Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 2, 1973 i Russell sparks scrappy cagers By JIM ECKER Campy Russell meshed his out- standing individual abilities with the strong support of his team- mates yesterday and the Michigan Wolverines inaugurated their new campaign onian encouraging note by decisioning Southern Illinois' University 86-74 before a paltry turnout of 5,707 at spacious Crisler Arena. Russell displayed controlled bril- liance throughout his 40 minutes of action, ending up with 29 points, 16 rebounds and six assists. Yet, he didn't dominate the game. "I don't have to with the guys we have out there," credited Campy. T h e Wolverines' performance' quieted many pre-season skeptics who thought Michigan was weak off the boards and short on outside shooting. Michigan outrebounded Southern Illinois by a substantial. margin (46-31) and canned almost 49 per cent of its shots, although1 many admittedly came from in close. The Salukis hit 52 per cent of their shots but they got off 15 less tries, a direct result of their' rebounding disadvantage., JOHNNY ORR'S cagers opened' fast against the Salukis, hitting the boards, breaking fast for layups, popping from the outside and play-; ing sticky defense. Michigan's backcourt tandem of tiny Joe' Johnson and freshman Steve Grote, penetrated effectively for the Wol-j verines' first eight points, while hot-shooting SIU freshman forward Mike Glenn kept pace singlehand- edly for the Salukis. After two and one-half minutes of play, Southern Illinois Coach. Paul Lambert switched his team from their opening man-to-man de-! SI MMnin SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: MARC FELDMAN and MARCIA MERKER fense into a zone, hoping to stall the Wolverines' fast-break and force Michigan outside. But Lam- bert's maneuver backfired. The 'Orrmen' promptly broke a close 8-6 ballgame into a 22-10 edge with- in a five-minute span. The Wolverines kept working and with 12 minutes gone in the game were up 30-20. But then, as Orr admitted, "We got a little tired." Glenn rekindled the flame on his shooting hand, four buckets, sub- stitute guard Tim Ricci popped for three baskets and their teammates contributed four other two-pointers. Within the span of six minutes Michigan's ten-point.lead had evap- orated into a 38-38 deadlock. against the comparatively shorter pivotman, 6-8 C. J. Kupec. But SIU's big man didn't hurt anybody yesterday. Overall Michigan looked pretty good yesterday. They ran a con- trolled, patient offense and gener- ally worked for the good shot. Joe Johnson showed little evidence of last year's turnover and weak- shooting tendencies. Rookies came through under pressure, espec ally scrappy starting guard Steve Grote. Salukis sphinxed MICHIGAN Russell Ayler Kupec Johnson The Wolverines' t e m p o r a r y BGrtte downhill slide contained the in- Rogers gredients of their earlier strong worren play, only now the ingredients Team were all negative. They stopped Totals crashing the boards, stopped run- ning, took some poor shots and Abrams slacked off on defense. A last-min- Shidler ute first-half revival sent Mich- Meriweather igan into the locker room with a Hens 41-38 edge. James ASSISTANT Coach Jim Dutcher Ricci took a look at the statistics during Totasm intermission and saw that his SC squad's rebounding edge of three matched the scoreboard margin. MICHIGAN So. Illinois He concludedmore boards,hmore A-5707 points. And that's exactly how it - worked. The Wolverines outre - bounded Southern Illinois 27-15 in the second stanza as they fairly controlled the boards in the final 20 minutes of action. Michigan started quickly in the second half, notching six fast points to expand its lead to 47-38 FG FT 11-23 7-9 4-4 0-0 8-19 2-3 7-13 1-3 4-10 2-3 2-5 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-1 0-0 37-76 12-18 R 16 2 11 2 7 5 3 46 F 1 1 3 4 2 1 0 TP 29 8 18 15 10 4 0 2 12 86 (UTHERN ILLINOIS FG FT R F TP 4-4 0-0 4 4-9 2-2 2 6-14 3-5 7 8-14 0-0 3 1-8 2-2 3 6-8 2-2 6 3-4 1-2 3 5 32-61 10-13 31 ORE BY PERIODS 2 4 1 3 2 3 1 8 10 15 16 4 14 7 16 74 1 41 38 2 45 36 F 86 74 Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI MICHIGAN CENTER C. J. Kupec (41) literally has his hands full with opposing pivot man, Joe Meri- weather of Southern Illinois in this battle for a rebound. Campy Russell (20) lends a hand. t ~full cour The Wolverines find . ... a new weapon By GEORGE HASTINGS NOBODY TALKED ABOUT the Big Ten title. No one mentioned an NIT berth, or where the Wolverines might rate in the national cage polls. For the first time in several years, there was little fanfare and a lousy spectator turnout for the opening of the Michigan basketball season. And it was too bad, because Michigan put on a decent show. Gone, of course, was the talented Michigan class of 1973- flashy Henry Wilmore, the big pivotman Ken Brady, crowd- pleasing Ernie Johnson, and springy John Lockard. But gone, too, was the apathetic attitude, the sporadic defense, and the shoot- first-pass-later philosophy that marked the second half of last year. Instead, on the court at Crisler Arena was a team that passed the ball, that played a semblance of defense, and actually scrapped out there as if it really wanted to win the contest. Imagine, here were the Michigan Wolverines playing, and their bodies were skidding across the court diving for loose balls! When was the last time Michigan basketball fans were treated to that? In the locker room afterward, Wolverine coach John Orr smiled as he rarely had occasion to late last season. "These guys really wanted this one very badly," he beamed. "We played very hard out there, we got every loose ball." And indeed it was a satisfying win for both Orr and for his players, who have generally been written off (when anyone has bothered to write at all) as at best a mediocre club. The Wolverines did it largely by coming out runnipg. After Orr surprised everybody by sending out 6-4 Bill Ayler to jump center against Southern Illinois' 6-11 Joe Meriweather, Campy Russell ripped down the Salukis' initial errant shot and fired a strike to a streaking Joe Johnson for a quick three-point play. That play set the tone as Michigan ran the fast break often and well, scoring nine of its first twelve points on breaks and con- tinuing to run throughout the contest. Orr knows his team is not big, and he feels that his players are going to have to play a running game to make up for it. Ayler, Johnson, and guards Steve Grote and Wayman Britt all showed that they are fast men who can do something with the ball if somebody can pitch it downcourt to them. Ayler in par- ticular showed speed getting down to the other end, and his smooth near-dunks are a picture-perfect way to end a fast break. But the question has been whether Russell and Kupec can get the ball off the defensive boards and to the breakers regularly enough to make the running game work. They did it yesterday. Amazingly, the duo combined for 27 rebounds, nearly matching the total of the entire Southern Illinois squad. Michigan's large 46-31 margin in rebounding was in fact a bit unreal. "I can't believe it," Orr shook his head. The nicest surprise of the game, to be sure, was the re- bounding of Russell. Campy led everybody with 16 caroms, and he took them from both boards. But then, in all respects, not just rebounding, he was by far the best basketball player on the court. Russell's totals of 29 points and six assists also were tops for both sides, but even those statistics fail to tell the whole story of how well Campy played. His defense was tough and consistent, and many times he afforded Kupec help in covering Meriweather. Missing were the sloppiness and mistakes that often plagued Russell's play last year, as he made only one turnover and committed only one personal foul, a questionable charging call at that. More importantly, Russell displayed a mature player's shot selection and movement without the ball. When he discovered that his outside shots weren't dropping too well, Campy began to put the moves on underneath and got the ball many times for easy buckets. "He was really moving," said Orr, "and Campy can do a lot of things under the basket that nobody else can do." Campy, though, didn't think it was any particularly big deal. "Where I'm gonna shoot from depends on how the game is going -today I was getting open inside and I got a lot of lay-ups," he explained. "Everybody was doing a good job passing and that was just the best way I could help the team." In fact, yesterday's contest reminded fans of the freshman club of two years ago, as Joe Johnson (15 points), who dis- played the outside shooting that he lacked last year, and Kupec (18 points), who did a good job keeping the ball away from Meriweather in the pivot, provided the main supporting work for Russell. But the comparison ends there. That freshman team won every game-this varsity squad is not going to. Southern Illinois is not a real good basketball team, Meriweather was no Bill Walton, and Michigan won't play anybody else as short as the rest of the Saluki team was. Yesterday's Wolverine performance was very nice, but it doesn't prove much yet. It's going to take more wins like this one before anyone starts talking Big Ten champion- ships, NIT berths, and national rankings again. f * 4 Hoosiers I a glue TECH ROMPS, 8-4 icemen chilled By BILL CRANE Matt Mann Pool was the site yesterday for the eighteenth annual1 Big Ten Invitational Swimming andI Diving relays and the event kick-. ed off the 1973-74 varsity swim-] ming season for the Michigan Wol-k verines.j Indiana, however, made off with the meet victory and left Michigan, Ohio State, and Michigan State in an impressive wake. The Indiana tankers took firstI place in all the swimming eventsj and also set six new meet records. Michigan captured first and second places in the three and one meter diving events respectively. The diving events were the bright spots for the Wolverines yester- day. Michigan finished second in most events all day but could not catch the strong Indiana swimmers. The Hoosiers also broke the 400- and 800-yd. freestyle relays meet rcc- ords of which none other than Mark Spitz had been part. Michigan divers faired be-per yesterday. The one meter diving event held in the morning found the Blue second to Ohio State. The afternoon brought good fortune and the Wolverines captured first place in the three meter event. Peter Agnew, Dick Quint, and Steve Schenthall all hit crucial dives and led the divers to the top. Commenting on the diver's show- ing Coach Dick Kimball said, "It's early in the season and the diving was pretty poor-but it was poor all around. Pete (Agnew) perform- ed steady. Of course, we had the advantage of knowing the boards." The Wolverines will host an im- proved Illinois team next Friday in the start of the dual meet season. almost before the Salukis could get out of their flashy red-and-white warmup clothes. SIU settled down, h o w e v e r, and deliberately and painstakingly narrowed the gap un- til with nine and one-half minutes left in the game only one lonely point separated the two clubs at 63-62. BUT ORR'S cagers took charge. In the next four minutes it was all Michigan as the Wolverines out- gunned the Salukis 17-4. All five Blue b-ballers contributed to the decisive spurt, including freshman backcourtman Lionel Worrell, in for the foul-ridden Johnson, Way- man Britt, Michigan's versatile sixth man, Russell, Kupec and Grote. With the score 80-66 and time rapidly expiring, the Wolverines effectively played out the clock to the 86-74 final. MICHIGAN had feared that 6-11 Saluki center Joe Meriweather would hurt the Wolverines inside By BRIAN DEMING Special To The Daily HOUGHTON - The Michigan icers finally put some goals on the board but they came too late to save the Wolverines as Michigan Tech made a clean sweep of the two-game series with a victory' here last night, 8-4.1 Leading 5-0 going into the final stanza of play, visions of anoth- er Husky shutoutwere on the minds of the partisan crowd of 3,388. But at 5:56 of the period, An- gie Moretto received a pass from Doug Lindskog in front of the MTU goal and slapped it by goalie Jim Warden. This broke the five-period scoring drought the Wolverines had suffered. Tech countered at 7:30 when junior Bob D'Aldise skated with the puck behind the Michigan goal and centered a pass to Mike Usi- talo. Usitalo drove the puck past Robbie Moore, making the score 6-1. Then Michigan, desperately trying to come back from a hope- less deficit, scored three goals In the next six minutes. Kris Manery scored the Wolver- ines' second goal after receiving a pass from Pat Hughes. Moretto picked up his second goal, Michigan's third, when he snatched the puck out of a scram- ble in front of the Tech goal and slid it past Warden. With just four minutes to play,j Frank Werner made the score periods, Michigan was buzzing fur- iously close to the Tech nets. But goalie Warden squelched Michi- gan's shots with some excellent saves. Warden stole a goal from Ran- dy Neal after Neal had worked his way out front of the Tech goal. Neal tried to force the puck in from the right of the net, but the sophomore goalie would not allow it. Warden pilfered another goal in the second period when Doug Lind- skog took a shot on a breakaway that Warden caught between his again kneepads. Farrell felt that Michigan was slow to take shots at the goal, hesitating too long after receiv- ing passes. In contrast, Tech's scorers would slap at the puck instantly before defenders had a chance to poke it away. Still, the former Michigan Tech assistant coach was pleased with his squad's play. "I'm really proud of the way they (Michigan) came back." "We just started connecting on our chances," defenseman Greg Fox acknowledged. 6-4, tipping the puck in from five - feet out. He was assisted by Ran- dy Trudeau, who had just pick- ed himself up after being check- Tus ed hard into the boards. With this, a spark of hope was rekindled for coach Dan Farrelj i and his charges. But time waB aimra tames Auburn running out. VI? rebounding crushes Saints By MIKE LISULL The Michigan Varsity Reserve basketball team got off to a rath- er shaky start yesterday, but once they got rolling they were invincible as they totally out- played and outclassed the Saints from Lansing Community College, 85-65. The Baby Blue went without a point for the first two minutes and at-the five-minute m a r k trailed 5-4. Then successive steals by forwards Kent Storey and Rick White ignited a rally that put the VR's in front to stay. After Storey's and White's de- fensive gems, some outstanding outside shooting by Howard Coin- stock, and superior inside play by White and sixth-man Scott Mason boosted the Baby Blue to a 44-28 halftime margin. But after the second period opening tip, the VR's c am e out sluggish and confused. The Saints switched to a 2-1-2 zone after playing man-to-man the en- tire first half. VR coach Rich- ard 'Bird' Carter said, "I real- ly wasn't worried, we haven't had that much time to practice against a zone. But we kept our poise until we got a good shot." And get a good shot they did. After their early troubles the Baby Blue came back to garner 41 points in the second half. Even more impressive than that was their S1 per cent field goal per- centage. The VR's, who outrebounded their outclassedcompetition 58- 24, were led by their lone schol- arship player, White. The 6-5 forward, who has practiced for less than a week after football ended, thoroughly dominated the game, scoring 22 points and ga- thering 14 rebounds. Another standout was guard Comstock whose first-half marks- manship put the game out of reach. Comstock played an ex- cellent floor game with 6 re- bounds and 4 assists to go with his 18 points. Mason was a power on the boards and added 15 points while guard Les Brown threw in 12 markers. This year's version of the var- sity .reserves is almost entire- With a minute left, goalie Moore came to the bench, giving the, Maize and Blue a sixth attacker in a desperate attempt to score. But with 26 seconds left, Tech's Graham Wise pushed a shot from the center line that reached thel empty Michigan net. The Huskies scored their eighth with 12 seconds left, winding up their eighth win of the season. Michigan's third period flurry of goals made the score somewhatI respectable - but the Wolverines played fine hockey during the be- ginning two stanzas despite their lack of goals. "We outplayed them in every period, and couldn't score," Far- rell declared. "We played 100 per cent better than last night," he added. During much of the first two Tech too tough 1 2 3 Tot MICHIGAN 0 0 4-4 Michigan Tech 3 2 3-8 FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. Tech - Zuke (Stamler) 4:26 2. Tech - D'Alvise (wise, Mayer)" 10:30 3. Tech - S. Jensen (unassisted) 12:50. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 4.' Tech - Jaschuk (Usi- talo, Murray) 5:26; 5. Tech - Mayer (Wise, D'Alvise) 9:12. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 6. M - Moretto (D. Linds- kog, T. Lindskog) 5:56; 7. Tech - Usi-' talo (D'Alvise, Mayer) 7:30; 8. M - Ma-' nery (Hughes, Falconer) 9:32; 9. M- Moretto (Neal, Palmer) 10:01; 10. M- Werner (Trudeau, Paris) 15:51; 11. Tech - Wise (Mayer, D'Alvise) 19:34; 12. Tech - Stamer (Steele, Zuke) 19:48. GOALIE SAVES 1 2 3 Total Moore (M) 13 6 14 33 Warden (T) 16 9 10 35 From wire Service Reports A fired up Tulane team pulled one of the major upsets of the college football season last night, shocking LSU 14-0. Coach Benny Ellender's Green Wave came back from an embarrassing 42-9 defeat at the hands of Maryland last Sat- urday to blank the Tigers. A Tulane Stadium crowd in ex- cess of 86,000 went berserk as LSU dropped their second game in a row, having lost to Ala- bama on Thanksgiving. Michigan's j u n i o r varsity wrestlers did well at yesterday's Michigan Intercollegiate Tour- nament at Ypsilanti, placing third behind the regulars from Central Michigan and Western Michigan. Jeff Guyton' (134 lbs.) was named Most Valuable in the tourney. Speaking of Alabama, the Crim- son Tide completed their first un- beaten season in eight years as they shutout cross-state rival Au- burn, 35-0. Coach "Bear" Bryant's crew lived up to their recently acquired number one ranking con- trollingthe affair from start to finish. Notre Dame, Alabama's oppo- nent in the Sugar Bowl, rolled to their eleventh consecutive vic- tory and first unbeaten and un- tied season since 1949 by thrash- ing Miami of Florida 44-0. For the first time in its long and storied history, the U.S. Mil- itary Academy went an entire season without registering a grid- iron victory. Navy handed the Army its worst beating in the Army-Navy series, shutting out the Cadets 51-0 at JFK Memorial Stadium. The Big Ten basketball cam- paign got under way this week- end, and defending champion In- diana got off on the right track dumping The Citadel, 74-55. Else- where, two-time conference scoring chain Mike Robinson poured in 36 points to spark Michigan Stare to a 78-70 victor yover Central Mich- igan. "Bay s bruisers bombr --- By CLARKE COGSDILL Freshman Mark Johnson had no trouble disposing Rick Bay's Michigan Mat Machine made it two with Bob Foster. in a row-in routs as well as victories-by over- Rob Huizenga's and Dave Curby's triumphs whelming a combative pack of Ohio University were never in doubt. Huizenga scored an unusual Bobcats 38-0 in a dual meet yesterday afternoon point when his opponent was called for inten- in Crisler Arena. tionally walking off the ring . . with Huizenga The sophisticated remnant of the basketball clinging to his back. Curby's opponent was pen- crowd got a quick example of what Wolverine alized twice for stalling. xwrestling is all about when Jim Brown shattered Ohio's Dave Hopkins in the day's opening match. HEAVYWEIGHT Gary Ernst combined a sec- iy Rich Valley got a mite careless against Bob ond-period reversal and the riding time advantage Cruzado, suffering a first-period takedown to to edge Russ Ranno, 3-0. trail, 2-0. That mischance must have been in- "I'm glad everyone won," a pleased Bay re- spiring, as Valley immediately took charge until marked afterward, then told his team, "You guys he secured the fall at 5:32. be sure to fill out your ballots for Champion of Bill Davids at 134 lbs. overcame far graver the Week before you leave." That would have to difficulties against Bobcat freshman Dave Webb, be the roughest test the grapplers have faced barely escaping being pinned after only 1:15 of so far. the match. Trailing 5-2, Davids turned it on to Bobcat stew go ahead on the scoreboard, 6-5, before pinning 118-Jim Brown (M) dec. Dave Hopkins (O), his opponent. At 142, Bill Schuck had his hands full with Gus 2- i MaaviE ASchck akedwn t te 3-seond 126-Rick Valley (M) pinned Bob Cruzado (0), : alavite: A Schtck takedown at the 35-second 5:32 mark of the first period made the difference, 134-Bill Davids (M) pinned Dave Webb (O), as neither wrestler could maintain an advantage 40 any legth oftime.4:02 {. any length of time. 142-Bill Schuck (M) dec. Gus Malavite (O), 3-2 CAPTAIN Jerry Hubbard exploded after nearly 150-Jarrett Hubbard (M) dec. Ben Parker (O),: t. SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL MICHIGAN 86, S. Illinois 74 Michigan State 78, Central Mich. 70 Wisconsin 77, Rollins 55 :Minnesota 55. California-Mavis 45 Purdue 11'7 ,. Illinois Edwardsville 71 Iowa 85, N. Illinois 83 Indiana 74, Citadel 55 Northwestern 83, Ohio University 81 Notre Dame 112,V aiparaiso 62 Boston State 85 Framingham St. 69 Willamette 69, S. Oregon 53 Texas-El Paso 67, Quincy 34 LaSalle 87, Lehigh 37 Kentucky 81, Miami, Ohio 68 Nebraska 70. Wyoming 62 Tusculum 77, Covenant 64 Tenn. Temple 88, Bryan 47 Hiram 109, Ohio Wesleyan 92 Cent. Conn. 80, Hartford 62 Trinity, Conn. 88, Wesleyan 83 Anderson, Ind. 87, Marion, Ind. 76 Cameron 80, Tarleton St. 75 St. Vincent's 68, Shippensburg 64 Midwestern 82, Okla. Christian 63 Connecticut 102, Yale 88 Virginia 92, Wash. & Lee 69 Wright St. 87, Wilmington 55 Princeton 69, Fordham 44 Brown 76, Rhode Island 67 Long Island U. 84, Merrimack 75 Sisqushanna 68, Wagner 66 t -U-