Page 8-Saturday, March 6, 1982-The Michigan Daily Irish skate by 'M' icers, 6-5, By MARTHA CRALL Special to the Daily SOUTH BEND- The Michigan hockey team fought back from behind almost all night before falling short by one goal, 6-5 to Notre Dame last night before a sparse crowd of 2,107 at the Athletic and Convocations Center. The down-but-not-out Wolverines now need a two-goal victory in the rematch tonight to take the first round, total-goals CCHA playoff and advance to the semifinals next week in Detroit. MICHIGAN TOOK an early 1-0 lead thanks to Dave Richti-r, but Notre Dame scored three straight goals to take a 3-1 lead into the second period. The Wolverines made a three-goal run of their own to tie the game and go ahead, 4-3, early in the third period but again the Irish battled back to tie and take a 6-4 lead. A final goal by Jim McCauley made the outcome 6-5. Only a solid effort by Michigan goalie Jon Elliott kept the Wolverines close, as they were outshot, 41-21 by the quick Notre Dame team. ALL GAME long the Irish seemed to set up their plays better, and they sported a .500 power play, scoring three of their six goals with a Wolverine in the sin bin. Michigan's power play looked better than its league-basement standing would indicate, scoring two of its five goals that way. Notre Dame spread out its goal scoring, as five different Irish skaters got in the scoring parade. ' THE THIRD period opened with a 3-3 tie but Kelly McCrimmon took the Wolverines up, 4-3, at 4:17. Don Krussman stole the puck in the Notre Dame zone from Jeff Logan and passed to McCrimmon who beat Dave Laurion from the right circle. The lead, however, was short-lived, as Logan scored his second goal of the evening and 17th of the season at 8:26. He broke away on a power play and zinged the puck over Elliott's right leg. - Sean Regan followed with a goal off a Kirt Bjork rebound when Elliott failed to cover the puck in power play traffic at 10:06. BRENT CHAPMAN made it 6-4 when he took his own rebound all alone at 11:17. Michigan's final goal came on a pretty play by Ted Speers and McCauley. Speers nailed a perfect left to right pass to McCauley, who took the puck and shot in one motion to make it 6-5 at 18:25. The Wolverines scored first at 3:06 of the opening period when defenseman Richter rifled a slapshot from the right point that wound up in the net past a screened Laurion to put Michigan up 1-0. NOTRE DAME wasted little time in tying things up on a power play goal. With 10 seconds remaining in Ted Speers' hooking penalty, Irish defenseman John Schmidt fired a slapshot past Elliott at 11:06. The score became 2-1 a few minutes later when Jeff Logan slid the puck past Elliott at 14:36. The Michigan defense got caught up ice and Logan had only Joe Milburn and Elliott to beat. The Irish took a 3-1 lead a 4:06 of the second stanza after an off sides was not called on them. Mark Doman beat Mark Perry and Elliott with a wrist shot to give Notre Dame a two-goal edge. Michigan's usually impotent power play got the Wolverines back in the game with two quick goals. The first came on a five-on-three Wolverine advantage as Brad Tippett took Speers' rebound and shot it into an empty net. The pressure on the left side of the net drew Laurion out of position at 15:02. A little more than a minute later on a one-man advantage, Michigan's Brian Lundberg put the puck by Laurion to knot the score at 3-3. Down but not out FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Rchter (McCauley) 3:06; 1. ND-Schmidt (Bellomy) 11:6 2. ND-Logan (Poulin, Regan).:14:36. Penalties: ND-Higgins (holding) 7:30; M-Speers (hooking) 9:16; M-May (inter- ference) 16:47; ND-Perry (interference) 18:38; M-Lundberg (slashing) 19:39. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. ND-Doman (Schmidt) 4:06; 2. M-Tippett (Speers, McCauley) 15:02; 3. M-Lundberg (Richter, Speers) 16:19. Penalties: M-Neff (tripping) 4:32; ND-Higgins (checking from behind) 7:13; ND-Perry (roughing and holding) 12:09; M-May (roughing) 12:09; ND-Schmidt (holding) 14:30; ND-Chapman (roughing) 16:37; M-Yoxheimer (roughing) 16:37; ND-Higgins (interference) 19:52. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 4. M-McCrimmon (Krussman, Yoxheimer) 4:17; 4. ND-Logan (Rothstei Bowie) 8:26; 5. ND-Regan (Bjork) 10:06; 6. ND-Chapman (Deasey, Regan) 11:17 M-McCauley (Speers, Tippett) 18:25. Penalties: M-Grade (hooking) 6:55; M-Yoxheimer (cross-checking) 9:08; M-Grade (checking the goaltender) 13:39; M-Lundberg (interference) 19:26. SAVES 1 2 3 M -Eliott ............................................:......10 14 17 ND-Laurion ...............................................8 6 7 - 41 - 21 SPORTS OF THE DAILY: avs top Tigers, GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)- Ralph Sampson's baseline jumper with three minutes remaining provided Virginia with a 56-54 victory over stubborn Clemson in a first-round game of the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball tournament last night. Earlier in the day, top-ranked North Carolina and North Carolina State ad- vanced to the semifinals of -the tour- nament. The Tar Heels downed Georgia Tech 55-39, while the Wolfpack stopped Maryland 40-28. THE CAVALIERS and the Tigers were tied 15 times, the latest a 40-all scbre on a jumper by Virginia's Tim Mullen with 10:38 left to play. Virginia then ran off six unanswered points to take a 46-40 advantage with 7:20 remaining. Clemson again cut the gap to two on consecutive baskets by Travel with fellow students and professional colleagues! Repeat of great tours 1980 & 1981. Education & Schools June 19- July 10 (Chinese Schools close in mid-July) Health Care System July 28-Aug 16. Includes major tourist cities: Beijig, Xion, Shanghai, Guilin, plus others, and Hong Kong 8 Tokyo. Only $3525 from San Francisco. Limited space, deadline near. Call: Prof. Robert Hefner, 580 Union Dr. Rm. 459, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. (313) 763-4355. Univer. of Michigon credit ovaloble. Horace Wyatt, but an 8-2 Cavalier stretch gave Virginia a 54-46 lead at the 4:19 mark. Sampson's jumper with 3:03 left gave Virginia a 56-50 lead. Vincent Hamilton hit a jumper to close the gap to four and Fred Gilliam added another jumper from the top of the key to reach what was eventually the final score, with 1:47 left to play. Virginia had a chance to salt the game away, but Jimmy Miller missed the front end of a one-and-one, with 33 seconds left. After a Clemson time out, the Tigers worked for a close last shot, but Mike Epley was short with his at- tempt and Wyatt mishandled the rebound, ending Clemson's bid. Hamilton led all scorers with 22 poin- ts before fouling out. Wyatt added 12, as the Tigers dropped to 14-13. :Sampson finished with 13 points, and was the only Cavalier to reach double figures. Virginia is now 28-2. N. Carolina 55, Georgia Tech 39 GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Freshman Michael Jordan, who only Thursday was released from the infir- mary, scored 18 points to lead top- ranked North Carolina to an 55-39 vic- tory over Georgia Tech in the opening game of the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball tournament yesterda Jordan suffered a tonsillar and was admitted to the UNC in on Monday. He returned to with the Tar Heels on Thursda3 Friday showed no after-effects illness. JORDAN, A guard, was seve from the field in the openingl the Tar Heels took a 30-16 halfti, In the second half, he added a fi and a free throw before coming good. The Tar Heels, No. 1 in the na top-seeded in the tournament, Yellow Jackets 11-10 with 11:3 the first half. They then ran straight points to extend the le 10 with 9:02 remaining. After a pair of Lee Goza free North Carolina added five baskets to boost its lead to 27 3:17 to play in the half. Georgia Tech guard Brooke the ACC's second-leading finished with 14 points. Steppe dan were the only players it figures. North Carolina improved itsr 25-2, and Georgia Tech finis season at 10-16. Tigers reroke offer LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) Detroit Tigers withdrew their offer to sign free agent first b Ron Jackson yesterday,t Manager Jim Campbell Jackson's agent called the mo news. Campbell said Jackson, acq the Tigers late last season, wou needed because the American 56-54 ay;, team obtained infielder Enos Cabell on abcess Thursday in a tradewith the San Fran- firmary cisco Giants. In that deal, Detroit gave practice up outfielder Champ Summers. y and on JACKSON AND his agent, Abdul from his Jalil, had been considering the Tigers' three-year offer for weeks. n for 10 Jackson declared himself a free half as agent at the end of last season after hit- me lead. ting .270 with five home runs and 40 ield goal runs batted in. In 31 games with out for- Detroit, he hit .284 with one home run and 12 RBI. tion and The six-year veteran, however, was led the ignored in the free agent draft, 0 left in although both he and Jalil have insisted off six other clubs are interested. ad to 17- Jalil said Friday he and Jackson no longer were interested in the Tigers, throws, calling Detroit's withdrawal "the best straight news I've heard since September. 7-12 with WMU coach resigns KALAMAZOO (UPI)- Coach Glen Steppe, Weller, who steered Western scorer, Michigan's hockey program into NCAA and Jor- Division I status the past four seasons, n double resigned yesterday it was announced by school Athletic Director Tom Won- record to derling. shed its Weller, 43, who came to Western Michigan after spending five seasons as an assistant to coach John MacInnes at Michigan Tech, was responsible for - The upgrading the Broncos' schedule to its $750,000 current level. baseman It was not immediately known General whether Weller was pursuing the said. Michigan Tech vacancy created by the ve good recently announced retirement of long- time Huskies' Coach MacInnes. AP Photo Inyourface. North Carolina's Sam Perkins (31) blocks the shot of Georgia Tech's Lee Goza during yesterday's quarterfinal action in the ACC tournament. The Tar Heels had no trouble in dispensing the Rambling Wreck, 55-39. Highly rated Virginia and North Carolina State joined North Carolina into today's semi- finals. _- .... uired by id not be League LEAD BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS: S 7- Tracksters race to front (f( Taste our T-Bone Dinner just $3.79 11 Special to the Daily BLOOMINGTON- Michigan's men's track team took a big step toward the Big Ten indoor championship last night as it captured second and third place finishes in both the two-mile run and the long jump-the only two final events thus far staged-and qualified runners in seven other events. With their dual places and shows, the Wolverines ac- cumulated a conference-leading 28 points, seven more than host Indiana and 21 more than the next nearest com- ;petitor. "We knew coming in that if we scored 26 to 28 points with seven qualifiers, we would have a shot at it (the title)," said assistant coach Ron Warhurst. "And that's exactly what we've got." COLLECTING those points for the Wolverines were Brian Diemer and Bill O'Reilly in the two-mile and Vince Bean and Derek Harper in the long jump. Diemer, a junior, crossed the finish line in 8:42. 17 to take second behind defen- ding champion Jim Spivey of the Hoosiers. O'Reilly was third in 8:47.05. In the long jump, Bean cleared 24'6" and Harper 24'5%"; but the Michigan duo was outdistanced by Kerry Zim- merman of Indiana, who registered a leap of 25'0", his best ever. "After I hit the 24-11% on my third trial, assistant Coach Phil Henson told me not to worry, that I already had placed for the national meet," said Zimmerman. "I knew this event was up for grabs, but I expected the overall performan- ces to be better. I was really surprised Michigan's Derek Harper ran through on his final attempt. I can't really describe how I felt. In a way, I was kind of let down." The seven qualifiers for t Wolverines included: Mike Shea in the 1,000-yard run; Andrew Brude in both the 300-yard and 60-yard dashes; Har- per in the 60; Diemer in the mile-run; Bob Boynton in the 600-yard dash; Shelby Johnson in the 60-yard high hur- dles; and Rob Grainger in the 440-yard dash. "If we can come away with four fir- sts, a couple of seconds and a third tomorrow, we'll be right in the thick it," said Warhurst. "It's going to be real dogfight between Indiana, Wiscon- sin and Michigan." The Hoosiers, like the Wolverines, qualified seven for tomorrow's finals. Eight Badgers survived the cut. A T-bone. steak, cooked the way you like it Plus our All- You-Can-Eat Salad Bar, roll with butter, and baked potato, all for one low price! 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