Wednesday, March 31, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Nine Wednesday, March 31, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4Pnn . 1NI ll I F, Bulls By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Bob Love, scoring 17 of his total 36 points in the final period, lifted the Chicago Bulls to a 112-102 victory over Los Angeles last night to tie their Na- tional Basketball Association Western Conference semi-final series at two games each. The best-of-seven series moves to Los Angeles Thursday night and then returned to Chicago Sun- day afternoon for game No. 6. Trailing 83-78 going into the' final quarter, the Bulls caught fire with Love leading the way, They went past the Lakers on a three-point play by Bobby Weiss 87-85 with 9:35 to play and then rolled on. Witt the Bulls leading 93-89 Love scored 11 straight Chicago points to make it 104-93 and clinch the contest. Hawks humbled ATLANTA - Willis Reed and Dick Barnett combined on five straight free throws to break a 101-101 deadlock last night and send the New York Knicks to a 113-107 victory and a 3-1 lead over beat daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JOEL GREER I Atlanta in the National Basket- ball Association Eastern Confer- ence semifinal playoffs. The Knicks, defending w o r 1 d champions, can end the best-of- seven series Thursday night in New York. Reed's free throw with 4:10 re- maining gave New York a 102-101 lead which Atlanta never over- came. Barnett added two free throws with 3:13 left and another pair with 2:47 remaining before Reed's tip-in 40asecond later made it 108-101 and iced it for N ew York. Bullets bounce PHILADELPHIA - The Balti- lakers, more Bullets, despite muscle mand- Wes Unseld sitting out most of the second half in foul trouble, routed the Philadelphia 76ers 120-105 Tuesday night to take a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven- game National aBsketball Assoc- iation Conference semifinal play- off serise. Earl "The Pearl" Monroe scored nine points in the last 1:46 of the second period in an 11-4 rally which enabled the Bullets to gain a halftime tie at 62-62. * * * Warriors withered MADISON, Wis. - Two crucial San Francisco turnovers late in the game helped the Milwaukee Bucks grab a 114-102 National Basketball Association playoff vic- tory over the Warriors last night. Milwaukee now leads the best- of-7 Western Conference semi- final 3-0. The Bucks frittered away a 16- point lead as San Francisco surg- ed to within one point, 94-93. The two teams matched two pointers before the Warriors' Nate Thur- mond came up with a rebound off the Bucks' basket. Thurmond's pass, intended to start a fast break, instead went to Milwaukee guard Lucius A 1- len. Moments later, Joe Ellis stole the ball, only to have Warrior teammate Jeff Mullins apparently lose the lob pass in the lights. Mil- waukee converted both turnovers into points and pulled away from a 96-95 advantage to the f i n a l margin. f even series Rockets, Haywood settle suit; Boryla fights for McDaniels By The Associated Press The Denver Rockets of the American Basketball Association and their former superstar, Spen- cer Haywood, settled their breach of contract lawsuit yesterday. A federal jury trying the case was dismissed. Ending litigation that began last, November, the settlement frees Haywood of all contractual obligations to the Rockets and the ex-University of Detroit star will continue to play for the. Seattle SuperSonics of the rival National Basketball Association, with whom he signed a contract last Decem- ber, Elsewhere, Villanova's 6-foot-8 Howard Porter, most valuable player in the recent NCAA cham- pionship tournament, vehemently denied he had signed to p 1 a y with the Pittsburgh Condors of the American Basketball Associa- tion. And in Utah, seething Vince Boryla, general manager of t h e Utah Stars, vowed yesterday to re- tain American Basketball Associa- tion draft rights to All-American Jim McDaniels "no matter what it takes." McDaniels, 7-foot Western Ken- tucky star, was drafted No. 1 by the Stars two weeks ago and was drafted in the second round by Seattle o fthe National Basketball Association. The signing only inflamed a squabble between Carolina and the Utah Stars of the ABA. Utah draft- ed McDaniels in the ABA's college draft in January., McDaniels, however, reportedly said he would not play in Utah. Howevr, the Stars had not relin- quished any rights to him. In New York, ABA commissioner. Jack Dolph commented on the con- fused situation. "Carolina's action is unilateral and has not been approved by the trustees of the ABA nor by me," he said. "If and when the Cougars submit McDaniel's contract I will not approve it." Returning to Porter, the Con- dors announced Monday they had acquired Porter's contract from the ABA. They would not say when it had been signed. This immed- iately revived the report of 1 a s t January that the Villanova star had inked a three-year $350,000 ABA pact. If Porter signed with the ABA last Dec. 16, as has been report- ed, Villanova's season would be of- ficially rubbed out. The Wildcats would have used an ineligible player. The NCAA would have no choice but to -take away NCAA runnerup honors. Villanova 1 o s t to UCLA in the tournament final Saturday. Porter says he hasn't signed anything with anybody. "I haven't talked to them (Con- dors) and I'm not going to talk to anyone for a while," said Por- ter. "I'm tired after a hard tour- nament. ' If the money is there now it will be there later." The Stars' ABA rival, the Car- olina Cougars, announced yester- day that McDaniels had signed a multi-year personal services con- tract with them. Boryla, a former NBA player, said other ABA owners had asked him to let Carolina have McDan- iels for the good of the league. But Boryla, slamming his fist on a table at a sportswriters' luncheon, declared: "He can do public relations or anything else for Carolina, but he will not play basketball for them." Asked if he is planning a suit with Stars' owner Bill Daniels, Borryla reiterated, "We will take whatever steps necessary." Haywood's attorney, Morris Pfaelzer, and Frederick P. Firth, Denver's attorney, confirmed set- tlement of the suit. Last week the NBA dropped its action against Haywood and the SuperSonics but levied a $200,000 fine against the Sonics for sign- ing the player in violation if its four-year rule-one that prohibits an NBA club from signing a play- er before his college class has graduated. The attorneys would not di- vulge details of the settlement and U.S. District Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, before whom the case was being tried, dismissed the jury, TERRIBLE SCRIMMAGE: Grid offense weak By JOHN PAPANEK sent for X-rays, and according to "Terrible, terrible scrimmage," assistant trainer Mike Willie, it was the way football coach Bo Schembechler described the Wol- verines' performance yesterday. They ran offense against defense for about an hour, working only on third down situations. The offense managed to con- vert only about one out of every five third down plays, mostly on the running of Alan Cowboy1 Walker, and a few passes from Kevin Casey. "We have a lousy offense," Schembechler said afterward, but he hardly sounded convincing. "We're going to have to run the ball every play." But Bo's soft voice and hidden smile belied the, meaning of his words, then he{ added as an aftermath, "We have a real good defense, though." Some of Bo's early problems are beginning to iron themselves out. The most prominent one is his search for a quarterback. Casey has been running the first offense for a few days and he appears to be the front-runner, though Sch- embechler quickly denies it. He passed well yesterday, hit- ting tight end Paul Seymour and wingback Glenn -Doughty for first downs on a few occasions. The pre-season favorite for the job, Larry Cipa, went in with the second offense, fumbled on his first play, and spent the rest of, the afternoon on the sidelines. The only real upsetting moment yesterday came about halfway through the scrimmage when tac- kle Fred Grambau came off the field holding his thumb. He was appeared to be "a slight disloca- tion or possible fracture." Another talent search which Schembechler has been carrying on is to replace the shoes of de- parted defensive middle guard Henry Hill, and he may have found the man. Contrasting the image of the small but tough Hill, Bo has coA- verted a giant fullback to fill the defensive slot. He is 6-2, 227-pound sophomore Bob Thornbladh. With returnee Fritz Seyferth and 6-2, 241-pound sophomore Ed Shut- tlesworth battling for the fullback slot, Bo found another use for Thornbladh. "We put him there because we need him on defense," Bo said. "It's as simple as that." Schembechler h a s abandoned another experiment which had sophomore Harry Banks working out in the defensive backfield. "We decided to give him his chance on offense," Schembechler said. Banks is one of the quickest men on the team. A contributing reason to moving Banks back to offense has. been the defensive play, of converted wingback Randy Logan. "Logan is doing a real good job on defense and we intend to leave him there," Bo said. Meanwhile, if Casey proves to be a quality quarterback, Billy Taylor makes it back from his knee operation, and the defense gets by without any major in- juries, everything could be nicea and rosey come September. --Day-Terry VMc.arthy MICHIGAN'S MIKE SALE performs on the rings in one of the season's earlier meets. Sale is one of several gymnasts who will be competing both individually and for his team during the NCAA Championships which are being held at Crisler Arena Thursday, Friday and Saturday. __ AT CRISLER: Gymnasts. ready for NCAA's By BETSY MAHON For the past several months Crisler Arena has resounded each afternoon with the sounds of basket- balls being dribbled and the noise of a team sport. All this is in strik- ing contrast to the tranquility that proceeds the opening of the NCAA Gymnastics Championships which begin there on Thursday. It's not that gymnasts take it easy during practice; they just do things dif- ferently. Teams from as far away as Penn State and New Mexico have been arriving in Ann Arbor all week and working out on the equip- ment which has replaced the bas- ketball court markings on the floor. For the most partthe gymnasts are just testing out the unfamiliar equipment and going through some basic routines. Some squads, like the Wolver- ines, have had a three week layoff since their last competition while others, California, for example, only qualified for the NCAA's over the past weekend. Different Michi- gan gymnasts used their vacation in a variety of ways. "I took the first week off," explained Michi- gan co-captain and high bar spe- cialist Ed Howard. "Then I spent most of my time on tricks and worked on style more than any- thing else." "I haven't done anything dif- ferently," said three time Big Ten All - Around Champion Rick Mc- Curdy. "I just tried to improve on the rough spots in my compul- sories." As many as three or fou:' teams practice at one time at Crisler but the arena looks more like the scene of a reunion than a field of com- petition. There are two prime rea- sons for this, the first being that many of the competitors are per- sonal friends., They met in high school, while' being recruited, at various gymnastics camps around the country, at previous meets and, in the case of several of the all- rounders, on the World Games Team. Many feel that an important part of the meet is getting ac- quainted or re-acquainted with other gymnasts and watching them perform. The second factor is that gym- nastics, by its very nature, is not a highly competitive sport. Iowa State star Brent Simmons summed up the situation, "I'm not really competitive at practice but when the competition starts it's strictly that. I don't actually try to beat someone. That way you just end up beating yourself." Howard concurred, "Other peo- ple may feel a sense of competition but I feel tension more than any- thing else. I'm getting pretty ex- cited now." This seeming absence of rivalry does not mean a lack of enthu- siasm and the coaches have no problems getting their squads up for the championships. Iowa State Coach Ed Gagnier explained, "I didn't have to do very much. They are all super-excited already." He added a word of praise for Mich- igan Coach Newt Loken, "Newt always has his team up for com- petition like this." Loken said, L Tigers gain Chance, lose Robertson; Red Sox acquire Duane Josephson By The Associated Press Dean Chance apparently didn't impress the New York, Mats this spring - and that may turn out to be good news for the Detroit Tig- ers. The Tigers acquired the one- time 20-game winner from the Mets yesterday along with pitch- er Bill Denehy in exchange for Jerry Robertson and an unspec- ified amount of money. Meanwhile, the Boston R e d Sox, determined to make a solid bid for the American League pen- 4 nant, acquired hard-hitting cat- cher Duane Josephson from t h e Chicago White Sox yesterday and promptly announced they are not through wheeling and dealing. The Chance deal was the second trade in two days by Detroit, whlch wasted little time in bolstering its injury plagued and otherwise faltering pitching staff. The Tig- ers traded rookie infielder Mike Adams and a minor leaguer to be named later to Minnesota Mon- day for pitcher Bill Zepp. "Chance has been throwing pretty good," said one-time Tiger Manager Jack Tighe, now a sup- erscout with the organization. "He's not throwing great. 1 he was, we wouldn't have gk tten him." Chance, former Cy Young Award winner while with the Los SALE ON KLH PRODUCTS AT HI FI STUDIO 121 W. WASHINGTON Angeles Angels in 1964, also is a one-time Minnesota player. He had a 20-14 record for the Twirs in 1967. After a 16-16 record in 1968 he had arm trouble and had only a 5-4 record the next season. The Mets bought him from Cleveland last September for $150,000 after the 29-year-old righthander had a 9-8 record with the Indians. He was 0-1 with New York. In 16%/3 innings this spring Chance. gave up 10 runs and 17 hits and had a 5.63 earned-run- average. Zepp will stay in Florida when the Tigers head North Saturday: They open the season Tuesday at home against Cleveland. Zepp, a native Detroiter who had asked to be traded to the Tigers, is a 24-year-old righthander who had a 9-4 record as a rookie with the Twins last year. "We've got something else in the works," Boston player personnel director Haywood Sullivan said in announcing the acquisition of Josephson. About an hour earlier, the Red Sox sent 1967 Cy Young A w a r d winner Jim Lonborg and reserve outfielder Jarvis Tatum on op- re-elect SCOTT-Pres. elect VASQUEZ-V. P. endorsed by BSU and CHICANOS tion to Louisville of the Inter- national League. The Red Sox obtained the 28- year-old Josephson and relief pit- cher Danny Murphy in exchange for veteran reliever Vicente Rom6 and first baseman Tony Muser, a 23-year-old prospect shipped to Louisville Monday. "Josephson will be our starting catcher on opening day in Boston next Tuesday," Boston Manager Eddie Kasko said. "We'll work him into the line- up immediately, and I'm going to try to catch him regularly. I know he hit the hell out of us last year." Vote RAP* BILL JACOBS SHIRLEY NICKOVICH JACK WHYTE I I I Back Michigan's Gymnasts ' Responsible Alternative Party WOLVERINE DEN 1201 S. Univ. open 24 hours I In the 1971 NCAA * THURSDAY * FRIDAY * SATURDAY Champions from nine conferences and Championships APRIL 1 - 2 - 3 at CRISLER ARENA H URSDAY- Additionally, 40 other teams will send -Compulsory Routines their top performers after the individual -FRIDAY--- titles. It's three dasnof actin. 11 SPAGHETTI-all you can eat for $1.25 -with meat balls-$1.50 il I --T 12:30 p.m.- -- .tea' a a - - a - a L _. U ,.. . . . V.:.1 I 1 I