Page,10-Friday, February 10, 1978-The Michigan Daily HARDY ADDS 22 IN 85-74 WIN Blue bounces OSU behind McGee's 29 By HENRY ENGELHARDT All season long Johnny Orr has said that the Big Ten winner will have no more than four loses. At halftime his 6-4 squad trailed Ohio State 39-35 and the Wolverines were on the brink of loss number five. But Orr earned his 100th Big Ten coaching victory and continued game to game survival by knocking the Buckeyes on their buns, 85-74. MICHIGAN UPPED its record to 7-4, good enough to hold on to fourth place in the frantic, upset-bloated Big Ten race. The Wolverines caught the Buckeyes at 43, bartered with them for a while before leaving the Buckeyes behind without even waving goodbye. It was a 51-50 Wolverine lead with 13:13 to play when Joel Thompson,. who had a fever of 102 on Wednesday, hit one of two free throws. Thompson missed the second freebie,. but Michigan snared the rebound and Mike McGee scored two of his career high 29 points on a baseline jump. Ohio State called timeout, which only ;triggered the Michigan fans to an un- provoked, spontaneous few minutes of cheering. WHEN THE TWO teams came back on the court a good portion of the 13,497 partisans were on their feet giving the home team some encouragement. For two minutes the teams traded points and the score was 58-54 when Michigan called timeout, the crowd was still enthused-"They were like crowds on the' road are for 40 minutes," assistant coach Bill Frieder would say later. After the pause Michigan blitzed the Buckeyes 8-3 and the game was never in question again. "WE PLAYED the second half with intensity," said Orr. "The crowd helped us, they fired us up." The crowd wasn't the only help in the victory. A stingy 1-3-1 zone defense also turned the tide. Note the following: * Ohio State's Kelvin Ransey had 15 points in the first half against Michigan's man-to-man but tallied only seven against the zone in the second half. THE BUCKEYES shot just a shade under 60 per cent against the man-to- man but hit only 46 per cent versus the zone. " Michigan outrebounded OSU 18-16 in half two after losing the battle of the boards 18-15 in the initial stanza. " MICHIGAN GOT the ball down- court with authority off the zone. If a few passes hadn't slipped through McGee's hands or gone off Alan Har- dy's feet it would have been a total blowout. "We wanted to go into the zone in the first half," noted Orr, "but we couldn't get the lead. We didn't feel we could play (Buckeye coach) Eldon's (Miller) team man to man, especially with Ran- sey and (Ken) Page." Down at the other end of the court Michigan found McGee mismatched against 6-4 Mike Cline first and later 6-2 Carter Scott. McGEE SCORED almost at will, get- ting good inside position countless times on the smaller Buckeyes. He had 17 points in the first half and added 12 more down the stretch.' In fact, Michigan's forwards looked as good offensively as they have all season. Hardy started slow but finished the night with 22 markers, many from long range. He also added six rebounds, helping pick up the slack for Thompson, who was weak after a day with the flu. "Yesterday (Wednesday) I was throwing up and had a temperature of 102," explained Michigan's game cen- ter, "but today I woke up and felt a lot better. "I was getting pretty lightheaded as the game went on," Thompson said. "The zone really helped out." The senior skyjumper was well enough to pop for 14 points but garnered only six rebounds, well under his usual. ALL TOTALED the starting front line scored 65 of Michigan's 85 total. But the guards, though unnoticed in the scoring figures, made a strong contribution. Baxter passed out eight assists and in Orr's words, "was all over the floor." Staton was a hawk on defense, pulled down five rebounds and stole the ball three times. Michigan shot 59 per cent in the second half and was lucky to be down only four at the midway point after a 42 per cent shooting in the first half. "WE NEED back to back first and second halves to win," cautioned Har- dy. And that's what it will take tomorrow against the league leading Spartans. "We hope we'll ploy well and they don't," said Orr. "They have too many good players for us to beat them if they play well." But as Orr concluded his postgame remarks, "No one thought we'd beat them up there," he said with a hearty laugh, "and we did." b Spartans nudge Iowa Doily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY TOM BERGEN (left, hiding his face) and Marty Bodnar tussle for a rebound in acthgn from Michigan's 85-74 victory over Ohio State last night. The teammates each\scored one basket in substitute roles. Mike McGee led Michigan with a career high 29 points. W-Eldon-e, Wolverines C:' , * Adelphi Universityt new program in Financial Dvelopm ent/ Nonprofit Management preparesyou to enter the People Industry"-the $29 billion nonprofit field. Now you can be trained at Adephl Unyverstys 16 weelk program to assume positions of responsibility in over 1.5 million nonprofit organi- zations, Including: Hospital & Health Care Agencies Educational Institutions Community a Cultural Organizations Political Groups Relgous & Ethnic Organizations Oualifcaions for acceptance in the program include a college degree andl an interest in helping other people and building a btter society. Adelphi s program includes an Internship in a nonprofit organization as well as employment assistance. A new -1p-w AunitI MICHIGAN FG/A FT/A McGee ..............11/21 7/7 Hardy ................. 10/15 2/2 Thompson ............. 6/11 2/4 Staton ................ 4/12 0/0 Baxter ...............1/4 4/4 Lozier ................ 0/0 0/0 Bergen ................ 1/2 0/0 Bodnar, Mk ........... 0/0 2/2 Bodnar, Mt............ 0/0 0/0 TEAM............. 4 TOTALS ............. 34/67 17/19 OHIO STATE BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - Wayne Radford scored 18 points last night, including two free throws with six seconds remaining, as Indiana edged Purdue 65-64 in a Big Ten basketball game. The loss dropped the Boilermakers out of a tie with Michigan State for first place in the conference. Guard Jim Wisman, playing much of the second half with four fouls, gave In- diana a' three-point lead on two free throws with 23 seconds to gb, but Pur- due center Joe Barry Carroll cut the lead to one nine seconds later. F 1 3 3 2 2 0 0 0 0 R 6 6 6 5 2 1 0 0 2 TP 29 22 14 8 6 2 2 2 0 Page .................. Smith ................ Williams............ Cline ................ Ransey ............ Scott ............... Ellinghausen .......... Hall................ FG/A 7/16 4/8 5/9 4/7 9/15 1/3 2/3 1/1 FT/A 1/2 0/0 2/2 0/0 4/5 0/0 1/2 0/0 F 3 2 2 0 2 5 0 2 R 3 7 11 2 0 2 2 3 TP 15 8 12 8 22 2 5 2 3 TEAM.............. 11 33 85 TOTALS ...........33/62 8/11 3 18 34 Score by Periods MICHIGAN -........................ 35 Ohio State ......................... 39 Attendance: 13,497 (paid) 50 -85 35-74 in the $"9billion For more information. send in this card today. or call our toll-free informa- hion hotline. (800) 424-9477. or contact your schools placement office. Center for Career Programs, Financial ~ T Development/Nonprofit Management Program, Adelphi University, Garden City, New York 11530.. O DAY PROGRAM ] EVENING PROGRAM Summer: 6/12-9/29 I[)Spring 4/17-1213 I 0 Fall: 10/9-2/2/79 13 Fall: 1023-612079 Name _ Home Address City _ Sate _____ Zip ___ Home Phone No Campus Address City State____ Zip_ Campus Phone No d_ Adelphi University admits students on the basis of individual ment and without reqard to race color creed or sex EN i 629 EAST UNIVERSITY STAK-IN-A -SACK SPEC/At! BUY 2 Get HOMMOS FREE SCORES College Basketball Arkansas 80, Texas A&M 79 Cincinnati 75, Georgia Tech 67 MICHIGAN 85, osU 74 Indiana 65, Purdue 64 MSU 71. Iowa 70 NHL Boston 5, Detroit 3 Philadelphia 5, vancouver 2 NBA New York 126, Indiana 117 Portland 94, Cleveland 88 Then Radford was fouled and sank both free throws before Purdue's Walter Jordan scored an uncontested basket at the buzzer. Indiana's red-hot shooting of 67 per cent kept the Hoosiers in front most of the game, with their biggest leads at eight points. But Purdue's rebounding edge and the free-throw accuracy of Sichting kept the Boilermakers within reach. Indiana's victory left both teams at 13-7 for the season. Purdue fell to 8-3 in the conference, while Indiana raised its Big Ten mark to 5-6. Alone at the top IOWA CITY (UPI) - Michigan State, paced by guard Robert Chapman's 22 points, used clutch free throw shooting and took advantage of a six-minute cold spell to edge Iowa 71-70 last night in a Big Ten game. Iowa led at halftime, 32-27, and had a 49-43 lead with 11 minutes remaining. However, the Hawkeyes managed only one field goal during the next 6 minutes as Michigan State jumped on top, 58-54, behind the passing and scoring of forward Earvin Johnson. Michigan State was outscored from the field, 56-48, but cashed in on 23 of 35 at the free throw line. Iowa State hit only 14 of 26 freethrows and were outrebounded by 11, 49-38. Wings Clipped' By KEVINROSEBOROUGH Special to The Daily DETROIT- The Detroit Red Wings were thwarted in their attempt to move into third place in the Norris Division last night, dropping a 5-3 decision to the Boston Bruins. The Wings jumped out to a 3-0 lead on tallies by Nick Libet, Vaclav Nadoman- sky and rookie Reed Larson. But a Bruin blitz in the middle of the second period resulted in four straight goals, two by Bob Miller, in a 7:27 stand. Gregg Sheppard beat Jimmy Ruther- ford with what proved to be the winner at 15:17 of the second period. THE HARD FOUGHT affair was a refreshing change from the lackluster performances the Wings usually come up with against the Bruins. They lost the last two games with Boston by scores of 7-0 and 6-1. They Wings remained one point behind the third place Pittsbirgh Penguins, who were idle last night. Gr19 duate Assistthos are available in the / Eastern Michigan University 1 English Department for978"and79. ' $3,000 per year, teach two comp. / 1 classes. Good teaching experience / while working on MA. 1 Collor write: Dr. Paul D. McGlynn ! 1 Dept. English, EMU / Ypsilanti, Mi. 48197 (487-2075) j I. HaveYo u eardthe Latest? SUBSCRIBE to the and You'll Always Be in the Know! For Delivery to Your Doorstep PHONE: 764-0558 a I i 1,rI MAZE Golden Time Of Day I TWO SKILLERZ ,JSKY 19 PEABO BRYSON Reaching For The Sky RELEASESI!. '~riifwL~ot \ ~ofoi rAg F. w I r PUT YOUR SCIENTIFIC OR ENGINEERING DEGREE TO WORK If you're a degree candidate who would like to embark on a future-oriented scientific or engineer- ing career, then consider the United States Air Force. It's one of the finest opportunities in the nation. Completion of our three-month Officer Training School nets you an officer's commission and launches you into a career that's geared for. tomorrow. Our equipment is among the finest, our working conditions are excellent, and our benefits package unmatched. Major Ray Hunter, your Air Force representative will be at U. of M. February 13, 1978,from 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. See the placement service director for I I s \\\\\