v, -,m.- .. THE MTCHIGAN DAILY rage Seven IF N, ICHOLS PLAT ES 10 WA: Indiana bu -- &cI-oea o/ Ou .Yme3 TVS presnts.. . .:. Illinois vs. Northwestern by Jim Ecker - PHYSICAL FITNESS FREAKS claim this country has de- generated into a nation of watchers instead of doers. And they're right. Sports fans in particular wile away an astronomical num- ber of hours every weekend in a mesmeric trance before that r magical rectangular box. Usually it doesn't matter who's doing combat. Take your pick: Lions and Tigers, Bears and Bengals; Cowboys and Indians, Pirates and Saints; Orioles and Cardinals, Eagles and Falcons. It usually doesn't make all that much difference. But, please, not the Fighting Illini and the Wildcats, even when it is for the mythical state championship of Illinois. And especially not when Michigan and Indiana are doing battle for bigger and better things, namely the Big Ten lead. Obviously the most important and attractive conference matchup Saturday occurred in Bloomington, Indiana, where the Wolverines and Hoosiers locked horns in the biggest game thus far of this interesting Big Ten campaign. Yet the Television Sports Network (TVS), committed to a broadcasting schedule drawn up late last fall, focused in on that titantic Illinois- Northwestern confrontation. TVS, in its first year of broadcasting Big Ten games after replacing the Hughes Sports Network as the league's television agent, accepted a prescribed list of games from the Big Ten office last November and has been. forced to live or die with that inflexible lineup ever since. Last Saturday, TVS suffered a severe injury. "There's no question they should have shown Indiana and Michigan, or at least Purdue and Wisconsin," admitted Johnny Orr yesterday. "We watched that first game between Notre Dame and South Carolina before our game and they kept talking about 12,000 screaming South Carolina fans. Hell, if they had followed that with our game with Indiana, they would have had 18,000 crazy people yelling their heads off." "Instead, they showed Northwestern and Illinois playing for the state championship of Illinois before 3500 people. State cham- pionship hell. I know Bradley and Southern Illinois don't think that game was for the state championship." Big Ten selects games ACTUALLY, THE TVS NETWORK isn't totally to blame for the generally unappetizing Big Ten television schedule this year. The league office in Chicago, headed by Jeff Elliott, comprises the schedule, not T'VS. "We try to wait as close to the season as possible before drawing it up," relates Elliott. "But we really can't wait very long." ,Elliott explains that advertisers must know several months in advance which games will be shown so that they can organize, appropriate publicity and advertising campaigns. Also, local TV stations must know the conference's broadcasting schedule before- hand in order to work out their own schedules with the various member schools. "We certainly always want to get a team on. at least once, and twice, if possible," says Elliott. "Also, we try to get every team a home game. But it'd not easy. We look at how a team did the year before, how they. might do this year, which players are gone, which might develop, and what the attractive match-ups might be. Y bbles Illini VW,.gOWNERS Cold Start Special iv~. agoi tune-up including points and plugs " battery test * starter test " charging system test ONLY$14.95Po-2375Rosewood ONLY 14.95Phone 662-2576 By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN - Indiana's 10th- ranked Hoosiers, led by Scott May's 26 points, rolled past Illinois 101-83 last night to maintain their hold on first place in the Big Ten basketball race. 'The Hoosiers boosted their rec- ord to 9.1 in the conference and 17-3 for the season while sad- dling Illinois with its 11th straight defeat, exceeding the previous Illini losing streak ofc 10 straight back in 1907.t Indiana broke to a 23-18 lead in" the early going and with May scoi- ing seven of the next nine Hoosier points, Indiana upped its lead to 32-18.Y Illinois, paced by Jeff Dawson and Rick Schmidt cut the margin to 48-40 at the half. Indiana came out storming in the second half and outscored the Illini 20-8 in one stretch toI make the score 80-60 as Johnz Laskowski and May led the at-t tack. The Illini never recovered. Coach Bob Knight then beganG substituting and the two teamsf played on an even keel. Schmidt led Illinois with .30 points and1 Dawson had 25.1 Steve Green, who' scored 37 points in Indiana's pivotal win over Michigan, added 20 points l to the Hoosier total against Illi- nois. Kent Benson pitched in with 18 points and Laskowski, often called Indiana's Super Sub,- had 15. Illinois' biggest threat came with 17 39 left in the second half when Dawson scored to cut the Hoosier lead to 52-46. ('a.l sports NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA MERKER due's Boilermakers ran away from the Iowa Hawkeyes, 99-78, in a Big Ten college basketball game last night. The victory kept Purdue in sec- ond place in the league race, one- half game behindi Indiana. Nichols led the Boilermaker balanced scoring, followed by Frank Kendrick's 18 and 16 from Bruce Parkinson. Avenging a 112-111 triple overtime loss to the HawReyes in their last meeting, Purdue never trailed in the contest. Davey Duke put the Boilermakers ahead with only four . seconds gone in the game with a! field goal. The Boilermakers pulled ahead by 18 at one point in the first half, then blew to a 25-point lead in the final 20 minutes. Iwa's leading scorer was Candy LaPrince with 21. Ki Acareer in law - withoutlaw shoo. 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The previous mile record time fell into obscurity yesterday when North Carolina senior Tony Wildrop ran a brilliant 3:55.0 mile. Waldrop says however, "I'm still a country boy from North Carolina and I'm tired of running all these sub-four minute miles." KAUFFMAN TRAMP CHAMP: Gymnasts skin Iowa Then the Hoosiers went on an- By TOM PYDEN other of their sprees to put the "Well, it's always a compliment game beyond reach. to be rated the favorite, and the BolrG ,explode! guys will be working hard to prover WES LAFAE TTp --,Je' 'that they deserve the rating. ButP WEST LAFAYETTE-Jerry Nic- remember, the ballgame will startI hols dropped in 20 points as Pur- all over again on March first andI second."I si An ov e r 1y optimistic Ralph1 Houk assessing his beloved De- R aiipag"ingtroit Tigers' chances for the up-c coming season? Hardly. Rather the sentiments of a cautious Newt Loken, acknowledginig the frontrunners for next month's reeordboo BigTen Gymnastics Meet after their exciting 161.1-160.8 con- quest over Iowa last Saturday Michigan's wrestlers have again in Iowa City. gone through the ritual of voting "The guys were really fired up for a Champion of the Week. Rob and went all out for this one," Huizenga, who breakfasts on cham- reflected Loken, "because judging pions, swallowed another one Fri- from Iowa's previous scores and! day night when he licked Wiscon- knowing that they had fine talent,; sin's defending Big Ten 167-pound j we knew it was going to be .3 very' champion Ed Vatch 3-0, and won close meet."1 the honor on a near-unanimous 'The Wolverine g y m n a s t s fell2 vote. ;slightly behind after the initial1 The Wolverines' twenty-sixth con- floor exercise event, but came secutive dual meet victory (over back w it h outstanding perform- Wisconsin) was noteworthy for the ances by Jerry Poynton on the number of records the Maize and pommel, Monty Falb, Joe Neuen- Blue smashed, both as a team and swander and Pierre Leclerc, on as individuals. Many of them are the rings, to take the decisive too tiivial to print, but the more lead. important standards set include: "I thought we had a com- " Most consecutive dual meet manding lead after the rings, victories in one season (13) but it diminished considerably " Best season's dual meet rec-' after the vaulting and parallel ord (13-0) bars," noted Loken. "However, " Most consecutive home meet our high bar men came through dual victories (17) . under great pressure and did a " Most consecutive home dual' tremendous job." meet Big Ten victories (15) Going into the final event of the bar team, generally considered to . indicative of the nation's top tram- be one of the best in the country. poline team. Nevertheless, the Michigan squad Kauffman's distinction of earn- rose to the occasion and overcame ing a spot on the U.S.A. team up- the tremendous pressure as Bob held an eight -year Michigan Darden, Carey Culbertson and tradition of providing at east Bruce Medd each retorded nine-, one trampolinist per year for plus scores to offset the fin; Iowa world competition: He now has high bar performance ani give the the chance to add to Michigan's undefeated Wolverines their fifth fine record of having a Michigan consecutive dual meet victory. bouncer win an individual title in Also over the weekend, Mason five of the past seven interna- Kauffman, Michigan's brilliant tional championships. junior trampolinist from Men'- phis, Tenn., successfully defend- :.: :.:::: ...... ed his National AAU Individual li Top 1ii Trampoline championship in Th1 e T1 pTen < Cleveland, Ohio. With the title C 1 H; comes a spot on the three-mana odege ockey U.S.A. team to compete in the'1. Mich. Tech 22-s-2 99 eighth World Trampoline Chard- 2. New Hampshire 19-6 84 pionships at Johannesburg, South 3. Minnesota 16-1(-4 74 Africa in March. 4. Boston Univ. 16-6 59 S5. Denver t9-t0-2 57 Kauffman's fine effort a: the . .Wisconsin t5-9-5 47 National AAU Trampoline and 7. Mich. State 19-21-1 45 U.S.A. Team Trials Meet paced the 8. Harvard 12-7-1 19 9. MICHIGAN 17-12-I 1$ Michigan squad as the Wolverine cornett 13-s- 1I bouncers captured the team trophy st. Louis 22-9 18 PHI BETA SIGMA :RATERNITY, Inc., DELTA RHO CHAPTER PRESENTS Three Dog Night and CHAMBERS BROTHERS "We come up with what we think is schedule and submit it to the TVS people, the and athletic directors for .approval. Basically, the A.D.'s if anything should be changed." the best possible basketball coaches the coaches advise I I ;} i I v I GRADUATE STUDENTS WELCOME 1r "Oh, they send us a copy of the schedule before the season and' ask for comments," concedes Orr. "But even if you do say something, they don't do anything about it." Flexible schedule needed WHAT ORR, AND MANY OTHERS, would like to see is a more flexible schedule, something along the lines of ABC-TV's method of choosing their NCAA football games. Each 'fall, ABC televises a pre-determined number of set games, yet leaves enough'- elbow room for mid-season switches for particularly appeasing confrontations. These "wild card" games bring the country's football fans the games they want to see. TVS should do likewise with its basketball fare. Don Lund, Michigan's Associate Athletic Director, thinks there should be a cut-off point during the season after which the broadcasters start going with the best games available. "Early in the season it doesn't really matter," says Lund. "But later, they should start showing the most important games." The Big Tqn and TVS stand to miss out on more than last Saturday's Michigan-Indiana game. This week, instead of either the Michigan-Purdue battle for survival or the Indiana-Minnesota confrontation at Williams Arena, the conference's fans will be treated to the Iowa-Illinois humdinger being played in Cham- paign. (Iowa's third TVS appearance of the year.) . "Wild Card" game on March 9 THE LAST DATE .of the Big Ten campaign, March 9, has been set aside as a "wild card" date, with either Purdue at Indiana or Michigan at Michigan State both good prospects. Both games will probably decide who goes where for post-season competition, and as such would draw good TV audiences for these classic intra-state rivalries. But if the last game of the year can be a wild card game, why can't others? Elliott claims that different starting times in the various Big Ten cities cause the major comiplication and that a last-minute switch in starting times to accommodate television would wreak havoc with uninformed ticket holders. For instance, Purdue and Indiana start their Saturday afternoon games at 4 p.m., while Iowa plays Saturday night at 7:30. Changing tip-off times for those games would throw some people off. But when Michigan and Ohio State played a televised game in Ann Arbor February 9, tip-off came at 1 p.m., a full hour earlier than normal. An effectiue niblicity campaign through the local media got almost everybody to that game on time. The same could be done for other rescheduled ballgames. Really, there is no reason why the Big Ten and TVS couldn't devise a more feasible working format. "We'd like to have as much flexibility as possible, within reason," confides Elliott. "This is only our first year of operation with TVS, and I'm sure many factors will he subiect to discussion at the end of the saon.n' t .W1 "rohnhlv wnnt to al1k hoot the schedule then. too." I I I I !'! aou' GRAD COFFEE HO UR WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM CR ISLE R ARENA, U of M Campus March 15, 1974 8 p.m. $6.50 $5.50 $4.50 * Most consecutive unbeaten Big meet, the Maize and Blue gym- Ten home dual meets (17) nasts held a tenuous .35 edge and{ * Most consecutive dual meet were faced with the task of main- wins by a Michigan wrestler (Jerry taining that lead and winning the Hubmasrd-29}n meet by holding off the Iowa high * Most dual meet wins in onL season (Hubbard-13) :f' ' 'I * Most team points scored by ig Ten Sa d a Michigan wrestler in dual melt Stnding- competition (Hubbard-55) WL Since the wrestlers travel this Indiana 9 1 Saturday to close out the season at Toledo, the odds are that most of MICHIGAN 8 2 these records won't last out the weekend. E MSU 7 3 Minnesota5S "'.: . . . Wisconsin 4 S Iowa 3 7 S The Top 20 *Northwestern 3 7 r Illinois 1 9 i. N. car. st. (30) 20-1 1,034 Ohio State 1 9 2. Notre Dame (22) 20-1 1,018 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS TICKETS AVAILABLE BEGINNING FEBRUARY 11th AT: Michigan Student Union, Hudsons, Grinnells, Discount Records (S. University) SORRY NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED U ' m ~iI _ __ U 1 t 3. UCLA (3) 4. Vanderbilt (1) 5. Maryland 6. N. Carolina 7. Pittsburgh 8. Alabama '9. Marquette DAILY LiBELS 4 10. Indiana 11. Providence 1?. Southern Cal 13. Long Beach St. 14. S. Carolina 15. Creighton 16. Kansas 17. Utah 18. Kansas St. 19. MICHIGAN 20. Louisville (tie) la-3 20-1 17-4 18-3 21-1 18-3 19-3 16-3 21-3 is-3 2b-2 16-4 19-4 16-5 17-5 17-5 16-4 15-5 842. 698 635 602 493 383 379 296 285 280 249 80 62 41 40 35 21 19 Indiana 101, Illinois 83 Purdue 99, Iowa 78 We Style Hair ... We Don't Just Cut It appointments available Doscolo Barbers . Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 East Liberty-668-9329 East University-662-0354 E , . . ._...._.... _._ ..r " 3 OFF! While Slag Ski Parkas Ski Warm Up Pants Turtlenecks I i i