Page 10 -The Michigan Daily -Friday, January 13, 1984 Wolverines bury Gophers (Continued from Page 1; Michigan's lead to four, but Joubert sank both ends of a one-and-one free throw opportunity to restore the six- point spread. Minnesota's Jim Petersen finished the scoring with a dunk at the ten- second mark. Joubert missed the front end of a one- and-one with eight seconds left, but the Gophers couldn't get a shot off before the buzzer. MICHIGAN coach Bill Frieder was pleased with the way his team attacked .the Minnesota zone down the stretch. "Against Iowa, we didn't do a good job against the press 'cause we didn't take it to the basket," Frieder said. "We told Rock and Eric (Turner) and Joubert to fill three spots on the court and take it to the basket if it's uncon- tested." Minnesota coach Jim Dutcher was happy with Michigan's late-game shot selection but unhappy with the results. "JOUBERT took a couple of tough shots and Rockymore did too - he took a rocket shot from the corner," Dutcher said. "When you're four down, these are the shots you, want them to take. But to their credit, they make them." Tarpley, who scored most of his poin- ts on a variety of hooks and dunks, star- ted the game only because Frieder was not certain about whom Minnesota would start. The Gophers' Petersen had not played in Minnesota's three previous Big Ten contests and wasn't suppose to play last night. Frieder star- ted Tarpley because he felt Tarpley could defend whomever Minnesota played. "I didn't know who they were going to start and I didn't want to, make the decision at game time," Frieder said. "Tarpley did a good job. He got the boards when we needed them." MICHIGAN held a 37-30 halftime lead, but the Gophers tightened it up thanks to 12 second-half points by senior forward Roland Brooks. The 6-7 Detroit native finished with a career high 18 points. Gopher guards Marc Wilson and Davis scored 12 points apiece. Peter- sen, who played 24 minutes off the ben- ch, added eight. Tim McCormick scored 11 for the Wolverines. Nine of the 6-11 senior's points came in the first half when Petersen sat on the bench. Michigan remains tied for first place in the Big Ten with a 3-0 conference record. Purdue, which beat Ohio State last night, also is 3-0. Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN .... Purdue ......... Indiana ........ Illinois .... . . Northwestern .. Michigan State . Iowa ......... Wisconsin ...... Ohio State ..... Minnesota.*.. Conf WL 30 30 20 21 12 12 12 12 02 03 Overall WL 11 2 103 93 112 84 75 84 57 75 84 Joubert.- ... tosses in 14 Wisconsin spoils MSU, 81 74 MADISON (AP) - Rick Olson scored a career-high 29 points and Cory Blackwell added 25, as Wisconsin posted a 81-74 upset victory, over Michigan State in Big Ten college basketball last night. The Badgers won their first conference game against two losses, improving their overall record to 5-7. The Spartans, ohe of the Big Ten favorites en- tering the season, are 1-2 and 7-5. BLACKWELL scored six points as Wisconsin jum- ped in front 10-2. But behind Scott Skiles' five points, the Spartans rallied to tie the score at 12-12 midway through the first half. Then Olson, who had missed his first five shots, made two key defensive plays to give the Badgers a 38-28 halftime lead. North Carolina 74, Maryland 62 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - Sam Perkins scored 18 of his 26 points in the second half and Michael Jor- dan added 20,leading top-ranked North Carolina to a 74-62 Atlantic Coast Conference victory over No. 5 Maryland last night. It was the 11th consecutive triumph for the un- beaten Heels, tying the school's third-longest winning streak at the start of a season. Maryland is 10-2 after having a nine-game winning streak snapped. Jordan scored 12 consecutive points to give North Carolina a 62-56 lead with 4:43 remaining, the largest spread of the game at that point. Purdue 63, Ohio State 52 COLUMBUS (AP) - Purdue, led by Jim Rowin- ski's 21 points, built 11-point leads early in the second half last night'and then withstood an Ohio State rally for a 63-52 victory that kept the Boilermakers un- beaten in Big Ten Conference basketball. Ohio State, limited'to its lowest scoring total of the season, dropped its third consecutive game, its longest losing streak since the 1980-81 season. WITH TONY CAMPBELL and Ron Stokes, the Buckeyes one-two scoring punch, having an off-night, Troy Taylor paced Ohio State with 20 points. Campbell, scoring 10 points, stretched his double figure scoring streak to 46 games. He came into the game averaging 19 points. Stokes, averaging 15 poin- ts, managed only six points. . AP Photo North Carolina's Sam Perkins finds his bid for a basket ruined by Maryland's Jeff Atkins (10) and Adrian Branch, in last night's action. Thinelads test ten open season at EMU took over. The 6-foot-1 guard scored 13 o f P1 00, 4 414 Um~~100 d Rent~ ANNARBOR INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5tt ALe at liberty 761.9700 $2.00 SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. MON. THRU FRI. DAILY 1:00 P.M. Matinees! "Paul Cox's direction displays the kind of lunatic touches that virtualy define the comedy of BillForsyth (m Gil;:oal Heror -Vincent Canby, New York Times points and Grapplers hit home mats By SCOTT SALOWICH Michigan's travel-weary wrestling team returns to its own mat Saturday night to take on Arizona State and In- diana in a pair of matches. The Wolverines are coming off a rugged road trip which saw them drop four meets in as many days. Two of those losses, however, were by close margins to the highly ranked squads from Lehigh and Clarion State. "IF WE had won just one more match in each of those two meets, we could easily be nationally ranked right now," said Michigan coach Dale Bahr, whose squad is struggling at 1-5 this season. A win over Arizona State would be a big step toward the national, ranking which Bahr is hoping for. The Sun Devils are 9-4 this season and are "con- sistently in the top 15 nationally," accor- ding to the Wolverine coach. Bahr expects a "touch and go meet which will probably go down to the 190 pound and heavyweight matches." Wolverine Kirk Trost, 16-7, will take on Mike Davie at 190, while the 25-5 Rob Rechsteiner faces Rod Severn, ASU's top heavyweight. The Indiana squad is the forgotten man of this weekend's meet. The Hoosiers are 1-3 overall, including a 45- 0 thrashing by Wisconsin, and Bahr is confident that his team can handle them. Cage rs host Gopher's A pair of front-line Gophers may bury the Michigan women's basketball team's conference home opener tonight, if last week's statistics are any indication. Minnesota forward Carol Peterka, 6- 0, a sophomore, pulled fn Big Ten Player-of-the Week honors by pulling down a career-high 14 rebounds and scoring 11 points against Purdue last Sunday, all in just 13.5 minutes. A week ago against Illinois, Peterka gave a career-high scoring performance, tossing in 23 points and grabbing 12 rebounds.. AT THE OTHER forward for the 2-0 Gophers is junior Laura Coenen, Min- nesota's leader in scoring and reboun- ding. Recovering from the flu last Sun- day, the Big Ten's leading scorer last season contributed 22 points to her team's victory. - STEVE WISE By CHRISTOPHER GERBASI The first meet for the Michigan mens track team is just a shot, vault and a jump away today at Eastern Michigan and it will hopefully be a preview of things to come from the, Wolverine's impending track season. The open meet will feature about 20 schools, but Wolverine coach Jack Harvey views it as a warm-up for his team. "WE'LL RUN about 85 percent of our people," said Harvey. "It's pretty low- key for us. We're holding some people until next week. We're just coming back from Christmas break and some kids are out of shape." Michigan's strong poiint is an. all- senior field crew with some pretty im- pressive credentials. John Nielsen and Scott Erickson will both be putting the shot 60 feet, Dave Lugin can high jump seven feet, Dave Woolley is capable of pole vaulting 16 feet and Vince Bean and Derek Harper can both long jump 25 feet. The Wolverines' distance crew will sorely miss standout performers Brian Diemer and Gerard Donakowski, who were lost to graduation, but runners Dave Meyer, Chris Brewster and Ron Simpson will try to fill their track shoes as the two can all run in races ranging from one mile to three miles. HIGH HURDLES should prove no ob- stacle for Derek Stinson who had Michigan's season best last year and set a school record in the 55 and 6( meter hurdles respectively. Harvey also hopes to have back Thomas Wilcher, who has been plagued by in, juries in both track and football. The middle distances should be good hands, or feet, with Todd Stever- son and Rob Grainger who finished second and third respectively in the 600 yard run at last season's Big Ter~ Championships. Steverson alsc qualified for the NCAA Championships in the 500 meters as a freshman lasi year. The Wolverines are, however, hurti- ng for short sprinters. "IN THE 60 and 300, we're fairl weak;" said Harvey. "We don't have headliner in the sprints. Our strength this year will probably be irrfield events plus people who may not necessarily bE Big Ten champions, but who will be in a position to score." ,Harvey sees promise in newcomers Scott Crawford, a long and high jum- per, and John Lawton, a quarter-milE champ from Minnesota. A crop oi freshmen distance runners are un proven at this point and Harvey will b4 anxious to see how they develop in- doors. As for the season ahead, it's too early to tell how Michigan will fare, but Har- vey believes Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois are the teams to beat in the Big Ten. "We're not really going to be bad," he said, "but I don't think we'll be as good as last year. It's hard to tell. I'll know more after the Relays (next weekend's Michigan Relays) and I'll see whatkil ,of potential we have." Harvey will see what kind of shape his athletes are in today in Ypsilanti. The shotput competition will get under way at about noon, while the preliminaries will be held all afternoon. The firnals should start at 6:00 p.m. Are You a Hot Dog' OPTIONAL SNOW BUNNY Winter model. THIRST-AID KIT For emergencies, or any other time. FUR-LINED GLOVES 100% imitation mink. PILLOW Even the great skiers need something to fall back on. SHOULDER PADS For the dreaded Chinese downhill, whatever that is. SHORT-SLEEVE SHIRT Pretend it's Hawaii and-- you'll keep warm. . fK, t i SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Iowa 42, Northwestern 39 Purdue 63, Ohio State 52 Villanova 65, Georgetown 63 20T Lousiana Tech 83, Notre Dame 56 North Carolina 74, Maryland 62 Colorado 66, Marquette 62 Temple 83, Massachusetts 66 Georgetown 72, St. Bonaventure 58 Houston 88, Texas Tech 66 NHL Islanders 7, Montreal 3 Rangers 2, Flyers I Quebec 4, New Jersey 1 NBA Los Angeles 95, Kansas City 89 Portland 128, Houston 117 I ~. - SIX-PACK When the thirst-aid kit runs dry. Serve chilled. SNOWBALL MOLD For size "D" snowballs WIENIE-WARMER What's a hot dog without a wienie? .. REAR VIEW I MIRROR In case you want to ski backwards. s ALTIMETER To tell how high you are. PORTA CAST Personally autographed by Jean Claude Kiley's mother's plumber. , ' X'71 I , _1 ....... ,w , ---'' 0 U mi miin;rmi