Women's Field Hockey vs. Ohio Stage 10:00 a.m. today at Ferry Field he Michigan Daily SPORTS Women's Volleyball vs. Central Michigan 7:00 p.m. Tuesday at CCRB Sunday, October 30, 1983 Page 7 Icers down Miami in series By JOE EWING It was a case of too much and too little last night at Yost Ice Arena as the Michigan hockey team dumped Miami of Ohio, 6-3, to sweep the weekend series with the Redskins. The too much was the Wolverine's of- fense, which was led by Chris Seychel's two goals and one assist and senior co-captain Jim McCauley's three assists, and which dominated play throughout most of the game. THE TOO LITTLE was the third period comeback attempt by Miami, who took advantage of two Wolverine penalties and scored a pair of power- play goals in the final stanza. On Friday night, Miami had staged a similar ef- fort and managed to tie the game with three third-period goals before the Wolverines went on to win 4-3 in over- time. Most of the Wolverines third-period problems on both nights came from giving Miami the power-play advan- tage too many times. But Michigan head coach John Giordano didn't put the majority of the blame for the penalties on his Wolverines. "I'm disappointed with the refereeing," said Giordano, who wat- ched his team raise its overall record to 3-4. "I didn't think it was very good because it wasn't going two-way. I don't mind getting penalties if they call them the same way for both teams, but I don't think they were calling it the same way for both teams." THE WOLVERINES struck as soon as the game began, and never really had to look back as Seychel picked up a loose puck in front of the Redskin and fired it past sprawling Miami goalie Alain Chevrier just 16 seconds into the game. Ray Dries and John DeMartino assisted on the play. The Wolverines then added their 10th power-play goal of the season at 12:13, when co-captain Kelly McCrimmon grabbed his own rebound in front of the goal and caught Chevrier out of position. McCauley got credit for the assist. Double FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Seychel (Dries, DeMartino) :16; 2. M-McCrimmon (McCauley) 13:45. Penalties: Miami-Wheeldon (interference) 3:00; M-Bjorkman (roughing) 9:35; Miami-Moore (slashing) 12:13. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. M-Seychel (McCauley, Carlile) :12;:1. Miami-Lynes (Easdale) 6:05; 4. M-Downing (unassisted) 6:11; 5. M-Dries (Seychel, McCauley) 18:24. Michigan came out ev the second period as Mc( pass from defensemen and set up Seychel for his the night just 12 seconds it It was Seychel's fifth goal giving him the team goals MIAMI FINALLY ; scoreboard at 5:58 whi Shawn Lynes took a perf Bill Easdale and fired t Michigan goalie Mark shoulder. scalping THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6. M - Jones (Carlile Miami-Channell (Ciotti, Whe Miami-Lukas (McMillan, Martin Penalties: Miami-Bench Miami-Lynes (high-sticking) (high-sticking) :12; M-Hudas M-Carlile (cross-checking) 9:5 (hooking) 12:09; M-Jones (slashir Scoring by Periods sweep en quicker in The Wolverines added an unassisted Cauley took a goal just 13 seconds later from Frank Todd Carlile Downing and then went up 5-1 at 18:24 second goal of when Dries banged one home from nto the stanza. Seychel and McCauley. of the season, Freshman Brad Jones scored the scoring lead. Wolverines' only third-period goal got on the when he picked up the rebound of a en co-captain Carlile wrist shot and beat Miami ect pass from reserve goaltender Tim Hall, who had he puck over replaced Chevrier in the second period. Chiamp's left Carlile did most of the work on the goal, rushing the puck into the Redskin zone and taking the first shot. Miami got it's power play goals from Todd Channell at 8:13 and Greg Lukas e. Spring) 6:47; 2. at 11:43. eeldon) 8:13; 3. "I'm pretty pleased with the way ec) 11:43. we've been playing so far," said Gior- (delay) 0:00; dano. :12; M-Carlile (hooking) 7:10; ;7 M i P-; M181-Lyn n ), ng) 15:14. nes Penalties: M-Spring (roughing) 7:17; p12 3 Miami-Beirnes (high-sticking) 11:56; M-Hudas MICHIGAN ................... 2 3 1 -6 (high-sticking) 11:56; Miami-Lees (interference) Miami......................... 0 1 2 -3 14:50; M-Bjorkman (high-sticking) 19:50. Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Wolverine Kelly McCrimmon takes a stick in the head but keeps on digging for the puck in yesterday's 6-3 victory over Miami of Ohio. Terps top Tar Heels, 28-26 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - oomer Esiason threw two touchdown asses in the third quarter as 13th- anked Maryland upset unbeaten and hird-ranked North Carolina 28-26 esterday, thwarting a two-point con- ersion attempt by the Tar Heels with 2 seconds left. North Carolina, 7-1, drove 90 yards or the final score on a one-yard dive by yrone Anthony. But a pass from Scott tankavage, under heavy pressure rom J.D. Gross, went off Anthony's ands. The victory, accomplished before six or t esgave Maryland a -1 record and enabled the Terps to reak a tie with North Carolina for the tlantic Coast Conference lead with a 4- CLA 27, Washington 24 PASADENA. Calif. (AP) - Quarter- ack Rick Neuheisel completed his last 7 passes and Frank Cephous ran for a air of fourth-quarter touchdowns esterday as UCLA took over first lace in the Pacific-10Conference foot- all race with a 27-24 upset victory over Ith-ranked Washington. Cephous scored the winning touch- twn on a 5-yard run with 1:55 emaining as the defending Rose Bowl hampion Bruins raised their Pac-10 ecord to 4-0-1 and their overall mark to -3-1 with their fourth straight victory. Vashington fell to 3-1 in league play and -2 overall. Neuheisel, who completed 25 of his 27 asses for 287 yards in 10 plays for the vinning score. Washington had gone thead 24-20 on a 1-yard run by Walt nt with 5:55 left to play. uburn 28, Florida 21 AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Bo Jackson aced 55 and 80 yards for touchdowns, be second after a controversial tur- iover, as fourth-ranked Auburn [owned No. 5 Florida 28-21 in a outheastern Conference showdown esterday. The victory lifted the Tigers into a first-place deadlock with No. 6 Georgia in the SEC title chase, each with 4-0 records, and knocked Florida into a runnerup position at 3-1 in the first of three "consecutive weeks of head-to head battles involving the trio of nationally ranked powers. Jackson's 80-yard scoring run came with 8:20 left in the third quarter and gave the Tigers a 28-7 lead. Miami 20, West Virginia 3 MIAMI (AP) - Bernie Kosar threw for 211 yards and a pair of touchdowns and Jeff Davis booted two field goals yesterday as No. 7 Miami-downed 12th-i ranked West Virginia 20-3 in the- Hurricanes' homecoming college foot- ball game. Miami's defense delighted an Orange Bowl crowd estimated at 62,500 by holding the visitors to only 4 yards on 27 rushing plays. Boston Colle-ge 27, Penn St 17 FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - Doug Flutie threw for 380 yards and two touchdowns and Kevin Snow iced the victory with his second field goal yesterday as Boston College downed Penn State 27-17 in a battle of Eastern football powers. Boston College, tied for 19th in the national rankings, came back from a two-week layoff to boost its record to 6-1 . Unranked Penn State had its five- game winning streak broken and fell to 5-4. Nebroskq 51,_Kansas_8S. .25 MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) - Mike Rozier's three touchdowns staked Nebraska to a 38-5 halftime lead, then plucky Kansas State scored three unan- swered touchdowns in the second half yesterday before the No. 1 Cornhuskers subdued the Wildcats 51-25 Manno leads-Red wings to 4-3 overtime triumph By JIM DAVIS Special to the Daily DETROIT - Bob Manno, an off- season free agent acquisition, collected his first two goals as a Red Wing, in- cluding the game-winner in overtime, to give Detroit a 4-3 victory over Quebec last night at Joe Louis Arena. "I don't think I've scored two impor- tant goals ever," said Manno, who was* signed as a defensemen but has been playing left wing. JUST AFTER the opening face-off of the sudden-death period, John Barrett fed a wide-open Manno in front of the Quebec goal. Manno, all alone with plenty of time, puckhandled and then backhanded a shot past Dan Bouchard to give the Wings their fourth straight victory, the last two of which were in overtime. "I knew I was all alone because I was the first one down forechecking," Man- no said. "I just took my time and took a backhander and in it went. I had so much time I thought I was in a parking lot." The Wings had taken a 3-1 lead into the third period, but goals by Michel Goulet and Louis Sleither knotted the game up and sent it into overtime. It took Manno only 21 seconds to decide it. Anton Stastny gave Quebec a 1-0 lead in the first period on a power-play goal. Red Wings' rookie Steve Yzerman tied it as he redirected a Brad Park slapshot at 7:51. Twenty-four seconds later, Manno banged in a Dwight Foster feed from the side of the net to make it 2-1. Later in the period, Ron Duguay made a per- fect pass to Kelly Kisio in the slot, who converted to make it 3-1. SCORES NHL College Football (llinois 16, MICHIGAN 6 Ohio State 45, Wisconsin 27 Michigan State 34, Minnesota 10 urdue 48, Northwestern 17 Iowa 49, Indiana 3 Notre Dame 28, Navy 12 Georgia 31, Temple 14 Texas 20, Texas Tech 3 ttsburgh 13, Syracuse 10 .nnessee 7, Rutgers 0 Auburn 28, Florida 21 SMU 10, Texas A&M 7 'ebraska 51, Kansas St. 25 klahoma 45, Kansas 14 1lippery Rock 24, Shippensburg St. 23 ilabama 35, Mississippi St. 18 Vissouri 41, Iowa St. 18 mall State 33, Eastern Michigan 20 louston 28, Texas Christian 21 4estern Mihihgan 16, Ohio U. 14 lowling Green 15, Central Michigan 14 JCLA 27. Washington 24 Brigham Young 38, Utah State 34 Baylor 24, Tulane 18 Northern Michigan 45, Northern Iowa 26 Air Force 41, Army 20 737 N. Huron, Ypsilanti 485-0240 Detroit 4, Quebec 3 NBA Houston 106, San Antonio 100 New York,.100, Washington 97 Sun., Oct. 30- PHI BETA SIGMA PARTY Need College I.D. for Admission 2-FOR-1 til Midnight Mon., Oct. 3I- HALLOWEEN PARTY 8th ANNUAL MONSTER MASH m