The Michigan FACE SECOND LEAGUE LEADER IN THREE NIGHTS: Daily-Saturday, February 4, 1978-Page 7 Wolverines high, seek vengeful victor y By PAVE RENBARGER good part of the nation will be looking h Special to The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - Through- out the first half of this Big Ten super-season, the Michigan Wolver- ines have displayed an uncanny knack for bouncing back after a costly loss to register a crucial victory. Today, the resilient Wolverine cagers face a challenge of the oppo- site nature -- needing to descend from the heavens and play basketball less than 48 hours after one of the most incredible victories in recent years. The classic struggle with Michigan State is past history as far as Johnny Orr is concerned, as he prepares his ragged troops for yet another all- important clash, the rematch with the Purdue Boilermakers this after- noon at 4:05. THE SECOND-PLACE Wolverines (6-3) have hopes of knocking Purdue (7-2) out of its share of first, and could possibly grab a third of the lead themselves, pending the result of the MSU/Indiana game in East Lansing. But the game at Purdue is the one attracting most of the interest around the conference. In fact, the moguls at NBC have seen to it that a in on the action. Earlier in the week, the network decided to telecast the Michigan/ Purdue clash as their Big Ten Game of the Week, preempting the game between Iowa and Wisconsin. With all the pre-game build-up adding to the importance of the game, it seems a trifle strange that the Wolverines should be ripe for a letdown. But that is precisely what Orr is most fearful of, given the emotional high his cagers reached at State. Orr's fears, however, are nothing to take lightly.hFor example, after Purdue hit new emotional heights last Monday in their convincing 80-65 decision over Michigan, the Boiler- makers hosted Ohio State on Thurs- day and nearly lost, 71-69. "THEY [PURDUE] were up for us and then they had a letdown," said Orr yesterday afternoon as he and his team were recuperating in their hotel. "That's the thing I'm worried about happening to us. "We were higher than ever the other night, but now we're all tired out," Orr continued. "All our guys are in bed right now." Of course, the worrisome coach nas more on his mind than the psy- chological aspects of the encounter. Physically, the Boilermakers are one of the most imposing teams in the league, clearly intimidating the smaller Wolverines in their first meeting. Across the front line Purdue mea- sures in at 7-1, 6-8 and 6-7 in the per- sons of Joe Barry Carroll, Walter Jordan and Wayne Walls, and the threesome can rebound with the best of them. If Michigan center Joel Thompson finds himself in foul trouble again, Michigan will be in for a long afternoon. IN THE BACKCOURT, Boiler- maker boss Fred Schaus will go with Jerry Sichting and Eugene Parker. The sharpshooting duo found Michi- gan's defense delightfully porous last Monday, penetrating with ease to total 26 points and 12 assists between them. "We've got to contain their guards better this time," said Orr, referring to the defensive assignments await- ing Dave Baxter, Tom Staton and newly-crowned hero Mark Lozier. "We'll have to be more aggressive this time and get the foul shots," continued Orr, recalling the second most pitiful statistic of the previous meeting as Michigan was awarded but one free throw. By far the most pitiful stat of the game had to be the Wolverines' 37.6 per cent field goal accuracy.vThat kind of percentage will have to improve for Michigan to return home a winner. The Wolverines, however, seemed to regain their touch at MSU, hitting at a 54.5 per cent clip. "I just hope we can play that good again," said Orr. "I don't know if we can, but if we do, then you'd better' watch out for us, by golly." Joel Thompson Joe Barry CarrU4 QUICK TWO GOAL LEAD PACES NOTRE DAME: By GARY KICINSKI Kevin Nugent pounced on a Blue goal and flipped it pas ' .. J;? full court C PRESS Comic strip game.. .. joke's on State By CUB SCHWARTZ IT WAS A GAME straight out of Gil Thorpe. The underdog team battling State U. The leader of the team who has been in a slump for the past few games miraculously snaps out of it. He rallies the forces in the closing moments of the game until they finally tie the score with seconds remaining.' The roar from the crowd is deafening but the team stays cool under the pressure. And with virtually no time left on the clock a young reserve - the one who knew he could do it all along but never got the chance - loops a shot from the top of the key. Only no one at Jenison fieldhouse had to wait for the next days comics to find out whether the shot drops. 'All nets' as the court jargon goes. And as Mark Lozier raced towards the dressing room, as Johnny Orr blew kisses to the crowd, as Dave Baxter wrestled with Alan Hardy and Joel Thompson - + the throng of Statelts tood dumbfounded. . th"Anyone bt hi" cried a fan sitting behind me. "It just can't be - a substitute taking the last shot. Goddammit all. My friends who had finally found something to boast about at State filed out discouraged. They had the Earvin Johnson Magic Show with impressive supporting cast, the Sparban Spirits, home court advantage, even a special appearance by Zeke the Wonder Dog. But it didn't work. "It was their biggest game in so long," said a jubilant Tommy Staton, "and they didn't do it" Not only was it a big one for State. The Michigan locker room was bedlam. Friends, fans and reporters streamed into the makeshift dressing room leaving little room for movement. A guard recovered It could have beenthe NCAA Championships or the Big Ten clincher judging from the atmosphere. Dave Baxter lead chants of "Michigan, Michigan." The senior co- captain was a happy man Thursday night. He had shaken off the shooting slump which has plagued him since the beginning of the year by tossing in seven of ten attempts from the field. Even more important was Baxter's renewed confidence and leadership. In the first half he kept the assignments from the bench on path, moving players around on offense and reminding his teammates of their positions in the zone defense. He hit the crucial shots which quieted the crowd's, increasing roar as the State zone prevented inside passes. And finally he tied the game on a 20-foot shot from the corner with 1:36 remaining. What is important is not so much that he made the shot (which is obviously important) but that the play was designed to go to him. He wanted the ball in the crucial situation and Orr wanted him to have it. "We were moving the ball back and forth looking for him," said assistant coach Bill Frieder, "and then he got open..." Baxter was obviously pleased with his play. "Well, its been a while since I've sunk them like thatin a game," he said. "But I was more selective about my shots tonight. "I wanted Coach to play me and I told him so and he did." But being the team captain he is, Baxter was quick to give credit to the entire team. It was, after all, a team performance throughout. A guard uncovered Hardy's flying slam-dunk a la Julius Erving, Thompson's crowd de- manded encoure just minutes later, Staton's spirited defense of Earvin Johnson and McGee's tremendous rebounding job (10) were all part of the game of games. Oh, yes - that other fella - Lozier. The guy who can tell his grandkids 40 years from now how he sank the shot that sunk State. Baxter had words for his backcourt partner. "All year we haven't had one guy come off the bench and consistently give us good play," he said. "Lozier's been doing that. He has helped me out considerably. Across the room Lozier sat amidst the group of reporters who nearly suf- focated him. They wanted to know about 'the shot.' The one every ball player dreams of but has to fear. The shot this group of frustrated athletes never had the opportunity to take. "We didn't even get the out of bounds play working," the quiet sophomore explained. "Alan just saw me, I took a couple of dribbles and looked at the clock. It said two and I said forget it." "As soon as I let go it felt so good. I thought it was good, it looked so nice. If I'd have missed it I couldn't have shot it any better." A few steps away Hardy yelled out, "Hey can you breath in there Loz?" The hero let out a nervous laugh and looked up at the group around him, "I don't know how to handle this," he apologized, "Honest." He continued to relive the last five seconds of the game as he will un- doubtedly do countless times in the future. All this time reporters who barely Only Rip Van Winkle could have had it so bad. 01' Rip would've been hard pressed to match any nightmares he may have experienced in those 40 years of shut-eye with the nightmare season the Michigan icers are currently sleeping through. The slumbering Wolverines were dealt their 10th defeat in their last 11 conference games last night, as the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame dazed the icers 7-4 last night at Yost Arena. The season that had started out with such- promise has crumbled faster than a stale bag of cookies. Just about everything is going wrong in all facets of Michigan's game. Last night started off as most of Michigan's game have lately. The Irish scored on their first shot on goal, added another quick one and Michigan was down 2-0 before they had a chance to get their feet cold. Notre Dame's first goal came while Michigan was two men short. The Irish fed the puck around the perimeter and senior defenseman Don Jackson fired it by freshman netminder Rudy Varvari at the 3:43 mark. THAT PAROLED Ben Kawa from the penalty box, but the Irish tallied a minute later while Bill Wheeler was still serving time. Senior wingman lead. "Those two goals wer game," said a dejected Co scored on their power playc MICHIGAN HAD TWO p own in the first period, b either. Michigan's only goa Bill Thayer fed Mike Co break, and Coffman fired between the legs of Notre I Coffman's fourth goal o to 2-1, but that was as clo come to the Irish in the gam Michigan had another p start the second period, b came to a goal was a couple Brennan that didn't quite m, Irish captain Terry Fai a two-goal margin at the 4 in alone and beat Varvari. SOON AFTER Michigan of the period when Dave D Mark Miller on the left si fired a clean hard shot that rifled off to the right boards Notre Dame came righ skid ding.,leers loose puck in front of the scored when a Dan Byers shot deflected in off- a st Varvari for a quick 2-0 Michigan player for a 4-1 lead. The up-and-down action saw Michigan return to e the difference in the the western side of the areana, where Bill Wheeler )ach Dan Farrell. "They notched'just his second goal of the year as he de- chances." flected a point shot from Brennan. power play chances of its SEVEN MINUTES later Notre Dame's Steve )ut couldn't connect on Schneider scored on a faceoff pass from Gaoff Li came when left winger Collier to make the score 5-2. ffman on a two-on-one Greg Meridith of Notre Dame was sent off at his patented slap shot 18:04 and Michigan finally capitalized on a power Dame goalie Len Moher. play opportunity. In fact, they took only five secQn- f the year cut the deficit ds to do it.as Dan Lerg fired one from the left point se as the icers were to that eluded a sliding Tom Michalek and beat Molic. e. BUT THE IRISH got their three-goal' lead right ower play opportunity to back as Fairholm grabbed a loose puck.t ut the closest Michigan Michigan's defense was having trouble cleariihd e of slap shots from Dave jammed it in for a 6-3 lead after two periods. - make it to the goal. The third period proved to be the most excitihng, rholm gave Notre Dame as Michigan never gave up despite the deficit Kip :48 mark when he broke Maurer scored his 19th goal of the sea son when John Olver pulled up on a breakaway and fed the seior got its best opportunity center, who beat Moher cleanly. - )ebol threaded a pass to de. Miller skated in and t clanked off the post and . it back down the ice and Meredith wrapped up the scoring and the:gahe for Notre Dame when he skated in on the right side and blasted a slap shot to the far side of VarvaO -at the 18:49 mark. . . Stager pessimistic about tanker victory; , . ' , believes tough competition will aide team By BILLY SAHN It is often said in sports that con- sistency counts. In the case of the Indiana swim team, this is an under- statement. For example, Indiana won its first Big Ten swimming title in 1961 and hasn't lost it since. Furthermore, the Hoosiers took the NCAA crown in 1968 and wore it for the next five years. In all, Indiana has placed first in NCAA competition six times and runner-up five times. "Indiana is swimming extremely well," said Michigan's swimming coach Gus Stager. Stager and his team face Indiana this afternoon at Robert Royer Pool in Bloomington. "I DON'T think we'll have a chance of beating them," comment- ed Stager. "They're just too good." Despite the odds against the Wol- verines being victorious, Stager will swim his team to full capacity. With all the snow and cancellations as of late (Purdue and Illinois), this has been hard to do. "We need competition badly," remarked the Wolverine's coach. "The competition will tell us where we are and what our practices have done for us. And, no doubt about it, Indiana is competitive." Competitive they are and competi- tive they have been. Indiana's drive for excellence has been aided by a variety of superstars over the years. Among them are Charlie Hickcox, Mark Spitz, Gary Hall, and the latest, a three-time Olympic Gold Medalist at Montreal in 1976, freestyler Jim Montgomery. MONTGOMERY, who graduated last year will be missed. Yet, as typi- 0X Notre Dame goalie Len Moher takes refuge inside his own net as Michigan's Kip Maurer (17) and Gordie Hampson (19) tangle with the Fighting Irish's Geoff Collier (15). Moher was relatively safe inside the net as he didn't have to share it with many Michigan directed pucks. (Number 5 on the Irish is Don Jackson.) Notre Dame won the battle between two of the league's more disappoin- ting teams, 7-4 before 4,503 faith- ful patrons. The win was Notre Dame's first against the Wolverines this season and it raised their record to 8-12-1 in the league as compared to Michigan at 10-13. Both teams, will lace up the skates for the second game in the weekend series tonight at Yost at 7:30. cal of the Hoosier coach Doc Counsil- man, it won't be long until the gext star emerges. Freestyler and indi- vidual medleyist Djan Madruga, a Brazilian, is expected to reach such status soon. Yet, nobody is infallible. Stager is preparing his team in every way possible to give the Hoosiers some good races. "I'm looking 'for surprising re- sults," said Stager. "We have a tre- mendous amount of potential." Among those that Stager seeks po- tential from are the four swimmers who will make up Michigan's free- style relay. Stager expects to choose from Kevin Morgan, Tom Pederson, Bob Murray, Fernando Canales, or Paul Griffith. r SCORES I I Pro Basketball Los Angeles 105, New Jersey 99 Cleveland 104, Buffalo 101 Boston 116, Washington 94 Philadelphia 106, Indiana 94 College Basketball North Carolina Staste 83, Virginia Tech 68 Pennsylvania 82, Cornell 72 Harvard 71, Brown 67 Furman 89,North Carolina 83 ~****************4********* The CCRB will have a permanent locker sale today, Feb. 4, from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon. Ninety woIen's and thirty men's lockers will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis. Lockers cost $9.50 for use through April 28 and $19 for use through Aug. 18. a ;... .... .... .... .4.. ... ....-... .... .... ... I - -* _ - U