The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 15, 1981--Page 9 FORMER 'M' STAR MAKES GOOD IN PROS All that a, By BOB WOJNOWSKI He came from out of nowhere and led Michigan to the brink of a national championship. He followed that up by guiding the Wolverines to their last Big Ten basketball championship, in 1977. And now, just when it seemed as if he had returned to whence he came, he has resurfaced as a member of the Utah Jazz of the National Basketball Association. On a gritty, gutsy ballclub, Rickey Green was the *liding, graceful force which led it. He was the man upon whom the powerful Michigan fastbreak was built. Twice All-Big Ten and once an All-American, Green finished his career at Michigan as the tenth all-time leading scorer, all this in only two years as a Wolverine after transferring from Vincennes Junior College in 1975. However, upon leaving Michigan, Green saw his fortunes quickly sour. Originally drafted by Golden State in the first round, Green had tryouts with Detroit and Chicago, where he was the last player cut, before finally latching on with Utah about two Plnths ago. His fast-breaking style of play in college was not conducive to the NBA style, and the adjustment from college All-American to NBA has- been was a difficult one. "I was just playing point guard in college, and I really wasn't ready for the pros," Green explains. "After awhile you get down on yourself. "You play a lot of games and there's a lot of travelling, but the hardest part is trying to stay on top of your game while sitting on the bench." And apparently Green's bench-sitting days are over. He has played in 16 games for the Jazz, star- ting the last seven, and is averaging almost 10 poin- - and Green, too ts a game, third best on the team. He is shooting 57 percent from the floor and 83 percent from the free throw line. All of which makes one wonder: why is Rickey Green now excelling where previously he has failed? "I think it was just a matter of time, and Golden State didn't have the time," he philosophizes. "I've matured a lot. I knowwhat it's all about now." At Utah, Green finds himself paired with one of the NBA's most talented guards in Darrell Griffith. And he'll be the first to admit that Griffith's talents have made his own job that much easier. "Darrell's a great athlete. He's a joy to play beside Update because he opens up the whole game. Teams key on him and that leaves me open. I get a lot of easy baskets because of him." Although Green sees himself as basically a penetrator and a scorer, he is quick to squelch rumors that defense is an art that is frowned upon in the NBA. "There's a little less emphasis on defense in the pros than in college, but everybody in the NBA is a superstar," he says. "And everybody can score." Although he now lives in Salt Lake City and spends much of the year in action with the Jazz, Green does try to follow the current Michigan team, catct an occasional game when time permits. "I saw them play Purdue last week and I t they've got a good team. But I really can't m any predictions from what I've seen." Green also manages to keep in touch with mo. his former Michigan teammates and tries to k up with where they are and what they are doing. "I'm friends with a lot of those guys and I tr talk to them whenever I get a chance. I sawF Hardy when we played the Lakers, and I've ta to Dave Baxter, Joel Thompson and McGee. "I keep in touch with Hubbard, I see he's doing good with Detroit, and I know Steve Grote works a T.V. station over there. And John Robinson i assistant with Johnny Orr at Iowa State." Green also puts in a call to Orr, the for Michigan coach, every now and then. "Oh sure, I've called him a couple of times he's called me too," he notes. "I thought he w good coach and I liked him a lot." Despite the fact that Michigan lost to Indiana in championship game in Green's first year here then fell in the third round of the NCAA's following season, he has no .regrets whatsoe about his career at Michigan. "Everybody wants a national championship ar would've been nice to get it, but I don't feel it disappointing at all. I had a great two years ther Indeed he did. And with his pro career back on1 track, only one question remains: has Rickey Gr found a home in Utah? "I think so," he ponders. "They're pleased with way I'm playing, and I'm enjoying myself, again hing hink ake st of keep y to Alan lked real s for s an mer and as a the and the ver nd it was ,e." University Sports Information Photo FORMER MICHIGAN All-American Rickey Green has found recent success with the Utah Jazz. Green and Steve Grote (30) led the Wolverines to the nation's top ranking in 1977. SATURDAY, 7:30 PM-Aud. "B" Angel Hall-JAN. 17 SCORES FIRST GOAL AGAINST BADGERS Dual athlete Fardig sizzles on ice and lini By MARTHA CRALL Golf and hockey. Jekyll and Hyde. The genileman's game- and one of the roughest, toughest games played in American. The two sports, upon mention, elicit totally different mental pictures. In the case of the former, one would picture a gator-shirted man calmly strolling up *to the green, concentrating silently for a ninute or two, and smoothly sinking a 20-foot putt. Whereas the latter evokes a wildly dramatic scene in which heavily padded men skate around at a lightning pace, stopping at nothing to steal the puck back from the luckless possessor and send it flying 100 miles- per-hour into a net. IF THERE ARE two sports which are completely different, surely golf and hockey are. And although being a two- sport man is unusual enough, being a * two-sport man in both of those sports is even more unusual. But Dave Fardig is not your usual guy. "Obviously," he said, "golf 'and hockey are two different types of spor- ts, but my attitude is guite the same in approaching both games." "Hockey is a team sport, but so is golf. The biggest difference between the two is that in golf, someone can look at your score and be able to tell exactly how you did, but in hockey, they just know if your team won or lost," Fardig explained. HE PLAYED BOTH sports at Pioneer High School here in Ann Arbor. And former Michigan hockey coach Dan Farrell talked him into coming to Michigan to play hockey in the fall of 1977. The honeymoon ended, though, half- way through Fardig's first season. He quit the team because of problems with Farrell, which Fardig is now quick to admit was both parties' fault. And after a summer of golfing, he decided to pursue his other love. He tried out for the golf team, and has sin- ce been a starter for the last two seasons, while putting hockey on the back burner. THAT IS, UNTIL last fall. "I wasn't pleased with my golf game at the end of the summer. I figured I had nothing to lose by coming out for hockey," Fardig said. "I thought there was a good chan- ce that there were openings with the loss of centers, and there was a new coach, too." Fardig did make the team, but hasn't seen much action. He played in the icers' opening series with Bowling Green but had trouble adjusting to the physical style of play Michigan has adopted and has seen action in only five games since. "I didn't realize.how physical it was going to be," Fardig said. But after having worked on the problem, he has seen more playing time of late. FARDIG PLAYED IN a good part of both games last weekend at Wisconsin, scoring his first goal of the season in the opening game. There was little satisfaction, though, as the Wolverines dropped both contests, 8-5 and 4-3. "No one is really happy now. We know we can do better," Fardig said of the losses. Fardig is quite happy with his situation now, though. He respects his coach, "I think he (John Giordano done a good job under all the cir stances this season. Some of decisions, I think, were questioned he usually turns out to be right." While the hockey season is only over, Fardig has thoughts about th coming golf season. "I worry a what people think when golf se rolls around. Some people think automatically a starter when I sho in the spring, but that's not right. I to earn a spot just like everyone e want people to know that," Fardig For now, though, hockey fills Far time. And while the golf -green buried under snow, the two-sport fulfills his 'Hyde' duties onthe ice. that een 1the n."- has cum- his (Mujeres en Armas) , but Women in Arms is the first major documentary filmed in Nicaragua after the over- throw of the Somoza dictatorship by the Sandinist National Liberation Front. Pro- half duced and directed by Victoria Schultz, a Finnish filmmaker, it examines the part e up- played by women, both in the struggle against Somoza and in the reconstruction about process which is changing Nicaraguan society in basic ways. Through women's eyes the 'ason film focuses on a wide range of related topics, from the family to the revolutionary mass I'm organizations to the new Sandinist Popular Army. The situation the documentary w up portrays suggest that Nicaragua's battles against tyranny, underdevelopment, and have machismo are relevant to both women and men in other countries as well. lse. I Revolutionary processes have necessarily to liberate women. Any sort of process said. that doesn 't liberate women, gradually perhaps, is no revolution. Women here have i' reached a certain point. They won't go bdck. They'll keep advancing, gaining ground dig's But always as women. -Dora Maria Tellez s lie Guerilla Commander in Nicaragua man Comite Latinoamericano, Ethics and Religion, Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America expert. Call RedCross todayaboutlearning CPR- cardiopulmonaryresUscitation. - Red Cross Green Ice Ann Arbor Pioneer graduate Dave Fardig remains one of the few athletes gifted enough to compete in two varsity sports. Fardig, shown here skating for the Wolverine icers, also roams the links for the Michigan golf team in the spring. NOON LUNCHEON