r Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY SundayMarch 20. 1977 a g E g~HM I G AI ..ve r I I fyl ourt SPRESS Nice guys don't ... ..B; always finish last By KATHY HENNEGHAN LEXINGTON IT HAPPENED - now it will just take some time to sink in. The season is over. The Michigan basketball team "fell short" of a national championship, granted. But think of what it achieved. The title isn't there for the taking, whether you're ranked number one or ignored. I would hate to think that this season would be remembered as a disappointing one. And regardless of what a certain Detroit man wrote yes- terday, Johnny Orr handled things far better than you might expect. Orr has not been the same as last season from this vantage point. He no longer coaches a cinderella team, andthe pressures that come when one is> expected to win sometimes showed - Orr has been testy with the press, often with justification. But it was sad to watch a man who seemed to enjoy himself so thoroughly a year ago show signs of that pressure. But the personal attacks on Orr were way off base. The team was loose in practice Friday, and Orr was joking with John Robinson moments before yesterday's tipoff. And after the loss, when it must have been hardest, Orr was most gracious. He made no excuses. implied no excuses. I don't know him well, but I've been around him for two seasons now. I would have been surprised if he had been anything but gracious yesterday. Listen to what UNCC coach Lee Rose said about the man. After winning the Midwest Regional championship, here is the first thing Rose said: "I've had the opportunity to meet some class people in my profession, but Johnny Orr is at the top." Class?' Johnny Orr? That's not what you thought is it? Orr said Friday, "It's always been important to me to gain accept- ance, and now I've received it every place except Michigan." Give the man some credit. And if you think the team choked, well, that's your prerogative. UNCC a somebody But think about the kind of team UNC-Charlotte is, the team that knocked Michigan out of the picture. Those guys are young. They game out of nowhere. Nothing was expected of them at the national level. ("Michigan is playing UNC-Charlotte? Who are they?") Now think back to last season, and the season before that. Isn't that the sort of club Michigan was? Amidst the post-game chaos, UNCC's Cedric Maxwell, the Regionals MVP and rightfully so, said, "It feels nice to be recognized. We are winning and getting fan support. I think every player we have has been overlooked." And Kevin King: "We believe we can win it all. If we didn't believe it, we wouldn't be this far." And Lew Massey: "Nobody beats you when you play hard. We get tired of hearing people say we shouldn't be here." "A lot of people didn't know about us, but we're making some echoes now," said Melvin Watkins. Now doesn't that sound familiar? You have to respect a team like that, despite Michigan's disappointment. And you have to respect Michigan, last year's underdog but this year's favorite. for the effort made. It's a bitter pill to swal- low, but there should be no shame in this loss. "It's very sad for me," said David Baxter, "because I never played on a team with so much talent as this one. It's been a team effort all the way and it breaks my heart. We'll be back though. I'm still proud to be a part of it." "Charlotte has a great team with character," said Rickey Green. "Whether or not they put it together to win it all is a different story." Definite disappointment All-American Green, along with co-captains Steve Grote and John Robinson, played his last game for Michigan yes- terday. Lexington closed out their successful collegiate ca- reers, although yesterday's finish was not what they had hoped for. But for the other players, there's another shot at it. Take Tom Staton. The stats sheet doesn't tell the story, Sta- ton was scoreless and fouled out with 9:17 remaining. But Staton played a fine game until Alan Hardy, his roommate and close friend, replaced him. Watching Staton sit on the bench during those final minutes brought to mind Wayman Britt, who 'found himself in the same! situation against Notre Dame last year. You had to feel sorry for the guy. Nobody wanted it more. Last year things worked out; this year things were different. "I had confidence in the man in there (Hardy)," said Staton. "You don't worry about it when you know he willc put out. But you sure want to be in there, of course. "The season was a good one." Staton added. "If we went toJ Atlanta, the season would have been a great one. Knowing we should have been there is the biggest disappointment." For Johnny Ort, Baxter, Statton, Phil Hubbard and the rest,c there will be other times and other places. They'll make suret of it.,, "We had a great year." said Orr's assistant B1l Frieder.I "These kids have done amazing things all year. But I'm disap-t pointed, and not a damned thing is going to change it." - Disappointment? -Sure, it's understandable. Excuses? No. Thec operation has class. Cornbread, L( put brakes on (Continued from Page 1) the final and deciding moments of the game. "Michigan's a great basketball team and we knew they'd come back in the second half, said 49er coach Lee Rose. "We knew they'd run at us and we knew their defense would come on. But one of the outstanding things about our team was our ability to maintain our poise until the end." Center Cedric Maxwell scored 11 of UNCC's twenty points in the final 12 minutes, most of them coming on drives over his Michigan counter- part Pghil Hubbard, who sprained his hand on.the opening tip. Maxwell's play earned him the most valuable player award for the tournament. IN ADDITION TO HIS SCORING, the 6-8 senior nick- named "Cornbread" helped defeat Michigan with his all- around play at both ends of the court ... and in the middle too. He outrebounded' Hubbard 13-7, blocked four shots and had three steals, and just as significant, Maxwell, not the 49er guards, brought the ball up the court much of the time on offense. This tactic, employed by UNCC all year forced Tom Staton to foul out trying to guard him, and Hubbard and Alan Hardy also picked up fouls attempting to stop his full-court drive. "I THINK MAX CAN DO more things better than any other player in the United States," said Rose. "When you're 6-8 and show the mobility and agility that Maxwell has, we'd be remiss if we didn't incorporate his skills into our attack." In fact, it was Maxwell's lay-in over Hubbard that put UNCC ahead .50-49, and Michigan never held the lead after that. "Me and Lew (Massey) discussed this play previously," said Maxwell. "I just laid the ball over Hubbard and be- cause he was in foul trouble he couldn't do very much to stop me." AFTER THIS, MICHIGAN, who gained the lead by virtue of its explosive running game at the outset of the second half, slowed the pace of the game and could never quite garner enough momentum to overcome the lead it once again had lost.. "I told the team that when we caught them we just had to suck it up for twelve minutes," said Orr. "Then there were a few crucial plays, like loose balls which we couldn't come up with. If we did it, it would have been a different ball- game." Hubbard, who scored eight points in the first eight minutes Marquette By The Associated Press i minutes left in the game. The fi OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. -' 6-foot-9 forward put in six a Reserve Bernard Toone keyed a straight points to put Marquette second-half comeback that led up by five, and the Warriors Marquette University to an 82- never traided again. 68 victory over Wake Forest Toone finished the game with, yesterday in the finals of the 15 points. Marquette was led by NCAA Midwest Regional basket- Bo Ellis, who had 20 points, and ball tournament. Butch Lee'with 19. The Warriors now advance to Wake Forest was led by for- the championship round in At- ward Jerry Schellenberg with 19 lanta against North Carolina- points. Rod Griffin had 16 and Charlotte. guard Skip Brown had 10. ^* * 49ers title drive of the second half, tallied but four the rest of the game. "WE TOOK Hubbard one-on-one on defense, and had a zone on the perimeter," explained Rose. "It kept the ball away from him, and we could dominate him." Hub picked up only seven rebounds, considerably less than the 26 he had Thursday night against Detroit. Also, Staton picked up three quick fouls in 1:14 sending him out of the game for good. "When we lost Staton, it really hurt us. It took away from some of our quickness," said Orr.. UNCC led only 52-51 at this point. "THAT ONE ref called four or five fouls consecutively," said Staton. "It seemed they were missing calls at our end and making calls at their end. If you steal the ball and get a foul called, what can you do?" Slowly but surely, the 49ers widened their lead to 73-61 with only 2:34 left in the game. Already in the bonus situation, eight free throws made in eight attempts, as well as Steve Grote's fifth personal foul helped push UNCC to this nearly insurmountable margin. Michigan's final chances faded away for good as Rickey Green missed the front end of a one and one when Michigan had a chance to come within four *points of UNCC with still fifty seconds left. IT WAS just a case of the 49ers playing as well for the last twelve minutes of the game as they had in the entire first half. Michigan had much trouble scoring against the UNCC zone, and started to force shots up from the outside or make poor passes inside. Hitting only one of the first eight shots, the Blue quickly fell behind 7-2. This pace continued much of the first half and Michigan found its hopes for a membership in the final four on the wane as the 49ers posted a 40-27 halftime lead. "WE WERE just missing our shots," said Hubbard, whose one for seven shooting exemplified Michigan's 33 per cent fre- q'iency for the half. "I had it inside a couple of times and missed and we were missing our outside shots. If we'd made the shots we'd been taking. it would have been a different story." Michigan burst out in the second half, however, outscoring UNCC 20-8 mostly on layups due to the same running game that had carried the team all season long. But when the running game ceased to exist, as was the case the rest of the way, Michigan couldn't score as efficiently. And when UNCC refused to watch Michigan rob it of a place among the elite of basketball, it showed the poise and class deserving of one of the four best teams in college basketball. Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER JOEL THOMPSON floats a lay-up over 49er Phil Scott in yes- terday's heartbreaking loss to UNCC. Wolverine Phil Hubbard eyes the action in anticipation of a possible rebound. Staton Robinson Hubbard Green Grote Thonson Baxter Ha~dy Bergen 'rear TOTAL S MICHIGAN FG FGA FT FTA R A T 0 4 0 (0 3 4 0 5 9 1 2 4 1 11 5 14 4 4 7 0 14 9 19 2 6 2 6 20 3 8 1 2 3 4 7 3. 5 0 0 1 0 6 2 7 0 0 0 0 4 3 8 0 1) 4 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 3o 74 8 14 32 15 68 UNC-CHARLOTTE FG FGA FT FTA R A T 6 13 7 9 11 3 19 Massey King Maxwell Kineb Watkins Gruber Scott Hester Team TOTALS 2 ]0 3 0 3 16 10 7 3 1 0 2 5 5 2 0 'I 4 3 8 5 2 0 1 0 3 13 3 6 0 0 6 43 4 1 6 3 Q 0 fl 6 25 1 s 6 0 27 53 21 28 17 75 Score by Periods MICHIGAN .. 2. UNC-Charlotte . ,. 40 Attendance: 22,301 41 -68 Fouled out: Staton, Grote. inals of the NCAA East Region- Is. Kuester directed the four- corner offense over the final 15 minutes after Kentucky ral- lied from a 13-point ,deficit and closed to within 59-53. I upon Decons The rest of the Tar Heels had! no trouble from the foul line against Kentucky. They con- nected on 33 of 36 attempts, in- cluding 16 straight in the second half and their last 21 in a row. * * * vious outing. But the Rebels pushed tl)eir- running game into high gear in the second half and wore down the Bengals. Forward Eddie Owens, who scored 13 of his 24 points in the second half, had a steal and a stuff shot, then forced another turnover and hit a jurnuer to move Nevada-Las Vegas to a 65-57 lead with 14:25 left and the Rebels were off and runniLg. Tony Smith added 12 of his 18 points in the second half for the Rebels, while Reggie Thetis and Sam Smith scored 16 apiece. Idaho State was unable to work the ball into its 7-foot cen- ter Steve Hayes, who scored just six points in the first half and 16 over-all. Ed Tmhopson led the Bengals with 27 points. I The victory also postponed the scheduled retirement of Marquette Coach Al McGuire, who had said before the game that the Warriors had to hold Wake Forest, which likes to run, to less than 70 points to win. Toone came off the bench when center Jerome Whitehead picked up his fpurth foul with 16 ' Tar heels ta e COLLEGE PARK, Md. - North Carolina was forced to play all but one minute of the second half without All-Ameri- can guard Phil Ford, but senior John Kuester calmly directed the Tar Heels to a 79-72 victoryI over Kentucky yesterday in the ex inl F fo in H re Si sh in - ,.. .. . Rebels run More sports on PROVO, Utah - Nevada-Las age seven Vegas, the top scoring team in the country at an average of 108 ...................... ... .. ... .. .. ... .. ... .. ..................,points a game, pulled away from In addition to a painful hyper- surprising Idaho State in the xtended. right elbow, suffered second half and posted a 107-90 Thursday's semifinal game, triumph in the West Regional ord was charged with his final. ourth personal foul in the open- Nevada-Las Vegas, a school g minute of the second half. which has climbed to national e went to the bench and never prominence only recently and eturned, telling coach Dean has never made the final four, mith he didn't think he could trailed 52-51 at the half to un- hoot free throws because of the ranked Idaho State. Idaho State jury. had eliminated UCLA in its pre- KNICKS PLUCK HAWKS Tigers roar too late in slugfest By The Associated Press LAKELAND, Fla. -- The Chi- cago White Sox scored 12 runs in the second inning off De- troit star Mark Fidrych, four on' a grand slam homer by Royle Stillman, and went on to outlast Detroit 18-15 in exhibi-. tion baseball yesterday. Chicago pounded out eight hits in the big inning, had three hit batsmen and were aided by two errors by first baseman Mickey Stanley, which made 10 of the runs unearned. John Hiller relieved Fidrych to begin the third and was1 pounded for four runs, two on a homer by Richie Zisk followed by Jim Spencer's so- lo blast. Chicago added two more runs in the sixth off Bob Sykes. Detroit, which matched Chi- cago with 18 hits, got solo home runs from Ron- LeFlore, Rusty Staub and Phil Mankowski. Mankowski's came in the five- run seventh off Jim York after held on to trim the Atlanta Knicks with a two-run shot by Mickey Stan- Hawks 107-101 in a National as- had 22 and 24 points, Frazier Shelton and Jim apiece. Robinson ley.ketbal Ir,'- rT:..- , ris: i htf 1 Association game last IMcMillan 15 The Tigers scored seven runs 1t. in the ninth off Larry Monroe, Atlanta, which trailed by as three on a home run by rookie many as 22 points in the sec- outfielder Tim Corcoran,~ who, ond quarter, rallied behind is5 8-for16 so far in spring train- forwards Len Robinson and ing, with three homers and JIohnDrew and pulled within eight runs batted in. four with three minutes to go. But Earl Monroe, who didn't! Hawks hounded play in the first three periods NEW YORK - Lonnie Shel-'( because of a foot injury, scor- ton and Walt Frazier led New f ed six of the Knicks' final eight 'York to a 19-point lead in the 'points to clinch the victory. first quarter and the Knicks I Bob McAdoo topped thej led Atlanta with 34 points and Drew had 26, including 14 in the fourth quarter. The Hawks missed their first 12 shots and didn't score a bas- ket until 6:07 had elapsed. By that time, the Knicks led 13-21 behind six points by Frazier. New York steadily added to its lead until a dunk by Shelton on a breakaway made it 31-12 at the end of the quarter. ' This, time, Michigan did not have enough By TOM CAMERON Special to The Daily LEXINGTON - The little skinny kids always seemed as though they could overcome the most insurmountable leads. Michigan would always come- back-U of D, Marquette, Purdue, Illinois, Ohio State, Wisconsin . . .. they had done it so many times. It was their "trademark" as coach John- ny Orr put it. In the final seconds of the game Michigan may have been the best team in the country. But as they reached back to pull out yesterday's regional final game against UNC-Charlotte, they found nothing-it just wasn't there. Like the whole game, nothing fell for the Wolverines in the final seconds. Yesterday's game was for those big husky guys called the "Mean Green". "EVERY TIME it was in our grasp, and there was a loose ball or something, they (UNCC) would get it," Orr said. "That's what makes you win - that's what we've been doing all year. "Those loose balls could have gone either way," he con- tinted, "but they didn't." The scrapping Wolverines did everything right in the final minutes - they caused those loose balls, never let the 49'ers waste the clock away, and brought the ball down and took good shots. But nothing would fall. WITH THREE and a half left in the game, Michigan found itself down by eight. In those three and a half minutes, the Wolverines brought the ball down court 14 different times. They took good shots, and had five chances at the free throw line, yet scored only six points. When only a few seconds remained, Michigan guard Dave Baxter said, "we should have won this . . . game." Maybe they should have, because the game was in their reach. But for all the times they had done it before, it was just not going to happen this time. THE WOLVERINE'S first eight minutes out of the-locker room after half-time made it look as though they were on their way to just another comeback victory on the road to Atlanta. After being 13 points down they took the lead by ore.. "We knew they (Michigan) would come back," UNCC coach Lee Rose said. We knew they would because Michi- gan has class." Three minutes after Michigan had caught up though, Tommy Staton fouled out - and then a little later so did Steve Grote. So when Michigan went back to pull it out, they had to reach a little further. "i THINK WE were very juiced up (after the half)," Rickey Green said. "Going ot there and Pressing took a little out of us but we just couldn't get the little extra effort to t'ill it out." "It, (himself and Grote) being out didn't hurt our mo- mentum, it hurt our denth," Staton said. Michigan needed only a little something extra- maybe Grote and Staton could have provided it. Any little extra might have had Michigan on the way to- Atlanta. "ba;:{'?si:;'.;: isi r}.:i{v .%'.Ni:::^:%f{s':4{i:}: :'':4 ::::?::: ;;{{;":':?::::3:X } "s:,r:} c};{.?:,ys.T:sf,.; .e ys :;.';:r{;:,s."Ys',v: }.,':%s%9U i::+{?:: y sr+:?":."'. ":.dv.-ri: r::-ia: +' a+rrr.^..cear.+.C?.:v. a:$:n .wwvA."r."n?"s:;va" ti:+$snd#to+..o+r. ."i."r:":. :{v;::.:":+OrJ. 'vv$%"r."s,.S{4+ 'ritiv,:., x+: :v.":v: r" SCORES NCAA Tournament 1TNC-Charlotte 75, MICHIGAN 68 UNLV 107, Idaho State 90 N. Carolina 79, Kentucky 72 Marquette 82, Wake Forest 68 MHSAA Tournament Class C Redford St. Mary 88, Buchanan 59 Saginaw SS. Peter & Paul 75, NBA N.Y. Knicks 107, Atlanta 161 Cleveland 94, San Antonio 89 Chicago 104,-Seattle 92 NHL N.Y. Rangers 5, Pittsburgh 2 Chicago 2, N.Y. Islanders 2 Toronto 5, Atlanta 4 l t T c CH URELLA COPS CROWN Cyclones capture title Only two of Michigan's seven wrestlers who gained berths in the NCAA tournament in Nor- mas, Oklahoma, remained in contention for national titles going into fast night's action. The performance of these wrestlers advanced Michi- gan into a tie for ninth place so far with 41.5 meet points. In the 150 pound class Michigan's Big Ten champ Mark Churella upset top ranked Paul Martin of Oklahoma State, 9-7, to gain entry to Also, team captain Mark Johnson reached the championship match-up by pinning Eric Wais of Oklahoma State in 7:22°and then elim- inating Penn State's Jerry White, 6-2. He will face Chris Campbell of Iowa once again in a repeat of last year's finals. Johnson has met Campbell four times this sea- son and managed one tie at best. IOWA STATE clinched the national champion- ship yesterday afternoon after the consolation rouinds bhuscing a nteam point-totail of 90.5 for, Goodbye Lexington *.. and hello Atlanta! At least that's w h a t the UNCC players are E waiving about. As for the Wolverines, well, just like the photo,I they were blocked out' of the NCAA picture by the Mean Green. The Wolverines, on' the other hand, waved1 goodby to the nation- al championship in