The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 3, 1983 - Page 9 I Dries skates toward his goal a -. Lanier booed.. . ...Detroit lost its memory O NE PUNCH erased a lot of memories. When Bob Lanier flattened Bill Laimbeer with a left hook in Tuesday night's Milwaukee Bucks-Detroit Pistons game, the Silverdome crowd forgot the 6-11, 270-pounder's 10 ears in a Detroit uniform. His 15,488 points, 8,063 rebounds, ,276 field goals and 859 blocked shots - all Piston career records - also slipped the audience's mind. So, too, did a career scoring average of 22.7 points per game.. In fact, the whole decade of the '70s was lost. The 7,000-plus who witnessed Lanier's punch relentlessly booed the temperamental behemoth. They threw programs at him. They hurled hot dog wrappers at him. Someone even kept the wrapper and tossed a half-eaten frankfurter. And the derision continued throughout the game. For sure, Lanier's action was deplorable. An apparently nprovoked blow cannot be ignored. Nor can Lanier's history. 'Sugar Ray" Lanier Besides leading the Pistons in scoring and rebounding for eight straight years, the big man from St. Bonaventure took the team's knockout crown year-in and year-out.The Buffalo Braves' Dale Schlueter and the Atlanta Hawks' Bob Christian were just two of many victims of Lanier's slegehammer fist. Who can forget the time Lanier charged into the seats in 'akland to protect Detroit teammate Eric Money from the crowd during a 1977 playoff game fight. Lanier is not stranger to fisticuffs and Detroit fans should know that better than anyone - they cheered every one of his bouts. Whenever Lanier cocked his left, Piston supporters voiced their approval. "Nail 'im, Bob!" they'd shout. "Knock him on his ass!" Monday night they forgot Detroit's favorite knockout artist this side of Thomas Hearns. When Lanfer sent Laimbeer to the floor, all the crowd saw was a glowering giant wearing a Milwaukee uniform. No one remembered his decade in etroit. Everyone, however, remembered who played for the home team. All knew that Lanier didn't. "Give the bad guy all the abuse we can deliver," the fans reasoned. And they delivered. Didn't he play for Detroit? But five years ago a similar Lanier outburst would have brought a totally different reaction. His punch must have ben provoked, the crowd would have rationalized as it owered a swollen-faced Piston opponent in trash. Monday night Lanier was just another Piston opponent. It doesn't matter who plays the game, as long as the home teams wins. Steve Kemp is Lanier's baseball analog. Once the heart of the Tiger batting order, Detroiters now know Kemp only as a hated Yankee. Neither Kemp nor Lanier left Detroit on his own accord. Both were traded. Kemp, though, downgraded the home team upon his departure. Spectator contempt for the out- fielder is understandable.' But Lanier's farewell was an amiable one. Until he leveled aimbeer, the greatest center in Piston history deserved nothing but applause from a Detroit audience. Elephants remember. Sports fans don't. By MIKE MCGRAW If they gave a comeback player of the year award in college hockey, Ray Dries would have to be Michigan's nominee for the honor. That's because the senior center came back twice from being cut from the squad to rejoin the Michigan hockey team. And now this season Dries has proven to be a key member of the Wolverine of- fense. The ordeal began two seasons ago when Dries came to Ann Arbor as a transfer after playing one year at U-M Dearborn and was asked to leave af- ter training camp, a victim of too many skaters. "IT WASN'T BASICALLY a cut the first year," said the Mt. Clemens native. "They lost a bunch of forwards the year before. So coach Giordano called me into his office after tryouts and told me he had too many new people to look at and said for me to come back in two or three weeks and he'd have a better idea then. "He lived up to his word and called me two weeks later and said that he'd like me to practice with the team. I skated with them all year." Dries saw po game action that year since he had to sit out a season after transferring, but then found out that the ice time wouldn't be automatic even once he was eligible. "THE NEXT YEAR I came into tryouts and looked bad. All summer long I had skated, but didn't lift a lot of weights, which was a big mistake," said Dries. "I got cut and was really surprised. That year was a shocker. However, in the sport of hockey, events have a tendency to repeat themselves-just look at the Stanley Cup winners in the last eight years. And just as the previous year, Dries was asked to return to the Wolverines. "I couldn't believe I was cut," Dries said. "My parents wanted me to stay in school, but I wasn't into it. But just like the year before, two weeks go by and coach calls me back." DRIES FINALLY got his chance to play on Thanksgiving weekend of last year against Nor- thern Michigan and responded with a goal and two assists. He went on from there to play in every game after that until disaster struck in February when a rut in the ice caused Dries to injure his ankle and spend the rest of the season on the sidelines. "I started aainst Michigan State on a line with Brad Tippett, so it was one of the top lines," said Dries. "I was thinking, 'Wow, this season is going great, I'm going to finish strong and be ready for next year.' "In the beginning of the third period, though, I went into the corner and got caught in a rut in the ice and just then two guys hit me and I felt my ankle snap. "I THOUGHT I broke it. When the trainer came out I told him 'it's gone, but he thought I meant my knee.so he wouldn't let me move and got a stretcher. I felt pretty stupid getting carried off for an ankle.* It turned out to be a really bad sprain, I was on crutches for four weeks." In fact, that wasn't the first time Dries had been injured during a key point in his career. While playing in juniors, he was selected for a national team to play in Finland, but broke his wrist just before the trip and didn't play. But that injury didn't stop Dries from having a successful junior career which led to an in- vitation to play at Dearborn two years after leaving high school. THE FRESHMAN season with the Wolves was also a good one for Dries as he was named to the Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Michigan center Ray Dries poke checks a Michigan-Dearborn player during the Wolverines'4-3 season-opening victory over the Wolves. The senior from Mount Clemens has come back after being cut twice from the team and is now one of Michigan's key players. NAIA All-Tournament team. But hockey at Dearborn was having financial problems at that time and there was talk of the sport dropping to club status in the future. So Dries decided to transfer while he still had three years of eligibility left. This brings us back to where the Ray Dries Story began, as he tried out for Michigan and eventually became one of the smallest players in Division I hockey, at five-foot seven. However, his size hasn't bothered him a bit on the ice. "I've been the smallest guy on every team I've played for, so I'm used to it," said Dries. 'Everyone I go up against is bigger and stronger than I am, but I'm a lot quicker than they are going into the corners, so it can be an advan- tage." "FOR A LITTLE guy he's tough," explained current roommate and former Dearborn team- mate, John DeMartino. "Its not how many bouts you win or lose, its how many you show up for. And Ray Dries always shows up." So far this year Dries has indeed been at every game and has collected three goals and three assists in the process. Should he continue to show up at Yost Arena, Dries could be in for a very successful season. Grildde Picks The wicked witch awoke and slithered over to her magic mirror to ask the question she asked every mor- ning. "Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who knows football best this fall?" To which the mirror responded: "evil one with face of lizard, Snow White is the new Griddes wizard." Well, this incensed the witch so much that she conjured up a poisonous pizza and disguised herself as a pizza deliver- y man in hopes of poisoning Snow White with this prize pizza. The pizza felled Snow White, but alas she was awoken by a kiss from Prince Charming who promptly hoisted her on- to his horse and road away into the sun- set to have her place bets with his bookie. He was no romantic fool.- Turn in your picks by midnight Friday at the Daily or at Pizza Bob's on S. State or Church. 1. Purdue at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Illinois at Minnesota 3. Ohio State at Indiana 4. Michigan State at Northwestern 5. Iowa at Wisconsin 6. Pittsburgh at Norte Dame 7. Washington at Arizona 8. Arizona State at California 9. Oklahoma at Missouri 10. Stanford at Southern California 11. Alabama at Louisiana State 12. Maryland at Auburn 13. Georgia at Florida 14. East Carolina at Miami 15. Clemson at North Carolina 16. Colgate at Pennsylvania 17. Holy Cross at Harvard 18. Prairie View at Arkansas-Pine Fluff 19. Southern Connecticut at Cal Poly- San Luis Obispo 20. Purdue Trouble-Makers at DAILY LIBELS Small Computer, Big Deal. T he Epson Notebook Computer is a complete computer system that you can use anytime, anywhere. Like in the library, to take notes. Or in the lab, for calculations. Or even at the hofbrau, where you can have "lunch" while you catch up on your work. 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