McGEE LEADS OFFENSE AND DEFENSE Blue whips Wildcats in By SCOTT M. LEWIS * One streak is over. Hopefully for Michigan, a different type of streak is in the works. ' The Wolverine basketball team, which had played four consecutive overtime games during the past two weeks, di'dn t need any extra sessions yesterday as they outclassed and outhustled last-place Northwestern, 70- .57, before 9,842 patrons at Crisler Arena. 9rTHE VICTORY, Michigan's second straight, avenged an 85-82 triple over- time loss tothe Wildcats last Saturday and evened the Wolverines' conference record at 5-5, two garmes behind the leader. Northwestern, meanwhile, slipped to 2-8 and seems ready to take permanent sihelter in the Big Ten basement, their home for most of the 1970's. Michigan, apparently tiring of the heart-pounding, drama-filled finishes Owhich have characterized its games this season, slammed the door on Nor- thwesternearly in the second half. At 19:07 the game was tied at 35. Eight minutes later, the Wolverines had jum- ped to a 55-43 lead, at one juncture holding the visitor scoreless during a four-minute span. An alert, aggressive Blue defense, spearheaded by junior forward Mike McGee, held the Wildcats to 24 points aftel' the intermission. The Wolverines successfully cut off-the passing lanes, forcing Northwestern to take several forced shots. ACTUALLY, THE Wildcats' shot selection wasn't a whole lot better in last week's win, but the results cer- tainly were. Northwestern hit on 46 per cent of its field goals, compared to 61 per cent last Saturday in Evanston. McGee, who again earned game_ scoring honors with 26 points, did a magnificent job in containing Jim Stack, Northwestern's leading scorer. The frustrated sophomore, who carried a 15 ppg average entering yesterday's contest, managed only one of eight field attempts for two points. Wolverine coach Johnny Orr hailed McGee's -defensive work. "When he gets fired up to do something, he goes out and does it," said Orr, whose team lifted its overall record to 12-7. "He ,doesn't get enough credit for his defen- se. few of those." This time the coach did ins 'designated foul shooter', Mar nar, for the final two minute; Northwestern's only option was the Wolverines, then hope M would fail in the one-and-one sit Bodnar, however, answere challenge, sinking five of seve the line. "I told him if he hit seven h have made me look like a geniu said. "He said he didn't want m too good." NORTHWESTERN coach Ri also discussed foul shooting du post-mortem, but from a differ spective. "To be successful we go to the free throw line," s second-year mentor. "Every i got the ball inside, it got knocke I thought there were five or six there. They got away with a lot With the exception of McGee, Ten scoring leader, none Wolverines reached double Center Paul Heuerman, battling followed McGee with eight pRoin backup pivot John Garris added Heuerman, the team's leadin last Thursday at Wisconsin, wa in the first half yesterday by 7- Brian Jung. However, hs o spurt in the opening eight NORTHWESTERN regulation helped Michigan gain control of the game. sert his Garris, the 6-9 sophomore whose rk Bod- game has been improving in recent s, when weeks, played only 12 minutes, but still s to foul grabbed four rebounds and blocked two ichigan shots. uations. IT WAS a Garris specialty - the ed the ferocious dunk after an 'alley-oop' pass en from - which gave Michigan its first lead of the afternoon, 33-31, with 2:16 ie would remaining in the first half. us," Orr A large part of'the first half was an e to look exercise in lethargy. Michigan spent most of the opening twenty minutes ich Falk chipping away at a deficit which never fring the exceeded five points. ent per- After the game Orr made a little pitch have to for his journalistic talents. "I'll be said the broadcasting the (NBA) All-Star Game time we (today) and I'll try as hard as I possibly 'd away. can to find something nice to say about fouls in the Detroit Pistons," he said. The inside." Pistons, you'll recall, offered former the Big Wolverine standout Phil Hubbard a of the sizable contract if he passed up his final figures. year at Michigan and turned pro. g the flu, Michigan's next assignment will be ts, while far more demanding - sixth-ranked 3 seven. Ohio State. The Buckeyes, 6-4 in the Big g scorer Ten, will be teeming with revenge when s stifled the Wolverines invade St. John Arena 0 center Thursday. The Maize and Blue stunned a ~ ..strong off bench "TAKE (FOR instance) someone in the Big Ten whom you consider a good defensive player. If Terry Donnelly or someone from Indiana holds a player to a few points, you say it's good defense. If Michigan does it, then the other guy wasn'tshooting well," he joked. Another major factor in the Wolverines' win wastheir abilityto draw fouls and connect from the line. Michigan made 22 of 30 foul shots, while Northwestern hit only five of nine. In at least two of its overtime losses, clutch foul shooting by Michigan might have reversed the verdict. "It's a shame we lost those overtime games," reflected Orr. "Had we had our free throw shooters in, we might have won a ofnsive minutes Mulil Ca Min. Stack.......... 37 Campbell .......38 Jung .......... 15 Roberson......28 Gibson ........ 25 Rathel.........24 Jenkins........16 Grady .........23 Gretfi....... I Lumpkins .......1 Anderson.......i Blackard ...... 1 Team Rebounds Totals ....... FG/A FT/A R 1/8 0/0 8 6/10 2/2 4 2/3 0/0 4 8/14 1/2 2 1/4 0/0 1 5/8 2/3 3 0/3 0/0 0 3/5 0/2 10 0/0 0/0 0 0/I O/0 .0 0/0 0/0 ,0 0/0 0/0 0 4 20/50 5/9 36 A 0 0 2 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 Q PF .3 2 '2 4 3 :3 0 0 0 0 P ts. 2 14 4 17 2 12 0 6 0 0 0 OSU, 75-74, on January 19. Icats MICHIGAN Min. FG/A FT/A McGee.........39 11G20 4/7 Garner........35 1/7 4/6 Heuerman. 27 4/6 0/0 Bodnar, Marty 23 2/4 2/2 James......... 5 0/0 2/2 Johnson ....... 24 3/7 0/0 Lozier ......... 26 1/2 2/2 Garris ......... 12 2/4 3/4 Person.........5 0/1 0/0 Bodnar, Mark. 2 0/0 5/7 Smith.......... 1 0/0 0/0 Brown......... 1 0/0 0/0 R 5 ,5 5 2 0 2 4 2 1 2 A 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 PF Pts. 2 26 3 6 1 8 1 6 0 2 2 6 2 4 2 7 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 Team Rebounds Totals......... 24/51 22/30 57 Halftime: 3533 Michigan Attendance: 9,842 7 13 70 5 20. BULLETIN I At the end of two periods last night at Denver University Arena, the Michigan hockey team trailed the Pioneers 4-2 in WCHA action. Center Dan Lerg tied the game at 1-1 for Michigan in the first period but Ed Beers and Vince Magnan sent Denver to the dressing room with a 3-1 first period lead. After Darrell Morrow put the Pioneers ahead 4-1 in the second period, Lerg notched his second goal of the game to close the gap to two. The Wolverines could use a split in the series if they hope to close the gap on first. place North Dakota and maintain their grasp on the second rung in the WCHA. The Pioneers got power play goals from Ed Beers and Bill Stewart on Friday night to down the Wolverines 4-2 in the series opener. Beers and Vince Magnan scored in the first period for Denver, Glenn Johnson had a second period tally and Stewart's goal came in the final frame. Dan Lerg and Bruno Baseotto scored for Michigan. In a WCHA matinee yesterday, Michigan Tech coach John Maclnnes recorded his 500th career victory as the Huskies upended first place North Dakota 6-4. VIRGINIA UPSET: Terr~tapins dump Dk COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Greg Manning, whose last-second shot defeated Duke last season, scored a career-high 26 points while leading S 12th-ranked Maryland to a 101-82 vic- tory over the fifth-ranked Blue Devils in an Atlantic Coast Conference game yesterday. The Terps, now 8-1 and leading the ACC by two games over North Carolina, got their fast break game rolling in the second half after taking a 36-28 lead at halftime despite having Albert King and Earnest Graham in foul trouble. KING FINISHED with 16 and Graham 12 at the Terps increased their record to 16-3. Duke, now 5-4 in the ACC and tied for third with Virginia and Clemson, was SCORES College Basketball MICHIGAN 70, Northwestern 57 SWisconsin 70. Ohio State 67 Michigan State 68, Illinois 59 Iowa 73, Minnesota 63 Purdue 56, Indiana 51 Maryland 101, Duke 82 Virginia Tech 69, Tulane 68 Wake Forest 79, virginia 77 Georgetown 84, Connecticut 64 Baylor 60, Rice 57 Florida St. 54, Cincinnati 52 Oklahoma 56, Kansas St. 55 Kentucky 83, Tennessee 75 Toledo 87, Western }ichigan 68 Penn 62, Columbia 57 Clemson 61, S. Carolina 60 Mississippi 71. Alabama 65 Louisiana St. 75, Mississippi St. 63 W. Virginia 68, Pittsburgh 66 Yale 80, Dartmouth 67 DePaul 102, North Texas St. 71 Syracuse 89, Providence 69 Notre Dame 105, Davidson 71 Women's Gymnastics Ohio State 130.65, Michigan 130.6 Men's Gymnastics Ohio State 267.35, Michigan 263.9 !ICollege Hockey Mich. Tech. 6. North Dakota 4 Notre Dame 4. Wisconsin 3 led by Gene Banks with 21 points. He fouled out with 2:57 remaining. - The Blue Devils now are 11-4. -AP Wake Forest 79, Virginia 77 . WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.-Alvis Rogers' 18-foot jump shot with one second remaining gave Wake Forest a 79-77 upset victory over 13th-ranked Virginia yesterday in an Atlantic Coast Conference contest. Rogers' shot came after guard Mike Helms had missed a jump shot which had been designed to be the last shot of the game. However, Helms' shot boun- ced off the rim and Rogers grabbed the rebound, glanced at the clock and then hit on his jumper. HELMS SPARKED Wake Forest both defensively and offensively in the scond half as he tallied 19 points, while guard Benny McKaig scored 12 points and handed out six assists. Guy Morgan led the Deacons in scoring with 21 points. Rogers had 16 for the game and added 11 rebounds. Lamp led Virginia with 24 points and Lee Raker added 22. --AP Kentuckv83, Tennessee 75, LEXINGTON-Klye Macy scored 22. points as third-ranked Kentucky sent archrival Tennessee to its fifth con- secutive Southeastern Conference defeat with a 83-75 college basketball victory last night. The Wildcats jumped to a 22-6 lead as freshman center Sam Bowie scored seven of his nine points, but the Volun- teers clawed back to trail just 74-71 on Reggie Johnson's six-foot jump shot with 2:48 remaining. Jay Shidler added 14 points for Ken- tucky and Fred Cowan scored 13. John- son led-all scorers with 28 and Wood ad- ded 14. No OT, no heartache, but lots o ree throws By ALAN FANGER There would be no overtime, no heart-stopping, last-second shots, no heart-sinking, last-minute free throws. Johnny Orr didn't even come out to midcourt to do his victory shuffle. Through some strange occurrence, Michigan played only forty minutes of basketball yesterday when they defeated Northwestern, 70-57 at Crisler Arena. And that suited the dean of Big Ten coaches just fine. "WHOA, BOY," were the first words uttered by Orr in the post-game press conference.,There was a welcome sense of relief which accompanied every word thereafter. Indeed, the strings of tension that pulled so tightly on the Wolverines in the previous two weeks had loosened just a bit. For the first twenty minutes of the contest, it appeared as if those strings would continue to be drawn at their tightest. Wildcats Rod Robersora nd Mike Campbell were hitting several shots from outside, and those shots that went astray of the bucket were usually picked off by forward Jim Stack. It was enough to keep Northwestern within two points at halftime, 35-33. Then, without advance notice, the Wildcats came up with a mild bout of foulitis. Michigan was the benefactor of 23 second-half trips to the free throw line, and the Wolverines converted on 17 of those chances. According to Northwestern coach Rich Falk, that proved to be the difference in the game. "THEY HAD-THIRTY free throws-that's the story of the game, right there," said Falk. "They were 22 of 30, and we were five of nine. That's a lot o point difference. "I want to give great credit to Michigan," he continued. "They're playing with a lot of incentive right now." The incentives, to be certain, were present at all times. For th Wolverines, there was the chance to avenge the triple-overtime loss to the Wildcats a week earlier. There was the opportunity to boost their conference record to 5-5 and possibly to move up in the Big Ten standings. And there was the chance for them to win another game in front of their home fans. At halftime, Orr was concerned his troops weren't taking advantage of these incentives. He thus instructed his team to return to a fundamental basketball function--rebounding. "I TOLD THEM at halftime that we had to go to the boards better than we were doing in the first half," said Orr. "We had to hit the boards more. We haven't been aggressive enough on the boards lately." His message had some effect, as the Wolverines pulled down 18 second- half rebounds, compared to a first-half total fo 12. The surge in "boards" came at a fortunate time, too-Michigan shot only 37.5 per cent in the final twenty minutes. While Mike McGee returned to form with a 26-point performance, Orr singled out center Paul Heuerman as a key figure in the Wolverines' suc- cessful maintenance of their second-half lead. "He's a good shooter, you know. Once we got it into him, he put in the baskets for us. And he was sick, you know," Orr said. IT WASN'T the first time Heuerman had played in less-than ideal health. The 6-8 junior battled mononucleosis throughout'late December and early January, but he managed to earn himself a Big Ten Player-of-the- Week award for his performance in the first two conference encounters. Heuerman's play wasn't the only surprise of the afternoon. When the sta'rting Blue pivotman finally submitted to the ravages of influenza, sophomore John Garris picked up where his predec6ssor left off. Garris tallied seven points and four rebounds in only 12 minutes of action. TAKE THlE LEAD Help New Students Discover the Diversity of Michigan BE A FALL nfI VNTaTin N Con cerned about THE JOB MARKET p j IJKL - \, uvx o Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY MICHIGAN FORWARD Mike McGee (40) goes in for a layup while guarded by Gaddis Rathel (33) and Bob Grady (32) of Northwestern. 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