Fridoy, Morch 18, 1977 TFlE MICHIGAN DAt Y Page Eleven. Friday, March 18, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven ~fullI court BTOM CAMERON HE DICK VITALE traveling side-show is through for the year. His engagement ran out as soon as Michigan came to town.. No more wil we hear from the mighty motorized mouth or hear the Detroit dialecter give the hard-sell of the Uni- versity of Detroit basketball program. It's time for him to take a long spring nap and give his jaw a rest. But the Dick Vitale show was quite a performance while it was playing. Sometimes it's hard to listen to Vitale as often as he would like us to hear him. Vitale can get quite obnoxious. But the man is a magnificent manipulator of the press. He knows how to get U of D to the people. So that's exactly what he does. Any mention of U of D in the press is good, according to Vitale. His style of coaching starts well before the game with his pre-game buildup, then it moves to the pregame site. He is then flamboyant during the game and is always ready to talk after it. Before last night's game Vitale led the press corps to build the game up as the "best thing ever in Michigan basketball." He set the stage 'so if the Titans did win it would have been a greater feat than what David did to Golath. . He had everything to gain and nothing to lose. He tried to psyche Michigan out at every angle. He even wore Michigan's maize and blue colors. But it didn't work - it fell short. "(I wore blue and yellow) to try to psyche them (Michi- gan) out." Vitale said. "I try to do every little thing I can ... not that it worked." "I didn't even notice (Vitale's dress)," said Michigan's Johnny Orr. "You know, he does those things for you guys in the press. I never even notice." The clothes were just Vitale's style - different. His style is almost a complete opposite to Orr.- Orr is low-keyed. He doesn't hoot or hollar. He speaks slow and clearly. He doesn't jump up and down or scream .. much. Yet, it's Johnny Orr that's standing on top of the bas- ketball world, not Vitale. Orr, who last year was the coach of the year, shows his style through the way his team plays. Towards the end of the game, when things were tight, Michigan pulled it out like they usually do. "There are basketball teams that know how to win," Vitale praised. "They are a team that will do everything in their power to win. They know how to take advantage of every "Some say they're lucky," Vitale continued, "but I look at it this way: Luck is preparation with opportunity and when they get opportunity, they take advantage of it. "That's why they represent the state of Michigan, the Big Ten and, I believe, they will go all the way to the NCAA cham- pionship. I feel that basketball team is destined to win a cham- pionlshi1p," Vtale s$aid. It's the poise Michigan had in the stretch - as they have done all year - that pulled out the game for them. "I was proud of my team when they (Detroit) tied the game up, and then we pulled away," Orr said. "That's been the trademark of our team this year." U of D could not show the same poise. "At the end, we took two bad shots at pressure times," Vitale said, "and that's what happens." Michigan did not take the bad shots - that shows a poised, well coached team - a winner. That's not to say Vitale hasn't done his job well. In four years -at Detroit he has brought the Titans into the national spotlight. He has made the city of Detroit wake up again, even if it was for a short time. He is himself. He motivates the players his way. With '3:29 left in the game, he called time out to bring the Titan team together for the last time. He told them, "I am super proud of you guys ... no mat- ter what happens. You have three minutes to play and I am super proud of, you - give me the best three minutes of your life." I sat twenty feet away listening to him. If he had given me some sneakers I might have played my guts out. But when it came down to coaching the basketball game, it was Orr who took all the marbles. "We expected everything they did," Orr noted after the game. "They didn't do any- thing we didn't anticipate."r Vitale made his first tragic mistake in the first few minutes of the game. As soon as his team took a six to two lead, 'he told his team to slow the ball down. In ef- fect, he merely took away all of his team's momentum. Right after Vitale slowed the ball down, Michigan out- scored the Titans 16-2 to take an 18-8 lead. Orr would never do such a thing to his running Wolverines. Only if Michigan is getting blown out, will Orr call time out to slow the game down. Orr knows his team and like his team, he knows what must be doneu to win. And he does it. Hub ard rebounds pave way to victory over tough Titans (Continued from Page 1) Vitale added. "That's what won it." Detroit, a zoning team all sea- son, stuck with the tried and true against the Wolverines. Orr, who posted his 200th ca- reer victory, pointedouththat, "with a zone, it's much harder to keep you off the offensive boards." DESPITE Hubbard, Michigan did not put the game away un- til the final minute of the game. Dennis Boyd, with 1:31 re- maining in the game, pulled De- troit within three at 84-81. Then the Wolverines brought the ball down court andwent ino a stall. With 32 seconds remain- ing, Steve Grote penetrated to the free throw pine and hit Jahn Robinson with a pass. Robinsc- laid the ball in for the last tvo of his season high 25 points, end- ing Detroit's title hopes. "I felt in my heart that we could beat this basketball team," said Vitale, "and right now I'm very depressed." VITALE HAD reason to think the Titans could win at the out- set - when they grabbed the momentum early and jumped to a 6-2 lead. Michigan's press resulted in four consecutive Titan turnovers on Titan passes and the Blue7 ripped off six straight points. " The Wolverines contin2el to3 outscore Detroit in a 10-2 spurt which left the score 18-8-eight- een minutes before intermission. "YOU MAY think Michigan was lucky," Vitale said, "but' I say that luck is when prepara- tion meets opportunity." Behind Robinson for2Michigan were Hubbard with 22 points, Grote with 16, and All-American Rickey Green with 11 points and sev.n assists. Long led Detroit with 25, while Tyler tallied 17 and 3oyd had 16. HOWEVER, Long scored only six of his points in the second half. Why? "I wish I could answer that",'' said Vitale. The reasons were twofold: fa- tigue and Staton's defense. "I WAS trying to pressure him up in the first half," Staton ex- plained. "In the second half, I' tried to force him whe;e he didn't want to go and he st rte: missing."j Staton paid the price for gt h; Plenty of tickes are available defense, picking up four fouls. in Lexington for Saturday's Hubbard picked up his third game. The game is offiieally a with sixteen minutes left. Other se~lout but Kentuckians are opt- than that, foul trouble was non- ing to watch the East regional existent for the Blue. finalist Wildcats on televistoa. So Michigan's season will go Oregon's orange and black on for at .least one more game, football team meets the Syra- possibly more. cuse orange Oct. 2 at Syra- "I MOST definitely think that cuse, N. Y. team will go all the way," said Boyd. A thoroughly convinced Vitale felt the same way. PROVIDENCE, R.I. - The I Michigan women's swim team, led by the new na- tional diving champion ChrisJ$ Seufert, moved into _the -top, ten squads at the National Championships held at.Brown University. Seufert, a junior transfer student from Pennsylvania, amassed 404 points to nip Barb Wertien of Ohio State. She becomes the first Michi- gan national champion in five years. After the first night of the three-day' meet, Michigan holds ninth place behind lead-. er Arizona State. Daily Sports REST EASY! SELL IT THRU THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS CALL NOW 764-0557 Titan-ic sinks MICHIGAN Robinson Staton Hubbard Green Grote Baxter Hardy Thompson Team TOTALS PG/A 12-x8 4-8 8-19 4-I3 7-14 0-2 x-3 1-x FT/A R 1-z 7 0-1 3 6-7 26 3-5 5' 2-3 3 o-o 0-0 2 0-0 1 Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER MICHIGAN'S JOHN ROBINSON goes up for two of his game high 25 points against Detroit's Ron Bostick. The Wolverines edged the Titans 86-81, to advance to the Mid- East Regional Final., A! Pts. o 25 4 8 2 22 7 21 5 16 o 0 0 2 1 2 19 $6 38-86 37 --i Long Bostck Tyler Bo yd Duerod McCormick Anderson Ross Whitlow; Team ITOTALS FG/A 3-9 8-12 8-16 5-12 1-2 1-3 0-0 1-3 FT/A 1-i a-o 1-1 0-0 o-o' o-0 o- 0-0 ,DETROIT R 7 10 9 1 0 2 a A 0 0 1 7 7 1 0 '0 ~ Pts. 25 6: 17 16, 11 2 0 2z -~ - a" mlw 37-78 12-18 4 51 Score by Periods MICHIGAN.........48 Detroit............44 39-81 3-4 33 16 81 Attendance: 22,286 By DON-"MacLACHLAN LEXINGTON, Ky. - Make' way for the Mean Green of] North Carolina-Charlotte.' The 49ers utilized a balanced' scoring attack and a hawking zone defense to thrash sixth- ranked Syracuse 81-59 in the' first game of the Mid-East Re- gional last night. "The game wasn't that easy, believe me," said NCC coach Lee Rose. "Our players played a fine game in every respect.", After battling to a 10-10 tie for the first six minutes, the Mean Green outscored Syra- cuse 22-4 in a nine minute span to take a commanding 32-14 lead that it never relin- ; quished. NCC shot 58.3 per cent from the field in the first half and left' the floor with a 38-22 halftime lead. I , It was no different after the' intermission as the Mean Green built up a 28 point lead and: coasted into the Mid-East finals. IISCO RES I NCAA BASKETBALL MICHIGAN 86, Detroit 81 Wake Forest 86, Southern Illinois 81 N. Carolina-Charlotte 81, Syracuse 59 Marquette 67, Kansas State 66 Kent ucky 94, VMI 78 North Carolina 79, Notre Dame 77 Nevada-Las Vegas 88, Utah 83, Idaho State 76, UCLA 75 thrash Syrai "They're about as fine a team as we"ve played all year," said losing coach Jim Boeheim. "Aft- er we'got down by 16, we just couldn't ':'t ;h up." All-American center Cedric Maxwell was a standout on the hardwoods with a game high 19 points. The 6'8" senior dominated Syracuse's 6-10 Bouie while adding three blocked shots, three assists and five rebounds. "Maxwell, pound for pound, is the finest player in the coun- try," Rose said. "Our team has played hard and deserves the recognition it is getting. Possib- ly Syracuse was looking forward to Michigan." The 49er starters hit on 67 per cent of their field goal attempts and all five hit for double fig- ures. Guard Chad Kinch and Mel- Bowling Pinball and Billiards OPEN 11 A.M. TNat THE UNION vin Watkins netted 16 and 13 points respectively and com- bined for 12 assists. Forward Lew Massey and Kevin King ripped down 13 re- bounds against the taller Or- angemen. The tandem canned 14 and 13 points respectively. "The total game we playad was just picture perfect," said Rose. whose team upped its season 27-3. Forward Dale Shackleford and Marty Byrnes led Syracuse' scoring attack with 16 points each. The Orangemen bowed out with 26-4 season mark. NCC, last year's NIT runner- up will face Michigan in the re-. gional final Saturday. YALUABLI COUPON WORTH UP TO s.75, I Purchae one of Ots following dks I~ x SMr. Tony Sandwiches: GIANT HAM & CHEESE. 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