The Michigan Daily Saturday, November 15, 1980 Page 9 " MILBURN NOTCHES GAME-WINNER Surging icers skate by Huskies,.5-4 By DAN CONLIN Special to the Daily UGHTON-With 'Huskie hysteria' ing in the stands, and the constant t of Fricker. . . Fricker ... Fricker om the crowd, the Wolverines sur- a blazing third period to capture a ictory over Michigan Tech at the. nt Ice Arena yesterday. ense hitting by both teams in the two periods ignited the Tech fans had the Wolverines - fighting for lives. CHIGAN goalie Paul Fricker was ded with shots for the first twelve ites of the third period without bing a goal. At 12:17, Tech's Mark :ovich tied the game at four on a shot from the point. ichigan silenced the crowd 31 seconds later as Joe Milburn beat Michigan Tech goalie Darcy Way on assists fromPaul Brandrup and John Blum at 12:58. The final minutes of the third period saw all the action in the Michigan end, as Fricker continually turned back shots. THE MICHIGAN goalie totaled 44 saves last night after stocking up 62. saves last weekend against Michigan State. For his performance, the sophomore netminder was named the number one star of the game. In the first period, sluggish and slop- py play led to three early Michigan goals. At 12:12 in the period, Steve Rich- mond led Bium at the blue line, who in turn hit Milburn on a two-on-one break. Milburn returned the pass back to Blum who deked Way out of position, leavingI 'the net open for the score. FRESHMAN Kelly McCrimmon , sparked the second goal for the Wolverines at 10:10 as he caught the Onefor t FIRST PERIOD Scoring- 1. M-Blum (Milburn, Richmond) 2:12; M-Richmond (Bourne, Brandrup) 10:10; 3. M-Mars (Milburn, Brandrup) 13:57; 4. MT-Wat- ters (Boehm, Mickalich) 16:25. Penalties- M-Perry (hooking 7:19; MT-Wat- ters (holding) 9:30; M-Yoxheimer (tripping) 15:50. SECOND PERIOD Scorig- 5. MT-Lauen (Scott, Bader) 6:07;'6. M-May (Hampson, Blum) 6:34; 7. MT-Zuke (unassisted) 10:51. Penalties- M-Richmond (tripping) 0:53; MT-Bissett (holding) 8:05; M-Lundberg puck in front of the net and to Brandrup, who with closed in on the Huskie1 Brandrup's rebound was Way by a pouncing Richmon At 13:57, Michigan tallie he road (roughing) 8:05; M-Blum (tripping) dberg (roughing) 10:51; MT-Johns 10:51; MT-Johansson (charging) 1 (tripping) 13:33; M-Brandrup (roug THIRD PERIOD Scoring-8. MT-Palkovich (Hjel 12:17; 9. M-Milburn (Brandup, Mar Penalties-none. SAVES M-Fricker ................10 MT-Way.................12 I passed out goal and it looked like a runaway might Richmond, be in store. Milburn lured the lone goaltender. defender away from the slot and was lifted past able to lead Jeff Mars. nd. Mars shot from the slot beat Way in ed the third the upper right hand corner of the net. The Huskies got on the board at 16:25, but Fricker made them work for the score. Steve Yoxheimer went to the ) 8:58; M-Lun- penalty box for tripping, setting up the ston (roughing) Tech power play. Fricker was bombar- 0:51; MT-Stilesply ghing) 16:05. ded with three shots, but deflected each. The third shot hit Fricke'r's skate, mquist, Boehm) leaving the Michigan goalie sprawled rs) 12:58. on the ice. Before he could recover, defenseman Tim Watters hit the open net for Tech. THE HUSKIES set the tone for the 21 13- 44 second period by their aggressive play 8 11 -31at the outset. At 6:07, Tech got a three- on-two break against the physical Brion Lundberg-Blum defense. Mike Lauen barrelled towards Fricker with Lun- dberg hanging on his shoulder. Lauen's shot beat Fricker, closing the score to 3- Michigan retaliated 27 seconds later at 6:34. Gordie Hampson's shot from the point rebounded to Dennis May who slipped the puck past Way, giving the Wolverines a 4-2 lead. Overly physical play left Michigan on the short end when Lundberg was sent off for roughing at 8:58 along with Blum for tripping. One Huskie was sent off for roughing, leaving the Wolverines with a four-on-three disadvantage. A TEAM effort killed the penalties without a goal, but with both teams at full strength, the hitting intensified. At 15:01, Fricker's skates were knocked out from under him in a fury in front of the net. Ron Zuke's centering pass deflected off the falling Fricker and in- to the net. Lundberg, in defense of Fricker, roughed all of the Huskies who were around the net. The following com- motion sent two Tech players to the penalty box along with Lundberg. Michigan was unable to capitalize on the four-on-three advantage and the period ended with the Wolverines leading, 4-3. Aerial assauft Ierrmann a threat to blue roses THE LINEUPS MICHIGAN PURDUE By ALAN FANGER mporarily push aside, if you will, the fact that est team in the Pacific-10 conference may not ar in the Rose Bowl New Year's Day. body could ever convince the Wolverines that roses don't mean everything in the world. demic probations or no, the symbolic and tional value associated with that trip to dena is still- the overriding concern of Bo' mbechler's team. d the whole bowl of roses is on the line for real afternoon, when Michigan entertains Purdue in a 5 p.m. contest at Michigan Stadium. pth teams, along with Ohio State, are undefeated Big Ten play, and since the Boilermakers and keyes do not face one another, the Wolverines st win both today's game and next Saturday's en- nter in Columbus if they are to return West for the t time in two years. Our destiny is in our own hands," said Schem- hler. "We are in a position where we can control it happens to us in terms of the Big Ten race." urdue, meanwhile, has been a red-hot team offen- aly and is expected to pose a formidable challenge the Michigan defense, especially the secondary. ,hembechler readily admits that "Purdue will* e on us. They have too many offensive weapons to completely. We are just going to have to outscore he foremost weapon in the Purdue attack is quar- )ack Mark Herrmann, the fourth-year starter who been given substantial publicity as a candidate for the coveted Heisman Trophy. While Herrmann has not had great success against the Wolverines in his three previous years, he is coming off a 439-yard passing effort against Iowa. "This is a better offensive team than we played a year ago," said Schembechler. You can't un- derestimate what Herrmann has done." Broadcasts of today's Michigan-Purdue game can be heard beginning at 12 noon on WJR (760 mann's aerials. If the Boilermakers have a weakness, it is their defense. A rather erratic unit, it yielded 26 points to Michigan State and 31 to 0-10 Northwestern. But Schembechler nonetheless maintains that "it's a good defense - really improved since the beginning of the year." "(Outside linebacker Tom) Kingsbury's back. He's good. And (defensive tackle Calvin) Clark's very good," said Schembechler. Purdue coach Jim Young, a former assistant to Schembechler, had similar words of praise for the /Michigan defense. "Defensively, they're very sound," he said. "They play the typical Michigan defense. They don't give you very much. They move quickly, play a lot of zone pass coverage and flow well to the ball. It will be the toughest defense against the pass we've faced this year. The Boilermakers, of course, can look back with pride on their performance against Michigan last year in West Lafayette. After jumping out to a 24-6 lead, they managed to hold off the emotionally- charged Wolverines on a late-game drive to win 24-21. The following week, they defeated Indiana and ear- ned a trip to the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl. Michigan, as a result of that defeat, was virtually eliminated from Rose Bowl contention. The game will be highlighted by the appearance of Chad Zemin, the People's Republic of China am- bassador to the United States. Zemin's visit will mark his first exposure to football. (82) (72) (65) (59) (67) (75) ( 1) (30) ( 5) (32) (24) Norm Betts.. (230) Ed Muransky (270) Kurt Becker. (255) George Lilja. (255) John Powers. (255) Bubba Paris. (270) Anthony Carter(161) Alan Mitchell(185) John Wangler(192) Stan Edwards(205) Butch Woolfolk(207) TE ST RG C LG QT WR SE QB FB TB (80) (.75) (52) (63) (57) (76) ( 1) (87) ( 9) (37) (21) Henry Feil.. (250) Steve Bryant. (185) Bart Burrell. (185) M. Herrmann(190) John Macon.. (205) Jimmy Smith(103) OFFENSE Dave Young. Tom Jelesky. Ray Gunner.. Pete Quinn... Tim Hull..... (241) (268) (236) (230) (245) DEFENSE AM), WWJ (950 AM), WPAG (1050 AM), WAAM (1600 AM), (91.7 FM). and WUOM Herrihann is accompanied by a top-flight corps of receivers, including tight end Dave Young, who last Saturday set the Big Ten record for career recep- tions. Split receivers Bart Burrell and Steve Bryant, while not possessing great size or speed, have developed successful ways of getting open for Herr- (53) (99) (77) (63) (95) (94) (41) (13) (-9) ("3) (37) Mel Owens...,(230) R. Thompson(215) Mike Trgovac(235) W. Carraway(235) Jeff Shaw.... (250) J. Herrmann. (215) A. Cannavitlo(220) Keith Bostic. (198) B. Carpenter.(166) Marion Body. (182) Tony Jackson(173) OLB OLB T T MG ILB ILB SS WHB SHB FS, (15) (60) (94) (96) (53) (62) (59) (43) (38) (36) (34) T. Kingsbury.+ David Frye..# Calvin Clark.i Paul Hanna.. Tom Munro..+ Mike Marks..{ (209) (200) (245) (240) (240) (222) James Looney(221) Tim Seneff... (207) Bill Kay..... (194) R. Williams.. (179) M. McKinnie. (193) S rish emain evinei ,HICAGO (AP) - Notre Dame cb Dan Devine denied published orts early yesterday that he had ersed his decision to retire at the clusion of this season and return to ch the Fighting Irish football team more year. 'NOTHING could be further from the th. I hate to get into a contest with ebody, but that's clearly irrespon- le journalism," said Devine in a ephone interview from his South nd, Ind., home. "There is no basis atsoever for that story." he Chicago Tribune had said in a pyrighted story in yesterday's 'tions that Devine, who took over at tre Dame when Ara Parseghian tired in 1975, had reversed his cision to leave the South Bend, Ind.,- hool, a move he announced earlier isseason. His record at Notre Dame 54-14-1, including a national chain- nship in 1977. IM SCORES THURSDAY Hockey mbda losers 1, Psi Upsilon Owls 0 ed School Fools 4, Fiji Islanders 1 e Holes 3, Aerospace Engineers 2 Volleyball Women's enerics 15-15, Andi's Bar & Grill 0-3 ironson 'A' 15-15, 1-0 Stock well 64 Co-Rec Dutchmen Plus Two 15-17, South Quad Spikers 7-15 aspital Administration 15-15, St. Mary's 7-8 hantom Daze 11-15-16. Purple Spikers 15-5-15 he Eclectics 15-15, Leftovers 9-5 I Spikers 2-2, vectors 0-0 (forfeit) ghtweights 15-15, Amoebas 5-9 lpha Phi Omega 16-15, S-H Hitters 14-7 OC 15-15, "A" 10-9 Logie Oogies 2-2, wisps 0-0 (forfeit) avka's Mawkas 9-15-15. Harvey's Repairs 15-11-7 mething Different 15-15, "B" 7-1 Football Independent [%AE WOI.YERU4'-5HAYS EHAPD1THE VIROtCTIOI4 OF FACIM& ?"LlEALL OF 1THIS YEAR'S IIEFMtANTK lOPHI CANOE PAlES -- i6EQ$, CAPIE LL, F{EQ~hMAN 4AA SCJUCNTER.. i/, NOT fIM MARK "'AGAIN &I NCAA CAREER.LIK> PASSING LEAD)ER. ( 8E" WEEK y{ TI~li/ ~~TR 1wCfl The Ball's in your Court, / Sports Fan!. 4 i . 1A 9- a Ci r s',- . 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