full court PRESS Frieder makes cagers run... .. .'road work' paying off By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE EFORE THE START of the college basketball season last November, Uthe Crisler Arena floor was being dealt a severe beating. The per- petrators of the damage were none other than the Michigan Wolverines, being put through a regimen of running unlike any they had ever experien- ced. One year before, when Johnny Orr was still the boss, the team practiced for two hours at the most. But rookie head coach Bill Frieder remembered well the three overtime losses the Wolverines were saddled with last season, and he wasn't about to see a repeat performance under his command. So just to make sure the Wolverines weren't caught napping this year, Frieder made the team run. And run and run and run. And no more two hour practices, either. This year's group hit the hardwoods for as many as three hours every day before the season started-a great portion of that time spent running. In fact, freshman guard Dan Pelekoudas found that it wasn't the superior competition or the pressure that was the most difficult part of the transition from high school to college basketball. "It's definitely the practices," remarked Pelekoudas. "He (Frieder) really kills us." During one pre-season practice, Frieder noticed that some of his charges were stopping short of the baseline as they raced up and down the floor. "Three overtime losses!" yelled Frieder. "That's the difference touching the lines makes. That's not going to happen this year!" Well, if the results of this season are any indicator, the Wolverines started touching the lines. Thus far, Michigan has participated in three extra session contests, but unlike last year, the Wolverines have come '' n 'y vs . out on the winning end of all three Minnesota succumbed to the Blue in Minneapolis (in a double-overtime ffair), while Indiana and Illinois ~ also in double-OT) both bowed to Michigan in Ann Arbor. Add to that a one-point win over Dayton down in Frieder the Buckeye state, and one can ... runs the show easily see that this year's squad is a much-improved one. All this improvement on a team where the only major change from one year ago is a new man at the helm. The nucleus of the team is the same from lastrcompaign's 17-13 squad which finished sixth inthe Big Ten. But Frieder has squeezed every bit of potential out of a group which he admits is not as talented as some others in the conference. Consider Frieder's accomplishments in his young head coaching career. To begin with, he guided the Wolverines through the non-conference schedule unmarred, entering Big Ten play with a perfect 9-0 mark. In the league season thus far, the cagers have notched three road wins-tw more than they claimed all of last year-and two more victories at home for a 5-3 record, second best in the league. And following Michigan's 78-65 romp over then-ranked Arkansas on December 6, the Wolverines have been regular members of the nation's top twenty polls. But still, Frieder isn't ready to sit back and relax. "We're not a very good team," he remarked following the Illinois win. "We just work so hard." Which is exactly why the Wolverines are a good team. In a league as balanced as the Big Ten, hard work is what makes the difference. That's why a hustling team like Iowa, with no real abundance of talent, can win consistently, and a team like Ohio State, with a plethora of talent, only wins when it feels like playing hard. If the Wolverines can continue to play with the same intensity that has become their trademark this year, they have an excellent chance to qualify for the NCAA tournament, which was the goal the cagers set for themselves before the season's inception. One main advantage Frieder enjoys is the confidence of his players. Following the win over Indiana, co- captain Thad Garner exclaimed in the dressing room, "I feel great! We beat the second best coach in America (Bobby Knight). I don't have to tell you who the best is." It seems that playing on a winning team has made Garner forget the pain his legs went through back in November. The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 4, 1981-Page 9 SPOR TS OF THE DAILY IU's Knight alright, says Big Ten CHICAGO (AP)-Big Ten Com- missioner Wayne Duke said yesterday that Indiana Coach Bobby Knight has not been reprimanded for grabbing an official during Saturday's basketball game against Purdue. "From all available reports, Coach Knight was concerned that he could not see the play and he pulled the official aside," said Duke. "There was a telephone exchange between Knight and Herm Rohrig (Big Ten supervisor of officials) and Rohrig reminded Knight that there is to be no contact with officials. " AS A MATTER of fact," added Duke, "It was Knight who initiated the telephone exchange. There have been reports that Coach Knight was reprimanded by the Big Ten but they have been exaggerated." Kush being sued PHOENIX (AP)-Former Arizona State football Coach Frank Kush testified yesterday that he "couldn't recall ever touching" ex-Sun Devil player Kevin Rutledge in a 1978 game and says he first learned of an alleged punching incident through a booster almost a year later. Rutledge is suing Kush, the univer- sity, former Sun Devil assistant coach Bill Maskill and others for $2.2 million in damages-claiming Kush punched him in the mouth following a poor punt during Arizona State's 41-7 loss to Washington Oct. 18, 1978. HE ALSO CLAIMS Kush and Maskill subsequently harassed him into quit- ting the team and forfeiting his scholar- ship. Kush, testifying for the second straight day, told the court that he had no recollection of ever grabbing Rutledge's face mask but said there was "a possibility" that he may have slapped Rutledge's helmet at the time. Rutledge testified Kush grabbed his face mask in the Washington game while he still had his helmet on and chinstrap fastened, shook his head from side to side and up and down and landed a "kunckle-punch" that Rutledge said split his upper lip. Marsikova defeated DETROIT (AP)Unseeded Claudia Kohde defeated No. 5 seed Regina Mar- sikova 6-1, 6-3 in the second round yesterday fo an Avon women's tennis tournament. THE SPONSORING toiletries manufacturer, meanwhile, dropped the tournament purse from $150,000 to $125,000, charging the Women's Tennis Association failed to make sure one of the tour's top three players showed. Avon said the WTA is bound by con- tract to provide top players. The WTA had no comment on the purse. Several top players skipping the event were Tracy Austin, Martina Navratilova and Billie Jean King. UPI Top Twenty 1. Oregon St. (33)...........17-0 2. Virginia (7).............18-0 3. DePaul ..................18-1 4. LSU (1)..................19-1 5. Arizona St..............15-2 6. Kentucky ..............15-3 7. Utah...............i1-1 8. Wake Forest ..........16-2 9. Notre Dame ............. 14-3 10. N. Carolina ............. 16-4 11. Maryland .............15-4 12. Tennessee ..............15-3 13. Indiana ...............13-7 14. UCLA ..................12-4 15. MICHIGAN.............14-3 16. Iowa ...................13-4 17. S. Alabama............17-3 18. Connecticut .............15-3 19. Brigham Young..........15-4 20. Wichita St...............16-2 602 578 509 473 366- 329 317 255 246 134 133 112 94 81 78 45 36 32 :1 IM SCORES Sunday Water Polo Co-Rec Hit and Run 13, Hi Ho's6 Scrambled Ii12. Water Rats 0 (forfeit) Breakers 5, D.I.R.T. 2 Master Pieces 21,Forfeit 7 Monday Table Tennis Residence Hall Gomberg 3, Huberties 0 Couzens Skids 2, Frost 1 Paddleball Graduate Law Gold 2, MBA Orange 1 Basketball Co-Rec Breakers 44, Roundballers 24 Fubars 107, Remnants 34 Graduate Pisces 38,Caveman 33 Trash 52, DSD D' 40 Residence Hall 'A' Mutiny 40, Rotvig 32 Lewis 80.3rd Hamilton 18 ,B, Oxford 19, Reeves 17 Tailor Chiefs 47,VanTyne 27 LSATEGMAT. GRE ITEST PREPARATION CENTERS I AAUP CHAPTER MEETING (OPEN TO THE PUBLIC) Thurs., Feb. 5 at Noon Michigan League-Michigan Room VICE-PRESIDENT BRINKERHOFF will discuss the FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE UNIVERSITY PROF. WILFRED KAPLAN will summarize questions raised by the Auditor- General and Vice-Pres. Brinkerhoff will respond. This meeting is intended to be an open forum on issues of retrenchment, as proposed in the letter to the Michigan Daily on Jan. 18. Those attending may take their lunch trays from the League Cafeteria to the meeting room. 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