THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 24, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 24, 1974 ue blitz blasts Roilermal ers By MARC FELDMAN anced and well-coordinated attack "That was the greatest per- all year to vault to their lofty formance by a Michigan team second place standing in the Big y Ten but in no game has the bal- in a long time," beamed ,a ance been more obvious or sensa- happily stunned Coach Jolyn tional. Orr after he and 11,732 Crisler The five Michigan starters, Arena partisans had witnessed shooting a combined 62 per cent the Wolverines' total. execu- from the field, decimated the Riviters with a collective total of tion of the supposedly potent 101 points as each member of Purdue Boilermakers, 111-84, the quintet had between 18 and yesterday afternoon. 22 tallies. Th Wotvri nes winning! Wayman Britt and Campy Rus- J. 1L V L 'V J, W * 1 for the eleventh straight time sell, who "brought up the rear" with 18 markers apiece could have at home, burned the hoops cracked the 20 point barrier along with uncanny accuracy at the with Steve Grote (22), Joe Johnson outset to bury the Boiler- (22), and C. J. Kupec (21), but they makers quickly and perman- were removed for substitutes with over four minutes to play. ently. It is highly doubtful that more Michigan hit its first nine shots, than a handful of major collegeI 19 of its first 21; and 26 of 39 in the basketball teams have ever had first half to take an insurmount- all five starters score twenty or able 55-30 lead by intermission and more points, and had the Wolver- the Boilers never got any closer ines been more statistically orient- the rest of the way. ed, it could have happened yester- But it wasn't only ,shooting that day. enabled the Wolverine juggernaut Orr singled out the 5-10 Johnson to post its 17th victory in 21 games. for praise. "This was the best game Michigan ran well, crashed the he's ever played. I put him back boards at both ends with vim and in the game for a minute or so at vigor, and passed for an incredible the end just so he could get the total of 32 assists. recognition from the crowd when The Wolverines have used a bal- I took him out again," Orr bubbled. Although Johnson was disap- sure bid to a post-season tourna- pointed in his personal total of ment. three assists, he more than made 0 Johnny Orr's name being ut- up for it with nine of 11 shooting tered in the same sentence with from the field and the career high Big Ten Coach of the Year. of 22 points. But all these things are true and The diminutive Detroiter brought gradually as the season progressed the crowd to its feet midway the improbable has become reality] through the first period with a for the Michigan cagers. Yester-c stunning succession of fast break day, another convert was added inI layups and medium range jumpers. Purdue mentor Fred Schaus. Rath- In one four minute stretch, John- er than making excuses for hisi son hit four straight shots to pace Boilermakers, the former Los An- the Wolverines on a 16-4 spurt geles Laker general manager that opened up an incredible,39-15 praised the Wolverines. lead with less than 12 minutes gone. Those "perennial prophets of B-Orring b gloom," as Richard Nixon would have termed them, who predicted MICHIGAN FG FT R F TP nothing but losses for this Michigan Russell 7-15 4-5 8 2 18 basketball team, must have really Britt 9-17 0- 11 4 18 been shaking their heads in dis- Kupec 9-13 3-3 12 5' 21 3!Johnson 9.11 4-5 1 4 22 belief yesterday afternoon. Just .r2te 10- -3 5 3 22 add up the improbables of yester- Worrell 1-3 0-0 1 - 0 2 day's game and the season: Rogers 0-2 0-0 0 2 01 * Michigan scoring 111 points white 1-2 0-0 1 1 214 and beating anybody by 27 points. Schinerer -2 0-0 0 0 4 gWhit ten 0-i 0.0 020 * Three players finishing with Johnston 1-2 0-1 3, 0 2 over 20 points and none of them is Ayler 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 named Campy Russell. Team totals 49-85 13-18 52 23 111 i A 17-4 overall record, a 9-2 FG FT R F TP mark in the Big Ten and an almost Kendrick 4-11 2-3 6 2 101 "We've played worse," Schaus admitted. "I just don't think we're capable of beating the Michigan team that played here today. In fact, I don't know too many clubs that could have." The Wolverines' next stop is the not so friendly confines of Wis- consin Fieldhouse in Madison, where the fallen Badgers will try to atone for their shoddy season by upsetting Michigan. But if the Wol- verines play half as well tomorrow as they did yesterday, it should be no sweat. asketball Nichols Garrett Parkinson Luke Satterfield Rose EScheffler Steele Manahan Thonmas McCarter Team totals 5.11 5-10 8-12 0-2 5-10 2-10 1-4 2-4 1-3 0-0 1-1 34.78 0-0 6-8 2-2 0-0 2-3 1-2 0-1 1-2 2-2 0-0 0-0 16-23 4 8 3 0 3 4 2 2 1 1 0 40 2 4 4 0 2 4 0 2 1 0 22 10 16 18 0 12 5 2 5 4 0 2 84 SCORE BY PERIODS MICHIGAN PURDUE Attendance-11,732 55 56-111 30 54 84 PLAYOFFS IN SIGHT: BY G EORGE! George Hastings Icers Off Irish - - - - -- - - -- - -"a I By ANDY GLAZER can't reckon with everything-at dig, faked past Paul Clarke and Special To The Daily 0:50 of the third, Michigan's Don JIwristed a shot that Kronholm could SOUTH BEND -With a WCHA Dufek almost put it into his own only partially stop. playoff berth nearly clinched, the net in an attempt to clear the, Next, Randy Neal tried to con- Michigan Wolverines came out and puck. ter the puck from behind the turned in one of their best efforts At 7:21, Doug Lindskog got called Notre Dame net. It hit the back of of the season last night as they for tripping during an offensive Kronholm's s k a t e, and trlzkled used three third-period goals to up- thrust. But before play stopped, home. end Notre Dame's Fighting Irish,, Notre Dame aot a bench penalty- Joe Johnson . . best game ever Joe Johnson stood alone and dejected in the hall outside the visitors' locker room in Mackey Arena. It was the night of January 21, 1974, and Michigan had just dropped it first Big Ten game of the year to Purdue in the most galling fashion, 85-84, in overtime. Johnson crumpled the stats sheet he had just been handed and hurled it to the floor, and decided right then and there that it would not happen again. Well, yesterday it did not happen again. The Wolverines went out and completely demolished a Purdue team which had come into Crisler with a 9-2 Big Ten mark and the seemingly best chance of any Big Ten contender of replacing Indiana as conference champion this year, The Boilermakers left a thorough- ly beaten crew. AND IT WAS poetic justice that the chief tormentor of the Boilers was Joe Johnson. Joe had not had a good, game at Purdue, making twelve turnovers, several in the fatal last three minutes. Yet after the contest, Purdue coach Fred Schaus had singled him out for praise as the man who made the Michigan offense go. Unfortunately for him, Schaus' praises of Jehson proved to be more than accurate yesterday afternoon. The little Michigan guard had the best scoring day of his college career and played a truly superb all-around game in leading the Wolverines to their greatest performance of their fine season. His shooting statistics bordered on the incredible, as he hit nine of eleven field goal attempts and four of five from the line. His coach John Orr declared that "Joe Johnson was bril- liant out there today. That was the finest game I've ever seen him play." JOHNSON himself was not sure he agreed. "People say when you score a lot of points that you played your best game," he said, "That's not always true. But I did feel really good out there today, better than I ever have." Of course, Johnson had a point. He has played some excellent games this season without scoring a lot of points. The best part of his game has been his defense, as he has usually defended the opposition's better guard and has held some of the best scorers in the midwest well below their averages. But Joe has also come into his own as the master ball- handler and the man who runs the Michigan offense. He has provided the quarterback the Wolverines lacked last year. On top of that, Johnson has been superb as the middle man of the Michigan fast break, forcing the defenders to commit and then doling out the assists. YESTERDAY he added high scoring to his repertoire. His jump shot, which served him so well in his freshman year, was on, and time and again he would pull up off the fast break, go straight up and ripple the cords. Joe, however, was not that excited about all the points. In fact, he was disappointed that he only had three assists. "All I'm trying to do this year is beat out Campy for the assist leadership," he revealed. "For me the assists total is a big part of the game. That's the statistic I want to lead in." But of course, yesterday's game was a true Michigan team effort, as any game in which the five starters score 22-22-21-18-18 must be. Every one of the Wolverine starting group had one of his better games. * C. J. KUPEC also had perhaps his best all-around game in the Big Ten. Coming off a disappointing performance at Indiana last week, Kupec completely dominated Purdue's highly- publicized 6-11 John Garrett. He led both teams in rebounding and assists, held Garrett to three points in the first half, and hit a tidy nine-of-thirteen from the field himself. * STEVE GROTE, fighting illness which kept him out of prac- tice part of the week, wen out and played his usual hustling game, scoring 22 points and even ripping down several offensive rebounds. * CAMPY RUSSELL played tremendous defense, holding Purdue ace Frank Kendrick, who had burned him down at Purdue, to four first-half points, prompting Schaus to term him "the best player I've seen in the Big Ten in two years. 0 WAYMAN BRITT turned in a balanced effort, pulling down 11 rebounds against a big Boilermaker team, scoring 18 4-2.t The Wolverines came out flying! in the first period. In direct con- trast to their style in Friday night's game, they checked both hard and often, and shot the same way. I THE AGGRESSIVE Maize ind Blue kept the pressure on in close against I r i s h goaltender Mark Kronholm, and Angie Moretto whip-3 ped home the only goal of the stanza at 5:34. In the second period, Notre Dame started issuing body checks left and right. The dam broke at the five- minute mark; after Notre Dame's Steve Curry charged Tom Linds- kog, a scuffle broke out, with Tom'sc brother Doug coming to his aid,' and Ray DeLorenzi jumping in on Curry's behalf. ANY HOPE THE Wolverines hadt of carrying their 1-0 lead througa-' out the game vanished at 8:33, whentEddie Bumbacco s-.red his third goal of the series. Bumbacco broke down left wing and fired a 25-foot slapshot just past Robbie Moore on the wide side. Wolverine coach Dan Farrell said afterward that "our defensive pen-' alty killing was the best that it's. been all year." But, a good defenseI tomany men on the ice. TECCYMor oseda:r ' ...''.:~:.. ""' ' ;~ '~.' Farrell was still worried. "All thE game: hose guys ould h teIf year we've had problems in 4-i)n 4 needed an exorcist to get rid of siutos a uthpn edus tonight." Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM situations. I was just hoping we'd."s tmhet.IT'S GOOD VERSUS EVIL as Lionel "Main Train" Worrell, one of Crisler Arena's favorites, drives virtually clinched a WCHA playoff; past Purdue's Bruce Rose. It was Rose's aggressive and foul-prone play that marked him the villain of THE LUCK OF the Irish turned rspot. As for Notre Dame, well, the yesterday's contest. The "Train" did not have his best game, but that did little to subdue the enthusiasm sickly green. Twenty seconds after Gipper plays football, not hockey. of his extremely vocal Section 26 fan club. the double penalty, Kardos slam- med hometa rebound of a Kris MSU NIPS WILDCA TS Manery shot.M ISWLC T Seventy seconds later Pat Hughes took a crisp pass from Don Far- Notre Damned! Indiana bounces Minnesota SCORE BY PERIODS By The Associated Press E'Arena. ! MICHIGAN 1 2 3 4 MINNEAPOLIS -Torrid second- ! Wisconsin, now 5-5 in. the con- Notre Dame 0 1 1 2 half shooting by Scott May and the -ference and 1 -7 overall, won the Magaaed at -t2eIou -_line..,'n naug GOA (M) Moore (ND) Kronholm LIE SAVES 11 7 10 13 10 5 TOT. 28 28 FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. M-Moretto (Fox) 5:34. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 2. ND-Bumbacco (Nyrop, Kronholm) 8:33. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 3. M-Kardos (Manery, Palmer) 7:42; 4. M-Hughes (Fardig, T. Lindskog) 8:52; 5. M-Neal (Moretto, Palmer) 10:47; 6. ND-DeLorenzi (Is.- raelson, Nyrop) ppg. 14:43. Attendance: 4,200 inside work of freshman Kent Ben- son powered the Indiana Hoosiers to a 73-55 victory over the Minne- sota Gophers last night and pro- tected their Big Ten basketball ~lead. j May hit his first six shots of the second half and wound up with a game high of 20 points, 14 of them in the second 20 minutes. Benson added 18 points and led all rebounders with 15. Steve Green contributed 16 points for the Hoosiers, now 18-3 for the season and 10-1 in the Big Ten with a one- Toledo, SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR' BRIAN DEMING game at the foul line. The Badg- ers hit 18-20 while the Buckeyes, losing their eighth straight game, hit only six of 15. Bill Andreas came off the bench to score 18 points for Ohio State, now 1-10 in the Big Ten and 6-15 overall. game lead over Michigan. Phil Filer and Rick McCutcheon each had 12 points for the Gophers, but both fouled out midway through the second half as the 34-3, 's is Hoosiers romped to their tenth Hawks corned straight Big Ten victory and broke CHAMPAIGN, - Rick Schmidt a five-game losing streak at Wil- hammered in 27 points yesterday lams Arena dating back to 1967. to lead Illinois to a 91-84 victory *a* * over Iowa as the Illini snapped an 11-game losing streak, longest in Wildcats forlorn school history. EAST LANSING - Guard Mike The loss was the 11th on the road Robinson grabbed a rebound and for the Hawkeyes who have yet to turned it into athree-point play 'win awayfrom home. with four seconds left to give Iowa held only one lead at 2-0 Michigan State an uphill 73-70 Big before the Illini took charge and Ten basketball victory over North- rolled to a 10-2 advantage. Iowa Ma(men defuse to clinch best~ By CLARKE COGSDILL held to a low score simply be Special To The Daily cause his opponent stalled on hi TOLEDO - It wasn't suspense feet: the referee was quite len that brought close to 1,000 wrestl- ient with those who didn't g ing enthusiasts to the Toledo Field for takedowns. House yesterday afternoon to But when Rich Valley put 1 watch the number-one Michigan gether four near-falls and coppe Wolverines destroy the young and a 16-0 superior decision at 126 ov winless Rockets, 34-3. Toledo's Mark McGuire, it w For some, it was a chance to clear that even cautious tactics 1 watch home-town boy Bill Schuck the foe weren't going to be enoug show his stuff, and the Toledo na- to gum up the Michigan mat m tive obliged with a 13-8 decision chine. Bill Davids followed wi over John Fast. But most of those a devastating crunch at 1:09 of h who came out probably did so out tango with Phil Kehn. of curiosity to see just how good After Schuck's triumph, capta a team has to be to reach the top. Jerry Hubbard got the first tak Michigan's Jim Brown was down at four seconds and knock Jual season e- [is n- go t0- ed er as by gh na- ith his ain ke- ced off a pretty good man, John Zy- chowicz, 7-1. Hubbard's win re- wrote his personal record: Most consecutive dual meet victoriesc (30), most dual meet wins in one( season (14), and most team points] scored by an individual wrestlere (58). The remainder of the meet s was mostly undistinguished. 177- pounder Rob Huizenga used a - dig this - orthodox cradle to score his pin of John Trease at 1:09; John Ryan absorbed the Maize and Blue's only loss when he wrestled a bad middle four minutes against Joe Berlman;t and Dan Brink, Dave Curby and western yesterday. battled bac e vRobinson, a two-time Big Ten 16-14 on the scoring leader, led the Spartan Prince, but rally to overtake the Wildcats, who 12 straight nst all grappled well held a 10-point advantage at 62-52 advantage 1 D deserve their wins. with 5:56 remaining. 32 half-time lly achieved something Northwestern had possession of today," smiled coach the ball with the score tied 70 referring to his squad's with one minute left, and stalled neet record - the best in hopes of a final shot. But Benny a Michigan wrestling 'White stole the ball with 14 sec- e'll be in pretty good onds on the clock to set up the o into the Big Tens." Spartan's final shot. 14-0 Trailing 36-34 at halftime, North- Brown (M) dec. Myron Sha- western managed to jump to a 48- Indiana -_. 40 lead with 12:20 left behind 6-foot- MICHIGAN Valley (M) sup. dec. Mark 8 center Bryan Ashbaugh. Purdue ). 16-0.* * * Davids (M) pinned Phil 1Mich. State :09. OS U scorned Wisconsin Schuck (M) dec. John Fast COLUMBUS - Gary Anderson Minnesota scored 17 points and Kim Hughes aT), 7-1.a. 16 to lead Wisconsin to a 68-56 Big Now s Brink (M) dec. Charles Mil-1 Ten basketball victory over Ohio wa State last night, the first time the Illinois Beriman (T) dec. John Ry- Badgers have ever won in St. John Ohio State Huizenga (M) pinned Joe 1:09. Curby (M) dec. Mike ck-a y Ernst (M) dec. Dave Hen- 6-0. ;k within two points at shooting of Candy La- the Illini then scored points to take a 28-14 before opening up a 46- lead. 'en Standings Conference All Games W L W L rn 10 10 9 8 S 5 3 3 2 1 1 2 3 3 5 6 8 8 9 10 18 3 17 4 16 5 13 8 13 7 11 10 9 12 6 15 5 15 6 15 UNBEATEN PENN STATE: Tumblers face toughest test en lose By MICHAEL WILSON The Michigan gymnastics team will put their unbeaten record on the line tomorrow night when they host unbeaten Penn State in the Wolverines' final duel meet of the season. The contest will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Crisler Arena. Penn State promises to be the toughest test the Blue gymnasts will face to date. The Nittany Lions were runners-up in last year's NCAA meet and according to Michigan coach Newt Loken, are even stronger this year. Penn State has been consistently scoring 163- 164 points per meet this year. The combination of superb specialists and all-around men give the Nittany Lions a very balanced attack. verly swollen thumb, has been hampered in re- cent workouts and will see limited action against Penn State. The Wolverines will also be hurting in the floor exercise due to the loss of J. P. Bouchard. Bouchard injured a tendon in his left foot during a workout this past week. "The loss of J. P. is a serious blow, not only to the team but to him personally because he wanted so badly to compete against Penn State and in the Big Ten," Loken commented. 'However, the floor exercise team has been working extremely hard to do what is humanly possible to perform their routines and push their scores as close to J.P. as nossible." Loken added. [S C O1RE SI COLLEGE BASKETBALL MICHIGAN 111, Purdue 84 Illinois 91, Iowa 84 Michigan St. 73, Northwestern 70 Wisconsin 68, Ohio State 56 Indiana 73, Minnesota 55 Marquette 61, Detroit 53 Penn state 66, Pittsburgh 64 Notre Dame 108, W. Virginia 80 Alabama 94, Kentucky 71 W. Michigan 85, Kent St. 59 Nebraska 71, Oklahoma St. 63 N. Carolina 94, virginia 61 NY rl c'4..J+o 00 flamen.... 'JA " OT contest to Wayne Special To The Dailyd ttid DETROIT-Michigan's women's basketball team dropped its third straight game, 39-32, in overtime to Wayne State University yesterday Cmorning. Plagued by turnovers and cold shooting, the Wolverines trailed by at least two points throughout most of the game. Michigan managed to tie the game at the end of regulation time, but hit only two free- throws in overtime while allowing the Tartais seven points. The Wol- verines missed nine of nine shots from the field in that overtime period. "We lost it at the free-throw line," Michigan coach Vic Katch stated. The Wolverines hit only 17 of 35 free throws, missing 12 of 20