4 Page 8 -The Michigan Daily -Sunday, January 15, 1984 Olson's 39 keys Badger upset of Blue (Continued from Page 1) "In the first seven or eight minutes of the second half I thought Michigan came out and was extremely aggressive, which caused us to make turnovers," said Wisconsin coach Steve Yoder. "But we were able to regroup. Last year we led at halftime in a lot of games, but we weren't able to sustain it." MICHIGAN came as close as 55-53 with six minutes left and 63-60 with a minute to go in the game, but in both in- stances the Wolverines were unable to take the lead. Part of the reason was the Badgers' near-perfect shooting from the foul line. In fact, all of Wisconsin's last 16 poin- ts came on free throws. Olson accoun- ted for eight of them, while reserve. guard Mike Heineman connected for four to seal the Wolverines' fate. Nevertheless, Michigan still had its chances to pull off a victory. After Olson hit two free throws to put Wisconsin on top 63-58, Pelekoudas was called for travelling with 1:11 left in the game. Pelekoudas stole the ensuing in-bounds pass, however, and scored on a goaltending call against Wisconsin's David Miller. BOTH TEAMS then hit two free throws and Wisconsin was never in trouble again. With its win Wisconsin improved its overall record to 6-7, 2-2 in the Big Ten. Michigan's loss, coupled with Purdue's victory over Indiana, drops the Wolverines into a second-place tie in the conference. "I told Yoder before the game that I wasn't concerned about my team and that I thought they would play okay," said Frieder. "But I was concerned with Wisconsin playing so well. I thought we played well, but they just played better." The Wolverines return home to Crisler Arena on Wednesday to play Ohio State at 8 p.m. Big Ten Standings Purdue ............. MICHIGAN....... Indiana ............ Illinois ............. Wisconsin........ Northwestern...... Michigan State* .... Iowa ............... Ohio State........ Minnesota .......... Conf WL 40 31 21 3 1 S2 12 13 12 0 3' 03 Overall WL 11 3 11 3 94 12 2 67 84 7 6 85 76 94 Badgered MICHIGAN Joubert ........... McCormick ....... Wade.............. Rockymore-.... Turner.......... Tarpley ........... Rellford ........... Henderson........ Pelekoudas........1 Thompson ......... Team........... MinFG/AFT/A 19 26 20 18 37 30 26 2 18 1 2/7 1/3 5/8 3/6 4/12 4/7 4/7 0/0 2/2 0/1 0/1 2/4 1/2 0/0 2/4 2/2 7/7 0/0 0/0 0/0 R A PF 1 1 3 2 0 1 6 1 4 0 3 2 2 10 3 13 1 1 5 1 5 0 0 0 0 2 5 0 0 2 34 19 26 'F 3 t 1 t TP 4 4 11 6 10 10 15 0 4 0_ 64 WISCONSIN MinFG/AFT/A R AI Blackwell..........34 4/8 4/7 10 2 Roth ..............26 0/6 2/2 4 4 Ploss.............. 19 0/3 0/0 0 2 Miller ............. 32 4/10 2/2 4 1 Olson.............. 39 14/20 11/12 3 2 Plondke............19 0/1 0/0 0 1 Heineman..........19 0/0 4/4 1 2 Steinhaus..........11 1/1 2/2 1 0 Team ............. 5 TOTALS...........200 23/49 25/29 28 14 Halftime score, Wisconsin 45, MICHIGAN 33 PF 4 2 4 1 1 1 TP 12 2 0 10 39 0 0 4 I 4 Olson AP Photo Wisconsin sophomore Ricky Olson drives past Michigan's Garde Thompson in yesterday's game. Wisconsin beat the ' Wolverines 71-64. 14 71 ...drops in 39 TOTALS.........200 25/53 14/20 Attendance: 8,646 Doc 1 ' S ,d ANNIVERSARY Wisconsin feasts on Michigan... ...fans provide food for thought SZE CHUAN WEST Specializing in Szechuan, Hunan, Mandarin Cuisine DINING & CARRY-OUT COCKTAILS VEGETARIAN MENU BANQUET FACILITIES C O U P O N - - - - - -- - - --m- ALL MEALS 10 O FFincludes carry-out Offer expires Jan. 19, 1984 * ba . ----. -- --. ---------------. ------- ---------.I MADISON ONLY AT WISCONSIN does a giant cheese greet you at the entrance to the basketball arena. No kidding - a six-foot tall cheddar stood in the ticket window at Wisconsin Fieldhouse. Not only that, but a 125-gallon carton of milk - skim, I believe - strolled through the concourse. Wisconsin promotes itself as America's Dairyland, but someone stretched the public relations a bit too far. There were dozens of cheeses, a multitude of milks and an assortment of grapes, cucumbers, ice cream cones and Oscar Mayer weiners attending yesterday's basketball game between Michigan and Wisconsin. The food products were guests of the state's Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection. Any person dressed as a Wisconsin agricultural product was admitted free to the basketball game. Someone stretched the rules a bit when he allowed a frankfurter and a pepperoni pizza into the game. Nonetheless, it was a unique promotion. And they call Don Canham a marketing genius. Thne flrst seeds of a contender Seriously though, it is ridiculous that the Wisconsin Athletic Department stages such an outlandish promotion to draw crowds to Badger basketball games. Wisconsin perhaps floors the most-improved team in the Big Ten, one certainly; capable of gaining a post- season tournament berth, and Buck B d plays an exciting style of Badger basketball. ...the big cheese The Badgers proved it to Michigan State Thur- sday night, and yesterday the Wolverines learned their lesson. Wisconsin played a nearly flawless game while thrashing Michigan, 71-64. The Badgers weren't nearly as talented as the Wolverines, but they capitalized on every bit of ability. Coach Steve Yoder's team rarely took a bad shot. It committed just two first-half tur- novers. Every Badger played within his limits. Centers John Ploss and Scott Plondke, two born bricklayers, attempted only four shots between them. They let Rick Olson, Cory Blackwell and David Miller handle the shooting chores. Even sharp-shooting Scott Ross knew what to do with the ball. Normally a 17-point scorer, Ross missed his first few shots of the game, spent the rest of the day passing to Olson. Nary a wasted feed The 6-1 guard didn't waste any feeds. Olson sank 14 of 20 field goal attempts on his way to 39 points. He filled the netfrom every part of the court. Olson's first six shots read, "Corner; free-throw line; 15-foot baseline; 20-foot wing; 20-foot; 20- foot." Even from those distances, every shot came within the flow of the Wisconsin offense. The Badgers are well-disciplined. They play hard. The two Michigan teams won't be their only victims this year. "If we keep playing this way here in Madison, we're certainly going to be a team that the rest of the conference has to be ready to play," Yoder said. And the pumpkins, peas and other Wisconsin basketball fans might pay to see what happens. I wonder when Canham will give cars, cherries and Stroh's cans free tickets to Crisler? WE ARE OPEN Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 - 10:00 Friday 11:30 -11:30 Saturday 12:00 - 11:30 Sunday 12:00 - 10:00 N 94 A EX 12 SE HUA . 2161W TADUM. 769 -5722 14 uOF- 2162 W. STADIUM 76-72 MD SCORES Wisconsin 71, MICHIGAN 64 Purdue 74. Indiana 66 Illinois 55, Ohio State 53 Iowa State 76, Iowa 72 OT DePaul 98, Alabama-Birmingham 63 Louisville 83, Virginia Tech 79 OT North Caroline 70, Wake Forest 62 Alabama 65, Georgia 60 Boston College 69, St. John's 67 Wichita State 73, S. Illinois 63 Purdue stuns Indian come join our staff The University of Michigan Housing Division RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1984-85 SEEKING STUDENTS: Illtcrested iII wOrking witi othwir studcnis in a residenel lall Iitetrst(l in d'vtlo)ing a spirit ol communnyitill I wit liii a rcsidenlcl haill. Iicirstcdi in ldvcloping and stirig Ithcning skills in group lc rl(' hi ad an d i sing. I lttitcd ~linl (ict'lop)Iing )ogra iiiiii ig 1(4a (I ivc-stil dclit 1i ti(.stud ii (l loping itw skills and talnis [or a liei ime n. POSITIONS AVAILABLE: BIG TEN ROUND-UP: BLOOMINGTON (UPI) - Jim Row- inski and Mark Atkinson led a 17-point Purdue scoring streak at the start of the second half that carried the Boiler- makers to a 74-66 Big Ten victory yesterday over Indiana and kept them in first place in the conference. Purdue went from a 35-30 halftime deficit to a 47-35 lead with 14 minutes left and never led by less than five points the rest of the game. Rowinski had six points and Atkinson five in that impor- tait stretch. "At halftime, he told them we want to play emotional defense and patient offense and try to work back into the game," said Purdue coach Gene Keady, who won his first game at IU's Assembly Hall in four tries. "I never dreamed that it would be that good. "I'd have to say it's my biggest win," said Keady. "When we win at Indiana it's unusual. We've never won two Big Ten road games in a row since I've been here." Thwa St. 76, Iowa 72 AMES, Iowa (UPI) - BarryStevens scored 28 points and Terrence Allenad- ded six in the second overtime yester- day to send Iowa State past Iowa, 75-72, for the Cyclones' first win in the in- trastate rivalry in six years. Sophomore Jeff Hornacek set up two baskets with lob passes and hit a pair of key free throws in the final period to aid the non-conference win for the Cyclones, now 11-3. The victory was the I Rcsidct izI)izcctoirs AssistatiResidet i Icizuios 7v1 ir zin v.IPccr Adisi50r Rcsiduznt ;\i isoi s Rcsiczi I FeIllowvs (;Sl>\Rcsidint [ci hwcs WE'LL PAY YOU' SHAPE THIS , JN TO GET INTO SUMMER. l, 74=66 Cyclones' fourth in as many overtim games this season. The cross-state rival Hawkeyes, who fell to 8-5, trailed by as many as 10 poin- ts in the first half and rallied from a six- point deficit midway through the second half to send the game into over- time at 56-56. Iowa, which hit only 5-of-10 free throws in the first overtime, led the rest of that period until Hornacek's driving layup in heavy traffic fell in with 21 seconds left to make it 65-65. Payn then missed an 18-foot shot at the buz- zer. Illinois 55, Ohio State 53 COLUMBUS, (AP) - Ninth-ranked Illinois, paced by 2 points apiece by Efram Winters and Bruce Douglas, rallied last night to hand Ohio State its fourth straight loss, 55-53, in a Big Ten Conference basketball game. The Illini, 3-1 in the league and 12-2 overall, trailed almost the entire gamt before moving ahead 46-44 on George Montgomery's basket with 4:37 remaining. The Illini trailed 24-23 at halftime af- ter being down by as many as six points in the first half. Ohio State, dropping to a 0-3 con- ference record and 7-6 overall, lost for the third straight time at home, its longest losing spell in Columbus since the 1977 team dropped eight in a row. 4 Minnesota 69, Mich. State 6 MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Guard Marc Wilson scored 22 points, hitting 9- of-11 from the field, to pace Minnesota to a 69-61 victory over Michigan State last night, the Gophers' first Big Ten win. Minnesota, 9-4 and 1-3, opened a 13- point lead at 13:24 in the second half, 49- 35, on Tommy Davis' field goal. But the Ilad Li brarans QUALIFICATIONS: Must be it registered U of MN student on the Ann Arlumrt ms during the period of employment, M ust have com plleted itmillnmuml of ( our terms or equivalent a nd 18 undergraduate credit hours toward progran by the end of the Spring ierm 1981. Ulndergraduate applhianns iust have at least a 2.50 cululaiv grade point average ill the sc1hoi0l or college in which they are etnrolled by he end of ithe Sring Twn 1984. Graduate appi i a z is lmusI be in good a ta dcmi( sta nding in t he school or ( llegc in wif i they are eirollld byt ihe end if t he If you have at least two years of college left, you can spend six weeks at our Army ROTC Basic Camp this summer and earn approximately $600. And if you qualify, you can enter the ROTC 2- Year Program this fall and receive u to $1,000 a year. But the big payoff happens on graduation day. That's when you receive an officer's commission. So get your body in I I k I i 1I ii <