Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 31, 1984 Rockets rip lifeless stickers, 3-1 By RICK KAPLAN Whoever said that the best offense is a good defense must not have been wat- ching the Michigan field hockey team. Despite a superhuman effort by Wolverine goalie Jonnie Terry and ef- fective play by the rest of the defense, a complete iacK ot ottense proved to be Michigan's undoing, as Toledo left Ann Arbor yesterday with a 3-1 victory. LISA SCHOFIELD scored the lone Michigan goal at 18:10 of the first half. Schofield set up the play by passing to Lisa Murray at the center. Murray Collins unsatisfied as season winds down Terry, a senior from Dearborn, had to contend with 30 Rocket shots. In the second half, she made numerous kick saves to keep her team in the game. During one stretch at the end of the con- test, she made three consecutive tough stops, and finally kicked the ball clear of the goal crease. TOLEDO GOT on the board first, seven minutes into the game. Amy Hudson scored from in front of the goal after she controlled the rebound of Theresa Bishof's shot. Anne Porter scored the game- winning tally for the Rockets midway through the second half. Porter, a forward from Morenci, Mi., also knocked a rebound past Terry. The score remained 2-1 Toledo, for most of the remainder of the contest. Toledo kept the pressure on the Wolverine defense and Terry, who made save after save. BISHOF FINALLY added an in- surance goal at 33:10. She took a pass from Patricia Demers five feet in front of the goal on the right, and shot the ball into the left corner of the net. The closest Michigan came to scoring in the final half came on a low angle shot by Murray which passed from one end of the goal to the other without going in. Wolverine coach Karen Collins said she was not satisfied with her team's performance. "But, I'm never satisfied," she added. Collins does not see things getting any easier for her team this weekend. Michigan, now 1-12-4, faces Iowa Friday and Purdue on Sunday. "Iowa is the number-two team in the Big Ten, and Purdue is also a good team," she said. "We will have to put two good halves together to beat either one." SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Pistons bounce C124-107 Collins ... not satisfied worked her way up the middle, and finally passed back to Schofield on her left. The senior forward blasted the ball past Rocket goalie Sherri Mikolon to tie the score at 1-1. Aside from one flurry late in the first half, the home team was rarely able to get the ball into the Toledo end of the field. Michigan had only six shots on net all game. By STEVE HERZ Special to the Daily PONTIAC - The season is just three games old, but it appears that the Pistons already have us aboard their annual rollercoaster ride. After being pasted by two of the NBA's elite, the Knicks and Celtics, Detroit took on the league doormat Cleveland Cavaliers last night. Yes, the Pistons got their first win, 124-107, but impressive it was not. COACH CHUCK Daly was not ec- static with the results, saying, "We've still got a ways to go.'' Nonetheless the coach welcomed the team's first win with open arms. "It wasn't pretty," he said, "but it's still nice to get that first win." The Cavs (0-3) quickly showed the crowd why they haven't won this season. Kelly Tripucka scored six of his team-high 31 points as the Pistons reeled off the game's first 12 points. As it turned out that was the game, right there. Cleveland crawled to within nine at the end of one period, trailing 35- 26. But the Pistons then broke off a 14-4 spurt to start off the second period and led 64-48 at intermission. The Cavs could not pose a serious threat to the Pistons' cushion in the second half, coming within ten points on several occasions but never trimming the lead to one digit. Detroit center Bill Laimbeer dominated play from the middle. He filled up the nets for 15 points, had 15 rebounds, while limiting Cleveland rookie Melvin Turpin to two points. Said Laimbeer, "I assume he didn't play a very good game." Penguins 4, Red Wings 3 PITTSBURGH (AP) - Wayne Babych scored two goals to lead the Pit- tsburgh Penguins to a 4-3 National Hockey League victory over the Detroit Red Wings last night. Babych broke a 1-1 tie with 1:48 left in the second period when he scored on a pass from Mario Lemieux. Lemieux carried the puck in from the red line, avoided two checks and slipped a pass to Babych, who beat goalie Greg Stefan. Warren Young gave Pittsburgh a 3-1 lead at 2:17 of the third period, when he took a pass from Lemieux and fired a slap shot past Stefan. Blue Lines Icers No. 5 in nation... ..who would have believed it? By ADAM MARTIN IT'S HARD to believe, isn't it. The Wolverine hockey team is ranked fifth in the country, after just six conference games. Who would have thought last year's club - a team drowning in ninth-place ineptitude of the CCHA - would resurrect itself so quickly? Certainly not new head coach Red Berenson. The former Michigan and NHL star stressed before the 1984-'85 campaign began that improvement was his main concern - improvement from season to season. Granted, Berenson was enthusiastic about disposing of last season's dismal program and replacing it with a championship hockey team, but he wasn't about to do it in one season, let alone six games. Yet, after featuring a powerful, high-scoring offense in four of those con- tests, along with a solid defense, the Wolverines have been suddenly hailed as one of the top ten teams in the country by America's college hockey coaches. But listen, don't get too excited, at least not yet. Michigan has yet to play 85% of its season, and the bottom can fall out quickly, just ask Bo. In all the glory of last Friday's down-to-the-wire victory over Bowling Green (John Bjorkman nailed the winning goal with 48 seconds left in regulation) and a Wolverine team that has outscored opponents 32-24, Michigan has still had its problems. After watching the Wolverines lose twice from the pressbox, it is safe to say the problems are real and will have to be remedied before Michigan can honestly be a topten team. For starters, the Wolverines' opportunistic effort has been questionable. While being out- played for most of the game in losses to Miami and Bowling Green, Michigan had its chances to mount comebacks, if only the team could have converted its many good scoring opportunities. And just as winning has its posititve side- effects, there is a chain reaction "to the Wolverine woes. In its two losses, much of the team's inability to put the puck in the net resulted from doing time in the penalty box. Saturday night in Bowling Green, Michigan was called for 16 two-minute minors, causing it to play almost half the game shorthanded. And when the Wolverines had the man-advantage, they Norton failed to score - six times. As Red put it, "We didn't make 'em count." Not converting your opportunities has a good deal to do with momentum, also. Michigan failed to generate one iota of momentum Saturday night, much to the distress of the players who fought back with illegal ice conduct. Still, it 's not as if the Wolverines couldn't identify why they lost. Brad Jones, the club's leading scorer, was quick to blame the malady of over-confidence. One that he felt can be very contagious. "We didn't come ready to play Saturday night," said the Sterling Heights native, "we were probably too high on Friday night's win, and we didn't take it with us." Jones also lamented the amount of time Michigan spent shorthanded because it played havoc with the Wolverines effort to generate offense. The loss to Miami resulted from similar complications. "We went in Friday night knowing we were going to win," said rookie defenseman Jeff Norton of his club's first contest of the season two weeks ago. "We took it for granted that we were gong to win Saturday and we didn't come alive." Not coming alive is something good teams shouldn't have to worry about, according to Jones, especially on the road. "We can't get too overconfident over one win," he said, "the good teams have to win on the road, and it's not good enough to go .500." Which brings us back to the fifth-place ranking. If Michigan has been playing .500 hockey on the road and been spending 40% of its ice time in the penalty box, how can coaches rank the squad fifth? It's simple. The Wolverines' explosive offense and prevent defense produced four solid victories, all of which have overshadowed the negatives - at least in the coaches' minds. But as Bob Richardson, head coach of the number-one ranked Boston University Terriers, put it, "It's nice for people to think that highly of us so early, but I don't want to be complacent about it. It's not an achievement in a tangible sense." 'Nuff said. GRIDDE PICKS 4 4i 4 "I e START YOUR HOLIDAY BREAK EARLY 4 I 4 Some games are just so complex, the intricacies of the matchup so fine, that it takes more than one week to choose the victor. So this week, back by popular demand, Florida State at Arizona State and Miami at Louisville. If you think you've finally got these contests figured out, deposit your picks at the Student Publications. Building at 420 Maynard Street. You could be rewarded with a small product of Pizza Bob's. 1. MICHIGAN at Purdue 2. Indiana at Ohio State 3. Minnesota at Illiois 4. Wisconsin at Iowa 5. Northwestern at Michigan St. 6. California at Washington 7. Missouri at Oklahoma 8. Texas at Texas Tech 9. Mississippi at Louisiana St. 10. Miami, Fla. at Louisville 11. No. Carolina at So. Carolina 12. Kansas St. at Oklahoma St. 13. Boston College at Penn St. 14. Auburn at Florida 15. Memphis St. at Georgia 16. Florida St. at Arizona St. 17. So. California at Stanford 18. Iowa St. at Nebraska 19. Duke at Georgia Tech 20. Frats against Fritz at Daily Libels I .4 say_-A-Me MieAe" ICUT MUFFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST FROM AS .ynstalled By LOWAS.. Trained Specialists NSTALLED Featuring ......k - FITR MANY 2k AT 0 m I