4 Page 10- The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 6, 1984 Wolverines scratch 'Cats (Continued from Page 1) Frieder commented, "It was good to see Eric play well tonight. It's been a tough time for him, but he came through." THE FLASHY GUARD'S evening even drew rave reviews from the opposition. "Turner was excep- tional tonight," said Falk. "He provided great leadership and was the difference tonight." Turner was not alone. Once again it was a team ef- fort with Antoine Joubert especially shining in his Big Ten debut. The 6-5 swingman notched a career-high 16 points to go along with his four assists and two steals. The whole performance left everyone, including Joubert, smiling. "TODAY I HAD a great time out there," bubbled the Detroit native. "I loved it, I had a lot of fun." Roy Tarpley (12 rebounds, two blocked shots), Tim McCormick (10 points, eight rebounds) and Butch Wade (eight points) also loved the game, as they helped the guard tandem boost Michigan's record to 9-2. The Wildcats fell for the 18th consecutive time on the road. The team effort proved too much of a match against the two-man Northwestern show of Andre Goode and Art Aaron. The duo combined for 34 poiints including Aaron's game-high 21. That, combined with the loP sided Wolverine rebounding margin (47-26), proved to be the story of the contest. OH YEAH, the game. After Turner's alley-oop pass to Tarpley for a ferocious dunk early in the first half, there really wasn't much of one, as Northwestern was unable to cut the Wolverine lead to single digits the rest of the night. But while the 11,715 Crisler crowd was celebrating the Wolverines ascent to the top of the infant Big Ten standings, Frieder was - what else - warning the press and the players about the Iowa Hawkeyes, the next team on Michigan's agenda. "Iowa has a big height advantage over us," said Frieder. "They're coming off a tough loss and they had an extra day of rest, so they'll be a tough match." 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' ' =% mm mms um m m =muiimkq...m - Ann Arbor Corner of Washington and State Streets 0 STORE HOURS The '(Catsrmeow MICHIGAN Min FG/A FT/A NORTHWESTERN MInFG/AFT/A Rellford .7 McCormick....... 25 Wade.............17 Rockymore........23 Turner.............29 Tarpley............22 Joubert............27 Henderson ........ 15 Pelekoudas........ 20 Thompson ......... 8 Jokisch............ 5 Rudy.............1 Antonides.........21 TOTALS.........200) 0/2 4/6 4/7 3/12 7/11 1/6 7/12 1/1 0/2 1/2 1/2 0/0 0/0 29/63 0/0 2/2 0/0 0/0 2/3 0/0 2/2 2/5 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 2/2 10/14 R 1 8 1 2 4 12 3 7 1 1 0 1 47 A 0 2 0 2 7 1 4 0 3 2 0 0 0 21 PF 4 2 3 1 0 3 2 2 1 0 1 0 20 TP 0 10 8 6 16 2 16 4 0 2 2 0 2 Aaron .............31 Goode ............ 37 Schultz............ 34 Berg .............. 28 Watts ............. 36 Fullen ............. 12 Murray ........... 8 Dixon..............1 Pitts .............. 6 Peterson .......... 3 Richardson........ 3 Branch ............ 1 8/19 6/15 2/4 2/4 2/3 0/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/0 1/2 S/8 1/2 3/10 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 9/21 R 6 3 4 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 26 A 0 0 2 4 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 PF 4 5 2 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 TP 21 13 7 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 51 TOTALS...........200 21/50 68 Halftime score: MICHIGAN 37, Northwestern 21. Attendance: 11,715. SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y: ('pinned at Special to the Daily Pierre LEHIGH, Pa. - Although the Wolv- Mario Tr erine wrestling team lost a tight, 22-21 Naslund match at Lehigh last night, four in- Canadien dividuals still turned in notable vic- to .500 - tories. 21-4. In the 118-pound weight class, THE G William Waters ran his record to 11-7 on came 1:4 the season by shutting out Damian the perio Butler, 20-0. At 126, senior All- moved D( American Joe McFarland pinned Todd 16:53. Cassan to run his record to 29-3. -Naslun( Sophomore Ray Yerkes had a major seman Br decision over Eyvind Boyesen in the 177 for Walt class. It was Yerkes' second win of the goaltend season in as many attempts. A t With 1' heavyweight, junior Rob Rechsteiner Ludwig pinned Steve Vetsch. The win put backhan Rechsteiner's record at 25-6. Hollin. Tomorrow, the Wolverines travel to PONTI. Bloomsburg, Pa. to face Bloomsburg will join t State. The team opens its Big Ten with the N season January 14 against Indiana. Diego Clii C~anadiens 5, Red Wings I offer fort Lehigh Mondou, Bob Gainey and emblay also scored and Mats drew three assists for the s, who again upped their mark 19-19-2. Detroit slipped to 15- OALS BY Walter and Ludwig 5 apart beginning at 18:05 of od after Lane Lambert had etroit within 3-1 with a goal at d used his speed to beat defen- rad Park, then dropped a pass er, who wristed a shot past er Ed Mio. 0 seconds left in the period, made it 5-1 when his soft der eluded Mio. s joins Pistons AC (UPI) - Lionel Hollins he Pistons for tonight's game New York Knicks after the San ppers failed to match Detroit's he veteran guard. adline for San Diego to sign 30, expired Friday. Detroit e 6-3 guard to back up Isiah is an eight-year veteran who 12.7 point scoring average to He averaged 13.5 points in 56 th San Diego last season. THE. SPORTING VIEWS The Holiday season... . , breeds pigskin nausea By JEFF BERGIDA This holiday season proved to me that there is such a thing as too many football games on T.V. Sixteen bowl contests (not including any Blue-Gray, East-West or Male- Female all-star "classics"), six NFL playoff games and countless pre-game shows, featuring expert analysis from somebody named Bert, managed to hit my saturation point. How many times can one hear about the interior line match-ups between Peach Bowl participants Florida State and North Carolina? The game couldn't draw enough people to break even and CBS was treating it like the World Series. The 1983-84 bowl season started harmlessly enough as the Independence, California and Florida Citrus bowls went by quickly. By the 22nd of Decem- ber, however, the games started to roll by at a furious pace. West Viginia beat Kentucky in the Hall of Fame Bowl and ESPN's announcers got some fascinating player comments. Every viewer of that contest now knows in which coal mining town the Mountaineers and Wildcats grew up. From then on there was no let-up. Brigham Young beat Missouri and ESPN analyst Bud Wilkinson did a fine job of being elderly. Alabama embarassed highly-ranked SMU in the Sun Bowl (in El Paso, Texas where Michigan's basketball team went 0-2 making this a perfect holiday season for Wolverine fans). December 26 was the highlight of the schedule for patriotic Americans as Iran's team, the Dallas Fascists, were eliminated from the NFL playoffs by the L.A. Rams. We will be spared the sight of Tom Landry and Tony Dorsett for eight wonderful months. Later that night, Penn State beat Washington in the Aloha Bowl. Some guy named Joe Butita was on the air for ESPN and he managed to exhibit a vast lack of football expertise (although he described the weather nicely). The Liberty Bowl followed as the Boston College Eagles were out-Catholic-ed by Notre Dame, before 38,229 of the masses. 4 4 4 MONTREAL (AP) - Ryan Walter and Craig Ludwig broke open the game with late second-period goals to power the Montreal Canadiens to a 5-1 National Hockey League victory that snapped the Detroit Red Wings' four- game winning streak last night. thne dec Hollins, signed th Thomas. Hollins brings a Detroit. F games wi Twelve games in 80 hours put me away last weekend. First, Iowa got stepped on by Florida in the Gator Bowl. The Big Ten went 1-3 in post- season proving once again that foot- ball is not a midwestern sport. The NIL playoffs had Miami eliminated by Seattle in an outstan- ding game. Don Shula wins too much anyway. Detroit's mighty Lions put up a valiant struggle, for a team that didn't deserve to make the USFL playoffs. Oklahoma State toDned Baylor in the Bluebonnet Bowl on New Year's Eve. ESPN just got the ratings back and it turns out I was one of the 13 people watching. Sunday, Washington demolished my Rams and the Oakland (don't call them 4 A Cooper ". ..or is it "Copper" ? Los Angeles) Raiders did the same to Pittsburgh. Steeler QB Cliff Stoudt showed the heart of a mouse and Franco Harris managed to avoid getting tackled by heading for the nearest sideline every time he touched the ball. The big day was January 2. Five big games opening with Texas' loss to Georgia in the Cotton Bowl, 10-9, and the miserable Buckeyes getting lucky in the Fiesta Bowl and edging Pitt. Both clashes were decided by late touch- downs and made for exciting viewing. It's always great when a team from the state of Texas loses. Even if Lindsey "plaid sport coat" Nelson announces. The Rose Bowl was the only mismatch of the day. Didn't you feel sorry for the Fighting (?) Illini and their fans as UCLA was kicking their heads in? Lovable Mike White and Co. finally met up with a good team and all those fine people in Champaign may now shut up. Illinois would have come in fourth in most conferences. Finally, Michigan took the field against Auburn in the Sugar Bowl. Who'll ever forget the dolcid tones of Frank "I root for every Southern team" Broyles describing the play of Wolverine safety Evan "Copper." That's Copper, as in the stuff they used to put in pennies. Michigan fans were crushed by another last-second defeat. It'll be hard to get over this one. We lost to a bunch of extras from The Dukes of Hazard. Sorry; I got off the track. Miami ended my vacation by shocking the Nebraska Invincibles, 31-30, in the Orange Bowl. It was another great game. The best part was when Irving Fryar dropped a perfect touchdown pass and tried to bury himself under a rock. Well, I've had enough TV, it's time to go out and experience life. Wait... ESPN has 58 basketball games on this month. Where's my cable box? 14 A 14 MONDAY thru THURSDAY 7:30 AM to 9 PM FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 AM to11 PM (".anfn n %rn. a ..tn anirl nll ta if1 sc4 rioir% 4r.ll. 11