Page 10-Friday, December 9, 1977-The Michigan Daily Icers northbound Skatersscheduledfortwoat Tech full court PRESS " -ftmw- . .:" . RW!7, l ' err .y r / ./ o, +' %Wor 4brri. me/ s / By GARY KICINSKI A hockey coach is a hockey coach is a hockey coach - unless you've been a hockey coach with the same club for 22 seasons, winning seven league titles and three national titles in the process. Then you're an excep- tional hockey coach. Michigan Tech coach John Mac- Innes, whose team will host Michi- gan's icers tonight and tomorrow, is one such man. MacInnes has built a program up in Houghton that has made his name and the name of Michigan Tech synonymous with college hockey. MACINNES HAS a list of accom- plishments as long as the shaft of a CCM hockey stick. Since the Mac- Innes era began at Tech in 1956, the Huskies have risen to a position of national prominence. They boast 19 winning seasons under MacInnes, and in 17 of them they have finished among the top four teams in the WCHA. MacInnes has led the Huskies into the NCAA tournament nine times, moving into the finals seven times and coming away with the title in 1962, 1965 and 1972. In addition, MacInnes has been named WCHA Coach of the Year five times, and NCAA Coach of the Year twice. Nobody speaks more highly of MacInnes than Michigan coach Dan Farrell, who should know something about the man. "John is a very dedicated coach," said Farrell, who lettered as a forward on three of Maclnnes' teams and was -an assistant coach under him for -five seasons at Tech. "His teams are always very disciplined, and very fundamental - they don't do a lot of fancy stuff." MACINNES modestly deflects any credit for success from himself to "the great talent I get each year." This he attributes to working hard on recruiting. "Our philosophy has al- ways been school first, and hockey emmesmiseomma.. '0'sg second," he added. MacInnes is proud of the fact that 153 of 160 letter winners have graduated with their degree from Tech. After coaching for so many sea- sons, the 52-year-old MacInnes said he has seen several changes in the game. "I see more complete dedication by coaches now," said the man at the Huskie helm. "What with pre-season training, post-season training, off-ice training and some rule changes, the game has become more wide open. There's no more great defensive teams." Despite his success, MacInnes has never felt the urge to move to the NHL, a la Ned Harkness. "I've never considered it. I want to succeed at what I do, and I'm not interested in the pros," he said. "I can do without the interference of a general man- ager and an owner." WHEN ASKED IF he has enter- tained thoughts of retiring, MacInnes said with a laugh, "No, I'll probably keep on c'oaching until I get my pension, or until they fire me." This year's team of Huskies is off to a .500 start, but Farrell thinks they have been "playing well although their record is probably not what they'd like it to be." MacInnes sizes up his team as being "adequate on defense, very good in goal, and our scoring is a bit CAL-POLY MEET C Grapple By DAN PERRIN Yes, winter has returned to Ann Arbor as evidenced by the blanket of snow covering the campus. Unfortun- ately, along with the chilly weather comes the aches and pains of a bad cold or the flu. Well, dear friends, be thankful if the flu bug is the worst that has bitten you. The Michigan wrestling team has been hit a lot harder. Head coach Bill Johannesen in- formed The Daily on Wednesday that four of his wrestlers "have contract- ed an infectious skin disease which is highly contagious." The sick include defending NCAA 150-pound cham- pion Mark Churella, senior Karl Briggs, newcomer Bill Konovsky and Steve Fraser, a sophomore from Hazel Park. It is not known when they will be back with the team. "This ailment combined with our rash of injuries forces us to cancel our match with California Polytech- better than last year. with Olver sliding over to the left "We have no all-stars, no top wing spot. scorers, but we have good balance," A sell-out crowd of nearly 4,000 is he added. assured for both nights, and the rabid THE HUSKIES sport the league's Huskie fans always make it difficult current top goaltender, John Rock- for the visiting team. But Farrell is well, who has a 3.24 goals against gunning for a sweep, hoping to be tied average. Rockwell inherits the spot with first-place Denver on Sunday morning. The Bulldogs hold a four point lead over Michigan, but are inactive this weekend. Check out the SKATE SCRAPES ... All-Ameri- R ose Bowl can Dave Debol continues to lead the Supplement in league in scoring, with eight goals S d Dand 19 assists for 27 points ... Kip Maurer leads the league in goals, with 15... Goaltender Rick Palmer showed up at practice yesterday held last week by Wisconsin's Julian sporting a Huskie jersey, prompting Baretta, who was shelled for 11 goals several wicked slap shots in his by Michigan's high-powered attack. direction . . . Over the break, Baretta's average skyrocketed from Michigan will get to display its wares 2.94to'3.79. before the Detroit fans for the first In the scoring department the time since the NCAA finals. The icers Huskies are led by junior right-wing will play in the Great Lakes Invita- Dave Joelson and senior left winger tional Tournament December28th Dana Decker, each with nine goals on and 29th at Olympia Stadium, along the season. Greg Hay and Rodger with Michigan Tech, Western Michi- Moy share the team lead in points gan and Lake Superior... Then on with 17 each. January 3rd the icers face the Michigan will suit up freshman Moscow Dynamos, also at Olympia Jeff Mars for the series and sit out at 7:30 p.m. Regular season action junior Bill Wheeler. Mars will be resumes for Michigan with a re- placed on a line with fellow freshmen match at Wisconsin on January 6th Gordie Hampson and John Olver, and 7th... iANCELLED: rs fall prey to disease nic, scheduled for Friday," said Mathias (torn ligament) and Bob Johannesen. McCalvey (dislocated elbow) are "Due to the nature of the disease, both on their way back, as is 142- we must now isolate the cases and pounder Bill Evashevski. While soph- disinfect the practice area and locker omore Lou Joseph is still out with a room, which in turn leaves us no knee injury, the team should be in choice but to cancel practice until good shape for their Big Ten opener Monday. Our next competition will at Northwestern on January 14. be in the Midlands Tournament on As if the grapplers don't already have enough problems, the where- abouts of senior Brad Holman are still unknown. player ''I haven't seen him (Holman) since the day before Thanksgiving. I wrote him a letter of suspension last Friday," explained the frustratedc hr e t coach. From The Associated Press "I've put up with grief from him all Action in yesterday's baseball winter: through the years. Th r a4ihs, too meetings: is anotherMarvin Bagtes, a !4y * St. Louis traded catcher Dave. who runs his own program." Rader (.263, 1 HR, 16 RBIs), third base- On the brighter side, three of man Hector Cruz (.236, 6, 42) and a Johannesen's injured workhorses player to be named later to the Chicago have returned to practice. Jim Cubs for outfielder Jerry Morales (.290, 11, 69) and catcher Steve Swisher (.190, 5, 15). " Boston peddled pitcher Don Aase (6-2, 3.13 ERA) and cash to California t for second baseman Jerry Remy (.252, 41 SB). The Angels used that cash to sign free agent Rick Miller. " California traded two minor leaguers to Toronto for first baseman- DH Ron Fairly (.279, 19, 64). " Philadelphia sold first baseman- outfielder Tommy Hutton (.309, 2, 11) to Toronto for $75,000. yU Confident Joel .. . e9, tough in pivot By ERNIE DUNBAR W HEN ONE THINKS of a college basketball loss, the negative aspects of the game have a way of surfacing first. The missed layups, the errant passes, or the poor field goal shooting are always mentioned in con- versation before the positive points. But along with the mistakes, which cost Michigan's basketball team its first loss in four games on Wednesday, came the solid performance by center Joel Thompson. Besides leading Michigan with a career high 29 points in its 88-85 loss to sixteenth ranked Louisville, Thompson hauled in a game high 13 re- bounds. This may not seem like such an incredible statistic when one considers a few of the performances recorded by the man Thompson re- placed at the beginning of the season, injured center Phil Hubbard. But when you look and see that the 6-8, 205 Thompson started against 6-11, 225 Ricky Gallon, the figure becomes more prominent. Prior to the game, the edge at center had been more or less conceded to Gallon due to his three inch height advantage. Yet Thompson must not have listened to those reports, as he held Gallon to six points and six rebounds. Gallon's substitute, 6-8 David Smith didn't fare any better, notching four points and getting shut out in the rebounding column. Let's stop and consider the fact that this is only Thompson's fourth game at his new center position, after playing his previous three Wol- verine years at one of the forward spots. When Hubbard fell victim to a bum knee the first day of pre-season practice, Thompson was called into duty to fill the shoes of a potential All-American and possibly one of the finest basketball players in the country. And yet Thompson just took his role in stride, proceeding with practice as if nothing had changed. "I wasn't really trying to take Phil's place," said the senior from Flint. "I'm just trying to do my best in there." Indeed Joel has been doing his best at the pivot position. After his showing against the Cardinals, Thompson has answered all the critics that were questioning his ability to step in and fill the middle effectively. In every -statistical category which means anything to a* front line player, Thompson has upped the averages he established while at forward. His field goal percentage is up to 65.3 per cent from the 49 per cent three year figure. His rebounding average is an even 10 boards a game as compared to a 3.4 average previously. And in the scoring department, Thompson has shot his way to a 20.5 points per game figure, second on the team to senior co-captain Dave Baxter's 21.5. It was just last year that Joel averaged 7.0 points per contest in his reserve role. What all this boils down to is that Thompson has finally gained the confidence which he lacked coming off the bench. The mental aspect of the game coupled with a desire on his part to play winning basketball has plugged a hole Johnny Orr was considerably worried about in the early pre-season. "I was really fired up and ready to play," Thompson said of his performance on Wednesday. "Early in the game I hit the boards but I tired out in the second half and died out." Thompson grabbed 10 of his 13 rebounds in the first half, but saved 17 of his 29 points for the second half. "I have a definite advantage being a smaller, quick center," Joel said. "'Cause-if the defender comes out on me, I can go around them." Down 74-73 with 3:47 left in the game, Thompson reeled off Mich- igan's next eight points to give the Wolverines an 81-80 advantage at the 1:57 mark. His efforts weren't sufficient however, as the Cardinalsupped their season mark to 2-1 and dropped the Wolverines to 3-1. "He (Gallon) wasn't really boxing me out," Joel said of the battle in the middle. "None of them really boxed me out. If he had really been boxing out it would have been a lot different because he's real big." From Thompson's viewpoint, the game was lost when the Wolverines began to get impatient after breezing to an 11 point lead mid-way through the first half. "Impatience is something we really have to work. on. We let up and they (opponents) get back in it really quick," Joel said. "We kind of get a little more relaxed when we get a lead. When you get a lead, you just have to let things happen. You can't start forcing it. The mistakes that we made made it easier for them to come back." Michigan may have made too many mistakes to credit itself with an- other victory. But the element of the game there was no mistake about is that Joel Thompson has developed into the reliable center the Wolverines will need. };> .; f:.,,$ << ROSE BOWL TICKETS GROUP RATES AVAILABLE JOHN ROULAC P.O. Box 4101 Pasadena, Calif. 91106 t, .,. . 'A I S ILESSONS from Dept. of Recreational Sports for BEGINNERS & INTERMEDIATES WHAT YOU GET: 7 AFTERNOONS of SKIING 7. LESSONS (1 HR. EACH) ... Including Transportation & Rental Equipment IML WHERE: MOUNT BRIGHTON WHEN: TUESDAY AFTERNOONS I Leaving 12:30 p.m. On These Dates.. . Jan. 10, 17, 24, 31 Feb.7, 14, 21 ... 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