Tuesday, February 10, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage .Seven Tuesday1 February 10, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven No letdown for Michigan! Buckeyes crushed, 9 T__ "ftA - " TRT Tti AT.T By TOM CAMERON point lead in the first six and r{=1 .1-1 Special To The Daily a half minutes of the game, COLUMBUS - The Michigan and then Wayman Britt re- basketball team rebounded from sponded each time the Buck- a heartbreaking loss at Indiana eyes threatened to close the A on Saturday to crush Ohio State, gap thereafter. S p o rts r 90-66 at St. John's Arena last Britt scored 14 points in the night. first half, including a four-point NIGHT EDITOR: "They forced us to run," ad- play which established a 14 BILL STIEG mitted OSU's 18-year coach point lead. The half ended with .:.". Fred Taylor, "and we just the Wolverines ahead 44-34. " couldn't run that quick. They 'Eight seconds into the second to take a commanding 22 point have such super speed. I really half Phil Hubbard sat down lead can't remember an team in the hi ur su du t Ohio State never threatened Big Ten as quick as they are." witheafter the Michigan outburst. B T atya Wolverines exploded with 16 The closest the Buckeyes ever Michigan pulled out to a 12 points in a three minute stretch came was 20 points. D7 b k "After a loss like that on Bo nlill g hackSaturday," coach Johnny Orr MICHIGAN OHIO STATE said, "we were happy with FICGFN FGIO STTE F sthe way we played. I don't FG FT R F Pts FG FT R F Pts think I've ever been so down Britt 9-14 2-2 3 2 20 Daugherty 7-17 0-0 7 0 14 myself after a loss . . . We Robinson 6-12 1-2 10 4 13 Poole 2-7 0-0 0 3 came back very well tonight." Hubbard 2-11 0-0 13 4 4 Taylor 5-14 0-1 9 1 10 Grote 6-8 0-0 5 3 12 Bayless 7-13 0-1 3 4 14 Rickey Green led Michigan Green 11-21 1-1 9 3 23 wood 7-14 2-2 4 1 16 scorers once again with 23 Baxter 2-5 0-0 2 1 4 Cline 4-13 0-0 9 2 8 points, and once again his speed' Hardy 2-5 0-0 4 1 4 Shields 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Bergen 4-5 0-0 4 1 8 Bolden 01 0-0 0'1 0 was impressive. Staton 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Hammond 0-1 0-0 1 2 0 "Green really accelerates,"' Thompson 1-1 0-0 0 0 2 Smith 0-3 0-0 2 .0 0 said Taylor. "He even acceler- Schinnerer 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Romano 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 ates well dribbling. There's just Team 6 Lucas 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 no way to play head-on with TOTALS 43-83 4-6 56 19 90 Burris 0-0 0-0 0 0 0: him. You need two guys on each SCORE BY PERIODS Team 4 side (of him)."i MICHIGAN 44 46 90 TOTALS 32-83 2-4 39 15 66 Britt finished the game with 15, and Steve Grote 12. Hubbard scored only four points playing in front of his homestate fans. Jud Wood led Ohio State with 16 points. Craig Taylor, who scored 31 in Ann Arbor,j scored only 10 while playing with a severely injured back. Michigan was not only too! quick for Ohio, but also too strong on the boards. Michigan, led by Hubbard's 13 rebounds, picked off 17 more caroms than Ohio State. The Wolverines also blocked six Buck shots, includ- ing two by Hubbard, two by Robinson, one by Bergen, and one by Green. Green looked more like a for- ward when he blocked OSU for-' ward Mike Daugherty's jump shot and played more like a forward when he collected nine{ rebounds. j 0-66 end with a back as bad as his," Taylor said. The Wolverines firmly estab- lished themselves in second place with this win as Michigan State lost o Indiana. Michigan now holds a 9-3 Big Ten record, two games ahead of the Spar- tans. Michigan will travel to play the Spartans in East Lansing this weekend. mew Big Ten Standings .. z:4 1 3 l 1 1 1 i 5 i AP Photo TOM STATON, ONE OF Michigan's many super subs, guards Ohio State's Mark Bayless dur- ing last night's big Michigan win. Staton and his fellow bench-sitting s t a r s give Michigan depth few teams can match. The Wolverines finished with: the Buckeyes by outshootingI them 51.8 per cent to 38.5 per cent. "It was the shots that were taken," Taylor comment- ed. "Michigan took their shots underneath. We were 20 feet, out." Coach Taylor was surprised that his center, Craig Taylor, would even play this past weekend "No one else could have played the whole week Conf. W L Indiana 11 0 MICHIGAN 9 3 Michigan State 7 S Purdue 7 4 Iowa S 5 Illinois S 7 Northwestern 4 8 Minnesota 4 7 Ohio State 2 9 Wisconsin 2 10 All W L 20 0 15 S 11 '10 12 9 14 6 12 9 9 12 12 7 6 13 8 12 Ohio State 34 32 661 Att.--9007 full court P R ESS PADDLERS GRAB STATE TITLES: Locals place I 20 points, Johnny Robinson had1 ti Last night's results MICHIGAN 90, Ohio State 66 Indiana 85, Michigan St. 70 Illinois 7, Wisconsin 59 Purdue 86, Northwestern 58 well in Johnny's Wolverines . 0 l t I 4 00 too much talent? By ANDY GLAZER? T HE MICHIGAN WOLVERINES have once again proven that they have too much talent for the likes of an also-ran like Ohio State. Unfortunately, they may also have too much talent for their own good. There were questions in the stands and the press box, as to why the Wolverines didn't substitute more and earlier. Now, there are coaches who would give their left arm to be able to have such problems. In fact, Johnny Orr used By MARCIA M The hot and st Building paddleball alive with pinpoint suicide maneuvers 1 as Michigan hoste Paddleball Tournan the eight champio Arbor's Elyse Ja Louwsma, Dick Pitc Pudduck won three. The tournament ized by Mark Wils Martin, Susan .lKo Louwsma for mem National Paddleball About 160P eople rr to be one of them. That may be part of the problem.-I tries. Consider the past two season of Michigan basketball. Two ---- -- years ago the Wolverines were a sterling 22-5. They started a - team of Campy Russell, C. J. Kupec, Wayman Britt, Joe John- YanIS son, and Steve Grote. The only substitute to play with some- U~L i. thing approaching regularity was freshman Lionel Worrell, who transferred to Oral Roberts after that first season. All other S o substitutions were made out of either dire necessity or sym- IC t pathy for the opposition. Last year the Wolverines again sparkled, finishing 19-8. John Robinson took over for Campy, and David Baxter was a By The Associate reliable replacement at guard. But beyond Baxter there was no INNSBRUCK -l one that Orr could turn to with confidence. ace Gustavo Thoen way down a washb Now the Wolverines are enjoying another fine season and took the lead But following one of the best recruiting years by any team slalom at the Wint in the country, Johnny Orr has (depending on your source) yesterday, Russia's anywhere from eight to ten solid ball players. Baxter, Joel lakova was stripped Thompson, Alan Hardy, Tom Bergen, and Tom Staton are medal because she as talented a group as sits on any Big Ten bench. drops for a cold an There is the problem. They are sitting. Not all are happy ican couple won a 1 in that situation. al in ice dancing. "We proved it against Iowa," said Bergen, who hit three / straight buckets last night to start a game-breaking 16-2 Michigan Oc burst in the second half. "The subs came in and won the game. - "Tonight they took me out with six minutes to go (Michigan America's Philip was leading 80-54 at the time). They said I was tired. Well, I've ished fourth behind seen games where Phil (Hubbard) was tired, and he stayed in. the first run of "Don't get me wrong," continued Bergen, "Phil is a better slalom. Swiss ski ball player than me. I'm not looking to start. But I think I've Good and Hei H done the job enough to be playing some more. and final run of ti Michigan assistant coach Bill Frieder had some views on the today. subject. Olympic oficials "In the first half," said Frieder, "we went to the bench took away Kulakova when we had foul trouble, or when we weren't playing very the five-kilometer c well. In the second half, we played well, and you just don't race. She had take change things when they're going well-especially on the drops unaware they road. the illegal drug eph "You have to think about the team. As nice as it would be to make some people happier by playing them earlier, you can't afford to lose control of the game you have more or less won."'-, Michigan captain Wavman Britt, who as a four year starter knows as much about Michigan basketball as anyone, had a more "middle of the road" view. "We have more deth than we've had other years, and coachn Orr is definitely substituting more than he used to. But he likes to play the best guys, and you can't blame him for that. He stresses conditioning, and we're probably in better shape than anyone else in the league."! Taking an overview, you can't arevie with Orr's success. Ile has taken teams that no one exnected to go anywhere and twice taken them to the NCAA. This year's team was full of ques- tion marks before the season started. You don't see many now. On the other hand, it is difficult to tell a talented ball- nlayer like Tom Bergen (or others that are less vocal) that he must wait. Bt as difficult as that may be, it must be done. It is Johnny Orr's job to win, and he's doing it. "It's my team," said Orr, "and we'll substitute when I feelI like substituting." You're a winner, Johnny Orr, and no one ever argues with a winner. I think the move should be made sometime-but I also think there is no one who knows better than you when it shouldM be made. ERKER. STEVE K E E L E Y, a San won the last three national pad- tuffy Sports Diego racquetball professional, dleball singles championships courts came defeated Williamston's D i c k which he entered. Born in Jack- t shots and Jury in order to take the Open son, Michigan, Keeley earned ast weekend Singles first place. The match a degree in veterinary medicine d the State: was won in two games, 21-11,1 from MSU but has yet to prac- ment. Out of 21-20, the second an amazing tice it as he favors his racquet- nships, Ann come-from-behind effort. ball career. cob, Grace Jury was up 18-6 and serving! JURY GOT his revenge in her and Ron in game two when he turned Open Doubles, when he and R.P. . to the gallery and made a com- Valenciano, c u r r e n t national was organ- ical remark about his lead. doubles chamipons, downed Kee- on, Preston Evidently the laughter broke ley and Len Baldori, 21-19, 21-8. rnfield and Jury's concentration because he Ann Arbor's Greg Grambeau bers of the immediately lost his service and and Bob Streken finished third, Association. several consecutive points. by taking two from an East nade 220 en-! Keeley, the singles favorite' Lansing pair, John Scheppele before the tournament began, and Gary Croskey. - --Jacob and Louwsma defeated Kathy Williams and Susan Hal- sey in the Women's Doubles 1411. I i- ii e 1Championship. Williams, from win Btonz; e i! 1 Hazel Park, is a professional racquetball player who toured with Keeley and is rated about o ses n third in the nation in that sport. Ann Arbor females prevailed in Women's Singles as four d Press "It was such a small amount hometown women participated Italian ski it seemed almost an injustice," in t r o p h y winning brackets. i fought his said the president of the IOC Judy Shirley, who has played oard slope Medical Commission Prince paddleball for only two years, in the giant Alexandre de Merode of Bel- placed second to Plymouth's er Olympics gium. "However, if we are to Teri Davis in three games. Lou- Galina Ku- have a medical commission and wsma finished fourthand Karen of a bronze rules, we must enforce them." Harding and Suzanne Ris fought took n o s e Flu and colds have hit many for the consolation prize. d an Amer- athletes. . Ann Arborites also predomi- bronze med- In ice dancing, Ludmilla nated the Senior Division, age Pakhomova and Alexander 35 and 45. Pudduck and Pitcher Gorshkov won the gold medal won the doubles, outscoring S 6f for the Soviet Union. Another their opponents from Flint, Lou Colleen O'Connon and James Mahre fin- Millns of the U.S. took the C 0 e dThoeni in Soviet couple was second and r S O E ourney Giampetroni and David Jaffes, 21-8, 21-20. Third place doubles came to Don Johnston and Rod Grambeau by default. IN SENIOR Singles, Pudduck won the title, humiliating Mid- land's Larry Piper, 21-0, 21-13. Ann Arbor's Johnston took a third by default in this cham- pionship, too. The remaining division, Mas- ters, is designed for males 4S to 55. Before the switch this season to the Senior Division, Masters was for men 40 years and up. The winners this weekend were Al Hosner from Kalazamoo in singles and Lou Hephuis and Max Krinien from East Lansing in doubles. In March, the National Pad- dleball Singles Tournament is in Adrian. Ann Arbor represent-+ atives should be seeded near the top as they placed highly this, weekend in one of the country's best tournaments. The doubles are planned for April in Flint. The Top 20 ' By The Associated Press FEATURING SKY KING --LUS- 50c OFF ON ALL DRINKS BETWEEN 9 P.M.-10 P.M. WEEKLY HOURS FRI. & SAT. HOURS 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 (COMING SOON: SAM & DAVE) 4 Be Sure to take advantage of these W K LY SCIALS! Every Ties. & Fri. Evey ue.&EnEveyWed. Ail Dry TRIPLE LOAD ONLY very . ( ry) WASHERS 5O04$1.00 OFF. Rg. s Lb. Lod Reg. 754 DRY CLEANING STEA BORDS To help you sv on 2 ZIPPY STEAMtBOARDS ddrig .ues..hw .Fri for easy wrinkle removal Lar" Capacity onv ' FREE every day EXTRACTOR 13 1. Indiana (63) 2. Marquette 3. N rth Carolina 4. Maryland 5 Rutgers (1) 6. UCLA 7. Nev-Las Vegas 8. Tennessee 9. Washington 10. Notre Dame 11. Alabama 12. N. C. State 13. Cincinnati 14. Missouri 15 w. Michigan 16. MICHIGAN 17. St. John's 18. Virginia Tech 19. Centenary (tie) . Texas St. 19-0 18-1 18-2 17-3 19-0 17-3 23-1 18-2 18-2 14.4 15-3 16-4 17-3 18-3 18-0 14-5 17-3 18-3 20-3 16-2 1,278 1,093 980 772 756 601 398 4741 423 332 206 201 143 134 112 89 79 57 41 41 LEATHER i SUEDE DRY CLEANING SPECIAL JI KETS & COATS 131to15" 1 ,o Any Day) COIN LAUNDRY avuMR. STAD umu& DRY CLEANING 1958 S. Industrial Hwy. (Next to Colonial Lanes) the giant iers Ernst emmi were The second he event is reluctantly 's medal in ross-country n the 'tose y contamed edrine. bronze. In men's skating, Great Brit- ain's John Curry took a clearI lead with only the freestyle events to go. East Germany's Ulrich Weh-I ling became only the 13th per-. son in the 52-year history of the Games to defend a gold medal victory as he won the Nordicl combined event which includes ski jumping and cross country. S----------- COLLEGE BASKETBALL Tennessee 73, Vanderbilt 59 Georgia 86, Kentucky 81 Memphis St. 111, N. 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