Page Sixteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 20, 1977 Netters take 1st round lead By PAUL CAMPBELL Michigan, seeking its tenth straight Big Ten Men's Tennis title, made a large stride in that direction in the first day of competition yesterday by ad- vancing all three doobles teams and five of six singles entries to today's semifinals. Michigan with 28 points op- ened up a five point lead over surprising Indiana. Wisconsin was in third place with 21 points, with Michii'an State gathering 11 points for a dis- tant fourth. T H E FIRST DOUBLES match between Michigan's team of Jeff Etterbeek - Jud Shrofier and Wisconsin's Mike Barr and Al HUguelet provided the most excitement of yester- day's action. The first set came down to a nine-point tiebreaker. Wis- consin held service throughout ±, win 5-4 and take the set 7-6. Bit Ftterbeek and Shanfler, who were iindefeated during the conference season, came back to take the second and third sets 6-3, 6-1 and move into the semis against the fourth seeded team from Minnesota. E T T E R B E E K also was an easy winner at first singles, cruising into the semis by roasting Northwestern's J i m Bosse in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4. Shaufler had a somewhat harder time in his singles match, but prevailed over Grant Helgeson of Minnesota 6-1, 7-5. The fourth-seeded freshman will face Kevin Mc- Nulty of MSU in tomorrow's match. McNulty reached the semis by upsetting the number one seed in the second singles, Jim Flower of Ohio State, by scores of 7-6, 2-6, 6-1. Another first seed to fall was Mike Trautner of Minnesota. He was picked to win fifth singles, but Randy Druz of In- diana upset the prognosticators and Trautner, 6-4, 6-1. OTHER MICHIGAN players to advance were Brad Holland at third singles, Mark Freed- man at fourth singles, and Jack Neinken at fifth singles. The other two Wolverine dou- bles teams also progressed faultlessly. Holland and Nein- ken took two matches in straight sets to move on. Ow- ens and Freedman duplicated that feat in third doubles, los- ing only ten games while win- ning both matches. The only Michigan player who will not be participating further in the title race is freshman Scott Seeman. Un- seeded at sixth singles, he won his first match easily but was edged by Iowa's fourth-seeded Greg Anderson in the quarter- finals, 6-0, 2-6, 7-5. SEEMAN AND the rest of yesterday's losers will be plac- ed into the playback round, which starts today at 9 a.m. As long as they keep winning, they can play as many as three more matches and gain as many as four points for their respective teams, But it will take more than a few surprises to prevent Michi- gan from continuing its domi- nation of tennis in the Big Ten. The Wolverines have won 18 of the last 22 crowns. , ONLY SECOND - PLACE Indiana could come close to matching Michigan's number of qualifiers. The Hoosiers ad- vanced two doubles teams and five singles entries. Iowa and Ohio State are tied for fifth in the team standings with 10 points. Illinois and Min- nesota are right behind - with nine, while Northwestern with three and Purdue with two round out the field. The singles semifinals will be held at 1 p.m. with the doubles matches starting at 3 p.m. Admission will be $2. $p i't4 "ifthe (bdy4 Nissalke top mentor NEW YORK '-Tom Nissalke, who guided the Hlouston Rockets to the Central Division championship, was named the National Basketball Association's Coach of the Year for the 1976-77 season yesterday. Nissalke edged Jerry West of Los Angeles 26-21 in the balloting among 66 sports writers and broadcasters in league cities. West's Lakers took the Pacific Division title and had the best regular-season rectird. In his first.year at dIouston, Nissalke helped the Rockets improve their record from 40-42 in 1975-76 to 49-33 this season. He previously coached Seattle of the NBA and Dallas, San Antonio and Utah of the American Basketball Association, When informed of the honor, Nissalke gave credit to Rockets President Ray Patterson and former Sonics General Manager Bob Houbregs. "Both of them had faith in me," said the 42-year-old Nissalke. "When I got fired as coach at Seattle, Bob spoke up strongly and tried to convince management that it was a mistake. He hired me from the ABA and stuck with me even though it contributed to his eventually losing his job. Patterson describes Nissalke as "well-disciplined, hungry and knowledgeable. He's as hard on himself as anyone I've known. He's highly disciplined, well organized and a tireless worker--and those trademarks have carried over to our play- ers." Besides Nissalke and West, nine other coaches received votes in the Coach of the Year balloting-Ed Badger of Chicago, Hubie Brown of Atlanta, Larry Brown of Denver, Tom Heinsohn of Bos- ton, Phil Johnson of Kansas City, Bob Leonard of Indiana, Kevin Loughery of the New York Nets, Doug Moe of San Antonio and Jack Ramsay of Portland. --AP Howe top hurler Michigan ace Steve Howe is the leading pitcher in the Big Ten, according to official stats released thin week. Howe's conference ERA of 0.96 ties him with Ohio State's Paul SemalI. But the Wolverine freshman sports a perfect 4-0 record, while Semall was beaten by the Wolverines to put his slate at 3-1. Two other Michigan pitchers are listed in the", top 15. Craig McGinnis has held conference foes to an average 1.3 runs per game to rank fourth. Teammate Steve Perry's 3.24 ERA puts him in twelfth. Both men have 3-0 records in the Big Ten. Northwestern shortstop Kurt Bruksch leads the individual bat- ting statistics with a .442 average. Greg Lane is the first Wol- verine on the list. The designated hitter has hit for a .391 average in 16 conference contests to place him seventh. Centerfielder Rick Leach (.383) in ninth place and third base- man-Dave Chapman (.319) tied for sixteenth round out Michi- gan's representatives in the top 25. ; League-leading Minnesota dominates the team stats, lead- ing both batting and pitching. The Gophers are batting .309 as a team, while their pitchers have surrendered an average of only 1.79 earned runs per game. Michigan is fourth in batting , at .282 and third in pitching with a 2.61 ERA. Michigan does lead the league in fielding, however, with a 966 average. The Wolverines have fewer errors (17), more assists (154), and more double plays (15) than any other Big Ten club. -DAILY SPORTS Newt's newcomers Michigan gymnastics coach Newt Loken announced a list of 13 student-athletes who will bolster the attack of the 1977 Big Ten runner-ups. Tom Staley from Arlington, Illinois and Darrell Yee from Farmington Harrison High School were state titlists in the rings this past winter, Two other newcomers. Harold Dardick of Oak Park, Illi- nois and John Rieckhoff of Trenton won their respective state titles on the pommel horse last season. "I feel very fortunate in landing some excellent rings and pommel horse men to replace our graduating seniors who excelled in'-those two events," Loken said. "I also have . some fine all- around men enrolling, so I'm ver' hancv with the new prospects and I'm looking forward to working with them for the next four years." -DAILY SPORTS ILLINOIS POSES THREAT: Blue thinclads defend title By DAVE RENBARGER With the most important track meet of the season on tap this weekend, Michigan coach Jack Harvey is talking in terms of near-certain defeat. Nisw, nobody has user accused Harvey of such things as cocki- ness or overconfidence, but, in his assessment of the 1977 Out- door Big Ten Track and Field Championships, t h e Wolverine boss has outdone himself. "On paper Illinois has the meet wrapped up," predicted Harvey of the two-day affair, which gets underway today in Bloomington. "I feel that Illi- nois will 'definitely win it un- less something goes wrong with their performances. No- body in the conference can match them in terms of per- sonnel." But it was just 11 weeks ago that the Wolverines nearly did match the flying Illini. The oc- casion was the indoor confer- ence championships, and the Il- linois thinclads edged their Blue counterparts by a single point, 58-57. This time around, Illinois should be in top physical shape again, while invaluable Mich- BILLBOARD Deadlines for team entries in men's and women's IM basketball and co-rec volley- ball have been extended until tonight, Friday, May 20, at 6:30. Entries can be turned in at the Hoover St. IM building. The fee is $15 per team. For more information, call 763- 3562. igan pole vaulter Jim Stokes is questionable at best. Bothered by a pulled hamstring muscle for six weeks, Stokes has not vaulted in practice or in com- petition since early April. "He's going to give a shot and we'll just have to see how it goes," said Harvey of Stokes, who finished second to the Illini's Doug Laz indoors. As the defending outdoor champions, the Wolverine thin- clads themselves do not share their coach's dim outlook re- garding the meet. "They all think that we'll win it for s u r e," said Harvey. "That's why I'm trying to down- play it so much." In his plotting of a possible upset, Harvey hopes that his balanced Wolverine squad will be enough to offset Illinois' dy- namic duo of Charlton Ehizuelen and Craig Virgin. Ehizuelen, a senior from Ni- geria, has already racked up nine Big Ten championships and three national titles, giv- ing the Illini almost sure points in both the long and triple jumps. Virgin, an All- American distance runner, is expected to retain his 5,000 meters crown. Michigah hopes will hinge on the performance of its talented hurdling q u a r t e t of Charles Crouther, Arnett Chisholm, Gary Hicks and Don Wheeler, accord- ing to Harvey. "We're really going to have to rack tip some big points there in order to be competi- tors, he said. The lone defending Wolver- ine champion in the field will be senior Greg Meyer, who won the 3,000 meter steeple- chase outdoors last year. As far as the rest of the con- ference is concerned, Harvey is expecting to receive stiffest competition from hosting Indi- ana, plus Wisconsin and Mich- igan State. "Despite their poor showing here last week (Michigan beat the Hoosiers 84-61 in a dual meet last Saturday), I expect Indiana to be a real factor," noted Hat vey. Although the Central Col- legiate Conference champion- ships still remain on the thin- clads schedule, the Big Ten meet is the real jewel in Har- vey's eyes. "We've been shooting for this one all year long," he com- mented. "The CCC's are sec- ondary to us at the-moment." Bi'rd flies again CINCINNATI (UPI) - Mark "The Bird" Fidrych, tuning up for his first regular season start next week, pitched seven bril- liant innings last night in the Detroit Tigers' 4-1 exhibition vic- tory over the Cincinnati Reds. FIDRYCH, WHO said he is 100 per cent recovered from a knee injury which occurred before the regular season began, pitch- ed the third through the ninth innings, giving up only four hits and one run. Working quickly and smoothly and looking like "The Bird" of old, Fidrych needed to make only 80 pitches throughout the seven innings. He struck out three and walked only one. Fidrych said he would make his first regular season start Friday, May 27, when the Tigers entertain Seattle. "I FEEL GREAT," declared Fidrych, last year's American League rookie of the year. "I think I was ready to start a regular season game a week ago. I'm anxious to get going." Fidrych said that missing the first part of this season "has been the most frustrating think in my life," Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE East East w L Pet. GB EsW L Pct. GB Pittsbuirgli 24 10 .76 - New York 10 14 .588 - Chicago 21 12 .636 2% Boston 18 14 .563 1 St. Louis 21 13 .618 3 altimore 17 14. .549 11/ Philadelphia 1,7 15 .531 6 Milwaukee 19 18 .514 2J2 Montr-eal 13 19 .400 10 Detroit 14 20 .412 5 New York 1t tO .394 10% Toronto 15 2t .405 6% Cleveland 12 tO .375 7 West west Las Antetes 28 9 .759- Minnesota 24 11 .686 - Cincinnati 15 19 .441 11'.. Chcago 21 tt .636 1 Houston 14 21 .401 13 Texas 18 14 .563 41/ San Francisco 13 21 .382 13 Kansas City 17 17 .50 662 Ian Diego 15 24 .38414l1/2 Oakland 17 19 .72 1% Atanta 13 34 .351 151,x Caiornia 16 t0 .444 89% Seattle 14 27 .341 13 Yesterday's Games , Yesterday's Games San Diego 5, Montreal 2 - Milwaukee 5, Toonto 3 Atlanta 6, Chicago0 Seattle 3, Oakland 0 Pittsburgh 6. Los Angeles 5 New York 9, Baltimore 1