NCAA TOURNEY WINDS DOWN: 4 Big Ten teams The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 12, 1980-Page 7 ~ E4 in 'Sweet 16' 1 By the Associated Press, UCLA basketball Coach Larry rown, still excited about the Bruins' upset of DePaul in the NCAA tournament, talked yesterday about what comes next-Ohio State-and admits he's a little scared. "It's really exciting for us, the whole thing of just getting to play in the NCAA tournament, and then beating DePaul," said Brown, whose unranked Bruins meet the No. 10 Buckeyes in a third- round- NCAA game in Tucson, Ariz., tomorrow night. "I'VE- SEEN Ohio State play a few times and I haven't seen a better team this season. Playing them is like playing a pro team, they're so physical. They're bigger than us at every position, they're well coached, and I'm a little frightened," Brown said. "When we were in Tempe practicing last Saturday and Ohio State was on the floor, I wanted to keep our kids in the locker room, didn't want them to take heir warmups off and embarrass CLA;" he added with a grin. Ohio State, now 21-7, drew an opening round bye, then demolished Arizona State 89-75 Sunday. PROGRESSIVE REBOUNDING and more scoring punch from Kelvin Ransey are the big reasons the Buckeyes, 1960 champions, are among the final 16 teams this year. The Buckeyes, critics agree, are displacing their best performances after a mid-season slump cost them three straight defeats and four of five losses to Big Ten Conference rivals. Rebounding was a special problem Arizona State, almost 10 points more than his average in his final season. The 6-1 guard had sacrificed scoring-he hit at a 21.4-point clip as a junior-to run the Buckeyes' attack. "I don't think there's any letup now," Ransey said. 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NCAA PAIRINGS TOMORROW'S GAMES MIDEAST Purdue (20-9) vs. Indiana (21-7) Duke (23-8) vs. Kentucky (29-5) *Winners meet Saturday WEST Clemson (22-8) vs. Lamar (22-10) UCLA (19-9) vs. Ohio State (21-7) *Wnners meet Saturday FRIDAY'S GAMES EAST Iowa (21-8) vs. Syracuse (26-3) Maryland (24-6) vs. Georgetown (24-5) *Winners meet Sunday MIDWEST Louisville (29-3) vs. Texas A&M (26-7) Missouri (25-5) vs. Louisiana State (25-5) *Winners meet Sunday x;:< iU: Y": i vix":i ti: r: i;: ih+iYn'i:'r "i:i: ",tir: {; :iii' .t.... "::' n .:.":.:ti ::": ri^::?" ry. :"}i:"i}:":{q:"i:"}ii+i}:^i:.};.}ii: ::":"::C"i::":Li:::"}::"i:":ii"i::+"?}: i: : iiii: ::-:iiiv rr ' . {.{ r.; ;},{..;; . , ..}n. .:.r : ::: x:.: :. f . 4. .^".:;:i><:ii'r'{S:: Y.. {s{.:::".vv ::: w:: v : .: r: r4S": i7'"r:.. .r :..Y.....r ... }}.:i;Y ..f..... . ::ยข::: Qr iXi'r .> .. { . ..n .. v:lw:v'v}:::;v;i:}Y iiiii:':::"?ii:ii:s ii::}}$".: iiiily}:Jii r.}i:. ii} ii'ti{i: :":":"ii? .ry:.".1 r.. Z.ti $.+r: rrh d"}:."r... rv x..... .... } ...... ..... rri: i:"i:+$.w:.... r..: }::::": }}: $?:ti':?v. ::. i:i....... r........ .............. ............ during that slump. "We're getting more offensive rebounds now. All of our guys are following their shots and putting the ball back in," said 6-foot-14 center Herb Williams, whose 25-point, nine-rebound show helped riddle Arizona State. THE RE-EMERGENCE of Ransey as a big scorer has helped, too. His jump shots produced 25 points against full court PRES Hubbard watches alone.. .. .. , what might have'been By MARK MIHANOVIC A bright red cowboy hat atop his head, the tall, young black man standing in the players' tunnel at Crisler Arena was far from inconspicuous. From time to time, friends and fans who recognized him stopped and exchanged greetings. But Phil Hubbard seemed a lonely figure as he watched his former teammates convincingly defeat Texas-El Paso, 74-65, Monday night in the second round of the National Invitational Tournament. Whether or not Hubbard regrets leaving Michigan for "green"-er pastures with the Detroit Pistons is strictly conjecture. He hasn't broken down and admitted to as much; rath'er, he has accepted his decision and stood by it like a man, without excuses. But the contrast between the Wolverines' situation this season and that of the Pistons must dishearten Hubbard. Monday night's win brought Michigan's total to 17 for the year, one more than Detroit has accumulated; the difference, of course, is thatthe Pistonshave an edge in the loss column of 55 to 1.}. The won-loss ratio isn't the only difference between Hubbard's old team and his new one, though. While the Pistons have been embroiled in dissension all year, with star center Bob Lanier being traded and scoring machine Bob McAdoo relegated to the bench, Michigan has pulled together and given a 100 percent effort to make up for the Hub's departure. Dick Vitale has been fired, and things aren't going much more smoothly for Richie Adubato; on the other hand, Blue coach Johnny Orr has received a great deal of praise for having a respectable season with a team that was expected to be anything but respectable. The plain simple truth, however, is that Phil Hubbard is being paid well to play basketball, which couldn't have happened at Michigan. Whether that plus outweighs the minuses of his decision is something only Hubbard can answer. If 'Hub' had stayed Orr has said several times during the year that he has a fatherly affection for Hubbard and that he wishes him nothing but the best. But you always get the feeling that in the back of Orr's mind was the thought that if only the wayward son hadn't strayed, if only he had stayed home, in Ann Arbor, then this Michigan team could have really been something special. After the cagers defeated the University of Detroit early in the year, a reporter asked Orr what Hubbard's on-court presence would mean to his squad. "Oh, if we had Hubbard. . . hell, if we had Hubbard . .." Orr's voice wistfully trailed off. "I'm sure, in his own mind, he's sorry that he left, but those things happen," assistant coach Bill Frieder said yesterday. "The biggest thing that he would have given us is depth up front. "If Hubbard had come back and played as he did last year, which wasn't very well, we might not have contended for the Big Ten title. In order to contend for the Big Ten title, we'd have needed him to play like he did as a freshman and sophomore." There's no questioning the fact that Hubbard's departure was a tough blow for the Wolverines. But, in an indirect way, the Blue cagers started to become a good basketball team the day that the 6-8 All-American from Canton, Ohio announced that he was turning pro. Frontcourt key for Blue That day Mike McGee probably realized that the Wolverines would go as far as his scoring ability would take them. That day Paul Heuerman probably realized that the center job was his if he worked for it and that he'd better get his body ready for the Big Ten wars. That day Thad Garner probably realized that he could become a team leader and that if he played an aggressive, scrambling defense, it would be contagious. Those three frontcourt men have been the key to Michigan's success this season, and they keyed the victory over UTEP. McGee had his second straight 25-point game in the NIT and pulled in six rebounds. Heuerman went five for seven from the field, scored 12 points, nabbed eight rebounds on the defensive end of the court and made two steals. And Garner's stats read seven boards (five offensive), five assists, one blocked shot, and three steals. All told, the Blue outrebounded the taller Miners (with a frontline of 6-7 Anthony Burns, 6-7 Roshern Arnie, and 6-9 center Terry White) by a 37-26 count. The Wolverines dominated underneath the basket, where they were supposed to be the weakest with the loss of Hubbard. Now, Michigan must travel to Virginia Thursday night to take on the Cavaliers and the 7-4 freshman giant, Ralph Sampson, with the winner advancing to the semifinals in Madison Square Garden next Monday. And somewhere out there the tall black man with the bright red cowboy hat will be listening for the results-and no doubt wondering what might have been. of emotion. Our bench is really coming through." The Buckeyes may well need that emotion against UCLA, although there had been some question whether the Bruins,, who finished fourth in the Pacific 10 this season and had a 17-9 overall'record, would even be invited to the NCAA tournament. After they were, they opened with an 87-74 victory over Old Dominion, then stunned top-ranked DePaul 77-71 in the second round last Sunday in Tempe. PURDUE'S CHANCES in tomorrow's NCAA matchup with arch- rival Indiana depend greatly on whether All-American center Joe Barry Carroll can solve an air-tight Hoosier defense that has virtually han- dcuffed him in two previous meetings this year. The 7-foot-1 Carroll, a 22-point-per- game scorer for the season, managed only 11 points in a 69-58 loss at Indiana in January. He fouled out with only seven points in the Boilermakers' 56-51 victory the following week at Purdue. Indiana's leading scorer, Mike Wood- son, missed both those games during his recovery from a back injury. "IT HAS TO do with talent," Purdue Coach Lee Rose said in a telephone in- terview from his office at West Lafayet- te on Tuesday. "They (the Hoosiers) are No.1 in the Big Ten in defense." The seventh-ranked Hoosiers are 21-7 and have a seven-game winning string since Woodson returned from a two- month lay-off following surgery. The No. 20-rated Boilermakers stand 20-9 going into Thursday night's Mideast Regional semifinals at Lexington, Ky., Rose's hometown. "When you take Ray Tolbert and Landon Turner, who are quick, agile, have great mobility and do a great job on defense, and put them around Joe. . . and especially when they have Woodson back, who is a great player, it makes it difficult for us to do what we'd like to do," said Rose, caught up already in the tremendous intrastate rivalry, even though it's only his second year at Purdue. "WE HAD played twice last year and got to go to New York,and play them again in the National Invitation Tour- nament. And lo and behold we end up against them this year in the NCAA," Rose said. "'Both teams play with commitment and emogpn, yet it comes down to which team executes best. As far as the rivalry, it's just amazing. This is one of the most unique rivalries in athletics." Meanwhile, Duke's Vince Taylor still smarts over the NCAA logic that mat- ches the Blue Devils against Kentucky in the semi-finals of the Mideast Regional Thursday night - on the Wildcats' home court. "This game Thursday will be the toughest of our season, and we all know it," said the 6-foot-5 sophomore who lived in the Lexington, Ky., area for five years. "We're going to have to claw our way in there and out. There may be a lot of blood on the floor before it's over." Kentucky, 29-5, lost to Duke in a season-opening game back in Novem- ber. But it's a case of two different teams now. Duke, ranked No. 1 early in the season, stumbled and has been recovering. Kentucky has improved consistently. "Their freshmen have experience now. That was Sam Bowie's' first college game when we beat them, and they have three other freshmen playing a lot," Taylor noted. But, Taylor added, "I don't think we'll be intimidated by the situation. We know what it's like to be at both en- ds of the stick this season. We've grown up a lot in the past couple of weeks. This could be our chance to prove it." NIT PAIRINGS MICHIGAN at Virginia Murray State at Illinois Southwest Louisiana at Minnesota St. Peter's at Nevada-Las Vegas h N . \:; .. ''': . Thursday, March 13, 1980 Dr. Joaquim Puig-Antich N.Y. State Psychiatric Institute "PREPUBERTAL MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS, AN OVERVIEW OF CURRENT RESEARCH" MHRI Conference Room 1057 3:45 to 5:00 p.m. Tea 3:15 p.m. MHRI Lounge C A. Grapplers take sixth; send four to sN ' SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT CAMP SEQUOIA. Located in the Catskill Mountains in Upstate N.Y. Our 49th year Positions available as cabin counselors and instructors in land sports, water sports, lake and pool (W.S.l.), fiber arts, wood- working, ceramics, music, photogrophy, ham radio/electron- ics, gymnastics, tennis, pioneering, and R.N.'s. INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS WED., MARCH 19th For Information-Contact Summer Placement Office. 764-7460. Positions available for Teen Tour leaders to Israel must have been to Israel, worked with teens, and be 21 yrs-plus. Send resume to Summer Placement Office. By DREW SHARP The Michigan wrestlers took it on the chin at the recent Big Ten Championships at East Lansing. The grapplers finished a disappointing sixth at the meet held March 1 and 2. There was ore bright spot, however, as sophomore Eric Klasson won the heavyweight title and thus automatically qualified for the NCAA Championships to be held in Corvallis, -Ore., March 13-15. Three other Wolverine wrestlers also earned a trip to Oregon. All-American senior Steve Fraser placed third in th6 177 division. Sophomore John Beljan capped off a fine season by finishing fourth in the 150 weight class and another second-year man, Larry Haughn also came in fourth in the 126 weight group. Defending champion Iowa took the Big Ten crown once again, waltzing away from second place Wisconsin, 99.75-80.75. The Minnesota Gophers took -third place with 47 points, Michigan State nailed down the fourth position with 41.25 points, and Ohio State nosed out the Wolverines for fifth plce by getting 33 points while the Wolverines notched 31. The wrestlers finished the season at a 11-6-1 clip, slightly better than their 10-6 record of last season. Knicks 129, Rockets 109 NEW YORK (AP) - Ray Williams scored 12 of his 35 points in the third quarter last night to lead the New York Knicks to a 129-109 National Basketball Association victory over the Houston Rockets. The victory evened New York's record at 36-36 and gave the Knicks the fourth best record in the Eastern Con- ference, one game ahead of Houston with 10 games remaining in the regular season. If they finish in that position, the Knicks would have the home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs. TOBY KNIGHT and Michael Ray Richardson added 22 points apiece for the Knicks while Moses Malone topped the Rockets with 24 points and 18 rebounds. Monatreal(9, ligers 6 DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Rodney Scott and Andre Dawson hit run- scoring singles and Larry Parrish lof- ted a sacrifice fly for three first-inning runs that sparked the Montreal Expos to a 9-6 exhibition baseball victory over the Detroit Tigers yesterday. The Expos increased their lead to 6-0 with three more runs in the second in- ning. Ron Leflore, acquired in an off- season trade from Detroit, scored Chris Speier with a sacrifice fly, and Dawson stroked an RBI single and Ellis Valen- tine doubled home another run. FRED NORMAN, signed by the Ex- pos as a free agent, picked up the vic- tory as the third of four Expos' pit- chers. Elias Sosa got a save, while Pat Underwood took the loss for Detroit. Tom Brookens and Lance Parrish hit home runs for the Tigers in the third off Montreal starter Ross Grimsley, and Steve Kemp homered off Dyar Millar, the second Expos' hurler, in the fifth. Pacers 114, Celtics 108 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Long-range gunner Joe Hassett scored 13 points during a 17-4 fourth-quarter burst that carried Indiana to a 114-108 victory over the Boston Celtics last night, ending the Pacers' eight-game losing string in the National Basketball Association. Hassett scored three three-point goals and a pair of two-pointers as the Pacers turned back a Boston rally that had closed the gap from 16 points to five with under nine minutes remaining. AFTER LARRY Bird's second three- point goal pulled the Celtics to 89-84, Hassett unloaded the first of his long- distance bombs. Mike Bantom followed with a basket and Hassett came back with a two-pointer before Gerald Henderson countered for Boston. Another 10-2 Indiana burst, including consecutive three-pointers by Hassett, gave the Pacers their biggest lead at 106-88 before the Celtics' final rally. X., .:j. ........... ...... .... f ' n.7: Mechanical pencil fans are all shook-up over the Pilot "Shaker"and NEO-X lead. Just shake the"Shaker"- out comes a sliding protective sleeve then the lead! Want more lead? Shake it again! That's all it takes to advance the lead in this beautiful, $5.98 mechanical pencil. And it comes with the famous Pilot 2 year unconditional guarantee. Then there's our extra strength NEO-X lead. We've proven it's the strongest lead in the world. Comes in four diameters and various degrees to fit all mechanical pencils. The "Shaker" mechanical Pencil and NEO-X lead Shake it or "click it". 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