SPORTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, October 31, 1982 Page 9 BLUE FALLS SHORT IN 10-9 GOALFEST BG ices 'M' comeback By JOE CHAPELLE Special to the Daily BOWLING GREEN, Ohio- An ap- rent rout turned into a cliffhanger "here last night as the Michigan hockey team fell, 10-9, to Bowling Green. Coming back from a 10-5 deficit in the third period, Michigan's Chris Seychel, Tom Stiles, Ted Speers and Jim Mc- Cauley accounted for four goals to pull the Wolverines within one. With 4:16 left and the Wolverines trailing, 10-8, coach John Giordano pulled goalie Mark ,Chiamp. The Wolverines then put on their best ibition of hockey prowess, as they ame withint one, with McCauley slamming in the last goal of the evening. "I'm happy with the comeback," said Giordano. "We played well all night. I think our conditioning showed at the end." THE FALCONS completely out- played the Wolverines in the first period, outscoring Michigan 4-1. Sowling Green struck just 43 seconds to the period when sophomore Garry Galley took a Brian Hills rebound and poked the puck into the l'eft side of the net. The second Falcon goal came at the 7:26 mark when freshman Jamie Wan- sbrough stole the puck from Michigan defenseman Doug May and fired it past Jon Elliott into the left side of the goal. Bowling Green scored again at 8:55 when Hills took a Peter Wilson pass near center ice and broke away one-on- one against Elliott, literally placing the puck in the cage. AFTER missing several scoring op- portunities, the Wolverines took revenge at the 13:21 mark with a power-play goal. With Falcon center Dave Kane in the penalty box for elbowing, Michigan's Jeff Grade took a pass from Steve Yoxheimer and fired a slapshot into the goal. That made the score 3-1. The Wolverines stirred to life in the second period, scoring two goals in 30 seconds, after giving up one more to the Falcons. After Samanski accounted for the first goal of the period for the Falcons, Michigan struck back at 4:27 when senior Brad Tippett took a rebound from a Paul Kobylarz shot and fired it into the cage. The Wolverines, taking advantage of the Falcons' disorganization after Tippett's goal, scored again at 4:53 when freshman Todd Carlile garnered the first goal of his Michigan career. MICHIGAN'S Chris Seychel put the Wolverines back into the game at 7:07 with an unassisted breakaway goal, making the score 5-4. But Bowling Green retaliated when George Roll and Kim Collins each gar- nered goals at 8:37 and 14:53 respec- tively. THE SECOND period ended on a wild note, however, when Bowling Green scored two shorthanded goals, one coming as the result of a penalty shot. Michigan's Speers tripped the Falcons' Kane on a breakaway. That resulted in a penalty shot, which Kane took in, deking out Elliott before slipping the puck into the net.' "The penalty shot made the differen- ce in the game," said Giordano. "I think it was a bad call." The win raised Bowling Green's record to 4-0 in the CCHA and 4-1-1 overall, while Michigan dropped to 1-3 in conference play, 3-3 overall. EXTENDED DISCOUNTS ON SELECTED LINES OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE THROUGHOUT OUR FIRST, SECOND, AND THIRD FLOORS. STOP IN AND EXPLORE ANN ARBORS NON-PROFIT STUDENT BOOKSTORE. Bowled over FIRST PERIOD Scoring- 1. BGSU-Galley (Hills, Wilson) :43; 2. BGSU-Wansbrough (unassisted) 7:26; 3. BGSU-Hills (Wilson, Collins) 8:55; 1. M-Grade (Yoxheimer, McIntyre) 13:21; 4. BGSU-Randerson (Rolle, Pikul) 17:07. Penalties-BGSU-Ellett (hooking) 2:15; BGSU- Mills (roughing) 8:37; M-Milburn (roughing) 7:59; BGSU-Kane (elbowing) 11:24; BGSU-Samanski (roughing, high-sticking) 18:02; M-Stiles (roughing) 18:02; M-Speers (hooking) 19:21. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 5. BGSU-Samanski (Hack, W. Wilson) 2:49; 2. M-Tippett (Kobylarz, Downing) 4:27; 3. M- Carlile (Kobylarz) 4:53; 4. M-Seychel (Tippett, Mc- Cauley) 7:07; 6. BGSU-Roll (Randerson) 8:37; 7. BGSU-K. Collins (Kane, Ellett) 14:57; 5. M- Krussman (Milburn) 17:18; 8. BGSU-Kane (unassisted, penalty shot) 19:18; 9. BGSU-Hills (Roll) 19:48. Penalties: BGSU-Pikul (roughing) 6:24; BGSU- Randerson (roughing) 8:37; M-Neff (roughing) 8:37; BGSU-Pikul (high-sticking) 10:49; M-Krussman (high-sticking) 10:49; M-Neff (hooking) 16:26; BGSU-Catylini (roughing) 18:50. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 10. BGSU-Samanski (Wansbrough) 1:32; 6. M-Speers (Tippett, Goff) 5:36; 7. M-Seychel (Speers, May) 10:44; 8. M-Stiles (Krussman, Mc- Crimmon) 14:34; 9. M-McCauley (Speers, Seychel) 19:39. Penalties: M-Yoxheimer (holding) 3:16; BGSU- Ellett (interference) 3:16; M-Grade (high-sticking) 4:17; BGSU-Galley (elbowing) 4:17; BGSU-Hills (slashing) 4:17; BGSU-Mills (hooking) 5:42. SAVES 1 2 3 T M-Elliott ..............................15 8 - 23 Chiamp ............................. . 8 8 BGSU-Collings .........................8 7 11 26 Scoring By Periods 1 2 3 T MICHIGAN ............................1 4 4 9 Bowling Green .........................4 5 1 10 FL.mm m -T .mm. .mm. N.. C FLOOR 1 EXPIRES: SAT. / NOV.6 I I I EXCHANGE THIS COUPON FOR ONE FREE BALLPOINT PEN FEATURING OUR UNIVERSITY CELLAR LOGO Speers . . sparks comeback attempt :..........h.,tr {. ::. By JOE EWINGA SAE sloshes to Mudbowl victory. Sigma Alpha Epsilon used Denis Raue's interception to hold off a late second- half drive by Phi Delta Theta and preserve a 6-0 victory yesterday in the 48th an- nual Mudbowl football game. SAE PUT the only points of the game on the board midway through the first half when Jeff Harris hit a diving Chris Fowler in the end zone on a five-yard pass play. Harris himself set up the touchdown a few plays earlir..on a pretty third-down run from deep in his own end to just past midfield. After a dropped pass in the end zone, the SAE line gave Harris plenty of time to find Fowler for the score. The contest, which was allegedly played under IM touch football rules, took place in six to 12 inches of slimy, gooey mud in the mudbowl. Preparation for the classic took place over the span of a week when the field was first roto-tilled and then drenched by thousands of gallons of water. During halftime of the contest the field was "reconditioned," courtesy of the Ann Arbor Fire Department and their hoses, and-the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority slid by Pi Beta Phi, 2-1, in a quasi-soccer match that was actually a combination of rugby, European hand-ball, and mud wrestling. Katie Compton and Kathy Warren provided the scoring for the winners. Phi Phi's score came when two Pi Phis managed to push the Theta goalie, and the ball, into the Theta net. ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. 341 East Liberty, at Division. FLOOR 1 EXPIRES: SAT./ NOV.6 REG. LOPRICE SMITH-CORONA SINGLE PACK-02 BLACK FILM ITYPEWRITER CARTRIDGE '4.... ,...:,... ..,v wn,.-.,} ............. :.. v$:..:...44 "..:... 4. .v. ;G..:b} v:. .........-...:....v... v ................v..\.........rv.vti ....n........v......"v,.?.....v.. r........n:": }nv. }.".":}: rv....v..v.":::":...............,,.::.:::.w. ::. ::::::::::. .:::::::.:}.....^.....::::::...'::........ w...::. _:v:}:4?}y:":[:%L:"?} Stanford rally shocks Wa6shington, 43-3 1 SCORES College Football Notre Dame 27, Navy 10 Florida St. 24, Miami (Fla.) 7 SMU 47, Texas A&M 9 Penn State 52, Boston College 17 Arkansas 24, Rice 6 Oklahoma St. 30, Missouri 20 Pittsburgh 49, Louisville 0 Nebraska 52, Kansas 0 Ball State 16. Eastern Michigan 7 W. Michigan 27, N. Illinois 3 Alabama 20, Mississippi St. 12 UCLA 40, Oregon 12 I I ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Mike Dotterer ran 46 yards for a touchdown midway in the second period, opening a Stanford scoring binge which carried the Cardinals to a 43-31 upset victory over second-ranked Washington and ended the Huskies' 10-game winning *eak yesterday. Stanford lost the football, on a fumble and interception, on its first two plays from scrimmage and trailed Washington 17-7 midway in the second period of the nationally televised Pacific-10 Conference game. THE CARDINAL offense, directed by quarterback John Elway, then erup- ted for 30 points in 13 minutes, and Stan- ford led 37-17 early in the third quarter. *otterer, a tailback, got a key block from fulback Kaulana Park on the 46- yawd touchdown run, and Dotterer's 1- yard touchdown run a few minutes later sent Stanford ahead, 20-17. Maryland 31, North Carolina 24 CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Willie Joyner rushed for a school record 240 yards and two fourth-quarter touch- downs to lead Maryiand to a 31-24 up- t over 10th-ranked North Carolina yesterday. Joyner's 16 carries included an 84- yard scoring run with 7:31 remaining that clinched the Terrapins' sixth straight victory and raised their record to 6-2, 4-0 in the ACC. With North Carolina leading 24-17, Joyner tied the score on a 49-yad run with 13:11 remaining to cap an 80-yard, three-play scoring drive. Georgia 34, Memphis St. 3 The loss extended the Tiger losing streak to 15, longest in the nation among major colleges. Florida 19, Auburn 17 GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Jim Gainey's 42-yard field goal with one second left to play, his third of the game and second in the final three minutes, lif- ted Florida to a dramatic 19-17 victory yesterday over 19th-ranked Auburn. Gainey, whose 31-yard field goal with 2:51 remaining had sliced into Auburn's 17-13 lead, connected after Florida recovered an onside kick at the Auburn 45 with 2:47 to go and then let the clock run down to five seconds before calling its final time out after reaching the 25. The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. 341 East Liberty, at Division. FLOOR 1 EXPIRES: SAT./ NOV.6 QF OUR REG. 40% OFLOW PRICE ON DEERSLAYER'S LTD. OR CLASSIC MODEL POCKET KNIFE WITH STAINLESS STEEL BLADE ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. SHORT OR LONG Hairsty les for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........668-9329 East U. at South U........662-0354 Arborland.............971-9975 Maple Village...........761-2733 MICHIGAN RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB BENEFIT Featuring: "BLUE FRONT PERSUADERS" TUESDAY EVE, NOV. 2-9:00-12:30 OLD HEIDELBERG, 215 N. Main St. $2-DONATION $2/PITCHERS The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. 341 East Liberty, at Division. 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