Wednesday, February 13, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc Q'e Seven Wedsll~ 9ned A , Fbur 3 94TEMCIA AL Pneic GVrn F Upset By ROGER ROSSITER One short week ago Michigan'schances of copping a Western Collegiate Hockey Asso- ciation play-off berth looked mighty bleak. Mired in ninth place, with the awesome Michigan Tech Huskies heading for town, the Blue dekers were faced with a seemingly im- possible task. JUST WHEN the season appeared to be lost, the Wolverines pulled off a minor miracle-a series sweep. Even after Friday night's spine tingling, 5-4, overtime thriller, Saturday's prospects looked grim at best. No one would have blamed the Wolverines if they had laid down and died. After all, Michigan Tech is synonymous with college hockey. Its program is so well coordinated that it shames many professional organiza- tions. over Tech spark Dekers But the Wolverines came carried the play to Tech night, and "walked away straight one goal victory, 4-3. right back and again Saturday with a second "This was the greatest thrill I've had in hockey," grinned Michigan mentor Dan. Farrell. "In my mind they are the best. We beat them playing the style they like best-a physical, checking game." THAT the Wolverines did. They checked the Huskies in Farrell's words "like they have never been checked all year." They held perhaps the finest player in college hockey today,. Mike Zuke, goal-less which was the first time that has been done all year, also. "I knew John (MacInnes) didn't want Zuke out against (Don) Dufek. So, I purposely held his line off until I could match them up against Zuke's," Farrell explained. The dividends were most evident Saturday when Zuke was whistled off for taking a cheap shot at a Wolverine moments after Dufek laid him low with a solid bodycheck. At that point the game stood deadlocked, 3-3, but only five seconds later Don Fardig's quick wristshot gave Michigan the lead and the victory. In case you had forgotten, Dufek was also the man who slid home the overtime clincher the evening before. NO ONE player can be singled out as being the key to the series. Robbie Moore, in goal, Angie Moretto, Doug Lindskog and Rob Palmer were also instrumental in the total team effort. The only sour note in an otherwise perfect weekend came in the third period of Friday night's contest when Frank Werner took a blind side check and was felled with a broken ankle. The fracture will cost the Wolverines Werner's services for the rest of the season. MICHIGAN'S play-off hope, which seemed dashed after a double loss at Duluth, vaulted to its highest peak since the opening WCHA series three months ago. "This series really brought back my con- fidence, in that, I finally have gotten results from the philosophy I've been preaching all year," Farrell added. "I've been trying to show these guys that by playing sound two way hockey we can play with any team in the league. This series we finally did that, and my philosophy was right." With three weeks left in the season, the Wolverines find themselves in a three way tie for seventh place with Colorado College and Notre Dame. Appropriately, Michigan's next two series are against, who else, Colo- rado College and Notre Dame. That situation allows the Wolverines to control their own destiny. They'll get exactly what they earn in the next three weekends. IN CASE you are wondering about that final season series, it is a home and away set with arch-rival Michigan State, and it too will have a special prize awaiting its out- come-the Big Ten championship. The Big Ten champion is determined by those games played head to headamong the four Big Ten members of the WCHA, Michi- gan, Michigan State, .Minnesota, and Wiscon- sin. Minnesota and Wisconsin completed their Big Ten action last weekend by playing to a pair of overtime ties in Madison. Both have 5-4-3 records in the Big Ten. It I The Wolverines stand at 5-4-1 which means that a pair of wins or a win and a tie would give the Maize and Blue their first Big Ten championship since the 1968-69 campaign. A split of the State series would not be good enough, since the title is determined by win percentage rather than points as in the WCHA. For a little excitement let's delve into the possibilities for the upcoming weekend alone. Assume Michigan sweeps Colorado College at Yost and Notre Dame drops a pair at Min- nesota. That in itself would lift the Wolverines into seventh place with a four point cushion. If the aforementioned should occur, the Minnesota-Duluth at Michigan State series would tell a long story. A sweep by the Spartans would put Michigan in sixth place, two points ahead of Duluth. A sweep by Duluth would leave Michigan tied for sixth with State, two points behind Duluth. If the two teams should split, Michigan would be tied for sixth with Duluth, only two points behind idle Wisconsin. SHOULD a tie be coupled with a Duluth victory, a major logjam would occur with Wisconsin in fourth place (25 points), Duluth and MSU tied for fifth (24 points), and Michigan alone in seventh (23 points). All very interesting, to say the least. - The twin victories over Tech have very definitely opened the door for the Wolverines. If they continue to play the inspired hockey they played against the Huskies, a fifth place finish could be within grasp. However, a return to the doldrums that plagued their weekend in Duluth would knock them right out of the play-off picture, at least for another year. Farrell has always been associated with winners, both in his playing and assistant coaching days at Tech: His first year at the Michigan helm can be termed successful now if for no other reason than the victories over Tech. But, winners don't quit with the first taste of success, and neither Farrell nor any of the Wolverine skaters intend to quit now. "A multi-film and dance presentation utilizing tapes from the original production in quadro- phonic sound synchronized with 10 projectors." FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15 8:00 P.M. ST. MARY'S CHAPEL (corner of William and Thompson) SPONSORED BY THE JERUSALEM GROUP 663-0557 Doily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK MICHIGAN'S GARY KARDOS gives the cold shoulder to a grimacing MichiganTech player in action at Yost Ice Arena this past Saturday. It was checking like this that allowed the Wolver- ines to sweep the highly-rated Huskies. NBA~ Detroit 113, Kansas City-Omaha 106 Chicago 93, Milw~aukee 81 New York 100, Buffalo 93 Capital 107, Cleveland 99 Sports of The Daily LE CLERC STARS: Gymnasts flip State All 12iI 4 u$2. -- PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM CITY CENTER ACTING COMPANY JOHN HOUSEMAN, Artistic Director "An outstanding theatre group"-Knickerbocker News "Well knit unit of young and proficient players"-Doily "Outstanding performances"-The New York Times "Absolutely sparkling"-Cue presenting John Gay's THE BEGGAR'S OPERA Feb. 14-15 at 8/ Feb. 16 at 3 and William Shakespeare's MEASURE FOR MEASURE Feb. 16 at88/ Feb. 1 7at 3f&8 Mendelssohn Theatre TICKETS: PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Lobby 764-0450 Special To The Daily Buckner honored Quinn Buckner, Indiana's brilliant playmaker, has named ;the Big Ten's basketball Player of the Week by Associated Press. Buckner, who usually isn't among the high scorers in league, nevertheless, led the Hoosiers with ,17 points. But important, he grabbed five rebounds and was credited nine assists. "Quinn really controlled our game," said Indiana C Bobby Knight. "He got rebounds, steals, baskets . . . he a lot of things." Michigan's Campy Russell was nominated for the award * * * Tribe trades Chico ARLINGTON, Tex.-Leo "Chico" Cardenas, veteran infi who won Golden Glove awards for his defensive play bo the National and American Leagues, was acquired by the T Rangers from the Cleveland Indians yesterday for catcher Suarez. Cardenas, 35, has a .257 life-time batting average in 14y in the major leagues. He established an American League re for shortstops in 1971 with a .985 fielding average, breaki record held by Phil Rizzuto, formerly of the New York Yan Suarez, 30, batted .248 for the Rangers last year. emmensae..........me 4 been y the n the more with Coach eran J. EAST LANSING-The Michigan gymnastics squad tumbled to an expeoted triumph over Michigan State here last night by the score of 159.3-149.0. In spite of the convincing triumph Coach Newt Loken was not overly pleased with the squad's performance. "I'm hap- py about the victory but score- wise we just couldn't get 'it all together," the veteran mentor stated, adding, "But we'll do better against Iowa this Satur- day." Pierre LeClerc was Michigan's mn"o* st - idA. n fn 1 anily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BRIAN DEMING that event was Wolverine J. P. Bouchard with 9.0. "Sakamoto was terrific on the floor exercise," enthused Loken after the specialist awed the partisan East Lansing crowd with his performance. In the pommel horse Michi- gan's Jerome Poynton and Ru- pert Hansen tied for honors with a 9.0 score. MSU's Wade Wright was third with 8.35. Monty Falb had honors on the rings with 9.15 followed by Le- Clerc with 9.05 and Joe Neuen- swander with 9.0, making the event a clean sweep for the Wolverines. Jean Gagnon triumphed in the ThelT 1. 'UCLA 49 2. No. Car. St. 3. Notre fDame 1 4. North Carolina 5. Vanderbilt 6. Maryland 7. Pittsburgh 8. Alabama 9. Marquette 10. Long Beach St. 11. Providence 12. tie Indiana tie Daily Libels 13. Southern Cal. 14. South Carolina 15. MICHIGAN 16. Kansas 17. Creighton 18. Louisville 19. Utah 20. Arizona rop 20 17-1 17.1 18-1 17-2 18-1 998 $93 79'7 $42 576 Cage j sww*..X"W-.,*V...i ;lx , l-B , le-11,51, 7,-V.l *;;e.$ 15-4 431 By MICHAEL WILS( 19-1 386 16-3 331 At long last, the Big Ten 18-3 302 has a team in first plac 18-2 299 the first time in a long 18-3 256 14-3 215 single team is out front by 18-0 215 Michigan with its close 163 146 over Northwestern, has 16-3 134 15-3 76 lished itself alone at the 15-4 57 the conference. 15-4 40 So what if the lead is byi 16-5 25 percentage point or tw 15-5 17 problem now is maintaini :s ." lead, and a tough roa ahead for Johnny Orr's c ngs The biggest test will con T Pts. Saturday, when Michigan 2 32 travel to Bloomington to t 2 30 Bob Knight's revenge-: 4 26 Hoosiers. 5 25 Since its opening loss to 1 23 gan, Indiana has establis 1 21 self as the team to beat 1 19 Big Ten. The Hoosiers' sol 1 1 19 tory over Wisconsin on th 1 19 ger's home court Monday 1 15 shows what they can do. Ul~b vnsaningperformer. -v real pleased with LeClerc's fine all-around score," Loken noted elder in reference to the tumbler's 50.6 th in winning score in the all-around. Texas The dependable LeClerc picked Ken up second places on the rings and in the vaulting event while years winning the parallel bars on his ecord way to winning all-around honors. ng a Michigan was first in each kees. event leading off with a winning 9.15 effort by Randy Sakamoto in the floor exercise. Second in r olead I )N "I never thought they (Indiana) finally would come away like that," e. For commented Orr. time a But if Indiana has the one y itself. thing going for them that no victory other team does, it's the sched- estab- ule. Indiana will play the weak- top of er teams on its schedule (Illinois, Minnesota, and Ohio State) on a mere the road and has Michigan, o. The Michigan State, and Purdue all ing the at home in the remaining weeks. d lies "It makes a lot of difference agers. when you're on the road," said me this Orr. "People don't realize this must but its tough to play on the road." ake on When asked about the Iowa- minded Purdue game, Orr commented, "I thought it was tremendous. Michi- It's a good example of what hed it- playing at home can do. Purdue in- the will kill Iowa at home," Orr lid vic- added in reference to February e Bad- 18, -when Iowa must journey to night Purdue. Michigan State, minus top gig scorer Mike Robinson, managed to squeak by Ohio State playing without Bill Andreas in overtime Monday night down in Columbus. The victory enabled the Spar- tans to remain one game back of the league-leading Wolverines. State, like Michigan, must play Indiana in Bloomington. Big Ten Standings Ten vaulting event with a 9.2. He was trailed by LeClerc with a 9.05 score. Wolverines Rich Bigras and the everpresent LeClerc tied for the win on the parallel bars with matching scores of 9.0. Carey Culbertson took the high bar event, followed closely by Spartan Paul Hime, 9.05. In the all-around score it was a clean sweep for the Wolverines in the first three places with LeClerc, Bruce Medd, and Gag- non coming in one-two-three. The victory gives Loken's crew an unblemished 5-0 record thus far. The tumblers will put their per- fect record on the line this Sat- urday when they take on the Iowa Hawkeyes at Iowa City. After the Iowa encounter the Maize and Blue entertain Penn State in Ann Arbor Feb. 25. The Big Ten Championships take place on March 8 and 9 at Iowa and the season for the gymnas- tics men culminates with the NCAA Meet at University Park, Pa., on April 4, 5, and 6. race The Spartans will travel to Wis- consin March 9, and have Min- nesota, Northwestern, and Mich- igan at home for the remainder of the season. The big news was the upset of Purdue by the lowly Iowa Hawk- eyes. This game dropped Purdue into a tie with Michigan State, sporting 7-2 records. Purdue now faces a real up- hill battle. The Boilermakers must facethe two top teams in the Big Ten (Michigan and In- diana) on their own court. Fred Schaus' cagers will play host to Iowa and Illinois to round out the schedule. r -- m m- ---- -- - - $t I t y 1 I Stogether and head for the snow-cov- ered hills of Michigan -- S on the Northern Ex- . onlycosts 2round trip for adults, $6 for'- children. It's a great way to save gas and have a lot.E I of fun doing it. Reservations;- only. Call the number .- eoworyourloca I - ' travel agent today! I- I I* I r 1 T. "-I rc m 1 P1nI r afi WCHA S Michigan Tech Denver Minnesota Wisconsin Michigan State Minn..Puluth MICHIGAN Colorado College Notre Dame North Dakota tandi W L 15 5 14 10 11 7 10 9 11 12 10 11 9 12 9 12 9 12 7 15 Conference W L MICHIGAN 8 1 Indiana 7 1 Purdue 7 2 Mich. State 7 2 Wisconsin 4 4 Minnesota 4 5 Iowa 2 6 Northwestern 2 7 Illinois 1 7 Ohio State 1 8 All Games W L 16 3 15 3 14 7 12 7 12 6 10 9 5 13 8 11 4 13 6 13 GEO Meeting RA's, SA's, Graders and all other non-TF academic employees smomm"M SOVIET JEWRY WEEK I I I i I Wed. 8 P.M.: Feb. 13 Two documentary films on the contemporary state of Russian Jews "THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING" the story of absorption and settlement in Israel of Russian Immigrants GRADUATE STUD ENTS WELCOME! AGENDA WILL INCLUDE DISCUSSION OF THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: 1. How should we go about organizing SA's, RA's and other non-teaching Fellow academic employees? 2. Do these employees want to loin the general GEO scenario for activity: a contract deadline set for midnight Feb. 17 and a strike vote Feb. 18 and 19? If so, organizing must intensify immediately. 3. What demands should be included in a bargaining package relatina to the soecific needs of these emnlvees? Shniid GRAD COFFEE I-Ai IQ "LET MY PEOPLE GO" Life in Russia and the imoact itw i7bL1 I t J