Basketball vs. Yugoslavia Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Michigan vs. Ohio St. Televised by CBS Saturday, 12 noon ,The Michigan Daily Wednesday, November 14, 1984 Page 9 Jokisch cages basketball to play for Bo By PAUL HELGREN It was December of last year, just af- ter Michigan played in the Sun Bowl basketball tournament, when Paul Jokisch decided he had had enough - he wasn't going to play basketball at Michigan anymore. In fact, he wasn't going to play anything at Michigan anymore. Frustrated with his lack of playing time, Jokisch, a 6-8, 230-pound forward, was going to chuck it all and transfer to the University of Tennessee at the end of the season. There he would make a fresh start, suiting up for basketball and football. BUT THOSE plans changed three weeks later after a little chat with Bo Schembechler. "Somebody in the basketball office told him what I was going to do." Jokisch recalled. "So he called me into his office and we talked....He told me he thought I could work here and be suc- cessful but that it would take a little time. He showed me that he wanted me to play in his program so I decided to stay." So Jokisch decided to give up basket- ball, not Michigan. Instead of picking up splinters on basketball coach Bill Frieder's bench, he would try his hand at picking off spirals as a wide receiver for Bo. "As far as I was concerned," Jokisch said, "basketball was out the door and never to be seen again." BUT DESPITE a relatively suc- cessful rookie season on the gridiron (six receptions, two TDs), Jokisch is considering a return to the hardwood of Crisler Arena.. And with big man Tim McCormick moved on to the NBA, Frieder would love to havehim back. "We need size, and to get Paul Jokisch out would help us," Frieder said. "But...if it'll hurt his football, I don't want him. I want the best for Paul Jokisch." Jokisch cited the Big Ten's new 45- second shot clock as motivation to return to basketball. His speed (4.55 in the 40) and size would be a great asset in a fast-paced game. But the Bir- mingham native said he would submit to Schembechler's will. "THE MOST important factor would be getting Bo's consent," Jokisch said. "If he doesn't want me to play (basketball) then there's a problem. And if I get his blessing then it would be okay. If he feels it wouldn't help me in any way then I wouldn't go. "I'm definitely going to honor his decision." Schembechler has declined to com- ment on Jokisch's decision, saying, "We'll sit down and talk once the (foot- ball) season's over." IT SHOULDN'T be surprising that Jokisch yearns to play basketball again. Ever since he was a kid, it has been his prefered sport. "Basketball's always been my first love," said Jokisch, who was first-team prep all-state at Birmingham Brother Rice in both basketball and football. "Really, they had to talk me into playing football. after my sophomore year (in high school). I was gonna quit and just play basketball." Rice's foot- ball coach, Al Fracassa, convinced Jokisch to stick around. The following fall Jokisch teamed up with quarter- back Dave Yarema (now at Michigan State) to lead the Warriors to the state class 'A' championship. Numerous scholarship offers - in both basketball and football - came Jokisch's way during his senior year. Both Frieder and Schembechler were after him; Frieder won the chase. BUT FRIEDER later Dicked un four other big men - Roy Tarpley, Rich Rellford, Butch Wade and Robert Hen- derson. "I knew they were gonna sign a few new guys for the front line," said Jokisch;. "But at no time did I expect him (Frieder) to sign five thorough- breds. If I had been the last one to sign, I wouldn't have signed." After .two seasons as the fifth man in this talented quintet, a frustrated Jokisch looked for another athletic avenue. "I felt like I was wasting my time and I could have been developing my talents for football," he said. He was set to transfer to Tennessee (where he has many friends, including Chicago Bear wide receiver Willie Gault) until Schembechler changed his mind. SO FAR it appears the decision to stay has been a good one. Though Jokisch made just four receptions in his first five games and none in the next three, lately he has become a big-play threat. At Purdue two weeks ago he made a nifty 15-yard touchdown grab in the corner of the end zone. And last Saturday against Minnesota he was on the receiving end of a wingback option that netted 67 yards and a score. "He's getting better every week," said Schembechler. So Jokisch's return to football has been a successful one. And while a similarly triumphant return to basket- ball is on his mind, Jokisch wants to make it clear where his loyalty lies these days. "Right now the number-one priority is football," he said. "It will always be number one from now on.' WOLVERINES' SEASON FINISHED AT 1-12: Spikers define disappointment Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Wide receiver Paul Jokisch listens intently as Bo Schembechler instructs during spring practice. Jokisch says his first priority is football although he is also considering a return to the basketball court. Bangers penetrate to IM finals By JIM GINDIN Disappointing. This is the word every member of the volleyball team has used at one time in describing its 11-16 record (1-12 in the Big Ten) this season. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary reads "disappoint: to fail to fulfill the expectation or hope of." A good summary of the 1984 volleball season. JUST A month-and-a-half ago, coach Barb Canning said the team had a good chance of reaching the conference playoffs (four teams are invited). Its record was 8-3 and hopes were high. Nine straight conference losses and 12 losses overall followed in the ensuing 14 matches. "We went into every game expecting to win," said Can- ning before the final game against Michigan State last Friday. "We expect to win tonight." THE TEAM ended the season with its best effort, by trouncing the Spartans. "The defense was the best it has been all year," she said after the game. "Each individual was very good defen- sively, but the team hadn't come together until tonight." Teamwork is precisely what the women will work on during the off-season. Starting in January, they will prac- tice twice a week and will compete in five tournaments next semester. BARRING injuries of the type that kept starters Jayne and Jenne Hickman and Lisa Vahi on the sidelines to the extent that the six regular starters never played together, next year's lineup will have improved along those lines. Other improvements will come from the recruitment of new players. Canning is considering "about 100" high schoolers for the incoming freshman roster places. These recruits live as far away as Colorado and South Carolina. "We need height," she said. "We're lacking in the blocking area. Anyone with the ability can conceivably step into a starting role." FROM THE same club that brought Scarborough, On- tario players Andrea Williams and Vahi, are two recruits over six feet tall who could step into those roles. "If we can get those two, we can just cruise right in there to the Big Ten championships," said Williams, the Wolverine's captain. Despite frigid weather conditions, the Bang Gangers managed to sneak by the Slip & Fall team in sudden-death over- time at the tartan turf field. Steve Gar- cia ripped off a 20-yard run on the final play in overtime to give the Gang the deepest penetration of the extra period to seal up the Banger's victory. the ball. We could have had three in- terceptions." Baggies 26, DSD-B 0 Thanks to the poor weather con- ditions, the Baggies were scheduled to play indoors in "Bo's building". The scheduling quirk paid off handsomely as the Baggies used their speed to burn by DSD-B. R. Spencer Phippen snagged two touchdowns and Dave Lehman hauled in one as Tom Stackhouse snagged two touchdowns as Tom Stackhouse rifled four touch- down passes in the shutout. Stackhouse exclaimed, "Playing inside really made the difference in the game." Democrats 8, RLBS 0 Although Walter Mondale failed to win last week, the Democrats took out some of their frustration by handing the RLBS squad a shutout. The only score of the game came when Tyler Paetkeu pitched to Joshua Berg on a punt return and Berg broke loose for the game win- ner on the tartan turf. The Democrats played stingy defense against the RLBS team, picking off three passes - two by Berg and another by Steven Thome. Illegal Procedure 6, MACS 6 OT When the MACS were unable to punch the ball in from the one-yard line on the last play in regulation time, Illegal Procedure took control in sudden death overtime to clinch the win in another penetration victory. Kelvin Lee unloaded a bomb to Steve Hyman for the MACS only score in what one player, Randall Brand, called "a tough ballgame." IM Roundup was compiled by Jerry Mulh. AP Basketball Top Twenty GRIDDE PICKS 1. Georgetown (55) .... 2. Illinois (4) ........ 3. DePaul (3) ....... 4. Indiana (1) ....... 5. Oklahoma .......... 6. Duke ............... 7. St. John's ........... 8. Memphis St......... 9. Washington ......... 10. So. Methodist ....... 11. UNLV............ 12. Syracuse ........ 13. N. Carolina St....... 14. Louisiana St........ 15. Virginia Tech ...... 16. Arkansas ........ 17. Louisville .......... 18. Kentucky .......... 19. Kansas ............. 20. Georgia Tech ....... 34-3 26-5 27-3 22-9 29-5 24-10 18-12 26-7 24-7 25-11 29-6 23-9 19-14 18-11 22-13 25-7 24-11 29-5 22-10 18-11 Pts. 1248 1044 1038 994 945 848 839 753 662 646 441 434 395 340 329 298 281 280 251 250 Griddes and the Michigan-Ohio State classic go together. Who can forget when Woody Hayes tore up the sideline markers? The poor guy had lost Grid-. des. Or the time old Dr. Strange-Hayes punched the cameraman? It was a violent but natural reaction to seeing one's Griddes hopes go down the drain. Michigan kicker Mike Lantry once buried his face in the turf after he shanked a last second, potential game- winning field goal. Gone were his visions of a Griddes crown. Gone were the years of preparation that went into trying to attain that free, small pizza from Pizza Bob's. 1. MICHIGAN at Ohio St. (pick score) 2. Iowa at Minnesota 3. Wisconsin at Michigan State 4. Indiana at Purdue 5. Washington at Washington St. 6. Oklahoma at Nebraska 7. Texas at TCU 8. Georgia at Auburn 9. Florida at Kentucky 10. USC at UCLA 11. Syracuse at Boston College 12. SMU at Texas Tech 13. Colgate at Rutgers 14. So. Carolina St. at Appalachian St. 15. Yale at Harvard 16. Lehigh at Lafayette 17. James Madison at Towson St. 18. Idaho at Boise St. 19. Penn St. at Notre Dame 20. DAILY LIBELS at Ohio St. Lantern The Bang Gang set up their first touchdown with a bomb to Ernie Vargo at the three-yard line. Kevin Ruf's touchdown strike to Dave Herring provided the winner's other score. One Banger, Pete Anderson, claimed "The weather was so cold we kept dropping Sandberg n NEW YORK (AP) - Second baseman Ryne Sandberg, who led the Chicago Cubs to their first champion- ship in 39 years, was named the Most Valuable Player in the National League yesterday, gaining 22 of the 24 first- place votes cast by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Sandberg became the first Cub to win the MVP Award in 25 years, since Ernie Banks won consecutive awards in 1958- 59, and he was the first second baseman amed MVP . -an e d SPEIAL$1.00 OFF honored since Joe Morgan of Cincinnati. Sandberg, who also had two second- place votes, totaled 326 points in the balloting, easily outdistancing first baseman Keith Hernandez of the New York Mets, who finished with 195. Ai Where alumni keep up With the University. II meinekeN-Ay s DICOUMTMUFFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST :FROM AS Installed By LOW AS Trained Specialists Featuring... ....a ITS MANY * AT Unnth rn m maii a6,c - !QA AA i a munin w-e Navu I~o ~ AU 1Uti ~ 9Ann Arbor 3 Month Unlimited Racquetball - . Court Club 3 Month Combination Naut/RB - $143.00 2875 Boardwalh