Page Ten Touching all the bases ____________________Bill Stieg Johnny Orr 4... ... Digger Phelps 0 LOUISVILLE THEY DID IT again! There's something about Notre Dame that brings out the best in Michigan basketball. Digger Phelps, that suave, smooth man with every hair in place for the TV cameras, must be tear- ing out that hair just thinking about Michigan. He hasn't beaten Michigan and Johnny Orr in four tries now and that's enough to make him wonder if he has been doing it wrong all these years. You were supposed to find the biggest, strongest high schoolers you can, right? You put green shoes on them, stitch "Notre Dame" on their jersey and watch them grow to incredible heights fed by one of the most powerful prop- aganda machines this side of the Great Wall of China. Well, Michigan didn't fall for that. The little Wolverines ran circles around the heftier Irish ... when it counted. It's hard to figure out these Michigan players. They can lose to such mediocrities as Illinois, or match the best teams step for step, depending on their mood. Last night, the mood was right. Taught all week to hate Notre Dame, the Wolverines entered the game sky high and had no intention of coming down until the celebrating was over early this morning. It was a question of how badly they wanted to do it. Staton comes through again And they did it. They did it as a team, too, a truly im- pressive group effort that featured several heroes. If possible, forget for a moment Ricky Green's incredible offensive per- formance in the second half and Wayman Britt's gutsy defense and hot-handed offense that kept Michigan together all game long. And consider Tom Staton. This guy is a freshman, and he was thrown into the ring with one of Notre Dame's legitimate stars, Adrian Dantley. Dantley, a mammoth bone-cruncher who is as easy to stop as a freight train, proved devastating inside. Wayman Britt, defender extraordinaire, fouled out trying to stop him. So in came Staton. He flew to the hoop for a twisting layup to put Michigan up, 66-64. He stole a Dantley pass and broke away for a layup to give his team a 73-70 lead at 2:39. He lost the ball once but streaked downeourt to save a sure basket. He outjumped the tallest of the Irish for a key rebound in the next moment. And, oh yes-Dantley didn't score in the last four minutes. Now freshmen just don't do this. Not in the national tourna- ment. And not against Notre Dame, for goodness sake. 'A stupid pass' "Staton did a hell of a job," said Britt in the noisy Michigan locker room. "He came in there loose, almost too loose for a while. He was pretty well relaxed, and that's important. But it was the team defense that made the difference." Staton agreed. "I had great weak side help. Every time he (Dantley) had the bal, we had two men on him. The coaches told me to force him to the middle because that was where the help was." Staton didn't get any help on the clutch steal, though- except from Dantley, that is. "He just threw a stupid pass," smiled Staton. "He thoughtY he could lay in an easy pass, maybe because I'm a freshman.1 It was like he was throwing it to me.1 "I was looking for it all the way. He just looked at his man,I and I could see it coming." So exhilerating was the victory that even talkative assistant coach Bill Frieder was almost at a loss for words. "Let's just say that it's a pleasure to beat Notre Dame and Digger Phelps. Ever since he made that comment about Johnny Orr's idea of defense ('beating you 103-98'), we've looked forward to beating them. "Staton was outstanding. He's a Wayman Britt type player. He'll be a great star for Michigan." Britt wasn't really surprised at the win or at Staton's greatf job. "We just ran them down, tired them out," said Britt. 1 Did he help Staton much? "I knew he would be coming in for me. I just told him, 'Do it, baby.' " He certainly did.t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 19, 1976 Clutc!hlast minute free t rw stop Dant ley-ed Notre ame Face Tigers in regional final (Continued from Page 1) Notre Dame inbounded the ball But p r e s s u r i n g defense with 2:43 to go, Michigan led, brought about five Notre Dame 71-70. turnovers in those last four Tom Staton broke suddenly to minutes. Hubbard's second steal the ball, stole it and scored to and subsequent layup of that , put the Irish in a hole. stretch brought the Wolverines; to within one at halftime, 41-40. AFTER WILLIAMS drove for The second half was played at two, the Wolverines came down, perhaps the most furious pace waiting for a good shot. With of any Michigan game this sea- 1:34 remaining, they got one, son.but as Green drove the base- WITH THREE fouls each on Grote,Hubbard and Wayman Britt, the Blue came out in a zone which the Irish shot over and under to increase their lead to 60-52 with 11:36 remain- ing. But jumpers by Britt and Green, two free throws each by Green and John Robinson and a twisting Green drive gave the Blue their first lead of the half with 9:07 left. The two teams traded baskets for several minutes, and when line his foot edged out of bounds. His team endangered, Robin- son suddenly stole the ball and drove downcount. Pressured by Notre D a m e 's Bruce Flowers, Robinson stop-, ped and Flowers knocked t li e ball away. But Grote, who had injured his knee diving for a loose ball in the first half, scrambled after the ball and fed it back to Robinson. ROBINSON put up the shot, t i 1 i I was fouled, and then watched the ball hang on the rim for sev- eral moments before falng through. He converted the f*)ul shot for the three point olay. "They kept running the gameI play - a double pick on my man," said a tired but happy Robinson. "I just tried to antiri- pate it, and it paid off. Arid Grote hustled just great on tlhe play." The play gave the Blue a 76- 72 lead with 1:07 remaiaing. But Williams drove for a quick two, and when Ray Martin stole the ball from Staton with 43 sec- onds remaining, the Irish had a chance to tie. BUT STATON fouled Williams before he could shoot and the Notre Dame guard missed the first of the one-and-one. Staton grabbed the rebound and Mich- igan controlled the ball until Grote's free throws. The Wolverines survived the 31-point performance of All- A m e r i c a n Adrian Dantley, whose inside moves forced Britt to foul out with 8:46 to go. "Adrian Dantley is the best offensive player we've seen all year," said Orr. "He charges a little, I think, but when you're that good I guess.you deserve some breaks." "I don't want to bad mouth anybody," said Britt, "but some of those (foul) calls could have gone the other way. But we won the game, and that's all that matters." "Theydidn't quit," said a be- leaguered Dantley. "They de- served to win the game." The Wolverines face Missouri Saturday at 12:15 p.m. for the Midwest Regional title. Tickets will be available at the arena in Louisville for $7 apiece. Irish eyes are weeping, MICHIGAN FG FT R Britt 6-9 0-0 3 Robinson 5-13 5-6 8 Hubbard 5-13 1-2 10 Green 8-16 4-4 4 Grote 4-10 6-6 4 Staton 3-6 0-1 2 Baxter 1-5 0-0 1 Hardy 0-1 0-0 1 Bergen 0-0 0-0 0 Team Rebounds 3 TOTALS 32-73 16-19 36 Halftime score: Notre Dame 4 Michigan 40 NOTRE DAME AP Photo RICKEY GREEN (24) dumps the ball off under the basket after Notre Dame's Ray Martin cut off his baseline drive. The Irish could not stop Green all the time last night in Michigan's thrilling victory. F T FG G2 15{Flowers 3-6 4 11 Dantley 12-19 1 20 Knight 1-4 5 14 Martin 1-2 0 2 Williams 6-13 0 0 Batton 2-8 0 0 Paterno 5-9 Rencher 1-1 20 80 Carpenter 0-0 1, Team Rebounds TOTALS 31-62 FT 0-0 7-8 0-0 0-1 3-4 2-2 0-0 2-3 0-0 14-18 R 9 5 5 2 13 4 0 0 2 42 F T 5 6 1 31 4 2 5 2 3 15 2 6 2 10 0 4 1 0 23 76 MARQUETTE SLIPS BY WESTERN: 'U By United Press International BATON ROUGE, La. - Two free throws by Tom Abernathy with 14 seconds "left last night finally blunted an Alabama rally and pushed Indiana to a 74-69 win over the Crimson Tide, sending the undefeated and No. 1 Hoosiers into the NCAA Mid- east regional finals. Alabama had trailed by as many as 12 in the second half, but rushed back to take the lead at 69-68 with 3:45 remain- ing on a 12-foot jump shot by Keith McCord.j Indiana regained the leadj with 1:54 left on a bucket byI All-American Scott May, but the Hoosiers did not wrap up the game until Abernathy hit both ends of a one-and-one foul attempt that increased the Indiana lead to 72-69. Bob Wilkerson made two more free throws with six seconds left to provide the final margin. May scored 25 points to lead Indiana to its 29th win without a loss this season. He helpedI the Hoosiers jump to a 9-0 lead rms IDailv ipronts NIGHT EDITORS: MARCIA KATZ SCOTT LEWIS over seventh-ranked Alabam to start the game and kept In diana in control for much o the contest. But the Crimson Tide cam back on the shooting of cente Leon Douglas and guard T. R Dunn. Douglas, however, was hel, in check until the final rush b; the Crimson Tide and finishe with only 12 points. Dunn hit 1 to lead Alabama in scoring. ** * Western succumbs BATON ROUGE, La.-Spark plug guard Butch Lee and Mat rice "Bo" Ellis helped No. bac k Marquette hold off stubbor Western Michigan last night, 6; 57, and send the Warriors int a long awaited battle in th NCAA Mideast regional fina against top-ranked Indiana. Western Michigan overcam a typically swarming Marquett defense to stay even with the Warriors and held the lead a 51-50 with seven minutes left. a But in quick succession - Marquette came up with bas- f kets from Lee, Ellis, Jerome Whitehead and Earl Tatum to e boost the Warriors lead to Te ide n 58-53. 2- The Broncos came back to o reduce the deficit to one point e at 58-57, but Ellis hit a key Is bucket just under two minutes remaining to send Marquette in- e to Saturday's regional final e showdown with the Hoosiers. e Western Michigan was paced at by 6-8 junior center Tom Cut- ter, who scored 21 points, eight of those came in the final 10 minutes. Jeff Tyson added 18 to make the Western Michigan scoring effort an almost strictly two-man show. Mizzou trips Tech; face Blue Saturday By KATHY HENNEGHAN Special to the Daily LOUISVILLE, - Missouri, the Big Eight champion, de- feated Texas Tech, 86-75, last night in the first game of the regional semi-finals. Texas Tech saw its chances of victory dwindle when center Rick Bullock fouled out with 8:47 remaining in the contest. Bullock was the mainstay of Tech attack with 23 points and 14 rebounds. Tech put on a zone press and cut the Missouri lead to seven, 77-70, with 4:20 remaining but it was to no avail. Missouri scored five unanswered points to pull ahead 82-70, and Tech could not come back. Tech shot a miserable 35.6 percent from the floor while Missouri connected on 53.6 per cent. The Tigers burst out to an early lead, 45-36 at the half, scoring 10 straight points in the second period. Missouri was keyed by Willie Smith a 6-2 guard similar to Michigan's own Ricky Green. Smith hit for thirty points to lead all scorers and dished out seven assists. His total included a 7 for 9 effort from the floor in the first half. Smith had plenty of scoring help from his teammates as Jim Kennedy and Tim Anderson had . 15 points apiece. Missouri will now face Michigan in the regional final. Texas Tech closed it's season with a 25-6 record, while the victory raised the Tigers' record to 25-5. ".:...::V:.Y t::...::":::{":tl::":" J"" iJ:":i' ::'1:.....:Y::::... ...........::t:""J:::. :J:: f:'>...... ARIZONA UPSETS NEVADA IN OT Rutgers, VMI advance I SCORES II Team play sparks exciting comeback MICHIGAN HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL Quarterfinals Class A Saginaw 64, GrandsRapids Creston 50' Pontiac Central 48, Detroit Denby 47 Detroit Catholic 90, Detroit Mackenzie 67 Lansing Everett 59, Detroit Northeastern 58 Class B River Rouge 80, Royal Oak Shrine 45 Saginaw Buena Vista 70, Ironwood 53 Flint Beecher 72, Tecumseh 63 Coldwater 57, Grand Rapids west Catholic 52 Class C Buchanan 91, Shelby 67 Stockbridge 60, Pontiac Catholic 57 Unionville-Sebewaing 88, Beaverton 66 N 66 Roscommon 40 ': By The Associated Press The Keydets, after trailing s GREENSBORO, N.C. - R e - DePaul 33-31 at the half, built b serves Abdel Anderson a n d a 62-51 lead with 2:20 to play. t Steve Hefele combined for 33 DePaul, which had scored two points - picking up the slack points in 7 minutes, then tt when All-American Phil Sel- strung together the last 11 of g lers scored only eight - to lead regulation for a tie at 62, bring- R unbeaten Rutgers to a 93-79 vic- ing on overtime. tory over Connecticut last night Randy Hooks' basket with four in the NCAA East Regional seconds left tied the score for' basketball semifinals. the Blue Demons. The Scarlet Knights, ranked the e K overtime R ppar trp fourth nationally, won their 30th theaKetsaheaddedhtwdi m awying basket and then added two game in a row by pulling away;free throws for a four-point r from the Huskies with a 9-0 lead which they never sur- fi spurt early in the second half rendered. n for a 71-57 lead. Fifty-seven personals w e r e s Sellers, scoreless in t h e called, 35 against DePaul, which L first half, hit only four of lost five men on fouls. Among V 13 shots as he matched his them was Ron Norwood, who b season law, made against Co-!----- --- - lumbia. Freshman Anderson led Rut added 14. Ed Jordan and Mike Daveny each scored 18 and Hollis Copeland 16 for Rutgers. T[ . .#.- - 1 co )el im : N er le he L na -all re 'g tu as re al ored 23 points and sparked the dated rally that forced over- ne. VMI, the only unranked team; win last night, will face Rut- rs Saturday for the Eastern gional Crown and a berth in semi-finals in Philadelphia. * * * egas vanishes LOS ANGELES - Guard Her-f an Harris led a second-h a 1 f ly nd then hit four clutch e throws in overtime last ht as 15th-ranked Arizona inned third-ranked Nevada- s Vegas 114-109 in the NCAA st Regional college basket- 1 tournament. Harris brought the Wildcats back from a three-point de- ficit in regulation time with two cvlutch fallaway j u m p shots. Then his free throw with 14 seconds to play tied the game at 103-103 and sent it into overtime. In the overtime, Arizona con- nected on 11 of 15 free throw attempts - without scoring a basket - and held off the Reb- els, who could hit but four bas- kets. The wild game began with cool Arizona controlling t h e tempo behind guard Jim Rap- pis. The Wildcats went to the dresing room at half-time with a four-point lead. By RICH LERNER Special to the Daily LOUISVILLE - "We aren't going to wor- ry about Missouri until tomorrow. We're just going to relax and think about tonight," said Michigan basketball coach Johnny Orr, after the Wolverines' win over Notre Dame in the NCAA Midwest Regional tournament last night. Michigan faces Missouri tomorrow in the regional final, but last night the Tigers stood far from the Wolverines' minds. The Michi- gan players and coaches alike savored the 80-76 victory over the Fighting Irish with delight. NO SINGLE play or player stands out in the game as being exciting, with each Michigan player making a generous contri- bution to the team win. Every starter scored in double figures. Captain and defensive whiz Wayman Britt had his hands full with Notre Dame All- American Adrian Dantley on the Irish end of the floor. But Britt, the senior from Flint, shot a torrid 5-6 from the outside in the first half and kept the Wolverines within striking range when Notre Dame grabbed an 11 point lead. After suffering through a dismal first half, Rickey Green played the best ten min- badly that you get tight. I was driving a little more aggressive." In the more second half and I was STEVE GROTE erased the memory of a missed crucial free throw at Indiana by cashing in on both ends of a one-and-one ,free throw situation to give the Wolverines a four point lead with 27 seconds left. "Dantley was talking to some of our play- ers and laughing at us in the first half when they were winning," said Grote. "So I told everybody at halftime that we would laugh last-and we did," he grinned. Steals by Tom Staton and John Robinson within 90 seconds of each other dealt crucial blows to Irish fortunes. The pilfers enabled the Wolverines to grab a four point lead with less than two minutes to play. "I just kind of laid back and he (Dantley) threw it out there for me. He just threw such a 'diddily-doo' pass," said Staton with a nod of amazement. STATON CLAMPED down on Dantley late in the game, having taken over the assign- ment when Britt fouled out with 8:46 to play. Dantley scored only two points in the last eight minutes. "Those steals are what borught us back GU2' /!9,0 . Negaunee w, iuc mu U Class D Anderson also grabbed 11 r e - 1. wC llt Maple City Glen Lake 63, od. McBain Northern Christian 62 bud Harbor Springs 77. North Dickinson 68 1M rm By The Associated Press Detroit East Catholic 72, " tim5 NEW YORK-Melvin Watkins hit the go-ahead Gallen 69 (OT) GREENSBORO - Will Bynum basket with 30 seconds left and North Carolina- Detroit DePorres 80, Fowler 5 scored 22 points as unranked Charlotte's Cinderella team held on down the NIT Semifinals Virginia Military blew an 11- stretch to upset North Carolina State 80-79 last UNC-Charlotte 80, N.C state 79 point lead in the closing min- Kentucky 79, Providence 78 utes, then came back in over- nightind join tu natena. - NHL time to trim 17th-ranked DePaul National Invitation Tournament. Detroit 6, St. Louis 3 71-6 lt im k DThe Wolfpack had a crack at winning the ,S.Philadelphia 3, Vancouver 2716latng. Boston 5, Kansas City 2 erRon Carter added 21 points game in the final seconds but Phil Spence and C NBA for VMI, which got four clutch Glenn Sudhop missed inside shots to preserve Washington 110, Kansas City 102 overtime points from Curt UNC-Charlotte's win. Phoenix 106, Detroit 100 Repparte. The 49ers, who earlier in the season lost a :":...::::;.::..:":.:::::; ::;::: ::::::.. 63-60 game to N.C. State, had taken a 70-63 lead with 5:35 left on a shot by Watkins, before NCAA RESULTS the wild finish in front of a roaring crowd of 11,444 at Madison Square Garden. THE WOLFPACK, with star forward Kenny Carr and guard Al Green on the bench with Eist iidetist five fouls, relied on Phil Spence in the closing moments. Spence hit a basket with 5:00 left rC.C harlotte,I byone intI Wildcats win at buzzer NEW YORK-Larry Johnson scored a field goal in the last second to provide Kentucky with a dramatic 79-78 basketball victory over scrappy Providence in the semifinals of the NIT last night. The Wildcats earned a berth in Sunday's fi- nals at Madison Square Garden against North Carolina-Charlotte. JOHNSON'S MAD dash for the winning basket capped the most exciting game of the NIT. He roared down the court after taking a feed from center Mike Phillips for the winning bucket after Providence seemed to have the game locked up with a 78-77 lead with seven seconds left. Providence had wiped out two large Kentucky lDads to get back in the game. The Wildcats led by 18 points in the first half and again by _ I I