Saturday, February 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Saturday, February 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY t Cagers, grapplers vie In1 Minnesota today r WRESTLERS NEAR TITLE; SEVEN MOVE INTO FINALS' By JIM ECKER Vatch. The Badger, unanimously Special to The Daily approved as the top 167-pounder, MINNEAPOLIS - The Michigan ranked a strong favorite against mat machine virtually wrapped up the senior Wolverine. Ritzman the Big Ten wrestling champion- clipped Michigan State's Bruce shin last night by sirmassing an Zindel 3-2 in a controversial semi- overwhelming 70 points, 18 more final affair decided on a last-second than closest pusuers, Wisconsin stalling call against the Spatran. and Iowa. After last night's outstanding ef- With seven Wolverines grappling fort by his Wolverines, Bay's ear- in this afternoon's championship Her w o r d s sound pessimistic. bouts, Rick Bay's boys stand one "We're gonna have to wrestle a sten from completing their dream lot better tonight or we're not go- year. ing to be in it," confessed the can- "Nobody will ever know how ference's youngest wrestling coach.; hard these guys worked," remark- After yesterday afternoon's ac- ed an ebullient Bay. "They've to-egtW leie a done everything we've ever asked tion, eight W o 1 v e r in e s had to do. These guys have all qualified for semi-final bouts. Bill them todthefr goysahavnow, Schuck and John Ryan were the been together for two years now, only Ann Arbor-based wrestlers except Guyton. Now they know missing from the winner's bracket.: what that sign in the locker room The second - seeded Schuck lost a: means . . . Those that stay be- "rat tail" decision to Ohio State' come champions'. Dean Armstrong 4-1. Ryan IVrestl- " It would take an eniphenominal ed sluggishly against Wisconsin's combination of events- to prevent Laurent Soucie and succumbed 2-0. the conference crown from landing Although Michigan wrestled lethar- in Ann Arbor. "I guess I want a gically in the opening round, sever- comnouter to work it oit mathe- al Wolverines did perform well. ; By GEORGE HASTINGS Over the last few years thered a y have been certain assignments h v be n cran asg m nswhich have struck fear into the hearts of all basketball coaches. To play the Celtics at Boston, thef UCLA, have been tasks into which only the b'rave have entered with- NIGHT EDITORS: out a shudder. Mister T In the last two years, another Mario Fartzalone job has been added to this list of' near-impossible: to beat the Min- aging more than eleven points and nesota Gophers in Minneapolis. six rebounds per contest for Min- And today before a screaming nesota. crowd at Williams Arena and a The man who has been hottest The most impressive Minne- sota statistic, however, is a team mark. The Gophers have domi- nated the boards in every game they've played this year, so much so that they are averaging 14 more rebounds per contest than their opposition. This is the department, Orr ac- knowledges, in which Michigan will be hardest pressed to stop Minnesota. "They're just tremen- dous boarders," he says, "to win we're going to have to come up with a great rebounding effort." Assistant coach Dick Honig quickly agreed. "The name of the Blue up north for big brouhaha with conference pacing Gophers I V matically," commented Bay. Three of Michigan's seven title contenders await their gold-crown bouts as decided favorites. Jerry Hubbard, Gary Ernst, and MitCh Mendrygal are the Wolverines clear cut title choices. Hubbard, twice in the Big Ten's BROWN manhandled Hoosier John Hobbs 12-2 in a match com-. pletely dominated by Michigan's' 118-pounder and Mendrygal, tallied a 9-0 verdict against weak Buckeye Jack Brewer. 150-pound honor man, wrestles arch-rival Rick Lowinger of Wis-sI consin in a rematch of a recent Hubbard victory. Joliet's jugger- naut advanced to the final round by pasting Ohio State's John Brew-: er 10-2. ERNST EXTENDED' his domi- nation of the heavyweight bracket: when he recorded Michigan's lone pin. Saline's big guy leveled Buck-I eye Forrest Waugh's shoulders to Minnesota's faded blue mat 44 sec- onds into the third stanza. Ernst wrestles Gopher Dave Simonson for the title. Captain' Mendrygal, crown-wear- er apyear ago,extended his un- scored upon points streak to 15 following yesterday's competition.! Detroit Catholic Central's spider- man spun a web around Wiscon- sin's Pat Christenson in his semi- final match. Mendrygal opposes the second-seeded 158-pounder, Hawk- + eye Jan Sanderson. JIMMY BROWN and Bill Davids confront top-ranked matmen in! their final outings. The 118-pound Brown tries to revenge his single divisional loss with a return tango. with Iowa's Dan Sherman. Brown waltzed into today's finale 4 by shellacking the Badgers' Jack Weinwand, 8-1. Davids accomplished a personal- ly gratifying performance with a convincing six-point decision over Minnesota's Jeff Lamphere. Lam- phere edged the Hazel Park junior 4-3 in the dual meet: Davids sought: In other opening round action, Davids nipped Wisconsin s Jim Ab- bott 5-0; Ernst controlled Iowa's Jim Waschek for an 8-2 heavy- weight decision. ' Tech Daily Photo by Sara Krulwich MICHIGAN'S HOPES of repeating its 1972 upset of Minnesota today ride on the shoulders of their senior trio, Ernie Johnson (top left), Henry Wilmore (top right), and Ken Brady (bottom with Gopher Dave Winfield) in action from the Minnesota gama last year. 14 IN A ROW ;}}}};.};;{;tr Srgeisga," hlately for the team has been 640 game is rebonnding," he said, Ron Behagen ,a forward who is "Minnesota outrebounded Indiana Today's clash between the leading the club both in rebound- 47-23 last week. We're going to Mighty Men from Michigan and ing and scoring in conference play. have to do a whole lot better than the Mad Meanies of Minnesota The big man is averaging 18 points that." will be on the tube for video en- and 9.8 caroms, and came up with Rebounding will be an especially joyment. WWJ-TV, Channel 4 in one of the top performances by important factor in today's game, Detroit, will be the local outlet any player in the league two because of the fact that both for this week's game, starting at weeks ago when he scored 33 teams intend to run. Both have 2 p.m. points and hauled down 16 boards employed the fast break to great ,".,;.:r:;":,.:r.:,:::.:<°^- at Ohio State. advantage lately, especially Mich- regional'television audience, Mich- I Right on his heels in the scor- igan, which has gone back to the igan coach John Orr is going toI ing race has been Clyde Turner, running game the last two weeks ask his charges to do just that. an all-Big Ten player last year and played its best ball of the sea- The Gophers have been beaten who at 6-8 iseoneofthe tallest son. at home only once in the past guards anywhere. Turner has Says Orr, "We're gonna try to two campaigns, and have not responded to his move to the run. We have the best chance of lost there since the infamous guard spot this season in fine anyone in the conference to stay brawl game with Ohio State mid- fashion, scoring 17.7 per contest. on the boards with these guys, and waybroghelwtseason.Mine i-The most valuable Gopher of: we're going to give it our best of- sota is 10-0 there this year in an all, however, may just be their 6-9 fort." impressive 17-2 overall and 7-24 center, Jim. Brewer. Brewer is Defensively, Orr plans to go" Bign r-er.t raetied for bounding honors with Be- with the same man-to-man zone Big Ten record. hagen at 9.8, and is averaging 13 which has been so successful the But for the Wolverines, the game points, but his greatest value is last two contests. Ernie Johnson is more than a must. To even keep his tremendous defense and shot- draws the unenviable task of alive their slim Big Ten title blocking ability which' makes Min- guarding Behagen, while Henry hopes, Michigan must come up nesota one of the top defensive Wilmore, with 73 points in his with a miracle today in Minne- clubs in the country. last two games, gets a chance apolis. The man who enabled Turner to to show the pros his defensive As Orr puts it, the Wolverines move to guard is the other for- skills since he gives away five "are fighting for survival," They ward, 6-6 Dave Winfield. Winfield, inches to Turner. stand at 6-4 in the conference, and a superb all-around .athlete sought "We're as ready as we'll ever another loss would mean the end by both pro football and baseball be for any game," says Orr, of the line as far as a conference scouts, provides additional scor- "We're playing the best basketball crown is concerned. ; ing (11.5) and rebounding punch, we have in a long time, and we The Goohers reached their high and has been especially effective have momentum from our past point of the campaign last week- in the clutch. two wins. end, knocking off both Indiana and Illinois in easy fashion within aj period of 48 hours. After the sec- ond game. a dazed Illini coach Harv Schmidt. compared Minne- sota favorably to UCLA itself, the basketball phenomenon troubled by the Illini earlier in the year. The Minnesota club is literally a collection of giants, hand-pick- ed, melded, and led with feroc- ity by their controversial coach, Bill Musselmann. The starting five averages over 6-7, and they play as a well-oiled unit. The success enjoyed so far this season by the Gophers has been a product of a balanced effort. Four different Gophers have been aver- dlumps dekers, 53 By ROGER ROSSITER kept Tech's tenuous 1-0 first period pulling out all the stops to Special to The Daily period lead intact, get the tying goal which came at HOUGHTON - Despite the bril- [ Graham Wise took a neat drop 6:51. Randy Neal skated in un- liant goaltending of Robbie Moore, pass off a face-off from Bob D'Al-' molested on Quance, but the slick the Michigan hockey team drop- vise and beat Moore cleanly from junior netminder apparently smoth- ped its -eleventh straight WCHA ten feet out at 15:01 for the first ered the puck only to have Paris contest to the Michigan Tech period's only goal. The goal was dig it loose and knot the game. Huskies 5-3 last night. set up when Michigan defenseman Not to be denied the Huskies Moore stopped no fewer than six. Fox inadvertently iced the puck came on like gpmebusters and clean Huskie breakaways, but just two seconds before Tech's began pummeling Moore with fell victim to his team's numerousI Bruce Abbey was to have stepped shots from all angles. The dike defensive lapses. The spunk net- back on the ice which would have finally burst when Mike Zuke minder stopped a total of 46 shots made Michigan one man short and pa ' rech ahead to stay with his with an acrobatic style that frus-, negated the icing call. ptech ahad o th s tratted and amazed the 3041 rabid Tech jumped out to a 3-0 lead nI from a goal mouth scramble. Tech fans on hand. on a second period goal by Lei Moore had made two incredible "No doubt about it, the goalies . Hartviksen and Wise's second tally, saves on Darwin Mott and Jim were the stars tonight," beamed Hartviksen outskated Wolverines Nahrgang, but couldn't cover the victorious Huskie coach John Fox and Pete Dunbar and caught far corner on Kuke's game win- McInnes. Husky goalie, Rick Moore backing in the net for an Quance, was also brilliant, turn- ' easy goal at 3:44 while Tech was ner. ing back 29 shots, including two short-handed. Wise banged in his wide open blasts by Greg Fox I own rebound on a power play to and a third by Paul Paris that I give Tech what appeared to be an TODAY, TON ITE & TOM insurmo'intable 3-0 lead at 14:08. Same old story But Michigan was not about to m F Elie down and die as the Wolver-U -M D a i FIRST PERIOD rnes scored two goals less than SCORING: MT - Wise (DI'Alise), a minute apart to cut the deficit SECOND PERIOD to one at the end of the second TACET SCORING: 2. MT-Harviksen (Mott), period. SALE AT: 3:44; 3. MT-wise (D'Alvise), 14:08; 4. Julian Nixon notched the first STANGERS M-Nixon (Fardig), 15:36; 5. M-Kardos Wolverine goal on a beautiful fol- (Falconer, Moretto), 16:31. AND" THIRD PERIOD e low-up of Don Fardig's breakaway. POWER CENTER SCORING: 6. M-Paris (Werner, QaPOWERedoutCENTERtoth Neal), 6:51; 7. MT-Zuke (Mott, Nahr- Quance raced out ay BOX OFFICE gang), 10:25; 8. MT-Steele (Jafthuk), blue line to thwart Fardig, but the 13:35. rebound trickled to the trailing and0-5:3Hour SCORE BY PERIODS: 1 2 3 T Nixon who blasted it home into an BndoreHCur MICHIGAN 0 2 1-3 empty net. Michigan Tech 1 2 2-5 Gary Kardos' tip in of Bob Fal- GOALIE SAVES: coner's slap shot made the Tech 123 T fans realize that they were in for* AFRICAN Mooe (M) 13 12 21-46 iQuance (MT) 13 4 12-29 a fight. Michigan opened the third Bill Steele added an insurance' goal at 13:35 off a picture pass; from John Jaschukon a two on one break. Despite a five minute fighting major to Hartviksen which gave Michigan a man advantage for the final four minutes and 37 seconds, Michigan could not dent the solid Tech defense. Co11 1s NBA Detroit 107, Baltimore 106 Phoenix 125, Buffalo 106 Houston 138, Philadelphia 116 Cleveland 121, Portland 102 Chicago 84, New York 83 1 revenge, and he got it. FRESHMAN Jeff Guyton makes his entrance into today's 134-pound: crown-clincher a slight pick over MSU's Conrad Calendar. Calendar, lost to Guyton in Ann Arbor but the Spartan has wrestled impres- sively here, whipping Wildcat Andre Allen, the bracket's topI seeded grappler. Guyton nosed they "sleeping Illini's" Andy Pasaglia, 8-7, on a two-point reversal threeI seconds from the final horn. Roger Ritzman faces a stern challenge from Wisconsin's Ed AORROW AT POWER CENTER: NCERS IN CONCERT EVENINGS: 8 P.M. $3 MATINEES: 2:30 P.M. ADULTS: $2 CHILDREN: $1 All Seats UNreserved BALLET * JAZZ MODERN " WORKS BY DORIS HUMPHREY LUCAS HOVING ELIZABETH WEIL BERGMANN VERA L. EMBREE and students SPONSORED BY U-M DEPT. OF P.E. F LUIFLiV GURA GREAT: Tumblers demolish Hoosiers y .. 1028 E. UNIVERSITY 662-0202 OPEN 7 DAYS-9- 11 Fresh Meat, Produce Domestic and Imported Cheese DELICATESSEN SGT. PEPPER'S ONECYEAR ANNIVERSARY- -SPECIALS - By JAMES COACH Special to The Daily BLOOMINGTON - Aided and abetted by the redoubtable performance of Ray Gura, the Mich- igan gymnasts defeated the G-men of Indiana University 160.45-157.3 here last night. With the victory, the Wolverine gymnasts finished the dual meet season with a 7-2 record, having lost to only to Minnesota and Iowa. Indiana had promised to be an adversary of con- siderable talent, especially on the rings, and the prognastications proved accurate as the Hoosiers demonstrated themselves lords of the rings tri- umphing in the ring competition 27.75-27.1 as well as proving superior on the high bar 26.35-26.05. Nevertheless, the Wolverines dominated all other phases of the meet as they amassed a good share of the final margin of victory in the floor exercises and the vaulting competition. By any standards, however, the stellar figure of the evening was Michigan's Gura. Of Gura's exploits, Coach Newt Loken said, "It was his final dual meet and he simply did a great job." Loken's comments seemed well justified. Gura turned in the highest point total of the seas n (53.9) and led the Michigan contingent in the floor exercises, the vaulting contests, and the battles on the high bar. Additionally, his performances on the rings and bars helped to cement the Wlverine victory. Other Wolverine gymnasts who contributed to the Michigan victory were Ward Black and Terry Boys whose point totals in the floor exercises (9.05 and 9.0 respectively) enabled Michigan to batter the Hoosiers in this event 27.15-25.5. Bob Johnson gave the finest Michigan performance on the bars with a score of 9.2. Gene Coyle passed the Hoosiers with a 50.85 score. __ - _ all I r t,, WHO MAY VOTE? All may vote. students (graduate students and undergraduates) BANANAS . ....... ....... .. 1 Oc LETTUCE-.-............... 25c NX- Walk Together Soulful People ~'AKE3" Cat~mJf.. C~L A ..Ruumdcl, ll II WHO MAY RUN? Any regularly enrolled student on the Ann Arbor cam- pus of the U. of M. This includes graduate and undergraduate stu- dents from all schools and colleges. HOW DOES ONE BECOME A CANDIDATE? Candidates must file a state- ment of candidacy and a $5.00 returnable filing fee by March 1, (Thursday). Candidates must also submit a platform and 2 wallet- size photographs by March 2 at 3:00. CAMPAIGNING is governed by the Election Code. PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATES can obtain further information and copies of the Statement of Candidacy, Election Code, and the SGC Constitution at the SGC Offices, 3X Michigan Union, or call 763-3241. ELECTION SCHEDULE: . . " r. - . i _ r i f __ I I* FCa.a . - . SKIM MILK (2 half gallons) COTTAGE CHEESE (1-lb. carton) COLBY CHEESE (1 lb.) ......... GROUND BEEF CHUCK (1 lb.) LARGE EGGS (1 dozen) ........ 35c 98c 89c 49c ...79c DR. PEPPER POP, COCA-COLA, TAB & FRESCA (6 pack, 12-oz. cans) 79c