THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 17, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 17, 1974 - , - - - - a olMdmWlN Indiana Green BY GEORGE! George Hastings - Those gutty Wolverines: down but not out BLOOMINGTON J OHN ORR SHOOK his head and tried to find the words to descrge the team that had just demolished his squad. "I thought they were just superb out there today," he finally con- cluded. And that's just about all he could have said. For yesterday afternoon the Indiana Hoosiers were a great basketball team. They shot well, they rebounded, they ran, and they played de- fense like the Wolverines have not seen it played against them this year. -The Hoosiers are now in command of the Big Ten. Sure, Indiana had a lot of things going for them. The Hoosiers had their sparkling Assembly Hall packed with a record crowd of 17,521 screaming fanatics, each of whom wore some kind of red garment as a symbol of their undy- ing love of the Hoosiers. They had their usual tbevy of cheerleaders, pom-porn girls, and a third group of mini-skirted, corn-fed coeds apparently there just to stand and squeal. And they had the usual Big Ten home-club edge from the officials, who dispatched Michigan's starting guards on some awfully cheap fouls. But nobody disputed which team was the better one out there yesterday afternoon. The Hoosiers have been getting stronger every week, and they hit their peak against Michigan in the biggest game yet of the Big Ten season. Steve Green was utterly fantastic, running around and shooting over the parade of Wolverine defenders who made attempts to cover him, in a performance that ought to convert anyone who might have thought that Indiana does not have any great individual stars. But the man who indisputably made the difference from the 73-71 Michigan victory over Indiana in January was a 6-10 freshman center named Kent Benson. Benson, hailed as the greatest big man ever to play high school basketball in Indiana, was a real disappointment during the first part of the year. His statistics were undistinguished, and Indiana coach Bob Knight did not bother to bring him off the bench even once in the first game against the Wolverines. But yesterday, Benson was everything Knight had dreamed about and the rest of the Big Ten had feared. In the first half he dominated the middle, hauling down 10 rebounds, while bulldozing in 14 points, and displaying the kind of versatility that can make a big man impossible to stop. When Michigan's C.P. Kupec attempted to guard him from behind, Benson was able to go around or over Kupec for baskets. When the Michigan center tried to front him, he turned and went to the offensive boards for tip-ins when his teammates missed. Benson seems to be the player the Indiana team lacked earlier in the season, the man who could make them a truly great team. Of course, Indiana was not the only team on the court at Bloomington. The Wolverines did not go down without a fight, and not without a few bad breaks. A pair of missed layups and a foolish offensive foul in the first half's final minute cost them six easy points and ruined their chances of staying close at the half. They trailed by nine instead of three points, and that's a big margin for any visiting squad to make up in Assembly Hall. Still, the gutty Michigan team did not lose its poise, and when the Wolverines crawled back to within four points visions of yet aonther Maize and Blue miracle materialized. But stripped of their play-making guard, and with no-one capable of slowing down Green or Benson, the Wolverines were just not about to win this game. Orr was gracious and dignified in defeat. Unlike many times last year, his squad had been beaten by a better team, not by its own poor attitude. Even though the Hoosiers seem to have a wide inside track to the Big Ten title, the Wolverines are not sur- rendering. "I don't think we'll fold," predicted Orr. "Our kids are too good to do anything like that." As the final seconds ticked off, the Hoosiers' fans raised a chant of "We're number one." They are today, unquestionably. But weird things can happen in the Big Ten, and Indiana can be upset just like UCLA. For Michigan to capture the conference crown is now an admitted long shot. But it's no more of a long shot than was the chance back in October that this Wolverine team would be 16-4 on Feb. 17. folds (Continued from Page 1) in the game was costly as play- making guard Joe Johnson was lt midway through the rally with his fifth personal foul. Russell started the surge with a 20-footer from the right side but Johnson was whistled for charging as he scored on the front end of a four-on-two fast break. Wayman Britt hit a driving layup and after a John Laskowski basket, Russell connected on a three-point play, and Steve Grote launched a jump shot to make the score 52-48. With Johnson banished, Grote had taken over the play-making chores, but his tenure in the game was short-lived also. When Grote fouled out with over 10 minutes to play, the Hoosiers led by just eight points. Coach Johnny Orr was forced to bring Russell back into the fray despite his four Blue Greened MICHIGAN Blue hand SUNDAY SPOU TS NIGHT EDITOR: CLARKE COGSDILL Russell Britt Kupec Grote Johnson Rogers Worrell White Ayler Schinnerer Johnston Whitten TEAM Totals Technical: FG 11-18 11-20 5-13 1-6 3-9 0-0 3-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 FT s-11 2-2 2-3 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 R 11 4 12 11 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 2 45 F 4 3 1 5 5 0 3 0 0 21 TP 30 24 12 3 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 81 personal fouls, and switched start- ing forward Britt to an unaccus- tomed backcourt spot.. At this point, it would have tak- en a miracle for Michigan to catch up, and the Wolverines just didn't have any left. The Hoosiers ran off eight straight points to take a 73-57 lead and, for all prac- tical purposes, bury the depleted Wolverines. Naturally, Green was the major culprit as he had a hand in all four Hoosier buckets, scor- ing two and assisting on the others.: I N D I A N A CONTINUED to pour it on and stretched its lead to as many as 22 points before Britt and Russell padded their im- pressive scoring totals in the final moments, cutting the margin to a more respectable 12 points at the buzzer. Russell led the Wolverines with 30 points, 15 in each half, and Britt scored a season-high of 24 markers on 11 of 20 tries from the floor and a pair of free. throws. Victorious Coach Bobby Knight felt his team got it together very well 'after Michigan had cut the Hoosier lead to four points early in the second half. "For a while there, we were looking like Chinese bandits" Knight quipped. "But we turned it around very well and I'm very proud of them. But when Michi- gan's guards got into foul trou- ble it had to hurt them." Scott May. In that January game, Benson, one of the most sought- after high-school players in the country last year, languished on the bench all day and May scored two points in limited action. Yesterday, Benson looked like the "Bill Walton of the Midwest" that he was touted as being, with 20 points and 15 rebounds, and May chipped in with 18 markers and a good defensive effort. Michigan jumped out to early 6-0 and 10-4 leads before the Hoos- iers began chipping away with su- perb shooting from Green and scoring and board work from Benson. The Hoosier duo combin- ed for 35 of Indiana's 44 first half points, and Benson had 10 re- bounds. TRAILING BY SEVEN points late in the first half, the Wolverines caught Indiana nap- ping with 'some aggressive Joe Johnson ball-hawking but couldn't convert the steals into points. Three times in the last two min- utes of the half Johnson stole the ball and twice he missed driving layups. Britt was c-lled the other time for a moving block. Orr be- moaned these errors "We needed some sort of s- -rk at that time," he noted, "and perhaps we could hay turned things around. "I don't went to take anything awav from Indiana" Orr empha- sized. "They were superb. They made the key plays and we didn't." Iro-ically for the Wol -erines, this was the third time in the last four years thet they walked into As- sembl, H-1l in first nlace, and the third time thev w-lked out in second. Tt's going to take some good basketball and a lot of luck to climb to that top notch again. 34-72 13-18 Joe Johnson INDIANA Green May Benson Buckner Ahlfield Laskowski Wilkerson Crews Abernathy Morris Kamstra Allen Noort Smock TEAM Totals FG FT R 17-24 3-5 11 8-16 2-5 6 9-13 2-2 15 2-12 0-0 2 0-1 0-0 1 5-1 4-4 5 0-1 0-0 0 0-1 0.0 0 0-0 0-0 2 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 n- n on 2n F 3 4 5 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TP 37 18 20 4 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 a a-o 0=0u 41-82 11-16 AP Photo Halftime: Indiana 44, Michi SCORE BY HALVES MICHIGAN Indiana Joe flies high but Wolverines die By BRIAN DEMING A third period flurry of goals, including freshman Pat Hughes' third and fourth of the night, helped Michigan to a 7-4 victory over Colo- rado College at Yost Ice Arena last night. A third period let-down had been p trade mark of the Wolverines earlier this season. But in the last few weeks the Blue dekers hav won on the strength of third period ; play. Last night four final period goals took Michigan from a 4-3 deficit to its fourth win in a row.! "We h a v e confidence now which we were lacking before," Hughes remarked after the game featuring outstanding stickhan- dung and skating on his part which earned him four goals and the game's first star. The 6-0, 180-pound, Toronto na- tive scored the game's initial goal at 1:21 in the opening period with the puck a ten foot shot from the front of crease beh the net. score of th Colorado managed to tie the It was a score at 16:06 when senior :apt:un period beg Steve Sertich scooped the puck goal that k past Robbie Moore in a power play Don Dufek situation. nery shot Michigan' went back out in eAt 7:04 front at 17:09 when Randy Tru- in front fo deau slapped a shot from 20 :eet took a def! that vent untouched into the goal center line past defenseman Greg Smith and Tiger defer goalie Dan Griffin. Hughes The Tigers did not waste much 14:51 with time coming back. Less than 20 to the lef seconds later Mike Egan slipped ceiving a a shot in for the score. Colrodo -- later ended the first period scoring when a 25-foot shot by Doug Palaz- zari flew past Rob Palmer and Moore into the twine, giving the visitors a 3-2 lead. Bryan Pye gave Colorado a twoI goal lead after only 27 seconds had elapsed in the second stanza. As- sists came from Palazzari and Frm Sertich. Fro EUGEN Finding themselves in danger of hind the letting Colorado pull ahead ?he Bruce Co Wolverines cleaned up the sloppy ed UCLA defensive play and stifled the Co'o- ketball de rado attack. The las "The two penalties that we to-back g killed off in the second period Oregon S made the difference," analyzed spectively Michigan Coach Dan Farrell, re- the Bruin ferring to the four minutes of Coldren shorthanded hockey the Wolver- forwardf ines endured without allowing a 12 of 14 f score. This marked a turning ishing v point of the contest: a Colorado points. tally would have given the Tigers Meanwf a decisive three point edge. UCLA ce But the Wolverines held on and field goal at 11:57 Hughes scored his second for only7 tally making the score 3-2. While Russell on his knees amidst the chaos in 12 points, front of the Colorado ne', the fresh- gon inch man poked his stick out and slid fired off h apless from the right of the ind Griffin for the final Bengals bumf he second period. ill Michigan in the third SCORING BY PERIO inning with a kowe: play Colorado kontted the score at 4 4. MICHIGAN deflected a Kris Ma- into the twine at 4:27. GOALIE SAVES the Wolverines went out (CC) Griffin 9 r good as Bob Falconer (M) Moore 11 lected Tiger pass at the FIRST PERIOD e and flashed past the SCORING:F1.RM-Hughes nse to toss in the goal. 2. CC-Sertich (Palazarri, L earned his hat trick at 16:06; 3. M-Trudeau (D. h a tally from 15 feet 17:09; 4. CC-M. Egan (Hiefi man) 17:27; 5. CC-Palatar t of the goal after re- Zupetz) 19:18. pass from Fox PENALTIES: 1. CC-M. E 0 1 0 MOST SURPRISING to those 2 44 20 93 who watched Michigan hand Indi- igan 35. ana its lone loss of the Big Ten S campaign - the 73-71 shocker last 35 46 81 January - was the play of 6-10 44 49 93 center Kent Benson and forward Tige conduct) 1:31; 2. M-Natale (tripping) le 2:28; 3. M-T. Lindskog (delay of game) 2:47; 4. M.-Fax (tripping) 5:48; JDs 5. CC-Smith (cross checking) 8:52; 6. DSM-Manery (interference) 14:58.; 1 2 3 F SECOND PERIOD 3 1 0 4 SCORING: 6. CC-Pye (Palazarri, 2 1 4 7 Sertich) 0:23; 7. M-Hughes (unassisted) 11:57. PENALTIES: 7. M-T. Lindskog 2 3 tot. (roughing) 2:08; 8. M-Shand (hooking) 19 13 31 6:50. 14 7 32 THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 8. M-Dufek (Manery, Shand) 4:27; 9. M-Falconer (Shand, (Fox) 1:31; Fardig) 7:04; 10. M-Hughes (Falconer, awson) PP Fox) 14:51; 11. M-Hughes (Fardig, Lindskog) Falconer) 19:58. eld, Pretty- PENALTIES: 9. CC-Mitchell (hook- ri (Sertich, ing) 0:25; 10. CC-Stebe (high sticking) .4:05; i. CC-Mitchell (tripping) 16:53. Egan (mis- Attendance: 4,152 Steve Green GOPHERS GNAW MSU CAGERS FALL, 48-38: Stevens leads tankers By LESLIE RIESTER Maggie Stevens was named the Outstanding Swimmer of the Big Ten women's swim meet yesterday as she led Michigan to a strong third place finish at Madison, Wis. The Wolverines took eight first places but were edged by Indiana University for second place. The Hoosiers failed to capture a first and still earned 451 points to sneak past Michigan's 441. Stevens won the 100-yard butter- fly (:60.1); the 100-yard freestyle (:55.1); the 50-yard butterfly (:27.7); the 200-yard individual medley (2:19.1) and swam the first leg of the winning 400-yard medley relay. MICHIGAN'S DEBBIE Brebvitz also had an excellent meet, taking two firsts and a second. Brebvitz won the 100-yard individual medley (1:05.1); the 100-yard breaststroke (1:13.2); swam second leg for the victorious 400-yard medley relay and finished second to Stevens in the 200-yard individual medley. The Wolverine 400-yard medley team of Maggie Stevens, Debbie Brebvitz, Kathy Knox and Robin Orr (Johnny's daughter), set a meet record at 4:18.4. Michigan's medley relay team also took the 200-yard event, win- ning by one-hundredth of a second in 1:58.5. Wolverine coach Johanna High had nothing but praise for her swimmers. "I think they've done real well," claimed High. "I'm really pleased with their perform- ance." Uffhil..an h nnr nnl,,1 eimmatrin ;. at the nationals," noted Coach High. "S t e v e n s and Brebvitz should do well, and I'm expecting good performances from Lisa Pe- derson and Connie Ortega." Michigan's diving corps finished sixth, eighth and thirteenth. Diver Sue Gottlieb has qualified for the nationals and will accompany the Wolverines to Penn State next month. Cagers hooped An ice-cold Michigan women's basketball team couldn't buy a bucket yesterday afternoon at .Crisler Arena, and it fell to Grand Valley State College, 48- 38. The Wolverines looked strong! in the opening minutes- as their zone and trap press rattled the tall Laker squad. Michigan's stingy defense wasn't allowing Grand Valley even a shot, but the Wolverines couldn't find their own basket either, and the first quarter ended tied 8-8. IN THE SECOND quarter, the Lakers' 6-0 center Marvonne Burggraff came to life, dominat- ing both the offensive and de-j fensive boards. The Wolverines got only one shot each time down the floor, couldn't sink them all, and Grand Valley jumped to a 22-16 halftime lead. The Wolverines' cold streak Michigan lost its tallest player when center Sheryl Szady, play- ing with a 102 degree tempera- ture, fouled out early in the third quarter. Crn.4,,, V1P d by a , - . , gan finally woke up and scramb- led within six points with just two minutes remaining. But the Wolverines' effort fell short, and the Lakers held on to preserve the victory. Lydia Sims had 15 points for Michigan, Kathy Marijanovich tallied six and Linda Laird added four. Pat Baker and Marvonne Burggraff each flipped in 15 points for Grand Valley. Both the Varsity and Reserve equads travel to Adrian on Wednesday, February 20 to face some fast, scrappy Adrian Bull- dogs. )ucks Wire Service Reports SE, Ore. - Oregon, be- red-hot shooting of ldren, handed top-rank- its second straight bas- efeat 56-51 yesterday. t time UCLA lost back- games was in 1966 at State and Oregon, re- y. Oregon last defeated s four years ago 78-65. , a 6-foot-8 sophomore from Goleta, Calif., hit field goal attempts, fin- with a career-high 24 hile, the Ducks held nter Bill Walton to four ls and three foul shots 11 points. Lee, who finished with hit a 15-footer as Ore- ed ahead 44-43. Coldren three straight buckets arrest and Lee added two more, giving the Ducks a 52-43 advantage,- which they never relinquished. "Oregon played good, but we didn't think they would shoot as well from the outside," said UCLA Coach John Wooden. "They played well and we just got beat. He reiterated his feeling that the Bruins, now 7-2 in the Pa- cific-8 Conference, are not as eager as in past years. Rodents romp EAST LANSING -Minnesota's streaking Gophers upset Big Ten title-minded Michigan State Sat- urday afternoon, 56-50, with a 29-point performance by junior forward Phil Filer. Michigan State's Mike Robin- son was held to eight points, the lowest output of his collegiate career. Minnesota's conference scoring leader, Dennis Shaffer, was limited to six points. Both teams startedout slug- gishly in the first half. Nearly three minutes elapsed before the first points were scored. The Gophers successfully slowed down Michigan State's run-and- shoot and held onto a 28-26 half- time lead. Wal ton guard Billy McKinney reeled off 30 points Saturday, 14 of them in a second-half spurt that boosted Northwestern to an 86-75 come-from-behind Big Ten bas- ketball win over Illinois. * * * Badgers cheesed WEST LAFAYETTE - Hot- shooting Purdue, with four start- ers scoring 18 or more points, rolled to a 37-point lead in the first half Saturday and kept its Gang Big Ten title hopes alive with a 107-80 victory over Wisconsin. Forward Frank Kendrick scor- ed 19 points to lead all scorers, and John Garrett, Jerry Nichols and Bruce Parkinson scored 18 points apiece for Purdue. IOWA CITY -Neil Fegebank's 18-foot jump shot with four sec- onds remaining gave Iowa of 69- 67 Big Ten Conference basketball victory over Ohio State Satur- day night. Blue gymnasts shine in upset of Hawkeyles tepid BueKeye poolmen Special To The Daily THE TURNING POINT of the , COLUMBUS - The Michigan meet came when Michigan's Jose swimmers fought their way out of Aranha took an unexpected second a hole to overcome the Ohio State place in the 100-yard freestyle to Buckeyes 67-56 in a dual meet here start the Maize and Blue on the yesterday. Coach Gus Stager could comeback trail. only say, "It was a typical Ohio State-Michigan matchup with a Michigan swept the 200-yard but- good-sized partisan crowd making terfly, the 200-yard backstroke, and for good competition." the 200-yard breaststroke to lock As expected, the Buckeyes swept the meet up. Tom Szuba, Rob Helt the diving events to put the Wol- (in a season's best time) and Stu verines in an early hole. Dick Isaac took firsts in these events. Quint of Michigan did manage to In what Stager called the best pull a second place in the one race of the day, Gordon Downie meter dive for the best Wolverine blew toN a victory in the 500-yard diving performance of the day. freestyle. Stager noted that "Dow- nie said he could win it the easy way or the hard way." Downie sprinted for 150 yards to blow open R ES a big lead and so psyched his op- ponent that he swam to an easy San Francisco 83, Nevada-Las Vegas 71 five second victory. : Special To The Daily IOWA CITY - Hawkeye fans, still bitter over their 21-16 loss to Michigan's wrestlers several weeks back, were looking for revenge yesterday afternoon when the high-flying Iowa gymnasts hosted Newt Loken's Wolverines. They didn't get it. The Maize and Blue put on a fine performance to throttle the Corn State up- starts, 161.1-160.8. "The guys were really fired up for this one," the jubilant Loken commented after- ward. "There were some tremendous per- formances by the gang, especially the spe- cialists. And we got a great finish by the high bar men: Bruce Medd, Carie Culbertson, outclassed Iowa's 25.05 in the event. Michigan men also did well in the all- around, placing Bruce Medd second and Jean Gagnon third behind Iowa's fine Bruce Wald- man. The undefeated Wolverines next home appear- ance will be Monday night, February 25, at 17:30 in Crisler Arena, when they host also- unbeaten, nationally-ranked Penn State. Newt's beaut POMMEL HORSE MICHIGAN - 26.2: Poynton, 9.1; Hanson, 8.9; Medd, 8.2 Iowa - 25.05: Robbins, 8.75; Siemianowski, 8.75; Mason, 7.55. RINGS Illini Schmidt EVANSTON - Freshman r;;?" :.-'.; . . ': Sco NBA New York 117, Golden State 107 Capital 101, Buffalo 92 NHL Chicago 4, N.Y. Islanders 0 N.Y. Rangers 9, Vancouver 4 Toronto 7, Atlanta 2 ,.i.....l. 'I r m : -, Virginia 91, Navy 72 Florida 85, Auburn 77 Pittsburgh 91, Youngstown St. 71 Dayton 87, Chattanooga 62 Marquette 69, Loyola Chicago 43 Alabama 77, Mississippi 57 P oenn natmAth 70 STAGER MENTIONED that this weekend's activities had not led him to decide who to send to the Big Ten meet. "We still are un- i