Sunday, February 4, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, Feruary 4, 173ITHEIMICIGANIDAIL Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKi Jerry Hubbard (L) and opponent square off Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Jean Gagnon dismounts the high bar full court P RESS Michigan plays tough . . .but still cantw in By DAN BORUS{ Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN THOUGH THEY HAD all the reason in the world to, the much maligned Michigan cagers did not fold yesterday at Illinois. They were beaten by a team they were probably superior to, but they were not whipped. "I find it hard to believe that Michigan is 4-4 in the Big Ten," said a jovial Illini mentor Harv Schmidt after his squad sent the Maize and Blue roller-coaster deeper into its horrible descent yesterday. "They really took it to us."' The game was one of the seemingly endless nightmares that the Wolverines have suffered of late. A bad pass here, and untimely turnovers and poor free throw shooting there came back to haunt the Wolverines as they have in the last four or five games. And once again they had allowed the opposition's star to remain in the game with four fouls, Nick Weatherspoon, playing. what he later called, "my best game," calmly gunned the Wolverines to an agonizing death. But no one can say that the Wolverines handed him the buckets. He earned them, fighting through a sticky and agres- sive Wolverine man-to-man defense. Coach John Orr, his face long and white, reacted angrily when a reporter suggested that his squad did not play "the good D." "I thought we played defense well," Orr snapped In one of the few times he showed emotion in the post-game interview session. "Did you think we weren't tough?" he queried. Harv Schmidt, for one, thought they were exactly that. "They showed us a lot down there, coming at us man-to-man," he said. "Jesus, they were tough. They played us nose to nose. But 'Spoon '(Weatherspoon) played a fantastic game, boy, let me tell you!" And it wasn't offense that the Wolverines lacked, either. In the second half, they sunk an unbelievable 19 of 27 field attempts, which, for non-math majors, converts to 70.4%. That figure is especially high when you consider how down and disgusted the Wolverines feel. Whatever ails the Wolverines, and something does to be sure, this correspondent cannot believe the lack of the will to win is one of the viruses. He does not believe it because of Michigan's performance yesterday. Although their game was off, as it has been for well nigh three weeks, the Maize and Blue hustled. Henry Wilmore, who had an embarrassing one point in the first half, came off the bench and tried to rally the squad. "We perked up at the end," said Orr. And they did. They fought, they contended hard, and they had their chances, but somehow they fell short of the goal. Faced with the prospect of squaring off with a team that honestly believes that it is in the thick of the Big Ten race, a distinction Michigan has unfortunately lost, the Wolverines sucked up their disappointment and played with a fury, but not always the skill of a team fighting for the crown. And when the boorish and bush Illini partisans booed their every action, the Wolverines held their ground. Sure, something's wrong. The Maize and Blue cagers turned the ball over 17 times to the Illini, and on plays on which they were not being actively challenged. And they missed easy shots, i.e., free throws. What hurt was that they were one-and-one attempts. John Lockard, Greg Buss, and Joe Johnson all missed at key points in the game. And, to add to the list of Wolverine woes, they let a smaller and sometimes slower team stay almost even with them off the boards. It's hard to believe that, with eight games gone in the Bigj Ten season, mighty Michigan is not a challenger. Well, they aren't. And even though the Big Ten and Illinois are much improved, something other than the opposition is hindering Michigan. Coaching? Attitude and desire? Pressure? Maybe. But now the pressure is gone. No longer Big Ten contenders, and able to play spoiler to only Ohio State and Minnesota, the cagers could possibly go out and play for the joy and thrills of it all. Or they could continue to fold, coming so close, yet so far away. Michigan has a challenge. A quick look at the box score and you come away wondering how Michigan lost. With the exception o( J.J., all the regulars shot over or near 50% from the floor. That's the kind of shooting that wins ballgames. Illinois destroys cagers' By BOB McGINN Special to The Daily CHAMPAIGN - The hard- charging Fighting Illini of Il- linois rode the sensational play of senior captain Nick: Weatherspoon and the bril- SUNDAY liant defensive work of guard NIGHT EDITOR: Otho Tucker here yesterday to a 76-75 victory over Michigan, all but ending the Wolverines'. Big Ten title aspirations. maining that sealed Michigan's The loss, Michigan's fourth doom. against four wins, was as bitter to Henry Wilmore then drove the swallow as any all season. Coach length of the floor to score an un- Johnny Orr's snake-bitten club has contested lay-in, but it wasn't now lost its four league games by enough. the combined margin of fifteenj Illinois grabbed the lead for points. keeps four minutes into the second Afterwards, a dejected Orr put half, and held advantages of as this tragic campaign into perspec- many'as seven until the Wolverines tive when he said, "We play them initiated their stirring bid for vic- close, but we just can't pull them tory. out." Trailing by 72-65 with 2:38 show- The chief reason his hustling ing on the huge scoreboardclock, team didn't pull it out yesterday; Wilmore suddenly came to life. before the crowd of 11,117 in the First he drilled a long jumper from Assembly Hall can be directly at- the left corner to cut the gap to tributed to Weatherspoon. He fin- five. And then, twenty secondsl ished with 34 points, but it was his later, the "old pro" rammed in twn r o l h t hi h s another long range bomb. text D&tiIy SPORTlS ELLIOT LEGOW another, this one from the line, Michigan found itself t by just one, 74-73, with six s left. With Campy Russell al heavy pressure on the in pass, it seemed as if Sch wouldn't get the pass in with seconds. But he did, bar Weatherspoon, who was pr tackled in desperation by a Russell. A two-minute break ens which nervous Illinois officia Orr hovered over the fallen' Finally, he got to his fee walked slowly to the free stripe to sink the foul shot offset Wilmore's driving s hopes ho totaled 16 in the frame, along with eight boards. Schmidt saw his opponents' ag- gressivecdefense as an indication that Michigan had clearly come to play. "They came after us right from the start," he commented. "It wasn't child's play out there." The Art White-led officiating crew must have agreed, because they whistled some 47 personals during the course of the afternoon. Both clubs were hit hard by fouls, e base Michigan losing Joe Johnson, with trailing 4:32 left as well as Russell in the econds closing moments, while the Illini saw roughhouse cornerman Rick pplying Schmidt and Jed Foster both exit bounds midway in the second half. roader Michigan also had a golden op- in five portunity to seize control in the ely, to second half when Weatherspoon omptly drew his fourth at the 14 minute diving mark. But the scrappy Illini re- serves filled the breach until their leader re-entered the fray five ued in minutes later. als and There was considerable doubt as 'Spoon. to what the Wolverine players' re- t, and action would be after the crushing throw defeats they suffered last week. But ts that Russell, Brady, Ernie Johnson, and shot at John Lockard all turned in fine t~~~ s UC 1ccIO!SOIS w cn pus ed the Illini's one-point lead three with a scant five secondsr Just out 'Spooned Russell E. Johnson Brady J. Johnson Wilmore Kupec Buss Lockard Britt TEAM Totals Weatherspoon Schmidt Conner Tucker Dawson Foster Schroeder Roberts TEAM Team MICHIGAN FG FT R 8-15 4-4 7 6-8 3-4 a 6-11 1-2 14 1-5 0-1 2 6-13 1-3 1 1-3 0-3 5 1-1 0-1 1 3-3 2-2 1 0-0 0-0 0 3 32-59 11-20 42 ILLINOIS FG FT R 15-25 4-6 16 1-3 0-0 2 4-il 2-3 5 2-9 3-4 6 6-13 7-11 4 1-4 2-4 2 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 F 5 4 3 5 3 2 2 1 0 25 the buzzer. performances. None of them how- to With coach Harv Schmidt's club promne.Nn ftehw re- in a four-corner stall and holding The first half had been nip and ever, could come close to equalling a three point lead, 72-69 Ken tuck with the Wolverines leading the premier play of Weather- Brady fouled his pivot counterpart, for all but three. minutes, never spoon. Nick Conner. Conner missed the by more than five points. The score The win upped the Illini mark in TP first of the one-and-one, but Illini was tied seven times before the the Big Ten to 3-1, but with their 20 sub C. J. Schroader gathered in scoreboard read 34-34 at the klaxon. treacherous schedule of Saturday- 15 the vital rebound. Orr's chargers seemed ready to Monday games from here on in, 13 . j assume command several times in Schmidt fully realizes the formid- 2 Then with just over 50 seconds the first twenty minutes, but un- able task ahead. As he put it, 13 remaining Tucker, who had ackn timely turnovers and Wilmore's "Indiana and Minnesota are the 2ed Wilmore without a field goal in1lack of offense kept the contest teams to beat, not Purdue. They're a the initial stanza, was called for close. Michigan surprisingly came just too young." At one point in o travelling, out in a man-to-man defense, but the season, he might have men- 75 The Wolverines rushed downcourt it didn't faze Weatherspoon. He tioned Michigan as well. and their kingpin, Wilmore, fired -- -- - -__ TP upanother twenty-footer. This time 34 it caromed off the rim to Tucker, 2 who was promptly hacked by ErnieWolverine smers 17 Johnson. 19 The 6-6 sophomore atoned for his 4 earlier mistake by cashing in both 0 ends of the one-and-one, giving the Illini a 74-69 cushion. 76 Wilmoredshit a short banker a Ffew seconds later to cut the margin Special to The Daily electronically awarded s e c o n d to three again. And after Jeff Daw- PRINCETON-"We were con- while the Blue's Mark Anderson 76 son misfired on a bonus free throw cerned about it, so we set out was less than two seconds further situation and Wilmore hit still not to get in trouble in the back. _______________________" F 4 5 3 3 5 0 0 AP Photo MICHIGAN'S HENRY WILMORE charges down court with the ball in yesterday's basketball loss at Illinois. Wilmore was held to one point in the first half but with 12 in the second half nearly pulled out a Michigan win. 29-85 18-28 40 22 SCORE BY PERIODS: 12 MICHIGAN 34 41 Illinois 34 42 Attend~ance-11,1 17. . A PERFECT WEEKEND Grapp let By MIKE PRITULAa The football team couldn't do it and the Wolverines' basketball squad didn't even come close. But the Michigan Mat Machine chewed up its tenth straight opponent yester- day as it surpassed all other Wolverine sports in performance this year. Their 10-0 record was accomplished by a 20-12 victory jver a scrappy Minnesota squad yesterday. The win came on the heels of their 18-17 squeaker over Iowa on Friday night. IT WASN'T AN impressive showing and the Wolverines were perhaps a bit tired from their heartstopper on Friday night. However, coach Rick Bay was satisfied with the win. "I thought we hung in there tough against a tough team," Bay said. "And I was happy to come out of this weekend with two wins. This really sets us up for Michigan State." JIM BROWN, DOING his thing, got Michi- gan off to an early lead as usual when he grappled Gopher Pat Neu into the ground. Brown scored a 14-5 decision over the Min- naent n ,_ on n v. nnet ntlt ic __ "s thump Gophers* Lamphere to gain an easy takedown and a gift for a victory. The meet was tied 3-3 when Wolverine Freshman Jeff Guyton scored a superior decision at 134 pounds giving Michigan a 7-3 lead. Guyton wrestled impressively as he defeated last year's Big Ten runner-up by a 16-4 score. Another Michigan freshman, Lozon, who was wrestling his first varsity match, lost a hard fought bout and dropped a 4-2 decision to Minnesota senior Dick Gautsch. BAY THEN CALLED on his two Big Ten Champions to widen the narrow 7-6 lead. Jerry Hubbard and Mitch Mendrygal shut out their ppponents at 150 and 158 lbs. respectively increasing the Wolverine lead to 14-6. Hubbard's win was a 11-0 pasting that counted as a superior decision. It was a methodical, almost boring, 2-0 victory for Mendrygal, but it brought three points to the team. Minnesota took the next two matches as they cut Michigan's lead to 14-12. Roger "I thought Roger drained himself too fast in the early part of the match," stated Bay. "He really didn't have anything to finish up with . . . These two matches kept them in the meet and made it close." WITH THE SCORE 14-12, it was all up to Dave Curby and heavyweight Gary Ernst. Curby wrestled well at 190 lbs. and eeked out a 4-3 win over a tough freshman, Evan Johnson. It was a close meet that could have: gone either way but Curby prevailed in the end. At heavyweight Ernst showed his immenseE strength as he dominated Gopher Dave Simonson. The Wolverine junior came away with a 6-1 win to sew up the Michigan win. Ernst knew that all he had to do was to keep from being pinned in order for the team to win. A PERFECT SEASON? Bay had said this was possible from the start. Only two dual meets stand in the path of the Michigan, Mat Machine, Michigan State here on Feb- ..--r 111nnl A unncinthar nn h A meet," commented swim coach mee tgeronnhise-wmetsa-h In the backstroke event Prince- Gsy Stageron hipre-meet stra- ,tn's Charlie Campbell was the tgy for esterday's Tho nMtceigatvictor with a time of 1:56.0. Here against Princeton. The'Mcia aanhwvrto Michigan mn tankers made his plans look good agai, however, two Michigan men, as they never were threatened Poul Foster and Tom Szuba, were and eventually put the meet able to garner the'next two spots. away, 70-43. , Michigan showed its nationally Michigan's attempt to destroy feared breaststroke combination to any Princeton victory hopes was the Tigers and came out the pool realized in the first event, the .first, second and third ahead of 400 yard medley relay. Coming Princeton's best man. Stu Isaac up with a new combination so as was first in 2:11.1, followed by Pat to able to save the team's top Bauer and Mike Whitaker. Unfor- freestylers for later, Stager was still able to engineer a victory. Chris Hansen, Stu Isaac, Larry Day, and Paul Foster teamed up CLEVELAND (R) -- Olympic for a 3:33.8 first-place finish. gold medal winner Rod Milburn After that the tankers demoral- equalled a world indoor record ized their opposition even fur- last night with a time of 5.8 sec- ther in the 1000 yard freestyle. onds in winning the 50-yard high Michigan's Tom Szuba easily hurdles at the Knights of Co- triumphed in an excellent time lumbus track meet. of 9:42.3, finishing more than 14 seconds ahead of Princeton's tunately only the top two swim- touted Curtis Hayden. mers on a team count in scoring "We wanted to gain control early so Princeton's first finisher was and we did," Stager said. "Be- awarded third. cause of this we were able to The diving events again called switch some swimmers around in upon Michigan's depth to save other races." It was Michigan's upo in's epth to save depth which enabled it to maintain somethe one and three meter events that control throughout the meet. Princeton's Bill Heinz took the Princeton's two or three fine in- blue ribbon, but Michigan's Joe dividuals were no match for the C ~- -1 Crawford was a close second in