McGEE, HARDY LEAD SCORING PARADE: Second half surge se . By CUB SCHWARTZ Spirit, hope, 'the force'-call it what you will-the Michigan basketball team took a liberal dose at halftime last night and then used it to blow Wisconsin out in the second half, notching an 83-64 Big Ten victory. The Wolverines retired to the lockerroom after the first twenty minutes of play knotted with the Badgers, 32-32, the consequence of what coach Johnny Orr labeled "listless play. MICHIGAN BANISHED the word from its vocabulary however, out- scoring Wisconsin 51-32 in the second stanza, and bringing an unusually quiet Crisler Arena crowd to its feet in the final minutes of the game with its inten- se play. Once again the shooting of Mike McGee led the Wolverines. With the score even at 48 at 12:49 in the second half the frosh sensation canned a 25 foot jumper from the corner. It wasn't until Badgers 7:37 that another Michigan player net- ted points. In that five-minute span McGee reeled off 14 straight points - from un- der the basket, 25 feet out or the charity stripe. In the meantime, Wisconsin cquld only muster seven points, while committing four fouls, giving Michigan the bonus situation. The streak broke whatever momen- tum the Badgers had, while Michigan refused to lapse into the second half let- down which has plagued it so often this year. ANOTHER FRESHMAN, Paul Heu- erman, was also instrumental in the Wolverines five-minute blitz. Working defensively on Joe Chrnelich, who had been taking advantage of an height ad- vantage over McGee, Heuerman shut down the 6-7 forward who already claimed 14 points in the game. Chr- nelich added only two points in the final 12 minutes. No one on Wiscons up the scoring slack timidated by a cor turned the ball ove and only scored 151 game. After the McGee s one on the Wolverin Baxter and Hardy from the perimete went inside and out,. more and even Mik fast break pass, dis fancy moves and la bucket. For the first ti radio station WC cast an away bE Thanks to a spe the student servi radio station Wt will be able to b Michigan's road ning with tomo against the Ohio at 7:30 p.m. Future road b originate from th Minnesota, Indian The Michigan Daily-Friday, Jonuary 20, 1978-Page 9. als Badgers in was able to pick THE MOVE BY the big man, with . The Badgers, in- only :08 remaining, typified the second nstant zone press, half for Michigan. The team was un- r numerous times stoppable. more points in the "Tonight Michigan could have beat any team they played," said Wisconsin coring spree every- coach Bill Cofield. "Those long range es got into the act. bombs they took tonight can beat canned long shots anyone in'the nation." r, Joel Thompson Orr echoed the sentiment. "We were McGee added a few very pleased iwith our second half play. e Robinson took a We were terrific in there," he said. "At played a couple of half I told them it was just a matter of aid the ball in the who wanted to win badly enough." Michigan's offensive attack was lead ************ by McGee with 26, followed by Hardy * who netted 20. Wisconsin placed three * men in double figures - Chrnelich and * _.Wes Mathews with 16 each and Arnold k**********Gaines just two behind. McGee Hardy Thomposon Staton Baxter Lozier Bodnar (Marty) Heuerman Bergen Bodnar (Mark) Johnson Robinson Team Totals MICHIG Min. 37 39 39 1 Ii AN FG/A FT/A R A PF T 11/16 4/5 4 2 1 26 9 9/15 2/2 5 2 3 30 9 4/12 5/5 7 0 3 13 15 2/7 0/0 1 1 3 4 14 2/6 4/5 4 8 2 8 4 2/2 0/0 0 2 2 4 7 0/0 0/0.0 0 0 0 1 1/1 2/2 1 2 1 4 1 0/0 0/0 1 0 0 0 1 1/1 0/0 0 0 0 2 1 0/0 0/0 0 0 0 0 1 1/1 0/0 0 0 0 2 5 33/61 17/19 30 17 15 83 butchered WISCONSIN Min. FG/A1 Chrnelich 34 7/12 Pearson 40 5/6 Petty 26 1/3 Gaines 34 6/17 Matthews 32 6/12 Gregory 16 1/3 Smith 9 0/3 Hastings 5 0/0 Snydor 2 0/0 Jenkins 2 0/1 me this season, CBN will broad- asketball game. cial grant from ces department, CBN (88.3 FM) roadcast four of games, begin- rrow's contest State Buckeyes broadcasts will he campuses of na and Purdue. FG/AR 2/2 11 3/4 13 0/0 1 2/4 2 4/4 4; 1/2 1 0/0 0 0/0 0 0/0 0 0/0 0 A PF T 2 2 16 2 4 13 0 3 2 3 3 14 1 3 16 0 2 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ENGINEERS GAIN VALUABLE EXPERIENCE IN YOUR FIELD OVERSEAS AS A PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER SIGN-UP TODAY AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR TALK WITH RECRUITERS ON CAMPUS: January 23-25 at the Career Planning and Placement Office. Sign up NOW for an inter- view, 9 AM to 5 PM each day. Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG JUNIOR WOLVERINE forward Alan Hardy seems to be casting a voodoo spell on Wisconsin's Joe Chrnelich during action in last night's game which saw Michigan win, 83-64. The Hardy hex did the job, as the Detroit Northwestern product netted 20 points, while Chrnelich tallied for 16. Team . Totals MICHIGAN Wisconsin 2 26/57 12/16 38 8 18 64 Score by Period 1st 2nd Final 32 51 83 32 32 64 Attendanc1e 13,609 SPORTS OF THE DAILY Johnson jams Purdue; Hoosiers rip Bucks THE FACTS OF LIGHT Johnson had only 'six points at half- time but went to the basket more in the second half when forward Gregory Kelser and center Jay Vi ncent got into foul trouble. . The Spartans led at halftime, 31-25, but Walter Jordan scored 11 of his 17 points to bring the Boilermakers to within three points for most of the second half. With 71f minutes left in the game, Michigan State began to run the clock down while protecting its slim lead. The 6-foot-8 Johnson did most of the ball handling for the Spartans and drew four fouls as he converted eight out of eight free throws. Michigan State remains in first place in the Big Ten with a 5-0 record. The Spartans are 13-1 overall. Purdue is 3-2 in the conference and 8-6 overall. -UPI Hoosiers harass BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Wayne Rad- ford scored eight straight points in the first four minuites of the second half last night to lead Indiana to a 77-63 Big Ten victory over Ohio State. The triumph snapped the Hoosiers' three-game losing streak and left them 2-3 in the conference and 10-4 overall. The Buckeyes, who had cut a 10-point first-half disadvantage to three at in- termission and then to one at the start of the last 20 minutes, also are 2-3 in the league and 9-5 in all games. Freshman center Ray Tolbert played his best offensive game of the season for Indiana to finish with a game-high 24 points while Mike Woodson collected 19 for Indiana. -UPI Tumblers trample Michigan's women's gymnastics JY els mp Hurons 79-76 By BRIAN MARTIN Negating a distinct height disad- antage, Michigan's varsity reserve asketball team outran Eastern ichigan, 79-76, prior to the varsity ontest last night. Although outsized at every match- p, the quicker Wolverines pressed early in the game and confused the Hurons. "We switched our defenses throughout the game and they had trouble adjusting," coach Dan Fife said. "We beat them in the transi- tion." Michigan sprung into a zone press- and forced the frantic Hurons into many turnovers. But EMU wasn't the only error-prone team on the floor, Michigan also turned the ball team showed complete recovery from gheir heartbreaking loss last Sunday to Chicago-Circle, as they defeated a totally outmanned Western Michigan team 128-74.75 last~ night at the Coliseum. A personal high all-around score by Mia Axon of 32.55 paced the rout, as the tumblers overcame an illness by Sara Flom which limited her competition in the meet to two events. Even with the illness, Flom managed to take first place in vaulting and second on the balance beam. Four different tumblers captured first places for the Wolverines. In addition to Flom in vaulting, Ginger Robey on uneven bars, Colleen Forres- tel in floor exercise, and Axon on the balance beam led the gymnasts' charge. Axon's 8.3 score on the beam tied the Michigan varsity record. The tumblers journey to East Lan- sing Sunday to face perennial gym- nastics power Michigan. State. They hope to challenge the Spartans to put out a top performance to beat them. "They're (MSU) a betterteam, but this could be the thing that psyches up the whole team and everybody could hit," said assistant coach Don McElreath. "We want to go there and try to beat them." JEFF FRANK SCORES DETROIT - Andre St. Laurerft scored two goals last night to lead the Detroit Red Wings to a 4-2 NHL victory over the Chicago Black Hawks. Dale -McCourt put Detroit on the Wings soar scoreboard at 6:33 of the first period. St. Laurent scored his first goal at 3:20 of the second period to give the Red Wings a 2-0 lead when he took a break- away pass from McCourt, faked Chi- cago goalie Tony Esposito to the right and lifted the puck into-the net. CAMP TAMARACK Brighton and Ortonville, Michigan INTERVIEWING FOR Counselors, Specialists, Supervisors and many other camp positions JANUARY 23 and 24 Summer Placement Office CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 763-4117 Camp Tamarack is the residential summer camp sponsored by the Jewish Fresh Air Society 6600 W. Maple Rd., W. Bloomfield, Mi. 48033 ..... .... 49Go@ College basketball Indiana 77, Ohio State 63 Michigan State 60. 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