w The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 19, 1978-Page9' Flint, Heights, STATE TOURNEY ENDS Buchanan, Orchard win 1CLASSA. 1 1 1 Flint Northern 67, 1 1 Pontiac Central 56 1 1 1 1 I By JAMIE TURNER Led by senior guard Graig Tucker and aided by the worst performance of the season by Pontiac Central's Walker D. Russell, Flint.Northern defeated the Chiefs for the Class A state title 67-56. Tuckers - whose outcourt shooting staked Northern to an early lead and whose free throws nt the final quarter clinched the fi result - badly obt- played the more heralded Russell, the most heavily ttgl~t-after schoolboy player in the p. Tucker led all scorers with 2.(* swhile guiding the Northern 'offen9* ;auto breaking the game open in t rth quarter. RUSSELL ONthe other hansd, made his first shot of the night and then failed to make another on his way toa1 for 18 shooting effort. While his performance didn't doom the Chiefs, Pontiac was forced to rely on someone elsegetting hot during the game, a desire that was never filled. "We talk in terms that if we hold Walker to 20 points then we can stay in the game," said winning coach Bill Troesken. "He just had a bad shooting night. All you can hope for is that it doesn't happen in the state tournament, but it did." Even without Russell's scoring, Cen- tral stayed with Northern through the third quarter and two minutes into the fourth before losing all offense. It was a three-minute period in which the Chiefs were outscored 9-2 that gave Northern some breathing room that they would not relinquish. THE GAME had see-sawed wildly in the first 24 minutes, with the lead changing nine times and tied eight other occasions. Tucker and team- mates Gary Townsend and Gary Pool controlled the boards for the Vikings while David Lee and Clyde Corley did their best to shoulder the scoring bur- den left by Russell. However, it was the poor overall shooting of Pontiac (30%) that would deny coach Ralph Grubb his state championship. Grubb has now come away empty three separate times in the final game. "When you get two teams from the same division and league (Western division - Saginaw Valley Conference) in the finals, I think that speaks very well of our teams and the kind of ball we play," commented Troesken. "SURE, YOU want to win, but I'm glad they won it," added Grubb, "You feel bad and the kids feel bad, but they would have felt worse if they (the win- ners) had been someone else." remmmm m~mm malm mm I1 1 1 CLASS B 1 1 1 1 Muskegon Heights 67, 1 1 Ecorse 52 1 1 1 1 1 1 m ammsaummm mm m mm iamm'' By United Press International Kitchens and Plummers are always a natural combination. One of each went together well enough yesterday to bring Muskegon Heights a Class B state tour- nament championship in a 67-52 breeze against underdog Ecorse. Donnell Plummer, a 6-foot-5, 200- pound center, scored 18 points and con- trolled the vital inside game when he came off the bench early in the contest. Robert Kitchen, a smooth 6-foot-3 junior guard, fired in 12 points and keyed a 17-11 third quarter with his out- side shooting that gave the Tigers a decisive lead. THE BAD news for everyone else in Class B is that those two plus three other players instrumental in the vic- tory - guard Clayton Cochran and for- wards Doug Burse and Cedric Scott - will all be returning next year for their senior seasons. Coach Lee Gilbert isn't at all unhappy about the lack of variety. "They compare to Highland Park a lot," Coach Ken Jackson of Ecorse said. "They are big and they are solid. Naturally, we played a bad game plus they were too powerful for us." The Raiders, who finished 17-9 at the end of an 11-game winning streak, jun- ped to an 8-0 lead before Gilbert called time out and replaced starting senior center Charles Patton with Plummer. "I USUALLY like to get Plummer off the bench to get more offensive ppnch," said Gilbert, who played on a 1970 Muskegon Heights team that lst in the state semifinals. "When I put Donnell in there, there will be a change because he's so great offensively. Off the bench, he gives us incentive and is a plus. "In the first quarter we had state final jitters. The kids wanted to win so bad. They finally settled down." PLUMMER got two tips immediately and wound up the quarter with eight of the team-high 18 he eventually scored to bring Muskegon Heights within 12-10 at the end of the quarter. The Tigers then began to resemble the team that finished second in the ratings and compiled a 26-2 mark with losses only to Class A teams. They piled up margins of 17-13, 17-11 and 23-16 in the next three quarters. A less than capacity crowd of 13,147 at Crisler Arena watched Kalonji Bar- nett score 22 points in a losing cause for Ecorse, eight of them in the opening period. But next high for the Raiders, who toppled top-ranked and unbeaten Flint Beecher in the semifinals, was only seven points by Lance Ector. mm ==m imm mm mm m - * CLASS C Buchanan 77,; * Saginaw Sts. Peter & Paul 65 By JEFF It was basketball that you might remember from your high school days, as Buchanan captured the Class C Championship with a 77-65 run and gun victory over Saginaw State Sts. Peter and Paul. The championship was Buchanan's second in the last three seasons and came in front of a large boisterous group of fans who had traveled from Buchanan for this occasion. AN EQUALLY large and noisy con- tingent from Saginaw made the disap- pointing trip back as their high scorer Cass Wilson sprained an ankle in the second quarter leaving the Crusaders without an outside scoring threat. Alternating buckets and ovations, the two teams battled throughout the first half and at the half-time buzzer, the Crusaders led 38-35. Buchanan flew out of the lockerroom after halftime, scoring 12 of the first 13 points in the third period, building up a 47-39 lead after three minutes of the second half. Three baskets by freshman David Carpinski, a 67 per cent shooter on the season paced the Buchanan charge. THE CRUSADERS stormed back to within two, at 49-47 before the Bucs bolstered by several occasions where they got five and six shots at the baskets, pulled away to a 58-51 lead af- ter three periods. They maintained that lead throughout. Moses Kyles topped the Buchanan scorers with twenty points while teammate Gerald Busby added 19 plus eight assists and 19 rebounds. Duane Parker of Saginaw topped all scorers with 22 points. umm=mmmmmmmm um CLASS D Orchard Lake St. Mary 67, petroit St. Martin dePorres 52 Y Y} ham mm aisammm mm mm - J FRANK No matter how you look at it. the Class D championship game can be summed up in one word-blowoUt. DIemonstrating the same fundanlen- tals of shooting, rebounding and defen- se that carried them to 4 perfecf 24-0 record going into the finals, Orchard Lake St. Mary destroyed Detroit St. Martin dePorres. 67-52, to continue Michigan's longest single season major sport winning streak. NEVER BEFORE has a high school won as many games in football and basketball in one season as the Eaglets have. St. Mary took the Class C football title last fall with a 12-0 mark. The game was close for two and a half minutes before long jumpers by Greg Williamson and a short pop by Barry Bugaj propelled St. Mary into a 12-7 lead, a lead which they never lost. Turnovers and personalfouls plagued dePorres for most of the first half, before St. Mary ran seven unanswered points to grab a 31-18 halftime lead. The margin never got smaller. ST. MARY'S coach Robert Schumaker gave no special explanation for the unexpected rout. "We did what we've been .doing all year long, but we did it especially well today," said Shoemaker. "We didn't use any tricks or gimmicks." Williamson shot eight of eleven in compiling his game high 16 points, Everisto Perez with fourteen points and nine rebounds and Jim Paciorek, future Michigan gridder with thirteen' aided the Eaglets cause. Eugene Johnson topped dePorres with eleven. ARKANSAS HOLDS OFF FULLERTON: Kentucky ends Spartans' season By T Associated Pres DAYTON, , io .- Ki yhas three starti niors t Iancor-its team, but en tra*sf*,_ttudent Kyle Macy ha s given,tbe top ranked Wi the boost.thy've needed in t earch .for thei* first NCAA baske I title since 195," Macy, a sophomore who transferred from Purdue, played a hero's role again in the NCAA playoffs for the Wildcats, scoring nine points in the last six mjnutes yesterday to pace Kentucky to a 52-49 victory over Michigan State in the Mideast Regional finals. Macy scored 18 points overall for Kentucky, inel sg seven crucial foul shots in the:' tretch. Kentucky, which had ind after shooting only 40 p, the field in the fir- st half, ahea n two free throws bp fi i[s w i 7:02 left. Frows a0 of Kentucky's points three-point p la by Mac 1 ton free throws , Macy's ;rows in the last minute provided the Southeae power with its winnin w l as the lowest scoring' ar for the Wild- cats. Greg red 19 poents for Michigan Jch led by4' 24 with about 19 min i, to go before- tucky staged its comeback. The Spartans were plagu y foul trouble down the stretch, Vvit their freshman scoring sensation, Earvin I SCORES I Johnson, picking up his fourth foul with 9:19 remaining in the game. He retur- ned a short time later but finished the game considerably below his scoring average of 17.4 with six points. With 2:43 remaining in the game, the Spartans lost their only senior starter, Robert Chapman, and they also lost the services of guard Terry Donnelly a short time later. Michigan State, which won its first outright Big Ten championship since 1959, finished the season at 25-5. Ken- tucky won its 28th game in 30 starts. Kiss of Victory Razorbacks advance ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Shar- pshooter Ron Brewer hit a 12-foot jum- per with 1:24 to play yesterday to lift fifth-ranked Arkansas to a 61-58 victory over unranked, unheralded Cal-State Fullerton in the finals of the NCAA's Far West Regional basketball tour- nament. The victory clinched Arkansas' first appearance in the championship Agony of defeat semifinals of the NCAA tourney, which will be held next weekend in St. Louis. The hogs will take on top-ranked Kentucky next Saturday in St. Louis. Arkansas, which boasts a 31-3 mark, built up a 15-point first-half lead behind the ^hot-shooting Brewer. But the Titans, the Cinderella team of the NCAA playoffs, staged one of their typical, wild second-half comebacks to throw a scare into the Razorbacks. The Titans, down 39-24 at the half, used a hustling full-court press to force turnover after turnover by the Razor- backs and climbed back into the con- test. The Titans outscored the Razor- backs 11-2 during a seven-minute stret- ch early in the second half to draw within six points of the Razorbacks at 43-37. Fullerton kept chipping away down the stretch, finally catching Arkansas and taking its only lead in the contest with 1:43 to play when guard Keith An- derson hit a jumper from the corner to put the Titans on top 58-57. Brewer then hit his clutch field goal and the Razorbacks later sewed the game up when Fullerton allowed them to score a breakaway basket by Jim Counce. .4 VITAS GERULAITIS (World Ranked #5) Reached quarter-finals of Wimbledon in 1976 Won Italian Open in 1977r Reached semi-finals at Wimbledon in 1977 Reached singles finals in seven WCTa Toiurnamaents. 1977 Reached semi-finals of WCT Championships 1977 Won Australian Open 1978 -I Joe Hall jua tleatlicote EUROPE-$1500 INCLUDES AIR FARE I Fabulous 28 DAY tour of Western European countries, Exper- ience their history and life! Visit the major cities and enjoy the picturesque country side. Bilingual American Guides as escorts. Two tours leaving Detroit June 14 & July 12. Send for details, complete itinerary and reservations. KEN ROSEWALL (World Ranked #13) Four-time Australian Open Champion 1953 55 71 & 7? Winner of the French Open 19539& 68 Four-time runner-up at Wimbledon 1954 56. 70 & 74 Won the U S Open at Forest Hils in 1956 & 70 Won the WCT in Dallas 1971 & 72 Won WCT in Jackson and 1Hong Kong m 1976 N BA Boston 117, Kansas CityI 1 A Philadelphia 141. New York 127 Milwaukee 113. Indiana 104 NIlL Boston 6, New York Rangers :1 Atlanta 5, New York Islanders Major League Ii Detroit 4. Pittsburgh 0 Houston 41, Los Angeles I Chicago White Sox, ,Toronto Texas 12, Baltimore:); New York Yankees 6. New Yo (Cincinnati -1, Kansas (City' 3 Atlanta 5. Montreal 4 Minnesota:3.Boston Chicago Cubs 6, Oakland 2 San'Francisco 7. Seattle 1 Cleveland 6, San iego 2 Milwaukee 8,(Ca lifornia 3 Philadelphia 7, St. Louis 6 CALL (517) 321-7897 WRITE: San Saud Travel. Inc. P.O. Box 12269 Lansing, MI 48901 I Chili ALWAYS FRESH, 7 days .. Greek Wbe '7 march 1i2s~ Saturday 14rn SCC Waatr follies . Nunn River 9-1 > Z RT ll rmek Party >SwicJy5:30.8 AMII Eating For Fpilepsf'$paybett 7 11 V( 5uiatphn Pecgl5Die Monda~y '711 MX. 3 wimafhon (1onclude5 Tuesda~y 8-11 FCC 5qn ' mend & Wednesday .-6 Panhellenic. Laribh ay" ~to '' Tluraday 2.5 Panhellenic Bake Sale- & 11-5 AM F~bw 6100 Dri~ve I /. /1" The Ann Arbor Civitan Club Presents The 3rd Annual CIVITAN TENNIS CLASSIC STARRING Vitas Gerulaitis vs: Ken Rosewall 7:00 P.M. Monday, March 20,1978 Crisler Arena, Ann Arbor SPONSORED BY i hudsons with our own special touch and introducing: ! ____ . n_ -A/\ Patron Sponsors: THE ANN ARBOR NEWS, WEBER'S INN, Ticket Information RESERVED SEATS (Blue Area)....... . . Tickets on Sale At: 7.50 " All Hudson's Stores f Liberty Racquet Club I I