The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 24, 1978-Page 9 WOL VERINES HUSTLED 80-71: Bucks boo 'T CI lV7*fti f)IT/f -- _ -*/t By CUB SCHWART Z Special to The Daily COLUMBUS-It was St. John's feast day here last night, at least for 13,489 fans who packed St. John's arena and witnessed a spirited Ohio State team defeat Michigan, 86-71. S"I was very happy with one thing, that is the enthusiasm we played with tonight. I'll take the mistakes if we play with enthusiasm," said Buckeye coach Eldon Miller. The home town crowd, time and again proving its value in Big Ten com- petition this year, rallied the Buckeye squad and razzed the cagers from Ann Arbor repeatedly during the game. Meanwhile a young Ohio State team dominated the boards on both ends of the court and took advantage of the open lane to score most of its points from within ten feet. The men in the maize and blue, on the other hand, found a slid on the rim, shooting only 38.8 percent from the field-33 percent in the second half. "Our problem was we couldn't make the open shot. We had plenty of them," said Michigan coach Johnny Orr. Michigan jumped out to a quick lead in the opening emoments of the game, scoring on the Buckeyes' man-on-man defense. But Miller quickly shifted his squad to a zone defense, which the Wolverines' cold shooting couldn't break. Immediately after the move, the Bucks popped in ten consecutive points, giving them a six point lead which Michigan failed to recover from. The Wolverines closed to within two late in the period after Buckeye center Herb Williams collected his fourth per- sonal foul. But a pair of buckets in the last minute sent Ohio State to the locker room six points to the good. Michigan continued to use a zone press in the second half which Orr went to early in the game to combat State's offensive strength. But while the press caused 22 turnovers, the Wolverines committed 20 of their own g ie pas and. found themselves fouling in the process. When Williams fouled out with 5:36 remaining, allowing Mike McGee's two free throws to cut the margin to five, it appeared as if the momentum was tur- ning. On the resulting inbounds pass again-' st the zone, McGee, the Wolverines' best shooter for the evening at 39 per- cent, bumped Ohio State center Jim Ellinghausen. The foul was McGee's FIFTH, sending him to the bench as Michigan's high scorer with 19 points. Michigan took 17 shots in the next two and one half minutes-only one of them fell. Ohio State's luck didnt prove much better, but the few that did pass through the net put the Buckeyes out in front, 74- bungling Blue 63 with 2:51 remaining. Ohio State could not, however, put the Wolverines away for good. Michigan continued to press, and sophomore guard Mark Lozier began to drive to the basket instead of the outside shots his team could not connect on all evening. Still the shots didn't fall but the Bucks began to foul, putting the burden of Michigan's comeback hopes at the charity stripe. Lozier and forward Alan Hardy both missed the front end of bonus one-on-one free throws. And Ohio State's spread out, delay offense found men under the basket three times in the last two minutes, fanning' the flame un- der the crowd and-sealing the victory. "When we needed the free throw or the basket, we couldn't do it," said Orr, "when you don't do it, you lose." "I know it (the crowd) helped motivate our team," said Miller amidst the noise, "but it didn't hutt theirs. How can it affect the University of Michigan, having gone to the tournaments four years in a row?" Orr however, felt the crowd may have affected his team. "When you get on the road," he said, "you don't know what is going to happen to ypu." But the victory was the team's doing-not the crowd, and Orr was quick to point that out. "I don't take anything away from Ohio State. They called on a lot of players and they all responded very well." Indeed the Bucks employed the resources at hand. Miller sent all 14 players into the game. Eight of them" found the scoring mark, with four it double figdres. Freshman Ken Page hit 18 while guard Kelvin Ransey chipped, in 15. The loss dropped the Wolverines from sole possession of second place in the Big Ten into a tie with Purdue and Min- nesota. The league leading Michigaf State Spartans will put its two game- lead on the line against these same Buckeyes here Thursday night. ISCOJRES I Alabama 78, Kentucky 62 CROWD IGNITES SPAR TANS Blue gymnasts stumble at MSU -- L - If- I Blue snowoauea OHIO STATE Hardy 'McGee Thompson staton Baxter Feuerman zier Johnson Bergen t. Bodna Team Total MICHIGAN FG/A FT/A 8/20 2/3 7/18 5/6 n 2/8 5/6 2/5 3/3 5/12 0/0 in 0/0 0/0 3/5 0/2 1/4 0/0 0/0 0/0 iar 0/0 0/0 R A PF T 12 0 3 18 J.Smith 4 0 5 19 Page 10 1 2 9 Williams 2 6 4 9 Ramsey 3 5 4 10, Cline 0 0 1 0 Poole 3 3 2 6 Ellinghausen 1 1 1 2 Burris 1 0 0 0 Scott 0 0 2 0 Penn 4 Hetz 40 17 23 71 Team Total Score by Periods MICH 37 OSU 43 Attendance: 13.489 FG/A FT/A R 6/7 2/2 5 8/19 2/3 6 3/5 0/1 9 7/15 1/4 5 2/6 3/4 2 0/0 0/1 3 0/3 5/6 4 5/8 0/0 7 1/1 3/4 1 0/0 0/0 1 0/1 0/0 0 4 32/65 16/25 47 A PF 0 5 0 2 2 5 7 2 2 3 0 1 12 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 28/72 15/20 13 21 34-71 37-80 ame grapplers limp hru a painful season By BOB WARREN in collegiate wrestling. You have to li Sacrifice, frustration, fatigue and weights, run and build up endurance. in each describe the lives of a collegi- get disappointed and frustrated wher te wrestler, especially the young un- am finally healthy and I get hurt in in tied freshman or sophomore. At Michi- first match and am out again. an the story is not any different. From "It's a very individualized effort the moment the wrestlers begin cutting Some guys say we all care about eac weight in early autumn until the last other's welfare, but you can't be friend practice in March, their lives are cen- ly with the guy you want to beat out. It tered around what they call the "rough- very hard." est of all sports." For sophomore Dennis Bauer, a wi. "It's tough to say if you'll go on," ner in last Sunday's 29-14 victory again commented sophomore 142 pounder Bill st Indiana, the season has made up fo vashevski., "Every season I say this is the painful days of the past. "I was' oing to be my last one, but after I wrestling varsity as a freshman ar ake it through the cutting down, the then I got injured in a practice. I had practices, the running and matches, I have knee surgery and rehabilitate feel like I've accomplished something this summer. I had to use wrestling as reat, so I give it another try." motivation to come back. When I can Evashevski like many others on the back it was 'like my freshman yea ichigan team has been periodically again because I wasn't wrestling unt injured this season. "We all feel down Bill Petoskey got injured. Now I cal when we're hurt, but now I feel up be- reach my goal of getting a varsity lette cause I know I have a chance to wres- in my sophomore year." tie, which makes up for the coach's bit- "I was proud of these kids who neve hing and the pounding and razzing we wrestled before Indiana," commente et from the older, better wrestlers." coach Bill Johanessen. "Some kids like Evashevski at least has wrestled sev- Emerson Baty got beat badly, but tha ral times this season. Some freshmen is expected. It's very tough wrestlin ave not wrestled competively and just out of high school. They should ge robably won't for the remainder of the confidence against Purdue on Fridal eason. because they're the worst team o "I haven't been hurt like most of the paper in the Big Ten," earn, so I don't get that kind of frus- And if Michigan does get blown out,i tration," said 167 pound freshman would just be another unpredictabl honor student Bob Mrozinski. Yet, I frustration in the life of young colleg have to make a decision if it's all worth ate wrestlers.- it at the end of the year. If my grades slip, I might not want-to put up with the fatigue, pain, sacrifice and lack of tour- nament wrestling. However, it hasn't taught up with me yet." "I think it's been very frustrating and a lot different than high school," added Alpha Kappa Psi and the freshman Bob McNamer. "I'm in engi- born Campus are sponsorin neering, and when I come home I am to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, M wiped out for three, four hours. I have FREE BEER PR to study until three o'clock, and that is a big sacrifice." For Details Get Brac Sevral sophomores who have been Reserve Space Soon! through the disappointment of not wrestling much as freshmen or because of injuries, still have a fire that keeps them going. "My injuries have kept my morale down, but I want to wrestle at all costs," asserted Lou Joseph, the man Bill Evashevski competes with in chal- nge matches for the 142 pound spot. You have to do extra things to make it lit n n. r1 C. Id t' ir. it .Q n' ni ti ni a ti as ,e e e4 ki ,a ni ,e of i 7i By JEFF FRANK It was a double dip Sunday for Michi- 4 gans gymnastics teams, but the results 18 left a bad taste in their mouths' as both 6 teams dropped meets to Michigan is State. The bad news for the men was 7 206.65-200.7, while for the women it was 131.25-120.65. 10 Neither team performed up to expec- 5 tations in the double dual meet. From 0 the beginning they were overpowered 0 by the Spartan tumblers and the en- 80 thusiastic partisan crowd. "HITTING FLOOR exercise started the ball rolling," said Spartan coach _ George Szypula. "The crowd got behind us, the momentum kept building and we hit steady on everything. It's a great thrill beating Newt (Loken). We go back a long way." The MSU victory was the first over Michigan's men in a dual meet since 1966 and was the result of consistent high scoring by the Spartans in all ft events. Several events found a I Michigan man on top with Spartans I bunched in the three or four places y directly below him. In this manner they were able to out- t. score Michigan in pommel horse, con- h sidered to be the event in which d- Michigan maintained the greatest ad- *s vantage over the Spartans. Costly breaks and falls from the hor- n. se gave MSU a three-point edge follow- n- ing two of Michigan's strongest events, r and the Wolverines could never catch 't the fired up Spartans. d SPECIALISTS provided the only to bright spots for the Blue's tumblers. it Brian Carey topped a quartet of Spar- a tans on the horse with his 9.1 score. Carl e Badger's 9.4 vault left a trio in the dust. .r Bob Creek captured first place in high iA bar with his 9.3, while John Corritore n awed a knowledgable crowd with a 9.45 r after successfully hitting his double back sommersault dismount. r Darrel Yee on rings and Jim Varilek d in floor exercise also gave strong per- formances for Michigan, while fresh- person all-arounder Marshall Garfield scored a highly respectable 49.6 in his first collegiate meet. Jeff Rudolph of MSU topped the all-around with a 52.45. Michigan coach Loken looked for- ward after the meet. "The guys were shocked into realizing they've got to work harder to end the season with a respectable record," he said. Our work is cut out for us, but when Nigel (Roth- well) comes back we'll be a consider- ably higher scoring team." WHILE DEPTH and momentum cost the men's team their meet, it appeared that the women's team was psyched out by the defending state champion Spar- tans. Both teams turned in season low scores, in the meet. For MSU it was the lowest score in several years. The difference appeared to be con- centration as the Michigan women were plagued by falls on bars, beam and floor exercise which caused them to score well below the 128 point level that they reached twice last week. The Spartans, minus the services of top performer Pam Steckroat who suf- fered a minor injury during warm-up, turned in ragged performances in all events, but remained in complete con- trol of their routines and consequently avoided the falls that hurt Michigan. "We're a better team than this. We should have scored better than last year (122)," said assistant coach Don McElreath. There were too many shaky routines. The women weren't as dynamic as in past meets. "THEY WERE PSYCHED out from the beginning," McElreath continued. "They didn't have their usual drive, no pizazz in the routines. They were just putting in time." Sara Flom provided most of the bright spots for the women. She gained a first place tie on the uneven bars along with MSU's Mary Beth Eigel, and she and Ginger Robey took second and third, respectively, in vaulting. FLOM'S CONSISTENT perform- ances enabled her to place second all around to Eigel, 33.65-32.7. Hopes remain high for the remainder of the tumblers' seasons as they return to action next Sunday in a double dual meet against Indiana. "We'll get back on the road to victory next week versus Indiana," chorused Loken and McElreath. BOW ING LEAGUES FORMING Sign up now at the Union 55C Per Game Monday, Wednesday, Thursday Evenings UNION LANES Open 10 A.M. 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