THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage seven 0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage ~even ,.. Four Wolverines grabbed by new WFL in first draft AFRAID OF BEING RIPPED OFF I A unique new security system for your apart- ment that provides both Burglary and Fire protection. Works round the clock when you're home and away. PEACE OF MIND is available for under $60.00 for the average apartment. ANN ARBOR SECURITY SYSTEMS Telephone 662-9438 By DAN BORUS The World Football League went fishing for players and claimed some big fish in yesterday's pre- liminary six round draft. But de-. spite the bait the fish may not bite.. The as ~yet-unnamed Detroit fran- chise, which drafted last on odd rounds and first on even rounds,' used its six picks to come back with three Michigan stars. Drafting last in the first round in the fledgling organiza- tion's player selection process, the still unnamed team, which lacks a general manager and a coach, tabbed Michigan tight end and co-captain Paul Seal as its, first choice. Louis Lee, one- time Michigan assistant coach who represented the club in the New York draft,j mindful of a potential gate, picked Michigan fullback Ed Shuttles- worth in the fourth round. and Maize and Blue wingback, Clint Haselrig in the sixth. In addition, the Detroit club ob- tained rights to Ohio State out- side linebacker Rick Middleton and! Tennessee State's Ed "Too Tall" Jones. Michigan's All-American defen- sive tackle Dave Gallagher was, picked by the Boston Bulls in the fourth round. Memphis, which drafted first in the first round and last in the sec- ond round, chose Kansas quarter- back David Jaynes as the first WFL'er. Boston followed by pick- ing Boston College quarterback Gary Marangi. Heisman Trophy winner John Capelletti was the eighth player selected. He was chosen by Philadelphia. The draft did have some sur- prises. John Hicks, Ohio State's highly touted tackle, ,went to Florida in the second round. His teammate, linebacker R a n d y Gradishar, also highly acclaimed in the press, had to wait until Boston picked him in the thirdF round. c~~r9ir -tt Bt to Cincinnatti in coordination with medical school, had not heard from any representative of the Boston organization, which yesterday named Vito (Babe) Parilli, former Boston Patriot quarterback, as head coach. *®INeither had Seal, Shuttlesworth, or Haselrig heard from the De- troit organization. It is known that NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS all would prefer playing in the established N a t i o n a l Foot- ball League. Apparently, the WFL drafted the general national feeling, then Despite the threat by some play- with signing in mind, as many the league has its work cut out for ers to use the WFL as a bargain- clubs chose local rather than na- it. ing point with the NFL, WFL tionally known talent. "I wasn't surprised," said Gal- President Gary Davidson does not The League will hold a supple- lagher upon hearing of the deci- expect a bidding battle over draft mentary draft of the remaining sion from a roommate. "It will choices. college players and for those play- help me bargain with the NFL. ers under NFL contract. "To be frank, unless the WFL! This move is seen by experts as comes up with a substantially lu- a method for the WFL to gain some cmsu ihasbtnilyl-. needed prestige and credibility by crative offer, I'd much prefer signing name players during the the NFL. If the offers are com- interim period. parable I will go with the more If the reaction of the Michigan established league." stars drafted is any indication of Gallagher, who would like to go, FARDIG, PARIS STYMIE BADGERS: "No, I don't think there will be a battle," he said. "I do believe outstanding players in key posi- tion will be in a better bargaining position than they have been. But supplies of players are much larg- er than they have been and we should be able to sign our share." ___ 1 I I By BRIAN DEMING Don Fardig and Paul Paris- two seemingly typical hockey players. F a r d i g, a sophomore from Taylor, Mich., seems harm- less enough with his quiet, sober manner. And frankly Paris, a junior from St. Hyacinthe, Que- bec, seems to hide no deceiving motives. Few would suspect that these two are trained killers. T h e s e two mild - mannered skaters are sent out onto the ice by Coach Dan Farrell after Mich- igan is penalized and is short- handed. Numbers 14 and 15 at the forward positions are assign-' Ile 0 find soli d Sports of- The Daily Kevin Casey still Contrary to what you may ed to waste away opponents' power play opportunities. These two men are the penalty killers. FARRELL HAS looked all sea- son for the right combination of forwards for the penalty killing situations. It is vital for a team to be able to defend in short- handed situations and the Wol- verines penalty killing "was not nearly what I had hoped it to be" according to Farrell. But in the duo of Fardig and Paris Coach Farrell may stop searching. In Friday night's ac- tion the persistent pair were par- ticularly instrumental in poking, checking, and icing the life out of seven Wisconsin power-play opportunities as a sellout Madi- son crowd watched in horror. The penalty-killers spoiled 14 minutes of scoring opportunities of the Badgers and kept Mich- igan in the game, allowing Pat Hughes to score Michigan's third and winning goal at 5:17 of the overtime period. "That was my job," smiled the 5-8, 160-pound Paris, explain- ing his success against the us- ually overpowering Badgers. "I feel really good about it." OF COURSE, Paris and Fardig were not the only men on the ice in short handed situations. De- fensemen Randy Trudeau and Dave Shandwere usually play- ing during this time and per- formed well in -preventing the Badgers from getting inside. And goalie Robbie Moore was superb as usual. The .5-5, 155 sophomore puck stopper allowed only two goals in the game while picking up 41 saves. Not to be neglected are the second duo of penalty killing for- wards Bob Falconer and Gary Kardos. These two would replace Fardig and Paris in about the last 30 seconds of penalty time and took over where Fardig and Paris left off. But without the disciplined, time-consuming play of Fardig and Paris the contest could well have ended in a Badger rout. As Farrell points out, "the key to penalty killing is not to skate very much, but to hold the posi- tion and not to chase the puck. A good penalty killer must cover when a man breaks. Don and Paul are very effective at pick- ing up breaks." THEIR ROOKIE coach cited Fardig's ability to anticipate as complementing Paris' quickness, making it an excellent combina- tion. Michigan's method of killing penalties can be likened to a tight zone defense in basketball. The forwards and defensemen lay back, allowing long shots but shutting off shots close to the crease. This not only requires well disciplined play on the part of the forwards but puts a lot of pressure on the goaltender to stop those long shots. But be- cause Moore is such a good goal- tender and because the team is relatively inexperienced, Farrell puts his faith in this method as opposed to a pressured "go-get- 'em" style that other teams such as Michigan Tech employ. IN ORDER TO help Moore aut on long shots, the defensemen try to clear out the zone in front of the goal, and the forwards allow an unobstructed shot so Moore has full view of the puck. The team tries to open up an alley. when an opponent starts to take a long shot from the goal to the shooter to reduce chance of a deflection which they figure a ers is the only way to beat Moore. "It's just between him and me," remarked the small but confi- dent netminder. "We stay in a stationary box and let them shoot from the point," time killer Fardig ex- plained. "We figure if Robbie can see them he's going to stop them.,, With this kind of defense Paris and Fardig have their hands full picking up men breaking towards the goal and must discipline themselves not to commit them- selves too far outside. Also, they, as well as the de- fensemen, must adjust to the different types of powerplays the opposition uses. Wisconsin, it was noted, used three different power plays. The Paris-Fardig duo responded flawlessly to the different attacks. W i t h Michigan's aggressive style of play penalties will con- tinue to happen. When they do, watch the Wolverine penalty kill- ing team in action. Moore, who was shaken up in Saturday ' night's game will be back in action this weekend against Min- nesota. If the penalty killing continues as well as it did in Madison the Maize and Blue have little to fear when they're short handed. 3 t YOUR DOLLAR IS ALMOST . WORTH A DOLLAR AGAIN 4* :O 10%OFF* When You Pay Cash for Your Books at .~~ Centieorc Bookshp a p 336 MAYNARD Daiy Pho *Loeb Library Excluded-ALL SALES FINAL PAUL SEAL (83) shown herec, blocking on an end run agains t ____ _______________ Illinois this year, was drafted in the first round yesterday by the Detroit franchise of the World Subsc__be___ The Daly Football League. bciet h al Dimension of Reigious Experience LECTURE AND DISCUSSION SERIES JANUARY 23, WEDNESDAY 3-5 P.M., ANGELL HALL, AUD. A "Philosophical Implications of Hindu Mythology" by DR. DAVID KINSLEY, McMasters Univ. FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC " NEXT WEEK JAN. 30, WEDNESDAY 3-5 P.M., ANGELL HALL, AUD. A "Yoga and Its Spiritual Context" by BARBARA LINDERMAN, local yoga instructress Sponsored by the Office of Ethics & Religion. Also offered for credit through Course Mart Call 764-7442 for more information. eligible have heard over the PA at the Ohio State game, quarterback Kevin Casey has not suited up for the last time as a member of the Michigan football team. Under the new Big Ten redshirt rules, the popular Grand rapids native was granted an extra year of eligibility because he didn't play during the 1972 season. Casey has been working out with the gridders in winter conditioning drills, and if he overcomes his vexing run of injuries, he'l give solid backup support to Dennis Franklin in next fall's campaign. ** * Gymnastics, wrestling times The Michigan Athletic Department announced yesterday that the starting times for this Saturday's gymnastics-wrestling doubleheader have been advanced one-half hour to give. the visiting teams enough time to get home before the gas stations shut.down. The Michigan-Minnesota gymnastics meet will thus begin at 1:00 p.m., instead of the scheduled 1:30 starting time, and the Michigan-Illinois wrestling meet which follows will commence at approximately 3:30 p.m. * * , > WCHA Standings W L Denver 11 7 Michigan Tech 11 3 Minnesota 9 5 Wisconsin 8 8 Michigan State 8 9 Colorado College 8 10 Notre Dame 7 10 MICHIGAN 6 9 Minn.-Duluth 6 9 North Dakota 6 10 T] 2 2 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 Pts. 24 24 20 18 17 16 15 13 13 12 Bridge Winners* Michigan selected its repre- sentatives to the annual U.S. Intercollegiate Bridge Tourna- ment last Sunday in a highly competitive duplicate showdown. Rick "the Rock" Roeder and Rob Beswick aced the field with Cary "the Greek" Fotias and Joel Sobel a solid second' Both duos widely outdistanced the third place team. The tournament, sponsored by the National Association of Col- lege Unions, has divided the country into 16 regions that send representatives to the national competition. Beswick, Roeder, Sobel and Fotias will play in the Kent, Ohio regional Feb. 18 for national starting positions. -MARCIA MERKER * - * Ralston top coach NEW YORK - John Ralston,j who gave the Denver Broncos their first winning season, was named yesterday as the Ameri- can Football Conference's Coach of the Year by the Pro Football Writers of America. F Ralston, in his second season as Denver head coach, kept the Broncos in contention for the AFC's Western Division cham- pionship until they lost 21-17 to Oakland in their final game. Den-j ver improved from a 5-9 recordj to 7-5-2. Reserves wrestle The Michigan junior varsity wrestling team hosts Lansing Community College tonight in Crisler Arena at 7:00 p.m. Ad- mission is free. 1[,x .. II Coaches laud Notre Dame upset; see rematch at Pauley all UCLA By JEFF SCHILLER angry. They'll murder you next There were those who believed time.' that the "Walton Gang" was more "Well, it so happened that invincible than the most powerful 'next time' was the next night of comic book superheroes-,after' at UCLA. And not only didn't we all, even Superman was vulnerable get murdered - we beat them, to kryptonite. But Digger Phelps' one of the only two times UCLA Notre Dame quintet restored some has ever lost at Pauley Pa- luster to the doctrine of human vilion!" imperfectabiilty last Saturday with The coaches also disagreed in their 71-70 upset victory over UCLA analyzing the cause of Saturday's at South Bend. shocker. Both McGuire and Tar- -What this will mean to UCLA's kanian lauded the play of Notre chances for a seventh consecutive Dame center John Shumate, Mc- national championship, and in their Guire claiming that "Shumateadid rematch with the Irish this Satur- an unbelieveable job against Wal- day at Pauley Pavilion, are topics ton. He's a physical center, and of conversation throughout the col- that's the only kind that has a lege basketball world. chance against Bill." To the coaches of other top- Tarkanian concurred, but sound- rated collegiate teams, thebig ed a note of caution. "I couldn't upset may mean a lot-or it believe it, he gasped. In the. may mean nothing at all. last few minutes, Shumate was go- ing right at Walton, shooting right Many mentors feel the defeat in his face. Nobody's ever done will cause the Bruins to be an that! even tougher opponent. Jerry Tar- "Either Shumate is much better kanian, coach of last year's third- than -any other center that's ever ranked Long Beach State team, played against Walton and UCLA, spoke from his new desk at the or-as is more probable-Walton University of Nevada-Las Vegas: was not anywhere near his physi-' "The loss will make. UCLA tough- cal best." or to beat. An upset loss always Most coaches cited the home makes a team wake up." court advantage. McGuire bowed And Al McGuire of seventh-rank- to the crowd, noting that "there's ed Marquette claimed that "Notre a noise factor in South Bend that's Dame guaranteed UCLA the na- just unbelievable. I've never heard tional championship on Saturday anything like it. They tell me that afternoon." when Notre Dame was 17 points N ai.ge ehtht down. the crowd was just as vocal be a close game where UCLA, might easily lose. No doubt - about it: there is an unmistake-t prepared for it. The amazing thing is that this hasn't happened more often to UCLA." able home court advantage in Regardless of the cause, no- college basketball." body laughed off the upset as a Boyd and Arizona State's Ned f r e a k happenstance. McGuire Wulk thought that the loss was at pointed out that "Notre Dame is least partially due to intangibles. an outstanding team. Their win "You can't always have the ball was no fluke." bounce your way," Boyd remark- Only Boyd shied away from pre- ed, but Wulk went beyond mere - dicting a UCLA victory in this breaks to explore another possible' weekend's rematch at Pauley Pa- cause. vilion. Al McGuire divined UCLA "UCLA played a bad three min- "by a comfortable margin," while utes," the Sun Devils' coach al- Smith and Wulk concurred. But leged. "Maybe it was just bad Jerry Tarkanian provided the best luck, but another possibility is that I reason: UCLA hasn't been in that siutation "Nobody - but NOBODY - beats too much before, and they weren't UCLA at Pauley." I--- - - -- - ""_" " GRAD PARTY BY GRAD COFFEE HOUR PEOPLE AND FRIENI DS FR Friday, 9 p.m. B.Y.O. ME Warsaw's phenomenal Philharmonic Under Witold Rowicki's direction since 1950, the WARSAW NATIONAL PHIL- HARMONIC has .risen from total destruction in World War II to become one of the outstanding orchestras of the world. The Philharmonic has been Poland's primary musi- cal institution since 1901, hosting nearly all the great conductors and soloists. Maestro Rowicki's program in Ann Arbor reflects his devotion to both composers of his native land, and contemporary music. PROGRAM: Szymanowski: Concert Overture, Op. 12 Britten: "Illuminations" with Stefania Woytowicz, soprano Boguslawski: Capriccioso notturno Stravinsky: "Petrouchka" Concert on Sunday afternoon, January 27, at 2:30, in Hill Auditorium. Tickets from $3.50 to $8.50 at Burton Tower, or at the door Sunday from 1 p.m. GJt~V E$ITY at RIVE GAUCHE-1024 Hill (corner E. Univ. and Hill) all grads, faculty and friends welcome I-' University Players/University of Michigan ATTENTION BLACK ACTORS AND ACTRESSES AUDITIONS FOR OBIE AWARD WINNERS