Wednesday, j6iuary 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven' Wednesday, Ja~iuary 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven 3 .1 Sports of The Daily Celtic-led East stars demolish How Big George . . . .. .smoked Joe By BOB McGINN STUNNING. Shocking. Astonishing. One of the greatest upsets of the century. These are the words being used throughout the world to describe Monday night's Heavyweight Championship fight held in the unique site of Kingston, Jamaica. And they all fit, to a degree. But George Foreman's obliteration of champ Joe Frazier is really just one of a long line of incredible reversals in prize- fighting history. The seedy old fight men still reminisce about James J. Braddock's decision over Max Baer in 1935. And if you have forgotten about the then Cassius Clay-Sonny Liston bout in Miami in 1965, you don't have much of a memory. Even Monday night's victim, Frazier, earned his title by whipping that supposedly invincible foe, Muhammad A'. So to lay to rest the ever-present choruses of "fix," Foreman gained his niche in ring annals the same way others had before him. How did it happen? If you're at all interested, you'll un- doubtedly read so many "expert" theories in the next few weeks that it'll make your head spin. The sportswriters will all have their say, as well as every ex-pug sporting two cauliflower ears and, perhaps, even Norman Mailer. They'll argue about Frazier's inactivity (eight rounds in two years), and the Ali backers will smirk with glee as they discourse on the effect they think their man's punches had on Frazier two winters ago. But all of that can be nothing more than conjecture. A machinelike rock of a man has been destroyed in less than two rounds, and the only thing one can surmise is that there must be extraordinary rower in the two gloved hands of 24 year old George Foreman. The pre-fight odds were 3 -1 for the champion, and that seemed about right. Sure, Foreman had knocked out 34 of his 37 foes, but of the so-called "contenders" around, he had faced only George Chuvalo, the Canadian trial horse. There was also talk about the 1968 Olympic heavyweight champ's amazing pro- ficiency at making the heavy bag fly. Liston could do it, but not many more. Thus, the fight people conceded that Foreman could punch, but few took his chances seriously. It has been a boxing axiom for decades that in order to be good, you must fight other boxers who have a reputation, whether they are 10 years past their prime or not. The evidence that Frazier underrated Foreman is overwhelming. Frazier's big mistake A notoriously slow starter, Smokin' Joe strangely leaped to the attack at the opening bell. Maybe he wanted to dis- courage his opponent immediately, or maybe he wanted to dispel any doubts that he had not recovered from the All fight. Whatever his motive, it was just plain stupidity. Foreman has had nearly a dozen first round Ko's a factor which is meaningful, to fight regulars. He must have smiled when Frazier struck the first blow after a matter of only a few seconds. As Foreman said before the fight, "Frazier's got no style. He just comes on in, and I'll know right where to find him. Before I've always had to do the chasing." So before the champion even had a chance to.initiate his mauling tactics, he was on the canvas from a vicious right hand. He was ,to fall five more times before the end. "I knew Foreman was big and strong, but I didn't realize he was that strong," Frazier said. Afterward Frazier said grimly that he'd be back, and somehow you have to believe him. His preparation for the Ali bout had been nothing short of fanatical, as was his per- formance in the ring. The man deserved a rest, not a two year sojourn. Fighting nobodies like Terry Daniels and Ron Stander hardly constitute a title defense. Frazier's reign was another nail in boxing's half-closed coffin. Whether Smokin' Joe can ever reach the heights of his emotional self again will dictate his future in the ring. He has been humiliated. Maybe now, whether he meets Foreman again or Ali in a fight which will bring a vastly reduced purse, Frazier will get back to the business of fighting. It would seem at this point that the title door has now swung open for Ali. Should he fight the champ, Foreman appears to be made to order for him, since he is probably slower than Frazier and doesn't yet possess Joe's proven ability to go 15 tough rounds. If Ali doesn't take Foreman lightly, and if he still has the capacity to dance the distance, he would likely win a decision. But if Ali presents Foreman with the opportunity to un- leash his heavy artillery, the young Californian could go down in history before he's through as the most powerful puncher of them all. Even if Ali defeats Foreman, he must still fight Frazier to erase the memories of that night in 1971. Feeling as I do that Frazier will rebound with that iron-willed determination, and knowing Ali's feelings of revenge, I see their second engagement as the genuine Fight of the Century. The heavyweight division hasn't had three such quality fighters since Rocky Marciano, Jersey Joe Walcott, and Ezzard Charles were around in the early 1950's. It might be worthwhile to savor it while we can. CHICAGO ()P) - Boston's Da Cowens and John Havlicek co bined for 29 points to lead the Ea to a relatively easy 104-84 victo over the favored West in the 23 NBA All-Star game last night. The West, despite the crow pleasing efforts of flashy Na Archibald, was thwarted in a t for an unprecedented third su cessive All-Star triumph by t second-half power of the hustli East squad, which now leads the series 15-8. Although the West trailed onl 50-45 at halftime after blowin East does it EAST ve m- ast ry rd vd-' ate ry uc- the alsports NIGHT EDITOR: BOB McGINN West last-minute withdrawal because of "personal reasons," the West was outmuscled under the boards by the bruising East strongmen. J a b b a r' s replacement, Wilt Chamberlain, was effective in the early going but was on the side- lines much of the time in his rec- ord-matching 13th All-Star game appearance. For a while in the first period, Archibald and Sidney Wicks of Portland teamed in a shooting spree that led the West to a 19-9 edge. * * * Red Wings ie PHILADELPHIA - Alex Delvec- chio scored the 450th goal of his National Hockey League career- only the seventh player to reach that plateau-as the Detroit Red Wings held on for a 4-4 tie with the Philadelphia Flyers last night. Delvecchio's goal came at 8:20 of the second period on a power play and tied the game at 2-2. DeBusschere Havlicek Cowens Frazier Maravich Hayes White Wilkens Hudson Marn Bradley Black Unseld Kauffman Totals G 4 6 7 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 4 AP Photo EAST MEETS WEST and one of the twain shall be beat(en). Dave Cowens (18) of the Boston Celtics strains for a rebound snared by Los Angeles Lak er center Wilt Chamberlain (13) in last night's NBA All-Star Game in Chicago. The East throttled a surprised West squad 104-84. BIG TEN'S BEST: Sche mbechler honojred WEST G Wicks 4 Haywood 5 Chamberlain 1 Archibald 6 West 3 Dandridge 2 Lanier 5 Bing 0 Walker 1 Goodrich 1 Scott 0 Thurmond 2 Love 2 Hawkins 1 Totals 33 Attendance-17,527 F 1-2 2-5 1-i 0-0 0-0 2-2 0-0 1-2 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 10-16 F 5-5 2-2 0-0 5-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-2 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-2 0-0 18-18 ng in an early 10-point lead, the third quarter shooting of Cowens and y Havlicek opened up a 12-point g lead at 73-61. Thereafter, the East steadily took command and by midway in the fourth quarter had iced the T game with a 16-point bulge at 92-76. 9 Archibald, the 6-1 sensation of 14 Kansas City-Omaha, led the West 10 with 15 points and his magical ball- handilng delighted the Chicago 10 Stadium crowd of 17,527. 6 Without Milwaukee Bucks su- 6 perstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, a 4 4 4 104 T4 13 11 17:.. \ 10 2 4 6 2 en ntrseItyue. CHICAGO ()-Bo Schembechler, who directed co-champion Mich- igan to 10 successive victories be-' fore a closing upset by Ohio State, yesterday was named winner of the first Big Ten Football CoachI of the Year Award.{ Schembechler, whose Wolverinesj finished with a 10-1 record-mar- red only by a tough 14-11 loss to the Buckeyes-was selected for the new honor in a poll of news media covering the Big Ten. The trophy was presented to Schembechler by commissioner Wayne Duke at a press recep- tion last night also attended by the nine o t h e r conference coaches. Duke lauded Schembechler's 38-4 record during his four-season regime at Michigan commending COLLEGE BASKETBALL Maryland 100, Long Island 73 Lehigh 48, Colgate 46 Lafayette 61, W. Virginia 60 Marquette 76, Northern Michigan 55 Kansas St. 77, Kansas 68 Baylor 76, Arkansas 70 Hillsdale 92, Spring Arbor 64 Texas Tech 65, Rice 51 ITexas A&M 69, Texas 64 Oral Roberts 87, Pan American 68 NHL N.Y. Islanders 8, California 1 Philadelphia 4, Detroit 4 Minnesota 5, Los Angeles 5 it as "one of the all-time best ever over that time span." Instead of rebuilding in 1972,1 after losing 15 starters, Schem- bechler fashioned the Wolverines' into a club which finished No. 7 in the final Associated Press poll. It marked the third time in Bo's four seasons, Michigan won out- right or shared the Big Ten title. The honoring of Schembechler climaxed a day-long annual meet- ing of conference coaches at which' the mentors discussed problems of last fall and new rules for the 1973 season. Over the winter, Alex Agase shifted from Northwestern to suc- ceed retired Bob DeMoss at Pur- due; Indiana's Johnny Pont re- placed Agase at Northwestern; Lee Corso went to Indiana from Louis- ville, and Denny Stolz became head coach at Michigan State, supplanting his retired former boss, Duffy Daugherty. 1-1/4" GOLD" DECALS on black background Can be applied to front and rear windshields, books, etc. LAST CALL! MIXED BOWLING LEAGUES SIGN UP NOW UNION LANES OPEN 11 A.M. MON-SAT. Also available: 3/8" 3-character rubber stamps. These are the only two items we are handling at this time. Either item: $1.00 ppd for any 3-letter set-(all Greek, all English, or mixed). Sorry, no COD's. BATTEN ENTERPRISES P.O. Box 128 St. Albans, N.Y. 11412 HILLEL AND MIDRASHA COLLEGE OF JEWISH STUDIES PRESENT DR. ZVI GITELMAN Asst. 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