Thursday, February 265, 19765 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever Th.rsda.Fbur 6 96TEMCIA AL full court SPRESS SEVEN TEAMS RANKED NATIONALLY Big Ten grapplers battle at Iowa Lloyd Schini By BOB MILLER terer Mention sports in the Big Ten, and any fan will talk about the Ohio States in football and z__ P I"P- C! h the Indianas in basketball. * * " tGL/ G a74 7 .'V . .. By BILL STIEG THE CROWD YELLS for him to enter the game. They cheer when he takes the floor. They holler for him to shoot and they scream wildly when he scores. Why is there such a reaction for Michigan's Lloyd Schinner- er, an end-of-the-bench, roster-filling last-string guard? The answer is easy. At the risk of sounding trite, the fans can relate to Schinnerer. Every team has a Lloyd Schinnerer-that guy who busts his butt for the team every practice but never gets into a, game until late when the team has a big lead. By then the starters are relaxing and joking around on the bench, and many of the fans are getting ready to leave-gather- ing their belongings, putting on their coats and not paying much attention to what's going on on the court. Monday night was typical. Michigan was leading Illinois by 16 points with about a minute to play, and many fans had left. Those who were still watching, though, were yelling for Too often though, the "major" sports domi- nate the "minor" teams, in everything from budgets to publicity. Take, for example, the Iowa Hawkeyes wrestling squad. Iowa was ranked number one in the coun- try until two weeks ago when they were de- feated by second-ranked Iowa State. But last week, the Hawks returned the favor to the Cyclones and returned to the top of the rank- ings. PEOPLE IN THE Big Ten are proud of their football and basketball progams, and deserved- ly so. They point out that the Big Ten consist- ently fields teams in the top twenty. But how many people know that the wrestlers in the conference constitute one third of the top twenty in their sport? Along with Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan State, Michigan, Northwestern, Minnesota and Purdue have appeared in the national ratings this sea- son. With a field of that caliber, the Big Ten wrestling championships promise to be a literal all-star event. City for matches on February 28-29. Most con- ference coaches concede that upstaging Iowa for first place will prove a most difficult task. Iowa's strength and position as a hometown favorite lead most people to expect "the" race to be for second place. THREE TEAMS HAVE a better than aver- age shot to place behind the Hawkeyes-Wis- cousin (13-3, 7-1 in the Big Ten), Michigan State (7-7 overall, 4-4 in the conference) and Michigan (16-6, 6-4). The Spartans record is deceiving because they are a better team in tournaments than in dual meets. It only takes a couple high place finishers to get a lot of points in a tourney. Last year the order of finish in the Big Ten meet was Iowa, Wisconsin, MSU and Michigan with the other teams trailing far behind. The Wolverines, Coach Johannesen has indi- cated. will be gunning for the number two posi- tion. He feels it can be attained, especially since the Michigan matmen have the factor of revenge going for them. To finish second, Michigan would have to ontnoint the Spartans and Badgers, who both narrowly beat the Wolverines the last time they faced each other in dual meets. First, it crowns one school conference cham- pion, and it will qualify 36 wrestlers for the NCAA finals later in March. The top three finishers in each of the ten weight classes plus six other "at-large" quali- fiers will be eligible to participate in Tuscon, March 10-13. Coach Johannesen feels that his team has a shot at individual titles from junior captain Mark Johnson (177 pounds), with an 8-1-1 con- ference record, and freshman Mark Churella, (150) 7-2 in the Big Ten. Churella will be facing Chuck Yagla of Iowa, the defending national champ at his weight, for the third time this year. Each wrestler has one victory to his credit. AMOS GOODLOW (126) will have an oppor- tunity to face Jack Reinwand of Wisconsin. Reinwand is number two in the country of all 126-pound wrestlers and escaped with one point victory over Goodlow two weeks ago in Ann Ar- bor. The ever-steady Ed Neiswender, honorable mention All-American Harold King, and Rich Lubell at 167, 190, and 134 pounds respectively are other possible candidates with chances of finishing high in the standings, according to Johannesen. Non-Wolverines to look for during the meet! include: Lee Kemp, (158), out of Wisconsin who has defeated Yagla; Iowa's Tim Sysewski (134) a strong performer; and Pat Milkovich, (134) from MSU, a two time NCAA champion, who enters the meet with an incredible 24-1 record. RETURNING FROM last year's conference meet will be second place finishers Mike Mac- Arthur (118), Minnesota; Dan Wagemann (167), Iowa; and Chris Campbell (177), also of Iowa; Indiana Hoosier Sam Komar will be out to de- fend his Big Ten title at 134 pounds, probably the toughest weight class. Wrestling is popular in Iowa, and sellout crowds will be expected. These will be two days when a supposedly "minor" sport will emerge and be in the limelight. I acting coach Bill Frieder to send Schinnerer in the game. Why? e. Many of the fans are small, somewhat frustrated athletes. They The Conference will send its teams to Iowa THE BIG TEN MEET serves a dual p can see themselves in Schinnerer. He's not big-a 6-2 guard. And he's somewhat frustrated, Ccivs edge by Pist ns; he's been submerged by the recent flood of talented guards that has hit Michigan (Dave Baxter, Rickey Green and Tom rpose. Staton). So the. fans yelled for Lloyd, who Is In his last year as a Wolverine. Sonics bounce Braves "It really surprised me," he said. "I've heard them cheer before, but never like that. I was nervous." He handled the ball vvv , - L - .N S.. " A4v u . &A 3U MU LM a a few times and managed to hit a free throw. The crowd, already giddy from the big win, cheered as loud as they do for one of Rickey Green's spectacular moves. Full of talent and ambition Hopefully, the yelling isn't sarcastic. Lloyd Schinnerer is a good player. Those who see him in practice, not just in the last minutes of runaway games, know he has a good, smooth jump shot and body control on drives that would surprise more casual observers. And next to Rickey Green, he may be the fastest runner on the team. These talents made him one of the best players in the state his senior year in Bad Axe. He didn't think he had the potential, for Big Ten basketball, so he set his sights on Central Michigan. He "couldn't believe it" when Michigan sent him a letter of intent. He signed it as soon as he could find a pen. Now it .is four years later and Schinnerer has scored fewer points than Green has scored in a single game. He may be the hardest worker on the team, showing up at practice as much as an hour early to work out. He has lasted thriough a broken thumb, a separated shoulder, and a case of freshman blues that made him want to quit. He knows- and coach Johnny Orr agrees-that he could be playing a lot, even starting, for a smaller school. So what is he doing here? Why didn't he pack up and leave like so many other players discouraged by a lack of playing time? It's a matter of ambition. Schinnerer knows he is not good enough to start for Michigan. He's not looking ahead to pro ball-all he wants to do after he leaves here is coach. "The biggest thing for me is that I'm learning a whole lot about coaching," says the Phys Ed major. "Because of all my time on the bench, I can watch what moves the coaches make, and when and why." Attitude an important factor By The Associated Press I went ahead 86-75 on a pair of DETROIT - Seven Cavaliers ; i field goals by Kevin Kunnert scored in double figures, topped fat the start of the final period. by Campy Russell's 17 points, White topped Boston scorers as Cleveland notched a 108-101 > s with 21 points. John Havlicek NBA victory last night over the n r had 19, Scott 17 and Cowens 16. Detroit Pistons. Calvin Murphy scored 24 It was the ninth triumph in NIGHT EDITOR: points for Houston. Johnson had the past 10 games for the Ca- SCOTT LEWIS23 and Newlin 21. aliers, who firmed their grip 1~. Heinsohn was later ejected on first place in the Central...from the game. Division. Detroit, which entered Nate Thurmond 10. Thurmond the game second in the Midwest, also played a superb defensive - a half-game behind Milwaukee, game, blocking six shots. ICS C 0 RES I had a three-game winning Bob Lanier topped the Pis- streak snapped. tons with 27 points and Curtis~ ~ ~~ Nine of Russell's points Rowe added 21. COLLEGE BASKETBALL CAME in the final quarter of * * * DePaul 72, Villanova 63 the nlip-and-tuck game, which Brown buoys Clemson 90, Duke 8an 75 wasn't decided until the clos- t Detroit 83, Duquesne 67 ing minutes when Jim Brewer BUFFALO - Fred Brown W. Michigan 73, Kent St. 63 gttosuf o lvln scored 31 points and Tom Bur- Notre Dame 85. Dayton 79 got two stuffs for Cleveland,srd p tsnMat'yland 105 wake Forest 91 and Detroit couldn't get the leson added 29 last night as the, key rebounds. Seattle Supersonics won their . Brewer, Jim Cleamons and icghth straiyht game with a, Austin Carr each scored 14 for 126-94 victory over the Buffalo Cleveland, while Bobby Smith Srae. added 13, Jim Chones 12 and Seattle put the game away by, SE scoring the first 14 points of the .nciIarn fourth quarter. It gave them a U UZI ~dAID"' lead of 108-78. ,--_.L___ B~JJ~IaJLBPARJ E i I Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN DEMONSTRATING THE LATEST dance step are Michigan wrestler Rich Valley and Ohio State's Andy DeSabito. DeSabito won this match, a 3-2 decision. The action was part of a double dual meet in which the Wolverines defe ated both the Buckeyes and the Illinois Fighting Illini. V 1Adsw ftwtu M C C S yNq .? {{{ 1 { i L Put your books aside tonight and go over to the IM Sports Building for the 45th Annual Open House, from 6:30 to 10:00 p.m. The admission price is unbeatable-free! The main attractions include the Intra- m u r a I Championships in men's, women's and co-rec basketball and the Residence Hall vs. Fraternity All-Star Basketball game. Other events will take place at Yost Ice Arena and the Sports Coli- seum. At 5:00 p.m., the men's gymnastic team will have an exhibition with Schoolcraft College, with the public in- vited to attend. The Braves played the game under protest because Buffalo Coach Jack Ramsay claimed that Seattle was using an ille- gal zone defense in the second half. Bob McAdoo lead all scorers with 33 points. * * *t Celtics edgea BOSTON - Jo Jo White high- lighted a Boston comeback with a key steal and then hit on a three-point play last night as the Celtics edged the Houston Rock- ets 103-102 in a wild NBA game. Houston, helped by technical fouls called against Dave Cow- ens and coach Tommy Hein- sohn, charged to an 82-75 lead at the three-quarter mark and Another reason Schinnerer is here is less easily put into words. It's the pride he feels being a part of three excellent teams that have each made the NCAA playoffs. He's an im- portant part, too, keeping the regulars huffing and puffing! during practice as a member of the "scout" team, a squad assembled to simulate Michigan's upcoming opponent. He has willingly resigned himself to this less visible role., "His attitude is superb," says Orr. "He does so many things to help the team. At practice he really, really works. He never complains, and just does anything to help the team." The Big Ten championship two years ago was rewardt enough for the Lutheran minister's son. It was a thrill he shared with the "big" names like Campy Russell, C.J, Kupec and Joe Johnson. It was also a thrill he would never have experienced at a smaller school. Now, Schinnerer seems to wear his 'M' letter sweater more often and more proudly than anyone else. Schinnerer has that necessary quality for all winners who. play a team sport-unselfishness. He has kept quiet and worked hard and now he is looking forward to his third straight NCAA appearance. Not only does every team have a Lloyd Schinnerer -every team needs at least one to win. "I just can't say anything bad about Lloyd Schinnerer," says Orr. "I just can't say anything bad about Michigan," says Schin- nerer, despite his trials and frustrations. PRO STANDINGS MilwauM Detroit Kansas Chicago Golden Seattle Los Ang Phoenix Portland Boston Buffalo Philadel New YO Clevelam Washini Houston New Orl Atlanta NBA Western Conference Midwest Division ee 251 23 3 City 223 184 Pacific Division State 42 1 312 geles 293 25 3 d 25 35 Eastern Conference Atlantic Division 38 1 35Z phia 342 rk 293 Central Division Id ~36 2 gton 35 1 ~29 3 leans 26 263 L 34 34 37 40 16 29 31 31 18 25 26 31 24 30 31 33 GB 12 14 16 17y21 5 6 11 1 I 7 9 10 ] NHL wales Conference Norris Division w L T Pts Montreal 44 9 9 97 Los Angeles 30 25 7 67 Pittsburgh 26 25 11 63 Detroit 19 34 8 46 Washington 7 48 8 22 Adams Division Boston 38 11 10 86 Buffalo 33 18 10 76 Toronto 27 24 11 65 California 23 32 7 53 Campbell Conference Patrick Division Philadelphia 38 10 13 89 N. Y. Islanders 32 17 12 76 Atlanta 27 28 9 63 N. Y. Rangers 23 32 6 52 Smythe Division Chicago 25 19 17 67 Vancouver 25 25 11 61 St. Louis 22 29 9 53 Minnesota 17 40 4 38 Kansas City 12 40 8 32 Yesterday's Results Toronto 8, Detroit 0 Atlanta 3, Pittsburgh 3 California 6, N. Y. Rangers 4 Montreal at Kansas City, night t S! ' f ' 7 '3 f s; s' ; I ; I .s 's I 3, ? .7 w ' ; a ;z fi That's the kind of healthy and refreshing builds championship teams from the inside out. situation thatI Yesterday's Results Cleveland 108, Detroit 101 Seattle 126, Buffalo 94 Boston 103, Houston 102 Washington at N. Orleans, night Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And youYe eating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coin of the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves its costing us now for repairs and inefficiency. Point two. By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength in the competitive world trade arena. When the balance of payments swings our way againwell all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who can really Join The - ' '"? WE'RE' OLD! CAR RE IN ANN With' NEWt Dail THE EST NTAL A RBOR the EST E NJOY THE FINEST CHINESE WEST OF NEW YORK ANC EAST OF SAN FRANCISCC IN A QUIET ELEGANT SETT LUNCH 0 DINNER 0 SNACKS @ COC E FOOD iNG Ill KT _L "" u l III~~u ___AM " u