4 PageB8 -The Michigan Daily- Thursday, March 15, 1984 Shockers could put cagers in By JEFF BERGIDA It doesn't take a quiz kid to figure out Valley Conference tournament. "It's great to play in a post-season elcome to Jeopardy 1984. The that Gene Smithson's Wichita State MICHIGAN coach Bill Frieder knows tournament," said Smithson upon ac- answer in the category of Shockers could put Michigan's season in that his big men will have their hands cepting the NIT bid. "This is good for igan basketball is . jeopardy. full with McDaniel, currently our players, who've worked extremely red, white and blue basketball, a They sport an 18-11 record and four averaging 20.8 points and an in- hard even during the two years they Bond clock and an opponent that starters with scoring averages in timidating 13.2 rebounds per game. could not compete in post-season play." y vier g double figures. Honorable mention All- "Xavier McDaniel is one of the Here's a look at how the teams match : . jeopardy "We first Mich "A 45-sec MU'- +. 4 likes to run and gun. CONTESTANT number two responds correctly: "What are three things that the Michigan Wolverines have not seen during the 1983-84 season that they will have to deal with tonight at Crisler Arena in the first round of the National Invitational Tournament?" American Xavier McDaniel, who led the nation in rebounding as a sophomore last season, is Smithson's best player. The 6-7 power forward from Columbia, S.C., is coming off a season-high 35-point performance at Tulsa in the semi-finals of the Missouri premier rebounders in the country," said Frieder, who will be coaching in his second NIT. "He's a great player around the basket." Frieder accurately appraised the situation when he said that his club has a tougher first game than it would have had in the NCAAs. While that tourney sports such first-round lightweights as Nevada-Reno, Alcorn St and Marshall, the Shockers pose a legitimate threat to Michigan. WHILE WICHITA State has always had a well-respected basketball program, it was only after Smithson arrived from Illinois in 1978 that the school began to bask in the national limelight. Over the past six seasons, the Shockers have averaged twenty wins. Detroit Piston first-round draft picks Cliff Levingston and Antoine Carr led the team past Southern, Iowa and Kan- sas before it lost to LSU in the fourth round of the 1981 NCAAs. Immediately following that season of unprecedented success, WSU was put on probation and thus, despite records of 23-6 in 1982 and 25-3 in 1983, this will be its first playoff action since '81. up: POWER FORWARD: Michigan's Tim McCormick has struggled of late, taking only three shots Saturday night at Northwestern. Frieder is not trying to butter up the opposition when he calls McDaniel "a great player." Edge: Wichita State. SMALL FORWARD: Shockers' freshman Gus Santos has improved throughout the year. The New York native averaged 11.3 points a game in conference play. Rich Rellford is still inconsistent but the sparks of brilliance are coming more often. Edge: Michigan CENTER: Roy Tarpley has done it all for Frieder this year. His opposing number, Zarko Durisic from Yugoslavia, seems to be overmatched here. Big Edge: Michigan POINT GUARD: Although Eric Tur- ner can still be unstoppable at times, his shooting has been way off the mark recently. Aubrey Sherrod of WSU isn't the passer that Turner is but his 15- point scoring average makes up for other deficiencies. Edge: Even. 4 SCORING GUARD: Junior Karl Papke has an experience advantage on Antoine Joubert, but the freshman from Detroit Southwestern has come into his own recently. Edge: Michigan. Frieder says that his team is looking forward to a high-scoring game after a season in the defensive-minded Big Ten. "We'd like to play a little quicker game," he noted. If Michigan can stand the pace of a quicker game, look for another round of Jeopardy '84 at Crisler Arena this Sun- day or Monday. BILLBOARD- As of 3;00 p.m. yesterday, about 5,000 tickets had yet to be sold for tonight's first-round NIT game bet- ween Michigan and Wichita State. Sports Information Director Bruce Madej said that the athletic ticket of- fice, located on State and Hoover, would be open all day today to ac- comodate sales. The ticket office at Crisler Arena opens at 5:30 p.m. 4 Final Regular Season Michigan Basketball Statistics Raising lel By PAUL HELGREN 4 i I McCormick ................... Tarpley .................. Turner ........................ Joubert .................. Rockymore................. Rellford ....................... Wade .......................... Jokisch .................... Pelekoudas................. Thompson ..................... Henderson .................... Rudy .......................... Antonides ..................... Team ......................... G-S 27-26 28-16 26-23 28-17 26-18 28-25 28-14 11-0 28-1 13-0 20-0 9-0 6-0 FG-FGA 103-180 131-242 107-252 93-209 90-213 84-146 60-130 10-23 18-43 9-22 10-26 2-3 0-2 Pct 57.2 54.1 42.5 44.5 42.3 57.5 46.2 43.5 41.9 40.9 38.5 66.7 0.0 FT-FTA 101-154 53-70 72-91 45-61 25-32 44-57 20-46 7-10 22-27 5-6 15-26 3-4 3-4 Pct 65.6 75.7 79.1 73.8 78.1 77.2 43.5 70.0 81.5 83.3 57.7 75.0 75.0 RBS-AVG 146-5.4 208-7.4 55-2.1 57-2.0 40-1.5 85-3.0 148-5.3 7-0.6 21-0.8 .10-0.$ 42-2.1 6-0.7 5-0.8 91-3.3 A 27 21 120 84 42 8 14 1 48 13 3 3 0 Pts 307 315 286 231. 205 212 140 27 58 23, 35 7 3 Avg 11.4 11.3 11.0 8.3 7.9 '7.6 5.0 2.5 2.1 1.8 1.8 0.8 0.5 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Michigan center Roy Tarpley boxes out Wisconsin forward Cory Blackwell in action earlier this year. The Wolverines are looking for Tarpley to do the job again when they host Wichita State tonight in their NIT opening round game. MICHIGAN.......... 28 719-1497 48.0 422-596 70.8 921-32.9 386. 1860 66.4 Opponents .................... 28 645-1407 45.8 424-600 70.7 830-29.6 288 1714 61.2 Tennis team looks to net 1 7th title By ADAM MARTIN Despite a few early losses, there is lit- tle room for pessimism on Brian Eisner's tennis team. Coming into today's match with Kalamazoo College, the Wolverines have a record of 2-3. BUT THAT doesn't phase 14-year head coach Brian Eisner. He knows better than to panic. "For 16 years straight, we've won the Big Ten title," said Eisner, "and we expect to repeat." Michigan has been a power on the grass, clay, asphalt, Tartan or whatever for so long that Eisner finds little to frown about heading into the 1984 season. He knows, of course, that the Big Ten gets tougher every year and that this season's netters must per- form well to claim the title one more time. Eisner speaks with confident about his team. "A lot of mistakes have been made - Rent a Car from EcnoCar we rent to 19 YR. OLDI STUDENTS! Choose from small economical cars to vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request We accept cash deposits mental mistakes, nervousness - but; these things will get better. I'm con- fident that with improvement, we will be outstanding." EVEN in defeat Eisner radiates con-- fidence. Michigan lost its first match of the Corpus Christi Tourney to a tough North Carolina team, 6-3. Eisner con- sidered the first loss a good omen because of its positive elements. "It doesn't make any difference who we play. It's not other people, we control our own destiny." Michigan tennis coach Brian Eisner "We could have easily won this mat- ch," he said. "Despite the loss, I was very pleased." Eisner was also satisfied after losing a 5-4 squeaker to a top-notch Big Eight team, Oklahoma. "WE played better (than our previous match)," Eisner noted. "We should have won." Then, following a 6-3 victory over Tulsa, in which Michigan won six of seven singles matches, the forces of nature helped Duke down the Blue. "I thought it was going to be real close," Eisner said. "It was extremely windy, and it wasn't a case of us really being beaten. The wind got to us, we couldn't adjust." SO A seemingly disappointing trip gave Eisner reason to smile. He pointed out that his club "played solid tennis against good teams. We could have very easily been 4-0." The wins and losses themselves mean little to Eisner. His team is ready to face the competition ahead. And if Michigan is to maintain its reign as Big Ten champion, it must play its own game. "It doesn't make any difference who we play," Eisner said. "It's not other people, we control our own destiny." AND it seems Eisner's positive at- titude has trickled-down to his team. Senior Rodd Schreiber, for example. One of the few players with much ex- perience, Schreiber knows Michigan's tradition of excellence. "We never go into a match thinking we're going to lose," he said. Schreiber has played superb tennis in his three years as a Wolverine and is prepared to continue in '84. "We have experience, we know how to win," the Flint native said. "And we know we're going to win. You can't worry about losing because half of ten- nis is confidence." THE OTHER senior in the Wolverine repertoire is team captain Ross Laser. While more low-key than his team- mates, Laser knows what it takes to win. "We are a young team with a lot of talent and fire power, but it hasn't been tapped yet," Laser said. "It will have to be tapped this year, if we're going to win." As captain, Laser has his own plan for Michigan. "I plan to lead the team into their 17th straight Big Ten cham- pionship, and enjoy it." TO DO so, Laser will need help from sophomores' Hugh Kwok and Jim Shar- ton - two players without much ex- perience. Unlike Schreiber, Kwok does not overflow with confidence, but he's aware of his priorities. "We've got ourselves to worry about," said Kwok. "We've got to be sure of our own games, and not worry about who we play." Netters open season, see page 7 Rounding out the top six are fresh- men John Royer and Todd Cohen. While not having much Big Ten experience, Royer seems to be a typical Eisner pupil - confident. "WE'RE A very good team," Royer said. "We work very hard and we have a lot of natural athletic talent." As for himself, Royer does not appear to have the jitters of inexperience. "I know I can compete at this level," he said. "If I can play consistently day-in and day-out, I'll be just fine." With so much going for it, Michigan still faces what looks to be an ex- ceedingly tough conference. Accor- ding to Eisner, Minnesota will offer the strongest test, while Northwestern, Wisconsin and Illinois should return with clubs as strong or stronger than last seasons'. So even though Michigan holds 16 consecutive titles, there are no cakewalks. But with its heritage of winning, pessimism is not in the Wolverines' vocabulary. NIT: It's time to put a dead horse out o its misery You say you can't wait for the NIT to really get rolling? You say you.mem- orized the rosters, statistics and match-ups until you're seeing Tenn.- Chattanooga season highlights in your dreams? You say you stayed up late last night, furiously dialing Sportsphone every five minutes to find out the results of the SW Louisiana-Utah State clash? You say you're anxiously counting the days until the NIT championship showdown at Madison Square Garden, March 26-28? Go ahead and enjoy it, you exciting guy you. This year's NIT may be the last of its kind - if we're lucky, that is. The best thing that could happen to the NIT is a quick and painless death. Oh sure, it would be nice if NIT could change its present format and become a pre-season tourney or an NCAA-losers.tourney. But something tells me neither of those things will ever happen. So the NIT might as well make 1984 its swan song. The glory days of the National Invitation Tournament are long gone. With the NCAA tournament bloating with each passing year, the NIT has become superfluous. Next year the NCAA expands to 64 teams. Assuming the NIT maintained its current format of 32 teams, there would be 96 Division-I basketball teams competing in post-season play. That's 96 out of 250 or so schools in a tournament. Do we really need that? Can the winner in next year's NIT really take satisfaction in shouting, "Were number 65!"? The answer is no. It's about time the brains behind the NIT saw the writing on the wall. Back in the days when teams could compete in both the NCAA and NIT tournaments, or when there were only 16-32 clubs in the NCAA, the NIT made sense.There were enough good teams left to make an exciting tournament. Even this year's NIT isn't too bad, what with 20 of toe selected teams posting 18 or more wins. But take awaythe best 11, as will happen next when the NCAA expands, and there isn't much left. Some plausible suggestions have been made to keep the NIT afloat. One idea is to have the 32 teams that lose next year's first round NCAA games make up the NIT field. Five or 10 good teams get upset and you have a pretty exciting tournament on your hands. Don't. count on this scenario to ever materialize. First there is the NIT's stubborn insistence that its tournament must not be just a "loser's" cham- pionship. I don't know what the NIT calls itself now because I don't see too many conference champions on its list of participants. It's obvious to any avid hoop fan that the 32 NCAA losers would make up a far more interesting tournament than anything the NIT could put together. But sometimes pride gets in the way of logic. A pre-season tournament sounds like a good idea too, but the NCAA, which limits the number of regular-season games a team can play, could classify the tournament games as "regular season."This would reduce the number of other non-conference contests for the NIT participants and thus reduce their TV and gate revenues. You can bet" athletic directors across the country would just love that. Also the NCAA probably would not be too excited to have another tour- nament in competition with its own. Having what would be more or less two identical tournaments in one year might take some of the lustre off the Mar- ch classic. Scratch the pre-season idea. That brings us to the only logical conclusion - put the NIT out of its misery and pull the plug. It's the only humane thing to do. But in the meantime wouldn't it be nice if Michigan could snag the last NIT title. The Wolverines are down now and are in danger of receiving a rude shock (sorry) at the hands of what is supposedly a tough Wichita State crew. But if the Wolverines can survive today's game, they could make some noise and maybe end up in the final four and then who knows? And that would be a nice way, to remember the Nobody's Interested (anymore) Tour- nament. 4 4 4 4 4 .1 E Fun Make the Kahlua bunny your own fun mascot. He's 22 inches tall - not including the floppy ears.Very colorful, he comes in pink and blue, holding a red and yellow pennant that can be personalized with the name of your school. Get hopping - adopt him now! $24.00 each, postpaid. Why ordering two bunnies is better than ordering one: thati wav von et what vou want, ' f.: , '_: "HERE'S THE BEEF!" Finest Quality 50/50 Cotton-Poly Sizes: S-M-L-XL Colors: Royal Blue, Red, Green and White $7.00 Each NAME ADDRESS SCORES Exhibition Baseball Cincinnati 2, Detroit 1, 14 innings Boston 11, Toronto 1 Milwaukee 7, San F'rancisco6. Los Angeles 3, New York (AL) 1 California 6, Cleveland 5 Montreal 2, Baltimore 1 Minnesota 3. Philadelphia 1 Kansas City 4, St. Louis 3, 10 innings Houston 6, Texas 3, 10 inningl Chicago (NL) 10, San Diego 2 Seattle 14, Oakland 0 NIT Tennessee 54, Saint Peter's 40 NBA Philadelphia 92, Milwaukee 91 New Jersey 108, Phoenix 102 Washington 103, Boston 99 Kansas City 101, Atlanta 93 Dallas 105, San Diego 101 NHL New Jersey 3, Washington 3 SWENSON, CRAWFORD & PAINE 4 - 69' y 'E