Wednesday, December 2, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven' I Wednsda, Deembr 2,197 THEMICIGANDAIY Pae SveI Carr leads Irish past -AV[ cagers, the upper deck . v4.".v .... . 4{. ''.. K.A:h..:i It was only an opener, hopefully By MORT NOVECK FIFTH RANKED Notre Dame defeated the unproven but highly touted Michigan basketball team last night. But the Irish hardly looked like the fifth best team in the nation, and hopefully, the Wolverines didn't perform as they will once they reach their peak. Both teams committed numer- ous errors in the contest, 16 for Michigan and 2, for Notre Dame, and both coaches were quick to point out that this was the first game of the season for both squads. "It was obviously our opening game," Notre Dame men- tor Johnny Dee commented. "Neither team played exception- ally well. We just happened to win, but we've been lucky on the road." Michigan coach Johnny Orr also acknowledged that his team didn't play up to potential because of a lack of seasoning. Hemade mention of the fact that "our team is a young team." Michigan started two seniors, a junior and two sophomores while Notre Dame was able to go with four seniors and a junior. However, while both teams played sloppily throughout the i game, Notre Dame was able to overcome some of its first half mistakes and run away With what had been a close game for the first 27 minutes of play. According to Orr, "We played a hell of a game for the first27 minutes, but even though they made mistakes, Notre Dame didn't lose their poise in the second half and some of our players got worn down." Dee also attributed the victory to the fact that his team was able to overcome its mistakes. "This is a real team. There's a lot of togetherness. We weren't worried that we were down at the half, but we talked about the mistakes in the first half and went out and corrected them." Collis Jones, who finished the game with 30 points and 12 rebounds, echoed his coach's feelings. "We weren't pressured at the half. We knew what we had to do to win and we did it. Even though we played badly inthefirsthalf we thought we could beat Michigan." He also reiterated the point that though the Irish won, they weren't really pleased with their performance. "We were a little tired. We never really got our running game going and we missed a lot of short shots." Austin Carr, heralded by many as the best player in college ball this season, combined with Jones to dismember the Wol- verines in the second half. He contributed 38 points and 13 rebounds to the effort, but he too was far from elated over his performance. "I wasn't up to par. It was our first game and we had some lapses. We just have to concentrate more. We weren't going to the boards that well either." Though he did score 38 points, Carr only hit on 35% of his shots from the floor. It took him 43 attempts to sink 15 field goals. However, excepting Jones, who hit for 57% neither team shot that well. The Irish wound up hitting on 43.5% from the court. But the Wolverines were even colder, as they sunk only 37.9% of their attempts. In the first half they were even worse, with a 32% average. Orr acknowledged this, stating that, "We were leading at the half, even with our poor shooting. If we had hit we really would have had them, We just missed so many easy shots." Not that the Wolverines were all bad, however. Rodney Ford hit for 53% and 17 points while guarding Carr, a difficult enough assignment in itself. "Ford did a fine job," Orr com- mented, "but you can do a good job on Carr and he'll still score 40 points." Captain Dan Fife also had a fine performance, over- shadowing Carr on defense. He stole the ball outright on numerous occasions and forced other turnovers while sink- ing 19 points on offense. With all the miscues the game didn't really prove that much, but as Dee said after the contest, "We'll improve and I expect to see Michigan improve with every match." By AL SHACKELFORD Austin Carr and Collis Jones put the Michigan Wolverines through a combined 68-point meatgrinder last night as Notre Dame raced to a 94-81 win. The Wolverines played a fine game and held a 43-39 edge at the half, then seemed to tire in the second half in the face of a constantdbarrage by Carr and Jones. Notre Dame jumped to a 9-4 lead early in the game, but Michi- gan shook off a series of early mistakes to force a 10-10 dead- lock on a jumper from the top of the key by Wayne Grabiec. After netting four of his team's first ten points Grabiec hit a slump and was able to score only one more in the game. Consistent scoring by Michigan captain Dan Fife and 6-9 pivot man Ken Brady kept the Wolver- ines on even terms with the Irish for most of the first half. Brady, who finished the game with 20 points and 15 rebounds, dominated the boards and Fife hawked the ball all over the court, netting a number of steals and forcing the Irish guards into mistakes. Jones, who hit his first six shots from the floor, and Carr canned 15 and 18 points in the first half. Austin moved smoothly around his picks to pick up countless open shots from 12-18 feet out. A fine defensive job by 6-4 Michigan for- ward Rod Ford forced Carr into a few turnovers, however, and the Notre Dame ace suffered an un- characteristic fate of having four of his shots stuffed by Ford. Jones, hitting on what Michi- gan mentor Johnny Orr later termed "bad shots," worked off Wolverine soph star Henry Wil- more to pick up basket after bas- ket from the left side. With the score still tight at 37- 36 Michigan near the end of the first half, the Wolverines broke away for three quick buckets to open up a 43-37 advantage. Jones hit a hook for Notre Dame with 1:34 remaining to cut the gap to 43-39 at the half. In retrospect, the key play in the first half might have come with 2:08 to go when Wilmore picked up his third foul. His exit romthe game took a large chunk ofMichigan's offensive potential off the court and was to hurt the Wolverines in the second half. Brady hit the right note as the second half opened with a bucket from in close with only 19 sec- onds gone, but Notre Dame surged Sbackat the tiringhWolverines as Jones and Carr hit again and again. Michigan fought back gamely behind some spectacular shooting by Rod Ford, but a surge by Carr lofted the Irish into a 68-60 lead and Michigan just couldn't catch up. Notre Dame, the nation's five- ranked team, seemed rusty in the first half and turned in an over- all sub-par effort.rCarr's perform- ance was indicative of the team's as a whole, as the 6-3 All-Ameri- can cashed in on only 15 of 43 field goal attempts and was guilty of five turnovers. Carr led the Irish with 38 points and added 13 rebounds. Jones supported Carr's starring act admirably with 30 points and 12 rebounds. Once beyond Carr and Jones, Notre Dame's individ- ual scoring drooped to Jackie Mee- han with 10 points. Dan Fife was the most impres- sive Wolverine and rivalled Carr as the outstanding player on the floor. Fife scored 19 points, picked off seven rebounds, added seven assists, and swiped the ball again and again; in short, Fife did everything but sweep the floor after the game. Brady, playing his first college game after sitting out a year due to scholastic ineligibility, was tough in the middle and com- pletely outclassed the Irish big men. But he "semeed to tire" in the second half, according to Orr, and finished with only 7 of 20 from the floor. The third Wolverine in double figures was Ford with 17 points. )4-8 He also picked up nine rebounds and turned in a fine defensive job on Carr for the second straight year. Ford held Carr to 37 points in last year's 87-86 Wolverine loss at South Bend. Orr labeled Michigan's p o o r shooting (only 35 for 93 from the floor) and Wilmore's lack of play- ing time as the main reasons for his squad's defeat, but added that Ihe was "very proud of the team's effort." Wilmore didn't play up to his potential supersoph form, but was hampered by fouls and a small cut over his left eye which he sus- tained in the first half. He fin- ished with eight points. Michigan will get out of the frying pan into the fire Saturday when they journey to Lexington to do battle with the latest version of Adolph Rupp's Kentucky Wild- cats. Kentucky is the third-ranked squad in the country according to pre-season polls. Carr, Irish truck to victory Wilmore Ford Brady Grabiec , Fife Johnson Lockard Hayward Hart Team MICHIGAN fg ft7 3-6 2-3 8-15 1-2 7-20 6-13 3-14 0-1 9-21 1-2 1-8 0-1 0-1 0-0 2-5 1-1 2-3 0-0 reb 2 9 15 2 7 11 0 0 1 10 f 5 2 1 3 4 2 1 2 1 tp 8 17 20 6 19 2 0 5 4 N Gemmell Jones Pleick Meehan Carr Catlett Sinnott Regelean Team TOTALS Notre Dame MICHIGAN OTREI fg 0-6 12-21 2-3 3-4 15-43 3-4 2-4 0-0 37-85 DAME ft reb 1-4 6 6-21 12 1-3 6 4-4 2 8-8 13 0-0 8 4-1 3 0-0 0 8 20-30 58 39 43 f Q 4 5 4 1 4 0 tp 1 30 5 10 38 6 4 0 19 94 55-94 38-81 TOTALS 35-93 11-23 57 21 81 Attendance 10,489 -Daily-Denny Gainer AUSTIN CARR (34) of Notre Dame shoots over Wayne Gabriec (40) in last night's victory over the Wolverines. Collis Jones (42) and Sid Catlett (43) of Notre Dame and Michigan's Henry Wilmore (25) wait under the basket for a possible rebound. Carr, an All-Ameria, scored 38 points in leading the Fighting Irish to victory in the season opener for both clubs. WEAVER HITS 3 Fresh men blow debut By JOHN PAPANEK It was as if the Notre Dame freshmen decided to give the Baby Blue a head start. The game last night had not. evenhstarted and Michigan led 1-0. But the handi- cap was not nearly enough as the young Fighting Irish went on to obliterate the Wolverine frosh,' 103-83. Michigan got the early point as a result of a Notre Dame violation of a controversial new rule pro- hibiting dunking in pre-game warmup. John Bridges hit on the t e c h i n ca r~foul shot before the opening jump.' For the first 15 minutes it was really a game. The Baby Blue, de- spite being sorely outsized, rolled along on the hot shooting hands of John Bridges and Jim Taorm- ina, both 6-3, and 6-2 Dave Clan- cy. Michigan led for the last time when Bridges' 18-foot jumper fell through to make the score 17-16. They kept the score close, and$ SPORT'S NIGHT EDITOR: BOB ANDREWS Jacksonville explodes, 132-88, as Gilmore pumps in 50 points with five minutes remaining in the half they trailed by just 35-30. But the sleeping giants of Notre Dame awoke, and began a frantic scoring spree from which the Baby Blue would never recover. Led by their 6-8 center John Shumate, Notre Dame reeled off nine straight points. With Notre Dame leading by 22 with just 53 seconds left in the half, Michigan's Mike Weaver and John Lonchar combined for six quick points and brought the Blue to within a respectable 16-point margin. I"We were going real well until we hit that spot in the last five' minutes," recalled Dick Honig after his coaching debut. "We had to have the hot shooting, since we couldn't compete inside with our size." The brightest spot for the Wol- verines was the performance of Weaver, a 5-11 guard. He did not start because of disciplinary rea- sons, but was brought into the game early in the first half. He hit on his first shot, a high, arch- ing 28-footer, and then went on to become the game's high scorer with 33 points. In the second half, the best the Baby Blue could do was pull back to within 10, on a 20-foot jumper by Lonchar with 17 minutes left. But a steal and a layup by 6-6 Chris Stevens and a 15-footer by Bob Valibus opened the gap once again. Shumate and 6-7 forward Gary Novak handled the brunt of the scoring and savagely dominated the backboards for Notre Dame.' Shumate tossed in 32 points, mostly on inside layups and tip- ins, while pulling down 18 re- bounds. Novak, who according to Honig "was a man we wanted to get very badly," showed an array of medium range hooks and jump shots, as well as an intimidating game under the boards on the way to picking up 26 points and collecting 14 rebounds. Bridges and Taormina were the only other Michigan players to score in double figures, with 18 Iand 11, respectively. Whitten, who Honig says "fought a tough but losing battle" against Shumate, did manage to gather 13 rebounds though he scored only four points. Honig was disappointed, but he said, "I realized the physical mis- matches out there. I really think we should have won, but we hit that cold spot and just couldn't shake it." Michigan's lack of big men on the freshman team doesn't con- cern Honig terribly much. "Just look at our varsity," he said, "we have four or five big sophomores. We went just for guards this year." That being the case, the Baby Blue better get their hot shooting hands ready, because there is not going to be much breathing room against all those Big Ten giants. KENTUCKY SCARED: Indiana, Badgers post victories -Daily-Denny Gainer Brady (15)_lays one in By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Soph- omore George McGinnis scored 26 points and led Indiana University to a season-opening 99-82 basket- ball victory over Eastern Michigan here last night. The Hoosiers took an early lead and never trailed after going in front 14-13 on a tip-in by McGin- nis. By The Associated Press JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Tow- ering Artis Gilmore led the fourth-ranked Jacksonville D o 1 - phins to a 132-88 season-opening college basketball victory over lit- tle Biscayne College last night. Jacksonville, with two new starters, was ragged in the first half, but the 7-foot-2 Gilmore pumped in 50 points and was the same effective giant who led the Dolphins from oblivion into the runner-up spot to national cham- pion UCLA last season. He also grabbed 29 rebounds and blocked 11 shots. Gilmore's 7-foot partner, Pem- brook Burros, hit 23 points. Jim McCloud led Biscayne with 22 points. . i k Aparicio dealt for Andrews; Texas crippled for Hog tilt 1 i k By The Associated Press ! LOS ANGELES-The Boston Red Sox acquired veteran short- stop Luis Aparicio in a three-player trade with the Chicago White Sox yesterday in the first transaction involving a major name at the annual baseball meetings. Aparicio, a 15-year veteran, moves to Boston in exchange for second baseman Mike Andrews and shortstop Luis Alvarado. In another trade, the New York Mets sent veteran relief pitcher Ron Herbel to the Atlanta Braves for utility infielder Bob Aspromonte. The Baltimore Orioles traded pitcher Tom Phoebus and three minor league prospects to the San Diego Padres for pitchers Pat Dobson and Tom Dukes. 0 AUSTIN, Tex.-The top-ranked Texas Longhorns faced a night- mare yesterday: Three of their four leading candidates for All- America may miss the big game with Arkansas this Saturday. One is out for sure. Snlit end Cotton Snevrer broke his arm in the Illini scalp Butler MINNEOPOLIS-Fast running Minnesota overpowered North Da- kota 85-61 last night in a college, basketball opener with heralded 6-foot-8 sophomore Jim Brewer leading four Gophers in double, figures with 20 points. Brewer also pulled down 11 re- bounds as the Gophers madej George Hanson's coaching debut a success. Olie Shannon added 19 points, Eric Hill contributed 16 and Tom Masterson 11. North Dakota, under new coach Dave Gunther, was led by Mahlon Sanders with 11 points and Jon Tufte with 10. Minnesota, holding a 44-29 edge in rebounds, went ahead to stay' with 14:29 left in the first half on Shannon's underhanded layup which made the score 12-10. Gophers go CHAMPAIGN - Illinois con- tinued its season-opener mastery over Butler, rolling up a 113-102 college basketball victory here last night with a new-look Illini running game. The Illini, playing before the first of 11 sellout crowds inthe 16,128-seat Assembly Hall, com- bined with the Bulldogs to set a new court record for points by Kennedy McIntosh led Eastern Michigan rally in cond period, scoring 15 team-high 22 points. a brief the se- of his Eastern Michigan had t h r e e other players in double figures, with 20 for Bill James, 18 for Lin- dell Reason and 14 for Earl Dixon. Joby Wright and Rick Ford were the only other Hoosiers in double figures, scoring 18 and 17 points respectively. Badgers triumph MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin's Clarence Sherrod poured in 32 points to ,lead the hot-shooting Badgers to a 102-84 victory over Eastern Illinois in a basketball opener for both schools last night. The Badgers raced to a 48-36 halftime margin, and from then on the gane never was in doubt. Sophomore Leon Howard hit a field goal with 2:20 to go and. brought cheers from the, crowd of 5,403 as Wisconsin increased i t s lead to 100-75. Wisconsin broke a 14-14 tie early in the first half and moved stead- ily away from the visitors, who were plagued with foul trouble and inability to score from the field. Northwestern clipped EVANSTON, Ill.-Third-ranked Kentucky got a king-sized scare from Northwestern last night but managed to roll to a 115-100 open- ing basketball victory. Kentucky led 55-52 at the half but was tied up at 79-all with only eight minutes to play. But the vis- itors then broke loose with a 12- point spurt to put the game be- yond reach. Tom Payne, the first Negro to p 1 a y for Kentucky, scored 12 points in the first half, and saw limited service in the second half and he finished with 14. Purdue plunked LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Indiana state defeated Purdue 82-80 in a college basketball game last night, +th fi.st vi-vnr tn. +he Sveamnre1 i r i I .z w i also had 20 to lead the Boilermak- ers, and William Franklin added 19. * * * Spartans stunned EAST LANSING, Mich. - North- ern Illinois, leading by up to eight points for most of the game, held off a late Michigan State charge and scored a 76-75 basketball vic- tory last night. A free throw by sophomore Don Hammill with 21 seconds remain- ing was the difference in the rag- ged game. Spartan Pat Miller mis- sed a driving last shot as t i m e ran out. It was the first victory for the DeKalb, Ill., team over a Big Ten squad in basketball. Northern Il1- nois had a 41-36 halftime lead on the shooting of Cleveland Ivey, who ended the night with 21 points. MSU finally tied the game at 58-all with nine minutes remain- ing and led briefly. It was a see- saw battle until the end. North- ern got the ball with 55 seconds remaining and scored the winning point on a free throw. Spartan Rudy Benjamin led all scorers with 24 points. Each team lost the ball on turn- overs two dozen times in the sea- son opener for both squads. K-State licks TCU MANHATTAN, Kan. Kansas State jumped out front by nine points in the early moments and went on to hand Texas Christian a 79-70 licking in their basketball j opener last night. Mermen dive into new season, seek to dethrone Hoosier title By JIM EPSTEIN The swim season approaches and it is time for the Michigan swim team to make its annual run for second place in the Big Ten. The Wolverines have fin- ished as runner up in the con- ference in each of the last ten years, and they do not figure to move up to the top this year. second in the 200 yard individ- ual medley and third in the 200 yard free style at last season's Big Ten championships. In a tremendous upset, he beat out Fred Heckl (USC) and Mark Spitz (Ind.) to win the 200 yard freestyle in the NCAA champ- ionships. Kinkead placed second in the 200 yard backstroke and won in the three meter dive at the NCAA match. MacDonald, a junior, finished high up in both the 100 and 200 yard butterfly events in both the. conference and the nation- al meets. He combined with Ma- honey, Bello and sophomore, McCarthy to compose a 400 yard medley relay team which made All-American.