100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

January 25, 1977 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-01-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Seven

Tuesday, Jariuary 25, 1977

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

_oaSe ..

.'

CAGERS DUMP INSPIRED OSU, 92-81

Final

spurt

lifts

Blue

By DON MacLACHLAN drove the lane and hit a seven Center Phil Hubbard convert- Ohio State inbounded the ball
Special To The Daily footer to give Ohio State a short' ed the first of two charity tosses and Jim Ellinghausen missed
COLUMBUS-Michigan scored lived 81-80 lead, its first since and John Robinson pulled down from in close and Hubbard se-
twelve unanswered points in the' early in the game. the rebound from the second and cured the rebound, drawing a
last two minutes of the game "'WHEN THEY did get aheadI gave the ball to guard Dave foul tn the process.
rallying from an 81-80 deficit to it looked like the momentum Baxter who banked home a sev- Hubbard calmly sank both fre
defeat Ohio State 92-81 before would really shift and the fans en footer to put the Blue ahead throws, and after R a n s e
9,241 fans in St. John's Arena. went crazy," said assistant for good, 83-81, with 1:37 left. missed a 15 foot jumper, Baxter
DAVE BAXTER scored six coach Bill Frieder. "We (the The Buckeyes managed to grabbed the rebound and Mich-
and Phil Hubbard five in the coaches) discussed whether to work the ball into center Fred igan began to slow it down with
span as the Wolverines won take a time-out but we didn't ! Poole on their next possession its three guard offense.
their seventh consecutive Big want Ohio State to get its de- but Hubbard rejected a dunk Orr installed the offense with
Ten game upping their season fense together." attempt, with 1:07 remaining. four minutes remaining and it
mark to 14-1. The Buckeyes didn't set up a "HUBBARD really made a paid off. Green spotted Baxter
With 2:16 remaining, Buckeye defense and the Wolverines went key play when he blocked that all alone underneath the hoop
freshman guard Kelvin Ransey to work. shot," said Coach John Orr. and hit the skinny Detroiter-with,
TAKEDOWN INDIANA 29- 9

past Bucks
a bounce pass. Baxter laid it in Hubbard led the balanced Blue
and Michigan held an 87-81 lead scoring brigade with 17, followed
with 29 seconds to play. by Sieve Grote, Green and Bax-
THE TONE of the game was ter with 16 each, Corcaptain
set early when the Buckeyes John Robinson added 13 points
jumped off to a quick 11-3 lead and eight caroms.
three minutes into the game. "We ran on a team that runs
Michigan responded with ten real well," said a dejected OSU
straight points, two each by the Coach Eldon Miller. "I think we
five starters and grabbed a 13-11 can run any time whenever we
lead. get the ball, we fast break."
Both teams tried to generate TERRY BURRIS scored 21
a fast break in the first half as
the Buckeyes attempted to run I points and Ransey added 19 for
with the Wolverines. the Buckeyes who fell to 2-4 in
Michigan left at intermission the conference and 7-8 overall.
leading 42-37. The other half of the Wolver-
The Wolverines managed to up ine basketball machine sput-
their lead to 12 with 7:29 re- tered last night as Michigan's
maining but the running Ruck- women were nipped, by Michi-
eyes refused to play dead. gan State 63-62, at East Lansing.
OHIO STATE wentonta 20-7 1Down by five at the half, Michi
tear behind the hot shooting of 'Ran tied the game with 1:30 left
Ransey to take the lead 81-80 but victory slipped away.
and set the stage for the final Me'inda Fertig led Michigan
two minutes. scoring with 27 points.

Grapp lers

By PATRICK RODE
With the aid of two wins by
fall and two major decisions,
the Michigan wrestlers rebound-
ed from last Friday night's loss
to Iowa State with a 29-9 vic-
tory over Indiana, Sunday.
Pins were donated by sopho-
more Mark Churella at 177
pounds and heavyweight Mitch
Marsicano. Churella downed
Bob Semple at 4:06, while Mar-
sicano disposed of Mike Jor-
i SPO

gensen, 4:56 into the match.
"The most outstanding match
was when Karl Briggs defeated
Sam Komar," said Michigan
coach Bill Johannesen. "He'sl
the first Michigan wrestler to
beat Komar."
Two seasons ago Komar
won the Big Ten champion-
ship and was number four in
the nation at 134. But Sunday
at 142, with the aid of two
near falls and a takedown in

ega rn
the closing seconds, Briggs
took the decision; 11-6.
Johannesen was also excited
about Harold King's perform-
ance at 190. King scored an 11-3
major decision over Hoosier
Tom Powell.
"King is coming along," Jo-
hannesen remarked. "He's
changed, motivated about
school."#
Brad Holman also complete-
ly dominated his match with

ouch
an impressive victory over In-
diana's Doug Hotsell, in a
111-2 major decision.

AP Photo
BASKETBALL OR Volleyball? Nobody knew for sure when
Ohio State's Jim Ellinghausen attempted to spike Michigan

center Phil Hubbard:
points on the night in

Hubbard managed to escape for 17
the Wolverines 92-81 victory.

Johannesen did sound concern-
ed over some of the weight
classes. Unhappy with Rich Lu-
bell's performance at 134, he Rdb
Tol
almost forfeited the match with H
a minute remaining. Gre
"Lubell lost, on riding time Gro
and a stalling point, really," Bax
Johannesen noted. "He wrest- Har
led non-aggressively. It's got to Ber
change or we won't use him"'Tot
-Tota
To prove his point Johan-
nesen is planning to get some MI
use out of freshman Dave Atti
Cartier at 134 pounds, in the ---
three meets this upcoming
weekend.
Other Michigan losses to In- a
diana came at 118 where Todd

inson
impson
board
'en
'te
ton
ctr
dy
gen
ais
Sc
CHIGAN
o State
endance

MICHIGAN/
FG/A FT/A

5-9
2-7
6-10
7-15
6-9
1-1
6-6
4-6
0-0

3-4
0-0
5-9
2-2
4-5
0-2
4-4
0-0
0-0

R
8
5
14
2
2
0
2
1
2
3
39
50
44

A
2
0
3
3
1
2
1
0
13

TP
13
4
17
16
16
2
16
8
0
92

Burris
Hall
Ellin'ha'sen
Ransey
Bolden
Daugherty
Poole
Hammond
Smith
Team
Totals

FG/A FT/A
9-14 3-4
2-5 2-2
3-8 0-0
7-13 5-5
2-7 2-3
3-3 0-0
3-6 7-8
0-0 0-0
2-2 0-0

R
3
4
5
3
2
1
2
1
4
25

A'
0
1
4
9

'TP
21
6
6'
19
6
6
13
0

Lucky

aI
3
0

numberse ven

01110 STATE

full court
V~fTs/ R

)RTS OF THE DAILY

co,
N
:e
:e:

37-64 18-25
re by Periods
42
37
9,241

I8 4

I

--92
-81 Fouled Out: Burris, klinghausez
'Technical Foul: Ellinghausen

Stabler snares Hickok

..,

., __

By The Associated Press 17212points and running back I gish Purdue attack in the second Schneider lost a 6-2 decision
'____NEW YORK - Ken Stabler, 0. J. Simpson of the Buffalo half to surge back from a six-Ito Angelo Marino and at 158
the quarterback of the Super Bills was sixth with nine and point halftime deficit and take a with George Kelley losing to
Bowl champion Oakland Raid- 69 points. four-point lead, 58-54, with 13 Jeff Fitch, 6-4.
C ers, was named the 1976 Hickok -minutes remaining. Sixth rated Michigan now has
C o e ca - . - Professional Athlete of the Year Purdue, playing its third game a dual meet record of 6-1 and
Prfessioal Atet ti five nights, finally worked looks forward this weekend to
. 0on t be remem bered open race in the 27-year history WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. back to a 65-65 tie with just un- meets with Purdue, Illinois and
of the award. 'Walter Jordan pumped in 21 der six minutes left. , Ohio State.
COLUMBUS' Stabler, the first Hickok win-points last night to lead 18th- The teams then traded baskets
ranked Purdue to an 81-71 come- before the Boilermakers went
By KATHY HENNEGHAN ner who failed to win any of the from-behind aheadI
MICIGN s -0inBi Te pay 1-1ovral ad an~, 1 mnty cmptiiosre vcry verndBig Ten basketball aea for good on a Jerry Sich- TheT p 2
12 mouthy competitions, re- .tines wth 4:22 remaining.0
0O, MICHIGAN is 7-0 in Big Ten play, 13-1 overall and ranke+ ceived 31 first-place votes and victory over a tenacious Wis- tg jumper wit 2 remaining
as one of the best teams in the country. And given a day 135 points in nationwide ballot- consin squad that hosts Michi- I. San Francisco(4ted P 9 19149:
or two, that's about all that will be remembered of last night's ing by sports writers and sports- gan Thursday night. Gophters -rind.MICHIGAN (3) I3-1895
92-81 wnoe Ohio tt.cses The Purdue triumph raised i 1 3. Alabarma 14-1 703
S win over o State. casters. ' MINNEAPOLIS-- M i c h a e 1 4. North Carolina (1) 13-2 658-
teBoilermakers' 12-4 overall.,.Nvd-a egs()1- 6
You wouldn't know it to look at rye score, but the. game GAVE him a seven-point to a 6-1 conference mark and Thompson and Ray Williams tie) Daily Libels (1) 16-1 566
could so easily have gone the other way. margn over Joe Morgan, the dropped Wisconsin, 5-10 for the combined for 47 points yester- 6. Kentucky 12-2 562
second baseman of the worldseason, to 1-6 in the Big Ten. day to lead 11th-ranked Minne- 7- Tennessee 13-2 500
"We beat Michigan State by 13 and blew them out," champion Cincinnati Reds. Mor- WISCONSIN capitalized on su- sota to a 75-70 Big Ten basket- 8. UCLA 11-2 435
chmponCncnntiRds WSCNINcaitlze o si9. Marquette 13-2 406
said Michigan assistant Bill Frieder. "We beat Ohio State gan received 28 first-place votes perior rebounding and a slug- ball victory over Michigan 10. Wake Forest 14-2 364
by 11 and fought for our lives. Now the average guy who and 128 points. Morgan also State. 1l. Louisville 12-2 359
doesn't follow us very closely will read the score and think, . fil tw a hThompson scored 24 points and 13. Minnesota 12-1 219
'Well, Michigan just won another average game."' iiOn. I C ( R E S Williams 23 for the Gophers, 14. Providence 14-2 1211
WlMciadutwnaohraeaegm.'Tennis star Chris Evert, who SC O RES rlon
TnssaChsEvtwowho are now 4-1 in the confer. 15. Arkansas 11-1 1021
That's exactly it. This was no average game. With 2:16 re- also missed out on a monthly 17.Syracue now 4-1 ie c - Arns
maining on the clock, Kelvin Ransey scored to put the Buckeyes selection, became the' highest- College Basketball MICHIGAN STATE, w h i c h 18. Purdue 11-4 33
ahead 81-80. placed woman in the Hickok his- MICHIGAN 92, Ohio State 81 dropped to 3-4 in the Big Ten 19. Clemson 13-3 24
They say the effect of a good home crowd is not so much tory, receiving 24 ,first-plc uae8,wsosn7 n -0oe-lwssakd2.Mmhssae1- 1
tfscoragingeeffetheoagoito mebuto srngth omc votes and 108% points. Minnesota 75, Michigan State 0 by Greg Kelser's 28 points. Bob
that of discouraging the opposition but of spurring the home Rookie pitcher Mark Fidrch Illinois 71, Northwestern 68
team on. And the noise was incredible. o the Tigers, finished rt Uabam7oa 74p (T I Chapman added 22.
of teTgrfnse fourth Kentucky 100, Mississippi 73 Minnesota couldn't pull away
with 15 first-place ballots and 92 Tennessee 68, Mississippi state 59 until late in the contest. The
Orr turns green points; Jimmy Connors, the Louisville 107, LIU 68 Gophers took the lead for good PLAY AT REDUCED
Wimbledon and U.S. Open tennis Arkansas 72, Texas A&M 58 at 48-47 on a tip-in by freshman
Have you ever watcher Johnny Orr's face during a close champion, was next with 14 and women's - MSU 63, MICHIGAN 62 Kevin McHale. RATES ON TUESDAYS
game? Orr looks perpetually worried, but at times like last night -- --- -
he's virtually green around the gills. The handful of Michigan
fans at Columbus also sat with their stomachs tied in knots.
Then, against all odds, the Wolverines scored 12 unans- Applications for: at the
wered points to pull out the win.
" *UNION
"I felt the key thing was our defense in the last two or three Uen rrice rs
minutes," said Orr. "We played good defense then and were )o r

s

eee.e.ee....o eais.eoe ecaeooeeee
" a
* UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS
* *
00
I CALCULATORS, STEREOS*
" " Enclose payment in full with order, or remit20% withorder,balance C..."
PLEASE CHECK BOX FOR ITEM ORDERED
' ADD 3.00FOR HANDLING AND SHIPPING "
s Fast Delivery Guaranteed .
" with certifiedd chok oly
"* Pa. residents odd 6% sales lax
"*O personal ,checks weiff delay orders
* 0-ms-o
* ~././.4,J eledixx'uc0
" CKil ~J HEWLETT 3fACZKARD
- **'CGK...xcs *
* COUtf sarau
MODEL WAS SALE C
e A SL HP-21 $100 $ 69.95 "
SWAS SALE HP-22 16 $10995
. SR-32. $300 $16.95 HP-25 $145 126.95 "0
" PC-100 ... .$295 $149.95 HP-25C $200 $175.95 *
* SR-56......$180 $ 84.95 , $ 200 95 *
. SR-51 1-. .. S 80 $ $2.9s P2 $0 139 R4.. 5 39 P 7 $5 394 1
HP-97 $450 $649.95 "
ha 1111..: 50SOM ..$130" $ 92.95 "P 70 699
T1-5040....$150 $109.95"'
e Above prices include A/C Ada or/Charger, Carrying Case, "
e and full oe yearfatr warranty.
* "
.
- STEREO -a
s .
SE ND
XRECEIVERS SEND
FOR
. EER ""FREE
CATALOGUE :
" REG SALE PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED"
* SX-1250............SE9005H84 ONLY WITH ED
: SX-1050............ $700 $469 CREDIT CARDS - a
SX-950 .......$60 42
* SX- ''".............$500 $347 814-237-5990 '
* SX-750.............$400 $279 e
" SX-650 .............5300 S213 "
C SX450.........$20 $78 Add 3% for Credit Card Orders) C"
"........0............... $200 $149 s___
RECEIVERS Ad4%IrHanding aSnipping
STEREO WAREHOUSE
! 307 W. BEAVER AVE., STATE COLLEGE, PA. 14801
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,f0

7
e

1
3
3

much more aggressive.
"You can't tell me Ohio State plays like that every time-
if they did, they wouldn't be 7-8."I--S-Sp d r h f 8 ui
Michigan played up to its ability for the last two. The A v a ila b le
So, Ohio State played over its head for 38 minutes, while
coaches and players say they never thought of losing, not PRESIDENT
even in that last stretch. COORDINATING VICE-PRESIDENT
"It never entered my mind that we would lose," said Orr. FINANCIAL VICE-PRESIDENT
"You really don't think about things like that; you're only con-
cerned with thinking of something to try so you can get ahead." PUBLIC R E LATONS VICE-PRESIDENT
Little bit extra APPLICATIONS & JOB DESCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE AT UAC
OFFICES, SECOND FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION
"You ow you can pour it 'on to pull it out," explained co DEADLINE FOR'APPLICATIONS
captain John Robinson, "when the game really becomes a
game. Coach Orr knows it's hard to get fired up for this type Friday, Feb. 11, 1977-5:30 p.m.
of game. I knew we could do it, though. The only thing you worry
about is foul trouble." FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 763-1107
Phil Hubbard, an Ohioan who defected north ("that's a
sore point around here." said one Buckeye), said it was Im-
portant to do well at Ohio. "I was-really anxious to get back

t
t

in the game at the end," said Hubbard.
(Rickey Green offered that the only reason Hubbard dunk-
ed one was that he was from Ohio.)
A loss at Columbus would have been disastrous. Michigan
simply cannot afford to lose to the mediocrites in the Big Ten,
road trips regardless. Take a look at the schedule - road trips
at Indiana, Purdue and Minnesota still lie ahead. This stint of
seven games in 14 days has been tough, but not as tough as it
might have been.
The team leaves tomorrow for Wisconsin. Steve Grote re-
sprained his thumb, and Rickey, Green's back still bothers him.
"I think I'm about 75 per cent capacity," said Green. "I just
can't shake and bake it like I want to."

ENGI IERS
If you hove the ability and desire to master
nuclear engineering, then look into the Navy's
Nuclear Power Program. There are openings
for interested individuals who have a strong
academic average and an interest in nuclear
energy. Pay and benefits are among the best
offered to engineering grads. If interested
call or drop by.

aaaai a fa O aaaaaaaf **aa****
GLOBAL AWARENESS
SERIES.'
WEEKLY: Wed. 4 p.m. Thurs. NOON
LECTURE LUNCH/DISCUSSION
Angell Hall Aud. "A" Lord of Light Luth. (Hill & Forest)
Jan. 26-4 p.m. Fr. James Sinnott-U.S. FOREIGN POLICY AND
Jan. 27--noon THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA. Mary Knoll Missionary
expelled from S. Korea in 1975, now. active in giv-
ing testimony to U.S. Congress and citizens.
Feb. 2-4 p.m. Prof. Henry Bucher-CHURCH AND APARTHEID:
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE. Prof. has a PhD in
Feb. 3--noon African Studies from U. of Wisc. and is currently
working in their African Studies Program. He has
lived in Africa.
Feb. 9-4 p.m. The Rev. Frisco Gilchrist-THE U.S. IN LATIN
Feb. 10-noon AMERICA. He served in Paraguay since 1952 at
Colegia International, the Disciples of Christ edu-
cation program and most recently with Friendship
Mission working with peasant/Indian communities.
The current intervention of the government re-
sulted in his arrest and expulsion.
Feb. 16-4 p.m. Leon Howell-U.S. FOREIGN POLICY. Leon is
Feb. 17-noon Ass't. Editor of "Christianity rnd Crisis" and has
written for "Far East Economic Review." Author:

There IS a difference!!!
*MCAT -LSAT -*DAT
"GMAT *CPAT "VAT sGRE "OCAT "SAT
*NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS
.ECFMG .FLEX

i

Flexible Programs and Hours
nvar qR vanrc of avnarianra and ctirracc Cmall rlaccac Vntsiminntic

a

II

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan