Page Fift Wednesday, May S, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 5, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'M' recruiting: nothing yetu. teen By BILL STIEG One by one, they are slip- ping away. First Stuart House . . . then Ricky Brown . then Dave Colscott. These three players and sev- en other top-notch high-school- ers were on Michigan's re- cruiting list. Now all but one is signed - to other schools, that is. And Michigan is empty- handed. "We went after some great players," explained as- sistant coach Bill Frieder, "and we lost out on a few." -Nine, to be exact. Only one player, Brian Walker, is left from that original list, and he will probably go to North Caro- lina State. Here's the rundown on what happened to the oth- ers: * Stuart House went - to Washington State, where he can play forward for a black coach - two conditions he prefers. * Ricky Brown signed with Mississippi State, ostensibly to be closer to his Atlanta home. Blue, lrish * Steve Krafcisin will go to North Carolina. * Ed Scheuermann was abandoned early by Michigan, and went to Pitt. * Glen Grunwald signed on with Indiana. * Darrell Griffith will stay close to home at Louisville. * Jim Ellinghausen saw a chance to play at Ohio State and went there instead of Michigan. . Rich Branning thought he could start for Notre Dame, so he signed with Digger Phelps. * Dave Colscott will join Krafcisin at North Carolina. That leaves Walker, whose father would like him to join his brother at N.C. State and will most likely end up there. But the alarm hasn't sound-. ed in the basketball offices. Michigan lost only one start- er from its NCAA second- place squad, so replacements aren't immediately neces- sary. This year's recruiting Clash results are evidence of how talented Michigan is. "These are the best players in the country that we went after," says Frieder. "Most of them were looking for a place where they could play as a freshman --- that's the biggest reason we encountered for their going somewhere else. "Last year, for instance, we had C. J. (Kupec) and Joe (Johnson) leaving, and every- one could see themselves in those spots.' So now the recruiting effort has focused on Walker; Mike Prince, a 6-6 guard from De- troit Catholic Central; and Mike Davis, a 6-11 center from Mercer Junior College. Prince led his team to the state cham- pionship this year and Davis is good enough to be chased by Maryland and Southern Cal. Frieder isn't terribly sur- prised or disappointed at this year's recruiting, but he did say that "we were really sorry about losing Braanlng and Colscott . . . we were really in on him." And Mis- sissippi St. "came out of no- where" to land Brown, "But we are only taking a couple of recruits, anyway," says Frieder. "We won't waste tenders just for the sake of us- ing them." The other news out of the Athletic Dep't. this week was the release of next year's schedule. The most salient fea- tures of the new schedule are Thursday Big Ten games, and a crush of games between Jan. 15 and Jan. 29 that has Michi- gan playing seven times in 15 days. But the non-conference sched- ule is nothing like last year's killer slate. The biggest threats '76-'77 Home games in CAPITALS Nov. 27 WESTERN KENTUCKY Dec. 4 FORDHAM Dec. 6 Vanderbilt Dec. 8 South Carolina Dec. 11 WESTERN MICHIGAN Dec. 18 KENT STATE Dec. 21 CENTRAL MICHIGAN Dec. 28-29 Providence Holiday Tournament (Texas, Pro- vidence, Rhode Island) Jan. 6 NORTHWESTERN Jan. 1 WISCONSIN Jan. 15 Michigan State will be Vanderbilt and S. Caro- lina on the road. Kent State and Central Mich- igan are on the schedule to re- place the defunct Michigan In- vitational. They were choson because they are local teams that Michigan will not have to pay back with visit. schedule Jan. 17 Iowa Jan. 20 PURDUE Jan. 22 ILLINOIS Jan. 24 Ohio State Jan.27 Wisconsin Jan. 29 Northwestern Feb. 3 INDIANA Feb. 5 OHIO STATE Feb. 7 Minnesota Feb. 12 Indiana Feb. 17 IOWA Feb. 19 MINNESOTA Feb. 26 MICHIGAN STATE Mar. 3 Illinois Mar. 5 Purdue today in S. Bend MIXED BOWLING LEAGUES NOW FORMING- SIGN UP NOW INDIVIDUALS OR TEAMS U-M UNION LANES Open 1 1 a.m.-12 midnight Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.- 1a.m. Fri. and Sat. 1 p.m.-12 midnight Sun. By BILL STIEG Variety will spice Michigan's doubleheader at Notre Dame to- day as several Wolverine pitch- ers will work at least a few innings each. Coach Moby Benedict plans to use most of his hurlers in an effort to keep everyone in shape after a four - day rest. The Wolverines have played only once in the last 11 days - a 9-1 victory over Purdue last Saturday. The second game of that doubleheader was rained out, as was a Sunday twinbill with Illinois. The Wolverines are 12-11 overall and 4-1 in the Big Ten, good enough for first place percentage-wise, ahead of Iowa (8-4) and Ohio State (4-2). Aces Lary Sorensen (6-0, 2.51 ERA) and Mark Weber (2.3, 2.44 ERA) will lead the pa- rade of pitchers. Michigan's top hitters are Dave Chapman (.338), Dick Walter house (329) and Ted Mahan (.324). Chap- man and Mahan have 12 RBI each, behind Bob Wasilewaki's is. Notre Dame, hardly a base- ball powerhouse, is 13-23 this year. The Irish have won two straight, however, and four of their last six. They were also able to play last week- end. Leading the Irish are Frank Fiascki, a .368 hitter, and Bob Stratta, who is hitting .351 with 31 RBI, five doubles and four home runs. Dave Lazzeri is their other threat, hitting .313 with four doubles and four triples. Expected to play for Michi- gan is Rick Leach, the quarter- back for the football team who spent most of the spring calling signals for Bob Schembechler. Leach, a first baseman - out- fielder, got back to the baseball team just in time for last week- end's rainouts, but hit well in early March during the team's Florida trip. ACROSS EUROPE BYBUS LONDON TO: ATHENS$7 -ROME$44 PARIS $23' - ZURICH $40- MILAN $44' - BARCELONA $40' AMSTERDAM TO ATHENS $61* asoa MORE DEPARTURES tCONOMY HOLIDAYS/1324 LEX. AVE. NYC NY10028/212-34E-59E1 0+10% TAX.SERV. CHARGE °puA CB2BEE22 i;: } :"r: : :; "?. ,+' r '%} s { .;, 1: DELTA Restaurant & Pizzeria Greek and American Food * Breakfast anytime * Different Specials every day " Complete Dinners on Sunday for $2.75 * Special Room for groups " Pizza HOURS: 7 a.m.-1 a.m. 7days a week BEST BAKLAVA IN TOWN COMPLETE CARRY OUT SERVICE 640 PACKARD (corner of State) 662-7811 Y i1 I. :1 !: IO I Pizza Bob's Welcomes Everybody Back! 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