I The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 15, 1981-Page 9 Upset PS DePaul DAYTON (AP)--St. Joseph's of Pen- nsylvania knocked off top-ranked DePaul, 49-48, on a basket with three seconds left by John Smith in a second- round game of the NCAA Mideast Regional basketball tournament yesterday. Smith's basket was set up by a Hawk fast break off a rebound when DePaul's Skip Dillard missed the front end of a one-and-one free throw possibility with 12 seconds left. IT WAS THE second loss of the season for the Blue Demons, 27-2. St. Joseph's moved on to next week's regional at Bloomington, Ind., with a 24-7 record. Smith finished with 12 points for the Hawks. Bryan Warrick also had 12 and Tony Costner added 11. Clyde Bradshaw was the top scorer with 11 points. All-American Mark Aguirre was held to 8. St. Joseph's knew it had to slow the tempo of the game to play with DePaul. But in the end, the Hawks forced DePaul into its style of play. Kan St. 50, Oregon St. 48, LOS ANGELES (AP)-Senior Rolan- do Blackman connected on a 16-foot jump shot from the right baseline with two seconds remaining yesterday, giving unranked Kansas State a shocking 50-48 victory over second- ranked Oregon State in a second-round AF Photo game of the NCAA Tournament's Western Regionals. by St. BLACKMAN, A 6-foot-6 guard, of the enabled the Wildcats of the Big Eight Conference to take their only lead of the afternoon with his game-winning shot. I, OSU, The triumph boosted Kansas Sta into the Western Regional sem against the winner of Saturday's s game at Pauley Pavilion be Illinois and Wyoming. The upstart Wildcats, who had from 12 points down to beat San cisco 64-60 in a first-round game sday night, trailed Oregon State 2 halftime and 31-28 with just un minutes to play before they s back. Arkansas 74, Louisvill AUSTIN (AP)-Senior guar Reed's 48-foot shot from beyoi midcourt line at the final 1 yesterday gave the No. 20-r Arkansas Razorbacks a 74-73 v over stunned defending NCAA pion Louisville in the second ro the Midwest Regionals. Arkansas advanced to the re finals in New Orleans next week st No. 4-ranked Louisiana State, slaughtered Lamar University 1 the first game. ARKANSAS WAS all but dea junior forward Derek Smith con on an eight-foot follow shot wil seconds to play: The Razorbac trouble inbounding the ball, an was hounded by two Louisville 1 as he neared the midcourt line. In desperation, he launched drive missile that whisked throt basket without touching the rim. Brig Young 78, UCLA PROVIDENCE (AP)-Danny scored 37 points and led Br Young on a 15-point tear that late in the first half as the 16th- Saturda UCLA fall te 23-8 Cougars upset No. 10 UCLA, 78-55, ifinals yesterday in the second round of the second NCAA East Regionals. tween THE VICTORY earned Brigham Young a shot at Notre Dame in next come weekend's regional championships at Fran- Atlanta. Thur- Ainge scored the last eight points of 6-19 at the first half and his 17-foot jump shot der 14 eight seconds before the buzzer gave urged BYU a 31-22 halftimelead. The Cougars scored seven straight points to open the e 73 second half and take a 38-22 lead with d U.S. 7:58 to play. nd the LSU 100, Lamar 78 buzzer AUSTIN (AP)-Senior forward anked Durand Macklin scored a season-high victory 31 points and collected 16 rebounds chain- yesterday to"muscle No. 4-ranked und of Louisiana State University to a 100-78 victory over outclassed Lamar Univer- egional sity. again- The triumph advanced the Bengal which Tigers to the NCAA Midwest Regional 00-78 in third round in New Orleans next week. MACKLIN, WHOSE previous high d after was 29 against Mississippi State, nected dominated the Cardinals, as LSU th five crushed Lamar's zone with bruising ks had board work. d Reed The Tigers, now 29-3 for the year, got players 26 points from sophomore Howard Car- ter and 18 points from freshman a line Leonard Mitchell in the runaway over ugh the the Cardinals, who finished 25-5 for the season. 55 Indiana 99, Maryland 64 Ainge DAYTON (AP)-Senior center Ray igham Tolbert scored 26 points to lead Indiana started to a 99-64 victory over Maryland in a ranked second-round NCAA Mideast Regional I early basketball game yesterday. The blow-out victory by the ninth- ranked Hoosiers over No. 18 Maryland was a far cry from the conservation game earlier in the afternoon in which unhearalded St. Joseph's of Pen- nsylvania stunned top-ranked DePaul 49-48. LANDON TURNER had 20 points, Isiah Thomas had 19 and Ted Kitchel 13 for the Hoosiers, who controlled the run-and-shoot tempo throughout the game. Albert King led the Terrapins with 22 points. Charles "Buck" Williams added 16, and Ernest Graham 14 for Maryland, which ended its season at 21- 10. Indiana moves on to the regional it will host at Bloomington, Ind. with a 22- 9 record. Illinois 67, Wyoming 65 LOS ANGELES (AP) - Senior for- ward Mark Smith made two free throws with three seconds remaining last night to give No. 19 Illinois a 67-65 triumph over No. 17 Wyoming in the second game of an NCAA Western Regional double-header. Kansas State, 23-8, and Illinois, 21-7, will square off in a semi-final game of the Western Regionals at Salt Lake City next Thursday night. SMITH REBOUNDED a missed jump shot by Wyoming's Bill Garnett and was fouled by Kenneth Ollie, set- ting up the Illini's game-winning points. Illinois had tied the game at 65 with 16 seconds left on a 20-foot jumpshot from the left baseline by Perry Range. DEPAUL'S TERRY CUMMINGS (32) strains to turn back a shot Joseph's Bryan Warrick (13) during the Hawks' stunning 49-48 upset number one-ranked Blue Demons. *Toledo soars into Crisler for NIT I Cagers' Corner By MARK FISCHER The Michigan cagers will have two things going against them before the action even begins in their second round NIT game tonight at Crisler Arena. 1) Toledo is just South of the Ohio- michigan border, less than an hour away from Ann Arbor. 2) University of Toledo fans love to go watch their team play basketball. These two factors add upto a sellout crowd for tonight's Wolverine-Rocket clash which will certainly not be 100 percent behind the Maize and Blue, despite the fact that the game will be played here in Ann Arbor. You see, UT enthusiasts have been taking full ad- vantage of the Michigan athletic depar- tment's policy of selling NIT tickets on a first-come, first-serve basis. "THOSE PEOPLE CAME up in their caravans and bought out 'all the tickets," said Michigan coach Bill Frieder , of the Toldeo backers. "They're amazing." At least they're amazing compared to Wolverine fans, who filled only 7,200 of the Arena's 13,609 seats for Thursday's first round game against Duquesne, which Michigan won in unexciting fashion, 74-58. Frieder said his team was "super defensively" in that game, but the Wolverines will need more than just defense to get past Toledo.' THE ROCKETS, WHO ended the regular season at 18-8 and tied with three other teams for the Mid- American Conference title before losing to eventual champion Ball State in the league playoffs, are coming off an impressive first round victory over American University on Wednesday night. And lately Toledo hasn't- been any more friendly to Michigan than they were to American. The Rockets have knocked off the Wolverines two out of two times over the last few years, 67-64 last season and 91-84 in overtime in 1977-78. But all that is history. Toledo is' not the same team it was even a year ago, for gone are the three senior starters who led the Rockets to four consecutive seasons of at least 21 wins apiece. HARVEY KNUCKLES, however, is back. The high-leaping 6-7 Rocket for- ward led the MAC in scoring this year and is a force Michigan must reckon with tonight. Knuckles' only fellow returning starter is 5-11 senior Jay Lehman, a very experienced playmaking guard. But fortunately for the Rockets, the younger members of the team have stepped in and done the job. Consequently, said Frieder, "Toledo is an excellent team. We're -definitely looking at this one very seriously. "Now we have to play with as much enthusiasm as\we had through the first part of the year," added Frieder, whose cagers have won only two of their last nine games. MICHIGAN (18-10) 40-Mike McGee, 6-5Sr............. 45-Thad Garner, 6-7 Jr......... 15-Paul Heuerman, 6-8 Sr......... 34-John Johnson, 6-4 Sr..... .. 24-Marty Bodnar, 6-3 Sr............ F F C G G TOLEDO (21-9) .......25-Harvey Knuckles, 6-7 Sr. ... ..34-Da n Boyle, 6-6 So. ......31-Mitch Adamek, 6-6% So. ...........43-Jay Lehman, 5-11 Sr. ..... 20-Tim Reiser, 6-1 Fr. Game Time: 8:05 p.m. TV/Radio: Channel 11, plus radio stations WWJ (940), WAAM (1600), WPAG (1050),andWUOM (91.7). Ticket availability: NONE, the game is sold out. Assistant coach's job: more than meets the eye By RANDY BERGER When considering some of the more thankless ways for an individual to make a living, jobs such as janitor, nightwat- chman, secretary, housewife, and tollbooth attendant im- mediately come to mind. Another one can be added to the list: that of assistant basketball coach. "An assistant coach's job in basketball is a' very tough job because they do a tremendous amount of work and they don't get credit," said Bill Frieder, who performed that chore at Michigan under Johnny Orr before becoming head man last spring. "prTheir job is to do everything they possibly can to make sure that the program stays a good one." SOME OF THE MYRIAD duties of a Michigan assistant coach include recruiting, scouting, game preparation, coun- seling, and co-directing summer basketball camp. All of this work easily keeps the two full-time Wolverine assistants, Don Sicko and Mike Boyd, and the part-time assistant, Tom Kempf, busy through the year. However, an NCAA ruling that went into effect last August allows a team to employ only two full-time assistants. Thus, only Sicko and Boyd recruit for the Maize and Blue. "I don't like the rule because I had been recruiting the last three years," said Kempf. "It is bad for part-time assistants because in college you need to make a name for yourself, and the way you progress is by recruiting and meeting the other assistant coaches." Because he cannot recruit, Kempf assumes most of the of- fice chores, such as answering mail, watching films, and taking care of travel arrangements. "I watch two or three hours of films after practice, and' during the day I answer mail," stated Kempf. "One good thing, though, about being an assistant is that you don't get any hate mail like the head coach." BY MID-SEPTEMBER Kempf completes arrangements for bus trips, flights and hotel accomodations. "We just try to get the nicest hotel we can get. At times we are a little super- stitious. For instance, at Indiana we haven't stayed at the same hotel once because we haven't won there. The coaches learn about-potential recruits mainly through summer camps, newspapers, and scouting services. The Michigan coaches usually confine their area of recruiting to the Midwest, according to Sicko. "THE FIRST THING we try to do is get into the player's home and have a conference with his parents," he explained. 'We then try to persuade them to come to campus." Although Sicko has the opportunity to observe a lot of top high school talent in action, he will be the first to attest that recruiting isn't all glamour. "The worst part is that you have a lot of wasted time. The game may only last an hour and 45 minutes, but you can spend a whole day trying to get to that game." Boyd and Sicko seldom travel together, so while one is out on the road, the other is usually working with the team and preparing it for the upcoming games. In practicing for a game on Thursday, the coaches go over personal match-ups and begin looking at films on Sunday. An assistant only sees one of its upcoming opponent's games in person, but with the help of videotapes the coaches can study a team over and over again. "IN PRACTICE WE have a scout team, which is the second five, and they run the plays of the opponents so.our first team can learn how to defend against it," said Boyd. Another important function of the assistant coach which of- ten goes unheralded is that of counseling the players. "The players come in, and we try to help them with their personal and academic problems," Boyd said. While the assistant is occupied with his many daily duties he almost always has the thought of someday becoming a head coach stuck in the back of his mind. In a field in which there are so many assistant coaches vying for so few head coaching spots, it can be very frustrating. "THIS SPRING THERE are ten jobs at major colleges that have opened up in the last two weeks, and you can be sure that every assistant coach knows about them," said Kempf. Although assistants are always on the lookout for head coaching positions, they have to be careful not to just take anything that comes along. "I don't want to go to a place Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK MICHIGAN ASSISTANT COACHES Tom Kempf (left) and Don Sicko (right) help head coach Bill Frieder direct traffic during a recent game, as players Tim McCormick (44) and Johnny Johnson (34) look on. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: 'M' grapplers place in NCAAs special to the Daily PRINCETON - Joe McFarland and Pat McKay won their last matches of the season last night to place in the NCAA Wrestling Championships. Mc- Farland placed sixthin the tournament, while McKay placed eighth, and both garnered All-American status for their respective performances. Michigan's other entrant, Eric Klasson, was pinned while wrestling for eighth place inAthe heavyweight division. McFarland repeatedan earlier loss in the tournament by defeating Chris Wentz for sixth place. Wentz had defeated McFarland in the quarter finals. McKAY, A 190-POUND senior, lost to Henry Milligan of Princeton to earn his placing. McKay suffered a first round defeat in the tournament, but came back to win the remainder of regular season with a victory in a dual meet at Indiana State University yesterday. Michigan garnered 135.95 points, the highest team score ever in Wolverine women's gymnastics history, to ISU's 134.85. Beckwith led the tumblers by taking top honors in four events. She took first in the all-around competition with a score of 35.95, a new season and career high for her. BECKWITH ALSO finished first in the vault with a tally of 8.9, the uneven bars with 8.8, and the balance beam. with 9.35. Her mark in the balance beam was a new Wolverine team high. "They proved to themselves that they can do a good job at the regionals," said coach Sheri Hyatt. The Wolverines go on to compete at the MAIAW regional championships in East Lansing next weekend. 9.60. Other finalists for the Wolverines were Kaufman in the rings, Hedlund on the pommel horse, and Stanovich in the vault. Michigan's team score of 266.80 was their highest mark of the year. iN SCOR ES Basketball -All Campus Mens 5-9 Magnolia Thunder Pussys 57, Runners 36 Giants in Disguise 57, ZBT 11 Slade Bros 56, The Whimps 34 Law Dogs 61, Volunteers 23 . The Studs 48, NuSigma Nu23 MBA Blue 28, Drill Team 26 Guns 48, Law Datory 39 Beasts of Burden 27. Horton Wears a Hoop 25 Friday Independent 'A'Finals Raging Phlegmon 56. Dorks 5'i Graduate 'A' Finals Thunder Chickens 60, DSD "A" 56 Graduate'B' Finals Legal Soul 57-Overhang Gana i