SPORTS Page 8 Thursday, March 5, 1981 The Michigan Daily - ------------ Gophers tough test JOL IRMM.001 By JON MORELAND Most Big Ten basketball fans probably don't even remember the game. Along with providing coach Bill Frieder with his first Big Ten win, it gave Michigan a split in the crucial con- ference-opening road trip that began with a loss at Purdue. To refresh your memory, the game MICHIGAN (16-9, 7-9) 40-Mike McGee, 6-5 Sr. (24.1) .... . 45-Thad Garner, 6-7 Jr. (9.7) ...... 15-Paul Heuerman,6-8 Sr. (7.4) ... 34-John Johnson, 6-4 Sr. (14.8) ..... 24-Marty Bodnar,,6-3 Sr. (7.2) ..... was on January 10, 1981, when the Wolverines bounced the Minnesota Golden Gophers in Minneapolis in double-overtime, 68-67. That win brought the Wolverines back to Ann Arbor in excellent shape and saddled Minnesota with a possibly disastrous home-court loss. BUT IN THE Big Ten, the situation Corner F F C G G MINNESOTA (17-8, 9-7) .... 33-Zebedee Howell, 6-7 So. (2.9) ..... 42-Gary Holmes, 6-10 Jr. (7.9) .... 45-Randy Breuer, 7-3 So. (14.8) ..... 32-Trent Tucker, 6-5 Jr. (14.3) .........24-Mark Hall, 6-2 Jr. (14.9) can quickly change. The Gophers visit Crisler Arena this evening, and with just two games remaining on the conference schedule, they are the ones with the excellent shot at an NCAA Tournament berth. Last weekend's sweep of Illinois and Michigan State left Minnesota with a 9-7 record and a fourth place tie in the con- ference. "We've been playing our best ball of the season lately," said Minnesota coach Jim Dutcher. "We'd like to keep things going by winning two more this week." THE WOLVERINES, on the other hand, are in the midst of a six-game losing streak which has left them in a tie for sixth in the conference at 7-9. In the last three weeks, Michigan has shown little of the spunk it displayed in the double-overtime win in Min- neapolis. The recent streak poses some problems for Frieder in his attempt to avoid letting the skid become a seven- game affair. "We have to get the kids fired up," said the first-year head coach. "We've got a lot of pride to prove that what we've accomplished already this season was no fluke." But playing Minnesota at a time like this doesn't make the prospects of tur- ning things around much easier. "THEY'LL BE juiced up because they are on a win streak and in the hunt for a NCAA berth," observed the coach. And Michigan's problems don't just hinge on the momentum factor either; or 'M Minnesota is a very talented basketball team. "It will be a very difficult game for us because Minnesota has great size inside and great shooters outside," continued Frieder. THE "GREAT SIZE" Frieder referred to includes 7'2" center Randy Breuer. The sophomore pivotman leads the Gophers with a 16.4 scoring average in Big Ten games and is the Gophers' second leading rebounder. At forward, Dutcher will employ 6-10 Gary Holmes and 6-7 Zebedee Howell. The junior, Holmes, is averaging 7,9 points a game and leads his team in rebounds. THE BACKCOURT duo of Mark Hall and Trent Tucker are currently playing as well as any pair in the league. Hall is.' averaging 14.9 points per game while Tucker is scoring at a 14.3 p.p.g. clip. This list of Gopher starters is noticeably absent of one ingredient-seniors. Minnesota has ac- complished everything this season without a senior on the squad. The Wolverines, on the other hand, start four seniors and a junior, and they will no doubt need to call upon every minute of Big Ten experience if they hope to end their losing streak. One advantage the Wolverines will enjoy is the fact that the Golden Gophers haven't won a game in Ann Arbor since 1963. But then again, Nor- thwestern was winless in Crisler Arena since 1967 until two weeks ago. PLAYER McGee ................................ Johnson ......................t........ Garner ................................ Heuerman ............................. Bodnar. Mt ............... .......... McCormick ........................... Bodnar, Mk.. .................... Burton ................................ Jam es ................................ Hopson ................................ Person .. ... ......................... Pelekoudas ............... Antonides.......................... Brown....... ................. Team Rebounds .......... Totals........................... Opponents ............................. SCORING G FG/A Pct FT Vincent, MSU ..... 16 165/334 .494 59/ McGEE, MICH .... 16 157/315 .49866/ Gregory, WIS ...16 112/247 .453 94/1 Kellogg, OSU ...... 16 120/238 .504 57/ Roberson, NU ..... 16 108/247 .437 77/ REBOUNDING No. Avl Kellogg, OSU.............188 11.: GregoryWIS .............145 9. Johnson,Ill................ 143 8. Vincent, MSU ............. 136 8. Williams, OSU.............127 7. FG-A Pct FT-A Pct Reb PF-D A Pts Avg 252484 .521 99-147 .674 99 74-5 30 603 24.1 164-294 .558 41-50 .820 91 38-0 92 369 14.8 95-190 .506 53-73 .726 139 69-2 66 243 9.7 58-125 .464 68-84 .810 131 84-6 49 184 7.4 77-133 .579 26-33 .788 58 54-0 75 180 7.2 47-95 .495 42-54 .777 72 72-2 11 136 5.4 24-50 .480 15-19 .790 17 21-0 46 63 2.9 13-29 .448 4.10 .400 20 15-0 2 30 2.0 15-36 .417 3-5 .600 20 13-0 8 33 1. 4-19 .211 7-11 .636 9 8-0 2 15 1.4 12-28 .429 8-11 .727 31 16-0 8 32 1.4 4-8 .500 4-9 .444 3 17-0 5 12 0.8 2-3 .667 2-6 .333 6 8-0 0 6 0.7 2-7 .286 0-1 .000 9 6-0 0 4 0.4 769-1501 .512 720-1444 .499 57 372-513 .725 819 328477 .688 818 497-15 394 473-12 331 1910 76.4 1768 70.7 S Michigan 25-game statistics GAME TIME: 8:05 p.m.,.Crisler Arena TV/RADIO: WKBD (Channel 50); WWJ-950; WAAM-1600; WPAG-1050; WJJX- 650; WUOM-91.7 (FM) EXPECTED CROWD: 12,000 TICKET AVAILABILITY: As of noon yesterday, some 2000 tickets were still available. They will be on sale at the Athletic Department from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and at Crisler Arena one hour before game time. -y ~ /A 89 !99 118 71 91 V9. .8 1 .9 .5 .9 Pct .652 .667 .797 .803 .846 Avg 24.3 23.8 19.9 18.5 18.3 ...... ., ....ASSISTS Walker, PUR............. Harper, ILL ............ I Smith, MSU............. ! I. Thomas, IND......... Arnold, IOWA ............. Hi 19 17 13 16 11 Hi 12 12 11 9 11 Iowa............. Indiana.......... Illinois........... Minnesota .......... Purdue........... MICHIGAN ........ Ohio State......... Michigan State. Wisconsin .... ...... Northwestern ...... Big Ten Standings Conf. W L 13 3 12 4 11 5 9 7 9 7 7 9 7 9 6 10 3 13 3 13 Overall W L 21 4 19 9 19 6 17 8 16 9 16 9 12 13 12 13 9 15 9 16 0 No. 'Avg. 105 6.6- 88 5.5 84 5.3 78 4.9 69 4.3 T nIdh c(2Y~£ S FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE -n-- a -i- FG A Pct. Minnesota at MICHIGAN Tolbert, IND .............. 97 154 .630 Indiana at Illinois Hall, MINN ................ 96 158 .608 Iowa at Michigan State Breuer, MINN ............. 98 170 .576 Purdue at Ohio State Smith, MSU............... 105 187 .561 Northwestern at Wisconsin Edmonson, PUR....... ...'110 197 .558 Ex-M' grappler to be head coach / By RON POLLACK When Mark Churella graduated from Michigan he was obviously unac- customed to setbacks, as his three con- secutive NCAA wrestling champion- ships (twice at 150 pounds and once at 167 pounds) will attest. After ° graduation, Churella still did not have to overcome any obstacles as he was offered the job of assistant wrestling coach at Michigan, Nevada- Las Vegas (UNLV),'Arizona State and Oklahoma State. He chose Nevada-Las Vegas and began training for the 1980 Olympics. WITH THE U.S. boycott of the Olym- -ISREL- LOWE$T CO$T FLIGHTS Reliable - Flexible . Free European Stops Buy Now For Summer And $ave (212) 689-8980 Outs de New Y rk FREE 1-800-223-7676 The Center For Student Travel 1140 Broadway N Y.C, NY. 10001 Our rb Year' pics, Churella finally tasted obvious disappointment. This setback was compounded by the fact that he had narrowly missed qualifying for the 1976 Olympics (he finished fourth in freestyle competitin at his weight. The top three went to Montreal). But now, Churella's life is headed in a more positive direction, because, after two years as an assistant at UNLV, he will become the team's head coach next season. Churella will replace Dennis Finfrock, who is currently the head coach and assistant athletic director. Finfrock will now spend all his time on the assistant athletic director post. Churella originally intended to coach at Michigan, but before making his decision he visited UNLV one more time, and chose to go west. "I JUST DECIDED that I'd try something different, and Las Vegas was different," said Churella. "At that time I was looking for a situation where I could train for the '80 Olympics and here, unlike Michigan, we don't have any professional sports. Amateur spor- ts is all they have in Nevada. This is a place I thought would be good to build a program." Churella does not forsee any problems once he becomes the head coach, because Finfrock has been easing him into the position, giving him added responsibilities this year so that the transition will be easier. With-two years of coaching under his belt, Churella has found that certain parallels can be drawn between com- peting and coaching. "I PUT A LOT of time into training as a wrestler, and now I spend a lot of time coaching," said Churella. "I think there's a trade-off between the time you spend as a wrestler and the time you spend as a coach. It really evens out." Nonetheless, the life of Churella the wrestler isrnot a carbon copy of Churella the coach. "As a coach there's a frustration that you don't have as a wrestler," said Churella. "When you're a wrestler, if you make a mistake you can correct it. As a coach you have ten starting wrestlers who all might be making dif- ferent mistakes. It's not always possible to correct everybody's mistakes, although you try to." THIS SEASON HAS been a down year for a Nevada-Las Vegas squad that has a dual meet record of 4-6. During the season, UNLV has had to overcome more than opposing teams. "This season was a big setback since our athletic department had a big budget deficit which we no longer have. As a matter of fact, now we're in the black," said Churella. "We had scholarship cutbacks and a budgetary cutback of our expenses. Last year we just recruited out West, but this year I'll also recruit out East. Now that these barriers have been overcome, Churella is optimistically looking to the future. To say that he has set lofty goals for the team is quite an understatement. "Realistically, this year, we'll be taking three boys to the nationals and I'd like one All-American," said ChurellA. "e if we have the 0 - , .> .; r Churella ... UNLV coach recruiting year I'm hoping for, I'd like a national champion. Beyond that, I'm hoping for a national champion team, but that's in the future." "Like any coach, I don't like to lose- not as a competitior and not as a coach. To win a national championship would be to obtain the ultimate goal as' a coach." 6 A CAREER IN THE CHIPS If you're planning a career in Engineering, Finance, Marketing, or Data Processing, we know you're seriously considering the semiconductor industry. We'd like to offer a little piece of advice: Choose the company that will give you the best opportunities right away. Choose AMD. Advanced Micro Devices started out a little over a decade ago with eight of the best people in the industry and a dream. 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