NCAA TOt High-flying Iowfi PHILADELPHIA (AP )-The possession of the ball and a basket by upheralded Iowa Hawkeyes, aided by a Steve Krafcisin made it 60-57 with 6:52 technical foul and Vince Brookins' free to go. ow sharpshooting late in the game, Four quick points by Roosevelt Bouie Iet sixth-ranked Syracuse 88-77 in the later brought Syracuse within one at 62- semifinals of the NCAA's East Regional 61 but that was as close as the bsketball championships last night. Orangemen came the rest of the way. The victory sends the Big Ten team Brookins wound up with 10 successful into Sunday's East finals at the free throws in the last eight minutes Sp'etrum against the winner of last and 21 points for the game. night's second game between eighth- Kevin Boyle scored 10 of his 18 points ranked Maryland and No. 11 in the first half to help Iowa take a 40-33 Georgetown. ,lead at the intermission. Krafcisin Iowa, which tied for fourth in the Big added 14 for the Hawkeyes. Ten during the regular season, turned Louis Orr led Syracuse with 25 points * opening game around with a nine- while Bouie had 18 and Erich Santifer point string with less than eight contributed 14. minuites to go. Lti'UsU1't« 66f, ,The Hawkeyes -were helped by a technical foul on Syracuse Coach Jim Texas A &WM 55 Boeheim, which turned into a five-point play and actually gave them the lead. HOUSTON (AP) -Second-ranked The technical was called against Louisville's All-America guard Darrell Boeheim when he beefed about a foul Griffith made four free throws and a called on Syracuse freshman Tony layup in the overtime period to pace the Bruin. Brookins made both ends of the hard-pressed Cardinals tok a 66-55 1-and-1 foul against Bruin and one of victory last night over Texas A&M in technical foul attempts to give Iowa the NCAA Midwest Regionals. 7 lead. The Hawkeyes also got The Cardinals, champions of the ACCEPTS WEST COAST JOB: The Michigan Daily-Saturday, March T5, 1980-Page 7 URNAMENT crushes Orange Metro Conference, will now play the a Griffith layup icing matters with 11 winner of last night's second game seconds to go. between Missouri and Louisana State Texas A&M of the Southwest Sunday to advance to the final four. Conference finished the season 26-8, the Griffith, who had a game-high 24 best basketball year in the school's points and started the game history. sensationally with a slam dunk, missed The Aggies were led by Dave Britton, N., \'i full court R S. NCAA Match-ups East Iowa (22-8) vs. Maryland-Georgetown winner Mideast Duke (24-8) vs. Purdue (21-9) Midwest Louisville (30-3) vs. Missouri-LSU winner West Clemson (23-8) vs. UCLA (20-9) . lr.:::::": ": ": v.: "w::, ::: w: v~~v- ;},...2}LA (20 -9 )"L}{i: :;,{}:}?"X.v:"i:%v( :f-.v.:v::::w5vv :: }'i":vier :t4:{" .v: ti :{-0 .{f ."Fi?'}}'{qE l..'V ::r" \.r 1 i 1 a 15-footer in the final second that would have given the Cardinals a victory in regulation time. The Aggies tied the game 53-53 with 1:59 to go in regulation and the Cardinals stalled the rest of the way before Griffith missed. The Cardinals jumped ahead in the overtime on a Griffith free throw and a bucket by Roger Burkman off a Griffith miss. Griffith then made three more free throws and the Cardinals ran away with who had 16 points, Vernon Smith, who scored 12, and Rynn Wright, who had 11, Backing Griffith for the Cardinals was Wiley Brown with 15 points. Britton, who turned the ballover seven times in the first half, scored six straight points in the final two minutes and Louisville led only 35-33 at halftime. The Cardinals went six minutes without a point before Brown got hot with two buckets and three free throws that set up the overtime._ Blue ,grid aide quits By SCOTT M. LEWIS "I look upon it as a great he exodus from the Michigan opportunity," said Harbaugh, a tball coaching staff continued standout in football and baseball for Thursday when defensive backfield Bowling Green during the early 1960's. cop h Jack' Harbaugh accepted the He was drafted by the Buffalo Bills of potion of defensive co-ordinator at the old AFL. Stanford. After receiving a bachelor's -and ,Harbaugh, a Bo Schembechler aide master's degree from Bowling Green, fo.the past seven seasons, joins Don Harbaugh spent several years as a high ?'e Ian and Dennis Brown on the list of school coach in Ohio, earning exMichigan assistants. Nehlan, conference honors at Zenia in 1966. The Schembechler's offensive co-ordinator, following year he took an assistant position at Morehead State, then returned to his alma mater for three seasons before heading for Iowa. He was coaching at Iowa when Schembechler added him to the Michigan braintrust in 1973. A Stanford official reached in Palo Alto, Cal. said "Becoming defensive co-ordinator is a career advancement for him. He'll be working under (former NFL great) Paul Wiggin, who is one of the best defensive coaches around." The Harbaugh move to California will create a void not only for Schembechler, who now must fill two vacancies, with spring practice one week away. Harbaugh's son Jim, 15, quarterbacked the Ann Arbor Pioneer High squad last fall, and was most impressive toward the end of the Harbaugh season. An older son, John, has signed a letter of intent to play footblal at Miami .. gone to Stanford of Ohio. was named head coach at West Virginia At Stanford, Harbaugh will enter a January and shortly thereafter situation markedly different from that own also departed for West Virginia. at Michigan. Schembechler statement: a indefinitely suspended (Continued from Page 1 future time." suspended from the team, while middle WHILE S C H E M B E C H LE R guard Mike Trgovac and three other attempted to clarify the nature of the players were placed on probation. The suspensions, one of the suspended latter group will continue to practice players, Mike Kligis, blasted both with the squad and play in the fall. Schembechler and the news media for, the manner in which the situation is UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS said the being handled. announcement by Schembechler "all Kligis also described the meeting of but eliminates" the possibility that the the team's juniors which resulted in the suspended players will have their handing out of suspensions to himself scholarships terminated. dfour other players. All of a sudden he started yelling," "If Bo were to make them (the Kligis told AP. "He said he had all of suspensions) permanent, there would this evidence on us but he never told us be a chance those grants could be what it is. He never gave us a chance to terminated," said one official. "But talk. He just- started ranting and right now it looks doubtful." raving." koWski met with Schembechler SCO R ES yesterday afternoon, in hopes of C ORs eari soe thngsU th CiderExhibition Baseball earing some things up," the gridder Detroit 2, Philadelphia t said. Houston 5, Montreal 2 Kansas City 4. New York AL 3 Following the meeting, Kwiatkowski Chicago (AL) 3, Pittsburgh 2 Cincinnati 5. B oston 0 sait, "he (Schembechler) was fine. San Francisco 8. Chicago NL 5 E, rything's fine," but he refused to. NBA e}oborate on the content of his SanAntonio 13,Detroit 102 didussion with the Wolverine coach. A hinta o 98 B oston 85 ' . ' Indiana 104, Philadelphia 94 :Iigis and Kwiatkowski, along with NCAA Basketball qu'rterback B.J. Dickey, outside IowaS,Syracuse88 lihebacker Ben Needham, and Louisville 66, TexasA&M ss cekicker Bryan Virgil, were Missouri-LSUincomplete Maryland-Georgetown, incomplete FREE PINBALL! I 50t Worth of the BEST in Pinball at these locations: Tommy's Holiday Como Freshmen start fast as NCAA Track finals begin Sampson slays.. but Blue stands tall By MARK MIHANOVIC C HALK ONE up for Goliath. Virginia freshman Ralph Sampson, at 7-4 and still growing, literally dropped 26 points into the basket, as the Cavaliers played what some courtside observers termed their best game of the year in whipping Michigan Thursday night, 79-68. VIRGINIA COULD DO nothing wrong in the first half, connecting on a mind-boggling 76 percent from the floor (19 or 25) and sinking five of seven charity tosses. Sampson was six of nine from in'side, and when Michigan converged its zone into the middle, Jeff Lamp (three for three) and Lee Raker (three for four) did their stuff from the perimeter. Stil, the Wolverines were only eight points down at halftime, a fact which Virginia coach Terry Holland admitted after the game had him more than mildly concerned. BUT, DESPITE A SECOND half of vintage Johnny Johnson, in which he connected on six of seven I-o-o-ng jumpers, the Blue cagers never were able to catch the Cavaliers and were finished off by a pair of Raker free throws which made the score 68-56 with 4:08 remaining in the season. Virginia had too much poise. Virginia had too much crowd: 9,000 screaming lunatics (of which maybe 100 were doing their screaming for the guys in Blue) who filled dome-shaped University Hall, located on the outskirts of Virgiia's beautiful, rolling campus. BUT MOST OF ALL, Virginia had too much Sampson. It had finally happened. Over and over again it had been said that Michigan couldn't win with a 6-8, 200-pound center. Ohio State, with 6-10, 240- pound Herb Williams, left Ann Arbor one game worse off than when they came in. The same for Purdue and 7-1, 240-pound Joe Barry Carroll. Paul. Heuerman held his own against both big men. But the eight-inch height disadvantage he encountered with Sampson proved to be overwhelming. To get a picture of the situation, envision Keith Smith trying to guard Heuerman inside. Sampson gave Heuerman the message early by rejecting a couple of attempts, and the Wolverine pivotman ended up with three rebounds and a four-of -13 shooting performance. BUT TO DWELL on the final loss would not be fair to a Michigan team that fulfilled every aspect of its potential. Oh sure, the players and coaches will tell you that if they had gotten a break here or if that guy had played well there, the Wolverines could have won several more ballgames. And to an extent, they're right. As a team, however, considering the talent and experience they possessed at the start of the campaign, they would seem to have squeezed every last ounce of potential out of their respective bodies. Next year there will be greater potential to tap. The only loss to graduation that Michigan suffers is that of co-captain Mark Lozier. WITH THE GRADUATION of Purdue's Carroll and possible NBA defection of the Buckeyes' Williams, Heuerman could conceivably become one of the top two or three centers in the conference. Mike McGee decided that he wanted to be a complete player this season and went a long way towards achieving that goal; if a big pro contract doesn't lure him away, he is All-America material. Thad Garner will be a year better and stronger; the key for him is to maintain his zest for basketball. The current group of incoming freshmen (Dean Hopson, Jon Antonides, and M.C. Burton III) aren't likely to make a big splash, but Johnny Orr's other major hopefuls, Tim McCormick and. Derek Harper, are a different story. BUT LET'S BACKTRACK to Thursday night. As I was scrambling and scribbling out my story, a Virginia fan approached me. "Are you from Michigan?" the woman inquired. "Yeah," I replied. More scrambling g "Well, I just want you to know, I think your team has a lotof class.' "Yeah." More scribbling. "THAT NUMBER 45," she continued, "he was behind by ten points with three minutes left, and he smiled and helped our boy up off the floor. That's class. We didn't do that in the ACC Tournament. He's a-champion." I stopped scrambling ... stopped scribbling. "Yes, ma'am, you're right. Thank you very much." Neither Thad Garner nor any of the other Wolverines will receive a Big Ten or NIT title trophy. It's just as well, though, because the award given by that Virginia fan doesn't leave much room on the mantlepiece for anything else. By JOHN FITZPATRICK Special to the Daily DETROIT-Two freshmen, Michael Carter and Carl Lewis highlighted the first night of action in the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships held last night at Joe Louis Arena. Lewis, from Houston, demolished the competition in the long jump with a leap of 26' 4 1/2" . Michigan so omore James Ross finished seventh with a jump of 24' 3%", missing All-American status by a mere three-quarters of an inch. IN THE SHIOT put, precompetition- favorite Carter dominated with an overpowering throw of 67' 71/2", which fell less than three inches short of the meet record held by Hans Hoglund of University of Texas-El Paso. The three mile race was won by Solomon Chebor, from Fairleigh, with a time of 13:21:00. He used a blistering last lap kick to overcome a strong field dominated by runners from UTEP, as four of the ten finalists were from that school. Chebor stayed behind the leaders during the early stages of the race and in the final quarter mile rushed by defending champion Michael Musyoki of UTEP. Musyoki finished the race in second place with a time of 13:22:08. Ironically, only one of the top six finishers, all of whom acquired All- American status,was an American. That man, Alan Scharsu of Penn State, finished fourth in 13:24:33. Sanya Owalbi of Kansas gained a victory in the finals of the triple jump with his 54' 31/" leap, edging Hoosier Robert Can- non by just three inches. Princeton's David Pellegrini won the 35-pound weight throw with a heave of 69'3%14", helping to continue a tradition of strong showings by Ivy League schools in this event. Three of the top six positions were claimed by athletes from the Ivy League. A great deal of confusion was caused when the automatic timing malfunctioned during the 440-yard dash. The manual timing used instead caused a number of runners to have identical times. Tennessee's Anthony Blair and Bert Cameron, from UTEP, tied for first place with 48:07. A four- way tie for fourth place at 49:01 required the scoring to.be split between seven runners instead of the customary six. THE 880-YARD RUN was won by defending champion, Evans White, from Prairie View, with a time okf 1:52:04. Michigan's qualifiers for today's finals include Mike Lattany in the high jump and the distance medley team of Tim Thomas, Ted Dobson, Dan Beck and Dan Heikkinen, who won their heat with a time of 9:53:09. Marshall Parks qualified for the semi-finals in the 60- yard high hurdles. I STARR BAR SPORTS OF THE DAILY' Tigers acquire Dyer 109 N. Main St.-769-0109 APPEARING TONIGHT: DICK SIEGEL Monday night: DICK SIEGEL Tuesday night: GANG WARS with JOHNNY THUNDERS "Ann Arbor's original Honky Tonk Dance Bar" LAKELAND (UPI)-The Detroit Tigers announced yesterday they have acquired veteran catcher Duffy Dyer from the Montreal Expos in a straight player trade. The Tigers gave up infielder Jerry Manuel in exchange for Dyer, who has been in the National League since 1969. DYER, 34, PLAYED with the New York Mets from 1969-74 and was a member of the club's 1962 World Series championship team. He also played with the 1973 Mets team that won the National League pennant. He played with the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1975-78 and spent the 1979 season with Montreal. Manuel, 26, was the Tigers' No. 1 draft choice in 1972. He played one year for the Detroit club, in 1976, but otherwise has been relegated to the Tigers' American Association farm club at Evansville, Ind. Dr(ffs - II-(;o fretutte Denise Dreffs said she was shocked to see her name in yesterday's Ann Arbor News. Dreffs was among six all- conference volleyball players selected to the Tri-County All-Conference squad. "IT WAS a complete surprise," said Dreffs, a Whitmore Lake native. "I'm glad the other coaches thought I was competitive enough to deserve this." n be left out in ..U 'U' thjw Gourd A4&Q*6 rn presents gar REqp i 5 voo SATURDAY Don't t .