Wrestling Michigan vs. Purdue Crisler Arena, 2:00 p.m. SPORTS Women's swimming Michigan vs. Michigan St. Thursday, 7:00 p.m. Matt Mann Pool e Miehigan Daily Sunday, January 22, 1984 Page 7 Broncos bust iccers, By TIM MAKINEN Western Michigan's Dan Dorion put on a picture-perfect performance last night at Yost Ice Arena as a hushed audience of 2,937 saw the Broncos stage a 7-1 rout of the Michigan hockey team. Dorion, a sophomore rightwinger, notched three goals and assisted on three others. The goals brought his league leading total to 31, as well as stretching his point-scoring streak to 31 games. Dorion also assisted on the game winning goal of Friday night's overtime victory for Western. "I APPROACH every game with the same attitude," said the Astoria, N.Y. native. "But tonight I felt really good. I was free-wheeling because they gave me room to skate." Michigan had trouble getting un- tracked all evening, particularly in the first period when it was outshot, 28-8. The Wolverines, hindered with a pat- chwork defense due to injuries, had dif- ficulty breaking out of their own end and establishing a power play. Too of- ten it looked as if Michigan was content to sit back and watch the Dorion show. Dorion began the onslaught at 13:02 of the first period when a rebound from his shot went to teammate Pat Ryan who fired the puck under the crossbar to give Western a 1-0 lead. Then with Wolverine Kelly McCrimmon off for elbowing, Dorion set up teammate Stuart Burnie who beat Michigan goalie Mark Chiamp with a low shot. TIRED OF playing a supporting role, Dorion took center stage himself at 18:57 of the first period. The right- winger skated the length of the ice, danced around Michigan defenseman John DeMartino, and stuffed the puck in the net after being momentarily delayed by a sprawled out Chiamp. Michigan got on the board in the second period when John Bjorkman deflected a Bill Brauer shot past Bron- co goalie Glenn Healy, but Dorion refused to be upstaged. This time he skated down the right side of the ice and rifled a shot that beat Chiamp high on the glove side to give Western a 4-1 lead. The goal occured so fast that, for a moment, only the goal judge, Chiamp and Dorion realized the puck had gone in the net. The stunned crowd sat in silence. Michigan's Doug May pulled the cur- tain on Dorion for a while when he plowed over the Bronco rightwinger near center ice in the second period. Dorion sat out several shifts, but when he returned to the ice he promptly got a breakaway. Chiamp grabbed the spotlight though, and came up with the save. CHIAMP WAS not so fortunate, however, when Dorian squirted through the Michigan defense and picked up the hat trick with 13 seconds left in the con- test. Western's other goals came from Lance Johnston on a perfect pass from Dorion, and from freshman Kevin Donoghue, the first of his collegiate career. "Our team speed paid off," Bronco 71 coach Bill Wilkinson said. "Dorion was also fantastic again. I really think he deserves All-America honors even as a a sophomore. He's the best forward I've seen in the country." The loss dropped Michigan's league record to 9-11. Western stands at 8-11-1. It was also the first time the Wolverines have been swept in a weekend series since mid-November when Michigan Tech pulled the trick. Westernized FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. WMU-Ryan (Dorion, Thrun) 13:02; 2. WMU-Burnie (Gagne, Dorion) 15:21; 3. WMU- Dorion (Pesetti. Orhn) 18:57. Penalties: M-May (roughing) 3:12; WMU-Dorion (roughing) 3:12; WMU--Cuihane(interference) 7:09; M-McCrimmon (elbowing) 15:12; WMU-Crossman (slashing) 16:56. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Bjorkman (Braver, May) 1:33; 2. WMU-Dorion (Gagne, Culhane) 2:38; 3. WMU-Donoghue (Grillo, Fletcher) 11:51. Penalties: M-May (tripping) 3:32; WMU-Crossman (hooking) 8:33; WMU-Crossman (elbowing) 13:53; M-May (elbowing) 18:36; WMU-Burnie (slashing) 20:00; M-Chiamp (slashing) 20:00. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6. WMU-Johnston (Dorion, Gagne) :20; 7. WMU-Dorion (Thrun, Culhane) 19:47. Penalties: WMU- Donoghue(cross-checking) 2:31; WMU-Ohrn (holding) 7;21; M-Mann (slashing and roughing) 10:55; WMU-Ohrn (slashing and roughing) 10:55; M-May (slashing) 11:23; M-DeMartino (roughing) 14;28; WMU-Crossman (roughing) 14:28. SCORING BY PERIODS u 12 WMU .........................3 2 MICHIGAN..................... 0 1 3 2 0 T 7 1 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Sophomore defenseman Bill Brauer takes a shot on goal during last night's game against Western Michigan. The Broncos triumphed, 7-1. Michigan rises at relays By CHRISTOPHER GERBASI The weather outside was frightful,. but the Michigan performances inside were delightful as the Wolverine run- riers provided some heat at the ,richigan relays last night. No team Scores were kept in the 13-team meet at the Tract and Tennis Buildings. Michigan .did well in both distance races and the sprints, an area coach Jack Harvey thought would be weak this season. IN TJHE60yard dash,.theWolverines claimed the second, third, and fourth spots. Steve Johnson ran a 6.4 for second place, followed by Derek Har- per and Thomas Wilcher. Wilcher had a plight calf pull and was held out of the high hurdles.. "The sprints were impressive," said Harvey. "Johnson really helped us out. Also, we qualified well in the hurdles but didn't do well in thefinals." Derek Stinson finished fourth in the 60-yard high hurdles. Michigan was as im- pressive in the distance races as it was in the sprints. Dave Meyer made his move midway through the two-mile run and held on to first place in 8:53.94. Teammate Chris Brewster finished second in theevent. M1~ichigan's distance medley relay team of Bob Boynton, Todd Steverson, Dan Smith, and Ron Simpson, also raced to first place in 9:56.59. "Our medley team ran well, but we didn't have any competition so we couldn't get a fast time," said Harvey. THE WOLVERINE thinclads also came through in the field events. For the second consecutive weekend, Scott Ericksson and Johnny Nielsen heaved their way to the two top positions in the shot put. Unlike last week, though, Ericksson finished first with a toss of 59'21/2". Neilsen's distance was 57'1". The NCAA qualifying distance is 60 feet. Vince Bean and Derek Harper finished one-two in the long jump. Bean appearing in his first meet of the year, jumped 24'6". Harper leaped 24'1". Daily Photo by DOUG-MCMAHON Michigan's Steve Johnson (center) sprints against two competitors in the 60-yard dash preliminaries of the Michigan Relays yesterday in the Track and Tennis Building. M grapplers sizzle hapless Ilitni 29-9 BIG TEN R 0 UND UP: By STEVE HUNTER Yesterday's cold weather failed to 1 off the Michigan wrestling team - md so did the fighting Illini. Illinois Iidn't score a team point until the fifth natch of the night and lost to the Wolverines, 29-9. Michigan garnered twelve easy poin- :s to start the match when William Waters (118 pounds) gained a forfeit md Joe McFarland (126 pounds) was liven a six point injury decision over [llinois' Chris Davis. MIKE DerGarbedian kept Illinois ff the scoreboard by dominating the [llini's Todd Coons at 134 pounds by ihooting takedowns and letting his op- )onent up over and over. This strategy gave Michigan four team points for a najor decision. Bill Goodill followed at 42 with a decision, giving the olverines a commanding 19-0 lead. Vichigan's first loss followed when BriAn Flack (150 pounds) battled linois' David Baird to 4-4 tie, but lost riding time. The Wolverines came right back, owever, with a major decision by ophomore Steve Richards over the ;Mini's Kevin Stephenson.Richards, who dominated nearly the entire mat- ch, :said Stephenson "caught me off guard in the beginning. (But) once I got on top I was riding for the pin. When there was 30 seconds left and I was leading by seven, I wanted to get the ex- tra point for the major (decision)." That's exactly what he did, winning 14-5, and Michigan followed up with two regular decisions by Kevin Hill (167) and Bill Elbin (177). THE BIGGEST disappointment for the Wolverines came in the two top weight classes when Kirk Trost lost to Chris Llewelyn at 190 pounds and Rob Rechsteiner dropped one to Illinois' heavyweight Steve Nelson. Michigan head coach Dale Bahr summed up the match by saying "Overall, we were a much stronger team" but added he "was a little disap- pointed in our last two matches. I think both of them were over confident. Steve Richards wrestled at 158 pounds for the first time and did a good job, though." The Wolverines expect tougher going today when they face Purdue at Crisler Arena. Match time is 2:00 p.m. Tankers orerpower Oakland Oakland University, last year's Division II national swimming champs, was no match for the Michigan men yesterday, as the Wolverines trounced the Pioneers, 80-32. The victory left Michigan with a 3-0 record. Wolverine, freshman Dave Kerska Buckeyes spike Spartans, 82-68 Richards ... wins major decision EAST LANSING (AP)-Senior for- ward Tony Campbell pumped in 25 points to lead Ohio State to an easy 82-68, victory over Michigan State last night. The Buckeyes lifted their record to 9- 6 overall, 2-3 in the Big Ten. The Spar- tans, who :lost their fifth consecutive conference game, fell to 7-8 and 1-5. The Buckeyes scored six straight points and played sparkling defense en route to a 28-22 halftime edge. Michigan State, ranked last in the Big Ten in defense against field goals, then allowed the Buckeyes several easy jumpers to start the second half as Ohio State built a 23-point lead. Iowa 75, Wisconsin 62 IOWA CITY (AP) - Greg Stokes scored 23 points to lead Iowa to a 75-62 Big Ten Conference college basketball victory over Wisconsin yesterday. Struggling Iowa resorted to a new starting lineup and withstood a furious one-man Wisconsin rally in the second half by Cory Blackwell. THE HAWKEYES, now 9-6 overall and 2-3 in the Big Ten,' benefited from a speedier offensive lineup that included point guard Todd Berkenpas and 7-0 post Brad Lohaus. The new strategy worked as Lohaus connected for a career high 17 points while Berkenpas played a near flawless floor game. Iowa enjoyed a 35-25 halftime cushion and built its lead to as high as 16, 43-27 in the first four minutes of the second half. But Blackwell came back in'the last 12 minutes to single-handedly take charge, outscoring Iowa 14-8 with 3:14 left to play. The Hawkeyes turned the momentum in their favor on a three-point play by Stokes with 2:54 left, then got a pair of free throws from Lohaus to build a 66-54 advantage with 1:30 to play. 1:30 to play. Northwestern 52, Minnesota 50 EVANSTON (UPI) - Paul Schultz and Shawn Watts converted free throws in overtime to lift Northwestern to a 52-50 victory over Minnesota last night, snapping the Wildcats' three-game losing streak. Schultz, who scored 15, made one of two free throws with 3:15 left in over- time to give Northwestern a 49-48 lead it never relinquished. was a double winner, taking the 100- yard freestyle and setting the year's top Big Ten time for the 50-yard freestyle with a 21:02. THE MICHIGAN divers also dominated, taking the top three spots on the one meter board. Bruce Kimball took top honors with a score of 333.60, while Kent Ferguson and Mike Gruber took second and third, respectively, to shut out the Oakland divers. Junior Mark Noetzel took the 200- yard freestyle with a 1:42.85. Kristan Vandersluis also scored in the 200, taking third. The 400-yard freestyle relay team won in style with a 3:05.21, second best in the Big Ten this year. COME HOME TO THE DAILY AND A FREE PIZZA FROM SNAPPY'S. Subscribe to 1' 7F iU the Task Force on Undergraduate Education publishers of AD VICE ty ot michigaa ADIVICEB NEEDS YOU! Tuesday, January 24th 7p.m. Anderson Room A, First Floor, Michigan Union nrie £ tREtlZZA fOarmIQ and receive a FREE PIZZA fro NPYS If I