Sunday, March 28, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Sunday, March 28, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven UCLA slowdown overcomes Villan ova By The Associated Press HOUSTON - UCLA's hard- pressed Bruins finally subdued Villanova's scrappy "Iron Men" 2 yesterday with a deep- freeze and the career-high point production of senior Steve Patter- son to extend their NCAA basket- ball championship dynasty to an unprecedented f i v e consecutive' titles. The Bruins, who have now won seven out of the last eight NCAA championships and 28 consecutive playoff games, had to go into a stall to get the Wildcats out of their tight zone defense. Only Patterson, a 6-foot-9 cen- ter, and guard Henry Bibby were effective shooting from the out- side against Villanova, the Eastern champions. Patterson scored 29 points, 20 in the first half, and Bibby got 17. High-scoring Sidney Wicks was held to seven points under the close guarding of Villanova's 06-foot-8 Howard Porter. UCLA Basketball Coach J o h n Wooden said his strategy in play- ing a slowdown game against Vil- lanova in the NCAA championship Five in a row VILLANOVA 04r Atrktgan Bally SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: SANDI GENIS AND ELLIOT LEGOW Tar Heels wrec to capture NITl a 1 kc Tech game almost backfired "but that's the chance you take when you try that." But the strategy worked as the awesome Bruins zoomed to their seventh NCAA championship in eight years, including five straight. "I didn't think they could beat us man-to-man," Wooden said. "We w e n t to the slowdown to; bring them out of their zone de- fense and it worked. Yes, it did hurt our momentum but that's a gamble you have to take. Porter scored 15 for the Wild- cats and Hank Siemintkowski add- ed 19. UCLA went into a stall four minutes from the end of the first half and left the floor with a 45- 37 lead. Villanova went five minutes without scoring as UCLA built up a 12-point lead. Coach Jack Kraft then called timeout and put the Wildcats in a man-to-man defense but the damage was done. A fast-closing surge spearhead- ed by Porter brought Villanova within four points with 1:10 left but a goal-tending call on Patter- son layup gave UCLA a safe 66-60 lead with 38 seconds to go. UCLA, under Coach John Wood- en, was booed heavily for its tac- tics. Porter taunted Wicks, saying "You all sick? Play ball. You're No. 1. Hah?" But UCLA, as is the custom un- Smith Porter Smnski Ingsby Ford McDell Fox Rowe Wicks Patrsn Bibby Booker Sefield Betley g 4 10 9 3 0 0 26 f 1-1 5-6 -12 1-1 2-3 0-0 0-0 10-13 t 25 19 7 2 0 0 62 Totals UCLA 2 4-5 8 3 1-1 7 13 3-5 29 6 5-5 17 0 0-0 0 3 0-0 0 0 1-2 1 Totals 27 14-18 68 37 25--62 45 23-68 UCLA 9, Villanoya none. Villanova UCLA Total fouls - 14, Fouled out- der Wooden, kept its poise, par- ticularly when Porter went on a scoring surge in the closing mo- ments. Bibby's two free throws with three seconds left in the game, putting the icing on it for UCLA, which finished the year 29-1. UCLA shot 55.1 per cent from the field and a sizzling 66.7 per cent in the second half. Villanova, which was guilty of only 10 turnovers against the Howard Porter, 6-foot-8 Villa- nova forward, was named the most valuable player in the NCAA basketball champion- ships. Joining him on the all-tour- nament team were Hank Sie- miontkowski of Villanova, Steve Patterson and Sidney Wicks of UCLA, and Jim McDaniels of Western Kentucky. UCLA press, shot 41.9 per cent from the field. UCLA had a narrow 29-27 re- bound edge with Wicks hauling down nine and Curtis Rowe and Patterson eight each. Porter captured eight rebounds for the Wildcats. Patterson connected on 13 of 18 shots from the field - including some soaring 25-footers over the Villanova zone. He hit three of five free throws. A crowd of 31,765 watched the nationally televised contest in the Astrodome, a record for an NCAA championship final. Toppers top Hawks HOUSTON - Jerry Dunn's pair of free throws with 12 seconds left gave Western Kentucky a 77-75 victory o v e r Kansas yes- terday in a rugged NCAA basket- ball championship consolation game. Dunn was the goat of Thursday night's 92-89 double overtime loss to Villanova when he missed a free throw with four seconds to play. That would have g i v e n Western Kentucky the victory in regulation play. Jim McDaniels, Western Ken- tucky's 7-foot center ,poured in 36 points to keep the Hilltoppers in the contest which had numerous turnovers. McDaniels canned a 20-foot baseline jump shot with 36 sec- onds left to play to break a 73- all tie and then raced downcourt to block a Jayhawk shot to set up Dunn's clinching free throws. Dave Robisch, Kansas' 6-foot- 10 center, scored on a short jump- er with one second left. Kansas guard Aubrey Nash stole the in- bounds pass but his desperation shot found only the backboard. Robisch was high man for the Jayhawks with 23 points followed by Roger Brown with 16 and Nash with 11. The third-place victory helped Western Kentucky to a 24-6 final season record. McDaniels, who sat out part of the first half when he got into foul trouble, gathered in 19 re- bounds. Roger Brown had 16 for Kansas. By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Bill Cham- berlain walloped Georgia Tech with 18 points in a nine minute second half span and North Caro- lina charged by the Yellow Jackets 84-66'yesterday to win the 34th Na- tional Invitation Basketball Tour- nament. Chamberlain, who points, poured it on gia Tech threatened midway through the North Carolina lef totaled 341 when Geor- to catch up second half. 52-45 before --Associated Press STEVE PATTERSON of UCLA scrambles for a loose ball in yes- terday's NCAA championship game. The three Villanova players sandwiching Patterson in are Chris Ford (42), Tom Ingelsby (24), and Clarence Smith (44). SWEEP TWO Ruggers bomb Detroit More sports page nine Chamberlain spearheaded a fast break with seven straight points that boosted the advantage to 59- 47. Rich Yunkus made it interesting by scoring five points that brought the Yellow Jackets to within 61-57 with seven minutes left. But Cham- berlain again broke loose, this time ripping off seven of North Carolina's next 10 points to give the Tar Heels a safe 71-59 lead with five minutes to go. Despite scoring eight straight points and holding the Yellow Jac- kets without a field goal in the first 21/2 minutes, North Carolina was unable to take command at the start of the nationally-tele- vised game. Big Tommie Wilson put in eight points in a row and Bob Murphy also hit eight in separate first half stretches to keep Georgia Tech neck-and neck with the ,Tar Heels, five point favorites. The high scoring Yunkus, play- ing a sub par game with an injured left wrist, managed only five noints in the first half, but brought Geor- gia Tech even at 25 with a jump' shot. The Tar Heels pulled away 38-34 behind Chamberlain and Dave Chadwick, who combined for six points in an 8-0 spurt. Each scored 11 points in the first half. A field goal by Murphy and two foul shots propelled Georgia Tech into a tie again at 38-all before the Tar Heels ran off a six point binge and grabbed a 33-40 halftime lead. VA .-Y North Carolina charged away at the start of the second half, scor- ing seven points while its tough defense held Georgia Tech without a point for 3%V2 minutes. Jim Thorne 'scored four points and George Small added a foul shot to bring Georgia Tech back to 52-45 before Chamberlain took over. Chamberlain was voted the tcur- nament's most Valuable Player as North Carolina wiped out years of frustration for Atlantic Coast con- ference teams, who had never got- ten past the quarter-finals in this prestigious tournament. Bonnies club Duke NEW YORK - Hothanded Greg Gary led a St. Bonaventure comeback, scoring four crucial points in regulation play and eight in overtime, as the Bonnies beat Duke 92-88 yesterday to nail down third place in the National Invi- tation Basketball Tournament. Gary's four points in the last two Musket '72 By CHUCK DRUKIS The Michigan Ruggers yester- day rolled to two easy victories over the Detroit Cobras, in their only games this spring. Behind an aggressive offense and a slovenly defense the Mich- igan Gold fought to a 17-3 tri- umph. Urged on by a sideline banner - "Go Smitty - your harem" - Ron Smith scored a try in the first minute of play. A few min- utes later, Bob "Mad Dog" Red fell on a loose ball inside the Detroit goal for another try. Michigan continually kept De- troit boxed in, forcing numerous kicks from the endzone. The Rug- gers broke one such kick as Tom Webster scored on heads-up pass from Terry Larrimer. Chris Pen- noyer converted after the try. Just before the close of the half, Pennoyer spurted ten yards for another score, making the half- time score 14-0. Despite poor field position, Michigan managed one try by Webster, his second on the game, Randall Pert scored for the Cob- ras in the closing seconds of the crown minutes of regulation time pulled the Bonnies into a 78-78 tie after they were down by 18 points In the first half. The sharp-shooting forward then scored three of his overtime points as the Bonnies surged to an 83-78 lead and never fell behind again. Gary finished with 20 points. Duke threatened to run away with the game, building a 29-11 lead behind Richie O'Connor's blazing first half. The sophomore forward scored 22 points in the half as Duke led 45-32 at intermis- sion. Carl Jackson started St. Bona- venture back at the start of the second half, scoring the first two field goals as the Bonnies went on an 11-2 rally to climb within 47-43. Duke grabbed another big lead at 68-58 midway through the half with O'Connor scoring six points, but the Bonnies came back again with Matt Gantt showing the way to get within 73-70. game with a free kick, to make the final score 17-3. The Michigan Blue had an eas- ier time in their game as they ran away with a 28-0 victory. Peter Hendrixson, Vern Plato, and Bob Merkin scored tries while Steve Chapman made one out of three conversions to give the Blue an 11-0 halftime lead. In the second half, the De- troit B team hardly even saw the ball. Tom Woods, Dean Daggett, and Jim Genova scored a t r y apiece while Chuck Holt added two, and Chapman made another conversion. APPLICATIONS are now available for the Position of DIRECTOR Applications available at the UAC offices, 2nd floor, Union Due by 5:00 P.M. Tuesday, March 30 71111 BILL JACOBS Responsible Alternative Party r r- -Associated Press HOWARD PORTER, Villanova's All-American forward l e a p s high in the air and appears to be kicking the ball in yester- day's Wildcat 1o s s to UCLA. Porter had a great day for him- self, scoring 25 points but could not stop the Bruins express sin- gle-handed. UCLA rolled on to its fifth consecutive NCAA title in less than impressive style ov- er Villanova 68-62. New Factory CELEBRATION 20% off on all JENSEN Speakers HI FI STUDIO 121 W. Washington --.- --, WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME? Greene's way makes agingchm JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes you won't wear until fall-Clothes you would ordi- narily pack up, take home, have cleaned, pack up again and bring back in the fall. NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper Beautiful Imported and Domestic LEATHER. 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