Wolverine Open Wrestling Today at Crisler Arena 9:00 a.m. SPORTS Sunday, November 13, 1983 hockey vs. Michigan State 7:30 p.m. Friday, Yost Arena Tickets available at ticket office - Hoover and State { The Michigan Daily Pago 7 Cagers topple AlA in sloppy opener 0 By RANDY BERGER It was as much as can be expected of an exhibition game, a little sloppy play, missed layups and confusion on defense. Nevertheless Michigan did achieve its main objective last night, beating Athletes in Action, -78-70. "We have a long way to go, there's no question about it," said coach Bill Frieder. "We didn't play ,.with the intensity you have to play with to be suc- eessful and we didn't execute on offense, especially in the first half." RUSTY AND anemic best describe Michigan's play ,in the first half. The only reason that the Wolverines went into halftime with a 29-27 lead was that AIA was "even'slightly more anemic. - "The only thing that kept us in the game in the first 'half was our rebounding and their poor shooting," added Freider. "If that was a Big Ten game we would have been down by 20 instead of up by two." Rebounding was definitely the most positive aspect of the Wolverines' play. Butch Wade, who had 16 rebounds in the game, 10 of which came in the first half, and Tim McCormick who pulled in 11 rebounds, totally dominated underneath and essentially cov- ered up for the rest of the team's poor play. MICHIGAN"S shooting in the first half, 10 of 33 from the field, was horrible, especially when you con- sider that many of those misses came on layups and dunks. "We missed far too many layups," said Frieder. "A couple of our guys would rather be fancy than good. They're in the big leagues now and they have to do things the right way. The high school staff is over." It was obvious that there were first game jitters, which partly justifies Michigan's sloppy play early in the game. "I WAS TOO excited," said sophomore Roy Tar- pley, who fumbled away a perfect scoring oppor- tunity trying to slam a dunk. "I've got to learn to keep my head together." Another player who experienced a little nervousness was highly-touted freshman, Antoine Joubert. Joubert, who entered the game midway through the first half a midst enthusiastic applause, admittedly forced his shots. "I was putting a little additional pressure on myself by trying to force my shots," said the guard from- Detroit Southwestern. "I wanted to make one so bad." Joubert finally did get his first points as a college player on a nice pass from Dan Pelekoudas. His layup brought the sleepy crowd of 8,264 who were shouting for Joubert to shoot, alive and provided a spark to the team as it gave Michigan its largest lead of the first half. Michigan's overall play in the second half was much improved. Behind Eric Turner, who ended the game with 14 points and nine assists, the offense began to execute. Each time Athletes in Action would narrow the gap, Turner seemed to spark his teammates. After AIA had tied the game at 48-48 with 9:20 left, Turner keyed a Michigan surge that outscored AIA 11-2 over a four-minute stretch. The surge was capitulated when Richard Rellford turned a perfect underhand pass from Turner into a three-point play, putting Michigan ahead 59-50. After AIA narrowed the margin to 63-58, Turner again sparked a Michigan rally. This time he took an outlet pass from McCormick and drove the length of the floor to score a basket off a goaltending call. The basket put Michigan in front 69-63 with 1:44 left and the outcome was never again in doubt. In leading the Wolverines in the second half, Tur- ner demonstrated that his role on this year's team will be more that of a passer than a scorerm, he believes the rest of the team is beginning to adjust to this change. "They're starting to know what to do with the ball once they get it underneath," said the co-captain. "We're startingto know each other more as far as eye contact but we still have to improve on ueverything." full court PRES Gag rule for AIA . .at least at Crisler By JEFF BERGIDA Athletes in Action came into Crisler Arena yesterday minus an i important part of its "game plan," the halftime testimony. After two nights in Winston- Salem, N.C. and College Park, Md. playing Wake Forest and Maryland, AIA hit Ann Arbor but was not given the go-ahead to perform a presentation at the half. Some of the 8,200 fans present at the exhibition might be interested in what they missed. "Somebody usually will share what Christianity has meant to him" said AIA coach Rle (pronounced Ar-lee) Nichols. "It's a 12-minute program. One guy does an introduction another will share what Christ means to him per- sonally and the last guy does a summary."- Apparently, the absence of this presentation was not caused by a lack of effort on the part of the Athletes in Action organization. "We ask (per- mission to speak) at every school," said Nichols. 'Athletes in Action is the athletic ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ. The basketball players are amateurs who are paid as staff and associates of the organization. Based in Abbotsford, British Columbia AIA plays the top colleges in the nation with the goal of winning ballgames while spreading the Athletes deactivated MICHIGAN AIA Min FG/A FT/A R A PF McCormick.... Rellford ....... Wade.......... Rockymore .... E. Turner ..... Joubert ....... Tarpley ....... Pelekoudas.... Thompson ..... Q. Turner .. Team Rebounds TOTALS ...... 33 19 36 24 33 17 15 14 5 4 6/11 3/10 5/9 4/9 5/10 2/9 2/7 1/1 0/1 0/0 7/8 1/1 4/4 0/0 4/6 1/2 3/4 2/2 0/0 0/0 11 3 16 1 3 6 2 1 1 0 2 4 0 2 2 9 0 0 1 0 2 3 2 '1 0 0 2 3 3 1 0 Pts 19 7 14 8 14 5 7 4 0 0 78 Min1 Griffin .........18 Davis ........ 25 Haskins ........30 Bontrager ..... 36 Delph ......... 26 Hall ........... 25 Owens......... 16 Hoops ......... 8 Kellybrew. 16 Team Rebounds TOTALS.. FG/AFT/A R A PF Pts 3/10 0/2 2/6 6/16 7/11 5/10 1/5 0/0 2/4 2/2 1/3 1/2 4/4 0/0 2/2 0/0 0/0 8/11 4 6 2 3 2 3 2 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 2 0 0 2 1 4 1 3 0 3 3 0 3 8 1 5 16 14 12 2 0 12 70 8 26"/64 18/24 34 9 18 28167 22/27 47 20 15 Michigan's Roy' 78-70 Wolverine, Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Tarpley drives past his man to the hoop during yesterday's victory over Athletes in Action. AIA's Jim Hoops (41) and First half score: Michigan 29, AIA 27 Attendance - 8,264 Butch Wade of the Wolverines look on. 'M' harriers qualify for NCAAs word of Christ. "Our number one objective is to win for Christ, to win basket- ball games," said Nichols. AIA did not accomplish its first objective yesterday and Nichols sounded more like a basketball coach than a minister , when discussing the result. "You'll find that playing on the road you don't get the breaks," said 10-year head man. "A loose ball here, a goaltending call there, you give all those possessions up you're looking at 20 points a game." But when questioned about the halftime show, some of Nichol's feelings on the issue came forth. "If they don't want it (the testimony), they don't, want it. It's their option. It's no great concern of ours. There's enough schools that always want it and ask fa 'Our team is out to change the world. We want to make a positive impact by sharing the gospel. We're not cramming religion down anyone's throat. We're just sharing what's important to us.' - Mike McKee, Athletes in Action Special to the Daily EAST LANSING - Brian Diemer and Chris Brewster ran their best races of the season, taking second and fifth respectively, as Michigan's cross coun- try team qualified for the NCAA cham- pionships in the District Four clam- pionship meet at Michigan State yesterday. Wisconsin, the Big Ten champion and defending NCAA champion, won on John Easker's winning time of 29:49.3. But Michigan finished second, only 10 points behind a Badger squad which traditionally dominates the Big Ten. Purdue finished third, 73 points behind Michigan. Illinois finished fourth in the twenty-team meet. The top four teams move on to the NCAA championships. WOLVERINE COACH RON Worhur- st was elated over his team's showing. "Our guys ran a fantastic race," he said. "There were two or three inches of snow, and it was windy on the course, but that didn't hurt us at all. We have the confidence now to put in a good performance at the nationals." Warhurst credits Michigan's perfor- mance to some new strategy. "We used a new tactic this week," he said. "We laid back, ran together in a group and it worked." The previous two times the Wolverines faced Wisconsin, Michigan was not as effective. At the Lehigh In- vitational, it lost to the Badgers by 70, and at the Big Ten championships Wisconsin won by 50 points. But in this 10,000-meter race, Michigan gave Wisconsin a scare by taking four of the top 20 spots. Besides Diemer and Brewster, other Michigan placers were Dennis Keane (eighth), Dave Meyer (10), and Bill Brady (21). Harriers disappoint Special to the Daily EAST LANSING - A couple of key injuries devastated the women's cross country team, as they finished a disap- pointing 12th out of 20 at the district championships yesterday. Wisconsin won the event with 46 poin- ts, Minnesota finished second with 86m and Iowa came in third with 131. The Badger's Cathy. Granta was the in- dividual winner of the 10 kilometer race. MICHIGAN'S TOP runner, Suer Schroeder, who is recovering from a spike wound, could not even run in the race. The Harriers' number three run- ner, Kelli Burt, lost a shoe as she trip- ped over another runner, but she kept going another mile in the snow before she twisted her ankle and dropped out. The Wolverines' top finisher was Bonnie McDonald, who came in 45th. Cathy Schmidt, who had the flu all week, finished 54th. Considering all of Michigan's bad luck concerning the meet, Wolverine coach Francie Goodridge stressed the team's performance. "Bonnie Mc- Donald ran the best race of her career and I was pleased with some of the other runners." The district meet was a qualifying event for the NCAA championship meet, with the top four teams moving a on to the nationals. Pistons 131, Kings 106 Special to the Daily PONTIAC - The Pistons looked good on defense but better on offense last night as they ripped the Kansas City Kings, 131-106, before 10,288 at the Silverdome.- Detroit opened up a 13-point lead midway through the first period on the shooting of Kelly Tripucka, who scored 33 points on the night. THE QUARTER ended with the Pistons ahead, 39-24, and Tripucka ac- counting for 20 Piston points. The Kings whittled Detroit's lead down to 10 points in the second quarter as Piston coach Chuck Daly substituted for four of his starters. Midway through the period, however, the starters returned and so did Detroit's lead; The first half ended with the Pistons leading, 65-46. Tripucka finished out his hot first half by hitting 12 consecutive field goals to tie a Piston record. Detroit continued.its hot play in the second half, building up a lead of 31 points against the Kings, who entered the game tied with Cleveland for the worst record in the NBA (2-5). Bill Laimbeer added 21 points and 6 rebounds for the winners, while Da Suttle led the Kings with 26 points. The Pistons also traded two future second-round draft choices and an u - disclosed amount of cash for Philadelphia forward/center Earl Cureton. Cureton, a 6-9, 250-pound Detroit native, was Moses Malone's backup center last season. The three-year NBA veteran was signed to a multi-year contract, accor- ding to Piston general manager Jack McCloskey. Cureton entered last night's game against Kansas City in the fourth quar- ter after Piston coach Chuck Daly heard continuous chants of "Earl" from the crowd. Cureton played the last two minutes of the game and scored one point and dished off two assists. - MIKE REDSTONE ;, 3 e f>, "I guess, basically, we feel that a lot of things are sold through athletics, some healthy and some not," he added. "We come to present something positive. There's no question in my life that Christ offers hope to people. Why not offer that to the audience? "But they didn't want it. Christ isn't knocking anybody's head in to make them listen." Why wasn't AIA permitted to give its pitch? "We didn't ask," said Nichols. The members of the AIA squad are not a bunch of ministers who've never played the game before. Starting guard Marvin Delph was a mainstay on the Sidney Moncrief-led Arkansas teams that were national contenders in the late 70's. Andre Griffin was an All-Pac Ten forward last season and guard Ken Owens was a fourth-round draft choice of the Seattle Supersonics. Why did these potential pros choose to stay in the amateur ranks and devote their lives to Christ? That's what they usually try to explain at the half. Mike McKee, a guard who played his college ball at North Carolina- Greensboro, is in his second year with AIA. He was attending gruadate school at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary when AIA contacted him. After the game, McKee gave an example of what he would have said at half- time: "Playing for Athletes in Action is an honor' I want to make a difference in the lives of other people and I want to share the most important thing in my life, which is Jesus Christ. "I played basketball for a lot of reasons in college. When I became a Christian I wanted to play and spread the word of God. It's neat to go all over the world and know that I'm playing for God. Our team is out to change the world. We want to make a positive impact by sharing the gospel. We're not cramming religion down anybody's throat. We're just sharing what's impor- tant to us." So the fans at Crisler did not get to hear what AIA had to say. But what's more important, freedom of speech or another chance to hear Eric Becher and the band play a rousing rendition of "Far From Over," that wonderful Frank Stallone classic? Diemer ... finishes second Oilers crush Whings Join the Daily Sports Staff By RANDY SCHWARTZ Special to the Daily DETROIT - The Edmonton Oilers traveling hockey machine passed through here last night, leaving the Wings and their sellout crowd of 20,088 on the losing end of a 7-3 score. Wayne Gretzky continued his awesome point-scoring as he nabbed a hat trick and two assists, while Paul Coffey, Randy Gregg, Pat Hughes and Mark Messier added single markers for the Oilers. THE RED WINGS jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first 2:13 of the game with goals by rookie Steve Yzerman and Ed- die Johnstone. But the Oilers bounced back quickly and headed into the locker room with a 5-2 lead after the first period. Detroit threatened often in the second period, outshooting the Oilers 13-4. But Andy Moog, after a shaky start, stifled the Wings and held them scoreless with by back-to-back saves on breakaways by Ivan Boldirev and Dwight Foster. Oiler coach Glen Sather commented, "Moog played a strong game, especially in the second period when we let up defensively. At the other end of the rink, Greg Stefan was not sharp in the early going, especially on Randy Gregg's goal, a long floater from the blue line that somehow eluded the Detroit goaltender.- TO ORDER AHEAD. CALL SHIELDS 7 434-2311 2905 Washtenow $3.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA or RIB DINNER -n n wn.CT.... rLAUC DCA 4nn..AA I f Z INDIVIDUAL THEATRES_ 5th Ave at tbery 7 41.700 GIFT CERTIFICATES NOW ON SALE I Accepting: MasterCard VISA, American Express GOOD AT ALL STORES HURRY! ENDS SOON ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S Coupon Good from 11-3-83 thru 12-10-83 m am - - mm--mm -mm mmmm - ------- ~w ~m