I p SPORT S The Michigan Daily Saturday, January 30, 1982 Page 7 B1 By MAR The Falcon ho be more than N last night as the into a Bowlingt Arena. And whern the1 with the first-pl the Wolverines locker room wit] the first ever for at Yost and only the Falcons in ti the two teams. "WE BEAT team;" said Bow York. "It was but clean. Th istakes made owlingGr .K BOROWSKI minutes but only Bowling Green was ockey frenzy proved t able to capitablize on a power play op- ickiy aranzypred fo portunity. lichigan bargained for George McPhee, the Falcons' all- ey turned a close game tme leading scorer, gave his team a 1-0 Green blowout at Yost lead at 10:42 of the period. Defenseman Brian MacLellan laid a perfect pass on- hard-hitting showdown to the stick of center Brian Hills, who ace Falcons was over, slid the puck in front to McPhee, who could only head to the slammed it home. r a 6-2l ss. The wn was Less than three minutes later, ra Bowling Green team Bowling Green added another goal to go y the second victory for out on top, 2-0. Left wing Dave O'Brian he 14 meetings between got credit for the score that dribbled in good Michigan off a Wolverine skate just 10 seconds af- a very gendcoachgery ter Michigan killed off a checking from ling Green coach Jerry behind penalty against defenseman a very physical game, Mike Neff. ere weren't a lot of THE WOLVERINES came out flying by the two teams. It in the second period and quickly knot- yen. thrashes ted the score at 2-2. First left wing Paul Brandrup collected his third goal of the season by sweeping a weak shot from defenseman Steve Richmond past Falcon netminder Mike David. The play occurred just 56 seconds after Hills was sent to the penalty box for high- sticking. Then at 6:13, freshman Dave McIn- tyre netted his third goal of the season on a breakaway. McIntyre stole the puck and then skated past the lone Falcon defenseman and easily beat David over his glove hand. But the sudden Wolverine surge only slowed the flying Falcon offense for seven minutes. Bowling Green center Kim Collins knocked in a pass from linemate Dave Randerson for his eighth goal of the year to put his team up, 3-2. THE FALCONS continued to add to their lead with a goal from senior Andre Latreille at the 17:45 mark of the period. Nick Bandescu took the initial shot then batted the rebound to Latreille, who was parked at the corner of the net, and he easily put it into the open side of the goal to give his team a M'.icer 4-2 advantage. The falcons opened the scoring in the third period with a perfect breakaway goal from Hills at 1:15. The CCHA's leading scorer took a McPhee pass and skated in untouched, deked Mason and nonchalantly flipped the puck into the net for his 22nd goal of the season. Nick Bandescu ended the scoring at 18:54 of the third stanza to give his team ; the final 6-2 margin. The two teams face-off again tonight in the BGSU Ice Arena and it will be broadcast by WJJX (650-AM) starting at 7:25 p.m. 6-2 was a sound, methodical game. The victory improved the Falcons' record to 15-5-1 in the CCHA while Michigan dropped to 9-7-4. "I thought (Wolverine goalie Peter) Mason played very well tonight as did our own goalie (Mike David)," said York. "(Michigan defenseman Steve) Richmond impressed me. They are a solid team and have a lot of movement t center ice that causes problems. We did a fine job of killing penalties tonight and that was key." THE FIRST period opened with plen- ty of action between the many whistles. Nine penalties were called in the first 20 Falconized FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. BG-McPhee (Hills, MacLellan) 10:42; 2. BG-O'Brian (Braun, MacLellan) 13:11. Penalties: BG-MacLellan (elbowing) :30;' BG -ilson (highstickng) 7:07; BG-MacLellan (roughing) 8:16; M-Richter (elbowing and roughing) 8:16; BG-Galley (interference 9:49; M-Grade (tripping) 10:34; M-Neff (checking after the whistle) 11:01; BG-Galley (hooking) 15:24; M-Brandrup (hooking) 19:32. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. M- Brandrup (Richmond, Lun- dberg) 2;17; 2. M-McIntyre (unassisted) 6:13; 3. BG-Collins (Raderson, Guertn) 13:05; 4. BG-Latrellle (Hack, Bandescu) 17:45. f Penalties: BG-Hills (high-sticking) 1:21; BG-Picul (hooking) 8:57; BG--Mills (holding) 14:33; BG-W.Wilson (interference) 18:57. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 5. BG-Hills (McPhee, W. Wilson) 1:15; 6. BG-Bandescu (Kane, Galley) 18:54. Penalties: M-Neff (high-sticking) 8:32; BG-M- cPhee (hooking) 14:26. SAVES M-Mason ...............10 BG-David..............7 1 2 3 Total 12 11 - 33 12 2 - 21 THE SPORTING VIEWS MICHIGAN'S DAVE McIntyre (8) beats Bowling game, 2-2. The Falcons went on to win, 6-2. Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS Green goalie Mike David (30) to knot up the score of last night's . . I KLASSON 22-2 THIS SEASON: 'M' grappler honored Pro football's year in review . . .I I .the good, the bad, and the ugly By JEFFREY BERGIDA With Super Bowl XVI in the record books, a review of the events which took place on the gridiron this year seems appropriate. If someone had told you in August that the Super Bowl champions would be the San Fran- cisco 49ers, you would have laughed in his face. The majority of football fans probably thought that Joe Montana was still pulling out last-second wins down in South Bend on Saturday afternoons in the fall. And if that same person had stated that Pittsburgh, Oakland, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Cleveland, and Minnesota (all playoff teams in 1980) would see no post-season play in 1981, while Cincinnati, Tampa Bay, and both New York teams would be forces to be reckoned with, you might have phoned the local institution. In order to put the 1981 season into perspective, here are a few awards which were deserved: PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Joe Montana, San Fran- cisco 49ers-There's really nothing left to say about this man that already hasn't been said or written in the Super Bowl media blitz that saw him pictured on the cover of three national magazines. He advanced from second-string status on a team that hadn't made the playoffs in a decade to become the NFC's passing leader and the Super Bowl's Most Valuable Player in a matter of months. There are many players with more natural, talent, but Montana's winning spirit made 1981 his year. COACH OF THE YEAR: Bill Walsh, San Francisco 49ers-When the season began, could you name five 49ers? The Super Bowl is now a week old; how many 49ers can you name today? Walsh led a team full of unknown players to a 16-3 record and the first champion-, ship in the 49ers' history. ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Lawrence Taylor, New York Giants-Anybody who could lead the Giants into the playoffs after 18 years deserves an award. Taylor lived up to all the publicity which saw him compared to the Detroit Lions' Mike Lucci and the Pittsburgh Steelers' Jack Ham. He should be an All-Pro for the next 10 years. GAME OF THE YEAR: San Diego 41, Miami 38, January 2, 1982-When the Chargers jumped off to a 24-0 lead, many fans turned off their sets. What they missed was perhaps the greatest second half in NFL history, as back-up quarterback Don Strock led the Dolphins to an amazing comeback which saw them actually take a 38-31 lead before San Diego sent the game into overtime. In overtime, the Chargers finally won it after nearly a full period of extra play. UPSET(S) OF THE YEAR: Chicago Bears over San Diego, Denver, Kansas City and Oakland-Against most opponents, the Bears played like Northwestern's second- string team. Even the Lions actually won a game on the road against the Bears. Yet when playing these AFC West ballclubs, C jiicago transformed itself into a foot- ball team and gathered four of its six wins. MARK FIDRYCH RICHES TO RAGS AWARD: Brian Sipe, Cleveland and Jim Plunkett, Oakland (tie)- Remember these guys? One year ago, their faces were plastered all over magazine covers and newspaper spor- ts pages. In 1981, Sipe's interceptions led the Browns from a division title to a 6-10 record and last-place finish. Plunkett and the champion Raiders were the victims of three consecutive shutouts early in the year and the Super Bowl XV MVP ended the season on the bench. At least he still has his TV commercial.. "SMART MOVE" AWARD: Vince Ferragamo, Mon- treal Alouettes-Ferragamo left a city (Los Angeles) where he was considered to be Robert Redford and Terry Bradshaw rolled into one. He gave up his Sasson Jeans commercial for the Great White North where he proceded to lead the CFL in nothing except losses. Ferragamo was not even on the traveling squad at season's end. NORTHWESTERN WILDCAT AWARD: Baltimore Colts and New England Patriots-These teams brought football watchers some of the worst football since Tam- pa Bay went nearly two seasons without a-victory. The Colts gave up an average of 35-points per game. Who could lose against that? The Patriots, of course, who managed to hand Baltimore its only two wins of the year. SWISS CHEESE AWARD: The San Diego Charger defense-Any team that has to struggle with the best of- fense in football history should have its defense locked up. 1981 CONTRIBUTION TO MANKIND AWARD: San Francisco, St. Louis, Detroit and the New York Giants- These are the teams which defeated the Dallas Cowboys this year and spared viewers the sight of Tom Landry, "Fumbles" Dorsett, and Co. in the Super Bowl. As a result, two weeks of stories on what a nice guy Randy White is were avoided. MINNESOTA VIKINGS CLUTCH PLAY AWARD: Buffalo Bills and Philadelphia Eagles (tie)-The Bills were driving down the field toward a tying touchdown in their playoff game against Cincinnati when a key first- down play was called back due to a delay of game penalty. The Eagles lost a playoff game to the Giants. Enough said. Honorable Mention: Detroit Lions-For picking a great time to lose a game in the Silverdome. By RON POLLACK For hid performances against Pur- due, Illinois and Cleveland State last week, Michigan wrestler Eric Klasson has been named Big Ten Athlete of the Week. The senior heavyweight pinned Cleveland State's Mark Sanders in the Wolverines' 25-15 January 20 win at home. Three days later, Klasson en- countered Illinois' Keith Paloucek with Michigan trailing 18-16 going into the heavyweight match. Klasson won, 3-0, to give the Wolverines a 19-18 victory. THE NEXT night, Michigan and Purdue were even going into the final match of the night. .And just as he had done in his previous outing, Klasson emerged victorious to win the match for the Wolverine'grapplers. Despite these match-winning heroics, Michigan head coach Dale Bahr does not consider Klasson's performances to have been more impressive than usual. "I guess we've come to expect that from him," said Bahr. "I guess we've come to expect him to mop up at heavyweight." Klasson's three victories last week improved his record this season to 22-2. Five of these victories have come - on pins. The Iowa City, Iowa native has qualified for the NCAA Champinships the last two years and has set his sights this year, on a third such trip. Ann Arbor , Dearborn "WE FEEL he is right on target for East Lansing " Troy what he hoped to achieve this year," said Bahr. "Eric set his goal as the finals of the NCAA Championships, and he hopes to be an All-American, if not National Champion. He's only lost twice all season and one of those losses was to a post-collegian, while the other was to last year's NCAA runner-up." Klasson is currently the nation's four- th-ranked heavyweight, and as Bahr noted, "Once you're up there, anything can happen in the NCAA's." can pp STUDENT PgtFs ooo i PERSONALS (cash only) 10 words for $1.00 ...starting Feb. 1 .find us in the FISHBOWL Feb. 3, 4, 5 and 9, 10, 11 Kasson ... athlete of the week Indiana tankers sink Blue 64-49 THE HENRY M. LOUD LECTURESHIP Presents JI-M WALLIS Editor of Sojourners magazine and founder of Sojourners Community in Washington, D.C. Speaking on 'WaginPeace", W Special to the Dally BLOOMINGTON - The Michigan men's swim team lost a close 64-49 meet to the Indiana Hoosiers last night. "They just overpowered us," said Michigan coach Gus Stager. "We swam very well, but they just have more depth." Leading the Wolverines was Fernan- do Canales with wins in the 100-yard and 200-yard freestyle events at 45:07 Wrestlers lose to MSU Special to the Daily, EAST LANSING - The Michigan wrestling team was defeated by Michigan State last night, 19-15. Vic- tories for the Wolverines came from Joe McFarland (118 pounds) and heavyweight Eric Klasson. The only pin of the night was credited to Beljan, who took down MSU's Greg Csir.lassonn meanwhile. shut out his Michigan State opponent, Dan to Ohio State, 273.5-270.05. Dudley, 4-0. Men gymnasts lose "Ohio State was hot," s .,....1, n.:f Arn " os said Michigan at bohin dn special to the Daily COLUMBtJS - The Michigan men's gymnastics team dropped its first Big Ten meet of the season last night, losing coach Newt LOKen. we go e n the first two events and just couldn't catch up. But you've got to give our guys credit for not giving up." The 26th Annual RF T CONCERT EVER