Michigan Lacrosse Club Spring organizational meeting 7:00 p.m. tonight; 1250 CCRB SPORTS Men's and women's gymnastics Wolverine Invitational Crisler Arena; 5:00 p.m. finals The Michigan Daily Thursday, January 12, 1984 Page 7 rieder leery By JIM DWORMAN the type of injury that you can't hurry The wrong words slipped out of the up and heal." reporter's mouth. MINNESOTA WILL miss more than "How important are these two road the three-inch size difference between wins to your team?" he asked Michigan Petersen and his replacement, 6-7 Dave basketball coach Bill Frieder about the Dahlke. Much of the Gopher offense Wolverines' weekend trip to Minnesota revolved around Petersen's inside and Wisconsin. scoring ability. "WINS?" Frieder snapped. "You "It really changes the look of our mean games." team," Dutcher said. "We don't have Any Big Ten basketball observer an inside scoring threat. knows that there are no such things as We've really had to get a lot more predetermined victories in the con- scoring from our guards. At Illinois we ference, especially when a team is really didn't get that. They shot five for playing on the road. But tonight's game 20. But at Purdue they combined for 40 against Minnesota is as close as points." Michigan will come to an automatic Indeed, Minnesota's starting guards "W" in an unfriendly arena. score as capably as any pair in the Big The Gophers lost not only games to Ten. Junior Tommy Davis, 6-4, Purdue and Illinois last week, but, averages 14.5 points per game, while also the services of power forward Marc Wilson, a 6-1 sophomore, a Jim Petersen, the team's top inside averages 14.3.. N scoring threat. DAVIS AND WILSON, however, will a "He's got a deep muscle bruise in his be hard pressed to compensate for the calf," said Minnesota coach Jim Dut- loss of Petersen. Dahlke played in only s cher of his 6-10 senior. "There's a lot of seven games last year while John d fluid in there and it's hardened up. It's Shasky, Minnesota's 7-0 center, p , B Michigan Basketball Statistics n, rof T) MICHIGAN1 (n) Antoine Joub (44) Tim McCorm (53) Butch Wade. (24) Leslie Rocky (25) Eric Turner, PLACE: William Go hers HE LINEUPS (10-2) MINNESOTA (8-3) )ert . . (6-5) F (40) Dave Dahike ...... {4) lick .. (6-11) F (32) Roland Brooks ... (6-7) ...... (6-7) C (44) John Shasky ......(7-) more .(6-3) G (34) Tommy Davis ..... (6-4) ....... (6-3) G (24) Mare Wilson .....(6-1) s Arena. TIME: 9:00 p.m. EST. RADIO:WUOM (91.7 FM), WAAM (1600 AM), WWJ(950 A) LAST YEAR:Michigan 63, Minnesota 58 (Crisler). Minnesota 88, Michigan75 (Williams). SERIES RECORD: Michigan leads, 48-47. G- FG-GA Ptt V -FTA Pet RER-AVG, .12-12 62431 4.3* 172277.2 274 ,Y t12-6 495 43; I3-29 sl2-3 M-~ie.... ~2 45-86 W.0 1722 7 834,9 Made.......... ...1241 35.73 4.51.4-1.7I51t9847.0 +t i rf 2 H t-15 5, ~ uin ..1 T 52.5474 1W 5-9.6 1rs >t11 . 2 t 0618 33.3 148 75.11 12.1.6 t . 7 2x 987 1-2 50..4 4: 0-2 0*8 t.$ 3 4 15*3-4.8 A Pt. .5 142 ~22 142 44 to 4 0 7 .97 x:23 B 3 Avg 3.S i5 45 Ft in y fi tr B m a a veraged only six minutes per game. neither is noted for his inside scoring bility. Actually, the Gophers had moved lightly away from a big-man ominated offense before the injury to Petersen. With the loss of Randy Breuer to the NBA last year, Dutcher tansformed his offense into more of a erimeter game. "It's a different Minnesota team than n the past," noted Michigan's Frieder. They're tougher to defend because ou have to concentrate on stopping all ive players instead of. just concen- rating on Breuer." BESIDES DAVIS and Wilson, the Gophers rely on senior forward Roland rooks for perimeter shooting. Fresh- men Kevin Smith and Gerald Jackson re the first players off the bench for Minnesota. Smith, Brooks and Shasky ll hail from the state of Michigan. The Wolverines will start the same lineup as last week: Tim McCormick, Butch Wade, Antoine Joubert, Eric Turner and Leslie Rockymore. A Michigan victory would keep the Wolverines in first-place. Indiana, which beat Illinois last night, and Pur- due also are undefeated. Beating the Gophers, however, isn't assured. "You know that next week at this time Minnesota is not going to be 0-4," he said. "So who are they going to beat? Michigan State, Michigan or both?" 7 H A IRCUTTERS * NO WAITING DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State.... . Maple Village....... .. 668-9329 ..761-2733 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Roy Tarpley moves past Iowa's Dave Snedeker for the slam in Michigan's 53-49 victory over the Hawkeye's last Saturday. i2 33*- .?.~ 0. 1 427.3 10.40-37. 1$2 80 2.4 0)PPO'EN"..........2$7"S 44.5 142-230 $09 75-37 130 717 54.9 U Abou face: Tarpley' s dedication puts WINTER SEMESTER SPECIAL rough times behind him By PAUL HELGREN Watching the development of Roy Tarpley into a formidable force on the court this year, it's easy to forget that just last season he was a basketball wallflower watching from the sidelines, lost and all but forgotten in the can't- play-'em-all lineup shuffles. Unfulfilled self-expectations and a familiar spot on the bench combined to frustrate the then-freshman Tarpley. After an impressive 17-point debut in the '82 opener against Akron, the sinewy 6-10, 195-pound, center struggled and found himself relegated to part-time duty behind beefier team- mates. He sulked, partly in response to his lack of floor time. "MY ATTITUDE was real bad last year;" Tarpley admitted. "He was moody," said his coach, Bill Frieder. "And he wasn't working on the things he should have been working on:" But it didn't last. Rather than con- tinue sulking, the honorable mention high' school All-American vowed to adopt a more positive attitude and to devote all his energy to becoming a bet- ter ballplayer. IN OTHER words, 18-year-old Roy Tarpley did some growing up. "I talked to myself," he said, "and said in order to play and be successful I'd have to work harder and get a better attitude. You know, to love the school and love the coaches and like that." Part of Tarpley's commitment to hard work included playing in the local Sandy Sanders summer basketball league. Tarpley excelled and was named most valuable player of the } league. "HE WORKED real hard," said San- ders, a college referee who runs, the league. "He worked out two,, three times a day, shooting in the morning and playing in the afternoon. He would come to every game hoping some other player wouldn't show up so he could play in his place . . . He was very hungry." Armed with a fresh attitude, and with a summer of hard work behind him, Tarpley arrived at opening-day prac- tide a new man. The change did not go. unnoticed. Said teammate Tim McCormick, "Last year if he got knocked around in practice he might pout about it. This year he's working harder and he's taking criticisms from the coaches bet- ter." FRIEDER agreed. "His attitude this year has been super. He's been working real hard in practice. We had some problems with him last year, but he's coming along super." The "problem" days of last season are a distant memory for Tarpley now. Averaging over 20 minutes per game, the native New Yorker leads the team in blocked shots with 26, is second in the time to block shots. I love blocking shots. I think I have the whole team scared to come in the paint." NOT CONTENT to be just a shot- blocker, Tarpley has made great strides on the offensive end of the court as well. His quickness allows him to cruise by bigger and slower opponents and his jump shot and hook are more reliable now, too. But, as many Crisler Arena observers can tell you, it is Tar- pley's dunks - especially the new alley-oop from Eric Turner on the fast break - that bring even Michigan's gray-haired alumni to their feet. Turner initially hesitated to try the 'I love blocking shots. I think I have the whole team -scared to come in the paint.' - Michigan center Roy Tarpley ner chose to throw it straight to Tar- pley, who traveled. But the second time according to Tarpley, "He looked at me, I gave him the signal - 'Yeah, go for it.' Tarpley responded with a vicious slam, the Crisler crowd responded with enthusiastic applause, and the Wolverines responded with a scoring run. Plays like that make Frieder glad he looked beyond the 6-6 toothpick he first saw playing in Detroit summer basket- ball leagues two-and-a-half years ago. It also makes him thankful for the turn of events that brought Tarpley to Michigan. Splitting his childhood between New York and Mobile, Ala. with his gran- dparents, Tarpley moved to Mobile in his sophomore year of high school. Two unimpressive years of basketball left him looking for a new avenue. That's when an uncle from Detroit, Floyd Ed- wards, suggested he come there and play summer basketball. Frieder saw him play and the rest, as they say, is history. "When I first saw him he was only about 6-6, 6-7," Frieder remembered. "But he had good talent. He could jump, he could shoot . . . He's bigger now and he's going to get bigger yet." BIGGER YES, but how much better will he get? Some say the sky is the limit. "He's gonna be a great one, there's no doubt about that," said Frieder. "His potential is unbelievable," said referee Sanders, who has seen a lot of great players in his day. "He can go a lot farther. He's still just a babe in the woods." Heaven help Wolverine opponents when that "babe" finally grows up. $200 off on your choice of either a 1200 Baud Modem or high speed dot matrix graphics printer- with a purchase of the Ontel Amigo P.C. University Faculty and Student prices for the Amigo system in- cluding graphics extension dual diskette drives, C-Bosic, and MTS/MCP software begin at $1895. Offer expires Feb. 15, 1984 Call or come in to our Ann Arbor location for a demo of the unique capabilities of the Amigo. Lease, rental and financing available subject to credit approval. Osgood Computing Products OSGOOD COMPUTING provides complete service and PRODUCTS, INC. support on all Ontel Products. 115 Huron View Blvd. - Huron View Commerce Park VISA ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN ____665-6301 rebounds with a 6.9 average and has been consistent on offense, scoring 8.1 per game. "His improvement has been phenomenal," said Frieder. "His con- cept of the game is much better. He's much more effective with the ball. He's a better rebounder, better defensively. And he's already a great shot-blocker." AH, YES, blocking shots. It's Tar- pley's forte and there is nothing he seems to enjoy as much as snuffing the bad guys. And why not? Few players in the country make 'em eat leather better than Tarpley. Against Dayton he played like a hockey goaltender, swatting six shots harmlessly away. And though Tarpley was not credited with any rejections in last Saturday's 53-49 win over Iowa, his intimidating wingspan forced the Hawkeye big men to alter - and miss - their shots. "I think I have a lot of players in- timidated because they have to look for me," said the graduate of Detroit's Cooley High. "I'm weak-side helping all play because he has seen too many of his passes go off teammates' finger tips, but Tarpley convinced him to give it a try. "He (Turner) threw it to me a few times in practice, but he was like, 'Man that'll be a turnover for me.' He told me he didn't want to do it 'cause what if I miss it. I told him don't think, just throw it." AGAINST Northwestern an oppor- tunity for the alley-oop arose, but Tur- 14 MGH Institute of Health Professions SAC* Lunch Program RESUME WRITING 12- 130 ThursdaV. January 12th The Master in Science Program in Nursing Designed for non-nurse college graduates, this program leads to preparation as Clinical Nurse Specialists. Graduates are eligi- ble for RN licensure and specialized practice in one of six clinical areas. The Master of Science Program in Speech-Language Pathology. A two-year program of academic and clinical education leading also to clinical certification in Speech-Language Pathology is open to graduates of bachelors programs in communication disorders, psychology, linguistics, and selected other fields. Social Work in Health Care Program " Post-Baccalaureate Certificate program prepares college graduates for practice in a variety of health settings. " Post-Masters Certificate program provides an opportunity for social workers to develop the clinical -skills and knowledge needed for advanced practice in health care. --"------- ----------."..--- For more information, fill out and return this blank to: MGH Institute of Health Professions, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114. PLEASE PRINT. Please send me information on the programs indicated below: Master of Science Program in Nursing for non-nurse college graduates j C ' Master of Science Program in Speech-Language Pathology WORK WITH KIDS AT CAMP TAMARACK IN 1984 Brighton & Ortonville, Michigan Camp Kennedv. Aaree Outpost. and teen trios.