The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 19, 1978-Page 9 NCAA BID HOPES DIM Hoosiers husk woeful Wolverines, 71-59 By CUB SCHWARTZ Special to The Daily BLOOMINGTON -- The lights dim- med twice at Assembly Hall yesterday, once at halftime when the arena lights were turned off to conserve energy and once at game's end, when Michigan's light at the end of the tunnel, a post- season tournament bid, was also darkened.- Indiana, themselves searching for a NIT bid, rolled over Michigan, 71-59, behind the tremendous play of forward Wayne Radford. The 6-3 senior hit 11 of 16 from the field, eight for nine from the free throw line, garnered 12 rebounds, and managed an assist in producing 30 Hoosier points. Only once in the game was Radford's presence unnoticed. With a little over three minutes played in the first half, Michigan held a 6-2 edge - Radford had not yet scored. In the next 7:14 however, Indiana outscored the Wolverines 22-3. with 12 Tangled Upin Blue of the tallies rolling off Radford's fingers. AFTER THE DROUGHT, Michigan found itself down by 13 with nowhere to turn. Tla Wolverines matched Indiana step for step in the next ten minutes, but when the halftime buzzer sounded, only one point of the deficit had been regained. Trailing 39-27 at the onset of the second half, Michigan had numerous opportunities to jump back into the ball game. But each time the Hoosiers missed or turned the ball over, the Wolverines responded in kind. Never were they able to cut the deficit to less than the 12 the final score offered. "We didn't just give up," explained coach Johnny Orr, "we fought to the very end. But we missed a lot of oppor- tunities in the second half. When you're behind like that, you've got to put them in.' Only one Michigan man was able to put them in, and that was Mike McGee. The freshman carried the load as best he could, with 13 field goals and a per- fect eight for eight at the stripe, totaling a careeir-high 34 points. If that wasn't enough, McGee collec- ted nine rebounds, equal to the com- bined efforts of Joel Thompson and Alan Hardy.: "I THINK if they would have called a couple of fouls he could have had 45," Orr said in reference to the number of occasions when McGee was crashed to the floor after a shot with no whistle. "Apparently he just goes up and then falls down on his own." But there were no sour grapes in Orr's post-game comments. He knew Indiana was good - Radford in par- ticular. "He was as good as anyone we've played against all year. He was terrific," Orr noted. "If I'd have sat there and kept one guy on him, then I'd have said I was stupid. But I tried four or five different guys and it didn't work. I should have covered him myself." The difference in the final score, however, was Radford's supporting cast as compared to McGee's._ Mike No help at all Woodson and Ray Tolbert both found double figuress for the Hoosiers with twenty and ten apiece. Only Dave Baxter joined McGee in the double figure column with 10. In fact, eliminating McGee's performan- ce, the Woiverines shot a sickly 22% from the floor and only 16% in the first half. "We just didn't seem to be that alert," Orr offered. "I don't know what was the matter. If I knew I would have corrected it." THE POSSIBILITY of a NIT bid was all but ended by the loss. The two teams have identical Big Ten records, but the Hoosiers' overall mark is one game bet- ter than Michigan's. Add to that the fact that the Hoosiers have won six of the last seven, whereas Michigan has alternated wins with, losses in the last eleven outings. Orr's comments reflected pessimism. "I felt that if we won today we might have a real good shot. Our: schedule is not advantageous now. But the losing coach would not give up the ship. When asked if he was op- timistic about post-season play, he said," No, I would say I am not right now. But. I don't give up on anything., MICHIGAN FG/A FT/A McGee ............... 13/21 8/8 Hardy ................ 1/7 0/0 Thompson.............3/10 0/0 Baxter............. 3/12 4/4 Staton ............... 0/5 o00 Johnson ..............1/4 1/2 Lozier................0/2 0/0 Bergen ............... 0/0 0/0 Bodnar, Mt........... 0/0 0/0 Bodnar, Mk........... 1/4 0/0 Heuerman...........0/0 0/0 Robinson ............. 1/1 0/0 TEAM ............ TOTALS ............23/66 13/14 - by Henry Engelhardt PF R 4 9 3 6 4 3 4 t 5 C 0 4 2 1 f 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 22 33 TP 34 2 6 10 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 59 INDIANA FG/A FT/A Woodson ............. 10/20 o/1 Radford .............. 11/16 8/9 Tolbert............... 4/11 2/2 Wisman .............1/1 0/0 Baker............... 3/5 3/5 Risley..............0/0 0/0 Carter................ 0/1 0/0 Roberson............,0/0 0/0 Isenbarger........... 0/0 0/0 Grunwald...........0/0 0/0 Eells ................ 0/0 0/0 Kirchner..............0/0 0/0 TEAM ............ TOTALS............. 29/54 13/17 P rr. PF R TP 3 8 20 3 12 30 3 5 10- 4 3 2 4 7 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1I 10 r0 0 0 16 40) 71 n27. ATT. - End of the line? .. .don't tell Wolverines BLOOMINGTON y ES, AS INDIANA is proving, there is basketball after death. Death in the Big Ten race, that is. Michigan dealt the Hoosiers their fifth Big Ten loss in seven outings three and a half weeks ago. The Hoosiers were dead. They knew that five losses would not win the conference crown and merely for a shot at second they would have to win all eleven of their remaining games. Yesterday, by buffaloing the Wolverines, Indiana won its sixth of its last seven, and are now tied for fourth, only a game out of third. Indiana was down and counted out by everyone but Indiana. The Hoosiers never gave up on themselves and as a result they still hold a slim shot at the NCAA's and have a good chance for a NIT invitation. They im- proved their chances immensely by bumping off Michigan. Right now Michigan is dead. The Wolverines won their first three Big Ten games and ever since have alternated loss-win-loss-win ... Their play has been as inconsistent as that statistic indicates. But the Wolverines will play their best basketball of the year, win their remaining four conference games, and hope for a NIT bid. You may never again see dead people play the fierocious basketball the Wolverines are about to play. Because they have been skinned down to their pride. There are four players in particular that will tolerate defeat no longer: Dave Baxter, Tommy Staton, Joel Thompson, and Alan Hardy. To these four upperclassmen losing is like munching on a raw egg. It damn near turns the stomach and theaftertaste is vile. Watch Staton's eyes when he's on defense this Thursday at Crisler. They will express his step past intensity, they will express his ferocity. FeelThompson's swinging elbows when he brings down a rebound in a crowd of Illinois players. Nobody will dare take the ball from him. Stand under the basket after a Hardy dunk and sense the power of this young mxan's moves and the feeling that no one will stop him. Baxter carries double load Or possibly you will just want to concentrate on Baxter, who in addition to feeling the weight of having to guide the offense to its every move has carried a much heavier burden this season, that of his mother's battle with cancer. Just watch Baxter. He does not accept defeat. It eats away at his soul. He plays so hard and has done so well considering his limited natural at- tributes. Baxter is listed as 6-3, 165. But he is really just over 6-1 and can't weigh over 155. He can't jump worth beans and he does not have exceptional quickness. But he has gone such a long way on hustle, determination, and desire. Baxter also hates losing with a passion. Just like his coach. Johnny Orr may be a lot of things, but he is not a loser. Losing shakes the nairs from his scalp and marks his face with lines. A possibility of its oc- currence leaves him drained and usually not in the best of spirits right after a game, win or lose. To Orr and his entire staff there is no substitute for winning. So they recruit Baxter, Staton, and the likes of Wayman Britt. They know that those who are hungry will find food. These players are hungry for victory. The Wolverines have lost more games this season than they would like to think about. This year has not been a case of "the one that got away." Up un- til now they have accepted defeat with reasonable grace, making a few ex- cuses, putting the blame on shooting and the intangible of inconsistency. But all that comes to an end this Thursday. The Wolverines know that if they want to be more than just another team they must grit their teeth and play like the devil. Not just for ten minutes, or twenty, but for the next 160 minutes straight. This way they will replace excuses with wins. And I guarantee that Michigan will play all-out all the time-for there is no tomorrow, and that was said last week. The constant growling noise you'll hear in Crisler Thursday and Satur- day and in Minnesota and Northwestern the following week will be coming from the Michigan bench. Halftime Score: Indiana 39. Michigan 16,455. ICERS BACK TO LOSING WAYS Tigers deepen Blue misery, 5-2 By ERROL SHIFMAN Lerg in all alone ... Mitchell makes the save. Brennan fans on an open net tip-in. Debol on a breakaway ... loses control of the puck. Debol breaks in loose on a power play hits the post. The scoring chances were there for the Michigan icers but they could not put-the light on enough. The Wolverines fell to the Colorado College Tigers last night, 5-2. The Tiger victory was their first at Michigan tried to make a game of it in the second period after trailing 3-0 at the end of one. After Tiger defenseman Curt Christofferson made the score 4-0 by deflecting a shot past Bl ue goalie Rudy Varvari, Michigan made its run. With the aid of three Colorado College penalties within one minute, the Wolverines were able to get on the board. With a two man advantage the Blue power play fired seven shots towards the Tiger net and finally scored on the eighth. At 16:55 Dave Debol pounced on a rebound and slid it past Tiger netmin- der Paul Mitchell. The goal and the fact Michigan kept a two-man advantage put a surge of excitement through the Yost crowd. Twenty-six seconds later Debol an- swered the cheers and deflected a Mark Miller slap shot around Mitchell, cut- ting the score to 4-2. Unfortunately, Mitchell was not to be beaten again. DEBOL'S TWO GOALS did move him into a tie with Kris Manery for Michigan's all-time career goal leader- ship at 111. Manery attended the game and was happy for Debol. "He (Debol) makes his own breaks, he deserves the record," said Manery who is now with the Cleveland Barons of the NHL. "I only wish he was having a better year," added Manery. Coach Dan Farrell wishes his team was having a better year. We're not playing well anywhere," said Farrel, "I'm tired of talking this thing out." Colorado started at 1:54 of the first period as Dale Maksymyk knocked a rebound past Varvari after Varvari had made his first save of the game. VARVARI MUST have thought he was seeing double because on their next sustained possession of the puck Tiger center Greg Whyte pulled the same trick. Varvari kicked out Dean Magee's slapshot but there was no one to clear the rebound and Whyte slammed it home. d The Tigers adeed one more tally at 16:22 but the period resembled a trapeze act more than a hockey game with bodies constantly flying through the air. In the second and third stanzas the teams stopped most of their in- timidation tactics and played some ex- citing hockey. The teams traded scoring opportunities and both goalies made some fine saves. Both teams combined attempted a total of 59 shots in the second period. Colorado ended the scoring in the third period when defenseman Ged Seguin snuck a shot through the legs of a screened Varvari. The victory lifted the Tigers into fifth place in the WCHA and left the Wolverines in seventh, two points behind the Tigers. Next weekend the Wolverines host the Huskies of Michigan Tech, before ending their regular season with a home-and-home series against Michigan State. Dave Debol ... ... ties Manery's record Yost in 22 games, dating back to 1959. "Nineteen years is a long time to take to win a hockey game," said relieved Tiger Coach Jeff Sauer. Sauer's team got off to a quick start and never looked back. Bengals burn Blue FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. CC - Masmyk (iHaedrich, Feanster ) 1:54; 2. CC - Whyte (Magee, Warner) 4:14; 3. CC - Warner (Feanster, Magee) 36:22, PP. PENALTIES: . CC - Knoke (tripping) 5:05; 2. M - Turner (roughing) 10:19; 3. CC - Magee (roughing) 10:19; 4. CC - Magee (hooking) 13:0:3; 5. M - Lerg (hooking) 1.:00. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 4. CC - Kristofferson (Whyte, Magee) 8:17-,5. M - IDebol (Miller, Lerk) 16:55, PP; 6. M - Debol (Miller, McCahill) 17:21. PP. PENALTIES: 6. CC - Knoke (interference) 15:08; 7. Kristofferson (elbowing) 15:29; 8. CC - Feanster (slashing) 16:09; 9. M -Turner (elbowing) 19:18. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: u. CC -Seguin (Reilly) 1:46. PENALTIES: 10. M - Miller (cross check) 2:41; 11. CC- Knoke (tripping) 4:37; 12. CC- Reilly (in- terference) 11:05; 13. Soltvedt (tripping) 19::31 SAVES This space contributed by the publisher as a public service. 10 Leukemia adeath senece. When you were young, no form of cancer terrified your parents more than leukemia did. Just fifteen years ago, a child with leukemia could expect to live only months. But, thanks to research, things have changed Children who once lived months are now living years. Many of them are grow- ing up. Some are already adults, living normal lives. Did you ever wonder what the American Cancer Society did with the money you gave us? Well, some of it went to leukemia research. And, if we had more we could do more. Give to the American 1 2 M-Varvari ......................... 13 13 CC-Mitchell........................ 12 12 SCORE BY PERIODS 1 2 Colorado College ..................... 3 1 MICHIGAN ........................ 0 2 Attendance: 4,384 3 4 8 3 1 0 T :30 :32 T 5 2 Big Ten Standings W Michigan State............ 11 Minnesota ................ 11 Purdue ................9 MICHIGAN .............. 8 Indiana .................... 8 Ohio State ...............6 Illinois................ 6 Iowa ....................... 4 Wisconsin ................ 4 Northwestern .............. 3 Yesterday's Games Indiana 71, MICHIGAN 59 Minnesota 79, Purdue 72 MSU 79, OSU 74 Illinois 77; Iowa 76 Wisconsin 81, Northwestern 80 L 3 3 5 6 6 8 8 10 10 11 SCORES Men's College Basketball Houston 84, Arkansas 75 South Carolina 65, Notre Dame 60 Kentucky 58. Mississippi State 56 Marquette 57. Cincinnati 45 North Carolina 71, Virginia 56 Duke 81, Maryland 70 CMU 91, Ball State 84 Kansas 75, Nebraska 70 EMU 86,Kent State 70 Women's College Basketball MAU 80, MICHIGAN 47 Women's Trackl CMU 69. MICHIGAN 31 Synchronized Swimming OSU 136, MICHIGAN 109 WMU 28.MSU14 Men's Gymnastics (after compulsories) Indiana St. 211.4, MICHIGAN 198.5 " kIn % f4 . 9N _ r;l , l I 8 C 0j NEED A RIDE HOME? for real results, advertise in the