4 SPORTS 1 Page 8 Sunday, November 23, 1980 The Michigan Daily FRICKER SUPERB IN WIN Icers top Badgers, 3-1 BY GREG DeGULIS Similar to their Rose Bowl-bound football counterparts in Columbus, the Michigan icers produced a stellar defensive performance defeating the Badgers of Wisconsin 3-1 in front of 3509 at Yost Arena last night. Michigan goalie Paul Fricker made a total of 46 saves against the Badgers while gar- nering star of the game honors for the Wolverines. The split with the Badgers grants the Wolverines a 7-5 overall record in- cluding a 4-4 mark in the all-important WCHA standings. The win prompted acting coach John Giordano to com- nWent on the status of the hard working Michigan icers. "We're still a team that's trying to find an identity," Gior- dano explained. "We don't know whether to score goals or play defen- se." Well, last night, the Michigan icers chose to play defense. Although the Badgers attempted an incredible 94 shots through three periods on the weary Fricker, the Michigan defense managed to shut out the Badgers until 11:05 of the final stanza. The last time the Badgers were shut out in WCHA competition stems all the way back to 1972 when the Minnesota Gophers managed to blank the Wisconsin icers. Fricker's shutout bid was spoiled by junior right winger Ken Keryluk who dented the nets for Wisconsin at 11:0 5 of the final stanza. Badger left winger Ted Pearson raced down the wing with Michigan defensemen Dave Richter right on his back attempting to ride the Wisconsin attacker into the boards. Pearson managed to fight off Richter and the Badger left winger released a quick pass to Keryluk all alone in front of the Michigan goal. Keryluk calmly fired a wrist shot beating Fricker and spoiling the shutout bid. The Michigan icers also chose to play some offense as senior right winger Roger Bourne knocked in two goals and emerging freshman Kelly McCrimmon scored one more, raising his series total to three goals. Bourne captured the offensive star of the game honors with his third and fourth goals of the season. Bourne scored the first goal of the game at 7:44 of the first period when the senior right winger picked up a Gordie Hampson pass off the boards on the fly, wound up and fired a close range slap- shot to beat Badger goalie Jamey Gremore, putting Michigan up 1-0: Freshman left winger McCrimmon teamed up with sophomore right winger Ted Speers to chalk up Michigan's second goal. Speers and McCrimmon flew down the ice on a two- on-one break with Speers rifling a wrist shot on goalie Gremore. The puck rebounded out in front of the goal and a Wisconsin defenseman tried to smother the black disc but McCrimmon dug the puck out and knocked it into the goal amidst a swarm of red jersies. Bourne garnered Michigan's in- surance goal at 8:39 of the third period mainly due to the hustle of junior right winger Dennis May. A Wisconsin slap- shot from the point was blocked by Michigan with the puck richocheted past the red line creating a breakaway opportunity for the racing May. Wisconsin defenseman Bruce Driver broke up the breakaway attempt but May regained control of the puck and waited for the rest of the Wolverines to catchup. Bourne was the first to arrive in front of the Wisconsin goal and May hit the streaking Bourne with a crisp pass. Bourne then found the nets with a high wrist shot, putting Michigan up 3- 0. Bourne Again FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Bourne (Hampson, Manning) 12:16. Penalties: M-Mccrimmon (tripping) 3:13; W-Welsh (holding) 7:21; W-Lebler (high sticking) 14:48; M-May (holding) 17:13. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 2. M-McCrimmon (Speers; Richter) 15:23. Penalties: M-Richter (holding) 1:43; W-Pear- son (interference) 2:50; W-Lecy (holding) 6:31; W-Ethier (roughing) 7:25; M-Richmond (roughing) 7:25; W-Pearson (game misconduct) 19:39. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3. M-Bourne (May) 8:39; 4. W-Koryluk (Pearson, McFarlane) 11:05. Penalties: M-Tippett (hooking) 1:24. SAVES .1 2 3 - total M-Fricker .......................21 15 10 - 46 W-Gremore ....................... 7 14 16 - 37 i , j uSyrhr AP Phot e Purdue's Steve Bryant soars through the air after being hit by Indiana's Chuck Alexander, when going for a pass from quarterback Mark Herrmann. The pass was incomplete but Indiana was charged with pass interference, giving Purdue a first down inside Indiana territory. Purdue later upended the Hoosiers, 24-23. Purdue, slips by Indiana, 24-2 3 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)-Purdue linebacker Mike Marks batted down Indiana quarterback Tim Clifford's conversion pass attempt with 17 seconds to go yesterday, saving the Boilermakers' 24-23 Big Ten conference football victory over the Hoosiers. The Hoosiers trailed 24-17 but pulled within one point on a 10-yard touchdown pass from Clifford to Steve Corso, capping a 65-yard drive in the closing minutes. After Marks broke up the conversion play, the Hoosiers had one more chance when they recovered an onside kick at midfield. Indiana reached the Purdue 42, but Don Geisler's 59-yard field goal try failed as time ran out. The Boilermakers trailed 10-0 early in the game but rode the passing of quarterback, Mark Herrmann to victory in the second half. Herrmann, who completed 19 of 23 passes for 323 yards, rifled a 20-yard touch- down pass to Bart Burrell and set up two short touch- down runs by Ben McCall. The Boilermakers trailed 10-3 at halftime before Herrmann started his aerial show, hitting 11 straight passes at one stretch. Big Ten a the off-season in the wake of the Hawkeyes shockingly easy 41-0 rout of Michigan State yesterday in the Big Ten finale for both teams. "It was a real fine victory," Fry told reporters af- terwards. "The winter's going to be warmer because of it. "It you can win so impressively, it's got to be a great confidence builder. It's been a season of in- juries and mistakes, so today it was really gratifying to see the defense put together a shutout." Wisconsin 25, Minnesota 7 MADISON (AP)-Freshman quarterback Jess Cole ran for four touchdowns, including a 52-yard dash for the go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter, leading Wisconsin to a 25-7 Big Ten college football victory over Minnesota yesterday. 14 Roundup. Iowa 41, Michigan State 0 l I I 1 l l l EAST LANSING (AP)-Iowa Coach Hayden Fry- has some pleasant memories to carry him through x; "fi= "/A WE 5 Bre Servec Free H With A Om FREE DELIVERY 7 DA YS A WEEKI DELIVER: Mon-ThursR 5 pm-1 am Sicilian P Fri-Sat Sandwich 5 pm-2 am Dinnersl Sunk Greek, I i m-11 pm A meri Dishe akfast d Anytime ksh Browns AICH'SLI GARDENSC Cki ~n Eggs or OfV f1JIxtIe~V% n elettes 338 S. State Street Exten For fast pick-up orders call: 663-4636 Wine I Izzal izzal hesi talian, -icon si tails, sive List-. NCAA ROUNDUP: Oklahoma upsets Nebras] LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Oklahoma freshman Buster Rhymes ran 1 yard for a touchdown with 56 seconds remaining yesterday, lifting the ninth- ranked Sooners to a dramatic 21-17 vic- tory over fourth-ranked Nebraska. Rhymes' touchdown capped an 80- yard drive that began after Nebraska took a 17-14 lead with 3:16 to play on quarterback Jeff Quinn's touchdown plunge from less than a yard out. THE LAST-MINUTE touchdown brought Oklahoma from behind for the second time in the game. The Sooners earlier overcame an 89-yard touchdown dash by Nebraska's Jarvis Redwine and erased a 10-0 deficit on 3-yard scoring runs by J.C. Watts and Chet Winters late in the second period. UCLA 20 USC 17 LOS ANGELES (AP)-Backup quar- terback Jay Schroeder hooked up with tailback Freeman McNeil on a 58-yard pass play with 2:07 remaining yester- day to lift UCLA to a 20-17 victory over crosstown rival Southern California. Shroeder's pass to McNeil was deflected off the hands of Southern Cal defensive back Jeff Fisher at about the USC 40-yard line. McNeil gathered in the ball and raced down the left sideline untouched for the winning touchdown. SOUTHERN CAL had one final chan- ce after the Schroeder to McNeil touch- down play, but time expired with the Trojans at the UCLA 24-yard lipe. Washington 30 Washington St. 23 SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)-Quarter- back Tom Flick fired three touchdown passes yeaterday as the 16th-ranked Rose Bowl-bound Washington Huskies overcame a 14-0 deficit late in the first half to beat Washington State 30-23. Flick teamed with Paul Skanski, Aaron Williams and Anthony Allen for scoring strikes of 22, 41 and 47-yards respectively. WASHINGTON State had a chance to win the game until safety Ken Gardner intercepted a Samoa Samoa pass to give Washington the ball with 1:05 remaining. Clemson 27 South Carolina 6 CLEMSON, S.C. (AP)-Senior safety Willie Underwood ran an intercepted pass back 37 yards for a Clemson touchdown as the underdog Tigers up- set 14th-ranked South Carolina 27-6 yesterday. In addition to Underwood's touch- down, quarterback Homer Jordan sneaked 1 yard late in the third period, and fullback Jeff McCall scored on a 15- yard run just before the game ended. Big Ten Conf. Overall : MICHIGAN ............8 0 9 2 0b Ohio State ............. 7 1 9 2a0 Purdue ................7 1 8 3 0 Iowa ..................4 4 4 7 0 Minnesota ............. 4 5 5 6 0 Indiana ..............3 5 6 5 0v Wisconsin............3 5 4 7 0: Illinois ............. 3 5 3 7 1~ Michigan State......2 6 3 8 0 Northwestern.......0 9 0 11 0 Yesterday's Scores MICHIGAN 9, Ohio State 3 Iowa 34, Michigan State 0 Purdue 24,Indiana 23 Wisconsin 25, Minnesota 7 ka,21-17 GAMECOCK tailback George, Rogers, the nation's second-leading rusher, gained over 100 yards for 11th ; time this year. But South Carolina's scoring was limited to field goals by: Eddie Leopard from 29 and 39 yards; out. Baylor16Texas0 WACO, Texas (AP)-Full-back Den- nis Gentry rambled 64 and 16 yards; through the rain for touchdowns Satur- day and Baylor's ballhawking defense, made them stand with a 16-0 victory over theTexas Longhorns. The No. 12-ranked Bears intercepted four passes against the 20th-ranked Longhorns who tried two quarterbacks, Donnie Little and Rick Mcivor to no avail. Gentry carved out 130 yards on 22 carries while halfback 'Walter Aber-4 crombie collected 109 on 30 carries. be SCORES SCORES College Football EAST Boston College 13, Massachusetts 12 Brown 31, Columbia 13 Cornell 31, Pennsylvania 9,4 C. W. Post27, Kings Point 14 Iona 51, Brooklyn College 0 - Lehigh 32, Lafayette 0 Princeton 27, Dartmouth 24 r- . - - I LSA STUDENTS Vote in the LSA-SG elections Nov. 24 & 25 POLLING SITES Mon. & Tues. Fishbowl 9 AM-4 PM Dennison 10 AM-NOON South Quad 4:30-6:30 PM Bursley 4:15-6:15 PM Mon. Only Alice Lloyd 4:15-6:15 PM Couzens 4:15-6:15 PM West Quad 4:45-6:45 PM UGLI 8-10 PM Tues. Only Markley 4:15-6:15 PM Mo-Jo 4:15-6:15 PM East Quad 4:30-6:30 PM DEMONS WIN 86-80 DePaul downs Cards YOU COULD BE A WINNER! \ Grand Prize Drawing! 1AA 1 10lODAY CARIBBEAN CRUISE SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)-Mark Aguirre scored seven of his game-high 24 points to lead a decisive 13-3 burst late in the second half as DePaul whip- ped Louisville's defending national champions 86-80 in the second annual Hall of Fame Tipoff Basketball Classic yesterday. The two Top Ten powers never were more than six points apart before the second-ranked Blue Demons broke the game open against the third-ranked Cardinals behind their super-star for- ward. The Cardinals were led by Derek Smith's 25 points and 13 rebounds. Syracuse 20, W. Virginia 7 Villanova 23, Temple 7 Yale 14, Harvard 0 SOUTH Clemson 27, South Carolina 6 Furman 28, Citadel 15 Jackson St. 37, Alcorn St. 16 Maryland 31, Virginia 0 Memphis St. 6, Wichita St. 0 Miami Fla. 26, N. Texas St. 8 Mississippi St. 19, Mississippi 14 North Carolina 44, Duke 21 North Carolina St. 36, E. Carolina 14 Richmond 26, William & Mary 14 Tennessee 45, Kentucky 14 Vanderbilt 31, Tn. Chattanooga 29 Wake Forest 28, Appalachian St. 16 MIDWEST Ball St. 28, Indiana St. 21 Cincinnati 23, Miami, Ohio 13 Kansas St. 17, Colorado 14 Kent St. 34 Toledo 14 Missouri 31, Kansas 6i r f r :4 Computerized Reservations "Your Friendly Travel Professionals" ROSE BOWL TOURS .--. ~ws*90* b ,, I I