Page 8-Wednesday, November 30, 1977-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 30, 1977-Page 5 Big Ten: Chock full of new talent A good year \ " Pizza * Subs " Salads b Stromboli " Cheese Steak' Hoagies Bring in your ticket stubs after any game,. concert, etc. 5OC off any m eal! R u d H u Cafe. 618 Church St. Ann Arbor across from the Blue Frogge (Continued from Page 4) Iowa Hawkeyes thus far. Injuries have depleted the corps to a point where 10 healthy bodies often cannot be found for intra-squad games. "Ten or 11 players could be in better shape," lamented Coach Lute Olsen. The big blow is knee surgery to top freshman prospect Greg Boyk. "If he's back by league season," Olsen notes, "we'll be fortunate." Other major hurts belong to Scott Kelley, Terry Drake and Tomm-y Norman. Still, Iowa has 6-10 soph Larry Olsthoorn and super guard Ronnie Lester. If the others heal quickly the Hawkeyes can make their presence felt. A bunch of coaches called Michi- gan State a good dark horse selection for the Big Ten title. And the big mjan is thoroughbred Earvin Johnson. Johnson has yet to prove himself in college ball, but all coaches agree he is the can't miss of all can't miss prospects. The MSU stable houses more than just Johnson however. Solid offensive threats Greg Kelser and Bobby Chapman return along with sopho- more Terry Donnelly. In the pivot, State has 7-0, 200 (semi-skinny) Sten Feldreich from Sweden or burly Jay Vincent. "This year we can generate the of- fense," claims Spartan coach Jud Heathcote, "but right now, we're not a good defensive club.'' Northwestern has potential in the likes of Tony Allen, Mike Campbell, a 6-9 center, and guard Jerry Ma- rifke. But gone is Billy McKinney and the challenge facing coach Tex Winter is unenviable. Following the alphabetical path the two remaining teams are Ohio State and Wisconsin. These two teams probably had the best two recruit- ing years in the Big Ten, and possibly the nation. OSU got big men, little men and medium size men - all of whom came to play. 6-11 Herb Williams, 6-8 Jim Smith, 6-3 Ken Page, 6-2 Carter Scott and 5-9 Todd Penn have oodles of promise. Along with established players Jim Ellinghausen and Kelvin Ransey, who are now battling for starting y roles, the Buckeyes will knock off quite a few teams, and in a couple of years - watch out! "We have very little chance of winning the Big Ten (this year) be- cause of our inexperience," says Coach Eldon Miller. "Maybe we'll get years of experience in six weeks (practice)." Wisconsin Coach Bill Cofield has put two super recruiting years back to back. Freshman guard Wes Mat- thews and center Larry Petty will step right into the starting lineup. They should , join sophomores James ,'Stretch' Gregory, Clyde Gaines and Joe Chrnelich, but in- juries have hit both Gregory and Gaines. 'Stretch' is recovering from a fractured wrist' and Gaines from knee surgery. Filling these injury gaps are senior Jimmy Smith and Gregory's brother Claude, who Cofield claims is ahead of 'Stretch's' progress at the same time. Quite a compliment consider- ing 'Stretch' finished last season with- 17 points and 10 rebounds a game. At times Cofield has not had 10 healthy players, but "this is a sign of effort and competition for positions. They're enthusiastic,"-he says. All in all, the Big Ten promises to be hellacious this year, and cringe, even tougher next year. @00almost great By KATHY HENNEGHAN At this time last year, everything looked rosy for the Michigan basketball team. Four starters returned from a club that had lost to a phenomenal In- diana team in the NCAA finals. , This season, on the other hand, the Wolverines are an unknown quantity. In effect, the team lost all five starters from last year-Rickey Green, Steve Grote and John Robinson were seniors. Phil Hubbard is out for the season after knee surgery. Tom Staton and Joel Thompson shared a forward spot last year, but each must adjust to a new position, Staton in the backcourt and Thompson in the middle in lieu of Hub- bard. Last year's team was not especially noted for its defense-it allowed 74 points a game while scoring 85, of its own-but some individuals were out- standing (Staton, Grote, Hubbard) and the team as a whole was accustomed to pressure. From top to bottom the present team probably has more natural talent, but you just don't replace that experience overnight. IRONICALLY, THE backcourt lost two starters but should be the most stable element of this year's team. Staton and Baxter are both intelligent, experienced players and could be bet- ter than last year's duo-in time. Steve Grote started more games than any player in Michigan history and was the kind of guy coaches love. Not a "practice player" (or a non-conference scheduled player, for that matter), Grote nevertheless came on strong when it counted most. While his outside shot was by no means spectacular, he made a lot of. gutsy baseline jumpers underintense pressure. And he was ex- cellent at baseline drives. Starting opposite Grote was Green, who has natural talent to burn. His quickness was indispensable to Michigansover the past two years. Not only did he break numerous games wide open with fast break layups where he simple sped by the opposition, but opposing teams tesitated to press Michigan. True, Rickey sometimes forgot to play defense, and because he was so quick you overlooked his outside shot, not on a par with Billy McKinney's (Northwestern) or Ray Williams' (Minnesota). But one can argue that Green was the most exciting player ever to come to Michigan, and his unique talents were Michigan's trademark for the past two seasons. See BLUE, Page 12 000 Michigan hopes to benefit from tough pre-season action (Continued from Page 4) ranked Louisville and fifteenth- ranked Alabama all battle the Wol- verines during the course of the year. Michigan closes its season against the Bruins in Los Angeles on March 5. In five previous "meetings, the Wolverines have never emerged victorious. Last year, Michigan's season finale was a 69-68 thrilling victory over eventual NCAA cham- pion Marquette. Michigan hopes its confrontation with UCLA will prove a final tune-up for its fifth consecutive NCAA tournament. In December, the Wolverines sharpen their road skills against Fordham, Alabama and Athletes in Action. Fordham entertains the Blue cagers in Madison Square Garden seeking.revenge for last year's 78-57 loss to Michigan. Alabama has never appeared on Michigan's schedule before but this Southern Conference power should help Orr evaluate the true caliber of the 1977-78 Wolver- ines. ALL YOU CAN EAT! with SALAD BAR-$33.95 The Finest, Most Complete Salad Bar in Ann Arbor -Every Day Features- " Bar-B-Qued Beef Ribs " French Fried Fresh Smelt * Pan Fried Perch " Veal Parmesan. " Baked Lasagna " Pan Fried Frog Legs " Fresh Baked Ham * Southern Fried Chicken -Served At Your Table In Our Finest Tradition- Saturday thru Thursday 5-8:30 P.M. Sunday is. . . Imported BEER NIGHT. Bottles of Beer from Every Country* Monday is ... PITCHER NIGHT FEATURING: Premium Imported DRA UGHT BEER Wednesday is BOTTLE NIGHT FEATURING: Premium American Bottled Beer NMMR I In the friendly confines of Crisler Arena the Wolverines play host to Louisville and Dayton in the middle of December. The Cardinals accumu- lated a 21-7 mark a year ago and jumping-jack Darrell Griffith re- turns to haunt opposing forwards. Dayton always gives Michigan a tough time. The Flyers return ten lettermen from the team that fin- ished 16-11in 1976. "Our philosophy is to continue to play a national schedule and keep as many national powers on our sched- ule as possible," Frieder said. "We also want to maintain relationships with other Michigan schools." MICHIGAN scheduled contests with cross-town rival Eastern Michi- gan along with Central Michigan for the upcoming year. Coach Ray Scott feels his Hurons should be improved over their 9-18 record last year. Meanwhile, the Chippewas are count- ing on making a return appearance to the NCAA tourney this season. On New Year's Eve the Wolver- ines sing Auld Lang Syne with the Toledo Rockets - their final test before starting the Big Ten season. With much better balance in the conference-this season, Orr and his assistants aligned a tough non-league slate - and hope to benefit from it in the long run. From the looks of things, the non-conference tests should be every bit as challenging as the threats from opposing Big Ten squads. Tonlight at 8.00 Tom Hemingway 91.7 FM Ann Arbor A public radio station of The University of Michigan Call 764-9210 for a free program guide. All at GREAT PRICES! S. University near Washtenaw