Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 9, 197 WOLVERINES HANG ON, 66-63: Badgers c (Continued from Page 1) mayed hometown fans accom- fouled him, and Thompson was panied the third-ranked Wolver- forced to hang onto the rim.Ines into the l r ome close full court Something's funnyA ...,at Crisler By TOM CAMERON% preventing an injury. "I've had knee trouble since I was a freshman,," said the jun- ior jumper. "From now on, if anybody undercuts me, I'll hang onto the rim again." Even more bizarre was that the officials didn't give Thomp- son credit for the basket. Ac- cording to Johnny Orr after- wards, neither of the three ref- erees saw the ball go in. "HOW CAN THREE guys not see the kid dunk the ball?" voiced Orr, who ripped the of- ficials after the game. "Four- teen thousand people saw the dunk go in . . . only three stons didn't. "That set the tempo for the whole game," he added. Thompson made one of the two free throws, and Wisconsin' s Joe Chrnelich made both of his, converting a possible 7--0 Mich- igan lead to a 5-2 ballgame. MICHIGAN WAS called for technicals on dunks twice more in the game, once more on Thompson and once on Robin- son, both also for grabbing thel rim. Tough defense and lackluster shooting prevailed the remain- der of the first half, and Michi- gan left the floor holding a flimsy 27-22 lead. A round of boos from the dis- The Badge "I DON'T think we deserved that," said an obviously disil- lusioned Baxter. "When we don't play well we need the sup- port of the fans. But when they boo us - that's crazy. We're their players." "We can't be as up for every game, every night," said Steve Grote, who played despite a broken nose, which was giving him trouble. Those who expected Michigan to blow out the pesky Badgers after halftime, didn't get their wish. Instead, Gregory took fire for the Badgers, and propelled them to a 39-33 lead with 13:06 left in the game. WISCONSIN EMPLOYED a sagging man-to-man defense throughout, cutting Michigan off inside and forcing the fifteen footers which just wouldn't fall. "We've been sagged on be- fore, but we'd been able to hit the outside shots," said Staton. "But this time we just weren't executing." Staton finished with seven re- bounds, six assists and two steals for the afternoon. Center Phil Hubbard totaled fifteen re- bounds to pace the Wolverines. WISCONSIN, however.1 grabbed ten more rebounds than' Michigan, limiting the Blue to "slally jist one shot every time it had the ball. ?r Blunder The Badgers had a chance to sive rebound in heavy traffic, increase its lead to eight, but ! brought the ball to midcourt, Green came up with a key steal and found Green free under the and moments later Robinson basket. Green tossed in a te- was free for his technical- verse layup to pad Michigan's marred dunk shot. lead. Chrnelich missed the free Key free throws in the final throw - only one was awarded two minutes sealed the victory this time, as opposed to the iwo for Michigan. shots awarded on Thompson's This was Michigan's first un- technicals, an inconsistency no expected challenge in the one has been able to explain, in- rugged Big Ten. "All games cluding Orr. will be tough from now on," said Orr. "I was happy with our AFTER TWO key buckets by play down the stretch. Five Hubbard, Staton hit one of two years ago we never would have free throws to tie the game at come back." 40 apiece. The Badgers' play shows that The lead see-sawed until Hub- they are a team to be reckoned bard put Michigan ahead for with in the Big Ten. Coach Bill good, 52-51, with a free throw at Cofield started four freshmen 4:09. yesterday, and their play ap- Staton and Green came up peared like anything but that of with a key play with just under inexperience. three minutes remaining to The Wolverines, now 2-0 in the avert any comeback hopes on Big Ten and 9-1 overall, have a the part of Wisconsin. week to rest until they travel to East Lansing to batle the Spar- STATON GRABBED a defen- tans next Saturday afternoon. I) I t ii 1 MICHIGAN Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER MICHIGAN'S TOM STATON (23) is stopped on drive by Wis- consin's Jim Smith (13) holding Staton's arm. Staton missed the layup, but hit on one of the resulting free throws to tie the game up at 40 midway through the second half. Robinson Thompson Hubbard Green Grote Baxter Staton Hardy Team Totals FG/A 5-12 1-5 7-12 8-18 1-7 1-5 1-7 0-1 FT/A 1-1 3-4 2-7 6-9 2-4 1-2 3-5 0-0 R 6 0 15 2 2 1 7 2 4 A 0 0 0 3 2 0 6 0 T ChrnelIch Gregory Sydnor 16 Falk 22 Gaines 4Pearson 3 J. Smith 5 Brey 0 B. Smith Team 66 Totals WISCONSIN FG/A FT/A 1-5 4-6 9-13 6-8 0-3 0-0 4-14 3-3 3-9 2-2 1-4 4-5 3-8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-2 21-56 21-26 R 10 15 x 4 1 7 I 0 0 4 54 A 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 TP' 6 24 0 ]11 8 6 6 0 2 Orr calls officials 'incompetent' By TOM CAMERON "It's the most incompetent thing that we've ever seen," growled the usually soft-spoken Johnny Orr about the of- ficia'ing at yesterday's game. "'The ball goes through the basket and no one sees it? People like that shouldn't be allowed in the league. How can three guys not see the kid dunk the ball," said ram- paging head coach. "'They should not be officials." Orr was ticked off with the way the officials early in the game mishandled two plays involving Joel Thompson grabbing the rim while dunking and being fouled at the same time. On the first dunk, the officials did not count the bas- ket, evidently saying that Thompson never scored, "Four- teen thousand people saw the dunk go in . . . only three stoops didn't," Orr said. The officials then gave Thompson two free throws, and Wisconsin two free throws on the technical before jumping the ball at mid-court (due to the false double foul.) In the second situation, almost a carbon of the first, the officials counted the basket, gave Thompson two free throws and Wisconsin two free throws. Later in the game, Johnny Robinson was also called for grabbing the rim. The basket counted and one free throw was awarded Wisconsin. Orr, asked after the game if he received any explana- tion, said, "No, I don't know why. If they didn't see the guy dunk the ball, how do you expect them to explain anything?" The NCAA rulebook stipulates only one free throw to be awarded on such technical fouls. C RISLER ARENA was a strange place yesterday afternoon. " Hallucinations ran wild. Maybe it was the lights or maybe it was in the Bonino- zone. But those things I saw on the court could not have really happened, could they? A mediocre Wisconsin team giving highly-touted Michigan a serious scare? Three Big Ten officials out-and-out blowing rule inter- pretations? Michigan shooting only 35.8% at home? Wisconsin, who did not hit a field goal for the first 11:32 of the game, still in the game at the half? I thought I was on drugs. What do they put in those cokes anyway? Yet it all really happened. How? Why? You might expect that Michigan lacked enthusiasm going into the game. Afterall, Wisconsin had just been beaten badly (84-61) by a so-so Michigan State team and had only a 4-5 record. Indeed, Orr said he had some problems motivating the team. "The staff knew it was going to be difficult getting the team up for this game. They (the players) saw in the papers Michigan State beat them by 23. "We were not on time for the pre-game meal and we were late getting here (Crisler) and getting dressed. All that stuff accumulates for a poor performance." Tom Staton is probably Michigan's best cheerleader. He gets excited everytime Michigan completes a pass. But even he felt something may have been missing from the game. "We were motivated at first, but then they called the technicals on Joel and it slowed everything down," the hustling sophomore said. And that is what got Orr so-o-o-o hot under the collar about after the game. He specifically mentioned twice that the "three stoops" changed the tempo of the whole game. The officials are always looked at as the poor fall guys for the coaches, the guys who are always wrong. They are brave men who sacrifice themselves to try to put some order into the game and never get any thanks, only thousands of people hating them. Officials unexcused But these guys have no excuse. They totally blew a simple rule straight from the book and that's what they get paid $130 a game for. They missed a dunk shot, disallowing it be- cause no one saw it go in. Their inconsistency in their call- ing was blatant to every one in Crisler. These guys get paid for knowing the rulebook and hav- ing vision. It looked like this team had a lack of both. This is not to get down on all Big Ten officials. Many of them are quite fine and work much harder than what they get paid for. These three, however, were exceptions. But the game was filled with exceptions. Like the excep- tionally poor shooting of the Wolverines. How did they ex- plain it? 24-67 18-32 44 11 2 63 FIGHTS MAR 8-7 VI CTORY Colorado Dekers edge By JOHN NIEMEYER "The Col rado players were Th attacking Maurer and DeBQl. offr The Michigan Hockey Team It's strange that two of the the staved off a late comeback at- least penalized players on our play tempt by Colorado College last team were out there fighting swer night in Yost Ice Arena to take unless it was premeditated," man a bloody 8-7 decision over the Farrell said. Tigers in a game marred by 32 He went on to call the refer- But penalties. eeing "Brutal" and the play of the f Up 5-1 after the second peri- the Colorado team, "Bush." brewi od, the Wolverines looked to be The contest began innocently both assured of an easy victory, but enough as Colorado College chan the Tigers came back with 6 goalie Scott Owens did his im- gol nth ia saz. personation of a seive with pae The comeback was spurred Michigan tallying four goals, Frear by four power play goals two by Mike Coffman. Ear scored while key Michigan players sat in the box. The Bloody bat first two of which came while Ben Kawa sat out with a five- First Period I Pracht minute major for high stick- Scoring - MICH. - Rob Palmer Maure (Thayer, Coffman) :34. MICH. - Pracht ing. Coffman (Thayer, DeBol) 5:47. DeBol A third came as Kris Manery MICH. - DeBol (Pachoizuk, Mc- Feams watehed for Interference and Cahill) 15:54. MICH. - Coffman - DeB finally one as both Manery and (1,e3,1, Thayer) 16:44. Penalties - (rough: DanyHoene sebvthmajorys.ndMICH. - Hoene (tripping) 2:57. Dan Hoene served majors. MICH. - Manery (roughing) 6:04. Hoene was hit with a game Col. - Hanson (roughing) 6:04. Scori disqualification for spearing and MICH. - Thayer (interference) 7:08. rich, N is utmaicll inliibe orMICH. - Natale (tripping) 7:47. (Mauer is automatilyimeligi forMICH. - McCahill (interference) rich ( Friday night's contest against 9:14. Col. - Owens (tripping) 10:04. Reilly Michigan Tech. Manery's elli- MICH. - McCahill (interference) Col. - gibility pends a decision by the 19:28. Col. - Feamster (elbow) MICH. g 117:03. C.- Michigan coaching staff. 1s:03.rco:. Second Period 11:46. Michigan Coach Dan Farrell scoring - Col. - Hanson (De- Wheel was particularly displeased lich, Straub) 4:45. MICH. - Coff- son, D with the entire contest, feel- man DeBol, Pachoizuk) 12:29. Pen- - Mag alties - MICH. - Natale (inter- Kawai fig that attacks on Michigan ference) 1:09. MICH. - Manery Coffma players were flagrant with (high sticking) 1:58. MICH. - Mc- gee (hi the intent to put some key Cahill (tripping) 4:20. Col. - Feam- gee (m players in the penalty box, ster (holding) 6:05. MICH. - Kawa (misco which eventually triggered the (slashing) 14:41. Col. - Hanson ery (in (cross checking) 14:41. MICH. - Hoene comeback. Maurer (elbowing) 15:15. Col. Maner e second period started much the same way as Tigers scored a power goal. The Wolverines an ed with a goal by Coff- giving him a hat trick. by the end of the period, fireworks that had been ng all evening erupted as Maurer and DeBol ex- ed punches with Colorado rs Rick Pracht and Dave nster respectively. ly in the game, the Wol- tie (roughing) 15:15. MICH. - r (roughing) 15:15. Col. - (roughing) 15:15. MICH. - (roughing) 19:49. Col. - ter (roughing) 19:49. MICH. Bo1 (roughing) 19:49. Feamster ping) 19:49. Third Period ing - Col. - Hanson (Haed- Magee) :26. MICH. - Maurer ry, Thayer) 2:19. Col. - De- Pracht, Knoke) 2:59. Col - (Kronschnabel, Pracht) 6:49. - Pracht (Delich, Knoke) 9:53. - Turner (Miller, Lerg) 10:00. - Pracht (Delich, Christoffers) MICH. - Manery (Maurer, er) 16:22. Col. - Reilly (Han- elich) 19:53. Penalties - Col. gee (elbowing) 1:04. MICH. - (highsticking) 2:28. MICH. - an (holding) 8:07. Col. - Ma- iighsticking) 17:08. Col. - Ma- isconduct) 17:08. Col- Pracht nduct) 17:08. MICH. - Man- nterference) 16:57. MICH. - (spearing) 17:25. MICH. - y (misconduct) 17:25. verines had been able to stiffle the Tiger power play, but the constant assault, especially when having to play two men down for several minutes, fi- nally proved too much for Michigan. ' , I Grapplers pin Salukis, 41-3; Nine match victories key rout Staton: "I don't know.. Baxter: "I can't explain it.." Green: "I don't know. I've never at the same time." Grote: "Who knows?" Robinson: "Who can?" Only Johnny Orr speculated. "We leasing the ball a little too fast." One of those nights seen everybody off might have been re- By PATRICK RODE The Michigan wrestling team started the new year off on a good note yesterday with a 41-3 drubbing of Southern Illinois University, holding the Salukis to only one match victory. The Wolverine attack, which featured some changes and sub- stitutions, was anchored by pins from Amos Goodlow at 126 pounds, Mark Churella at 150, Harold King at 190 and Heavy- weight Mitch Marsicano. "I'M PLEASED with the team's performance," said Michigan coach Bill Johannesen. "We played above our competi- tion. If we can do that all the' time, we'll be tough to beat." Yesterday's match also fea- tured a superior decision by team captain Mark Johnson who won the 177 lb. match, 18-1. Michigan's sole loss came at 118 pounds where Todd Schneider, wrestling for the first time since he was injured in the Southern Open in November, was defeated in the final period by John Gross,. 7-3. Freshman Lou Joseph, who was wrestling for the varsity for the first time, notched his first victory by defeating Paul Hibbs 8-3 in the 142 pound class. Senior George Kelley was also victor- ious substituting at 158. BRAD HOLMAN, wrestling at 167 lbs., poured it on in the late going of his match to down op-' ponent Russ Zintak 6-1, scoring1 an escape, a takedown, and a two point near fall. In the 134-pound weight class, Rich Lubell scored the narrow- est victory of the day. John Starr took Lubell down tnce during the match but Lubell re- turned with two escapes to leave the match even at the end. Lu- bell took the victory on riding time. "Southern Illinois has got a long way to go," remarked Jo- hannesen. "They've been good in the past but this year theyre BILLBOARD The Michigan women's track and field club is holding an or- ganizational meeting at the Track and Tennis Bldg. Monday at 4:45 p.m. All those interested are invited. The lacrosse club has a mass meeting Tuesday, Jan. 11 at 8 p.m. in the Wines Field lockerI room at the corner of Division and Hill. l rebuilding and going to take their lumps." Michigan's dual meet record now stands at 3-0 while SIU falls to 1-9. Michigan opens its Big Ten season this week with a home confrontation with North- western. 118-John Gross (SIU) dec. Todd Schneider, 7-3 126-Amos Goodlow (M) won by fall Sill Ramsden, 4:38 134-Rich Lubell (M) dec. Jon Starr, 3-2 142-Lou Joseph (M) dec. Paul Higgs, 8-3 150-Mark Churella (M) wbf. Clyde Ruffin, 2:46 158-George Kelley (M) dec. Dennis Shumaker, 11-4 167-Brad Holman (M) dec. Russ Zintak, 6-1 177-Mark Johnson (M) sup. dec. Tom vizzi, 18-1 190-Harold King (M) wbf. Mike Spinnelli, 5:36 Hwt.-Mitch Marsicano (M) wbf. Ken Karowski, 2:32 It was just one of those nights. It probably will never hap- pen again this whole year - the next five for that matter. Every Michigan player was off. It was like the rim repelled the ball. Green's 8-18 shooting, Thompson and Baxter's 1-5, and Grote and Staton's 1-7 highlighted Michigan's devastating 35.8 from the floor. It was almost terrifying coming from a team averaging over 50 per cent. "It will happen," assistant coach Bill Frieder said of the shooting. "But it's a good team that comes back to win a game like that." No disagreement here. Michigan should be complimented that the defense held together and they did pull out the vic- tory. A win, afterall, is a win. And should the Wolverines ever make it to the NCAA play- affs how many will really remember the scare that the young Wisconsin team gave the Wolverines in the second game of the Big Ten season? * * * * * * ONE PLAYER'S LOGE ILLOGICAL CALLS: They when Joel dunked because son only used one. CAL EXPLANATION OF gave Wisconsin two free he used two hands where REFS' throws Robin- ..wu.ca a,...sv a..ab a........., vva. -- a.+a+" a d MOTT SNAPS WINNING STREAK J.V. cagers dumped, 73 -68 BOILERMAKERS BELT BUCKS By HENRY ENGELHARDT Michigan's varsity reserve lost their first game after 10 con- secutive victories yesterday aft- ernoon, dropping a hard fought 73-68 decision to the Mott Com- munity College varsity squad. Like the recent Ann Arbor winds, Michigan's shooting was ice cold. The Wolverines hit only 28 per cent of their field goal attempts, missing 66 shots in 91 tries. They had the opportunity to win the game, but couldn't get the ball through the hoop in the late going. Michigan trailed 69-66 with two minutes and 20 seconds left but managed only one field goal the rest of the way, despite stealing several Mott passes and dominating the frenzied play. An uphill battle all day, Mich- igan took the lead for the first and only time with just under utes of the game. The same squad, now 2-1 on the year, which scored 105 points against Central Michigan and 85 versus Olivet managed but 26 in the first half yesterday and trailed at that point by eight. Coach Fife blamed the de- feat on the Christmas lay- off. "We were off over two and a half weeks, just start- ing practice again this week," he said, "while Mott played over Christmas. "I worked them real hard in practice and they may have been a little bit tired, but they played super in the second half." One of Bo's boys, freshman John Wangler played in his first game as one of Fife's fellows. He paced the squad with 16 points and directed the offense in place of Dave Stavale, who transferred to Western Michi- gan. Sophomore Don Kooy led all rebounders, pilfering 15, he also added 14 points. Tennessee na- tive Cornell Williams tossed in 13 points and pulled down 10 boards. Next Saturday is a big game against Michigan State in East Lansing. But as Fife said, "When you only play 12 games, they are all big ones." f :?i4:,M. F " ":: ,.r...... ;rr r r ." :F.":r.;: R;:ei;}:;X;}:":?: is {;}'4S":: }r: ti:;."r."."i"}:r .:r:'f.{"}i:.}".}; ":: }; }:,?,:, t '% r r r:.i;x,.v}:":: $:::v'::::.?:" r':/. r. ": }: iT:::.,:: _:'"r;.. .: "::::: r ::;.:":iv."..; <".:":. :;:..:... ; ii' ... Big Ten Standings W L Pet. W L Pct. 9 1 .900 Hoosiers sti By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Freshman swingman Mike Woodson, demonstrating equal versatility inside and out, scored 24 points yesterday as In- diana routed Illinois, 80-60. Indiana raced to a 28-10 lead midway through the first period. After that, the Hoosiers led comfortably in evening their conference mark at 1-1. The Hoosiers, unable to cope with zone de- fenses against other opponents, forced Illinois from its zone late in the first half with Wood- son leading the offensive surge. He had 16 points in the opening period. Indiana led 48-30 at the half and led by as , many as 30 points in the second period. * * * Bucks boiled COLUMBUS, Ohio - Purdue missed 17 of its first 18 shots yesterday and then rallied behind Wafer Jordan's 29 points to beat Ohio State, 82-65. omp Illini State stalled EAST LANSING - Sophomore center Bob Klass hit two free throws with nine seconds re- maining to give Northwestern a 70-68 victory over Big Ten opponent Michigan State last night. Billy McKinney led the balanced North- western attack with 18 points. Klass finished with 15, and junior forwards Tony Allen and Bob Svete added 12 each. Bob Chapman scored a game high 24 points for Michigan State, and sophomore forward Greg Kelser had 19. * * * Gophers gallop MINNEAPOLIS - Four Gophers scored in double figures as Minnesota won its Big Ten opener 78-68 over Iowa last night before 17,509 fans at Williams Arena. The victory was the 10th straight for the nationally-ranked Gophers. Ray Williams scored 13 of his 20 points in the first half as the Gophers built a 12-point lead after trailing 18-16, but Iowa came back to MICHIGAN .................. 2 Purdue 2 Minnesota .................... 1 Illinois................... 1 Indiana. .. . ...... 1 Michigan State ............... 1 Northwestern .......... 1 Iowa 0 Ohio State .................... 0 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 1 .500 1 .500. 1 .500 1 .500 1 .000 2 .000 9 1 10 0 .727 1.000 'r."'rS::"}ii: :-::":":"}:"::":":'::":^:::i%: ."'{C r rt:4 Yffi:"::{.:{:":"::"::-0; tii:"i: :::::-:: :"?:.iy::5'=,tiY:" {:° D Sr;3ii:"$7}'.:a:f?$ FN6S}",{':?:":": i.: ;..: S::": atih:"':.C4:":":::vr.?:d" :"}i: ":vi":":::::":":":v:>:"i:":"}}:"i }: :......:4v...... os~r."i i :IC:"''".;y. v '; i SCORES .......: .. 9 5 .643 6 5 .5451 4 7 .3641 3 8 .273 8 2 .800 5 6 .455 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Marquette 65, South Carolina 54 Kansa~s 77, Missouri 72 Boston 109, Buffalo 106 New York Knicks 102, Phoenix 95 t