U. SPORTS The University of Michigan Dept. of Recreational Sports presents } The Michigan Daily ,SU By BOB WOJNOWSKI Special to the Daily COLUMBUS - Clark Kellogg's 21- foot baseline jumper with 45 seconds left gave Ohio State the lead, and the Buckeyes *urvived a frantic final 30 seconds to hold. on, as they defeated Michigan, 64-63, before 13,591 screaming partisans in St. John's Arena last night. After Kellogg's jumper put the Bucks ahead, Michigan freshman sensation Eric Turner missed a 25-footer with 20 seconds left and, after a wild scramble, Ohio State's Larry Huggins came out of the pack with the ball. THAD GARNE'R fouled Huggins with 14 seconds remaining, and the Friday, February 19,1982 Page 11 KELLOGG LEADS 64-63 WIN edges Wolverines called a time-out to make him think about the ensuing free throws. The strategy apparently worked as' Huggins, an 89-percent foul shooter, missed the free throw and Turner rebounded. He pressed the ball upcourt, was quickly double-teamed, and laid it off to Garner at the top of the key with five seconds left. Garner held the bill, then twisted and let loose with an off- balance 25-footer that hit the rim twice before falling off as the buzzer sounded. "Sometimes you'd rather be lucky than good," said Ohio State head Coach Eldon Miller. "I'd rather be good, but tonight we were lucky." IT WAS AN entertaining game to say Blue the least. After a lackadaisical! in which neither squad led by m seven points, the two teams can out of the gate in the second hal Turner, who wowed the cro some impressive long-range sh the first half, banged a jumperi top of the key to start the secon and bring Michigan to with From there, the team see-s Kellogg attempted to match Tu shot-for-shot showdown. A three-point play by Tur 15:34 left gave the Wolverines t lead of the game at 39-38. Afte out, Buckeye forward Tony C slammed one, Huggins hit a and Kellogg stole the ball and another to put Ohio State up, 4 whip the crowd into a frenzy. BUT MICHIGAN came bad outside shooting of Turner, eight of 10 in the second half. A he nailed two free throws with' Michigan had its biggest lea game, 57-51. The Buckeyes ca back, though, and when gu Bu cagers first half Stokes hit a pair of free throws with 5:02 pore than left the game was tied at 59. me flying Michigan took its final lead of the if. game with 1:13 remaining, when Gar- owd with ner slammed a reverse lay-up to make sooting in it 63-62, and set up the last-second from the heroics by Kellogg. ad stanza "I came off of a good pick and I was in 28-26. open," said Kellogg. "Fortunately I awed as knocked it home." irner in a "THEY DID A good job on Eric making him give up the ball," said ner with Michigan coach Bill Frieder in referen- heir first ce to the last 14 seconds. er a time Turner finished with 23 points on 10- Campbell for-18 shooting, while Kellogg scored 21 jumper, points on 10-for-14 shooting., d dunked And Frieder was bubbling with praise 44-39, and for the 6-7 Buckeye forward. "We're little kids out there and he's a ck on the man," said the Michigan coach. "He's who hit just a man among boys." And when The win avenged the Buckeyes' 62-60 7:41 left, overtime loss to Michigan three weeks ad of the ago and moved Ohio State to 17-8 on the ime right season. Michigan falls to 4-9 in the Big ard Ron Ten and 5-16 overall.' ccks by a nose -OHIO STATE A PF~ Pts MinFG/A FT/A R A PF Pts Summer Softball . .4i . 4 4, 4,. M , "r H Mi ~ I[~7~TIClassics Adult Slow-Pitch Leagues Mass Meeting--February 23, 7:30 p.m. Central Campus Recreation Building Room 3275 401 Washtenow CHOICE: Playing fields CHOICE: Location/lights /parking CHOICE: Umpires CHOOSE: Co-Rec. B, C-Men's B, C, D- Women's C, -D CHOOSE: Single or double header leagues CHOOSE: Reasonable Rates/No hidden costs/ No Uniforms/No r6sidency requirements, No University affiliation requirement. ,4" / MICHIGAN Mini Hopson.......... Garner . ........ Person.......... Turner.......... Pelkoudas ......... Rockymore........ Carter............. Team Rebounds Totals........... 1s 40 40 40 31 11 20 FG/AFG/A R 3/5 0/0 6 3/7 1/3 6 6/8 0/0 7 10/18 3/3 2 3/7 0/0 0 0/1 1/2 3 4/6 0/0 3 3 29/52 5/8 30 0 3 2 4 6 0 0 26 27 2 12 4 23 3 6 1 1 1 8 Kellogg......... Campbell ....... Waiters...........: Huggons.......... Taylor ............ Stokes.....4....... Johnson ........... Kirchner .......... Jones ........... Simms.......... Team Rebounds Totals........... 39 33 32 38 22 10 4 8 10 4 10/14 1/3 9 8/15 3/3 2 3/4 1/2 3 3/6 0/1, 1 2/4 1/2 0 0/1:4/4 2 0/2 0/0 1 0/0 0/0 1 1/1 0/1 0 0/1 0/0 0 2 27/48 10/16 21 0 I 0 6 4 0 0 l 0 4 0 1 3 4 0 0 0 1. 21 19 7 6 5 4 0 0 2 0 FOR INFORMATION CALL ROCHELLE 763-1313 or BILL 764-7415 YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO BE CHOOSY 15 15 63 Technical fouls; Campbell Attendance: 13,591 12 13 64 Halftime score: Ohio State 28, Michigan 24 Big Ten Standings Conf. Overall W L W L Iowa ............... 11 2 19 3 Minnesota .......... 10 3 18 4 Ohio State...........8 5 17 8 Indiana ............9 4 15 7 Purdue..............7 6 10 12 Michigan State ..... 5 7 10 12 MICHIGAN ........ 4 9 5 16 Northwestern ...... 3 10 7 14 Wisconsin...........1 12 4 17 I A *. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK SOPHOMORE LORI Gnatkowski drivestoward the basket in last night's game against Saginaw Valley, which the Cardinals won 68-67. See story, Page 12. I ... ... U Turner leads'M' cage rs UNTIL YOU TALK TO CAPITAL HOLDING CORPOATION!. By RON POLLACK Special to the Daily COLUMBUS- Eric Turner has begun to do something that freshmen. rarely do-he's taking control of his team. Thad Garner may be Michigan's captain and lone senior, but it is Turner who makes the Wolverines go. For the second game in a row, the 6-3 guard caught fire from the outside. Against Northwestern last Thursday, turner put on a one-man show to lead the Wolverines to a 45-44 victory. In that game he hit seven consecutive shots, en route to a 22-point output. LAST NIGHT his hot hand wasn't enough, as Ohio State defeated Michigan 64-63. But Turner was every bit as impressive as he had been again- bst the Wildcats. He made eight of his last ten shots, with most of his 23 points coming from the twilight zone in a very tight ball game. "I have confidence in myself, and we need someone to look to in the clutch," said Turner. "I've tried to fill that role." As the contest drew to a close, Turner once again tried to "come through in the clutch," but he was unable to deliver. With 20 seconds remaining and the Wolverines down, 64-63, Turner took a bomb from the top of the key that missed. "ERIC'S LAST shot was the type he'd been making all game," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. But this setback hasn't changed Tur- ner's role on the team. He is still the player that the Wolverines will have run the show in the future. "The last two games, he's had a hot hand, and we've gone, to him," said. Garner. "He may not always make the shot with the game on the line, but he'll always have it in his hand to set it up. Now we all look to him to lead us, and he's capable of doing that. Especially at the end of the game.- "I need to shoot when a game gets near the end," said Turner. "I've been getting more confident in my shot lately, so I'm looking for the shot." It was always expected that Turner take control of the team, but that he has done so this early in his career was not invisioned. 'HE EVEN amazes me," said Gar- ner. "I knew that he had the ability because of the way he ran the show in high school. I didn't think he could take control of our team so quickly, but he has." 'The fact that he has taken control of the Wolverine team is explained by Turner as "maturity and learning something new each game. I'm lear- ning more about the college game and everything is falling into place for me." "He's really just learned his role," said Garner. "He's progressed real quick. People looked for that from him when he first came in but he was just a freshman. Now he has a little experien- ce." Frieder, for one, couldn't be happier at the progress made by Turner this season. "He's a great player and there's no use hiding him," he said. 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