Sunday, December 3, 1972 -THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, December 3, 1972 EHE MICHiGAN DAILY Page Nine Overmatched Irish succomb to cagers By BOB McGINN Maybe Notre Dame is a lot better than people think. Or maybe Michigan isn't yet quite ' hat they are talked up to be. Whatever the reason, the Wol- verine cagers' unimpressive 96-87 victory yesterday in Crisler Arena didn't follow anyone's prior conceptions of the proceedings. But, as Coach Johnny Orr said afterward, "All we have to do is do the same thing 23 more times." Hopefully he means salvaging wins, because if the Wolverines continue to perform as they did yesterday, they could become Big Ten bridesmaids again. This game wasn'tadecided until deep into the second half, with but four minutes remaining. It was then that sophomore sparkplug Joe Johnson hit a short banker, then. followed four seconds later with a successful brace of bonus free throws, which finally put the scrappy Irish down, at that point, 85-72. Until then the issue was clearly in doubt. The opening moments of the game seemed to set the stage for the remainder of the contest. The Wolverines won the tip, and then proceeded to miss six or seven shots from close in before soph Campy Russell drilled a 20-footer SUNDAY SPOS NIGHT EDITORS: DAN BORUS and RICH STUCK legiate officials had a penchant Phelps, meanwhile, sincerely be- for enforcing , lane violations on lieved that his squad had a shot at free throws. This time around of- winning before his team even came fensive fouls may be the "in" to Ann Arbor. He was dejected af- thing. terward, but expressed satisfaction from the corner. In this one ex- change Michigan demonstrated their control of the boards (63-40) edge), but their overall superiority remained unestablished. Orr's charges, struggling from the outset, managed to build a 26- 16 lead midway through the half. Pivotman Ken Brady dominated the early going, hammering in three quick buckets. But Michigan was forcing the fast break when openings weren't there. The crowd grew more im- patient as it looked more and more evident that this would not be a rout. THEN COACH "Digger" Phelps switched from his 1-3-1 zone, which he had opened with because "of the element of surprise," to a man- to-man full court press. The shocked Wolverines didn't collapse completely, but almost. Within the span of five short min- utes, the Fighting Irish grabbed the lead for the first time, 33-32,1 by virtue of one of Notre Dame'sl four starting sophomores, Gary Brokaw, and his three-point play. As the halftime horn sounded with the unheralded Irish astonish- ingly in front, 35-33, waves of dis- contentment swept through the throng of 11,673. "We weren't hepped up to play, in the first half," commented Orr. "Brady, however, had an outstand- ing half." The big guy dunked twelve markers in the first twenty minutes, while his pivot rival, 6-9 John Shumate, had but four. The Wolverines fired at a miser- able 35 per cent clip over the first canto, but stayed close due to their 30-20 advantage on the boards. Perhaps Orr said a few words during the intermission because the Maize and Blue, led by a more composed Joe Johnson, hit their ini- tial four shots. Notre Dame was obviously reeling. But then Shu- mate, who had been dormant throughout the first half, began to assert himself. With Michigan leading 45-43 and the Wolverines in the man-to-man they played all day, Schumate notched the next nine Irish points- for a 52-51 lead. "I hadn't played under game conditions in two years," he explained, "and I felt' the pressure. Finally I started coming around." Shumate missed the 1971-72 cam- paign with a blood clot in his leg. Russell, who hit nine of 18 from the field and picked off ten re- bounds, drew his fourth personal' with 14 minutes left and his team down by one. He fouled out with six minutes left on a charging call, only one of a dozen whistled. Last season it seemed that col- After Shumate's hot streak, Mich- igan tightened its defense, especi- ally on Irish cornerman Gary No- vak. The 6-7 junior, who led Notre Dame in scoring a year ago, blitz- ed defensive ace Ernie Johnson for 12 points in the first half. But he could muster only two baskets in the final period as "E" effectively shut him off. "I OVERPLAYED Novak too much at first," admitted Johnson later. "He's very quick, so I played him more honestly the second' half." Sloppy all day on the break, Michigan finally got its running game together midway in the half. in the general performance of his youngsters. "Any time you have four sophs playing one of the top teams in the nation on the road, you know you're in trouble. I felt we dictated the tempo of the game. The keys were Michigan's superior board strength and our inexperi- ence." Perhaps Ernie Johnson summed it up best when he said, "We'll be a lot better next time." One Down . . ". Russell E. Johnson M. vs. O.S.U. The Oregon State Beavers coached by an old nemesis of Michigan invade Crisler Arena Monday night. Former Iowa coach Ralph Miller will have his team at- tempting to fast break and press their way past the Wol- verines. With height (6-11) from center Steve Ericksen and po- tentil stardom from guard Charles Neal, the Beavers could be dangerous. Brady J. Johnson Wilmore Lockard Kantner Tyler Team Totals Crotty Novak Shumate Brokaw Clay Silinski 1Stevens Varga Team Totals MICHIGAN 9 9-18 7-14 9-12 7-13 8-25 1-5 0-d' 1-1 f 0-0 3-5 2-2 2-3 5-8 0-0 0-0 0-z reb tp 10 18 13 17 11 20 5 16 12 21 3 2 0 0 1 2 8 63 96 42-88 12-20 XOTRE DAME 4-il 8-15 8-15 7-211 5-14 1-2 2-2 1 f 1-2 0-0 3-3 9-11 2-2 2-2 0-0 0-0 reb 6 7 11 2 2 0 0 4 tp 9' 16 19 23 12 4 4 4 35-81 17-20 40 87 Sprts of The Daily 'M cage machine *. * .*,* still needs oil By BOB HEUER TEELONG AWAITED rebirth of Michigan basketball didn't quite come off according to script yesterday. The awesome new Wolverines by their mere presence on the court, were supposed to send the young and inexperienced Irish running for the exists. Crisler Arena would shudder as the gladdened multitudes who had sold their souls for a season ticket went berserk. Well, they didn't even sell out Crisler for the opening game, the team sputtered like a worn out Model A, Campy Russell fouled out, and even the cheerleaders couldn't run on the court without tripping over themselves. But with all the inconsistency, all the first-game jitters, all the disorganization, and all the turnovers, one thing went accord- ing to plan. When time had expired, Michigan was on the long end of a 96-87 result. And that minor detail must not be taken too lightly. A loss in the opener might have premanently dam- aged the lofty aspirations of Johnny Orr and his charges. A win, albeit shaky, -sends their dubious cage juggernaut stumbling on its way. After the game, Orr accepted the victory and also part of the blame for his team's first-half disintegration, in which they went from a 26-16 lead to a 35-33 haltfime deficit. "We weren't really hepped up out there in the first half," commented a low-keyed Orr. "That was probably my fault." The crowd obviously thought so. They greeted the mention of his name during a time-out announcement with a spontaneous chorus of boos. Whether more of the blame for Michigan's generally sloppy performance lies with the Michigan mentor is de- batable. He brushed aside yesterday's criticisms with the usual "it's only the first game, give us time" routine. That's fine. Except the problems that plagued the Wolverines yesterday are the same ones that kept them from jelling as a unit all last year: the inability to generate a consistent scoring attack, a loose defense, and an abundance of turnovers, 25. These problems won't go away now that the first game is behind them. And it's up to Orr to work out the kinks before the rugged Big Ten schedule gets under way. But the fact remains, Michigan yesterday beat a vastly improved Notre Dame outfit by nine points, and they did it despite their inability to control the tempo of the game. "I was happy with the way we dictated things out there," intoned Irish coach "Digger" Phelps. "We controlled the play with our zone defense, and pressed effectively when we wanted to." The Wolverines had practiced dilligently against the press but as Joe Johnson put it, "It (the game) is a different thing from practice." Johnson and Henry Wilmore accounted for 12 turnovers; Wilmore's coming mostly in the face of the press. Johnson, however, took the blame for the team's failure to solve Notre Dame's full-court pressure tactics. "I'm supposed to handle the ball most of the time," said Johnson, "so when Henry has to handle it a lot, it's my fault." Johnson sparked Michigan's resurgence more with his own hot hand (14 second-half points) than with his quarterbacking of the offense. The poised youngster showed flashes of brilliance in leading the fast break, but the offense often had that helter- skelter look to it. One game is hardly sufficient to determine Johnson's j leadership ability, but whether or not he can direct Mich- igan's multi-faceted attack will go a long way toward de- j termining the effectiveness of the offense. The Wolverines overcame a multitude of mis-firings in gaining the victory. Henry Wilmore endured one of his worst shooting performances (8 for 25) and coupled it with five turn- overs. Ken Brady dominated the game when he asserted him- self, but the big guy must have gone eight minutes without touching the ball at one point in the second half. Campy Rus- sell's long awaited unveiling was tempered by foul trouble which They fdorged what was their biggest advantage since the early going 67-61 on a brilliant cross-court bounce pass from Joe Johnson to Henry Wil-uore, who converted it: into a vital three-point play. Score by Periods Notre Dame MICHIGAN Attendance: 11,673 1 35 33 2 52 63 G 87 96 AP Photo Bouncing A round Mike Robinson (31) dribbles with the Wildcats of Kentucky in yesterGay's game. For details, see story below. GOPHERS WIN, 7-3: regarded Wolverines lift the fans ont of their seats on their way to S eS the victory. It became a war of at-,Lethargicpucksters trition, and Michigan had the talent and the rebounding to subdue the By ROGER ROSSITER ' our positions and the goals took the middle of t Irish. "We just didn't play hockey for care of themselves." the right of Mic Orr was clearly not pleased with the first two periods," claimed Senior center Dean Blais netted Moore. O'Brien his club's initial appearance, but Michigan hockey coach Al Renfrew the three goal hat-trick for Min- into the open s he wasn't all that unhappy either. after his team was shelled 7-3 by nesota, while Mike Polich, who Moore never re "It took a while, but when we came Minnesota last night. had a hat-trick last night, added Minnesota m onit at them we were very success- Minnesota's Gophers did anything two assists. Don Fardig had a goal ice after the e ful," he stated. but crawl in their holes and hide and an assist for Michigan with "Buzz Schneider as they carried the play to the Bob Falconer adding two assists. pher's second Wolverines all night. The Gophers Minnesota scored two goals in passing play fr did not even allow Michigan the the space of 17 seconds in the and Dick Span luxury of a goal until the game was first period which really took the goal came fron well out of reach. steam out of Michigan. same spot on tl "We knew we had to play better An erroneous icing call against positional hockey than we did last Michigan by game officials John' night," remarked a satisfied Min- Ricci and Paul Duffy led to the Tum nesota coach Herb Brooks. "Last first of the two goals. Minnesota's The Michig night we were too eager to force Warren Miller won the draw fol- into some stif the breaks, but tonight we ad- lowing the questionable call and night in Chick hered to our strategy of playing dropped a pass to Tom O'Brien in only manage he faceoff circle to Michigan came to lite early in higan goalie Robbie the third period, despite the fact let go a hard drive that they were trailing 5-0, and ide of the net that began peppering Minnesota goalie eally saw. Brad Shelstad. oved right back up Don Fardig finally got Michigan ensuing faceoff and on the scoreboard at 1:59 when he r notched the Go- banged in a rebound off Falconer's goal on a pretty hard shot from the slot. rom Tom Dahlheim Randy Neal then cut the Michi- nbauer. .Schneider's gan deficit to 6-2 when he tapped m almost the exact in a rebound off Greg Fox' long the ice as O'Brien's, shot from the left point. Blais, cut the Michigan comeback short, how- ilers fall ever, when he again skated in all alone to score his third goal after an gymnasts ran Wolverine defenseman Pete Dun- ff competition last bar fell in the Michigan zone. ago as they could With a two man advantage and to place sixth in its goalie pulled,, Michigan scored fourteen teams at the final goal of the night at the y Open. The meat 19:55 mark when Angie Moretto ndiana State. One lifted a short shot past Shelstad. or the Wolverines Moretto was parked unmolested on performance by Shelstad's doorstep and had no ry Poynton on the trouble lifting the puck over the rd Black also fin- fallen goalie who had just stopped acing third in the Fardig's point blank shot from his Mright. Michigan's total lack of offensive, Wildcats knock MSU, Tar Heels crush Pitt the field of I the Windy Cit was won by I bright spot f was a fine freshman Jeri sidehorse. Wa ished high, pl free exercise. By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - Kentucky saw its 14-point lead fall to only 62-61, but came on again to down Mich- igan State, 75-66, and give Wildcat basketball coach Joe Hall his first victory after succeeding the leg- iondary Adolph Rupp after he re- tired last season. Kentucky, ranked No. 13 in the pre-season poll, regained command* after sophomore Mike Flynn hit two foul shots after being fouled by MSU's Mike Robinson. Then, sophomore Jimmy Dan Conner dumped a lay-up to put' Kentucky out of reach again, 66-, 61, with 2:40 left. Robinson was driving in for a: shot when he fouled Flynn. Michigan State coach Gus Gan- akas thought the foul call was the' contest's turning point. He said if Robinson had made the shot, in- stead of fouling, it "could have made the difference, by giving us a one-point lead and turning the whole game around." Hall, an assistant at Kentucky, before succeeding R u p p, who coached 42 years, said he felt the' turning point was the "clean lay- up by Conner against the pres- sailing high over Moore's sure. shoulder. left in the first two periods was clearly evident in the number of shots on That concluded the first period goal. The Wolverines had only Pitt heeled scoring, but the action was far from eleven. shots in the first forty over. With slightly less than five minutes, compared to the Gophers' CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - Bobby minutes left in the period, a free- twenty one. Only in the third Jones and George Karl sparked for-all shoving match started be- period did Michigan outshoot Min- North Carolina to a 99-70 victory hind the Minnesota net. No punches nesota, and then only by a 20-17 over Pittsburgh in an intersec- were thrown, but when the bodies margin. tional college basketball game here were untangled four roughing yesterday afternoon,.ee utnld fu ogig i. l yescrodyoftern an rmcheminors were called on Minnesota's Same Song A crowd of 8,400 at Carmichael Les Auge and Spannbauer and Auditorium saw the 6-fot-9 Jones Michigan's Rick Mallette and SCORING score 25 points and pull down 12 Frank Werner. MICHIGAN 0 0 3 3 rebounds. Karl, 6-2,scoredha6poits mnThe stage was thus set for the Minnesota 2 -3 2 7 and paced the second half surge ;main event between the Wolver- FIRST PERIOD which broke open the game. ines' Gary Connelly and the Go- SCORING: 1. Mn-O'Brien. (Miller) TheTarHees ld 4-34at he -4:42; 2. schineider (IDalheIm, 5pan - The Tar Heels led 46-34 at the hers' Robby Harris. The boxing baner) 4:59. half but Pitt still was within match started after Connelly deftly PENALTIES: 1. Mn-Cossalter (elbow- striking distance when North E'tossed Harris' helmet into the ing) 8:07; 2. Mn-Auge (roughing) 15:19; Carolina led 65-52 after six min- stands with both players landing: 3. Mn-spannbauer (roughing) 15:10; utes of the second half. Karl 4some solid punches. Each player 4 M-Mallette (roughing) 15:19; 5. M- then hit five straight points and was given a five minute fighting (5-min. fighting) 18:23; 7. M-Connelly the Tar Heels went on to build a major and a game misconduct, (5-min. fighting) 18:23; 8. Mn-Auge 79-54 lead. which means they will each man- (interference) 18:40. Bill Knight led the Panthers' datorily miss their team's next SECOND PERIOD y ~SCORING: 3. Mn-Polich (unassisted) scoring with 25 points while team- game. 1:53; 4. Mn-Blais (Polich) 7:16; 5. Mn- mate Bill Sulkowski added 20. Polich put Minnesota quickly Blais (Polich, Cossalter) 10:50. ahead 3-0 at 1:53 of the second PENALTIES: 9. M-Kardos (interfer- Hcrrvrd hoked eriod, just three seconds after. ence) 1:50; 10. Mn- Matschke (high- Harvard hFcked Fardig went off for Michigan ons4HIRD P RIOD BLOOMINGTON - Indiana Uni- an interference penalty. Polich won SCORING: 6. M-Fardig (Falconer, versity's Hoosiers opened their bas- the draw to Moore's left and rolled Dunbar),1:59; 7. M-Neal (Cullen, Fal- ketball season here yesterday wi thh coner) 5:58; 8. Mn-Bials (Cossalter) an easy 97-76 victory' over the k the Michig net a 10:06; 9. Mn-Schneider (MatsChke) in one motion. The goal was' 16:41; 10. M-Moretto (Fox, Fardig) visiting Harvard Crimson. Polich's fourth in the weekend 19:55. Indiana was led by senior center series. PENALTIES: 11. M-Cullen (roughing) Steve Downing with 31 points, in- h d hi fi g 12:19; 12. Mn-Miller (roughing) 12:10; cluding14 field goals, before a Blais t en score is frst goa 13. Mn-Falls (interference) 12:44; 14. gputtig a rebound after he and M-Cullen (tripping) 17:16; 15. Mn- less-than-capacity home crowd of Polich skated in on a two-on-one Blais (hooking) 18:22; 16. Mn-spann- 12,330 persons. break at 7:16. Blais scored again bauer (tripping) 18:58. The Hao osie rs methodislly at 10:50 when he broke in cleanly SAVES 1 2 3 F movedtahead at6einthetofirston Moore from the Michigan blue MICHIGAN (Moore) 5 11 15-31 half to take a 46-35 le-d into the line. Minnesota (Shelstad) 7 4 17--28 AP Photo ERNIE JOHNSON takes a long sweeping hook shot in yesterday's contest against the Fighting Irish. Guarding Johnson is Notre Dame's super soph Brokaw, who led the Irish in scoring ,in yes- terday's ho-hummer. Hoosiers garner tank laurels, Michigan places second again Special To The Daily COLUMBUS - Whenever a team goes into a swim meet when the competition consists of the likes of I Indiana they don't expect to win. Indeed, Michigan did not win the Big Ten eastern division relays, but they did put on a very en- couraging show for Michigan fol- lowers. The tankers finished sec-' and with 83 points, while Indiana's swimmers easily took the top spot with 113 points. Ohio State was I third with 51 points, and Michigan' !State was one more point behind in fourth. Michigan's strong second was perpetrated by some surprising performances by both their swim- mers and divers. The tankers 300 yard breaststroke relay team took and finished a good three seconds' ahead of the second place Hoosier with a time of 58.8 seconds for his leg. In the only other race in which Indiana did not win all by itself, the 400 yard medley relay, Mich- igan once more came on to grab' a piece of top honors. Michigan's team, consisting of Chris Hansen,t Isaac, Larry Day, and Jose Aran-1 ha, was just strong enough to dead heat the Hoosiers. Aranha swam the last leg of the race for the Wolverines and when he started out he had about a one second margin over the Hoosierl anchorman. Gaining steadily, inch by inch, throughout the 100 yards the Hoosier, Gary Connelly, pulled even with Aranha just a few yards very good Ohio State team for second place. The Buckeyes have an exceptional diving team so if-s no shame to beat them, even if you have to lose once more to Indiana. The diving threesome con- sisted of seniors Joe Crawford and Chris Newcomer, and junior Pete Agnew. In the three meter diving event Michigan could not quite overtake' the Buckeye splashers. They were edged by only 14 points, but they did have the satisfaction of hand- ing the Hoosiers their only finsh worse than second in the whole meet. The three meter divers were I Crawford again joined by sopho- more Dick Quint and junior Steve Schenthal. Crawford was by far the best diver in the meet as he intermission. Then Coach Bob Knight let his young sCouad run and the Hoosiers turned the game into a rout, leading by as many as 21 points in the final half. Harvard, also playing its season onener, was led by 6-foot-8 Tony JIenkins with 24 points and James Brown added 13 before fouling out late in the contest. Soohomores John Laskowski and Steve Green added 15 and 12 points, respectively, for Indiana and her- alded freshman starter Quinn Buckner added nine. Badgers bust MADTSON - Wisconsin, led by sepior forward Leon Howard with SCORES NBA New York 119, Buffalo 94 K.C.-Omaha 114, Houston 109 Chicago 89, Seattle 80 Atlanta 114, Los Angeles 109 ABA Utah 11, ndiana 105 Dallas 108, Carolina 101 Denver 127, Memphis 99 Virginia'111, San Diego 107 NHL. Detroit 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 Atlanta 4, Montreal 3 Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 2 Philadelphia 2, Toronto 2 MInnesota 8, Buffalo 6 WHA Cleveland 8 ,hiladelphia 2 New England 7, Quebec 2 S.M.U. 35, T.C.U. 22 Far West Stanford 35, Hawaii 7 Southern Cal 45, Notre Dame 23 Orange Blossom Classic Florida A.&M. 41, Md.-East Shore 21 San Diego 84, Southern Utah 80 San Francisco 83, Stanford 68 Long Beach 90.sN. Texas St. 63 Detroit 47, Hillsdale 46 Eerskine 107, Piedmont 75 Midilebury 59, Union 53 Vanderbilt 72, Kansas 64 Transylvania 87, David Lipscomb 79 Curry 72, Coast Guard 68, overtime Mercyhurst, Pa. 59, Ohio Northern 53 FHiran 88, Denison 64 FDU-Madison 70, Bloomfield 63