Sa#w:rdoy December 6, 1975, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Saturday, December 6, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Late Spartan surge trips icers, 6-4 By ED LANGE Michigan tate s c o r e d four goals in the final period of play to dump the Michigan icers, 6-4, before 7,963 fans at Yost Ice Arena. It was a devastating loss good period. We let Michigan Heaslip, a frequent visitor to the flicked it past a hapless Ver- PENALTIES: 1. Ms-Moroney (el- carry the play for two periods." box last night. State's sophomore sical. bowing) 2:25; 2. Ms-Betteriy (trip- At 1:12 of the third stanza, goalie, Dave Versical, proved to State quickly countered with ping) 9:4?; 3. M-Moretto (hooking) Michigan's Doug Lindskog was be the Spartan's saviour during: Brendon Moroney scoring on a 13:41; 4. M-Manery (elbowing) 19:49. sent off the ice for holding and the two minute onslaught, two on one, taking the pass from ISECOND PERIOD the Spartan power play notched thwarting both Greg Natale and teammate, who else, Tom Ross SCORING: 4. Ms-Cotp (Ross, Bet- for coach Dan Farrell and his I their second tally of the night. Dave Debol from no less than to tiei charges, who must now travel John Sturges let loose with a five feet. TheI to East Lansing and try to sal- booming slapshot from the left Michigan State scored the on top vage a split in the crucial two j wing that deflected off team- clincher at 17:04, with Robbie in on game series.! mate Tom Ross' leg past Blue Harris getting credit. The Spar- from( The Michigan penalty killing goalie Robbie Moore, Ross get- tan right winger tapped the puck over t team of John Fardig, Dan Hoene, , ting credit for the goal and from amidst a hectic scene sur- rights Greg Fox, et al, combined with Sturges the assist. rounding the Michigan net. on top, goalie Robbie Moore, the third Forward Pat Hughes of Ross picked up his second Mich star of the game, to stave off Michigan was the next Wolver- goal of the contest with only 12 Angie State's renowned power play for ine to find his way to the pen- seconds left when he stole the skog, h most of the night, save for the alty box, his reward for a puck from Doug Lindskog and fortabb final period. cross check. Steve Colp scored cooly guided it into the empty period. Penalties hurt the Wolverines the tying goal, taking a pass Michigan net. last night. The Spartan power from Ross in a goal mouth The contest started with a play, with Tom Ross, Steve Colp, scramble and ramming it past bang when only 1:14 into he Daryl Rice and Pat Betterly Moore. opening period, Michigan's would not be denied in the fate- The Blue dekers were unable Doug Lindskog took a perfect SCoR ful third period as they tallied to tally on their power play, a pass from defensman Greg Sturges twice. result of a trip by State's Ron i Natale in the center slot, and 8:58. Michigan coach Dan Farrell - - --_--_--- was noticably concerned about the refereeing in the contest, TA E EI HTH R berating the officials for call ing "cheap penalties." "Quite obviously, penaltiesIr were the difference in the game," funned Farrell. "Two of the penaltiesdon their two finali power play goals were very questionable. This is the first time I've ever said that, but By BILL STIEG defensive club and physical. If "We that's the way I feel." KNOXVILLE - Michigan is they held a team like that to 63, fense," Michigan left the ice after the worried about Tennessee. Ten- we've gotta expect to get our go toc second period on top 4-2 and it nessee is worried about Michi- I fannies drubbed." as pos looked like MSU was through. gan. and G As Spartan head coach Amo The only person in either bas- MEARS may be exaggerating. cans I Bessone commented after the ketball program not worried Most observers are expecting a shuffle game, "We only played one about tonight's game is Tennes- good game, but foresee Ten- fense. see's athletic director. He knows nessee as the drubber and "We that he'll have a full house at Michigan as the drubee. terbac 8 p.m. for a battle that means When asked about Tennessee, the ba a lot to both teams. Michigan assistant coach Bill (Mike) Michigan and Tennessee both Frieder produced a file which it stand highly ranked going into he guaranteed would "scare the THA tonight s game. Tennessee is hell out of you. Inside were is 5-10 eighth in the nation, Michigan countless press clippings about He rar 16th. By the sound of the the highly-regarded Volunteers. ballhan the third period because of the coaches' comments, each should To make his point known to Jack it up. terly) 1:34 pp; 5. M-Moretto (Sawa) Blue quickly climbed back+ 9:52; 6. M-D. Lindskog (Manery) as Kris Manery broke Versical, received a gift Greg Fox and flipped it the Spartan netminder's shoulder to put Michigan , 2-1. .igan received goals from PENALTIES: 5. M-Moretto (trip- ping) 3:15; 6. MS-Sturges (holding) 5:37; 7. M-Moretto (elbowing) 10:04; S. MS--Coughlin (hi stick) 16:12; 9. M-- Morrison (x-check) 16:12; 10. MS-Heaslip (misconduct) 16:29; 11. M-Manery (charging) 16:59. Moretto and Doug Lind- THIRD PERIOD his second, to take a com- SCORING: 7. MS-Ross (Sturges, Butterly) 2:38 pp; S. MS-Col.p e 4-2 lead into the closing (Ross, Rice) 6:34 pp; 9. MS-Harris (Colp) 17:04; 10. MS-Ross (un- assisted) 19:48 ENG. Oh, pUck PENALTIES: 12. M-D. Lindskog pIL~fI (holding) 1:12; 13. M -Hughes (x- check) 4:51; 14. MS-Heaslip (trip- FIRST PERIOD ping) 13.39. ING: 1. M--D. Lindskog (Na- TOTAL SAVES :14; 2. MS--Moroney (Ross,I 1 2 2 T ) 9:45; 3. M-Manery (Fox) Versical (MS) 21 8 11 40 Moore (M) 11 16 15 42 IANKED VOLS Jennes ee Daily Photo by KEN FINK MICHIGAN FORWARD Kris Manery (19) bIasts in a first period goal in action from last night's 6-4 loss to arch-rival Michigan State. Tim McDonald (4) of the top-ranked Spar- tans watches Manery pace the Wolverines to an early lead, but a late MSU rally dashed Michigan's upset hopes. DOWN OHIO U., 26-8: Grapple rs blast Bo 're strictly a star of- "says Mears. "We rry to our best players as often ssible. That's why King 3runfeld were all-Ameri- ast year. We're not the -type or continuity of- use one guard as a quar- k, and his job is to get ll to Grunfeld,, King or Jackson," Mears said. T GUARD, or point man, freshman Johnny Darden. rely scores, but is a good ndler and passer. son, on the other wing, is ellent shooter who scored ts a game last year. With an Terry Crosby as the serve, Tennessee's wings enter combined for 71 of 4s' 86 points against Duke. Ing up "garbage baskets" eath, says Frieder, is captain Doug Ashworth. rong and aggressive Mich-, ransfer scores most of his. s a game on lay-ups after ng the boards for a re- bound. Tennessee fast breaks when possible, getting the ball dtwn- court quickly and never hesi- tating to shoot. "THEY RUN now more than ever," says Frieder. "The key to the game may be how we keep them off the boards and how we convert from offense to defense." Defensively, the viols play' a 1-2-1 zone, which lends itself to quick double-teaming. Sharp passing and movement-which Michigan showed against a Van- derbilt zone-are needed to beat Tennessee's 1-3-1. Michigan captain Britt pre- dicts a struggle. "We'll just have to play tight defense on their three stars (Grunfeld, King and Jackson)," Britt said. "We have to frustrate them,, and deny them the ball. And once we get on the boards and start running, they'll tire out. We can do it if we really want to." By RAY O'HARA the first period with a take- 'brought home a 7-3 decision fort The Michigan wrestling team down and a near fall. PetersonI the Blue at 142. Briggs rebound- extended its winning streak to somehow lasted through the pe- ed from a lackluster perfor-' five straight dual meets lastriod and chose to begin the sec- mance against MSU and outdis- night with a 26-8 victory over ond period on top. tanced a tiring opponent in the Ohio University which could The tactic gained him nothing, third period. best be described as routine. however, as Goodlow quickly es- Churella, another freshman, Amos Goodlow and Mark Chu- caped. Peterson gamely shot for was victimized by Ohio's Gus rella produced most of the thrills a takedown but ended up be- Malavite, who refused to lose for Michigan fans, the former neath the Wolverine, who worked his cool even whenthe young with an impressive second pe- him over a little before finally Wolverine was ahead and was riod pin in the 126-pound match obtaining the pin. rewarded with the eventual and the latter with an unfortu- Goodlow's pin m o r e than decision. nate 105 defeat at 150, his first made up for a Michigan defeat After a scoreless first period of the season. at 118 pounds. Jim Haynes ap- in which Churella established Goodlow delighted all pres- peared to be slightly overmatch- i himself as the aggressor, the eut, except Ohio, with a debo- ed by Ohio's Andy Daniels, Who wrestlers went to the mat and nair pin of the Bobcats' Mark established a first period ad- exchanged reversals. Malavite's Peterson. The freshman ap- vantage and never relinquished escape, was short-lived as Chu- peared to be almost relaxing it, winning 5-2. , rella charged back and scored as he cooly destroyed his over- Michigan's Lance Driskell and a takedown, but the senior Bob- matched opponent. Ohio's Tim Casey fought to an cat escaped again and took Chu-! Goodlow did not waste much exceedingly uneventful 1-1 draw rella down. time as-he blitzed Peterson in at 134 before Karl Briggs Churella began to suffer in ADVERTISING IN DOESN'T COST IT PAYS! YOU'RE READING THIS, AREN'T YOU? Display-764-0554 Classifieds-764-0557 -s.-s- .-.. ,-- - -- s..- -s- - extra effort he had exerted pre-{ viously by taking the match to' Malavite. Churella refused to give up his fatigue was his, undoing. "Malavite's tough," observed Michigan coach Bill Johanne- sen, "and Churella just wore himself out early by shooting for so many takedowns. He'll! learn though. I think this matchj e higher. Air time Tonight's Michigan - Ten- nessee basketball game will be broadcast over radio sta- tions WAAM (1600 AM) and WUOM (91.7 FM.) The game begins at 8 pm. I i i !I I . will probably help him." "WE'RE expecting the tough- After Churella's defeat the est team we're going to face all Bobcats 'trailed by only 11-8 year," said Volunteer coach Ray but Michigan captured the last Mears. "Our scouts were just five matches to pull away. amazed at what Michigan did Brad Hol-nn, Ed Nieswender Ito Vanderbilt. They said they and Mark Johnson methodically looked fantastic.", disposed of their opposition by Michigan won its first game of uncompetitive scores at 158, 167 the year Tuesday, 90-63 over and 177 pounds respectively. Vanderbilt. Tennessee is 2-0, Johnson shut out Dave Foster, beating Biscayne easily and 6-0. eating iske eily.n The heaviest Wolverines, Har- edging Duke 86-80. old King at 190 and Mike Mc- Mears' statement is a bit Dowell at heavyweight, both strong, considering the pres- ired in the third period but held ence of Kentucky, Alabama and E on to h rdi Auburn on Tennessee's South- east Conference schedule. Good-lowed! "They held Vanderbilt to 63 118-Andy Daniels (01U) dec.Greg 1points, and that's a team that Hayes (M), s- usually scores 90 . points a 126--Amos Goodfellow (M) wbt. game," said Mears. Mark Peterson (OU), 2:39 "We were lucky to beat Van- 134-Lance Driskell (M) drew Tim derbilt by four last year," he Casey (OU), 1-2 14?-Karl Briggs (M) dec. Ben continued. "Michigan's a super Parker (OU), 7-3 150--Gus Malavite (OU) dee. Mark C"hurena (M. I In-x l E1I the players, Frieder posted the clippings and descriptions of the players on the locker room bul- letin board. There were some scary parts. Tennessee runs a 1-3-1 offense, and two of those five were all- Americans last year: Bernard King and Ernie Grunfeld. King 7lays at the high post and was the team's leading scorer and rebounder last season. He scor- ed 26 per game last year and hit over 62 per cent of his shots. MICHIGAN fans remember him well from the Wolverines rough-and-tumble 78-74 victory last year, when King was almost unstoppable, scoring 34. Michi- gan freshman center Phil Hub- bard will "have his hands full" trying to cover the 6-7 sopho- more, according to Frieder. Even if the Wolverines stop King, Grunfeld is more than capable of picking up the slack. He scored 23.8 a game last year, but was injured for the Michi- gan game. He plays from the wing position where Wawman Britt will cover him. Grunfeld, 6-6, is considered an outstand- ing one-on-one player. 7 1A 7 an exc 13 poin freshm top res and ce the Vol Picki undern senior The str igan tr 8 point crashin 158-Brad Holman (M) dec. Tom Rowlands (OU), 9-2 167-Ed Nelswender (M) dec. Ran- dolph Scott, 7-2 177-Mark ,ohnson (M) dec. Dave Foster (OU), 6-0 190-Harold King (M) dec. Tom Jones (0OU), 5-4 Hwt-Mike McDowell (M) dec. Mike Harris (OU), 5-3 _ _ S C n0 .R E S NBA Detroit 102, Houston 91 Boston 104, New Orleans93 Buffalo 125, Cleveland 108 Philadelphia 99, New York 97 Milwaukee 103, Kansas City 95 NHL N.Y. Rangers 3, Kansas City 2 College Basketball UCLA 90, San Jose St. 80 Southern Cal 77, Vanderbilt 72 WCHA Notre Dame 5, Wisconsin 2 ii i i i yi Tumblers take 4thf in Ball State meet special To The Daily The men's gymnastic team placed a ''respectable'' fourth in the Ball State Invitaional held yesterday in Muncie, Indiana, according to Coach Newt Loken. Bob Darden, on the high bar, captured the only first place for the Wolverines. In othersevents, Richard Bigras won fourth place hon- ors on the pommel horse and Pierre Leclerc finished fifth in vaulting and sixth on the parrallel bars to contribue to the Blue scoring. Freshman N i g e 1 Rothwell rounded out the four man squad, representing Michigan in the "all-around " Invitational. Team score was tallied by the finishes of the top three per- formers in each event. Nebraska led the 13 teams present with a 148.5. Indiana State placed second with a 143.85, and Oklahoma's 141.55 barely edged Michigan's 140.45. Southern Illinois finished fifth with a score of8139.3, squeaking by Illinois' 138.8. "Darden's performance was super," stated Coach Loken. "It was a fine showing by many competitors." Sports of theiaiiy Woody a goody Ohio State coach Woody Hayes has been named the Big Ten Football Coach of the Year in a vote of midwestern sportswriters and broadcasters. Michigan's Bo Schembechler, winner of the first such award in 1972, finished second with 242 points to Hayes' 344, points. Hayes received first-place votes on 52 of the 104 ballots cast. Hayes, who won the award for the second time in the last four years, has compiled a 213-62-8 career record, including a 132-33-7 mark in Big Ten play. -AP B rains and brawn Michigan defensive end Dan Jilek was the lone Wolverine representative on the 1975 Big Ten All-Academic Team released by the conference service bureau this week. Jilek, a senior from Sterling Heights, carries a 3.0 grade point average in the University's Political Science depart- ment. Conference champion Ohio State paced the 20-man team with seven selections, followed by Iowa with five. Only three of the team's members were named on the regular All-Big Ten squad, OSU's Tim Fox and Chris Ward and Northwestern's Pete Shaw. Saint Gil glides Former Michigan wingback Gil Chapman is currently leading the National Football Conference in punt returns, according to statistics released by the Associated Press this week. Chapman, drafted and cut by the Buffalo Bills of the AFC and now playing for the New Orleans Saints, has averaged 12.2 yards per punt return through the season's first eleven weeks. ! Moses to wander? The New Orleans Jazz of the National Basketball Association will take American Basketball Associations star Moses Malone in Tuesday's special NBA draft, a team spokesman said Friday. Malone, 6-foot-11, was the first basketball player ever draft- ed directly out of high school. He played with the Utah Stars until being sold to the Spirits of St. Louis, Tuesday. --AP Yankee comes home Yogi Berra, fired as manager of the New York Yankees in 1964 and the New York Mets in 1975, was hired by the Yankees today as a coach. The 50-year-old Berra, a Hall of Fame catcher after 18 sea- sons with the Yankees, was given a one-year contract. Terms were not disclosed. --AP Watch the birdie The Michigan Open Badminton Tournament will be held to- day and tomorrow at Concordia Lutheran College, 4090 Geddes Road, Ann Arbor. Entrants include Mike Adams, current National Singles Champion, fourth-ranked Tom Carmichael, and former U. S. La- dies Singles Champion, Pam Bristol. , 1 t a r 1 - I Ulrichs'has itl The great new Hewlett-Packard-HP-21 Scientific Pocket Calculator. Price reduced to only $100. [Z A true scientific calculator with 32 functions and operations, including rectangular/polar conversions, register arithmetic, two trig operating modes. [IFull display formatting. Select fixed- decimal or scientific notation with display rounded to desired number of J^ (decimal places. D HP's error-saving RPN logic system . with 4-memory stack. L.Traditional HP quality craftsmanship. New, smaller size. 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