OVERCOMES EARL Y SE TBA CKS The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 27, 1980-Page 9'. A. Bodnar ,makes By STAN BRADBURY He also serves who sits and waits .. . .. . and waits, and waits. For junior guard Mark Bodnar it has been a long wait with a lot of sitting. But then again that might be all in, the past as the realization of the above cliche has begun. He has not exploded onto the Michigan basketball scene like his twin brother, Marty, did last year as a sophomore. Mark has merely merged quietly into the flow of the Wolverine game plan-used primarily as a steady guard late in the game in crucial situations. The reason for Mark's appearance on the hard court can be summedup in one word-character. The story of Mark, howevet, cannot be told without reviewing Marty as well. The two Bodnars came to Michigan from Barberton, Ohio, where they had just led their team to 51 consecutive wins and a mythical prep national championship. "We wanted to go to school together," Mark said. "We told recruiters if you don't want both of us, forget it. Michigan had just won the national championship but they were losing both (Ricky) Freen and (Steve) Grote so they wanted both of us." At the time basketball started when they were freshmen, their careers parted ways and it became A Tale of Two Brothers.' Mark said, "We knew our first year we wouldn't be playing much." True, but while Marty was practicing, learning, and keeping in shape Mark was hampered with a stress fracture in his foot which began bothering him the fourth day of practice. During their sophomore years it was the best of times and the worst of times for- Marty and Mark, respectively. Marty was a regular starter and leading the Big Ten in field goal percentage. Mark missed the first five weeks of practice because his foot's stress fracture reoccured and it had to go into a cast. Then came this season. Mark worked hard in practice and Marty played hard in games and was co- captain, but playing time never materialized for the lesser known of the Bodnar pair. Assistant coach Bill Frieder said, "Mark's biggest disadvantage at the beginning of the year was that the four other guards had played more and had a lot more experience.'' And so the season went as Marty, Keith Smith, Johnny Johnson and Mark Lozier divided up the playing time. Mark sat on the bench as the Wolverines dropped clutch games against Toledo, Indiana, Northwestern, Michigan State, etc. "We started using Mark when we were getting some inconsistencies out of the other four," Frieder said. As opportunity knocked, Mark responded is Mark promptly. Michigan was at Wisconsin seeking their first road triumph of the conference season. Mark got the chance to play down the wire and the Wolverines won. Back at Crisler, Mark was used. late in the Northwestern, Illinois and Purdue games. Against the Illini and the Boilermakers, clutch performances were required from BOTH Bodnars. "Mark was very instrumental in those two victories," said Frieder. "It makes you wonder how we would have done earlier in those other close games if we had been using him." Mark looked back on the games earlier this year and said, "I didn't get an opportunity to play and I was down. It was just a matter of keeping up a good attitude. I really wanted to come to practice and play well and I was doing well in the practices. "While I was injured I was doubting myself, thinking that maybe I wasn't good enough to play," Mark continued. "Seeing Marty do well helped me. I knew I was as good as Marty but he had just gotten ahead of me. If I had been healthy I think you would have seen Marty and I playing more together." The 6-3. business major continued, "I'm not an envous or jealous person. I'm happy for Marty and everything he's accomplished." The two Bodnars still live together on campus and take practically the same classes. Mark says he thinks a successful senior year actually begins this season. "I need playing time to give the coaches confidence in me and I need some confidence in myself. I'm really looking forward to it (a tournament berth) so I have more opportunities to play. If I play well at the end of this season it will give me a good start on next year. That's why it is so important for me to finish strong this year," Bodnar concluded. Frieder said, "It's a credit to his character that he waited for the opportunity. He's really come along considering the fact he was injured the first two years. He really kept in shape." But most of all he waited. Michig Name Eaves ................ Baseotto .................. Lerg ....................... Manning.............. Blum.................... Tippet................ Richmond.............. Speers .................... Ha mpson .................. Bourne .................... May..................... Lundberg.............. Milburn ................... Todd ...................... Reid .................. Mars.................... Brandrup............... Perry ..................... Brennan................. VanBiesbruck.......... Fricker ................ Richter............... Tessier .................... Varvari ....:.............. Sutton.................. OTHER ............... MICTI;AT ........... Goalie (Record) B. Sutton (1-0) P. Fricker (18-10-2) R. Varvari (2-1) MICHIGAN (21-11-2) OPPONENTS (11-21-2) an's 34-Game OVERALL (21-11-2) Hockey WCHA(1210-2) GP G A PTS GP 29 34 34 34 33 34 34 26 26 28 33 33 34 26 34 22 22 22 12 7 31 29 16 5 2 34 G A PTS 35 41 76 29 43 72 35 34 69 7 39 46, 7 36 43 12 18 30 9 19 28 9 13 22 7 12 19 8 9 17 7 10 17 2 14 16 6 6 12 4 8 12 3 6 9 4 4 8 1 6 7 0 4 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 7 188 339 527 GOALIE STATISTICS G GA AVG. SAV PCT. 2 1 1.76 34 .944 31 131 4.39 1000 .884 5 17 4.42 125 .880 34 150 4.30 1159 .885. 34 188 5.39 996 .841 19 24 24 24 is 217 24 24 18 17 21 24 24 24 18 24 18 18 12 6 5 24 20 10 2. 27 45 26 47 19 45 22 27 26 ~ 30 10 18 13 19- 9 s 8 ..11. 6 9 14 13, 3 7 5 6 2 5 .6 0 0 11 2 2 '2 3 .3, 1 1t 0p 56' Stats li G 1 24 2 24 24 24 121 217 338 GA AVG. SAV pc 1 7.03 9 , 108 4.71 796F 3 2.26 48 =97 112 4.59 853 121 4.96 679 Mark Bodnar ... .. .coming into his own SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Templeton: 4 million dollar man YOUR COLLEGE RING PLUS A CASH REBATE! When you trade-in your men's 10K gold high school ring for .. 11.00 on a Lustrium college ring, America's newest fine Jeweler'salloy ....... ,... ..... Your rebate ........ ... ,....42.05 Trade in your women's 10K gold high school ring for $49.00 and buy your Lustrium college ring for only $19.95. 10K gold high school trade-ins also apply on all Josten's 10K gold college rings. Wed.-Fri.-11:00-4:00 MICHIGAN UNION-Main Lobby JOSTEN'S THE RING PEOPLE. February only ST. LOUIS (AP)-All-star shortstop Garry Templeton has agreed to a six- year contract which reportedly will pay him more than $4 million, the St. Louis Cardinals announced yesterday. The Cardinals, in keeping with their policy, declined to specify Templeton's pay. The flashy infielder, a switch- hitter, led the, National League with 211 Pfits in 1979. "I'M VERY HAPPY. I couldn't ask for anything more," Templeton said at a news conference. "I'm looking forward to being with the Cardinals for six more years and maybe longer." Templeton's -clause, as doe's a multiyear contract signed last month by first baseman Keith Hernandez, contains a built-in veto of a trade to certain clubs. The player said six clubs are involved but did not identify them. "I promise some excitement in the years ahead-hopefully all on the field," said Templeton, who a year ago engaged in a bitter contract dispute before signing a one-year pact. WCHA STANDINGS TEMPLETON, WHO has 654 hits in a little over three rmajor-league campaigns, joins Hernandez and switch-hitting catcher Ted Simmons as the highest-paid Cardinal players. Last month, Hernandez signed a five- year contract for a believed $3.8 million. Simmons signed a five-year agreement in 1978 for pay estimated at $3 million. Templeton, who led the National League with 40 errors in 1978, reduced that number to 34 a year ago. He participated in 102 double plays, becoming the first switch-hitter in major league history to total at least 100 hits from each side of the plate. Atlanta after Craig BOSTON (AP)-U.S. Olympic hockey goaltender Jim Craig soon may be wearing the colors of the Atlanta Flames of the National Hockey League, according to his lawyer. Bob Murray, Craig's attorney, reported "significant progress" yesterday in negotiations with Flames General Manager Cliff Fletcher. Murray said he expected that further talks might yield a final agreement within a day. FLAMES OFFICIALS met twice with Murray earlier this week in Lake Placid, N.Y., after the spirited American squad captured the gold medal with a 4-2 victory over Finland. Craig, a former Boston University star, played all six games for the Americans. David Poile, the Flames' assistant general manager, has said if a contract is signed, there is a good chance Craig willbe in goal Saturday night against the visiting Colorado Rockies., Murray hesitated on that point, noting it would be "difficult for him to perform" after such brief practice time with his new teammrates. NY, Ixpos tampering? NEW YORK (AP) - Commissioner Bowie Kuhn will look into charges that the New York Yankees and Montreal Expos have tampered with Dave Win- field of the San Diego Padres, although the Padres have not brought the matter to the commissioner's attention, a spokesman for Kuhn said yesterday. Ballard Smith said Monday he knew Montreal Manager Dick Williams had talked to Winfield in Las Vegas, Nev., and told him the Expos would like to have' him on the club and that a Yankees' publicity person told Winfield the same thing. Mickey Morabito, Yankees public relations director, told The Associated Press by telephone from Fort Lauder- dale, Fla., that the Yankees had not talked to Winfield but that the Padres had been in contact with him about the power-hitting center fielder. Smith has said the Padres have no in- tention of meeting Winfield's demand for a 10-year, $20-million contract. 4 TEAM W *North Dakota 19 -..MICHIGAN ....... 12 Iuinnesota ....... 16 Notre Dame ......13 Colorado College .. 14 Minnesota-Duluth 14 Michigan Tech 11 Wisconsin.....12 Michigan State .... 11 Denver ...... t 8 *Clinched WCHA title L 6 10 14 12 13 16 13, 16 15 15 T 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 PCT. .750 .542 .533 .519 .518 .467 .462 .429 .423 .354 WEEKEND SCHEDULE MICHIGAN at Michigan State (Fri.) .".ichigan State at MICHIGAN (Sat.) *Minnesota at Notre Dame North Dakota at Wisconsin Michigan Tech at Minnesota-Duluth Colorado College at Denver (Fri.) Denver at Colorado College (Sat.) SCORES NBA Chicago 105, Utah 85 Milwaukee 122, San Diego 88 oston 108, Atlanta 97 W NHL Washington 5, Los Angeles 3 College Basketball Northern Illinois 58, Miami (0.) 53 Iona 69, Farleigh Dickinson 53 Bowling Green 54. Eastern Michigan 49 Kansas 75, Colorado 65 Bradley 98. Tulsa 76 Live- In Concert SUIDA Y, MARCH 2 8:00 PM (port)Sport, noun. Recreation. Athletics. Pastime. Everyone has a sport of some sort. To play, compete, or 'ust to watch. Meijer is one of the biggest sporting goods stores around. No matter what your sport is, Meijer Thrifty Acres has the quality gear and the same name brands you want, priced to save you money. So, instead of spending your last dime at the sporting specialty goods store, why not jog on over to Meijer and save some money. Maybe enough for two seats behind the dugout. Whatever your sport, Meijer can outfit you. On the court, diamond, or field. And off. ed ato l It f. hi y+ ,..,.. at THE PUNCH AND JUDY THEATER 21 Kercheval (between Cadieux and Morass) Grosse Pointe Farms 48236 Info: CallI881-2621 or 881-2618 L "I to '_f u tin gonna be late? Agair? Six miles southeast of campus on Carpenter Road. - - Ir tI {I -j -2 ..rt- " ctss -