Page 8- The Michigan Daily - Saturday, January 14, 1984 M'infeeted with the winnmng Blues By LARRY FREED MADISON, - Poor Bill Frieder. His secret is out. Now the whole conference knows the Wolverines are going to be serious contenders for the Big Ten crown. It's, one thing to win at home, any team worth its Nikes is supposed to do that, but when the Wolverines start winning away from Crisler it's hard to conceal that the team is a legitimate contender. THE VICTORY over Minnesota is an indication that Michigan is a team to be reckoned with in the league. In ad- dition, a victory over the Badgers would give Michigan its best conferen- ce start since 1977. That's the good news. But as Friederf is always quick to point out, no Big Ten game is a gimme - and that includes the Badgers. "Wisconsin is a much improved team, even without (Brad Sellers)." remarked the fourth year coach. "(Wisconsin coach Steve Yoder) wasn't that unhappy that (Sellers) left." ALTHOUGH THE Badgers were hurt with the 6-10 center's transfer to Ohio State, Yoder has re-worked his offen- sive attack around the scoring of for- wards Cory Blackwell and Scott Roth. The duo has accounted for over 40 per conference contest. "Blackwell and Roth have really come on," Frieder said. "They have been scoring a ton of points lately." That fact was never more in evidence than Thursday night when the pair combined for 54 of Wisconsin's 81 poin- ts, as Yoder's Badgers engineered an upset win over Michigan State. BUT IF the Wolverines can shut down these two, the Badgers have little else to counter with offensively. Michigan should also be able to continue its dominance on the boards over Wiscon- sin's smallish front line of Roth (6-7), Blackwell (6-6), and Jay Laszewski (6- 8). "We have to take advantage of our size inside and not let their scorers hurt us," Frieder said. The Michigan mentor, however, wan- ts to leave nothing to chance and his prescription for Big Ten success is more than just points and rebounds. "We have to get ourselves mentally prepared," said the coach turned physiciah. "We have to get good rest and eat the right amount of food." And now that Dr. Frieder's team is no longer the best kept secret in the Mid- west, he is evidently willing to divulge his strategy for this season. Eat, sleep, take two road wins and call him in the morning. Badgers to seek cure Michigan - Minnesota Stats .j MICHIGAN . MINNESOTA Min FG/AFT/A Min Rellford..........13 McCormick .. Tarpley ......... Turner.......... Rockymore........ Joubert........... Wade............ Pelekoudas... Henderson........ Team ............. 29 33 36 36 26 20 4 3 FG/A FT/A R 3/5 0/0 0 4/9 3/4 6 8/10 1/2 12 3/11 0/0 6 5/9 2/2 1 5/6 4/6 1 0/2 0/2 3 0/0 0/0 0 0/0 0/0 1 4 A 0 0 2 5 2 1 0 0 0 PF TP 2 6 2 11 3 17 2 6 0 12 4 14 30 1 0 0 0 Brooks.............34 Dahke...........26 Shasky ........... 28 Wilson...........'31 Davis ...... ...... 8 Petersen...........24 Smith ............. 8 Jackson..........5 Skanes.............6 Team ............. 9/14 3/7 2/3 9/9 6/16 4/6 0/0 0/0 1/2 0/1 0/0 0/1 z/4 0/0 0/10 0/1 010 0/1 R 3 3 9 3 5 2 1 1 0 1 A 1 1 1 2 .3 2 0 0 1 PF TP 3 18 1 6 2 4 S 12 3 12 28 0 0 0 0 1 2. .Dutcher, Frieder pull magic... ...hocus-pocus with line ups-. HOUDINI WASN't there, but both coaches had a few tricks up their sleeves in Thursday night's 66-62 Michigan basketball victory over Minnesota. Barely 24 hours after he said Jim Petersen's calf injury would keep the 6-10 forward out of this week's game, Gopher coach Jim Dutcher brought his big man off the bench for 24 minutes of action. Petersen hobbled slightly but still managed to score eight points on a 4-6 shooting night. He also helped teammate John Shasky bottle up, Michigan's Tim McCor- mick in the second half. McCormick bulled his way to nine points in four rebounds in the first half of Thursday night's game. Sandwiched between Petersen and the 7-0 Shasky, Michigan's senior center tallied only two points in two rebounds after the intermission. It wasn't a bad night's work for Petersen, a man Dutcher said "had the type of injury that you couldn't hurry up and heal." At the other end of the court, Wolverine coach Bill Frieder surprised every- one by-removing two starters from the lineup that beat Iowa in Crisler Arena last Saturday. Frieder substitut- ed Roy Tarpley and Rich Rellford for Butch Wade and Antoine Joubert. Tarpley made Frieder look like a genius. The 6-10 center hit eight of 10 shots - three hooks, two tip-ins, and a pair of dunks - and finished with 17 points, twelve rebounds, and four blocks. On second thought, perhaps Tarpley made Frieder look more like a slow learner.' The fast-talking, faster- scoring sophomore consistenly has out-performed Michigan's other fron- tline players and his start was long overdue. Rellford, on the other hand, fizzled. He did not grab a rebound in 13 minutes of action. A poor outing from the Riviera Beach, Fla. native is nothing new to Jokisch Michigan basketball followers. Rellford regularly blows layups and - . stick with hoops dunks. He rarely gathers a defensive rebound. If Frieder wants scoring he should go with Joubert. If rebounding is his fancy, he should start Wade. Rellford provides neither ... Minnesota's team has a definite Michigan flavor. Dutcher is a native of Alpena and an alumnus of the Big U. He coached at Alpena Community College and Eastern Michigan, and assisted Johnny Orr at Michigan before taking the Minnesota job in 1975. Senior forward Roland Brooks,who scored a game placement and career- high 18 points in Thursday night s contest, graduated from Detroit Macken- zie. Freshman forward Kevin Smith is a product of Magic Johnson's alma mater, Lansing Everett. Shasky teamed with the Wolverine's Paul Jokisch at Birmingham Brother Rice. "There are a lot of good basketball players in this state and Michigan and Michigan State can't take all of them," Dutcher said.... Shasky, incidentally, is one of the conference's most improved rebounders and defensive players. If the sophomore center learns a few moves at the of- fensive qnd of the court, look out Big Ten ... Rumors continue that Michigan's Jokisch will abandon the basketball court to play for Bo Schembechler's football team. Don't believe them until you hear them from his own mouth. Jokisch has not played much this year but he loves basketball too much to quit the game... Did Michigan State really lose to Wisconsin and Northwestern? Maybe Spartan coach Jud Heathcote should arrange a scrimmage with my in- tramural team The way ISU is playing, it couldn't win the 5-9 and under league. I =4 TOTALS........... 28/52 10/16 Attendance: 14,366 34 10 17 66 Blackwell ... Badger's big gun TOTALS...........30/59 2/8 28 11 17 62 Halftime score: MICHIGAN 37, Minnesota 30 oopsters fade, fall to Gophers games of the season, but still fell on the By PHIL NUSSEL short side of the score to lower their After last night's 81-75 loss to Min- nesota in the. Big Ten home opener, women's basketball coach Gloria Soluk has to be wondering what it will take for her team to win. The Wolverines played one of their best record to 2-9 overall and 0-3 in the con- ference. Offensively, Michigan was very im- pressive in the first half hitting an in- credible 76 percent from the floor and 10- 10 at the foul line (they set a new team record hitting all 13 foul shots in the game). Forward Wendy Bradetich set the pace hitting 11 of 15 from the floor along with four foul shots to round up 24 points. The Wolverines led at half, 48- 40. IT WAS evident, though, that Michigan would have to continue its hot shooting if it hoped to win because the -----m --= m 15% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE I WITH THIS COUPON I (Except sole items) EXPIRES 1/21/84 ' md' mm m m m=== mm m Badgers' inside game, fueled by last season's Big Ten scoring champion Laura Coenen, was dominating the Wolverines. The bottom fell out in the second half. The Michigan shooting percentage fell to 30 percent. "It wasn't that they didn't have open shots," Soluk said. "We had the same game plan and we played the same offense. Our forwards were open and I don't know what hap- pened." "I THINK our game plan was sound and everything we lid was sound, but if you can't score, then we can't win. And we did not score in the second half." The Wolverines held their lead six minutes into the second half, 55-54, but then the Badgers dumped in eight unanswered points - six coming from Coenen. The game was not over yet. Michigan stayed close and after two Orethia Lilly jumps shots, the team took its last lead, 73-72 with 2:46 left. Hopes for victory died when the Wolverines failed to get the ball throughthe hoop on the next few possessions. At the other end of the floor, Minnesota scored six unanswered points to insure the victory. DESPITE SOME encouraging per- formances, such as center Sandy. Svoboda's career high 18 points, Soluk was anything but happy about the game. "You don't feel happy when you lose," she said. "I give the kids credit, they adjusted to being without our cen- ter (6-7 center Lynn Morozko is academically ineligible), but they shouldn't be happy about coming close. If they do that, they are never going to win." As is the case with most games, this contest was decided by the inside game. By controlling the boards,,the Badgers were able to get second and third shots while only giving Michigan one chance to score at the other end of the floor. The Badgers, winning their third straight Big Ten game, out-rebounded the Wolverines, 39-24. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: gr mm m= mm = mmo I I ARMY I9SURPLUS 1 201 E. Washington at Fourth 994-3572 1 { Now Open 7 I Days a Week * to Serve You W !! !lmiirrimm Hot Pistons wax Bulls 115-104 By DOUGLAS B. LEVY Special to the Daily PONTIAC - Withstanding a 14-6 Chicago surge midway through the fourth period, the first-place Pistons turned back the Chicago Bulls, 115-104 last night in front of more than 15,000 fans at the Silverdome. Detroit went on an 8-2 spurt, to open the final quarter, taking a 92-81 lead, but Chicago stormed back to within three points, 98-95. FOLLOWING a Detroit timeout with 4:50 to play, the Pistons came out hot with yet another spurt and closed out the contest. The loss dropped the-four- th-place Bulls to 15-19. Piston coach Chuck Daly was pleased with the performance of his team. "You've got to get your bunch (team) to respond," said the first-year coach. "It takes nine or ten people. Tonight we got the right people in at the right .time." Kelly Tripuka and John Long scored 23 points each, supported by Bill Laim- beer, Isiah Thomas (15 assists), and Vinnie Johnson, who scored 22, 19, and 16 points respectively. John Long was also happy after thd game. "I think Chuck has done a fan- tastic job bringing us together. We're playing good team basketball. Tonight the Pistons will be visiting the Cleveland Cavaliers. Detroit is now 21-15 having won 10 of its last 12 games and five of its last six road games. Sabres 3, Oilers 1 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Edmon- ton's Wayne Gretzky managed to keep his National Hockey League con- secutive-game point-scoring streak alive but the Oilers saw their 13-game undefeated string halted as the Buffalo Sabres came away with a 3-1 decision last night. Buffalo goaltender Bob Sauve and the Sabre defense frustrated the high- scoring Oilers for 47 minutes before rptr eat ,un Pat Hnihes fnr Edmon- AP Photo The Chicago Bulls' Quinton Dailey drives past Piston Lionel Hollins in action last night. TRACK THE WOLVERINES THRU THE BIG TEN BASKETBALL f SEASON ON WPAG Q t vr