i Page 8-Saturday; December 3, 1977-The Michigan Daily *1 %ThatC g aphe wkotc By KATHY HENNEGHAN Basketball: men face rugged Rams... (-I Make the innocent pay . . . it's the NCAA way NTERING JIM DUTCHER'S third season as head coach, the Minne- l sota basketball program is still not out of the woods. The Gophers have the National Collegiate Athletic Association to thank for that. Where is the justice in the Minnesota case? The NCAA took action all right, but took it long after the main culprits had gone. Rumors abounded about Bill Musselman and his squad and the NCAA began an investigation shortly after that coach's departure. As in many other cases, Dutcher and company are paying for past wrongdoings while the guilty go free. In the course of the investigation, the NCAA and a law firm hired by the university discovered that Dave Winey, a senior forward, accepted lodgings and food from an alumni. And Mychal Thompson volunteered the information that as a freshman he had sold his season basketball tickets for a $102 profit. Both are minor, even commonplace infractions. To make a long story short, the NCAA put the school on probation, cut basketball scholarships by half, and demanded that Minnesota declare the two players-ineligible. The university refused. The NCAA decided to make things sticky and put all of Minnesota's athletic teams on indefinite probation. The school finally acquiesced. The NCAA then liften the general probation, banned the cagers from postseason play and split the original player penalties in half - Winey would sit out three games, Thompson seven. "They took away the post-season possibilities, so they could afford to be gracious with Mychal and Winey," said Dutcher. "I'm pleased the whole thing is behind. Don't interpret that to say that I'm pleased with the result." The result is that Dutcher's squad started the season minus a starting forward and the best center in the country - although both are perfectly healthy. His club is now 2-2, beating the Cuban Nationals and Eastern Ken- tucky at home while losing to South Carolina and Loyola of Chicago. Thompson does not take kindly to sitting on the bench, and with all deference to the NCAA, does not see why he should, "I've never done anything so hard in my life as to sit and watch my teammates play," said the soft-spoken senior. "There was no way they would have found out about the tickets if I hadn't volunteered the information. I've talked to many players who have sold their tickets. I think the NCAA is trying to make an example out of me. "I was new in town and didn't have too many friends. I sold thetickets to a guy after a game, and I've never seen him since. I didn't have any friends or family there to give them to," said Thompson, a native of the Bahamas. "If I had known all this junk would come up, I never would have told them." Thompson could have been one of the first players taken in June's NBA draft, but chose to come back for his senior year. An extremely loyal young man, he speaks well of his coach. and teammates. His biggest fault in the whole affair was naivety. To Mychal's credit, he is not bitter although he has been deeply hurt, .even by other Minnesota athletes. The NCAA apparently knew what it was doing by placing the school on general probations - the old divide and conquer play. The pressure on the school increased especially when Minne- sota's win over Michigan in football made a bowl bid possible. (While the university denies the game as a factor, Thompson feels it was. Minnesota will play Maryland in the Hall of Fame Bowl). A group of 30 Minnesota athletes, dubbed the Committee of Concerned Gopher Athletes, visited Thompson at his apartment on three separate occa- sions and also harrassed Winey. According to Thompson, the athletes in- cluded hockey players, football players, wrestlers, trackmen and baseball players. Despite all the setbacks, Thompson predicts a Big Ten title for the Gophers. One of his goals this season is to beat Michigan in Crisler Arena, "just once, for Dutcher." But he will miss out on two more - "I really wan- ted to play against Jerome Whitehead of Marquette and against my brother Andy." The Gophers play Marquette Tuesday. They play South Florida, where Andy starts at center, on December 21 ... the last day of Mychal's suspension. By HENRY ENGELHARDT Special to The Daily NEW YORK - Right now it's likely that Fordham coach Dick Stewart has a case of the intense reds. But by this af- ternoon's end he'll probably be stricken with just the blues. Whereas the blues are only depres- sion caused by futility, the intense reds couple great desire with mind-twisting frustration. Nothing would satisfy the ambitious Fordham head coach more than a win over a consistent front-runner like Michigan. An upset victory over Michigan is the type of thing that helps fill arenas, lure blue-chippers and soothe the intense reds. But the realistic Stewart is already preparing for those post-game blues. "You won't be scared to death when you see us run out there. We don't have the advantage in any matchup," he says. "We're underdogs 99 per cent of the time, but our guys are courageous, they have pride." It may not seem like much, but for a squad that finished 5-21 last year, is 1-2 this year, and must start three fresh- men today, pride is one of the few things going for them. Due to adverse circumstances, fresh- men compose Fordham's entire front line. Center and co-captain Paul Smith will not play because of a death in his Air time The Michigan-Fordham game starts at 1 p.m. and can be heard on WUOM-FM (91.7) and WAAM-AM (1600). I Today's clash promises to be similar. "I enjoy the name Kamikaze Defense," says Stewart of his squad's label. "We don't associate it with fouls or a karate atmosphere but rather a total commit- ment to trying to play defense against severe talent odds." Michigan assistant coach Bill Frieder has a different appreciation of the Fordham defense. "It'll be a wild game just the way they play defense," he said. "We just don't want their type of play to effect our poise." The Wolverine lineup is the same one that shellacked Eastern Michigan 117- 69 last Wednesday, upping Michigan's record to 2-0. Three players, Joel Thompson, Mike McGee and Dave Baxter are all averag- ing 19 points or better. Baxter also has a total of 19 assists while Thompson has led the team in rebounding in both games. "He can jump, he has speed and Playing center for the Rams behin strength," marvelled Stewart of Ryan is P.K. Tripucka.Tripucka goes 6 Michigan's 6-7 pivotman. "This (the center position) is a big advantage tc the big Blue." 7, 240 but has been slowed to only thre minutes playing time so far this season because of a back injury. THE LINEUPS MICHIGAN FORDHAM Joel Thompson (6-7). C ..... (6-8) Kevin Ryan Mike McGee (6-5).... F .... (6-5) T. Holloway Alan Hardy (6-6)-..... F ..(6-5) John Walsh Dave Baxter (6-3).:... G.. (6-2) Bill Lombardi Tom Staton (6-4)..... G. (6-2) Tom Kavariagh while women wait for Cards family. His replacement is 6-8 Kevin Ryan. The other co-captain, 6-5 John O'Neil, broke his nose in Fordham's opener, (a 88-79 win over St. Lawrence) and broke it again in game two, (a 73-62 loss to Connecticut). He did not play in the Rams' other game, a 99-67 loss to Kan- sas. Replacing O'Neil, who despite his nose woes may see a dab of action, is 6-5 Tyrone Holloway. Filling out the all- rookie front line is 6-5 John Walsh. . Fordham's starting backcourt is not much more experienced. Bill Lombardi and Tom Kavanagh, both 6-2, are sophomores. Kavanagh may be remembered from last year for his tackling of Steve Grote, who was on his way to an uncontested layup. The Wolverines won that contest in Crisler 78-57, but the game was among Michigan's most physical of the year. By BILLY NEFF If optimism could win basketball games, women's coach Gloria Soluk would sail through this year's cam- paign undefeated. But unfortunately for the affable newcomer, there may be rough seas ahead due to a dearth of talent and experience. Soluk is apprehensive about the pros- pects for this year's contingent after viewing its scrimmage with Oakland University, one of the premier quintets in the state. "We couldn't do what we were capable of doing against Oakland; our players realized that they couldn't do certain things and 'they had better listen to the coach." BUT SOLUK'S general wariness about the talent on the team does not dull her feelings for the squad. "I've worked harder this year as a coach be- cause they're such a beautiful group of girls," said the former Wayne State mentor. The youthful Soluk, who will also coach women's softball in the spring, does see some talent though, especially in the person of junior Denice Cameron. "She is one tough cookie, an excellent ballhandler and a great shooter. Not only will she fill Lydia Sims' shoes (one of the stars last year), but we expect bigger things from her." However, Soluk, who was slow to list any of her players' faults due to her women's cage schedule persistent optimism, noted Denice has to learn to play with everyone on the court. INCLUDED IN her list of stars was freshman center Abby Curran. "She is going to be a great one," said Soluk. "She is very inexperienced; she is working very hard since she will prob- ably start as a freshman, which is a very difficult task." Although Soluk did not do any of the recruiting for this year, the previous coaching staff did come up with another blue chipper, both academically and talent-wise, in Brenda Venhuizen.x "Brenda was the valedictorian in her high school class," notes Soluk. "On the basketball court, Brenda is very, very hard nosed and tough - she %bon't give in to anyone." Venhuizen fits perfectly into Soluk's idea of the combination of academics first and basketball second. "I wouldn't try to recruit a kid with a 2.0 average who couldn't cut it here. We try to be very ethical here; we try to recruit only the top kids academically." ONLY TWO of the girls have scholar- ships and they are co-captains, Terri Conlin and Linda Gardner. Soluk termed Conlin as "one of the biggest hustlers on the team; she is a coach's dream as far as desire is con- cerned" and in reference to the scholar- ship, Soluk asserted, "I would have given her one too." Senior Gardner, meanwhile, "is recovering from a shoulder injury and is starting to look good out there; she is an excellent shooter and one of the lead- ers on the team." Soluk has high praise for all the other team members who she says "really enjoy one another." Most particularly, she singled out Jean Otto ("a great team player"), Natasha Cender ("a very hard worker"), Karen Gilhooley ("an excellent shooter who is getting tougher every day") and Sheila Butler, who Soluk cited as "very tough de- fensively." THE WOMEN CAGERS open their season against Louisville Wednesday, December 7 -at 5:45 in Crisler Arena, the prelude to the much celebrated men's game against the same school. Louisville's women recently walloped Center College of Kentucky to the tune of 97-21. Soluk will have her girls on the attack all the time this year. 'We run a forcing fast break. If you don't run the ball, you're just another ballclub." Soluk's fast break will be supported by a great deal of optimism, which she hopes will go a long way towards her building a program here. FA T MAN FOILED A GAIN Hayes put ( CHICAGO (AP) - Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes was placed on probation yesterday and publicly reprimanded by l Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke for unsportsmanlike conduct in taking a swing at a television cameraman. ~ aiIi Heyes struck Freedm Michigan and priv HAYED good beh, he draws commiss automat coaching two game "Base matter," that Coa Freedma ference's tsman lik "IN AC one-year proation took a swing and apparently Duke said he had viewed videotapes ABC cameraman Michael of the incident and they showed that an late in a 14-6 loss to Freedman was standing between the a Nov. 19. Hayes later publicly 33-34 yard lines and within two yards of ately apologized to Freedman. Hayes. This is in violation of NCAA S WILL HAVE to be on his football rules which restrict camera- avior for the next year and if men outside the 30-yard lines. another reprimand from the "However," Duke said, "I want to ioner during that time, he will emphasize that these factors ... do not ically be suspended from excuse the action taken by Coach Ohio State for the following Hayes." es. HAYES HAS BEEN reprimanded d upon my investigation of this and placed on probation before as have Duke said, "I have concluded Coach Bo Schembechler of Michigan ach Hayes, in striking Mr. and former Illinois Coach Bob Black- in ... violated the Big Ten con- man, all for making public comments regulation dealing with spor- about officiating. ;e conduct. Hayes had no comments about the CORDANCE with conference reprimand and probation. Home games in caps Dec. 7 Dec. 10 Dec. 13 Dec. 17 Dec. 28-29 Jan. 3 Jan. 10 Jan. 13 Jan. 14 Jan. 20-21 Jan.25 Jan. 28 Feb. 1 Feb. 4 Feb. 7 Feb.9-11 40 Feb. 14 Feb. 18 Feb. 21 Feb. 25 Feb. 27 Mar. 2-4 Mar. 9-11 Mar. 23-25 LOUISVILLE Central Michigan Eastern Michigan Adrian Motor City Tourney Ohio State WAYNE STATE Purdue Indiana Can-Am Tourney Shaw MICHIGAN STATE Grand Valley State ILLINOIS BOWLING REEN Big Ten Championships CALVIN Michigan State Western Michigan NORTHWESTERN Detroit SMAIAW Championships MAIAW Championships AIAW Championships Women tankers plunge into season The Blue mermaids take on Central Michigan and Waterloo today at 2:00 p.m. in Matt Mann pool as Michigan's women swimmers and divers plunge into this year's home season. Head coach Stu Isaac felt confident and relaxed about the meet. "They have a few good racers," he said, "but for us it will mostly be a meet against the clock." The focus is on improving individual times. His confidence extends over the entire season. "We have the best team we've ever had," he said. "We intend to win the Big Ten again." Isaac was. referring to the two previous championships, usurped from Michigan State in 1976. The only tough matches expected are Michigan State and Rutgers, which placed tenth last year in the nationals. Michigan finished eleventh. Even with such a young team (eighteen out of the twenty-seven swim- mers are freshman), Isaac hopes to clinch seventh or eighth place this year. "These freshman are experienced," Isaac said. "Last year only three had competed in the AAU (nationals at the high school level), but this year we have ten." With such a broad base of talent from the swim team, it's difficult to single out any individual freshman until competition actually begins. But the outstanding member so far is all-American returnee Katy McCully. McCully already holds a number of Big Ten and school records, and needs only one more league victory to become the winningest girl swimmer in conference history. This year she has set her sights for the Nationals. "I never have any definite goals for a meet; I just want to improve my times and place into the finals." The diving team is coming out strong, led by National Champion Chris Seufert and the only freshman, Julie Bachman. Bachman competed against the East Germans and the Russians last summer on the U.S. team. "Our best individual has to be Chris Seufert," Isaac said. "She and Julie give us the best one-two punch in the country.' Seufert won the Nationals last year on the one and three-meter board, while Julie ranked high in the AAU competition. The divers are all experienced, having competed at the national level. This is important, says Isaac, since "it takes a few meets not to let those people you've been reading about intimidate you. We're going in with strength." - BOB WARtD rules ... I am issuing this public repri- mand ... citing his actions as an un- fortunate display of unsportsmanlike conduct and invoke the conference rule requiring that should Coach Hayes en- gage in another unsportsmanlike act within one year from this date, he will be automatically suspended from coaching the next two Ohio State foot- ball games for the second offense." It all adds' UPI Q 9 Q 9 G0 C ,M,- 0 ->0 \ * * * * * * Big Ten cites Blue-bookers CHICAGO (AP) - Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin landed four players each on the All-Big Ten academic football team announced yester- day by Commissioner Wayne Duke. The team is comprised of outstanding players who have maintained a "B" or better grade point average during the last academic calendar year or through their college career. Michigan's linebackers John Anderson and Dominic Tedesco were repeaters at their positions while teammate Curt Stephenson made the team as a receiver after making it on defense last year. The other Wolverine was defensive back Derek Howard. Named from Minnesota were defensive back Bob Weber. defensive end Stan Sytsma and offensive linemen Dennis Fitzpatrick and Bryson Holli- man. Wisconsin was represented by receiver Greg Barber, tackle Tom Katenberg, running back Tom Stauss and defensive back Dan Schieble. I) i It t i~ a i f o n eQc fh n. i r ..n .F «.e L, . LO "w Rr 1U flt+' u.. v>.. : I