Pqge 12-Friday, January 6, 1978--The Michigan Daily WIN BIG TEN OPENER 80-65: FWolverines walk past NU By DAVE RENBARGER -As far as the Michigan basketball team was concerned, the Northwest- emn Wildcats were just what the doctor ordered. :the Wildcats, familiar in their role as: the healer of wayward teams, shwed up a Crisler Arena last night ,.minus their top player - to help Michigan kick off the all-important conference portion of its schedule. When it was all over, the Wolver- ines had registered conference vic- tory number one, 80-65, primarily by virtue of a fast and furious first half rush that staked the Maize and Blue to a 13-point half-time edge. With the Wolverines on the skids after losing two of their last three games, in- cluding that embarrassing overtime af- fair to Toledo on New Year's Eve, they were in dire need of an all-out effort to get started on the right foot. It was certainly that kind of an effort in the first 20 minutes of the contest. Michigan kept the Wildcats off-balance throughout the first half with a very in- tense brand of pressure defense that went along quite nicely with a 51 per cent shooting eye and a 25-12 reboun- ding edge. In fact, most of the fans in the stands had to be wondering if this was indeed the same club that looked so dismal down the stretch against Toledo. Assistant Coach Bill Frieder, at the helm alone while usual boss Johnny Orr was at home fighting off the flu, was also impressed with the first half surge. "I just thought we played with much more intensity in the first half than we did versus Toledo, and probably more than we have against anyone else this season," he said. Wildcat Coach Tex Winter, who engineered one of the most surprising upsets in college basketball last year when his team knocked off No. 1 Michigan, felt that his squad was just too listless in the first half to stay close. the first half." The Wildcats were working at a distinct disadvantage from the opening tipoff with Tony Allen, their leading scorer, not even on the premises. Allen has an impressive list of credentials already this season-37 points against Las Vegas and 27 against Loyola-but he remained in Evanston with a stomach disorder, possibley appen- dicitis. "You would like to think that if one guy is out of there, that someone else will come right in and pick it up," lamented Winter. "But it just didn't happen." On the other side of the ledger, there were plenty of Wolverines around to pick things up, as blossoming star Joel Thompson and forward Alan Hardy shared the scoring honors with 18 apiece. Mike McGee tallied 14 more before fouling out with almost seven minutes remaining. Frieder showed that he wasn't afraid to go to his bench early, as ten men saw action in the first half alone. After the intermission, the Wildcats, now 4-6, fell behind at one point 60-39, but managed to stick in the ballgame nonetheless. On two occasions laste in the game, Northwestern moved within nine points, but the Wolverines made good on their numberous trips to the free throw line (14 of 17 overall) down the stretch to up their record to 6-3. "Our starters got tired in the second half and that's why we went to the ben- ch," explained Freider. "Our starters were dying out there but our subs did a good job." NORTHWESTERN MICHIGAN FG/A McGee .............. 6/14 Hardy ............... 7/13 Thompson............9/12 Staton............... 4/8 Baxter .............. 3/8 Johnson ............. 1/4 Lozier............... 1/2 Robinson ............ 0/1 Heuerman........... 2/2 Bodnar, Marty ..,... 0/0 Bodnar, Mark .......0/0 Team............. FT/A 2/2 4/6 0/0 2/2 2/2 2/3 0/0 0/0 0/0 2/2 0/0 R 2 7 10 7 4 1 0 3 4 0 1 4 45 A PF 1 5 0 3 0 3 2 3 4 1 0 1 1 3 0 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 TP 14 18 18 10 8 4 2 0 4 2 0 FG/A FT/A Carroll .............. 0/1 0/0 Boesen.............. 1/4 0/0 Klaas ............... 3/5 2/4 Roberson............ 5/14 2/4 Marifke..............4/12 7/7 Gibson...............2/6 3/4 Campbell............ 6/15 1/2 Egan ................ 2/4 0/0 Wall................. 1/2 0/0 Endsley..............0/1 0/0 Fenlon.............0/1 2/2 Team............ Totals .............. 24/65 17/23 R 6 1 4 4 2 6 0 4 0 0 4 36 A PF 0 2 1 4 0 1 0 1 3 4 2 2 0 3 S1 1 1 1 0 0 0 TP 0 2 8 12 15 7 13 4 2 0 2 Alan Hardy Totals ............... 33/64 14/17 10 21 80 9 19 65 "We know that we have got to play with a great deal of desire and hustle and enthusiasm in order to compete in the Big Ten this year," Winter said. "Tonight, we didn't show any of that in Score by Periods 1 2 F Northwestern ................27 38 65 MICHIGAN .................40 40 80 Attendance: 13,537 . The DAILY'S PHONE NUMBERS: Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News & Happenings 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 BIG TEN ROUNDUP Magic Spartans dump Gophers By Daily Wire Services EAST LANSING-Freshman Earvin Johnson scored 31 points and paced a furious comeback late in the second half for Michigan State as the No. 18 ranked Spartans defeated Minnesota 87-83. Trailing 74-67 with 4:07 remaining in the game, Michigan State outscored the Gophers 14-2 in the next two minutes and 16 seconds to clinch the victory. THE SPARTANS had jumped to an early 26-12 lead midway through the first half as their full-court press seemed to have Minnesota bottled up. But Minnesota came back in the second half, hitting'20 of their first 31 shots to take the lead from Michigan State. The Gophers' standout center, Mychal Thomson, who recently retur- ned from a seven-game NCAA suspen- sion, was top scorer for Minnesota with 27 points. Rose Bowl 1978 Michigan vs. Washington The Most Beautiful Air View Ever Taken Full Color 16" x 20" Poster ONLY $3.50 ' University of Michigan- CELLAR Bookstore Hot Hoosiers BLOOMINGTON-Sophomore Mike Woodson and senior Wayne Radford combined for 31 points last night to help 11th-rated Indiana coast past Iowa 69-51 in the Big Ten conference basketball opener for both teams. THE HOOSIERS, 9-1, jumped to a 36- 23 halftime advantage. Indiana Coach Bobby Knight had three of his starters on the bench with his team holding a 51- 48 lead with 8:47 left in the game. Iowa's Clay Hargrave missed a free throw at that point and Knight sent Radford, Woodson and freshman Ras Tolbert back into action. A jump shot by Tom Norman put the Hawkeyes behind 53-45 with 6:30 left and Indiana took command with eight consecutive points. RADFORD, who had 14 points, sank a pair of free throws to star the streak with 6:02 left. Woodson then made two free throws and each sank a field goal to complete the streak. Ronnie Lester led Iowa, 7-3, with 16 points. * * * Badgers bounced COLUMBUS-Freshman forward Ken Page's 18 points paced Ohio State to its first Big Ten opening basketball victory in six seasons last night, a 77-61 K -dh verdict over Wisconsin. PAGE PACED a balanced attack for the young Buckeyes, running their overall record to eight victories in 10 starts. Wisconsin, also playing its first league game, fell to a 4-5 record. MIKE CLINE, the only starting senior for Ohio State, contributed 15 points, sophomore guard Kelvin Ran- sey had 14 and Herb Williams, a 6-foot- 11 freshman center, added 10 before fouling out with over two minutes left. Bill Pearson came off the bench to spark the Badgers with 15 points, while Joe Chrelich had 11 and Wesley Mat- thews and James Gregory put in 10 apiece. OHIO STATE, playing before its sixth consecutive home sellout this season, overturned an 11-6 Wisconsin lead in the first four minutes. The young Buckeyes, starting two freshmen and two sophomores, out- scored the Badgers 12-2 in the next four minutes for an 18-13 lead. Ohio State never trailed thereafter. THE BUCKEYES, who posted their last opening league victory at Purdue in 1972, rolled into a 32-26 halftime lead. WISCONSIN NEVER came closer than that in the second half, falling behind 46-32 in the first six min- utes. Ohio State ran its margin to 71-32 before Coach Eldon Miller began substituting freely. Ohio State, which has finished last in the Big Ten in the last two years, outshot the Badgers from the field 49 to 27 per cent and out-rebounding the muscular Badgers 53-48. Plucky Purdue WEST LAFAYETTE, --Four play- ers scored 19 points or more for Purdue, topped by Walter Jordan's 21, in a 95-85 victory over Illinois last night. THE BOILERMAKERS t o o k charge midway through the first half by running off nine straight points and holding the Illini scoreless for four minutes en route to a 50-38 half- time lead. Illinois got no closer than nine points in the second half. PURDUE, PUSHING its record to 6-4 in winning their conference opener, hit 33 of 42 free throws, including 11 for 12 by Jordan and 10 for 12 by Wayne Walls. Walls and Joe Barry Carroll canned 20 points apiece for the Boilermakers and Eugene Parker snapped out of a scoring slump with 19. Illinois, 6-4, lost four players on fouls, including three starters. Rich Adams and Audie Matthews led the losers with 15 points each. Reno Gray, who sparked an early Illinois charge to an 11-3 lead, had 13. ISCORESI Wildcats tamed Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG MICHIGAN'S ALAN HARDY WOWED the Crisler Arena crowd with this behind- the-back flying stuff. Mike Campbell reaches in vain, while Wildcat forward Brian Gibson reacts in awe. The Wolverines had enough tricks in their bag to stuff Northwestern 80-65. Michigan will play Minnesota Sunday, not Saturday as marked on game tickets, as the Gophers try to rebound from Earvin Johnson's 31 point effort in a Spartan win. poIt4c ( the ,kai/ Wings top Leafs DETROIT - Reed Larson celebrated his return to action last night after a five-game absence by scoring at 4:09 of the second period to give the Detroit Red Wings a 2-1 National Hockey League victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. The goal was Larson's 10th of the season and tied a Red Wings record for goals by a rookie defenseman first set by Doug Young in the 1931-32 season and matched by Rick La-Pointe in 1975-76. The victory moved Detroit to within three points of third place in the Norris Division behind Pittsburgh. Larson, who had been out since he aggravated a sprained thumb on Dec. 18 against the New York Rangers, fired from the blue line for his winning ef- fort. Ian Turnbull gave Toronto a 1-0 lead with a goal at 11:29 of the first period on a pass from Errol Thompson. Detroit tied the game at 16:35 when Bill Lochead scored after a scramble in front of Palmateer. Sweetness NEW YORK - Walter Payton of the Chicago Bears, the National Foot- ball League's record-shattering rushing champion, was named the NFL's Most Valuable Player yesterday by The Associated Press. Payton, who won his second straight National Conference rushing title and his first league title with 1,852 yards gained on the ground, was literally a runaway winner in the balloting by 84 sports writers and broadcasters, three from each league city. He received 57 MVP votes. A pair of quarterbacks, Bob Griese of the Miami Dolphins and Craig Morton of the Denver Broncos, received 10 votes apiece. The remaining votes went to defensive end Lyle Alzado and linebacker Tom Jackson of Denver, quarterback Ken Stabler and punter Ray Guy of Oakland and running back Lydell Mitchell of Baltimore. Payton insisted on stepping into the season-long spotlight only if his young blockers - center Dan Peiffer, guards Revie Sorey and Noah Jackson and tackles Denis Lick and Ted Albrecht - stepped in as well. And despite the inevitable comparisons between Payton and O.J. Simp- son and Walter's challenges to O.J.'s records, the Bear nicknamed "Sweet- ness" emphasized: "I could gain 5,000 yards and not tarnish the record of this man. He is a great, sweet guy. He has made contributions to the game over and above his ball carrying that will be remembered after most of us have gone." -AP Ke C. Mass.? A RICHMOND, Va. - K.C. Jones is the new assistant coach of the Boston Celtics of the National Basketball Association, according to Rich Haney, sports director of Richmond television station WTVR. Haney said Jones, who had a one-year contract as coach of the Rich- mond entry in the new All-American Basketball Alliance, accepted the job Thursday afternoon after meeting with Celtics president and general manager Red Auerbach. Jones left Richmond Thursday morning, met Auerbach in Washington and the pair flew to Hartford, Conn., where the Celtics were to play the Phoenix Suns. -AP Ali buckles under NEW YORK - Muhammad Ali has formally filed an agreement with the World Boxing Council to fight Ken Norton, thereby avoiding being stripped of the heavyweight championship, Jose Sulaiman, president of the WBC, said yesterday. "He has complied with the first part of the edict issued in Madrid," Sulaiman said today by telephone from Mexico City. SPECIALLY SELECTED, FAMOUS NAME I i