The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981 --Page 5-D Frieder's task: replace four starters Ce7th in '81 ,after late collapse and win in overtime. It was in the second of these extra-session contests that the Wolverines defeated Indiana, the eventual Big Ten and NCAA cham- pion. THE BLUE CAGERS reached the high point of their Big Ten season several weeks later, when they defeated Wisconsin for their fourth win in a row, a 7-3 conference record, a share of the league lead, and a Number 12 national ranking. Then the bottom fell out. Starting with a 105-87 debacle at home against Ohio State in which the Bucks shot 70% from the floor, the Wolverines proceeded to lose six in a row-in- By MARK FISCHER "T have no idea who my start- ingfive will be right now. -Bill Frieder Summer, 1981 It's no wonder that Frieder, Michi- ans second year basketball coach,' doesn't know who will takle the floor for hizi when the 1981-82 season begins. FOUR OF THE five starters from last' year's squad are now gone, and only two of the returning cagers-senior forward and captain Thad Garner and sophomore center Tim McCormick (who underwent knee surgery in June but is expected back)- logged more than five minutes a game in the 1980-41 campaign. Yes, you might say that Frieder gave he nod to experience last winter; but he ad good reason. His five star- ter -Garner and seniors Mike McGee, Paul Heuerman, Johnny Johnson and Marty Bodnar-had all started the previous year, one in which the Blue hoopsters won'17 out of 30 games. And for a while, Frieder's personnel- handling strategy seemed to be working beautifully. The Wolverines all but . coasted through thgeir non- conference schedule, winning their first nine games with little difficulty for the best start by a Michigan basketball team since 1926-27. Included in the cagers' pre-Big Ten season spree were impressive wins over two eventual NCAA tournament teams, Kansas (64- 52) and Arkansas (78-65). THIS EARLY RUN of success not only gave Frieder an unblemished career slate as Michigan's head coach, but it served to get the team a Number Eight ranking in the national polls, as well. Neither of these conditions held true for long, however, for it was then that the Big Ten portion of the Wolverines' schedule came up. In its first conferen- ce contest against Purdue, Michigan's undefeated bubble was burst 'soundly by the Boilermakers, who shot a siz- zling 75% from the floor in an 81-74 win over the visitors from Ann Arbor. The Wolverines bounced back in Minneapolis several days later, though, with a 68-67 double-overtime thriller over Minnesota which was to mark the beginning of the "Kardiac Kids" phase of their season. In two of its next three games (and in three, of its next four home outings), Michigan came from behind to tie at the end of regulation remains now, though, is what does 1981- 82 hold in store for the Michigan hoop- sters? As mentioned earlier, their 1981- 81 seniors, who accounted for almost three-quarters of the team's scoring last season, are all gone-McGee and possibly Johnson off to the pros, Heuerman and the two Bodnar brothers off to law school. "Well," said Frieder, "we are going to have a sound player returning in Thad Garner, an experienced player in McCormick, a super freshman in guard Eric Turner (6-3 All-American from Flint Central), and the rest of the players are good. But you have to remember that we will be a very young team." Young, yes, Inexperienced, yes. But boring? No, says Frieder. "In may ways (we'll be) a more enthusiastic and exciting team. The experts pick us as low as eighth or ninth, but I think you will see a very good basketball team here next season. Our main weakness is youth, but I think, in the long run, that may prove to be our strength. "WE WILL BE bigger at center (with McCormick, at 6-10, replacing Heuer- man in the pivot, and 7-2 sophomore Jon Antonides backing him up) and a little stronger rebounding at the forward positions (to be. manned by Garner, 6-7 junior Ike Person, 6-6 sophomore M. C. Burton, 6-8 junior Leo Brown, and/or 6- 8 freshman Willis "Stretch" Carter) so our board totals will increase. With Eric Turner at guard, we will definitely increase the quickness of our backcourt and allow for both a fast-breaking and disciplined basketball team." Helping Turner out in the backcourt will be 6-5 junior Joe James, who played more minutes last season than any other returning guard, 6-1 playmaking sophomore Dan Pelekoudas, 6-7 guard-forward Dean Hopson, a sophomore from Ann Arbor Huron, and 6-4 freshman Leslie Rockymore, a sharpshooter from Detroit Southwestern who may also see some action in the frontcourt. Also on hand is 6-3 frosh Greg Washington from Detroit Western. Washington, who is strong enough to play forward, will join the hoop team only after the football season has ended, as he comes to Ann Arbor to play that sport, as well. "Because there are so many new faces in the lineup, there will be much healthy competition for playing slots," continued the coach. "These men know there is floor time to be had, and each has a shot at that time. Also, our attack will be more balanced than last year-a little more by consequence than design, but more balanced, nonetheless." Thus the 1981-82 Michigan basketball team will sport many newcomers who will have to fill large vacancies left by their predecessors. With so much youth, however, the team has great future potential. It should be an in- teresting season. 1980-81 Basketball Statistics G-S FG-FGA McGee* ..........30-30 309-600 Johnson* .........30-30 195-351 Garner ...........30-30 120-233 Heuerman*.......30-30 79-161 Bodnar, Mt*. 30-22 89-164 McCormick ....30-0 54-106 Bodnar, Mk*. 27-8 31-65 Burton...... . 18-0 13-30 James ..........23-0 17-40 Person..........28-0 13-36 Hopson ........... 14-0 4-22 Pelekoudas..... ...18-0 5-9 Antonides........12-0 3-4 Brown............12-0 2-7 MICHIGAN .........30 934-1828 Opponents.........30 874-1716 x-Includes Team Rebounds Pet. FT-FTA Pct. REB-AVG A STL .515 114-169 .675 118-3.9 35 46 .556 42-54 .778 109-3.6 105 39 .515 64-88 .727 167-5.6 76 44 .491 76-93 .813 156-5.2 62 25 .543 30-39 .769 64-2.1 94 23 .5091 47-60 .783 106-3.5 14 3 .477 15-19 .789 17-0.6 55 8 .433 4-12 .333 20-1.1 2 1 .425 3-5 .600 23-1.0 8 2 .361 8-11 .727 40-1.4 11 1 .182 7-11 .636 10-0.7 2 1 .556 4-10 .400 4-0.2 5 3 .750 2-6 .333 7-0.6 0 0 .286 0-1 .000 9-0.8 0 0 .511 416-578 .720 950-31.7 469 196 .509 371-537 .691 969-32.3 452' 127 PF-D 89-5 47-0 81-3 98-6 64-0 83-2 25-0 17-0 14-0 18-0 8- 8-17-0 9-0 7-0 577-16 556-13 AVG 24.4 14.4 10.1 7.8 6.9 5.2 2.9 1.7' 1.6 1.2 1.1 0.8 0.7 0.3 76.1 70.6 BLOCKED SHOTS: McCormick 14; Garner 9; Heuerman 8; Johnson 6; Burton 3. Totals: Michigan 44, Opponents 72 DEADBALL REBOUNDS: Michigan 73, Opponents 72 RECORD: (19-11); Home (12-4), Away (5-7), Neutral (2-0); Big Ten (8-10) *(Asterisk denotes those players not returning in 1981-82.) p ommmmmomom mmommmm~m * .FREE PINBALL! This coupon entitles the bearer to 500 worth of Free Pinball Games at: Tommy's Holiday Camp : * 632 Packard * ~ Expires Sept. 24, 1981 ONE PER CUSTOMER PER WEEK .mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm McCormick ... now the big man cluding a 74-70 home loss to North- western, the conference's perennial doormat. The losing streak was finally snapped at home against Minnesota, in a game in which Mike McGee became the Big Ten's all-time career scorer with a 36- point effort. Leading everybody in scoring was nothing new to McGee. The speedy 6-5 forward from Omaha, who led Michigan in scoring for each of his four years in Ann Arbor, was the top point-producer in 26 of the cagers' 30 games last season, a fact which helped him receive the Bill Buntin Award for the team's Most Valuable Player. A LOSS TO Purdue on the last game of the regular season erased any chan- ce that the cagers-who finished seven- th in the Big Ten with an 8-10 conferen- ce mark-previously had at an NCAA tournament berth. The National In- vitation Tournament did give Michigan a bid for the second year in a row, however. The Wolverines had little trouble eliminating their first two NIT op- ponents, Duquesne (74-58) and Toledo (80-68), whom they faced in the familiar confines of Crisler Arena. Syracuse, where the Blue cagers faced the Orangemen in the semifinal round, was not nearly so friendly. Syracuse found enough holes in the Wolverine defense to hit its first 16 shots from the field in the second half on its way to a 71% field goal percen- tage for the game and a 91-76 victory over the Blue visitors, who finally en- ded up their own season with 19 wins and 11 losses. ALL IN ALL, said Frieder, "it was a good season." The question that t t 1 i f t t * secret Ad mirer Sports Information Photo THAD GARNER, THE Wolverine hoopsters lone returning starter from 1980-81, will be relied upon heavily for increased scoring and rebounding over his 10.1 and 5.6 per game averages of a year ago, as coach Bill Frieder must rebuild from youth. 1980-81 Big Ten Basketball Standings Conference Overall Indiana ......... Iowa ............ Illinois .......... Purdue ........ Minnesota ....... Ohio State .:..... MICHIGAN ..... lichigan State .. Wisconsin ....... Northwestern ... W 14 13 12 10 9 9 8 7 5 3 L 4 5- 6 8 9 9 10 11 13 15 W 21 21 20 18 17 14 17 13 11 9 L 9 6 7 9 10 13 10 14 15 18 a class by itself...the crewneck shetland ethe tis is a man who nows what eat e d e 's o ten'.Everything and fornts ~~ ian football fan. XheomalW peet gifts. 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