Hockey vs. Lake Superior Friday and Saturday 7:30, Yost Ice Arena SPORTS To insta IM bas tntram The Michigan Daily Thursday, December 1, 1983, 'M' die By JEFF BERGIDA It had been 28 years since a Michigan team held the opposition under 40 points until last night at Crisler Arena when the Wolverine defense, led by Rich Rellford and Dan Pelekoudas, swar- med all over an out-manned Central Michigan for a 58-39 victory. Michigan coach Bill Frieder was looking for defensive improvement and his team responded in a big way, for- cing 20 turnovers from the Chippewas. "I THOUGHT they did a much better job (on defense) in the second half," said Frieder. "Rellford came out and really played hard and the bigger guys were a little better. Joubert came off the bench and did a nice job and that's the way it should be." Frieder was not so pleased with the action in the first half, even though his Wolverines emerged with a 23-16 ad- vantage. Both teams were sluggish as Michigan hit on only 11 of 27 shots and CMU turned the ball over 10 times. "We turned it over too many times," noted Chippewa coach Dick Parfitt. "I thought they were unforced turnovers. Things were going O.K. most of the first half but Michigan stayed patient to let us turn it over." A MAJOR REASON for CMU's point total, the lowest for a Michigan op- ponent since the Wolverines beat Los Angeles State, 92-39 in 1955, wasCMU's delay tactics.' The Chippewas held the ball for over two minutes at one point in the first half as Parfitt's strategy was to stop Michigan from running the fast break. Rellford's hustle on defense and two blocked shots by Roy Tarpley sparked The Chips CENTRAL MICHIGAN fense Michigan early in the second half as it ran off eight straight points to break the game open. "They played hard for 12 to 15 minutes in the second half and that was the turning point," said Frieder. "Most of it came from the guys off the bench." "THE GUYS OFF the bench" were led defensively by Pelekoudas who saw 14 minutes of playing time and con- tributed three assists plus a steal. The senior was happy to make a con- tribution and believes that the defense is jelling.' "We've been playing pretty good defense-a lot better than last year" said Pelekoudas. "Just look at the final point totals in the last few games (52, 55, 39). That's the key to how well we do in the Big Ten, how well our defense does." Eleven different players scored for buries the Wolverines who were led by Rellford and Tim McCormick each of whom finished with 10 points. McCor- mick showed no ill effects from the sprained ankle which kept him out of Monday night's contest against North Carolina A&T. After the game, the pivotman said he felt 100 percent. "I JUST GOT it loose in the first half," said McCormick, "I felt ready to go after that." Overall, last night's contest was a physical affair and most of the ex- citement was brought about by the out- side shooting of CMU's Jeff Heide, who led all scorers with 14 points, and a wild reverse lay-up by Michigan's Paul day is last day of nt scheduling for sketball.11:00-4:30 ural Sports Building 9*1 Page9 L CMU31 Jokisch with 25 seconds remaining', which brought a crowd of 10,158 to itsf feet. The game also marked the return of former Michigan football and basket-. ball player Greg Washington to Anng. Arbor. The CMU forward scored only'2 four points and said he wasn't that- charged up. "I sort of came out that way against State (Friday' night) and didn't play well," said the former Wolverine ' receiver. "So I decided to sit back and just let it happen." That's how it went for Central last night. Michigan "happened" all over them. '"w" rs PARTHENON 2 Maint Lierty 'it OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Ann Arbor Carry Out Service 994-1012 Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Michigan cager Roy Tarpley battles Central Michigan forward Rob Koch for a rebound during last night's contest. The Wolverines topped the Chippewas 58-39. i Now Serving Liquor, Imported Greek Wines, Imported Beers. Win s fail 1 By JIM DAVIS Special to the Daily DETROIT - A third-period collapse and lack of effective penalty killing led to the downfall of the Red Wings last night at Joe Louis Arena, as the Toronto Maple Leafs bested Detroit,. 5-3. Rick Vaive, a 50-goal scorer each of the last two seasons for the Leafs, tallied the game-winner at 10:39 of the final period with a man advantage, Toronto's third power-play goal of the game, to lift the Leafs, who now hold a two-point margin over the Wings in the Norris Division. BILL DERLAGO added an insurance goal at 17:15 to seal the verdict. The first period started fast and furious and kept up the pace At 3:31, the Wings' Brad Smith went off for hooking Toronto defenseman Jim Korn, a former Wing who plays his dirtiest versus Detroit. Dan Daoust made the most of the power-play opportunity, firing a shot through a screen to the left of Wings' netminder Ed Mio to make it 1-0. -After Ron Duguay and Toronto's Dave Hutchinson went off for roughing, the Wings got a power-play chance when referee Bruce Hood called the Leafs' Bill Stewart for holding. Eight seconds later, Reed Larson took a pass from Brad Park and walked in alone on Toronto goalie Mike Palmateer and unleashed a 25-foot slapshot which beat Palmateer cleanly. ONE MINUTE later, Kelly Kisio split the Toronto defense off a feed from Greg Smith and fired his eighth goal of the season into the Leafs' net to make it 2-1 Detroit. At 18:00, Daoust stole the show again, skating around the Wings' defense and cutting right through the Detroit crease, beating Mio in the process. Andre St. Laurent and Dale McCourt } received roughing calls with less than a minute left in the period, then Korn and Gridders win Pizza Bowl What can 949 pounds of varsity athlete do faster and better than anyone else? Eat pizza. Quarterback Steve Smith and Defensive back Vince DeFelice teamed up last night against heavyweight wrestlers Walt Dunayc- zan and Rob Rechsteiner in a pizza eating contest sponsored by Athletes in Action at South Quad. For 32 minutes Tiger announcer Ear- nie Harwell provided the play-by-play until the football players ate their way through three medium pizzas beating the wrestlers by six pieces. -SHARON D'ANDRETA SN--- a---- ' only I I ~.9.5 LoT oron to Park were whistled off for five-minutes each - Korn for spearing and the Detroit defenseman slashing - while waiting for the ensuing faceoff. The period ended in a 2-2 deadlock. IN THE second stanza it appeared as if two entirely different teams came out to play, with each club content to let the other skate for the first 15 minutes. Both had a power play and one clean breakaway chance, but failed to click. Finally, with three minutes to go and St. Laurent in the box for elbowing, Borje Salming took advantage of a giveaway deep into the Detroit zone by Larson to put the Leafs back on top 3-2. Steve Yzerman, the league's rookie scoring leader, tied it up for Detroit at 6:19 of the third period on the power play, but that was all Detroit could muster. - - I Reilford ... leads defensive charge areMcdown MICHIGAN MinFG/A FT/A R A PF TP MinFG/A FT/A R A PF TP Washington ....... Koch............ Thompson,........ Lambropoulos ..... Mitchell......... Bolden.......... Heide........... Schmidt ........... Nordmann ........ Murray ......... Bellamy......... 30 23 11 28 28 21 23 8 18 8 2 2/8 1/4 1/1 1/1 1/3 1/2 7/14 0/2 1/2 1/2 1/1 0/0 1/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/2 0/0 0/0 6 4 3 1 2 1 0 0 S 0 0 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 I 0 3 4 1 2 2 I 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 6 2 2 14 0 2 2 2 Reilford ........... McCormick ....... Tarpley ......F... Rocky more. Turner ......... Wade .............. Joubert ........... Henderson........ Pelekoudas .... Thomnson....... Jokisch ........... Turner.......... Antonides....... Rudy............ 23 5/7 25 4/6 18 4/7 23 3/6 27 2/6 21 3/6 25 3/11 14 0/2 14 1/2 3 0/0 3 1/1 2 0/1 1 0/1 1 0/0 0/0 2/5 0/0 0/0 0/1 1/z 0/0 2/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 1/2 10 10 8 6 4 7 6 2 2 0 2 0 0 58 TOTALS......... 200 19/42 1/4 26 7 16 39 ...WEL GIVE YOU A DEALI Halftime scare: MICHIGAN 23 Central Michigan 16 Attendance: 10,158 TOTALS.........200 26/56 6/12 30 19 13 Join in our Holiday Moonlight Madness on Friday, Dec. 2 - 5 p. m. til 12 p.m. SUPER BUYS and GIFT IDEAS ... 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