Page 10-Sunday, December 6, 1981-The Michigan Daily Icers outskate Buckeyes, 7-3, gain split By MARK BOROWSKI The Maize and Blue beat the Bucks for the first time all year last night. After a loss on the gridiron two weeks ago and one on the ice Friday night, Michigan finally topped arch-rival Ohio State by a 7-3 score in front of 5,463 rowdy hockey enthusiasts. "THE KIDS rose to the occasion," said Michigan coach John Giordano. "Ohio State has a good team. We got in the game early. Ohio State got behind, and that was the key." Wolverine Peter Mason cpntinued to display his solid goaltending skills in turning back 31 Buckeye shots and raising his record to 3-0-1 on the season. Senior Dennis May also turned in a fine performance, collecting one goal and three assists. "Mason had a good game," Giordano said. "He had good concentration, and he was watching the puck." After a lackadaisical performance Friday night, the Wolverines came out" playing a bruising, aggressive brand of hockey that paid off in their thrashing of the Buckeyes. And they did it without three of their starters, all of whom were injured the night before. Defenseman Brian Lundberg has an injured knee, and defenseman Mike Neff and center Joe Milburn both incurred separated shoulders. It is not known when the three will be able to return. May offensive star;, Mason still unbeaten. "CONSIDERING all the injuries, we did remarkably well," said Giordano. "We're hoping to get healthy (for Miami)." Michigan's often-out-of-service of- fensive machine got rolling early with three goals in the first period. Fresh- man Paul Kobylarz collected his fourth goal of the season at 1:29 of the season on a nifty backhander. Dennis May started the play by passing to Billy Reid who was positioned in the slot. Reid then deflected the puck to Kobylarz, who whirled a backhand shot past Ohio State goalie John Damrath to make the score 1-0. The Wolverines scored their second goal at 7:47, while captain Steve Rich- mond was off for tripping. Juniors Ted Speers and Brad Tippett were forechecking intensely, and Speers dug the puck out from behind the Buckeye net and flipped it to Tippett in front of Damrath. Tippett then knocked it past the Ohio State netminder. THE SCARLET and Gray pulled to within one at 12:50 of the first period on a power-play goal by senior Larry Mar- son, while Speers was in the penalty box for elbowing. Reid picked up his second goal of the season with only seven seconds remaining on an interference penalty to Buckeye Jamie Macoun. It was only the sixth power-play goal of the season for Michigan in 70 attempts and gave Gior- dano and Co. a 3-1 lead. But Ohio State came out strong in the second period and took advantage of some sloppy Wolverine puck handling to make the score 3-2. Blue defenseman Mark Perry lost the puck in his own end, and the Buckeye's Steve Amoruso skated in all alone on Mason and flicked the puck over the senior's shoulder. MICHIGAN retaliated 10 minutes later when it pulled its goalie on a delayed Buckeye penalty. Freshman defenseman John Hawkins let a slap- shot rip from the point that Damrath stopped. But Richmond wristed the rebound into the top corner of the net, giving Michigan a 4-2 lead. In the final stanza the Wolverines collected three more goals with Kobylarz, Dennis May and Speers each accounting for one. Kobylarz knocked in a Reid rebound, and May notched his goal by aggressively chasing a loose puck that Damrath didn't cover suf- ficiently and jammed it through his legs. Speers' 11th goal of the season came on a slapshot from the left face- off circle that caught the far corner of the net.! The win improved Michigan's CCHA record to. 5-3-2 on the season and drop- ped the Buckeyes' to 2-7-1. The Wolverines travel to Miami, Ohio next weekend to take on the seventh-place Redskins. Photo by JEFF SCHRIER MICHIGAN'S JEFF GRADE and Steve Yoxheimer vie for the puck with Ohio State's Dave Kobryen and Mike Rousseau last night at Yost Ice Arena. But the Wolverines avenged Friday night's 4-3 loss by defeating the Buckeyes, 7- 3. Bucks stop here FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Kobylarz (Reid, Dn. May) 1:29; 2. M-Tippett (Speers) 7:47; 1. OSU-Marson (Macoun, Mandich) 12:50; 3. M-Reid (Dennis May) 18.43. Penalties: OSU-Mandich (hooking) 2:24; M-Richmond (tripping) 6:41; M-Speers (elbowing) 11:02: M-Dn. May (roughing) 14:28; OSU-Macoun (interference) 16:50. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 2. OSU-Amoruso (unassisted) 6:49; 4. M-Richmond (Hawkins, McCauley) 16:58. Penalties: M-Hawkins (interference) 2:32; M-Perry (tripping) 4:00; OSU-Rousseau (cross- checking) 5:22; OSU-Mandlch (interference) 9:53; M-Richter (high-sticking) 18:56; OSU-Pooley (holding) 18:56. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 5. M-Kobylarz (Reid, Dn. May) 4:47; 6. M-Dn. May 5:23; 3. OSU-Browne (Amoruso) 6:07; 7. M-Speers (Voxhelmer)-15:41. Penalties: OSU-Mandich (tripping) 7:49; OSU-Kobryn (roughing) 7:49; M-Grade (roughing) 7:49; M-bench penalty (too many men on ice) 10:30; M-Yoxheimer (roughing) 13:34. SAVES M-Mason.................7 OSU-Damrath ............8 15 9 8 5 - 31 - IS MEES, LASER ELIMINATED: Netter Leach in tourney semis By TAM BENTLEY ' "I just try and improve a little each day; tomorrow I'll just come and play a little better than today." That's the strategy of Michigan tennis player Mike Leach, top seed in the Prince Midwest Men's Collegiate Singles Championships at Ann Arbor's Liberty Racquet Club, who yesterday advanced to the semifinals with a 6-3,'6-3 victory over Purdue's Adam Abele. Today's winner and runner-up automatically qualify for the Prince National Tournament held the third weekend in January in Princeton, N.J. "I WAS PRETTY pleased with my playing today-6-3, 6-3, that's not bad," said Leach. Michigan tennis coach Brian Eisner, however, said that Leach is "capable of playing better. He has not played a great match in this tournament." Leach prevented Michigan from complete failure, as he was the only one of three Wolverines left in the competition who won yesterday. On Friday, the first day of the tournament, six of eight Michigan players won their first-round matches. The second round saw three Michigan netters lose in close matches. "I was disappointed," said Eisner, "but not in the way they played.' In yesterday's play, second seed Mark Mees was beaten by Southern Illinois' Doug Burke, 6-4, 6-4. "Mark did not play a bad match," said Eisner. "Burke just outplayed him." Michigan's other tour- nament entry, Ross Laser, was beaten by North- western's Dan Weiss, 6-3, 7-5. "Ross got off to a slow start," Eisner explained. THE PRINCE National Tournament takes the top two players from each of the eight regional tour- naments held across the U.S. It then draws 16 ad- ditional players from names submitted by each of the participating coaches, to round out the 32-man field. This tournament is the only chance during the year that Division One, Two, and Three school players have to compete against each other. The regional tournament this weekend began with 64 men, eight of them from Michigan: It is a single- elimination competition-one loss and you're out. All the teams from the Big Ten sent competitors, with the exceptions of Ohio State and Indiana. Now, the lone remaining Wolverine is Leach. Eisner is confident that Leach will go all the way. "He's got the inside track," the coach said. "Each match, he keeps playing better and better, which is something he'll have to continue to do." Leach's first opponent today is Southern Illinois' Robert Seguso. The winner of that match-up then moves on toplay the winner of the battle between Burke and Weiss. The netter who comes out on top of that match is the regional champion. The tournament's semifinal matches begin at 10:00 a.m. at the Liberty Racquet Club. Photo by JEFF SCHRIEX WOLVERINE LEFT WINGER Jeff Tessier skates the puck out of the Michigan zone in last night's 7-3 victory over Ohio State. SPOR TSOF THE DAILY: Special to the Daily STATE COLLEGE, Pa.- Michigan wrestlers Eric Klasson and Joe Mc- Farland took championships in their respective weight classes last night at the Penn State Invitational. Klasson, wrestling in the heavy-weight class and McFarland competing at 118 pounds, were both impressive, according to Wolverine coach Dale Bahr. Two other Wolverines, John Beljan in the 150-pound class and Nemir Nadhir at 158, placed third in the competition. The tournament's top two teams were North Carolina and Syracuse, who gar- nered three first-place finishes each. There were two major upsets at the In- vitational, as John Hanrahan of Penn State and Charlie Helier of Clarion State, both ranked second in the nation in their weight divisions, lost their mat- ches. Hanrahan fell to Dan Morrison in the 167-pound class, and Heller lost to Tim Morrison in the 177-pound weight category. The Morrisons are brothers who grapple for Rider College. Hoopsters squeak by Special to the Daily CINCINNATI - The Wolverine women basketball team squeaked past Indiana State, 82-81, in yesterday's University of Cincinnati-Coca-Col.a Classic. Michigan's scoring attack was led by Diane Dietz, who garnered 25 points. Peg Harte had 20 points, and her sister, K. D. Harte, knocked in 11. The Wolverines' five starters accounted for 76 of the 82 points that Michigan scored in the game. Thp Wnlvprinma w;..dn at half gra pplers take two firsts at PSU i first place in the Atlantic Division of the National Basketball Association last night. After leading 59-47 at the end of the first half, the Knicks' lead was never less than 11 points in the second half. The game's first three goals came from New York's Maurice Lucas in a span of 1:44 and shortly thereafter the Knicks led by seven after only 3:15. Richardson followed with six straight points.in a little over 1% minutes as the Knicks increased their margin to 22-9 with five minutes to play in the first period: In that span, Richardson and Lucas accounted for 18 of the Knicks' 22 points. DePaul 73, Purdue 67 CHICAGO (AP) - Terry Cummings scored 23 points and Bernard Randolph came off the bench to add 20 last night and spark a second-half surge that carried No. 7 DePaul to a 73-67 win over Purdue in college basketball action. The Blue Demons led most of the way, locking up their second win in as many outings with 10 unanswered poin- ts midway through the second half, padding a 52-50 lead into a 62-50 cushion. CUMMINGS HAD six points in that streak, including DePaul's last field goal of the contest with 4:30 remaining, and Randolph scored four. But after Cummings picked up his fif- th foul with 3:20 left to play, the Blue Demons went into a slowdown offense. Purdue twice cut the margin to five points, at 64-59 and 66-61, but DePaul converted 11 of 12 free throws down the stretch to put the game on ice. The Boilermakers' Russell Cross led all scorers with 30 points, but got little support from his teammates. Keith Edmonson added 17, but he was the only other Purdue player to contribute more than five points. Mavericks 109, Nuggets 105 DALLAS (AP) - Rookie forward Jay Vincent sank two free throws with 36 seconds left, then blocked a layup to preserve Dallas' 109-105 win over Den- ver in National Basketball Association play last night. Denver had run off eight consecutive points and tied the game at 105 with 50 seconds remaining. Milwaukee edges Pistons, 111-108; Thomas injured, status unknown. By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE Special tothe Daily PONTIAC - No one can say they didn't try. The Detroit Pistons, down by 17 poin- ts with 4:35 to play in the game and minus rookie sparkplug Isiah Thomas, fought back to within one point of the Milwaukee Bucks last night before finally losing, 111-108. IT WAS Detroit's sixth defeat in as many games, but the real loss came at the beginning of the fourth quarter. Thomas, the team's leading scorer this season, was knocked to the floor as he guarded Milwaukee's Kevin Stacom, spraining his right ankle in the process. The first-year guard was taken from the court on a stretcher and left for the hospital in the back seat of his Mer- cedes immediately after the game to be comeback. They were sent home disap- pointed, however, as Tripucka's three- point shot attempt, which would have tied the game with 10 seconds left, was blocked by the Bucks' Sidney Moncrief, preserving the win for Milwaukee. "We were pretty tired," said Detroit coach Scotty Robertson. "It was ob- vious. Milwaukee got a little panicky, like we did in the third quarter. They couldn't make the free-throws to put it away, but they outplayed us and deser- ved to win the ball game." THE LOSS wasted a fine effort by Tripucka, who led all scorers with 30 points and all rebounders with 14. "I don't know what the hell to do," said Tripucka. "I'm trying to get everybody ,. it o i n a nmw a m m nradv hbt time I was in shape." Milwaukee, which was led in scoring by Moncrief and Quinn Buckner, both with 20 points, as the Bucks upped their record to 12-6. The pistons, meanwhile, slid to 8-11 on the year. Aft U ' ' :, 7