....... - -- Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 29, 1976 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 29, 1976 Wolverine cagers F luck Hawkeyes Women's fast break skins Northwestern' By MARCIA KATZ The fast breaking dynamic duo of guards Lydia Sims and Melinda Fertig combined for 57 points last night as Michi-; gan's women's basketball team! outplayed Northwestern in ev- ery phase of the game, crunch- ing the Wildcats 92-50. Freshwoman Fertig poured1 in 32 points hitting on 15 of 24 shots, many of them fast, break layups for a 62 per cent clip. This was the second straight plus 30 night for Fertig1 as she pumped in 33 against Adrian last Thursday.; "MELINDA HAS gotten her confidence down," said a pleas-! ed Michigan coach Carmel Bor-; ders, "and the support of the team as a whole has really helped her."1 Sims surpassed her own 18.31 scoring average, as she scored! 25 points, hitting on 12 of 211 from the floor.I "Michigan is a really well skilled and drilled team. They are the best fast breaking team I've seen," said an obviously impressed Northwestern Coach< Mary DiStanislo. The Wildcats could not capita-c lize on their height advantage as their lack of speed and quick-i ness prevented them from keep-t ing pace with the high flying Wolverines. RIGHT FROM the openingI tipoff the sluggish Wildcat de- fense was out hustled by the, Blue who took an 8-0 lead inI the first two minutes of action.I Northwestern was forced toc switch from a man-to-man de-c fense to a zone defense in anc attempt to halt the Michigan With the one-two guard scoring punch and effective board play of Terry Conlin and Kathryn Young, the Blue had a com- fortable 50-24 advantage at halftime. THE SECOND half was much like the first as Michigan kept fast breaking and dominated the boards on rebounding. "We were up against some height and did a good job blocking out on the boards," praised Borders. She was par- ticularly happy with the speed the guards showed and the strong lead outlet passes byl the forwards. Going into the game, Borders said she was looking for more rebounding strength and scor- ing from the forwards. A more balanced attack was evident as Conlin had 11 points and 10 re- bounds and Young had eight points and nine rebounds. Mich- igan outrebounded Northwestern 53-37. "Yesterday at practice Mr. Sims (Lydia's father) showed Terry and I some moves for driving to the basket and it really helped tonight," com- mented Young. THE VICTORY is the seventh in a row for the Blue and ups their season mark to 12-4. The stage is now set for the State tournament March 4-6 in Kala- mazoo. Michigan is second seeded toI Western, and is pitted against Central in the opening game. Although Michigan has already defeated Central twice in reg- ular season play, Borders is not making any predictions. "This is anybody's tourna- By RICH LERNER IOWA CITY - The Michigan Wolverines clinched s e c o n d place in the Big Ten yesterday, thrashing Iowa 88-74, before a capacity crowd of 13,276. The win gives the Wolverines a 13-3 slate in league play with two games remaining. Michigan State and Purdue stand tied in third place with identical 9-7 marks. Indiana has already lock-, ed up the conference cham- pionship. Michigan shot a blistering 63.6 per cent from the floor and never trailed, racing to an 11-2 lead four minutes into the game. John Robinson canned a twenty foot jumper to start the rush, and the Wolverine zone press forced three consecutive turn- overs.I THE WOLVERINES stretched' their lead to 44-30 at intermis- sion, Robinson swishing another twenty footer with 5 secondsI left in the half. In the second period, Michi- gan expanded its lead to as much as 30 points before Iowa could trim the margin to some- thing respectable. However, the Hawkeye charge was too little, too late. Phil Hubbard, Wayman Britt and the ever-present Robinson completely stifled Iowa's front court. Hubbard held Bruce King, who scored a career high 36 points against Michigan earlier this season, to only one point in the first half. And the 6-8 220 pound forward could only muster bounds and had no turnovers. 9 points for his afternoon's ef- Grote did see some action, forts. scoring 7 points. "HUBBARD did a great job It marked the first time that on King," said Michigan coach Orr has varied his starting line- Johnny Orr. "They just couldn't= up all season. get the ball to him."n ed Iowa ynine points, well below his with 25 points,ahitting on 12 of seasoni average of l 16.9.o Frost,! 6 uog range attempts and one the Hawkeyes' leading rebound- of three. from the free throw er for the year, gathered in only line. Mike Gatens was the only three caroms. Britt despite giv- other Hawkeye in double figures, ing away six inches in height scorig ten in a reserve role. snared eight rebounds to go The win pushed Michigan's along with his twenty points, record to 20-5, the first time a "Britt did a great job for us," Michigan team has won that Orr said, "He negated Frost."' many games without a player Robinson scored 14 points, n a m e d Russell (Cazzie or pulled down 10 rebounds and Campy) on the squad. rendered Hawkeye center Fred The Wolverines play at Min- Haberecht so ineffective, that nesota tomorrow night before Iowa coach Lute Olson resorted returning to Crisler Arena to to a three guard attack. battle Northwestern in the last "They just outplayed us bad- regular season game, Saturday. ly," said Olson. "They're quick- But their season will be extend- er, they shoot better and they're ed, pending an almost certain faster. We're just no match NCAA tournament bid Thursday. when they play that well. "WE DIDN'T get any play Fowl shot from our frontcourt," Olson con- MICHIGAN tinued. "You have to move to FG FT R F TP AS get the ball. We were very Britt 9-14 2-2 8 4 20 2 lethargic in the front line and! Robinson 4-4 6-7 10 2 1 4 we're dead when that happens." Hubbard 2-3 2-2 3 46 1 we're;Green 10-16 2-2 1 4 22 1 Iowa shot only 35 per cent in Baxter 5-9 2-2 5 2 12 6 the first half and 39 per cent for Grote 2-4 3-5 0 2 7 1 teBergen 1-1 0-0 1 3 2 2 the game. Hardy 1-2 0-0 0 0 2 1 Rickey Green led Michigan in Th'mps'n 0-1 1-2 1 2 1 1 scoring for the fifteenth time Staton 1-1 0-1 1 2 2 0 this season. The junior guard Team 7 tallied 22 points. His accurate s IOWA outside shooting forced Iowa out FG FT R F TP AS of its tough zone defense. King 4-13 1-2 11 1 9 1 David Baxter joined Green, '.Frost 3 4-6 1-0 3 1 901 aHabere'ht 0-3 0-0 3 2 0 4 Britt and Robinson in double Th'mp'n 12-26 1-3 3 5 25 3 figures, hitting for 12 points. Weisberg 2-7 4-5 2 3 8 7 The sophomore guard started in Mays 3-6 9-1 3 2 6 1 place of Steve Grote who was Gatens 3-11 4-4 9 3 10 1 running a fever. Mayfield 2-2 0-0 1 0 4 0 IN ADDITION to his fine ATeam5 shooing Baxer ad a exel-TOTALS 30-76 14-21 41 18 74 20 shooting, Baxter had an excel- Halftime score: lent floor game. He dished out MICHIGAN 44, Iowa 30 six assists, corralled five re- ATT. 13,276 AP Photo SIX FOOT TWO forward Wayman Britt gets uphigh to tangle with 6-8 Dan Frost of Iowa in yesterday's clash at Iowa City. The senior captain connected for 20 points, while limiting the high scoring Frost to just nine, in the Wolverines' 88-74 victory. The win clinched second place in the Big Ten for Michigan, while raising its season mark to 20-5. FLU HINDERS EFFORT Thincluds set records fast break. ' ment," cautioned Borders "and' Numerous Wildcat turnovers I'm not thinking about Western, and the inconsistency of their! I'm just thinking about Central. offense, forced the play into The tournament can be ours if the hands of the Wolverines. we play smart ball."j ----- full court PRESS { 1 i i By MARK WHITNEY The Michigan track team set three new varsity records onits way to a strong showingin the Wolverine Invitational at the Track and Tennis Building last night. The Michigan shuttle - hurdle relay team of Arnett Chisholm, Kevin Briggs, Don Wheeler and C:huck Crouther easily wrn the} event with a time of 28.3 sec- onds. As well as a new school, record, coach Jack Harvey said it is the fastest time in the na- tion this year. Bill Donakowski smashed the varsity mile record by 2.3 sec- onds in a very exciting race.' Even though he took second place to Western Michigan's Dan Landman, Donakowski set the new school mark at 4:04.6. T h e sophomore distance man usually runs the three- mile. After the meet, he said, "It was more of a confidence thing. I thought I could run at least 4:06. I wanted to get into something shorter, and get my speed up." His time easily qualifies for the NCAA indoor championships at Cobo in March, but he doesn't think he'll run it. The third record fell as Mike McGuire blazed in the two-mile. The sophomore from Farming- ton, Michigan broke his own record of 8:47.1 and the new one sits at 8:44.8. Freshman Jack, Sinclair took second with an j impressive time of 9:02.0. Aside from the new records, there were other strong Wol- verine performances. In the 60- yard dash, Doug Hennigar took second and Chisholm fourth, with times of 6.2 and 6.3 sec- I onds, respectively. Rob Lytle ran a respectable 6.5. The mile relay team of Harlan Huckleby, Crouther, Dave Furst and Dave Wil- liams took off to an early lead, then held off EMU at the end to win with a 3:14.2 clocking. EMU's time of 3:15.0 qualified them for the March championships. Other Michigan winners were Abe Butler in the triple jump, Steve Elliot in the 1000-yard run, Williams in the 600, and Hennigar in the 300. Prior to this meet, there was speculation that the flu would! really h u r t the Wolverines. Coach Harvey said after thej meet, "The flu did hurt us. Jeff McLeod and Andy Johnson didn't run at all. Jim Gracef ran, but not very well, and Rob Lytle was going to run the 300 and 60, but wound up only run- ning the 60." When asked if other teams were having the same prob- Attc iiic L wa Cl UIM-p tu lem, Harvey mentioned a cou- ple. "Central Michigan had itLmg pretty bad, they were hurting. Eastern had a little, but not!e very bad at all." He was quite pleased with the over-all re- sults. The meet was a tune-un for many of the teams present. The Wolverines travel to Madison, Wisconsin next week for the Big Ten championships. East- ern, W e s t e r n and Central, among others are preparing for Central Collegiate champion- ships, also next week. One meet official, comment- ing on the great number of peo- ple who scratched out of many events, said, "Most of these teams have big meets coming up. Some have a problem with illness. There was no need for most of them to go all out." LF Blue day in Iowa .. . ... Wolverines devastating' By BILL STEIG Special To the Daily You could almost feel sorry for Iowa's players and fans yesterday. They must have felt the confused panic of somebody out for a stroll who suddenly finds himself in the middle of a driving range. The Hawkeyes were hemmed in and forced to surrender be- fore they could even try out their game plan. Michigan, playing lately with the accellerated precision of a Beethoven symphony at 78 rpm, simply wasn't going to be stopped. The Wolverines' 20th win was very similar to their last five: no contest. The Hawkeyes didn't expect such a rout at all. They certainly had reason for optimism. Until yesterday, they had these crazy daydreams about winning their last four in a row, tying Michigan for second place and riding into the NCAA's with the gas pedal on the floor. Of course, the dream was only slightly more probable than Richard Nixon's re-election this November, but they kept it in the backs of their minds, just in case .. . They had other things going for them too: Michigan had been know to let down, Steve Grote was sick and there would be a field house full of some of the loudest, craziest sports fans in the country. But now, the Hawks must be wondering if they can even make it to the NIT. "We were surprised," said Scott Thompson, who kept cool enough to lead all scorers with 25. "They came on much stronger defensively than the time we played them in Ann Arbor. They forced us out of our game. "They're known for their quickness and speed, so we came out using a zone and slowed the game down. But they just slowed down too, and played a good, patient offense." The "slow, patient offense" kicked the Wolverines into a quick seven-point lead and forced Iowa into a more aggressive ball-chasing man-to-man, but that didn't work either. "They mixed up their defense," said Michigan coach Johnny Orr. "But we go at 'em no matter what." Soon the racing Wolverines left the Hawkeyes far behind. Yes, you really could feel some sympathy for the Iowa folks. They don't hold back when it comes to sports. Iowa City is in an, athletic tizzy this weekend with yesterday's game, an important bowling tournament, and the Big Ten wrestling championship, keeping the fans happy. Motels and bars are filled and buzzing with sports talk. A capacity crowd filled the field house yesterday, and almost everyone stayed till the bitter end. The fans were as loud as any in the country, and they would even get excited when the home team would score a couple baskets in a row to cut Michi- gan's lead to twenty or so. But their team was in an unfortunate situation-they ran into a Michigan team with a purpose. The Wolverines (ranked from 13th in the Associated Press to sixth in the Sporting News) haven't played a bad game since losing to Illinois a month ago. They plan on continuing the pattern all the way to the NCAA finals. "The way they played today," said Thompson, "they're one of the top teams in the nation. We just played Indiana. Each team is unbelievably strong but in different ways. Michigan has the outside shooting, speed and quickness, while BJLUE SPLITS AGAIN Gophers drub deekers SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL MICHIGAN 88, Iowa 74 Minnesota 71, Michigan State 61 Purdue 81, Illinois 62 Northwestern 87, Ohio State 78 Marquette 8.1, Notre Dame 75 Oregon St., 73, washington 64 Detroit 89, Loyola 85 Cincinnati 89 San Francisco 88 (OT) 'Wake Forest 98, North Carolina St. 96 Rutgers 103, Long Island U. 87 North Carolina 91, Duke 71 Alabama 93, Tennessee 90 (20T) Central Michigan 66, Kent State 63 Toledo 83, Eastern Michigan 72 western Michigan 93, Ball State 67 Miami, Ohio 76, Ohio U. 75 Providence 67, St. Johns 53 Maryland 81, Virginia 73 NBA New York 93, Chicago 85 washington 92, Phoenix 89 NHL NY Islanders 4, Chicago 1 Montreal 3, Atlanta 2 Pittsburgh 5, Vancouver 4 Los Angeles 3, Detroit 1 Toronto 4, California 2 Kansas City 4 Buffalo 4 St. Louis 2, Philadelphia 2 Minnesota 5, NY Rangers 3 WCHA Notre Dame 10, Duluth 4 Michigan Tech 9, Wisconsin 6 Michigan St. 6, Colorado 4 By PAUL CAMPBELL Special To The DailyI MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesotat scored three goals in the first one and a half minutes of the second period and went on to thrash an uninspired Michigan, team 7-3 last night in ancientf Williams Arena. Down 1-0 after the first stanza, the Gophers blazed out of the!E locker r o o m. Tom Gorence opened the offensive barrage :431 seconds into the period, skating around two Michigan defense-1 men before slippingthe puck past Michigan goalie Rick Pal- mer. GOPHER FRESHMAN D o n I1 Madson scored his second goal of the series half a minute later,1 when teammate Warren Miller1 took a shot that was deflected in front of Palmer. In the scramble that ensued, Palmer' lost sight of the puck and Mad- son snuck in and scooped it by! his right side.j Before the announcer could1 finish telling the wildly scream- ing crowd of 7,648 who had as- sisted on Madson's goal, stellar1 sophomore defenseman Reed. Learson completed the incredi- ble Gopher rally. Breaking free at the center red line, Larson unleashed one of his lethal slap shots. Palmer appeared to lose sight of the rising disc, and be- fore you could say "golly gee whiz" Minnesota had a 3-1 lead.j Michigan couldn't m a n a g e even one shot on Minnesota goalie Tom Mohr until 8:39 of the period. But Dave DeBol made the shot count, beating! Mohr cleanly after stealing the puck behind the goal. "And I think our guys showed a lot of class by keeping Mich- igan from tying the game." The 5-3 score after the second period was not indicative of the Gophers' domination of the game. They could have easily scored half a dozen more goals in the period: they hit the goal posts at least that many times. G o p h e r goalie Mohr didn't make his first save of the period until 12 minutes had exnired. "THEY DOMINATED us in every phase of the game," mut- tered dejected Michigan coachI By RICK BONINO special To The Daily IOWA CITY - Michigan's three seeded wrestlers, Mark Churella, Amos Goodlow and Mark Johnson, as well as surpris- ing Brad Holman, advanced to the semi-final round of the Big Ten wrestling championships with wins here in the 2-Day. Big Ten Wrestling Championship before over 4,000 fans and one ominously circling, uninvited bat. Iowa's Hawkeyes flew as high as the furred intruder, taking a large early lead. The Wolverines only managed sixth place, trailing Wisconsin, Minnesota, Northwestern, and MSU. Rich Valley and Ed Neiswender lost to high seeds in rat- tail matches, while Greg Haynes, Rich Lubell, Harold King and John Ryan all lost quarter-final matches to drop into the wrestlebacks. The Wolverines' second-seeded 150-pounder Churella, rou- tinely handled Purdue senior Andy Watt, 14 to 4. Watt had cut Churella's lead to 6 to 4 midway through the second period, but a reversal and a near-fall put the match out of Watt's reach. In tomorrow's semi-final, Churella tackles Minnesota's Bob Schandle, one of the freshman's two conference conquerers this season. Goodlow, the fourth seed at 126, came on strong with a 15-5 major superior decision over Minnesota's John Hughes. Goodlow next meets Wisconsin's ton-seeded Jack Reinwand, who defeated Goodlow, 12 to 11, in a fast, exciting match in Ann Arbor two weeks ago. Michigan cantain Johnson waited a mere 12 seconds before taking down Northwestern's Terry Flannervand added eight more points during his consistent performance to down the Wildcat sonhomore, 10 to 2. The Wolverine second seed next faces Wisconsin's Ron Jeidy, whom he gamely hung on to tie, 2 to 2, after suffering a slight concussion midway through their dual meet match two weeks ago. Sophomore 158-ounder Brad Holman pulled off a five point play (takedown and near fall) in the waning seconds of the second period and added two third period reversals to upset Minnesota's third-seeded Jim Andre, 10-3. Holman moves into a semi-final match with Iowa's Mike McGivern, a number two seedwhodealt Holman. a4-0 loss in Iowa's dual meet shutout of Michigan. The other Wolverines were not as fortunate. Neiswander (167) gave Minnesota's Larry Zilverberg a scare, leading 5-2 early in the second period, but the defending 158-pound Big Ten cham) methodically out-muscled the lanky Pennsylvanian for the pin. Valley, the senior who surged late in the season to take Michigan's tournament berth ,at 142, lost a thriller to Ohio State's Andy DiSadito, 3-2. DiSadito defeated Valley by the same score in dual meet competition. Johnson; who had pinned King in a dual meet, didn't prove as dominant this time around but still superior de- cisioned King, 11-0. At 118, Haynes, who won 3-1 in earlier Big Ten action, gave Illinois' third-seeded Gary Matlock a challenge before succumbing, 6-4. The Wolverines' little big man, John Ryan, fought valiantly for seven minutes but suffered a pin at the hands of the con- MINNESOTA defenseman Bill Dan Farrell. "Nothing was any Baker put the Gophers back up good tonight." by two goals at 11:06. Left Michigan's only lead of the alone in front of the goal, he night came in the middle of the leisurely pushed the puck past first period when Wolverine Pat Palmer on a low drive. Hughes picked up an errant Kris Manery tallied on a pow- pass at the Gopher blue line and er play less than a minute later, slipped in shot from the right but Pat Thippen made sure the face off circle. Both teams had Wolverines wouldn't knot the many more scoring opportuni- score when he scored on a re- ties in the period, but simply bound to up the Minnesota lead could not convert. to 5-3. Tom Younghans gave the "Those three goals were a Gophers a 6-3 lead at 7:55 of great psychological lift," said the third period when he scored Minnesota coach Herb Brooks. while his team was one man h. Ii Yc VnI .ahnnc' hird Furlow sets record From Wire Service Reports P'1 Minnesota, led by Mike Thompson and" Ray Williams, outscored visiting Michigan WEST LAFAYETTE - Walter Jordan led State 18-8 midway in the second half to notch all scorers with 24 points and Purdue moved a 71-61 Big Ten basketball victory yesterday into a tie for third place in the Big Ten yes- afternoon, but the Gophers failed to stop terday with an 81-62 conference victory over Terry Furlow from becoming the greatest Illinois. scorer in Spartan history. The Boilermakers, up by only 35-31 at the half, broke the game open in the second half, Furlow, the Big Ten's scoring leader, was shooting a blistering 69 per cent during the held to 16 points but that was two more points period. Purdue finished with a 50 per cent than he needed to break Michigan State's accuracy mark for the game. career scoring record, formerly held by Mike r . Robinson. N'western: 87-78 The 6-foot-5 senior forward from Flint EVANSTON. Ill.Bob Svete scored a Ca- Slort. IT was Youngnans tnra shorthanded goal against Mich- igan this year. MADSONeAND Manery ex- changed tallies in the waning seconds of the game to account for the other scoring. Twenty - one penalties w e r e I ference's top-seeded heavyweight, called in the contest. The ref- Ryan, who usually wrestles at 167 erees whistled infractions 51 heavyweight due to injuries. times in the wild two game. series.:<:": >:.:::":::;:.:; .. Only one major fight broke1 DAILY OFFICIAI out during the game, but it re- sulted in game misconducts for Sunday, February 29 atu b o t h players involved. Mich- Day calendar Se igan's Greg Fox seemed to get s TV Center: The Cinema: The pi the ettr ofGoper Tm Yc- creenwriter, ww~r TV, channel 4, n the better of Gopher Tom Yac- n "C kel in their third period scuffle, wuOM- states of the Union-bi-!u but he will be sorely missed in centennial series featuring Oregon, se next Friday's game against Msi School: Trombone stu- "C Michigan State. 1 dents recital - Recital Hall, 2:30 gu First Period pm: Symphony Band, wind En- R scoring, 1. Mich, Hughes (Fox semble, Hill Aud., 3 pm: Faculty Klo --' 1 9/lChamber Concert, Rackham Aud.. "n, Wisconsin's Gary Sommer.. or 177, was forced to go at L BULLETIN ore / Linguistics: S. K. Sharm- n, Yale. "Linguistics as a Part of miotics," Lec. Rm. 1, MLB 4 Mu. Biological Sciences: Ernest Small, lassification of Cannabis (Maril- ana) and the Law: Science and mantics," 1025 ANGELL, 4 pm. A4nthropology: Gary Witherspoon. ulture in Language, and Lan- age in Culture," E. Conf. Rm., ackham, 4 pm.' Physics. J. Chanowski: J. Stone,