., he Michigan Daily Saturday, November 22, 1980 Page 7 Wisconsin icers whip Wolverines, 5-3 McCrimmon nets two in By MARTHA CRALL The Michigan Wolverines and Wisconsin Badgers took a seesaw battle into the third period of their hockey game last night at Yost Ice Arena, with the Badgers coming out on top, 5-3. Before a crowd of 4,129, Wisconsin put the game away with two third period goals, breaking a 3-3 tie. At 4:35 in the third, Badger defenseman Jay McFarlane, with assists from Pat Ethier and Lexi Doner, took a shot from the point which caught Michigan goalie Paul Fricker sideways, and the puck slid right across Fricker's chest and into the net, sending the Badgers ahead, 4-3. Only 1:20 later, when given a power play op- portunity, the Badgers scored again on a slap shot by.junior right winger Pete Johnson, who was assisted by Theran Welsh and Ron Vincent. Acting Wolverine coach John Giordano said af- ter the game, "In the third period, we didn't score on the power plays, we're just not that good."u Scoring started early in the game, with Michigan jumping ahead at 1:12 when freshman left winger Kelly McCrimmon skated down the right side and shot the puck past first-year Badger goalie, Terry Kleisinger, with assists from sophomore center Brad Tippett and defen- seman Steve Richmond. In the next 40 seconds, the Wolverines posed two more serious threats. The attack was stifled when Michigan's Dennis May was whistled for charging at 1:55. The Badgers wasted no time in scoring on the power play when at 2:48, sophomore left winger Doner, assisted by Scott Lecy and Welsh, rifled a shot which hit Fricker in the face mask. The shot first bounced in front of the net, then hit Fricker squarely in the mask and trickled into the net. The action continued to heat up until freshman Wisconsin center John Newberry crashed into two Michigan players after p ped, resulting in his disqua game and seven minutes w penalties (five for spearing tsmanlike conduct). Later Johnson called the penalties his team. The Wolverines scored on 8:47 when defenseman John shot from just short of tI Klelsinger straight into the n in the lead again, 2-1. Wisconsin tied the game, h period expired. On a powerj winger Vincent blasted in a d off Fricker.Welsh and Lec on the score, which knotted th Michigan started its seco with only 19 seconds gone. winger Ted Speers made ligi which pulled Kleisinger to hi losing cause flay had been stop- lification from the right side of the net for McCrimmon's second vorth of Wisconsin goal of the evening. ;, two for unspor- It took Wisconsin until 17:57 to retie the contest Badger coach Bob * when Johnson took yet another rebounded shot a "severe call" for and fired it past Fricker, whose ;vision was ob- structed by sprawling defensemen. the power play at "It's always good to win on the road," said the Blum fired a long Badgers' coach Johnson. "We've been spoiled at he Blue line past home. iet -to put Michigan "The turning point for us was when we tied the score at three. The third period flowed better. iowever, before the We played pretty good hockey in the third," he play at 18:41, right continued. shot which reboun- The Wolverines played through injuries to y picked up assists Richmond, the team's leading scorer (separated e count at two. shoulder), Speers (whose left hand is in a cast), nd period scoring and Dave Richter. Tippett and right htning-quick passes Giordano said that he will be getting the is left, clearing the medical report on Richter this morning. Paul Fricker SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Yankee manage1 nament yesterday, split' its first two matches to advance to the event's final eight. THE SPIKERS emerged victorious from their first match, defeating Miami (O.) in a tough three-game contest, 15- 5, 7-15, 17-15. , The Wolverines did not fare as well against Northwestern, losing 15-5, 15-11. Of the eight remaining teams, Howser resigns McCrimmon-al loss Michigan is seeded last. Top lineman honored PITTSBURGH (AP)-Mark May, Pittsburgh's 6-foot-6, 280-pound offen- sive tackle, has won the Outland Trophy as college football's outstan- ding interior lineman, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported. As a pass blocker, May has not allowed his man to sack the Pittsburgh quarterback since his sophomore year. And this for a team that has averaged over 30 passes a game during that time and played against some of the top- ranked teams of the college football world. DESPITE THE magnitude of this award, May remained humble. "This is not a one man show," he said. FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M - McCrimmon (Tippett, Richmond) 1:12; w. W - Doner (S. Lecy,. Welsh) 2:48; 3. M - Blum (Richmond, Manning) 8:47; 4. W - Vincent (Welsh, S. Lecy) 18:41. Penalties: M - May (charging) 1:55; W - Newberry (spearing, game misconduct) 5:53; M - Tippett (hooking) 10:14; M - Blum (roughing) 17:06; M- Richmond (Iacemask) 17:06; W - Pear- son (roughing) 17:06. SECOND PERIOD scoring: 5. M - McCrimmon (Speers, Tippett) 0:19;'. W-Johnson (Johannson, Mullen) 17:57. Penalties: W - Ethier (interference, elbowing) 1:31; M - Pessier (charging) 8:00; W - Johannsoin (hooking) 10:36. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 7. W-McFarlane (Ethier, Doner) 4:35;8. W-Johnson (Vincent, Welsh) 5:15;( g Penalties: M-Richmond (holding) 5:02; M-Blum (high sticking) 5:02; W-Driver (inter- ference) 16:41; -M-Brandrup (roughing) 17:47; W-McFarlane (roughing) 17:47. SAVES Kielsinger (W)...............12 10 10 - 32 Fricker (M )................... 9 10 7 - 26 Wolverine wrestlers debut at Ohio Open By CHUCK JAFFE It has taken a lot of sweat and deter- mination, but coach Dale Bahr and the wrestling team are finally ready to make their season debut this weekend in the Ohio Open. As the Wolverines will face many of their Big Ten rivals, Bahr views the tournament as an indication of what lies ahead for his grapplers. "We'll have a tough, aggressive team capable of going with anybody," Bahr said. "We're competitive in every weight class.Our balance is much bet- ter than last year." Bahr did cite one spot of worry for the team, and that falls in the depth category. "Depth will be a big problem for us," Bahr said, "especially at 118 and heavyweight. We still' do not have the overall depth I'd like to see." The. team's lineup has changed drastically from last year, as three newcomers will start for Michigan. Bahr, who described the lineup as "solid from top to bottom" will test his new team in Ohio, where he expects it to do well.m Starting off for the Wolverines at 118 pounds is freshman Joe McFarland. Coach Bahr says McFarland "has a bright future at Michigan," and he ex- pects a solid performance in today's competition. At 126 pounds, there has been a change in the lineup.. Senior Jim Mathias, last, year's starter, has been replaced by freshman Mike DerGarabedian. The two wrestlers bat- tled three times during "wrestle-offs" with DerGarabedian the eventual win- ner, two matches to one. At 134 pounds, Bahr will send Bob Siar against the competition. Siar, a sophomore, is coming off knee surgery, but says he is fully recovered. The 142-pound weight class has been another in which there is fierce com- petition among teammates. Mark Pearson gained the starting job by defeating Lou Milani. Pearson, who says his goal this year is to "reach his potential," says Milani "is easily as tough as the competition the team faces. Maybe tougher." Tim Fagan will be the team's point producer in the 150 pound weight class. Fagan, a sophomore, has "great poten- tial," according to Bahr. John Beljan returns for his third year of competition at Michigan, starting in the 158-pound weight class. Beljan feels he has improved both mentally and physically from last year. At 167 pounds, Bahr will send Nemir Nadhir. "I'm looking for great' things out of him," Bahr said. "He has been our most improved wrestler." The grapplers are as solid as a rock at 177. That is where Rob "The Rock" Rechsteiner will make his Michigan debut. Rechsteiner, who placed fourth in the Junior College National Tour- nament last year, is a sophomore tran- sfer student from Grand .Rapids- Junior College. Senior Pat McKay will start for the, Wolverines at 190-pounds. McKay and his back-up, Dean Rehberger,were two more grapplers who had to battle it out for the starting position. The anchor of the Wolverines' lineup is 6-5, 255-pound Eric Klasson. Klasson, the defending Big Ten heavyweight champion, is cautious about the season ahead. "A lot of my performance depends on whether or not I stay healthy," co-captain Klasson said, in reference to his necent-knee problems. "If everything gods well for me, I can have a good season, but the most im- portant thing to me would be for the team to reach its potential. I think we can do that." Showdown Saturday A look at the nation S top twenty, (AP)-Call it Showdown Saturday. Or Tradition Time. Some things never change and once again it's Nebraska- Oklahoma for the Orange Bowl.. Aside from Michigan-Ohio State, there are two other games pairing members of The Associated Press Top Twenty-No. 20 Texas at No. 11 Baylor and No. 12 Southern California vs. No. 18 UCLA in the Los Angeles Coliseum. SIX TOP TWENTY teams are idle-top-rated Georgia, third-ranked Florida State, No. 6 Pitt, seventh-rated Penn State, No. 8 Alabama and No. 19 Florida. All have at least one regular- season game remaining. Meanwhile, runnerup Notre Dame plays host to Air Force, No. 13 Brigham Young visits Utah in a Western Athletic Conference-Holiday Bowl show-down, No. 14 South Carolina is at Clemson, Duke at No. 15 North Carolina-UNC needs only a tie to clin- ch the Atlantic Coast Conference crown-Rose Bowl-bound No. 16 Washington vs. Washington State at Spokane and Mississippi vs. No. 17 Mississippi State at Jackson. And don't forget THE game-Yale at Harvard, with the Yalies requiring merely a deadlock that's Ivy for needing only a tie to wrap up Ivy League laurels. ACTUALLY, THE Oklahoma- Nebraska game may not decide the Big Eight's Orange Bowl represen- tative-unless Nebraska wins. Although the arch-rivals are tied with 6- 0 league records, Nebraska is 9-1 overall to Oklahoma's 7-2. The Orange Bowl has said that Oklahoma must beat both Nebraska and also Oklahoma State a week hence to get to Miami. The rival mentors, OU's Barry Swit- zer and NU's Tom Osborne, became head coaches together in 1973. Since then, Switzer has won seven of eight meetings-Oklahoma avenged a 1978 regular-season loss to Nebraska by defeating the Cornhuskers in an Orange Bowl rematch-but he's a 81/-point un- derdog this time. One reason might be that Switzer goes around saying things like, "Everybody's been beaten except Georgia and there's no way Georgia has the physical talent Nebraska has. If Nebraska and Georgia were unbeaten, who in the world do you think would have all the No. 1 votes?" OKLAHOMA LOST its last visit to Lincoln 17-14 two years ago. Billy Sims, on his way to 1 the Heisman Trophy and Jarvis Redwine .. . highstepping 'Husker 2 the end zone for a possible winning touchdown, fumbled at the Nebraska 3- yard line late in the game, the Sooners' sixth lost fumble that day. "Nebraska probably is the best team in the nation right now," says Switzer. "Their defense is intimidating. Offen- sively, they seem more diversified than they have been in the past. They are running more option plays with their three fine tailbacks and getting to the corner quicker." "It's for all the marbles, just like it usually is," says Osborne, who ob- viously has his own personal cliche writer. "I'm sure Oklahoma will be the best team we've played this year." Are you listening, Florida State? CINEMA GUILD Tonight Presents FELLINt'S AMARCORD At 7:00 & 9:30 Lorch Time Amarcord is full of tales: some rqmantic. some slapstick, some elegoical, some bawdy, some as mysterious as the unexpected sight of a peacock flying thrunh a linht snowfnll A truly hnutiful film.