100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 16, 1973 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-03-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, March I6, 1973

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page.Nine

Friday, March 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine

- ._ _.

CHESS

Indiana

Feldman crushes foes

victorious

in

NCAA

. . 0

opener

t.retains junior crown
MIKE DUWECK
UNIVERSITY freshman Steve Feldman blitzed through all
opposition at the 1973 Michigan Junior Chess Championship
in his successful bid for a third consecutive state junior title.
Feldman clearly outclassed the remaining 98 players en-
tered in the "under 21" division of the tournament with a 6-0
result. The tournaent, which was held March 3-4 at Oakland
University in Rochester, Michigan, was not as strong as had
been expected. Feldman was the only expert entered in the
event.
Fred Lindsay took second place with 5%-%, while Randy
Donahue placed third with a 5-1 result. Top girl in the tourney
was Nancy Gamburd, a very promising young player, if her
games in this tournament were any indication of her true ability.
Unfortunately, one prediction made by this writer prior
to the tournament did not come true. I did not lose the
shortest game of the tourney. Instead, I scored a quick 4%-1%/
(the only loss coming on first board during round one) and
walked off with the "Age 20" state championship.
Following are the other age division winners: 19, Lawrence
Achram; 18, Mark Waters; 17, Mike Gaiefski; 16, Stewart Man-
dell; 15, Bob Savage; 14, Ian Mahling; and 13, Gerald Kamin.
The Young Junior (12 and under) Championship was won by
12-year-old Daniel Togasaki with a 6-0 score.
One of the most exciting games of the tournament occurred
during the fourth round, which also happened to be the first
round to be played on Sunday. The round was scheduled to start
at 9 a.m., with Steve Feldman to play white on Board 2 against
Bob Savage, probably the second best player in the tournament.
Savage started Feldman's clock at 9, at which time Feldman
was no doubt still in Oak Park. When he finally arrived, he had
13 minutes remaining on his clock with a mere thirty moves to
make before his flag fell. As it turned out, Feldman not only
made the time limit, but was well on his way to victory.
The following is the score of that game.
Feldman-Savage, Round 4, Board 2, 3/4/72, King's Indian

From Wire Service Reports down court on a 3 on 1 break and
NASHVILLE, Tenn.-The Indiana Quinn Buckner fed Ritter to send
Hoosiers, led by the strong inside Indiana up by four, 63-59.
scoring of pivotman Steve Down- Marquette momentarily got back
ing and John Ritter's clutch jump- into the game as Allie McGuire
ers down the stretch, stormed back and George Frazier tied the score:
from a ten point second-half defi- at 63.
cit to upend Marquette, 75-69, in However, the roof quickly caved
the NCAA Mideast semi-finals last in for the Warriors as the hustling
night. Hoosiers rattled off 10 straight
The Hoosiers were down 53-43 points and led 73-63 with only 1:14
with about 14 minutes remaining to play.-
when Downing, who led all scorers Marquette, employing hot out- 1
with 29, canned four straight points side shooting, exploded at the-I
on a lay-up and a tip-in of Jim
Crews' side jumper. For an interesting evaluation
The Warrior advantage continued of the Michigan tennis team,
to dwindle to 55-53 but Marquette's othesMichigan tenis tea,
Marcus Washington connected on don't hesitate in turning to that
a beautiful baseline drive to extend work of art otherwise known as
the lead to four. However, Down- page seven.F
ing's drive and two outside bas-
kets by Ritter vaulted the Hoosiers game's outset to grab a 10-2 lead.t
to their first lead in the contest, But the slow-starting Downing got1
59-57. the Indiana offensive machine inn
After Maurice Lucas' turnaround gear and Marquette only led 38-35
knotted the score, Downing was at half. Fifteen of Downing's talliest
fouled by Lucas. The 6-8 center, came in the initial stanza.1
who hit on only one of six free Hoosier coach Bob Knight laudeda
throws in the first stanza, hit on his team after the contest exclaim-2
both to send Indiana on top again ing, "It lookeddbleak when we
by two. were 10 points down but our kidst
The Hoosier defense then stiff- hung in there. I'm very proud of
ened and Washington's forced them."F
jumper hit zippo. Soon after, the Helping the Hoosier cause were
fast breaking Hoosiers stormed Ritter and Steve Green, each withd

daily
sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
ROGER ROSSITER
14 points. Pacing the Warriors was
Washington with 20 while McGuire
added 15 in a losing cause.
* * *
Friars fire
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Marvin
Barnes poured in 20 points and
Ernie DiGregorio and Nehru King
18 each to lead Providence to an
87-65 -rout of Penn last night in
the opening game of the NCAA
Eastern Regional basketball tour-
nament.
Providence, fourth - ranked na-
tionally, ran its winning streak to
16 and over-all record to 26-2
against a Penn team that shot only
27 per cent in the first half to 60
per cent for the Friars, who led at
the half 36-29.
The Providence lead was 13
points after eight minutes, but the
Quakers drew closer when Provi-
dence lost the rebounding and

scoring of Barnes, who sat out the changes followed before Maryland Athletic Association West Regional
final 4 minutes of the first half closed the half on top, 35-34, on basketball playoffs.
with three fouls. Darrell Brown's basket with four * * *
Penn, 18th-ranked and now 21-6, seconds left.
cut the lead to 48-41 after five The game stayed close earl inte
minutes of the last half, but ProVw- the second half Maryland leading NASHVILLE, Tenn. - L a r r y
dence went on a 15-6 tear in the 43-41 after four minutes. But then final minute of overtime last night
next five minutes and was never the Terps ran up a dozen 'ints as 17th-ranked Kentucky overame
in danger again, in less than three minutes for a an early 11-paint deficit and dea
In all, five Friars scored in 55-41 lead and Syracuse never got atedy Aupsin e 1 0in te
double figures. Kevin Stacom had closer than seven points away after Nated Austin Peay 1 100i the
16 points and Charles Crawford 12 that. ciationaMideast Regional baketball
against the team with the nation'sthtciioMdesRgonlbktal
best defensive average. O'Brien scored 11 points in each tournament.
* ,* half in leading Maryland while The victory sends Kentucky into
Lucas hit 15 in the last half. The Saturday afternoon's finals against
Cats claw last half surge also was aided by sixth-ranked Indiana, a 75-69 win-
HOUSTON-Ninth-ranked Kansas Tom McMillen who scored. 14 of ner over No. 5 Marquette in the
State used an effective slow-down his total of 18 and Bob Bodell, opener of the Mideast double-
game and the outside shooting of blanked in the first half, scored 12 header.
Ernie Kushnyer and Lon Krueger in the last half.

to defeat seventh-ranked outh-!
western Louisiana 66-63 in the Frisco f oils
opening game last night rf the
National Collegiate Athletic Asso- LOS ANGELES - Guard Mike
ciation Midwest Regional basket- Quick rammed home eight straight
ball tourney. 1 points for the University of San
Kansas State, the Big Eight con- Francisco to start the second half
ference champion, stormed to a 22- and the 19th-ranked Dons stunned
8 lead over the surprised USL third-ranked Long Beach State 77-
Ragin' Cajuns to start the game 67 last night in their first-round
but had to reverthto aaslowdovn game of the National Collegiate
passing game in the final 15 min-
utes to pull off the upset.
USL cut Kansas' 38-26 halftime 1 Pofessional L'
lead to one point with 4:19 left Ps
in the game. But the WildcatsEastern Conference
with excellent free-throw shooting Atlantic Division
by Bob Chipman and Krueger, held t IV L Pct. GBj
off the charging Cajuns in the Boston 60 13 .822 -
final minutes. New York 55 22 .714 61/
Krueger, who led the Big Eight Philadlphia 9 675.128!/2
in field goal percentages, finished Central Division
with 16 pointsand Kush ver Baltimore 4627 .630 -
had 15. Atlanta 42 32 .568 4'/2
Houston 29 44 .397 17
Cleveland 26 46 .361 1714

Gamecocks gunned
HOUSTON-Forward Larry Ken-
on scored 34 points to lead 12th-
ranked Memphis State to a 90-76
victory over South Carolina and
ninth-ranked Kansas State used its
control game for a 66-63 triumph
over Southwestern Louisiana in the
National Collegiate Athletic Asso-
ciation Midwest Regional basket-
ball playoffs last night.
'ague Standings

SCHAUS SECOND
Knight proclaimed best coach

Pacific Division
Los Angeles 55 19 .7
Golden State 44 29. .f
Phoenix 34 41 4
Seattle 24 51 .3
Portland 17> 57 .2
Last Night's Results
Houston at Golden State, inc.
Today's Games
Phoenix at Atlanta
Boston at Baltimore
Kansas City-Omaha at Cleveland
Milwaukee at Chicago
New York at Los Angeles
Houston at Portland
Golden State at Seattle
Buffalo at Detroit

43
603
453
20
250

10Y2
21/2
32%
38

WHITE
1. P-Q4
2. P-QB4
3. N-QB3
4. NB3
45. P-KN3
6. B-N2
7. 0-0
8. P-Q5
9. N-Q2
10. Q-B32
11. R.K1
12. B-RI
13. P-N3
14. B-QN2
15. N-B3
16. N-N5ch
17. RPXP
18. NxB
19. B-N2'
20. B-B3
21. BxN
22. K-N2
23. R-KR1
24. P-B3
25. N-Ki

BLACK
N-KB3
P-KN3
B-N2
0-0
P-Q3
QN-Q2
P-B4
N-N3
B-Q2
Q-B1
B-R6
P-KR4
P-KR5
K-R2
RPxP
K-N1
B-R3
QxN
Q-R4
N-N5
Q*B
B-N2
B-B3
Q-Q2
BxB

WHITE
26. QxB
27. Q-Q2
28. R-R7ch
29. Q-R6
30. NxBPch
31. RxQ
32. R-R1
33. Q-N6
34. R-R7
35. Q-B5
36. QxR
37. P-QR4
38. K-B2
39. Q-N7
40. P-K3
41. P-KN4
42. QXP
43. QxP
44. Q-N7
45. P-B4
46. K-N3
47. P-K4
48. Q-N6
49. P-K5
50. PxP
51. Q-Q6Ch

BLACK
P-B3
K-B2
K-K1.
P-KN4
PxN
NxR
K-Q1
K-B2
R-R1
RxR
P-QR4
R-K1
R-Q1
R-K1
R-KB1
P-B4
PxP
R-B3
R-B1
R-B3
R-BI
R-K1
R-RI
PxP
R-RE
Resigns

CHICAGO OP) - B o b b y
Knight, who directed Indiana's
Hoosiers to their first undis-
puted conference title since
1958, has been named Big Ten
Basketball Coach of The Year.
The first such annual recogni-
tion was announced Wednesday
by Commissioner Wayne Duke,
who reported Knight was a

clear-cut winner in a poll of 40
Midwestern sports writers and
broadcasters.
Indiana, tabbed in preseason
ratings for a fourth-place finish,
wound up with an 11-3 confer-
ence record and 19-5 overall,
placing No. 6 in the final Asso-
ciated Press national rankings.
Knight, 32, in his second In-

4

s:.;:".;..'i C .iy iA ii ;.; .% : % 'v i i i->:

4..'

SCORES,

.1

diana season, successfully gam-
bled with a youth experiment
as he blended freshmen Quinn
Buckner and Jim Crews and
sophomore Steve Green with
veterans Steve Downing and
John Ritter for a winning com-
bination.
Knight came to Indiana from
Army where his team had a
102-50 record. He has an overall
138-63 record.
Knight won the award by a
wide margin over runnerup Fred
Schaus, Purdue's new coach.
Third was Minnesota's Bill Mus-
selman, whose dethroned Go-
phers were knocked out of a title
tie with Indiana in a last-game
upset by tail-end Northwestern.
Fourth was Harv Schmidt,
whose Illinois team finished in
a third-place tie after being
picked to finish ninth.

Terps tealr
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Marylandt
staggered Syracuse with 12 strai ht
points early in the second half
and went on to win 91-75 last right,
joining Providence in the finals of
the National Collegiate Athletic
Association East Regional basket-
ball tournament.
Maryland, eighth ranked nation-
ally and now 23-6, was led by Jn
O'Brien's 22 points and 21 by
freshman John Lucas.a
The Terps surrendered an early
lead as Syracuse scored 10 straight
points, six by Dennis DuVal, who
wound up with 22. Nine lead

Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee 52 22
Chicago 48 26
Detroit 33 40
K.C.-Omnaha 34 42

.703
.649
.452]
.447

Josip Begovac won the 2nd Huron Open in Ypsilanti last
weekend with a 5-0 result. Tom LaForge came in second with
4%-%. A significant upset occurred during the tournament as
local master Dan Boyk lost his game against John Shields, a
Class B player. Boyk finished with a 4-1 score.
The ever present J. D. Brattin directed the event. Brattin,
incidentally, also directed the Michigan Junior Championship
with the assistance of Jim and Gale Marfia.
* * *
The 7th National Open in Las Vegas, Nevada began last
Sunday and will run through today. Local master Wes Bur-
gar is playing in the tourney. It is reported that Eugene
Martinovsky may also be playing.
Ann Arbor is continuing to prove that it is the chess center
of Michigan, if not the midwest. Ann Arbor has two teams rep-
resenting it in the Metropolitan Detroit Association of Chess
Clubs, also known as the Metro League.
In League I, a team headed by none other than Paul Pos-
chel, the best player in Michigan, is leading the league by a
comfortable margin after five rounds, with two to go.
In League V. the Mark's Coffeehouse team is leading the
league by a point after five rounds. Mark's has two relatively
easy matches left, and should increase its winning margin.
The only tournament in Michigan this weekend will be the
2nd Eastern Michigan Open in Detroit. Registration will close at
9 a.m. Saturday, with rounds at 10-3-8, and 10-3:30 on Sunday.

4
18Y2
19,

NCAA Basketball
East Regional
Providence 87, Penn 65
Maryland 91, Syracuse 75
Mideast Regional
Indiana 75, Marquette 69
Kentucky 106, Austin Peay 100, ot
Midwest Regional
Kansas State 66, SW-Louisiana 63
Memphis St90, South Carolina 76
t West Regional
San Francisco 77, Long Beach St. 67
NAIA
Maryland-Eastern Shore 87,
Xavier, La. 80
Slippery hock 60, Wis-Green Bay 58
Gulford 70, Westmont 67
NCAA College Division
Kentucky Weslyan 96, Brockport St. 90
Tennessee State 106, Assumption 76
NHIL
Boston 4, Buffalo 1
Minnesota 5, Toronto 2
NCAA Hockey
Denver 10, BC 4
High School Basketball
CLASS A
Saginaw 79, East Lansing 54
CLASS B
Championship
South Haven 80 Colidwater 68
Southgate Aquinas 63 Northville 49
Hudsonvllie Unity Christian 89
Muskegon Heights $0
ALL-N IGHTERS
ARE GREAT
(but not when you're
cuddling up to
a typewriter)
Statement-Pie
Study Techniques
Available in paperback at
U Cellar
Fol letts
UoIIcs

Grand Rapids South Christian 70
Greenville 62
CLASS C
St. Ignace 82 Norway 67
L'Anse 61 Bessemer 43
Erie-Mason 62 East Jackson 52
New Haven 68 Deckerville 63
Ithaca 76 Lakeview 68
Traverse City St. Francis 90
Rogers City 49
CLASS D
Beal City 54 Hale 49
Lake City 59 Mesick 44

"ALASKA"
Job opportunities for laborers,
$300-$500 per week; t r u c k
drivers, $600-$800 per week;
others in construction, mining,
logging, oil fields, welding and
more. Send for information en-
closing a long stamped, return
envelope plus $1.00 to Alaskan
Opportunities, Box 3206, Ogden,
Utah 84403.

ASSOCIATION OF
JEWISH GRADUATE STUDENTS
invites you to a
PU RIM PARTY
featuring
FOOD, WINE, MUSIC, etc.

ADMISSION: $1.50
Sunday, March 1 3. 8 p.m.

call 663-4129 for details
. 1 429 Hill St.

Daily Classifieds GetResults

The location is the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel,
Blvd. Entry fee is $12.

1114 Washington

...

m

.MMO.ONN,..

v

Hey bub..
want big action
this summe r?
I can g~et you
one hundred
and forty five 0
love notesor
more weekly
...lessmy.
cut of course
DOWN P WlP LOVE! -
prLetes
protest..
dust off the
banner!

auf toufl we let
red blooded college
youth earn the
fu I I count at Good
Humor... and it-s
all theirs ...$145
a week
0

A_

$ 15 or mnore
a week... you, re
both polluted, juiced
on V -S fumes... prove
the big talk!

or student aid
Fla He
® 5aid
gals

OFF TO SERVE KIDS & GROWN-UPS
THESE FAMOUS GOOD HUMOR
ICE CREAM PRODUCTS

Columbia Records presents "The
LAURA NYRTHE FIRST NG First Songs." Including "Wedding
Bell Blues," "Stoney End," "He's
a Runner," "And When I Die,"
"Flim Flam Man," "Buyand
Sell," "I Never Meant to Hurt
You," "BlowingAway," "Good
w hiiIna " "* ilv'c I11GC " "I n .

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan