AW Page 8-Tuesday, January 17, 1978-The Michigan Daily DO RE MI FA SO LA FREE THROW Borders Book Shop and Thomson-Shore Publishers, Inc. in Association with Bill Haney Enterprises Cordially Invite You to Attend a Party in Celebration of the Publication of Jeff Mortimer's Pigeo B d100yNoses and Little Skinny Kids A Story of Wolverine Basketball t r Blue By HENRY ENGELHARDT A lesson in Wolverine economics: there is no such thing as a free throw. Saturday afternoon Michigan lost to Illinois 65-61, a four point spread. The Wolverines took 12 shots from the free throw line but hit only three. If they had hit eight of 12 they would be 4-0 in Big Ten play today. In Michigan's first 11 games it hit 66 per cent of its charity tosses. All it had to do was match that percentage to win the game. But alas, it's Tuesday and the Wolverines are 3-1. Tommy Staton aptly analyzed the free throw situation. "We missed them," he said. It is, as Staton alludes, a rather black and white situation. Either a free throw is good or it's not. Or if the shooter drops the ball behind his back, a la In- diana's Butch Carter, the free throw is bizarre. It is strange how something titled "free throw" could be so costly. But the Wolverines are not moping over the problem. "We're really a good shooting team," said Joel Thompson. "Most foul-si1 guys hit in practice, sometimes 90 per cent. I don't know what happened." Dave Baxter, hitting over 70 per cent of his freebies, feels he and his mates are unnecessarily pressured at the foul.P line. "We don't miss on purpose," the senior co-captain said. "We've been knocked by everybody. We're constan- tly having to prove ourselves rather than just concentrating on the game." Coach Johnny Orr, a little bemused, just shook his head. "Our attitude was terrific, it was not a lack of concen- tration. We just didn't happen to make them. "We were leading the Big Ten in free throw shooting after three games," Orr noted, "of course we've dropped out of there now." Unlike Baxter, Orr does not feel his squad is under abnormal pressure. "There's always pressure-every game. Every game now is the biggest game of the year," he said. Perhaps it is the coaches, not the players, who face abnormal pressure. Administrative assistant Dan Fife, who played for three years under Orr, ex- i plained. "As a player you played or fun. It wasn't do or die. But as a coach it's your job to win games." While the coaches are very pleased with the team's progress thus far, they are by no means getting complacent. At practice yesterday they added some new plays to the Wolverine offense. "The new plays give' us more freedom," said Staton. "(One play ad- ded) is a one-on-one play to take advan- tage of our best attributes." Staton pointed out that Michigan has scored less than'70 points in its last three games, not so hot for a team averaging over 80 in its first nine con- tests. "We just stopped executing," he said. "But against Minnesota and Iowa we got away with it." Michigan also hit its free throws in those games. Oh yeah, in practice yesterday the players each shot 50 times from the foul line instead of the usual 30. WOLVERINE TALES: Johnny John- son has a cold or possibly the flu and in- stead of practice yesterday he went to the hospital to be examined . . . Dave ~ke y Baxter is averaging 6.6 assists a game, if he continues at this pace he will shat- ter Dan Fife's record of 139 (set during the 70-71 season) by about 40 assists. -APopwe Meet the author and some of the players and coaches Who Became UM Sports Legends and National Sports Figures Thursday, January 19 at Borders Book Shop 4:30 to 6p.m. 303 South State Street 1. Kentucky (46)................. 12-0 2. Marquette..................... 12-1 3. UCLA..... .............. ...... 13-1 4. Indiana State...................12-0 (tie) DAILY LIBELS.............12-0 5. North Carolina................. 13-2 6. Arkansas .................... .. 14-1 7. Notre Dame....................8.3 8. Kansas................ .......13-2 9. Louisville.....................10-2 10. Michigan State ..................12-1 11.Syracuse......................12-2 12. Providence.................. .... 13-1 13. Virginia...................... 14. Holy Cross....................11-1 15. Texas .......................... 12-2 16. Nevada-Las Vegas............... 15-2 17. Duke ........................... 12-3 18. DePaul...........13-1 19. Georgetown, D.C................12-2 19. New Mexico..........f...........10-2 920 808 613 576 576 538 457 324 ,311 305 251 187 1731 129 126 91 88 63 60 58 42 _ie CLEARANCE! ON MEN'S LEATHER TOP BOOTS WOMEN SET FOUR SCHOOL MARKS: Records tumble, tumblers fall By JEFF FRANK If the late king of rock and roll had been present, perhaps he would call his song Heartbreak Arena. But while Elvis made records, the women's gym- nastics team spent Sunday breaking them before falling short of beating Chicago-Circle, 128.75-128.6, at Crisler Arena. The tumblers smashed four varsity Sceaetce College Basketball Kentucky 76, Mississippi 56 Virginia 83, Penn St. 56 N. Illinois 77, Bowling Green 65 Mississippi Si.70, Tennessee 68 Rutgers 75, Lehigh 62 , Dayton 97, Tenn-Chattanooga 68 GOLF-Phoenix Open Miller Barber .................. ..... 272 - $40,000 Lee Trevino .......................... 273 -$18,500 Jerry Pate ...................... .... 273 - $18,500 Rod F unseth..................... ..... 274- $9,400 Arnold Palmer ............. .......... 275 - $8,200 records during the meet in a valiant at- tempt to make up a two-point deficit which stared them in the face after the completion of the vaulting competition. INCLUDED in the record book on- slaught were team records on the balance beam and floor exercise, while 128.6 added nearly two points to the team's previous top score. Sophomore Sara Flom completed the assault by raising her uneven bars record by .1 for the second time this season, with a score of 8.5. Flom almost added a fifth record to the collection, with her first place all- around score of 32.95, just below her varisty mark of 33.0. THE RECORDS sound good, but the team was keenly disappointed at losing to the Chikas. Coach Anne Cornell called it a heartbreaker, but appeared pleased with the teams scores. "It was a good meet, we did a fine job," she said. "They're a fine team, our scores just didn't rise fast enough." Among the many excellent routines, perhaps the balance beam routines stand out. Freshperson Colleen For- restel successfully performed an aerial en route to her third place finish and an 8.1 score. Linda Watson followed with an 8.2 for second on her routine about which she said, "It's the first time I hit that routine in collegiate competition." WATSON, a beam and bars special- ist, was quite happy with the team's performance. "We wanted to win, and when we fell behind we started psych- ing ourselves up," she said. "We knew we had to beat them on floor (exercise), and everyone tried to put out more." Put out more they did as, paced by Ginger Robey's first place score of 8.6, the tumblers scored 34.1 points to set the record and close the deficit to its final margin. Assistant coach Don McElreath summed up the team's showing. "We were weak in vaulting. We need to work on maximum difficulty vaults," he commented. "The beam routines were fantastic. It was a complete surprise." "The team did great! We can break 130," Enthused freshperson all-around- er Katie Zobler. "We hurt ourselves on vaulting and (uneven) bars. We're gon- na do better." Grapplers split spoils; hampered by injuries, By BOB WARREN The wilds of Evanston, Illinois was the site of the battle. Michigan general Billy Johanessen pulled to- gether his walking and limping wounded wrestling Wolverines to tangle with a herd of Buffaloes and a pack of Wildcats. The Wolverines were able to corral the Buffaloes of Colorado, 35-12, but they could not overcome the claws of the North- western Wildcats, who wons29-18. The Wolverines out-muscled the QUALITY LEATHER TOP RUBBER BOTTOM, REMOVABLE FELT LINER AND CLEATED SOLE FOR EXTRA TRACTION. OUR REG. $20.94 $19 NOW-ONLYa. PRICS GOOD THRU SATURDAY JAN. 21,1978 Hey Baby . . 0 going my way? find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. Call Jod"Iadmire ;db ecause God is mans greatest inwntion. Spend 90 minutes with the longshoreman/philosopher. Eric Hoffer "The Crowded Life" Produced by "~, Miami, Fla. SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 10:30 P.M. - SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. Buffaloes as they won seven,.of ten matches. Sophomore Dan Richard won his first match by a forfeit and Dennis Bauer, who worked hard all week to make the difficult transition from his regular 177 pound class to 190, won his first start at Michigan by an 11-3 decision. Other winners against Colorado in- cluded freshman Bill Konovsky, who won an eight to two decision as he returned to his home Chicago area, and heavyweight Steve Bennett who won by a fall. Captain Karl Briggs; Steve Fraser and Mark Churella all won their matches' against Colorado and Northwestern. "We could have lost both meets, but these guys were able to stay off their backs and we should have won against Northwestern," commented Johanessen. Although Michigan devastated Col- orado it could not maintain the same ferociousness to cage the Wildcats. "After great matches by Todd Schneider, Briggs, Churella and Fraser, I though we could win with Bennett at the big weight. However, he got pinned and we , could not contain Northwestern's star Al Mar- zano at 190, Russ Reglarz, Alex Ricconmini or the Greenky broth- ers," Johanessen said. As it turns out Michigan once again is suffering from more injuries as the wilds of Evanston were too much for sophomore Lou Joseph whose shoul- der is suffering from 'Cat-induced internal bleeding. Yes, Michigan's wrestling team is mired deep in a jungle of despair and injury. Yet, the performance this weekend showed that there may be a path out of the grapplers' jungle as some of Michigan's young warriors came through with promising per formances. Wings retire Giacomin' DETROIT - Ed Giacomin has been retired by the Detroit Red Wings, the wife of the veteran National Hockey League goaltender confirmed yesterday. Detroit General Manager Ted Lindsay told the 38-year-old netmind- er Sunday that the Red Wings no longer needed him in an on-ice capacity, Mrs. Giacomin said.. Who are you, tellingjs us how to run our business? It takes a lot of confidence to come fresh out of school and begin telling us how to do things. On the other hand, it takes an un- usual company to provide the kind of environment where that can happen, but that is exactly the environment you'll find at Scott Paper. We constantly search for people who have the ability to respond to chal- lenge and think for themselves, those with the initiative and desire to seek al- ternatives, the skill and courage to con- vince others that there are better ways and who aren't afraid to express their ideas. ,g At Scott, we admire an aggressive Tune in Tues, January 17th, Time 8:00 P.M. c 0i PUBLIC *: BROADCASTING SERVICE WRVS 56 a U Ski Venture Cross Countiy Skiing offers 5 GROOMED TRAILS MOONLIGHT TOURS LESSONS GROUP PARTY RATES STUDENT DISCOUNTS WEEKDAYS WITH I.D. GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS: