Less than a minute after Gamb- game, defenseman Tom Marra re- sy's score and with Marra still atdgers; eat, 7-2 occupying the penalty box, Wis- consin defenseman John Jagger, an All-American candidate, after getting a pass from center Max Bentley, took a 45-foot slap shot that got past Wolverine goalie Karl Bagnell. This was the first of four power play goals the Badg- ers obtained throuhg the night. Thirteen seconds later, with both teams at full strength, the Bad- gers performed the trick again. The line of freshmen Stan Hink- ely, Gary Winchester and sopho- more Jim Johnston provided the crowd of 6,386 with a picture play. The trio took the puck in their own end and rushed up the ice and waited to take the shot until they were five feet out and easily beat Bagnell for Wisconsin's se- cond score. Along with their four power play scores, the Badgers also man- aged to score while short-handed. This situation arose on an unas- sisted tally by Boyd a little over a minute'into the third period. Michigan's second goal occur- red on a power play when Bernie Gagnon put the light on with the assist going ,to Mike Jarry. This was Gagnon's nineteenth goal of' the season. Wisconsin passed extremely well and generally appeared to out- hustle a sometimes seemingly dis- organized band of Wolverines. Penalties again hurt the Wol- verines as the Badgers were quick to take advantage of power play, situations. Engberg played a pass-' able game in goal but received a great deal of help from his de- fense. One observer of the game said, however, that he was not tested by too many tough shots from the floundering Wolverines. Perhaps lucky 13? Scores by period MICHIGAN 1 0 1 Wisconsin 2 3 2 First period scoring - 1. M. Gams- by (unassisted) 0:26; 2. W. Jagger (Bentley) 1:08; 3. WV. Hickley (Winchester, Johnson) 1:21. Penal- ties - 1. M. Marra (tripping) 0:11; 2. W. Winchester (tripping) 10:30; 3. W. Gilchrist (interference) 17:26. Second period scoring - 4. W. Dool (Sherrey) 6:33; 5. W. Boyd (unassisted) 17:12; 6. W. Dool (Bentley) 18:42. Penalties- - 4. M. Desmarais (hooking) 16:32; 5. M. Marra (tripping) 17:45; 6. W. Hend- ley (cross-checking) 19:41. Third period scoring - 7. W. Boyd (unassisted) 1:28; 8. M. Gagnon (Jarry) 13:21; 9. W. Winchester (unassisted( 16:45. Penalties - 7. W. Sherry (slashing) 5:54; 8. M. Gams- by (high sticking) 5:54; 9. W. Folk (offensive checking) 11:37; 10. M. Gamsby (slashing) 16:26; 11. M. Jarry (interference) 18:39; 12. W. Lannan (roughing) 18:39; 13. W. Erisen (interference) 19:34. Saves by periods Bagnell (M) 11 19 7 -- 37 Engberg (W) 9 8 7 - 24 m { ° 1 perfect record at stake cagers tackle Purdue; By AL SHACKELFORD Michigan's wunderlind cagers, ripping through the Big Ten like a buzsaw, put their 6-0 mark on the line this afternoon in a key rematch with Purdue at West Lafayette. Boilermaker mentor George King indicated yesterday v i a telephone that he may spring a few surprises on Michigan. "We're going to do things dif- ferently on offense," said King. He explained that poor offen- sive play did his Boilermakers in two Saturdays ago when they absorbed a crushing 85-69 de- feat at the hands of Michi- gan. King hinted that the change in Purdue's offense would take the form of "tempo control," a ball-control ploy designed to reduce the opponent's offense to nil. Purdue gave Indiana a taste of this "tempo control" last Saturday and came out the win- ner by an 85-81 count. Purdue enters today's game with a 4-2 record, good f o r fourth place in the conference. Senior guard Larry Weather- ford leads his team with a 21.5 scoring average and danaged Michigan with 26 in the earlier meeting of the two clubs. Michigan mentor Johnny Orr may change defensive tactics in an attempt to put the lid on Weatherford. 'Wayne Grabiec, may guard Purdue ace to take some pressure off Dan Fife, who has been getting in foul trouble lately. Fife fouled out of the daily "al sports NIGHT EDITOR: BOB ANDREWS first Purdue game trying to cov- er the dancing Weatherford and Michigan had some hairy mo- ments while their sparkplug guard was riding the bench. Orr, sensing a change in the team's attitude, predicted that today's game will see "our fin- est effort of the year." "The team was cocky last Sa- turday and I expected trouble," commented Orr on Michigan's shaky 82-81 win over North- western. "But they're certainly not cocky now." Cocky or not, Michigan has the manpower to take Purdue to the cleaners. Henry Wilmore, the Big Ten's third leading scor- er at 30 points a game, gives the Wolverines dependable scoring and a definite psychological ad- vantage. Wilmore canned 23 in the February 2 win over Purdue and turned the game into a rout with his uncanny control of ac- tion at both ends of the floor. Purdue's King seemed un- concerned with the problem of stopping Wilmore. "We don't set our defense on any one man," commented King. "We'll just put our best defensive forward, George Faerber, on Wilmore and hope for the best." The emergence of Ken Brady as an offensive threat and con- tinued steady scoring of the Fife-Grabiec-Rod Ford tandem will prevent Purdue from key- ing too much on Wilmore. Ford especially has been su- perb of late and found the range for 22 points in last Saturday's win over Northwestern, Using the best moves this side of Wil- more to get off his twisting jumper, Ford has upped his season average to 12.3. Michigan will put five doube- figure scorers on the f 1 o o r against Purdue: Wilmore, Ford, Brady (11.9), Grabiec (12.0) and Fife (13.4). Should one of the guards get in foul troble, Orr will continue to use either Dave Hart or Har- ry Hayward, depending on the situation. "We'll use Harry against a man-to-man and Dave against a zone," said Orr. He explained that Hart at 5-9 sometimes has difficulty passing the ball o v e r taller opponents. Purdue cannot match Michi- gan's well-balanced attack but boasts good scoring with Weath- erford, Bob Ford (18.6), Bill Fraklin (14.9) and George Faer- ber (13.7). The fifth Boiler- maker to get the starting n o d likely will be 5-11 Bill Kroc, who has tupped the nets at a pace of 0.6 a game. Today's game marks the half- way point in Big Ten action for both squads: a win for Michi- gan will amphetumize its Big Ten title hopes and send Purdue nodding Jones-like into obliv- ion. A Michigan loss could throw them into a tie for first. Other Big Ten action today will see Illinois at Ohio State (on TV), Indiana at Iowa, Wis- consin at Northwestern and Minnesota at, uh, Michigan Ag- gies. -Daily-Terry McCarthy Henry Wilmore (25) hits for two MSU RELAYS: Thinclads invade State .-Daly-Denny Gainer MICHIGAN'S Gary Connelly (20) and Punch Cartier (3) battle with a Denver player for the puck in action two weeks ago. The Wolverines lost another battle,, to Wisconsin, last night in Madison, 7-2. This Weekend in Sports TODAY BASKETBALL-at Purdue FRESHMAN BASKETBALL-at Bowling Green WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL EXHIBITION-Crisler Arena, 8 p.m. SWIMMING-Illinois at Matt Mann Pool, 3 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Ohio State at Crisler Arena, 1:30 p.m. TRACK-Michigan State Relays at East Lansing HOCKEY,-at Wisconsin By DALE ARBOUR The Michigan track squad takes to the relay circuit once again today after suffering a close dual meet loss to Indiana last week, 74-66. The action today centers on Jenison Field House in East Lans- ing, where the 48th Michigan State University Relays are being run. The stiffest competition should come in the shortest and longest of the individual events. In the 60-yard dash, Michigan State's Herb Washington will attempt to hold off a number of other fine Midwest sprinters. Washington is the defending NCAA Champion in the 60, as well as a co-world rec-I ord holder in that event, with a best of :05.9. Washington will have to come close to equalling this time if he hopes to remain the best of sprint- ers. Mel Gray of Missouri was on the heels of Washington all last year and has a career best of :06.0. At least five other sprinters, with lifetime bests of :06.1 or better are included in the field, includ- ing Michigan's Gene Brown, who finished second to Washington two weeks ago in Ann Arbor. The other hotly contested indi- vidual event will be the two-mile run, which also includes a fine field of Midwestern distance run- ners, including some of the best in the country. Jim Jones of A i r Force Academy will return to de- fend his victory of one year ago when he set a meet record of 8:52. His major competition will come from Sid Sink of Bowling Green, who has run an 8:48 so far this season. A large number of sub- nine minute two-milers will also be included in the field, which will make the occurence of a new meet record almost inevitable. As the name implys, however, many of today's events will be re- lays, and Michigan will have strong entries in most of them. T h e most promising foursome for Michigan will be in the dis- tance medley (880-440-1320-mile)j which will feature Eric Chapman, Kim Rowe, Phil Pyatt, and Mike! Pierce, in that order. This will be the first distance medley run by a Michigan team this year, but that fact won't prevent them from having a fine performance. Michi- gan's biggest competition will probably come f r o m Bowling Green, Western Michigan, Kent State,rand defending champions, Missouri. Another strong Michigan relay will be the shuttle-hurdle relay, which has the best. time in the Midwest so far this season of :29.0. Comprising this young and talent- ed foursome will be sophomores Godfrey Murray and Greg Syph- ax as well as freshman Mel Reeves and Reggie Johnson. Put- ting the pressure on Michigan in this event should be host Michi- gan State. as well as Western Michigan. Murray, Reeves, a n d Johnson are also competing individually in the 70-yard high hurdles, a n d Reeves and Johnson are in the 70- yard low hurdles as well, where competition in both events will be sufficient. Michigan could very wel have the best two-mile relay teams in this region. Its first team ran a Midwest best of 7.32.5 two weeks ago, and another foursome will run on this occasion, with the idea that they are the best Michigan two-mile relay team. Gerry Rich- ards, John Thornton, Bob Fortus, and Al Cornwell will attempt to provide the winning combination in this event. In other individual events, Mich- igan has its experts at work. In the 1000-yard run, Rick Storrey will be among the leading con- tenders for that title. Storrey has r un an unofficial 2:10.4, which equals his personal best set one year ago. BT S i Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN Ohio State Illinois Purdue Iowa Indiana Michigan State Wisconsin Minnesota Northwestern Today's Games MICHIGAN at Purdue Michigan State at Minnesota Indiana at Iowa Wisconsin at Northwestern Illinois at Ohio State 6 5 4 4 3 3 2 1 0 0. L 0 1 1 1 2 3 4 6 6 Pet. 1.000 .857 .800 .800 -600 .600 .400 .200 .000 .000 LITTLE BITE IN FIGHT: Tankers to battle Fighti ngIll ni By RANDY PHILLIPS Ten meet team. Reliables Joe Dave Clark and Carl Hiller will This afternoon Michigan's tank- i Crawford and Rydze have already get a workout in the breaststroke ers will undoubtedly win a dual shown they deserve a spot on the while Byron McDonald will swim meet - a situation completely Big Tensquad by their past per- the distance events in place of contrasting the one last w e e k formances. Fishburn. which saw the Wolverines drop Against Illinois there will be a Illinois hasn't won a meet so far 40 their first meet of the season to deviation from the usual proce- this season; in fact they haven't super Indiana. dures. Since the Illini h a v e no even come close to winning. So But Illinois, today's challenger, three meter board divers, the one there is not much fear on the part doesn't appear to pose any threat meter event will be split into two of the Wolverines that a repitition whatsoever to Michigan. When the sets of dives. The first set will be of last week's spectacle will occur.; two teams splash in at 3 p.m. at five required dives and the sec- Matt Mann Pool, the Wolverines ond will be five optional dives. will be facing only one consistently . , Fieldhouse specializes in the quite yet, since there are still two sprint events and finished sixth meets remaining after today's in the 50 yard freestyle and eighth match. But Stager will take a look - in the 100 yard freestyle at last at a f e w individual matchups. 1S du i year's Big Ten meet. Tim Norlen will be pitted against However, Michigan has swim- Ray McCullough in the 200 Indi- mers who are of the same caliber vidual Medley. The 200 yard but-Associated Press as Fieldhouse and will go at the terfly will be a close race no mat- DETROIT - The Detroit Pistons Illini swimmer in at least the 50 ter who swims since all the Wol pulled away in the third period last yard event. Stager indicated that verine flyers are close in ability night ad h n toeat teil- he may let Fieldhouse h a v e a and far outclass t h e i r Illinois night and held on to beat the Phil- breather in the 100 yard event as counterparts. adelphia 76ers 118-109, in the Na- Michigan will probably use their:cutrprs top swimers springly sthrh- In the 50 freestyle event Paul tional Basketball Association. tpthe meet. Katz. Greg Zann, and Stu Isaac In the fourth period, after De- ta rema d tht Michi will battle Fieldhouse. Dan Fish- troit went ahead by nine, the 76ers has "run ihto a little bit of a let- burn will swim the fly instead of closed the gap to five with just down." However, he dispels the his usual distance freestyle races. under five minutes to go when Bing possibility that it is due to the ." .. . }. Indiana loss. According to the .... Michigan mentor, there istalways Professional League Standings a let down at this stage of the sea- son. "We're almost through the N B A Montreal 26 17 11 63 193 154 season and we know what is going Eastern Conference Toronto 27 24 4 58 189 159 to happen the rest of the season. Atlantic Division Detroit 15 30 8 38 144 202 The'v (wimes)have ,lost Ne Yr W L Pct. GP Buffalo 14 30 10 38 137 206 They've (swimmers)e NewYork 40 24 .631 - Vancouver 16 32 5 37 144 197 track of their initial goals. They're Philadelphia 37 25 .597 21- West Division just tired of working out." Stager Boston 34 29 .540 6 Chicago 36 13 6 78 201 128'f points to the slow times by In- Buffalo 17 46 .270 23 St. Louis 22 16 15 59 147 141 diana' in both the Michigan and Batmr Central Division Philadelphia 20 25 9 49 144 162 d nBaltimore34 26 .581 - Pittsburgh 18 24 13 49 153 154 Michigan State meets to support Cincinnati 24 36 .400 101: Minnesota 18 25 12 48 131 163 his claim that the let-down is a Atlanta 24 39 .382 13 Los Angeles 16 25 11 43 158 193 natural and common occurance. Cleveland 11 54 .169 25? j California 16 35 3 35 137 194 Indiving, Michigan's superb! Western Conference Yesterday's Gaines In Midwest Division Buffalo 3, California 0 contingent will be faced with lit- Milwaukee 49 11 .817 -- Detroit at Vancouver, inc. tle pressure by Illinois. Diving Detroit 37 22 .627 11l Only games scheduled. coach Dick Kimball said that he Chicago 37 24 .615 13 Today's Games Phoenix 37 25 .597 13x/ Clfoni toray'lae will give all his less frequently Pacific Division . California at Montreal used performers a chance today. Los Angeles 36 24 .600 -- Los Angeles at Toronto Freshman Steve Schenthal has, San Francisco 33 30 .524 5 Chicago at Pittsburgh, afternoon ' drawn particular praise f r o in Seattle 27 35 .435 101= Philadelphia at Minnesota Kimball as a result of several fine San Diego 28 37 .431 11 only games scheduled. performances in recent meets r Yesterday'sResults3A5B*A Last week Schenthal took second Boston 113, Baltimore 109 (o.t.) A L Pt. GB n..m1,,,,. 4.u 4- wassa .. .nir. Detroit 118. Philadelphia 109 c -a . 'A1 ) rI Hollway succeeds Winner as St. Louis head mentor For the student body: Genuine By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis{ Cardinals, in a surprise move, an- nounced yesterday the hiring of Bob Hollway, Minnesota Viking assistant, as head coach of the National Football League club to succeed the deposed Charley Win- ner. The announcement of the 45- year-old Hollway as Winner's suc- cessor came during a mid-after- fi over 76ers, 118-109; rnp Knik,125-116 hit for three baskets to help put the Pistons on the safe side. K The Pistons, fighting to retain second place in the Midwest Di- vision and qualify for the playoffs, had led virtually all the way. Bing, with 27 points, and Lanier and Walker with 24 each topped the1 Pistons. Billy Cunningham had 26,# Hal Greer 23 and Archie Clark 21 for Philadelphia. of , * * Knicks flop ATLANTA - Walt Bellamy, Pete Maravich and Lou Hudson combined for 94 points last night as streaking Atlanta rolled past the slumping New York Knicks 125-116 in a National Basketballj Association. It was Atlanta's fifth straight vic- tory and its seventh in nine games while New York, playing without7 the injured Willis Reed, lost its1 sixth in row and its seventh in nine1 games. Bellamy poured in 33 points and grabbed 18 rebounds, Maravich tallied 31 and Hudson 30. Atlanta took command in the third quarter by outscoring New York 18-4 during a five-minute stretch in which the Hawks erased a three point deficit and moved to an 84-73 lead. Maravich tallied seven points anr Blla mv six nnints: during the! Fox and substitute Bob Weiss awakened the Chicago Bulls late in the third quarter last night, sparking a 107-88 triumph over Los Angeles in the National Basketball Association. Los Angeles star Jerry West was held to seven points as be connect- ed on only three of 19 shots. Jerry Sloan led the Bulls with 23 points while Fox and Bob Love each had 17. Weiss collected 19 assists and scored11 of his 12 points in the second half. Goodrich led the: Lakers with 21. Suns rise CLEVELAND-Neal Walk scored nine points and Clem Haskins eight in the third quarter last night as the Phoenix Suns broke open a tight National Basketball Associa- tion game with the Cleveland Cava- liers and posted a 114-105 decishin. Winning all but two bouts, the Michigan wrestling team yesterday defeated Illinois by a score of 30-5. The individual results of the meet are listed below. 118 pounds - Jerr* Hoddy (M) dec Bob Mayer, default. 126 pounds - Bill Davids (M) dec. Jay Fregeau, 14-7. 134 pounds - Tim Cech (M) dec. Andy Passaglia, 7-4. 142 pounds - Mark King (M) pinned Enos Brownridge, 3:17. 150 pounds - Jerry Hubbard (M) dec. Bill Schroeder, 4-2. 158 pounds - Tom Quinn (M) dec. John Oaks, 9-0. 167 pounds-- Rob Huizenga (M) dec. Dennis McCabe, 8-1. 177 pounds - Roger Ritzman (M) dec. Denver Beck, 7-2.I 190 pounds - Paul Jacob (1) dec. Therlon Harris, 5-2. Hvy. - Rick Boihouse (M) drew Mike Levanti, 2-2. noon news conference called byI club owners Charles W. "Stormy" Bidwill, Jr., and William V. "Bill" Bidwill. Hollway was signed to a three- year contract. Hollway, credited with construc- ting an awesome Minnesota de- fense, spent 15 seasons in the col- lege coaching ranks before join- ing the Vikings in 1967. "We are very pleased to have Authentic been able to acquire a coach of Bob Hollway's stature," Bill Bid- I 'Navy will, Cardinal vice president, said Hollway was not present at the news conference. But he issued a statement saying, "I believe in sound football but also in bold PE CO T football. We will strive for the big play and we will make the big $25 play." The Cardinals fired Winner Sizes 34 to 46 from the head coaching post Jan. 6. They interviewed more than two dozen candidates in their search for a successor. I (1 Hollway, born in Ann Arbor, Mich., played end for the Univer- sity of Michigan from 1947 to 1949, then went on to coach at Maine, Eastern Michigan and State Street at Liberty Michigan. He joined the Vikings' staff in 1967. MARCH 8is International Womens'Day LET'S MAKE PLANS Call CIIare: 662-4431 ext. 336 Leave Message If No One There ->0<->0 OC--G<-50<~>0mDC"">0""">4"">0o NOTICE NON-NATIVE SPEAKERS OF ENGLISH All Speakers of English as a Second Language* Are Invited to Take Part in an Experimental Test of Eng- .. . . R r . . I - - - .,..A i Combine th6 extitsmen+ of internationoI adventure , wth Unls I tiftwolly rewarding exz rienc.: live and work in a Kib- Ibutz; entoy gxtnvv,, ous throughout kroel; lectures and seminars; sun and fun on the Mediterranean seashsore; archoeolog~col idigs; evening ,nfertainment; weknds with roh JI