BALANCED BOILERMAKERS ROLL, 80-65 The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 31, 1978-Page,7 C W n it C pi ni si tf it tt s h t4 0 Ice-cold Wol By DAVE RENBARGER tinually gun from the twilight zone Up against a towering and talented over Purdue's shifting defenses. orps of Boilermakers and plagued The Boilermakers, controlling the ith a basketball that refused to go boards' at both ends of the floor, ear the hoop, the Michigan Wolver- moved inside with ease, connecting nes absorbed their worst defeat at on short range jumpers and layups risler Arena in four seasons, drop- all night long. Contrast Michigan's ing an 80-65 decision to Purdue last ice-colod shooting with the Boiler- ight. makers' 60.3 per cent accuracy, and The Wolverines put on the coldest you have the makings of a romp. hooting display of the season, "We did not shoot well," said 'issing 53 of their 85 shots for a Coach Johnny Orr, in a well-docu- niserable 37.6 per cent accuracy. mented understatement. "That was the biggest thing." SLUMPING co-captain Dave Bax- er played perhaps his weakest game "WE DID take some bad shots," he n four years, going one for nine from added, "but that was in desperation, he field, while Michigan's high trying to get back into the game." corer for the season, Mike McGee, For a while the Wolverines were it on only six of his 22 attempts. very much in the game. In fact, they The shooting statistics pretty much held a 35-29 lead with just over three old the story of the rout, as the minutes to go in the first half. But, ut-manned Wolverines would con- with starting center Joel Thompson verines burne on the bench with three fouls, nobody was around to neutralize Purdue's 7-1 Joe Barry Carroll, and the Boiler- makers ran off nine unanswered points to take a 38-35 lead at the half. The Wolverines looked sluggish upon their return to action, and some strange things started happening to most of their shots. They would miss the basket, they would miss the rim, they didn't even brush the net. It was like they were trying to hit a moving target. IN THE MEANTIME the Boiler- makers, who took sole possession of second place away from the Wolver- ines with the victory, ripped off byI twenty points in the first nine and one. half minutes of the second stanza. Michigan countered with just ten, and found itself behind 60-45. "We can't shoot our way back into a game," said Wolverine Tom Staton in his post-game analysis. "We gotta play 'D'." Thompson was hampered in his defensive endeavors with four fouls, allowing Carroll and forward Walter Jordan the freedom to dominate the inside game. Carroll ended up with 17 points, and Jordan 19, as all five of the Purdue starters ended up with shooting percentages well over 50. FORWARD Alan Hardy provided the sellout crowd with a few things to urdue, cheer about, notching eight of his' game-high 21 points on dunks." Thompson backed up Hardy with 18 points while the starting backcourt of. Baxter and Staton contributed a mere six points. f The 15-point margin of defeat equals a similar result that occurred against Ohio State in the final game' of the 1972-73 season. The Buckeyes' won that one 102-87. Only Indiana ha-a beaten Michigan at home in Big Tepb play since then, that being a 90-7616ss in the '74-'75 campaign. With a conference record of 5-3, the, Wolverines have significantly re- duced their margin for error in the remaining ten games. Hard-Boiled Blue MICHIGAN FG/A 42cGee ............ 6/22 hIardy ... ........... 10/22. rhompson ............. 9/17 3taton ................. 2/4 Baxter ................ 1/9 Blergen ............ ...1/:3 Bozier ................ 1/4 Bodnar, Mk...........1/3 Johnson ............... 1/1 Robinson ............. 0/0 Feuerman............. 0/0 Bodnar, Mt............ 0/0 ream ....... ....... 1'otals ................ 32/85 FT/A 0/0- 1/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/I1 1/1 R 6 14 1 2 3 0 ~1 2 0 4 .15 A 4 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 T 12 21 18 2 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 PURDUE Jordan ................ Walls .................. Carroll ................ Parker.............. Sichting............. Morris.............. Bemenderfer........ Barnes................. White ................. Warrick .............. Needham.............. Team.............. Totals .............. FQ/A 9/15 7/10 7/11 6/9 5/9 0/1 0/0 1/1 0/1 0/I 0/0 FT/A 1/3 0/1 3/6 4/5 0/0 0/0 2/2 0/3 0/0 0/0 0/0 R 10 7 11 5 2 1 3 0 1 0 4 48 A 3 i 0 7 5 0 0 0 0 0 T 29' 14 17 16 10 2 2 2 0 0 0 Iniaaswings upsetInia as fouls sink MSU By United Press International BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Wayne Radford drilled 23 points and freshman.. Steve Risley sparked a second-half rally with eight points to lead Indiana to a 71-66 upset over fifth-ranked Michigan State last night, the Spartans' first Big Ten basketball loss in eight games. The Hoosiers, beaten half a dozen times but early-season upsetters of powerhouse Notre Dame, threw in the first eight points of the second half' for a 39-34 lead and kept the lead for its third conference win against five- setbacks and 11-6 overall. Michigan State, now 15-2 overall, lost three key players on fouls in the second half-Greg Kelser, Jay Vincent and Bob Chapman. But the Spartans never gave up and closed to within one point at 63-62 on a pair of field goals by freshman star Earvin Johnson. Then Hoosiers pulled ahead for good from the free throw stripe. Indiana led by as much as eight points in the first half and by seven in the second stanza. First Radford and then Mike Woodson and Scott Eells. took turns shooting over the MSU zone. Woodson had 16 points and Eells 13. Johnson led the Spartans with 21, Vincent had 17 and Ron Charles 13. Chapman, guarded closely by Woodson, hit only one of nine shots from the field before fouling out with only seconds left to play. 13 65 35/58 -10/20, 16 80 Score by periods 1st Purdue ..:.................. 38 MICHIGAN .................35 Attendance: 13,609 (paid). 2nd 42 Final -80 30 -65 ~p't4 '(the kba4 A's trade goes ka-Blue-y From Wire Service Reports NEW YORK-Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn rejected the trade of Vida Blue to the Cincinnati Reds yesterday but urged the two clubs to restructure the transition. The decision, announced by his office after Kuhn had left for Boston, was precipitated by the $1.75 million that the Reds had paid Oakland owner Charles O. Finley for Blue, a three time 20-game winner. Kuhn has placed an informal $400,000 ceiling on the price any team could pay another club for an additional player. The Reds and A's tried to skirt that limit when Cincinnati included minor league slugger Dave Revering in the Blue deal which was announced at baseball's winter meet- ings in Hawaii last December.. There was an attempt at a compromise that would have sent other Reds players to Oakland and reduced the cash involved in the transaction. But, whin that could not be worked out, the commissioner stopped the deal, then suggested that the two clubs re-negotiate during the' second interleague trading period that runs from Feb. 15 to March 15. It marked the second time that Kuhn has refused to allow Finley to move Blue to another team. Nineteen months ago, the commissioner blocked the sale of Blue to the New York Yankees for $1.5 million and also disallowed sales for $1 million each of outfielder Joe Rudi and relief pitcher Rollie Fingers to Boston. * * * Ta-ta to Tito The Detroit Tigers sold unsigned second baseman Tito Fuentes to the Montreal Expos for an undisclosed amount of cash yesterday. The deal was announced after the Tigers traded two minor league pitchers, Mike Burns and Frank Harris, to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for reserve second baseman Steve Dillard. Fuentes led all free agents in hitting last season with a .309 average, but also committed 26 errors in the field, which combined with his hefty salary increase request and the presence of future hopeful Sweet Lou Whitaker made him expendable. Dillard batted .241 last year as a part-timer and .275 in the same role in 1976. Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG MICHIGAN'S ALAN HARDY (42) and Purdue's Walter Jordan ain't pickin' cher- ries, but they are giving their right limbs a good workout as they stretch for a loose ball during last night's 80-65 Boilermaker victory. Jordan led Purdue with 19 points, while hlardy scored 21. DEFENSE ALLOWS 23 SERIES GOALS: Poltent By PAUL CAMPBELL To think, Michigan's WCHA season started back in November with a 10-4 pasting of the Denver Pioneers. That was back when Denver was a dark horse at best, and the Wolver- ines were remembered as the team that had missed winning the national championship the previous year by just one goal. NOW DENVER is the number two team in the country, and Michigan nothing more than a disappointing enigma. The new order was confirmed Saturday and Sunday in Denver, where the Wolverines swallowed a double dose of humiliation in falling to the Pioneers 14-4 and 9-2. It was the most lopsided series loss suffered by Michigan all year, and dispelled hopes that the team's problems had miraculously fled with the breaking of a recent seven game losing streak. Not so. YOU MAY recall that defense has been a sore spot for Michigan. It still is. The 14 goals scored against the Wolverines on Saturday were the most against a Michigan team since WCHA Standings W L T Pts Ptoneers 1944. The ten goal margin of defeat was the biggest in Wolverine history. wa Scoring, usually a mark of Coach th Dan Farrell's Michigan teams, con- fo tinues to slump mysteriously. The DE same Michigan team that was aver- aging over six goals per game at ho Christmas time has reached that ha figure only once in the last twelve Da games. And it lost that one 12-10 to 64 North Dakota. ,th When it's playing with little offense al and less defense, a hockey team has to hope their goalies get hot. Michi- / gan's goalies have only been luke- h Saturday Night FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. D-Stenaland (Falcone). 9:04: 2. D--Schnarr (Davidson, Nedelak), 17:17. D_ Penalties: 1. D-Woods, 10:22: 2. M-Manning. u 14:10;:3. M-Waymann, 16:26; 4. M-Olver, 17:43. son SECOND PERIODP 3:1, Scoring: 3. D-Davidson (Berry), 0:48; 4. D-Ber- M ry (unassisted), 3:19;:5. M-Olver (Waymann),5:10: 12: 6. D-Berry (Davidson, Nedelak), 6:01; 7. D-Roehl M (Stenaland), 6:22; 8. D-Berry (Davidson, Woods), 9:40; 9. 1)-Magnan (Woods, Pezzelli), 12:04.S Penalties: 5. D-Gibson, 6:41; 6. M-Coffman'. 11:21; 7. D-Schnarr.18:54. THIRD PERIO) D Scoring: 10. D-Woods (Messier), 7:28; 21.-M -Falcone( Roehl, Gibson). 9:45; 2. M-Thayer M (Lerg. Coffman), 20:28; 13. M-[Debol (Miller. Mc- Cahill), 12:57; 14. D-Magnan (Pazzelli, Messier), 13:23, 15. D-Messier (Hudson). 14:07; 16. M-llampson (Maurer), 16:46; 17. )-Berry (Sch- narr, Nedelak), 16:56; 18. D-Roehl (Falcone),(d ed 18:10. Penalties: 8. 1-Stenaland, 12:08; 9. M-Pachol- I2)- zuk, 29:07; 10. D-Magnan, 19:08. Y pulver.. arm of late, and there is no way ey could have prepared themselves r what they were to face out in enver. On Saturday night, Rick Palmer oped to continue the sharp play he ad shown in shutting down North akota 5-2. But the Pioneers poured shots on Palmer. His 50 saves were e most by a Wolverine netninder l year. THAT MARK only held up for 24 ours, as freshman Rudy Varvari Sunday Night FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Maurer (Pacholzuk), 8:18; 2. -Falcone (Stenaland, Roehl), 9:32; 3. M-Olver iassisted), 22:33; 4. 1)-Berry (Schnarr, D)avid- ). 17:47. Penalties: 1. M-Thayer, 3:18: 2. D)-Magnan 8: 3. D-Berry, 5:45; 4. D-Sandbeck, 6:51; 5. -Turner,7:01; 6. D-Sandbeck, 11:41; 7. M-Lerg, 15: 8. M-Olver, 14:51; 9. D-Stenaland,18:4:3; 10. -Turner, 19:45. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 5. j)-Messier (unassisted), 12:03. Penalties: 11. M-McCahill, 3:10: 12. M-lloene. 56: 13. M-Debol, 6:.30; 14. D-Gibson. 10:1); 5. -Sandbeck, 12:46; 16. D-Roehl. 13:26 17. -Thayer. 16:35: 18. D-Stenaland, "16:35:1 9. -Maurer, 18:05. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6. 1)-Messier (Pazzelli, Magnan), 1:00:; D)-Pazzelli (Messier, Magnan). 6:27: 8. 1)-Rtoehl tenaland. Falcone), 8:29; 9. D-Messier (unassist- ), 11:32; 10. D-Stenaland (Roehl), 17:34: 11. -Woods (ineen, Messier). PP.28:2.3. Penaltie4: 20. M-Turner, 17:56: 21. D)-Hudson. 56: 22. M-Pacholzuk, 28:06; 23. D--Falcone, 59. ze icers stopped 51 shots in a game that' actually was close for two periods. K Michigan led 1-0 and 2-1 before: falling behind for good on two Denver, goals late in the second period. The Wolverines had nothing left in the:, final period, and limped home in fifth; place in the WCHA (10-12), only two, points aead of, Colorado College. ICER ICINGS:, The snow that! delayed Michigan's games cancelled:-- the Notre Dame-North Dakota:: series. Meanwhile Minnesota swept;. Duluth, 3-2 and 6-5, and Colorado.. College took two from MSU, 8-6 and. 5-3. Mark Johnson scored five times:' on Friday to give Wisconsin a 10-2: victory over Michigan Tech, but the: Huskies came back to win 5-4 on.: Saturday. '.. ' 4 1. AP Poll UPI Poll Team Record Points Team Record Points 1. Kentucky (35) .................. 14-1 2. Arkansas (4) .................. 19-1 3. Marquette (5) ................. 15-2 4. Notre Dame (2) ................ 14-:3 5. U.C.L.A .......... ........... 14-2 6. North Carolina .............. 16-3 7. Michigan State (4) .............. 15-1 8. Kansas ......................... 16-2 9. Louisville ...................... 12-:3 10. New Mexico ................. 15-2 1. Virginia ........................ 4-2 12. Texas ...................... 16-2 13. e'aul .................... 6-2 11. Georgetown................... 15-2 15. Florida State ................... 15-2 16. Providence..... .............. 16-2 17. Duke .......................... 15-4 18. Syracuse .................... 14-:3 9. Illinois State ................ 18-2 20. San Francisco .................. 15-4 926 728 664 649 :582 562 560 264 242 210 188 187 139 228 115 145 97 89 38 28 1. Kentucky (36) ..................14-1 2. Marquette (1) ..................15-2 3. North Carolina .................236-3 4. Arkansas (3) ...................19-1 5. Michigan State .................15-1 6. U.C.L.A. (1)...................1.1-2 7. Notre Dame .................... 14-3 8. New Mexico.................14-2 9. Kansas........................ 16-3 11. Louisville......................12-3 1. Georgetown...:..............14-2 12. Florida State..........'. . 15-2 1:3. D)ePaul .....................216-2 14. SanFrancisco...............2--l 15. Virginia ........................ 14-2 16. Providence.................16-2 17. Texas .......................... 16-2 18. D)uke........................215-4 19. Syracuse....................14-3 20. Nebraska.................. 16-3 404 288 249 227 207 200 184 95 84 60 :15 32 24 23 20 18 15 1'2 5 Denver .......................... 18 Wisconsin............. ........15 Michigan Tech....................15 Minnesota ......................1 MICHIIGAN......................241) Colorado College.................. 9 Notre Dame...................... 7 North Dakota...................T Duluth.......................... 6 Michigan State .................... 5 4 .5 12 13 12 13 15 16 0 z. 0 u 0 0 36 32 27 20 18 15 14 13 11 SCORES Indiana 71, Michigan State 66 Minnesota fi9, Northwestern 58 Ohio State 87, Illinois 84 Iowa 88, Wisconsin 73 Kentucky 90, Georgia 73 North Carolina 7:3, Mercer 70 Loyola 79, Indiana State 71 NIIL Buffalo 3, N.Y. Islanders 2 Recreational . SPOTS The Department of Recreational Sports is offering instruction for stu- dents, faculty, and staff in the following activities: * Circus Arts. (Tumbling, juggling, balancing skills, and unicycling.) Fee: $40 " Paddleball. Fee: $45 " Women's Self Defense. Fee: $40 Subtract $5 if you have a validated U of M student ID or facility user pass. Registration is weekdays February 1-13 at the CCRB. For further in- formation, contact Rochelle Bast (764-7415). The Department of Recreational Sports if also sponsoring an aquatic fit- ness clinic and a women's squash clinic. The aquatic fitness clinic will be held at 7 p.m., February 8, in the exercise room of the North Campus Recreation Building. The squash clinic for women will be held Tuesday, February 7 and Wed- nesday, February 8 at 7 p.m. at the Intramural Building. Racquets will be provided. For further information, contact the Intramural Building at 763- 3562. location. change TiresA -nibAArhinnn~. nnnTM; intnr"4' 'RDv.~nI RECORD MILE HIGHLIGHTS RELA YS Meyer cracks 4-minute barrier, By JAMIE TURNER For part of last week, Michigan track coach Jack Harvey must have wondered what the blizzard of '78 was going to do to last Saturday's Michigan Relays. The Relays have been the seasonal opener for the indoor season for many years and have usually attracted a wide selection of teams in competition. This year's Relays were held as usual, and except for the -~~~ ~ - --- _ C :T4 .. ---- .n ni~~ an Meyer has been the pet project of assistant coach Ron Warhurst and the victorious Meyer couldn't say enough things about his tutor. "He has taken a lot of time to coach me and I think he is one of the best coaches in the country," Meyer said. Meyer wasn't the only Wolverine miler to excell in a meet that really wasn't much more than a scrimmage. Bill Donakowski broke the varsity record in the mile with a 4:02.7 and teammate Steve Elliot also bested the team record uta-M u ann0d nraAr .third Moveup... fly Marine. Stand our hot F-4 Phan- tom on its tail and jet into the stratosphere. If you're in college now and want to fly, we can get you off the ground. Our PLC Air Program guaranteesflight school after basic train- ing. If you qualify, we can put you in the air before college graduation with tree civiiain flvina les-