The Michigan Daily _SPORTS Sunday, November 21, 1982 TIPPET NOTCHES TWO Pag 9 Icers end skein; down Bucks, 5-4 .:,_ saTv r.+ Ralr4d O Ally By MIKE MCGRAW It's about time somebody beat this school. And for the Michigan hockey team, their 5-4 victory over Ohio State was especially gratifying as it snapped a seven-game losing streak. Mark Chiamp took over for Jon Elliott in the net and turned in a stellar performance stopping 30 OSU shots and was voted the game's number one star. Another noticeable change for the Wolverines was the transfer of center Ted Speers back to the defense. HEAD COACH John Giordano thought that the move of Speers played a role n the improved defensive play. "We had to put Speers'ondefense, as much as I didn't want to, except as a last resort," said Giordano. "Ted's given so much to this program. I think he's potentially an All-American for- ward, But he's a real team player, he didn't complain at all. Speers in addition to playing multiple positions, has also become quite a workhorse for the Wolverines. "Speers was on the ice 50% of the time tonight, and when you've got your best player out there that much, you're going to have some success," added Giordano. "As long as we keep winning, he is going to be out there." SPEERS AND Chiamp led the injury- ridden Michigan defense to almost two periods of shutout play, but then the Buckeyes came to life and rallied to within one. "Tonight we didn't get tothe point where we caved in on defense like we've done the last two weeks although we did run into trouble at points," Gior- dano added. Michigan began the game by con- trolling the puck for the most part but handled it sloppily. OSU. s Andy Browne went off at 2:05 for hooking but the Wolverine's only good scoring chance went awry when defenseman Doug May slapped a shot wide from the left face off circle. JOE MILBURN made things exciting for the crowd of 3,420 when three minutes later he took off on a two man breakaway and was hauled down by the Buckeye's Mike Rousseau. 48 seconds into the penalty, Michigan freshman Chris Seychel took the puck behind the goal and was stopped by Ohio goalie Bob Krautsak when he tried to stuff it in but Brad Tippet was there to put in the rebound and put the Blue on top. Chiamp kept Michigan ahead with several goods saves and the offense responded. Tom Stiles intercepted the puck at the Ohio State blue line and walked in and slid a backhander past Krautsak at 8:27. Later in the period the Michigan defense staved off 42 seconds of a Buckeye two-man advan- tage. Ohio State's Paul Pooley was in the penalty box as the second period star- ted and just as his penalty expired, Seychel poked one in during a scramble in front of the OSU net. NINE MINUTES later, Wolverine freshman Frank Downing collected the puck at center ice on a bounce pass off the boards from Milburn. Downing out- skated everyone to the net and slipped the puck backhanded past Krautsak to put Michigan up 4-0. The Bucks finally got on the board with 1:09 left in the period as Browne deflected a Gord Rivington shot just un- der Chiamp's pads. The guys in red drew closer early in the third as Dave Kobryn beat Chiamp while the teams played with four attackers to a side. Chiamp s FIRST PERIOD Scoring: I. M-Tippett (Speers, Seychel) 6:54 2. M- Stiles 8:27 Penalties: OSU-Browne (high-sticking) 2:05; OSU-Roussea (tripping) 6:06; M-Melbourn (trippijg) 13:24; M-Reid (charging) 14:42; OSU-Paul Pooley (high-sticking) 18:34. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. M-Seychel (Tippett, Speers) :39. 4. M- Downing (Milbourn, Carlile) 9:24; 1. OSU-Browne (Rivington, Kobryn) 18:51. Penalties OSU-Roussea (charging) 9:54; M-McCauley (roughing) 15:56; OSU-Burden (roughing) 15:56; M-Speers (hooking) 16:53. Browne pulled Ohio State to within one with 8:34 left in the game as he spun around while on his knees and placed the puck into the far side of the net. After Tippett hit the post and May shot ne into the crossbar, Tippett came back to put Michigan up by two with a Backhander high into the net. OSU, however, would not let up as Don Perkins shot one past a screened Chiamp with two minutes left. The Buckeyes pulled Krautsak for the final minute-and-a-half, but could not gain the equalizer. The win pulled Michigan bak into a tie for 11th in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association standings with a 2-8 record. OSU is now 5-4-1. Michigan hosts Northern Michigan next weekend at Yost Arena. no chump THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 2. OSU-Kobryn (Tousseau) 4:20; 3. OSU- Browne (Shortt, Leask) 11:26; 5. M-Tippett (Downing, seychel) 17:06; 4. OSU-Perkins (17:58). Penalties: OSU-Rivington (slashing) 2:29; M-May (high sticking) 3:56; M-Yoxheimer (roughing) 6:42; M-Kobylarz (high sticking) 12:05; OSU-Tillotson (high sticking) 12:05. SAVES 1 2 3 T. M-Chiamp ........ ............. 6 12 12 - 30 OSU-Krautsak ....................10 9, 4 - 23 . *mow Daily Photo by JON SNOW Michigan team captain Ted Speers battles with Ohio State's Mark Shortt for the puck in last night's 5-4 Wolverine victory. Speers, normally a center, was shifted to defense to help the injury-plagued secondary. NCAA ROUNDUP: Huskie PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) - Premier field goal kicker Chuck Nelson missed a 32-yard attempt in the closing minutes and fifth-ranked Washington fell 24-20 to archrival Washington State yester- day, pushing the Huskies .out of what had appeared to be a certain Rose Bowl berth. Washington, an 18-point favorite, needed a victory in its Pacific-10 Con- ference finale against the Cougars to wrap up a chance for its third straight New Year's Day visit to Pasadena. But the loss, coupled with UCLA's victory over Southern California, ended the Huskies' Rose Bowl hopes. Washington-was behind 21-20 when Nelson, who had made 30 consecutive field goals, an NCAA record, had the opportunity give the Huskies the lead when he lined up for his 32-yard attem- pt. The ball drifted wide to the right. The Huskies took possession again and trailing by one point with just two minutes left but Cougar Keith Millard sacked Husky quarterback Tim Cowan and caused a fumble. The Cougars' Gerald Waters fell on the ball. The Cougars added a 38-yard field goal by John Traut with just one minute left to put the game out of Nelson's range. With 51 seconds left, the Huskies got the ball on their own 25 but linebacker :Mark Pleis promptly intercepted a Cowan pass. The Cougars then ran out the last 44 .seconds. UCLA 20, USC 19 PASADENA (AP) - Quarterback Tom Ramsey directed a pair of first- period touchdown drives and UCLA th- warted a two-point conversion attempt * by Southern Cal after time had expired yesterday as the 11th-ranked Bruins. nipped the 15th-ranked Trojans 20-19 in 4 Pacific-10 Conference football game at the Rose Bowl. A crowd of 95,736 and a regional television audience watched the Troj- ans score a touchdown on the final play of the game on a one-yard pass from quarterback Scott Tinsley to tight end Rose E Mark Boyer. But UCLA's Karl Morgan sacked Tinsley on the two-point conver- sion attempt. The victory gave the Bruins a 5-1-1 Pac-10 record and a 9-1-1 overall mark, The Trojans fell to 5-2 in conference play and 7-3 on the season. The Bruins ledsall the way after driving 80 yards on their first possession, but the Trojans drove 66 yards in 13 plays as time ran outinvtheir attempt to pull out the win. SMU 17, Arkansas 17 IRVING, Tx. (AP) - Quarterback Lance McIlhenny's short touchdown run late in the fourth quarter and Jeff Harrell's perfect placement gave No. 2 ranked Southern Methodist a 17-17 tie with No. 9 Arkansas yesterday, assuring the Mustangs the Southwest Conference championship and a Cotton Bowl berth against Pittsburgh on New Year's-Day. The tie soured SMU's dreams of a perfect season, giving the Mustangs a 10-0-1 record and 7-0-1 in the SWC. ARKANSAS, now 8-1-1 and 5-1-1 in the SWC, immediately accepted a Bluebonnet Bowl invitation for the Dec. 31 game in Houston. The Razorbacks must play Texas Dec. 4 in Austin in an SWC finale. Tailback Gary Anderson's three- yeard touchdown run, his second of the day, gave Arkansas a 17-10 lead with six minutes to play but SMU, noted for its miracle finishes, got a gift on a penalty. Arkansas defensive back Nathan Jones was flagged for interference against Jackie Wilson which gaverSMU the ball 40 yards downfield at the Arkansas 17. Mcllhenny scored on a two yard run four plays later. SMU had one more chance as Harrell's 52-yard field goal with one second left was short. Harrell had kicked a 49-yarder in the third quarter to put the Mustangs ahead 10-7. Air Force 30, Notre Dam 17 AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) - Wishbone quarterback Marty Louthan ran for 115 yards and two touchdowns and Sean Pavlich booted 'owi hopes three long field goals, leading Air Force yard runs to a 30-17 upset over 18th-ranked Notre field goal Dame in college football yesterday. a 17-0 lead The victory was the Falcons' fourth Pavlic in a row and improved their record to 7- 57 yards r 4, ensuring their first winning season fset a lat( since 1973. Notre Dame dropped to 6-3- who fired 1, losing to Air Force for the first time the final s in 12 tries. With se AIR FORCE capitalized on two Irish clock, the turnovers for a pair of first half touch- by tearing downs, both scored by Louthan on two- upset and Pavlich kicked a 40-yard on the final play of the half for d h added field goals of 42 and n the final quarter, helping of- e Irish rally lead by O'Hara, a pair of touchdown passes in even minutes of the game. veral seconds showing on the Cadets celebrated the upset gdown both goalposts. TwoforRipey's ...- . BERKLEY (AP) - Kevin Moen, a University of California defensive back, weaved his way through literally hundreds of people and scored a touchdown after time had run out to give the Bears an amazing 25-20 victory over Stanford yester- day. It was perhaps the strangest en- ding to a game in college football history. Stanford fans in the Memorial Stadium crowd of 75,662 had streamed onto the Memorial Stadium field, thinking the ball was dead, but Moen kept going and became the hero of the upset vic- tory. STANFORD'S Mark Harmon kicked a 35-yard field goal with four seconds remaining, giving the Car- dinalsa 20-19 lead, after quarterback John Elway had maneuvered the Cardinals into scoring position.Then Harmon tapped the ball just over midfield on the kickoff. As the final seconds ticked off the clock, several Cal players kept the ball alive by passing it backward as they advanced it toward the Stan- ford goal line. Moen went about the final 30 yar- ds, fighting his way through Stan- ford band members and fans. CAL FINISHED the season 7-4 by winning the wild Pacific-10 Con- ference game. Stanford, which was expecting an invitation to the Hall of Fame Bowl if it won, finished 5-6. Elway, playing his final game for Stanford, threw two touchdown passes and finished his career as the owner of several NCAA and Pac-10 scoring records. Gale Gilbert, Cal's sophomore quarterback, also threw two touchdown passes including one which gave the Bears a 19-14 lead early in the fourth period. * * * BOSTON (AP)- The 99th game of the tradition-laden Harvard-Yale football series was delayed for five minutes yesterday by an unexpected intruder publicizing another academic rival. The surprise interruption came as the teams lined up for a kick. Sud- denly, a buried black balloon sprung up from the field at the Yale 46-yard line. THE BALLOON, with the letters MIT written on it, began inflating. The device, promoting the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard's Cambridge neighbor, apparently was attached to a motorized device operated by remote control. There were no injuries. I'M'runs to By JIM DAVIS Yes, sports fans, another national championship is on the line this week, tomorrow to be exact. It's the National Cross Country Championship. And both the Wolverine men's and women's teams have a shot at finishing right up there with the national powers. The site of the Nationals is Indiana University, a course the Michigan men's team mastered earlier this season in a 7-team meet, which in- cluded defending. NCAA champion Texas El-Paso. MICHIGAN junior Brian Diemer and senior Gerard Donakowski will lead the Wolverines in the meet, which includes twenty teams, plus thirty individual runners whose teams failed to qualify. Other Michigan hopefuls will be senior Bill O'Reilly, junior Jim Sch- midt, and sophomore Bill Brady. Diemer, who finished third in both the Big Ten and District 4 Champion- ships, said the team will be shooting for the top five, and that "we'll certainly make the top ten." Donakowski echoed this feeling, but pointed out that the meet is "really tough to call." DONAKOWSKI singled out Big Ten Champion Wisconsin and perennial- favorite Texas El-Paso as the teams to beat. And, while proud that the Wolverines had beaten UTEP at In- diana, he emphasized that the Miners "were missing two of their top runners. They weren't at full strength (in the In- diana meet)." He added that UTEP has its entire 1981 National Champion- ship team back, and that Wisconsin's entry is "awesome." The Wolverine women have also qualified for the Nationals, the first time in Michigan history. nationalsI "Our goal for the whole year was to get to the Nationals," said coach Fran- cie Goodridge Kraker. "We have a chance to do well." JUNIOR. LISA Larsen and senior Melanie Weaver are expected to lead the Wolverine assault against the National Powers. "I think Virginia will be able to defend its title," said Goodridge. "Other teams to finish strong will be Stanford, Oregon, Clemson, and Ten- nessee. After that it will be quite a race and we have a good chance to place right up there." ALTERNAT/IVES TOA U.S. MKEDICAL SCHOOL " Ross University School of Medicine " Basic Sciences on the Island of Dominica " Clinical Rotations in U.S. hospital " All Classes taught in English Film Seminar -Nov. 22nd 3:30-4:30 Conf. Rm. 3545-SAS Career Planning & Placement More information: 399-3083 SCORES College football E. Carolina 23, Temple 10 EAST Lafayette 34, Lehigh 6 Boston College 35, Holy Cross 10 Cornell 23, Penn 0 Delaware 46, Bucknell6 Harvard 45, Yale 7 s \ Pittsburgh 52, Rutgers 6 SOUTH Clemson 24, S. Carolina 6 Duke 23, N. Carolina 17 James Madison 42. Towson St. 24 Maryland 45, Virginia 14 MississippiSt. 27, Mississippi 10 Tennessee 28, Kentucky 7 Vanderbilt 27, Chattanooga 16 Virginia Tech 14, VMI 3 William & Mary 28, Richmond 17 MIDWEST Indiana 13, Purdue 7 Iowa 24, Michigan St. 18 Wisconsin 24, Minnesota 0 FAR WEST Brigham Young 17, Utah 12 California 25, Stanford 20 Oregon 13, Arizona 7 Oregon St. 30, Montana 10 San Francisco St. 21, Chico St. 19 UCLA 20, Southern Cal. 19 Washington St. 24. Washington 20 HOUSING DIVISION/ LS&A For Winter Term 1983 RESIDENT ADVISOR AND GRADUATE STUDENT TEACHING POSITION AVAILABLE in the PILOT PROGRAM/ALICE LLOYD HALL Individuals must come to 1500 S.A.B. to update application presently on file. New applicants may pick up an application in the Housing Office, 1500 S.A.B. beginning at 8:00 A.M.-12 noon and from 12:30 P.M.-4:30 P.M., Thurs, November 18, 1982. For more information, call Dr. David Schoem, Pilot Director, 100 Observatory Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 764-7521. APPLICATION DEADLINE IS 4:00 P.M., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1982 A Non-Discriminatory Affirmative Action Employer SHORTWAY-BUS-mURS Thanksgiving November 20-21 --~ Nov. 24-28 Kalamazoo Gary, IA Chicago Christmas Round Trip Transportation from The Michigan Union to Columbus, Ohio. One Night accomodations \ti Norm i --11.711Q atliday Inn.