9 4 Page 8-Sunday, January 31, 1982-The Michigan Daily CAGERS PLUMMET BACK TO EARTH Illini crush Blue, By LARRY FREED Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN- The Wolverines, still riding high from their overtime victory against Ohio State, were quickly brought crashing down to earth yester- day under the Orange Crush of Illinois, 79-61. "I think Michigan was a little flat af- ter their exciting victory," Illinois coach Lou Henson said. "We were really happy with our team's play overall. The offensive and defensive play was sound." HENSON HAD no reason to feel otherwise as his team never was in trouble during the contest, opening up leads of over 20 points on several oc- casions in the second half. Craig Tucker, a part of Henson's triple-guard offense, broke a mid- season slump in tallying a game-high 21 points, mostly on long-range jumpers. Perry Range and James Griffin also chipped in double figures for the Illini with 16 and 12 points, respectively. "I was confident about the game af- ter our road win over Minnesota," said a-jubilant Tucker. "Once I started hit- ting and we got into our running game, I was feeling good." THE FAST break was the key ingredient for Illinois as they broke a 35-24 halftime game open with a ten- point spurt early in the second stanza. The series of unanswered points were mainly due to Derek Harper, who despite scoring only six points, dished out 12 assists, including many to Tucker as they teamed up on several easy fast breaks. "Once we got our break going, the pace and scoring of the game really opened up," Tucker explained. As Henson pointed out, the key to get- ting his team's break going was its ability to outrebound the Wolverines (45-30). Michigan's poor shooting, 40 percent from the field and 60 percent from the line, did not help the Wolverines escape their 14th loss in 16 outings this season. The victory upped Illinois' record to 5-3 in the conference and 12-5 overall. "WHEN YOU play a team in their arena you know you have to shoot and rebound much better than we did," said Michigan coach Bill Frieder. Thad Garner, who kept Michigan close in the first half, led all Wolverine scorers with 15 points. Eric Turner (13) and Dean Hopson (12) also pumped in double figures in a losing effort. Michigan came out strong midway. through the first half as Turner and Garner combined to pump in eight poin- ts to narrow the Illini gap to 20-17. Michigan would not get any closer to the Illini, however, much to the en- joyment of a sellout partisan Illini crowd of 16,156. AFTER A HENSON timeout, Griffin sparked the Illini crowd with three quick buckets to open up a comfortable 28-19 lead. Griffin, who has been stringing together several fine performances during this Big Ten season, finished the afternoon with nine rebounds, two blocked shots, and four steals to go along with his 12 points. "I expect to be double-teamed more now that I'm playing better," Griffin said. 9-61 THE WOLVERINES did indeed try to double cover the 6-10 senior pivot man, but the Illini outside shooting (48 per- cent from the field) put an end to that strategy. Despite his team's convincing per- formance, Henson is still weary of the Wolverines, who he must face again next Saturday. "Although Michigan is undersized, they still can beat anybody," said a cautious Henson. "We're not looking forward to playing in Ann Arbor." Before the Wolverines can look ahead to their match with the Illini they must face the upstart Northwestern Wildcats at home next Thursday in'an effort to improve their last place 1-7 conference mark and 2-14 overall record. Tucker-ed out MICHIGAN Min FG /A FT/A ILLINOIS MinFG/A FT/A Garner .......... Hopson ......... Person......... Pelekoudas. Turner ........., Rockymore........ Carter ............. Rudy........... Brown.......... Hall............. Team Rebounds 39 31 34 31 40 18 4 1 6/7 6/10 3/10 3/4 5/15 2/6 0/2 0/0 1/1 0/0 3/3 0/4 1/2 0/0 3/4 2/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 A 4 3 1 3 2 a 0 0 0 0 PF Pts 2 15 2 12 1 7 4 i 3 6 3 0 0 0 '1 2 0 0 R A PF Pts Leonard ........... Range............ Griffin............ Tucker........... Harper ............ Welch ............. Montgomery ...... Daniels............ Bomtemts........ Richardson.. Team Rebounds 17 35 35 29 38 19 14, 10 3 2 4/7 5/10 5/8 8/18 1 /3 2/3 1/2 2/3 0/2 0/2 1/1 6/7 2/2 5/7 4/5 0/0 2/2 3/3 0/0 010 5 8 9 6 6 2 5 1 3 1 3 0 12 3 0 0 0 0 5 2 3 0 2 1 0 1 9 16 12 21 6 4 4 7 0 0 Totals............200 26/65 9/15 30 13 19 61 Technical: Turner Attendance: 16,186 Totals..............200 28/58 23/27 45 20 16 79 Hands Off! Kansas State centter Les Crfat ca'tches Missouri forward Ron Jones (44) on the hand as Jones makes a basket in Missouri's 59-58 victory over Kansas State. See story, Page 7. MICHIGAN ...................24 Illinois ........................35 37 44 - 61 - 79 -full court (- PRESS M' foes don't gloat... ... Blue power will be back. By BOB WOJNOWSKI CHAMPAIGN TS ONE-GAME winning streak now history after a 79-61 loss to Illinois here in the spaceship-shaped arena they call Assembly Hall, the Michigan basketball team and its coach, Bill Frieder, will now pick up this morning's paper and read about it. And what they read will again, by no means, be indicative of the type of reaction expected from those who have just handily beaten a 2-14 team. "Michigan is a good team-they're young, but I can see how on any given night they can beat anyone," said Illinois coach Lou Henson after yester- day's pasting. And his sentiments are echoed, almost to a man, by every one of Michigan's oppoinents in this lost season. They bumble and stumble to sear- ch for the words which will soften the Wolverines' sting of defeat. Michigan 'a little flat' "I thought Michigan was a little flat," continued Henson. "Even though they ran their patterns well and executed well they might have been a little flat coming off of their Ohio State win. But I'm not looking forward to going back up to Ann Arbor to play them." Yes, Michigan was a little flat. And most of what Henson said could not be disputed. But the Illinois head man nicely buffered his slightly negative comments with continued praise of the Wolverines. No, Michigan did not execute well. No, Michigan is not a good young team. It is a very mediocre team at best. "Their zone was tough-it was," said the Illini's 6-10 senior center James Griffin, who managed 12 points and 9 rebounds. Sure Michigan's zone was tough at times, so tough that the Illini could muster "only" 79 points. Illinois outrebounded Michigan by a 45-30 margin and ran at will-indeed it ran the Wolverines ragged. So why all the nice words when it's obvious to any impartial observer that this Michigan team is a sorry one? Is it the unwritten rule that one shalt not criticize one's opponent; regardless of how bad they are? Henson gives a good indication of why the Wolverines are being treated with such respect In such a disrespectful season. "Frieder's doing an excellent job, and you just watch, they'll be back," he said. Ah, there is the key. This is no Northwestern or Wisconsin one is dealing with. These are the "mighty" Wolverines, and while they may be down, they are expected back. Meanwhile, fans across the Big Ten areloving it, and they fairly revel as they watch the home team rout the once-proud Wolverines. The Michigan game is no longer one of the sure sellouts but rather one of the sure wins. In Champaign, the mood was festive, and the partisans cheered and danced and laughed as their Fighting Illini roared to an easy triumph. Indeed, those not so close to the situation play the unfamiliar role of Wolverine-killer to the hilt, while Frieder can only grit and bear it. "When you play an excellent team on its home court, you have to shoot and rebound better than that," said Frieder. "Illinois is a fine young team. Any questions?" Frieder b eats hasty retreat When none are immediately forthcoming, Frieder hastily exits the press room. Indeed, he must grow weary of the questions and his now tiresome an- swers-"we're hanging there. We're looking to have a good recruiting year and we'll be back." The recruiting year is the key, and with 6-8 Paul Jokisch of Birmingham Brother Rice and6-9% Roy Tarpley of Detroit Cooley already committed to Michigan, and a third recruit expected to announce this week, the Wolverines do indeed seem to be on the way back. -And so the opposing coaches say yes, Michigan is a good young team, they have a lot of good youfg talent and they were tough. And the opposing players say yes the Michigan players were tough and yes it was a tough team. For they know, though Michigan is in the basement this year, they them- selves could just as easily be there next. And the treatment they want then is the treatment they give now. .;, __ . _ Gophers c BLOOMINGTON (AP)- Darryl Mitchell scored 18 points yesterday as 10th-ranked Minnesota turned back a second-half rally and beat Indiana 69-62 in a regionally televised Big Ten Conference basketball game. Randy Breuer, the Gophers' 7-foot-3 center, added 15 points-all in the first half-and the three other Minnesota starters also were in double figures. Minnesota, breaking a tie with the Hoosiers for second place in the conference, never trailed. Paced by Breuer's 15 points and eight rebounds in the first half, the Gophers opened an 11-point lead at the in- termission. Minnesota widened the advantage to 17 points, 47-30, before Ted Kitchel started the Indiana rally. Kitchel, a 6-8 junior, had eight points in a 12-4 spurt that cut the lead to 51-42. Indiana then pulled within seven points, but two free throws apiece by Mitchell and Gary Holmes brought the margin back to 11. The Gophers coasted the rest of the way, scoring their final 14 points from the foul line. Iowa 76, Ohio State 66 IOWA CITY (AP)- Iowa's Mark Gannon scored 19 law Hoosiers, 69-62 points and held the Big Ten's leading scorer to just two field goals in the second half as Iowa posted a 76- 66 basketball victory over Ohio State yesterday. The junior forward hit seven of nine from the field, connected on all five of his free throws and pulled down six reboinds as No. 6 Iowa boosted its record to 15-2 overall and 7-1 in the leggue. The Buckeyes fell to 13-7 and 4-4. Purdue 81, Wisconsin 67 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)- Keith Edmonson scored 32 points for Purdue and sophomore Russell Cross had 12 of his 20 points in the game's first 10 minutes as the Boilermakers recorded an 81-67 vic- tory over Wisconsin in Big Ten college basketball yesterday. Cross scored twice and Edmonson converted a three-point play to give Purdue a 17-11 lead with 12:33 left in the first half and the Boilermakers were never caught. The Boilermakers dominated the boards early, opening a 27-17 lead and built it to 14 points in the first half with the help of a costly technical foul against Wisconsin's John Ploss. Edmonso i was fouled by Ploss as the Purdue senior made a layup. Ploss was also charged with a technical for hanging on the rim. Edmonson, who made 16 of 19 free throws, hit shots for both the per- sonal and technical. Joe Gampfer, Purdue's 7-foot sophomore center who scored 12 points in his first college start, then made a field goal on the possession after the technical to give Purdue a 35-21 lead. Michigan St. 64, Northwestern 61 EAST LANSING (UPI) - Freshman guard Sam Vincent scored a career high 22 points and Michigan State withstood a furious last-gasp rally by North- western as the Spartans nipped the Wildcats 64-61 last night in Big Ten basketball action. The win improves Michigan State's record to 4-4 in the Big Ten and 9-9 overall while the Wildcats dropped to 2-6 in the conference and 6-11 overall. - The Spartans, seemingly in command throughout much of the contest before foul problems, and some clutch Northwestern shooting, put the game in doubt until the fihal seconds. 0 Women cagers stomp on Tartans 8-6 By LARRY MISOKIN a The Wayne State Tartars must have known they were in for a long afternoon when the Michigan Women's basketball team went up 1-0 before the opening tipoff. The Wolverines never relinquished their pre-game lead and coasted to an 88-62 vic- tory over Wayne State yesterday afternoon at Crisler Arena. Michigan's first point came as a result of a technical foul called against the Tar- tars for starting a player, Terry Fuhr, who was not listed on their roster. K.D. Har- te sunk the free throw and Michigan was on its way to it's second victory in a row, upping it's season mark to 12-6. With nine games left, Michigan has already equalled last year's number of wifls. THE GAME WAS never close as the Wolverines built a commanding 37-23 half- time lead and then outscored Wayne' State 51-39 in the second half to walk away with the victory. Once again, the Wolverines' high scorers were Peg Harte, who poured in 24 poin- ts, and Diane Dietz who had 22 points. The victory however, was a real team effort as every member of the team scored at least once and coach Gloria Solukwas able to substitute her second string players into the game for'most of the second half. "The kids did a super job today," Soluk said.."I didn't realize that everyone was scoring, but the kids recognized it." WHILE MICHIGAN'S offense was impressive today, the team played an ex- cellent defensive game as well, constantly forcing the Tartars to shoot from the outside. A big part of the Wolverines tough defense was Patrice Donovan, who broke her own team record with 11,blocked shots. "Patrice was outstanding," said Soluk. "She has been coming on strong lately. With. her working on the inside, our guards can play around a little more because they don't have to worry about the middle. She's an intimidating player." Wolverine Terri Soullier, who started in place of Dietz, filled in well with 10 poin- ts and tough defense. Soluk said she was pleased with the way Soullier played but declined to comment on why Dietz did not start. "IT BOTHERED ME not to start because I didn't know why," said Dietz, who scored 16 of her points in the second half. "It was frustrating not having her (Soluk) say anything to me before the game. I just tried to keep a level head and once I got in I felt like I had been in all along." The key to Michigan's strong offensive performance was their fine passing as well as their improved shot selection. Once again the Wolverines ran the fast break at will and also had fewer turnovers. "I was glad to see that we had fewer turnovers today," said Soluk. "We ran the break well and shot well. We are not shooting from outside a set perimeter. It makes a coach feel good to see selective shooting." MICHIGAN HAS three big games coming up against Western Michigan, Detroit and Central Michigan, before they travel to Michigan State for the Big Ten tour- nam'ent in two weeks. Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER DIANA WILEY watches Cheryl Sobkow go up against two Wayne State defenders. Michigan won at Crisler Arena yesterday. Michigan's record is now 12-6. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Field events boost 'Al'at est hi Special to the Daily KALAMAZOO- Field events turned out to be the Wolverines' specialty as Michigan men's track team competed at the Western Michigan Relays held here Friday night. No team scores were recorded at the meet. Michigan's Derek Harner helned get In the running events, however, the Wolverines did not fare so well. Evan Moore, in his best collegiate perfor- mance to date, ran the 5,000 meters in 14:38 for a second place finish. Shelby Johnson took second in the high hurdles in a time of 7.3 seconds. Gerard Donakowski highlighted Michigan's Kaufmann, who scored a career high 9.65 on rings, and Milan Stanovich, who won the high bar and vaulting events. Other outstanding performances were registered by Kevin McKee, who won the floor exercise with a 9.6, captain Nevin Hedlund, whose 9.2 score won the pommell horse competition and Dave us win all six events and Rick Kau- mann was spectacular on rings" Synchs sink Special to the Daily . COLUMBUS - Garnering 89 points, the Michigan synchronized swimming team placed third at the College SCORES College Basketball 111B inA7 IVJIf*.shat Big Ton Standings - _. 0