c4o* y SPORTS Page 8 Friday, January 15, 1982 The Michigan Daily 4 U of M Spring Break Nassau,Bahamas Feb. 21-Mar. 1 DELTA Seven Nights-Sheraton, B.C. (including airfare, trans- fers, service charges) ............................$499* Air only ...................................$246 7 Day Caribbean Cruise $409** Feb. 20-28 From Tampa plus Gratuities of $35 per person Air Fare $238-$278 (includes 4 meals/day) Call for Details ........*.769-1776 * PER PERSON QUAD OCCUPANCY E TRY TO HELP YOUI ** PER PERSON TRIPLE OR QUAID OCCUPANCY A ROOMMATE 208 East Washington (Between 4th & 5th Aves.) Deadline Extension Wed. Jan. 20 HURRY SPACE LIMITEDI 'M' ea By LARRY FREED Special to the Daily BLOOMINGTON - Michigan basketball coach Bill Frieder said earlier in the week that a miracle was needed to beat the defending Big Ten and NCAA champion Indiana. Frieder, however, was unable to part the sea of Hoosier red as his Wolverines were drowned here, 81-51. "We didn't play very well tonight," said a despondent Frieder. "We're awfully limited inside and for us to beat anyone we have to play up to our poten- tial." UNFORTUNATELY for Frieder, his Wolverines played no where near their potential as they shot a mere 40 percent from the field and an even worse 33 percent from the free throw line. The anemic shooting added up to an easy victory for ''Bobby Knight and his Hoosiers,*who fought their waynout of the Big Ten cellar with a much-needed victory. Hoosier hosing gers routed, 14W.M.i "Knight was awfully nice to us tonight because he could have beaten us 150-30." Frieder said. Although the Wolverine mentor might have been slightly exaggerating, the Hoosiers did score almost at will. Forward Ted Kitchel, the Big Ten's leading scorer, led the onslaught with 18 points and ten rebounds. FOUR OTHER Hoosiers joined Kit- chel in double figures - Tony Brown,. (15), Randy Wittman (11), John Flowers (11), and Jim Thomas (11). Knight, who saw his team snap a four-game loosing streak and extend its record to 7-5 was pleased with his team's performance. "We were more concentrated in our efforts to play the way we wanted to," the Hoosier coach explained. FRIEDER, ON THE other hand, was not as satisfied with his team's perfor- mance. "My main concern is that we have not improved since Christmas," he said. The loss marked the eighth in a row for Michigan and firmly entrenched the team in the basement of the Big Ten with an 0-3 conference mark and a 1-10 overall record. Michigan was never really in the con- test after Indiana outscored it, 25-12 at the end of the first half enroute to a comfortable 39-22 intermission lead. "OUR GUYS are going to have to learn to play man-to-man (defense) better," Frieder said. "Indiana has a. lot of poise and patience." On several occasions the Wolverines had a chance to shrink the lead to under 10 points, but poor'shot selection and rebounding cost them a chance to get back in the contest. Big Ten Standings "You've got to give Indiana credit, they played great defense and hurried our shots," said Frieder, whose career mark was evened 20-20. THE WOLVERINES could get no closer than 15 points in the final stanza as Knight began to substitute freely with nine'minutes to play. Eric Turner led the Wolverines' lackluster performance with 13 points. Thad Garner was the only other Wolverine to notch double figures as he netted 10. One of the few bright spots for Frieder was the extensive play of walk- on Gerard Rudy, who scored four poin- ts, including one dunk shot that even brought 15,732 Hoosier partisans alive. However, Frieder had little else to smile about as he witnessed his Wolverines get out-rebounded 42-30, in addition to allowing Indiana 54-percent shooting from the field. The loss extended Michigan's losing streak at Indiana's Assembly Hall to 11 straight, with the last victory dating back to 1966. 81-51 L. WORKWITH KIDS AT TAMARACK IN 1982 Brighton & Ortonville. Michigan Camp Kennedy, Agree Outpost Teen Trips Positions for bunk counselors, specialist counselors, supervisors, service staff and many other positions. INTERVIEWING JANUARY 20 & 29 SUMMER PLACEMENT OFFICE Call 764-7456 for appointment MICHIGAN Min FG/A FT/AI Garner ............F36 5/15 0/1A Hopson.............9 0/1 0/2 ! Person.............24 3/5 2/2 ! Turner.............29 6/11 1/2 Pelekoudas........ 32 2/7 0/1 Carter...........26 3/7 0/0 Rockymore.........20 2/8 0/0 Brown............. 4 1/3 0/1 Rudy .............. 13 2/2 0/0 Hall ............... 7 0/1 0/0 Team Rebounds Totals............. 24/60 3/9 INDIANA MinFG/A FT/A R 6 0 6 3 3 3 0 0 1 7 30 R 10 3 6 2 8 5 1 0 2 0 0 A 4 1 1 3 4 0 1 0 1 0 PF Pts 2 10 3 0 4 8 3 13 34 2 6 0 4 1 2 1 4 2 0 15 21 51 Kitchel.............26 Wttman ...........27 Flowers ........... 34 Thomas..........29 Brown............. 39 Bouchie ..........12 Vakich ............ 14 Blab...............4 Morgan......... Cameron.......... 4 Franz..............4 Team Rebounds Totals.......... 7/9 5/11 4/7 5/8 5/10 3/5 3/5 0/0 0/3 0/0 0/1 4/5 1/1 3/4 1/1 5/7 2/3 1/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 A 0 5 1 4 8 2 4 0 2 0 2 PF 1 1 3 4 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 Pts 18 11 11 11 15 8 7 0 0 0 5 32/59 17/23 42 28 16 81 Ohio State........ Iowa ............... Minnesota........ Northwestern ...... Purdue ............. Illinois ............. Michigan State. Indiana ............ Wisconsin ......... MICHIGAN ........ Conf. W L 3 0 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 0 3 Overall W L 12 3 10 2 10 2 6 6 5 7 8 4 6 7 7 5 4 7 1 10 .y r MICHIGAN'S THAD GARNER and Indiana's Ted Kitchel battle for the. loose ball in action in Bloomington last night. The Hoosiers eventually won the war, routing the Wolverines, 81-51. Note our other INTERVIEW DATES February 11 February 16 March 4 March 15 March 24 YOUR SUMMER JOB- MORE THAN JUST EMPLOYMENT Tamarack is the Jewish Residential camp spon- sored by the Fresh Air So- ciety of Metropolitan De- troit, since 1903. LSAT -"MCAT -GRE GRE PSYCH - GRE B1O - MAT GMAT -DAT - OCAT -PCAT VAT* SAT' ACT* CPATOEFL MSKP - NAT"L MED BDS ECFMG -"FLEX - VQE NDB -NPB I - NLE 1b &4I KMPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information, Please Call 211 E. Huron St. m Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (313) 662-3149 I URn '1' N RUhiI Nl T P Purdue nips MU,43-7 20-25% off WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)- Keith Edmonson scored 21 points as Purdue, getting its final 10 points from the free throw line, shut off a strong Michigan State rally and beat the Spartans 53-47 yesterday. The Boilermakers, now 2-1 in the Big Ten and 5-7 overall, led 28-20 at halftime and built the lead to 11 points at 33-22 early in the second half before guard Kevin Smith ignited the Spartan comeback. Smith, who had only three points in the first half, added 12 points in the final period. Michigan State pulled within one point on a pair of free throws by Herb Bostic, but the Boilermakers iced the game in the final minute with three foul shots by Kevin Stallings, one by Cross and four straight by Greg Eifert. Ohio State 51, Illinois 50 (OT) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)- Ron Stokes hit two free throws with three seconds left in overtime yesterday to lift Ohio State to a 51-50 win over Illinois. Stokes, a freshman guard, was fouled by Illinois guard Perry Range. He sank both shots, lifting the Buckeyes to their ninth consecutive victory and third in a row in the Big Ten. Illinois guard Craig Tucker tied the game at 44-44 with 5:53 remaining in regulation time. That was the last basket scored in regulation play as both teams went into slowdown patterns, hoping for a last shot. In the overtime period, Illinois jumped to a 48-44 lead on baskets by Range and Tucker. But Ohio State followed with baskets by forward Clark Kellogg and center Granville Waiters, plus Stokes' clutch free throws. Northwestern 61, Wisconsin 55 MADISON, Wis. (AP)- Art Aaron's 14 points led a balan- ced Northwestern scoring attack, as the Wildcats took a 61-5 Big Ten basketball victory from Wisconsin last night. Northwestern stifled the Badgers' inside game with a tigh zone defense and trailed only once in the game, 29-28, after Wisconsin's Cory Blackwell made a jump shot with 59 secon- ds left in the first half. The game remained close in the second half, and Scott Roth's jump shot pulled the Badgers within one point at 46-45 with 6:48 remaining. Minnesota 61, Iowa 56 MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Minnesota's 7-3 center Randy Breuer scored 22 points, lifting the 11th-ranked Gophers to a 61-56 victory over fifth-rated Iowa last night. The Gophers broke open a tight game midway through t second half. It was the first Big Ten loss for Iowa which fell to 10-2 overall and 2-1 in the conference. Minnesota fell behind the Hawkeyes 29-27 at the half but came out in the second half and whittled out a three-point edge. 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