rly, March 26, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven riday, March 26; 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Brurns, Wildcats triumph Tarheels trample Duke: Yellowjackets roll again By The Associated Press HOUSTON UCLA's nerveless efending national champions de- ur ed Kansas' jittery Jayhawks B-60 in a duel of full-court presses st night behind the playmaking Sidney Wicks and the outside, ooting of Henry Bibby to join illanova in the NCAA finals Sat- day. The All-American 6-foot-8 Wicks,' oially a forward, was given the sk of bringing the ball up court gainst Kansas' 6-foot-10 Dave Ro- isch as the Jayhowks tried to riatch the swarming UCLA press. The strategy by Coach John Vooden, who is seeking his fifth o ncutive NCAA title, worked eretly. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: RANDY PHILLIPS playoff victory for Wooden and his Bruins. The final score wasn't indicative of the thoroughness of the UCLA victory. The Bruins led 68-53 with 1:45 remaining before Wooden emptied the bench. Kansas made numerous floor Shouting "You know what to doirrors against UCLA which was I Soutng 'yo knw wat o d''less than smooth but always kept ,icks worked one-on-one against its poise. obisch until Kansas Coach Ted Curtis.Rowe chipped in 16 points Iwens took the giant Jayhawk cen- to aid Wicks and Bibby in the .er off Wicks late in the game. scoring while Kansas guards Pi- Wicks poured in 21 points to lead erre Russell and Bud Stallworth 11 *orers and the slick-and-quick had 12 each. 3ibby had 18 as UCLA steadily: * * * uilt a 32-25 halftime lead into a Hilltoppers toppled >ulge of as much as 15 points in - he second half. HOUSTON - Howard Porter's Robisch, who was held to 17 clutch-shooting and shot-blocking oints by the UCLA defense, was propelled Villanova's incredible so frustrated that at one point he Wildcats into the NCAA basketball e4d "play ball" as the Bruin finals last night with a pulsating ,emror yelled instructions to his 92-89 double overtime victory over ates. Western Kentucky's Hilltoppers. It was the 27th consecutive NCAA, Regulation play ended in a 74- 74 tie when Western Kentucky's Jerry Dunn missed a free throw with four seconds to play. In the double overtime, Porter_ nailed a jump shot to send ther Wildcats into a quick 89-87 lead{ they never relinquished. P o r t e r then blocked two shots and it was' his free throw with 14 seconds re- maining that iced the victory.x Seventh ranked 'Western K e n- tucky, which came into the contest' with a 23-5 record, lost seven-foot Jim McDaniels on fouls with 2:31 left in the double overtime. The{ All-American McDaniels scored 28 points.- Siemiontkowski, a 6-foot-7, 230 pound junior, kept the 18th-rated Wildcats in the game in regula- tion play. He scored 31 points and was a terror on the boards. Hard-pressed Western forced the Wildcats into numerous turn- overs with a full-court press but the Hilltoppers had just as much trouble with Villanova's' sticky zone. Villanova led by as much as eight points in the second half; but sloppy ball-handling cost the Wildcats the lead.= Western Kentucky shot poorly from the field, hitting only 37.1 = per cent while the Wildcats con-n nected on 49.3 per cent. . The Hilltoppersalso were cold, from the free throw line with 55 per cent of the shots falling while Villanova, now 27-6, hit 64.5 per -Associated Press cent. GEORGIA TECH MUSCLEMAN Rich Yunkus goes up high in an Dunn's strong outside shooting attempt to block a shot by St. Bonaventure's Carl Jackson in NIT kept Villanova's zone from des- action last night. Yunkus popped in 19 points to help give the troying the Hilltoppers. Dunn fin- Yellow Jackets a 76-70 double-overtime victory and advance ishedWith 25 points, while Jim s Rose added 18 for the Hilltoppers. them to the finals tomorrow afternoon. By The Associated Press NEW YORK -North Carolina handcuffed Duke with a high- pressure defense and little George Karl scored 21 points as the Tar Heels scored a 73-67 basketball victory last night to gain the finalsi of the 34th National Invitation' Tournament. The Tar' Heels' defense was tough from the beginning as it shackled Dukes' high-scoring cen- ter Randy Denton and holding their, Atlantic Coast Conference colleagues without a field goal for the first five minutes of the game. North Carolina, 25-6, bolted to a 13-2 lead but Duke, 20-9, came back behind Allen Shore and pull- ed within one point at 19-18 of the first half. Lee Dedmon neu- More Sports, Page 9 tralized 6-foot-10 Denton under the boards and the Tar Heels got another 11-point lead with four minutes remaining. ' Duke then scored six straight points, but North Carolina man- aged 31-26 halftime lead. North Carolina pulled away from a 40-38 lead with a 12-1 scoring binge after a slow 10 minutes in the second half. Karl scored seven of his points on free throws in the last five minutes as North Carolina iced the victory with 17 free throws. Dave Chatwick, Bill Chamber- lain and Dedmon all had 10 points for North Carolina. Richie O'Con- ner had 18 points for Duke. Ionnies bounced NEW YORK-Jim Thorne scored four points in the second over- time period last night to bring Georgia Tech back from almost certain defeat and give the Yellow Jackets a 76-71 basketball victory over St. Bonaventure in the semi- finals of the National Invitation Tournament. The Yellow Jackets will play the title game aaginst North Carolina, which stopped Atlantic Coast Con- ference cohort Duke 73-67 behind George Karl's 21 points in the first game of the doubleheader at Madison Square Garden. St. Bonaventure wiped out a 10- point second-half lead, caught Georgia Tech in regulation, and appeared to have the game won as Paul Hoffman was on the line with two free throws. But the usually fine shooting guard missed both throws while the partisan crowd of 18,812 roar- ed its disappointment. HAVEN'T HEA GOOD LATEL HAVEN'T HEA Here's an innovative speaker s: everyything they could ask f< dispersion of sound. 89% refi The game went into the second overtime period tied at 67-67. With T h 'o r n e scoring four points,, the Yellow Jackets took command with nine straight points before Dale Tepas snapped the spell for the Bonnies. Georgia Tech, 23-8, pulled out from a 29-29 tie at the half on a 10-2 spurt before Tepas led St. Bonaventure, 20-6, to a 59-59 tie with four minutes left. Tepas, scoring nine of his 16 points in the second half, hit a jumper and Hoffman got another field goal to give St. Bonaventure a 67-65 lead with less than a min- ute in regulation time. Rich Yunkus, who scored 19 points for Georgia Tech, tied it on a soft jump shot from the key and set the stage for the over- time periods. Thorne led the Yellow Jackets with 27 points and Bob Murphy added 17. Karl Jackson scored 18 points for St. Bonaventure. t y k -II: PHILAD.-MINN. TIE: Red Wings down Vancouver By The Associated Press The tie moved the Flyers closer, ?DETROIT - Mickey Redmond to a West Division playoff berth. scored his 20th goal of the season The third place North Stars, who with 1:34 to play last night to already have clinched a playoff break Detroit's five-game losing spot got second-period goals from, streak and give the Red Wings a Danny Grant and Jude Drouin. 4-3 victory over the Vancouver The Flyers, fighting with Pitts- Canucks in a National Hockey burgh to nail down fourth place, Leaguergame. fought back from the deficit on a lead early in the second pei'iod power play goal by Jimmy John- when Ted Taylor and Murray Hall son and Larry Hillman later in the scored 23 seconds apart. second period. Red Berenson connected to tie * * * it at 3-3 for the Wings at 3:26 of Cougars claw the third period before Redmond scored the winner. PITTSBURGH - Randy Mahaf- S* * fey sank a foul shot with 3:35 left to give Carolina the lead for go as the Cougars defeated Pittsbur 128-122 Thursday night in an Am ican Basketball Association gam Bob Verga scored 33 points Carolina while George Lehma added 32. John Brisker had 32 the Condors. Floridians click TAMPA, Fla.- The Floridia rallied for 37 points in the thi quarter and snatched fourth pl in the American Basketball Asp ciation Eastern Division with 128-105 victory over Virginia lf night. Flyers, Stars knot PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia Flyers and Minnesota North Stars played to a 2.2 Na- tional Hockey League tie last night. . . Scores NCAA Semifinals Villanova 92, Western Kentucky 89 (2 o.t.) UCLA 68, Kansas 60 NIT Semifinals Georgia Tech. 76, St. Bonaventure 71 (2 ort.) North Carolina 73, Duke 67 JENSEN-World Pioneer of HI Fl Speakers and one of the world's largest is starting their "NEW FACTORY" celebration HI Ft SPEAKER SALE. All cabinet models included. These reductions make these speakers unbeatable values 20% OFF on all Jensens. Five Year Warranty. HI F! STUDIO-121 W. Washington (Downtown across from Old German Restaurant) -Associated Press AUBREY NASH (25), Kansas guard, attempts to pass the ball - to a teammate as three UCLA players, Sidney Wicks (35), for- ward; Steve Patterson (32), center; and Henry Bibby (45), guard; close in on him. The pressing attack of UCLA was effective in downing Kansas 68-60'. MSU takes NCAA lead AUBURN, Ala. (/P) - Washing- 10 s Larry Owings,. top perform- Se nlast year's meet, scored an opening round victory yesterday in the NCAA wrestling champion- ships when he pinned Tim Whit- taker of Kent State in 6:12. 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