THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven ay q By CLARKE COGSDILLr k Bay, Michigan's wrestling and academic advisor to the { tic Department, has resigned. - just don't enjoy coaching," 31-year-old mentor explained rday. "I've had a great i of guys to. work with, a assistant (Bill Johannesen), i r: facilities and Don Canham's . e run the program my way.F here's no use staying around oing something you don't en- nd you might as well leave you're young enough to have >pportunity to start some- z e else.". Y'S FOUR YEARS as coachI lished him as one of the out- ing wrestling teachers in the ry. His teams compiled a 43- al meet record (31-2-2 inside 4g Ten) won the 1973 Big Ten pionship, and finished sec- n both the 1974 Big Ten tour- nt and NCAAs. the be bequeaths his successor an Cliff 27-meet victory streak, and ed Mi irden of stepping in follow- to 1970 e first 14-0 dual meet season his su chigan wrestling history. "I thi i heard rumors he was go- the co : leave," commented Iowa whenc wrestling coach Gary Kur- it's s eier, "but I'm surprised he's coachi g out. I'd have to say wrest- it got mill be the loser. I'm interest- ed for seeing the Big Ten as strong ssible, and I enjoyed going TWO ainst his teams. I wish him Jerry gore I uits as mat m AP Photo Cash tumbles but Tigers triumph. Norm Cash is out as he sails past Yankee Thurmon Munson in yesterday afternoon's game. Joe Cole- man, pitched no-hit ball for 73 innings and finished with a two-hitter and Mickey Stanley hit a two-run homer, leading the Detroit Tigers to a 4-1 victory over New York yesterday. Coleman lost his bid to become the first Tiger to pitch a no-hitter since Jim Bunning in 1958 when Gene Michael hit a ground single up the middle with one out in the eighth. Coleman struck out five, walked two and hit Roy White twice en route to his first Victory of the year. The win raised the Tiger mark to 3-3. Detroit plays the Red Sox today in Boston in the first of a four game series. Rick Bay st of luck." Keen, the man who direct- chigan wrestling from 1925 0 and recommended Bay as accessor, reacted similarly. ink it's a very great loss to aching profession," he said contacted at his office, "but uch a personal thing. If ng had got to me the way to him, I'd never have last- anything like 35 years." -TIME national champion Hubbard claimed he hadn't InIs gave Chicago a 42-40 edge at ission. ROIT WENT COLD again at ginning of the second half, erry Sloan led the Bulls out 6-49 advantage. But Lanier t Detroit right back to been surprised when Bay told a ;when the season was over. I never team meeting last week that his wrestled over the summer the resignation was imminent. "We way some other guys did. I always knew from when we were fresh- had other things to do. men and sophomores that Rick wasn't going to be around too "WHEN I'M coaching I find I long," he asserted. "You know get uptight for six months out of! how he'd get so uptight even at the year. It's not so bad if you the beginning of the week - get nervous the night before a there's just no way any man can meet that's one thing, but if take it forever." you're tensed up the whole week, Bay's decision did not come has- there's something wrong. tily. "I told Don Canham (Ath- "The only reason I was in letic Director) last December I coaching at all was because I thought it'd be my last year," Bay could do it here. I might be inter- recalled, "and he really tried to ested in athletic administration talk me out of it. I suppose I could somewhere else, but as far as I'm stay another year if I really want- concerned there's only one place ed to. But the guys work so hard, to coach, and this is it. I'd like to they deserve a coach who's in stay in the Athletic Department there because he wants to do it. I if there were any openings, but "Maybe I should have been tip- there aren't. ped off because, back when I ' "I feel good about my decision. wrestled here, I was always glad I'll be spending the next few f. f, r~ f/ s Y'+..{ 4{. entor weeks helping out in the recruit- ing, and trying to find something else in the Ann Arbor area." Bill Johannesen, Bay's assistant for the last four years, currently holds the inside track as the search for a successor begins. "He's the only coach I'd recommend," Bay notes, and Keen remarked that he would "rank Johannesen the same way I rank Rick -- very high." Jobs like Michigan's don't open up very often in the wrestling world, and Canham is sure to be deluged with hundreds of appli- cations before he makes the ap- pointment. But as one well-placed source notes, "it all comes down to one thing: will Canham decide to go along- with Billy Jo, or will he decide to spend the big bucks and hire Dan Gable (1972 Olym- pic gold medalist) away from Iowa?" Sports of The Daily EVEN SERIES, 3-3: Pistons Pistons' Scott honored NEW YORK (A)-Ray Scott was named yesterday as the National Basketball Association's Coach of the Year after finish- ing his first full season as coach with the Detroit Pistons, who reached the playoffs for the first time in six years. Scott received 33- votes in the 12th annual balloting of 51 members of the news media from each of the league's 17 cities. Buffalo's Jack Ramsay was second with 10 followed by Larry Costello of Milwaukee with four, Bill Sharman of Los Angeles with three and K. C. Jones of Capital with one. Scott will receive his Coach of the Year trophy prior to the start of tonight's Western Conference semifinal game at Detroit between the Pistons and the Chicago Bulls. "From the start of the season, we had a plan-to play ex- cellent defense, hold teams under 100 points and execute intel- ligently on offense,' said Scott. Bo pass happy. With all the doom and gloom affecting Michigan athletics at this time, it's nice to know that someone is happy. Bo Schem- bechler was in wonderful spirits after his team worked on its passing game at Michigan Stadium yesterday. The Wolverine passing attack, whose existence has been questioned in the past, looked sharp on the Tartan Turf, with Dennis Franklin zinging accurate passes and Keith Johnson making excellent catches. Said Bo, "Every aspect of our passing game looked good, except our pass blocking. We don't pass block very well." Then, with offensive line coach Elliot Uzelac within earshot, he joked, "My line coaches don't know how to teach pass blocking." Smiling all the while, Bo "complained" that "the only thing that's been consistent this spring has been our injuries." Then, in response to a question, he laughed, "At least none .of my players has jumped to the WFL. They aren't good enough." Hoosiers protest BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (P) - Indiana University Athletic Director Bill Orwig decided yesterday to present an appeal by the school's swimming team to the University Faculty Commit- tee for possible action on the Hoosiers' one-point loss in the national championship meet. The swimmers, protesting the loss to the University of South- ern California in the National Collegiate Athletic Association meet last month, claimed that the meet committee at Long Beach, Calif., "bowed to regional political pressure." The Hoosiers, seeking their seventh straight NCAA crown, lost 339-338. By GEORGE HASTINGSj Special To The Daily d ayDERITh Derij DETROIT - The Detroit.( E Pistons sweated out a last minute rally by the Chicago Bulls last night and kept themselves alive in the Na- NIGHT EDITORS: tional Basketball ,.AssociationLEBA HERTZ playoffs, pulling but a 92-88 LESLIE RIESTER victory before 11,134 relieved I fans at Cobo Arena. The Detroit victory tied the "The difference in this game was titanic tussle between the two that we were able to execute and maintain our composure in the, teams at three wins apiece, final minutes," Scott explained. and sets up a decisive seventh game in Chicago Saturday af- LANIER'S SECOND-HALF play ternoon. made another difference. Held to The Pistons rode to victory on a mere four points in the first two the strength of an eight-point surgeperiods,the bigguresdond midway through the fourth quarter y pouringuin 24 more down the led by Bob Lanier. With the score stretch, including 14 .markers in 76-75 in Detroit's favor, Lanim the fourth quarter. sandwiched two jumpers anda . The only player on the floor who hook around a long bomb by rivaled him was Walker, who George Trapp to put Detroit on top, pumped in 14 of 20 shots to keep 84-75, with 3:38 to go. his team in the game. Despite his Chet Walker and Jerry Sloan last minute heroics, the point totals then led a desperation Chicago of Sloan, who scored only 11, andI comeback, combining for the last Bob Love, held to 14, testified to 13 Bull points. With 1:06 to go, the efficiency of the tough Piston Walker cut the Piston's lead to defense. 88-84 with a three-point play, and It was the fourth time in the Lanier fouled out. series the Pistons had held the Bulls under 90 points, and the f TTTCVr~ nnxx~irni fr TA" ifth!LIIimn X~1in ~,rnr Uin~1UAA.U to go g interm DET the be and Je to a 5 brough tighten it again, and Bing gave the Pistons a brief 64-62 lead be- fore Norm Van Lier's lay-up made it 64-all at the end of three. The see-sav# battle continued for the first six minutes of the final period until the Piston surge broke the game open. Last night's outcome means that it all boils down to Saturday's en- counter, with the Bulls enjoying the home court edge. But Scott dis- counted that factor, and expressed supreme confidence in a Detroit win. "The people in Chicago said this series would be a piece of cake," the Piston mastermind declared. "Now they're choking on it." AP Photo BOB LANIER chases after a loose ball in last night's 92-88 playoff victory over the Chicago Bulls. Lanier hit 28 points to lead the Pistons in the crucial sixth game, evening the series 3-3. For Di rect Iassified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. (Continued from Page 6) PHOTO SUPPLIES CHRIS FRD xuanswerea or ie- troit, finding Don Adams under- neath to put the home team back up by six, 90-84, with only 45 seconds left. But Sloan put in an offensive rebound, and after a 24-second violation on Detroit, Walker's lay-up pulled the Bulls to within two points with six sec- onds left. Walker then fo'led Dave Bing, who stepped to the foul line and sank the last two of his 22 points to ice the contest. The game marked the first timej in the series that Detroit had won a close game. Detroit coach Ray Scott agreed that it was a goodj sign for his team.a rf:1f' 'rf. v. y r,"': };" i r,"}:% : r: " r :A:+ :%?y ' :' J i J r if+.a!?irY yF ;: }ri: ' ' ; ;;r $: r}{ ti ;:;}:S ti:"r:;:Sr,";;RrW rr r :{ "r,;};'i::?;;": r1 rr r ' f. "'" "r: f ".?' ... ry, r :r:": .i.... rr.. F. r.. ... Frrir:" ., :q.v'r'.+al>ver}r r' t. ' ;:ir ?;.;:r.r}rrr r::"Fr}rdla ."r r' rae , ,'",r/." ; [ g w{ ;y ..... rrrrrrt r }r"vYl, .S r.+n "' ..... r.r}3}.. rrY~dt }:+ r :' ...... r... r.::: x. Netters slam Irish By BRIAN DEMING Playing in the Intramural Building because of thewet weather, Michigan's tennis team knocked off Notre Dame yesterday afternoon, 7-1. After poor starts in most of the matches, Brian Eisner's squad nearly shut out the Irish, losing only in fourth singles where Jeff Miller fell to Randy Stehlik, 7-5, 7-6. The Wolverines, who had been practicing on the relatively slow courts of the Liberty Racquet Club, took some time to get used to the extremely fast Intramural courts. The match was scheduled outside but the team had to displace some irate basketball players when the rains came. The Irish, on the other hand, having played all spring on the quick surface of their field house, were used to the fast courts. "They're a tougher team than I expected," commented Eisner, who had hoped to start the season out with a solid shutout. "They're much improved over last year." The Wolverines played under an additional disadvantage as starters Peter Fleming and Kevin Senich were sidelined for the opener. Fleming, who normally plays in the number two slot, has been bothered by a back injury while Senich, a number four regular, missed the opener due to a bad sore throat. terback in the fall for the Irish football team. "We didn't play great," Eisner remarked about the team's overall performance, but the fifth year mentor, seeking his fifth Big Ten title, was pleased, not only with Friedler's fine play but with the come-from behind ef- forts of Fred DeJesus and Jim Holman. DeJesus, a sorhomore from Puerto Rico, could do nothing right in his first set against Brandon Walsh but bounced back in the second and third sets to win 1-6, 6-4, 6-3. Holman, an Ann. Arbor native, replacing Se- nich in the lineun, recovered after a first set lost to win 2-6, 6-4, 6-4. The third doubles match featuring Holman and Jerry Karzen against Juan Inchauste and Ron Inchauste of Notre Dame was canceled un- der pressure from restless volleyball players, the meet having already been decided. Singles 1. Victor Amaya (M) d. Rick Slager (ND), 7-6, 6-4. 2. Eric Friedler (M) d. Chris Kane (ND), 6-2, 6-1. 3. Fred DeJesus (M) d. Brandon Walsh (ND) 1-6. 6-4, 6-3. 4. Randy Stehlik (ND) d. Jeff Miller (M), 7-5, 7-6. S. Jerry Karzen (M) d. Juan Inchauste (ND), I ..:: : 3 ;?:;'" : ?: :? ,{}-0 { s :r JG : r. 1 ? yJJ 4 'r ,:yt ;$ ~.^'s, {6" 'r ' J fr. ': t ' Ir.''. ith time in six games under 100 points for Chicago.I The defensive play of Ford, who; played over half the game, on Sloan, and of Trapp and Curtis Rowe on Love, were the key indi- vidual efforts within the Piston team defense concept. In the game's opening minutes,, it looked like a replay of the first half in Chicago Tuesday night. The Piston offense came out of the locker room disorganized and worked for few good shots in the first ten minutes of the contest. Meanwhile, Chet Walker paced the Bulls to a 18-5 lead. Then, with 3:24 to go in the first period, Scott went to his bench and put Jim Davis in the pivot. The game turn- ed around. DAVE BING GOT hot in the quarter's final two minutes, drop- ping in two jumpers and passing off to Davis and Stu Lantz for four more points, cutting the Bull's lead to 22-15 by the buzzer. Shortly into the second stanza, the Detroiters finally got hot. With great balanced scoring Detroit went on a 14-2 surge that turned a 28-21 Bull lead into a 35-30 margin in favor of the Pistons. With Lanier spending 11 minutes of the first half on the bench, Davis, George Trapp and Chris Ford all came off the pines to make big contributions. The Bulls hung tough, however, and a jump shot by Walker with only seconds USED ROLLEI 35 and new Nikkormat cameras. Jim 662-4276. 27D414 FOR SALE: Konica Auto S-2, 35mm. Excellent condition. Call Ellen, 763- 6637 or 665-5323. dD13 BUSINESS SERVICES DID YOUR PARENTS put you through school? Show them whom you've be- come this Graduation. Photographic interpretations in natural settings. James Chalat. 761-8484. 6 years expe- rience professional colour prints. mounted and framed. Prices start at $50.00. 07J14 TUTORING SPANISH/ENGLISH. Exper- ienced bilingual instructors. 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