full court *PRES By JOE EWING POOR BILL Frieder. Just months after the Michigan basketball coach brought success to his team and to the Big Ten by leading the Wolverines to the NIT cham- pionship, the conference has pegged him in its "bad boys" category with Indiana mentor Bob Knight. On Monday the conference headquarters reprimanded both Frieder and Knight for failing to attend recent meetings of the league's basketball coaches. It seems both decided not to attend a coaches' officiating clinic on Oc- tober 7. The Indiana head man also skipped the annual Big Ten press day November 18. Conference officials claimed that both had violated league rules, saying that it is "the professional respon- sibility of all conference personnel to attend meetings scheduled by their group." The league gave both coaches equal slaps on the wrist. According to the Big Ten, both had broken the rules, and both needed to be punished in the same degree. One small thing the league overlooked, however, is that Frieder and Knight did not break the rules to the same degree. What Knight did was far more severe than Frieder, and deserved to be acted on by the conference. But what Frieder did might not have warranted action. Sure, both coaches missed the October 7 meeting with the referees but it appears that the session was optional. According to a statement sent to Big Ten coaches by meeting chairman Jud Heathcote, the coaches' atten- dance would not required. So Frieder really wasn't in the wrong in the first place, and therefore should not have been reprimanded. Knight, however, kept up his bad boy of the Big Ten image, thumbing his nose at the media by skipping the November 18 meeting. The dean of Big Ten coaches deserved the punishment he got. The press meeting was supposed to have been man- datory for each of the ten conference hoop coaches and, even though only seven coaches showed up, Knight's ab- sence was the only one that was unexcused. Illinois coach Lou Henson was with his team knocking off Oklahoma in Bad boy Frieder?.0.. get it straight, guys the Tip-Off Classic, and still managed to send a tape of an interview he had done with the media the week before. And Heathcote, who was recovering from a heart attack suffered in September, sent assistant coach Michael Deane and guard Sam Vincent to represent the Spartans' program. But where was Bobby Knight? "(I was doing) undercover work for the Indiana Depar- tment of Natural Resources," he later told Sports Illustrated. "They had been told that several quial had in- filtrated southern Indiana and they asked my to spend by Sunday on a search-and-destroy mission." Knight had gone hunting and ignored his responsibility to his team and his league. There is no need to say how important a conference with media is, especially for a basketball coach and his program. So when someone like Bobby Knight doesn't show up for the event, it can do nothing but hurt the reputation of his team, as well as the Big Ten in general. Frieder hadn't done anything that would be damaging to the Michigan basketball program, and really shouldn't have been pigeon-holed with the Hoosier coach. It appears that the Big Ten might have wanted to get at Knight for missing the press conference, among other things, but didn't want to take him on one-on-one, so they went after Frieder,too. No one at the Big Ten office would elaborate on the reprimands. Also, Knight has stirred up some controversy in the college basketball world in the past few weeks, accusing some unnamed Big Ten coaches of cheating in the Big Ten recruiting war. Knight was sent a letter requesting that he provide the conference with information on any recruiting violations. The reprimand might also have been sent to apply more pressure on Knight and demonstrate that the Big Ten is in control of the situation. The league wants the embattled Knight to either tell all, or admit that he has no proof of any wrongdoing and shut up. The truth of the matter won't come out until Knight and the league say something, but Bill Frieder might have gotten stuck in the middle. The Michigan Daily - Wedn SPORTS ON TAP MEN'S BASKETBALL EASTERN MICHIGAN, Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. ALCORN STATE, Dec. 17, 7:30 p.m. RUTGERS, Dec. 22, 2:00 p.m. at Tennessee, Dec. 29, 7:30 p.m. INDIANA, Jan. 2,8:08 p.m. OHIO STATE, Jan. 5, 2:00 p.m. HOCKEY MIAMI, Dec. 14-15, 7:30 p.m. at Great Lakes Invitational, Detroit Mich,. Dec. 28-29. JAPAN, Dec. 31, 7:00 p.m. at Ferris State, Jan 4-5, 7:30 p.m. RUSSIA, Jan. 6,7:00 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL at Detroit, Dec. 16, 2:00 p.m. TOLEDO, Dec. 21, 7:00 p.m. DOMINO CLASSIC, Dec 29-30, 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. at Indiana, Jan. 4, 7:30 p.m. at Ohio State, Jan. 6, 2:00 p.m. WRESTLING at Midlands Tournament, Evanston, Ill., Dec. 27-28. at Ohio State, Jan. 5. MEN'S GYMNASTICS at Spartan Invitational, East Lansing, Mich., Jan. 6. nesday, December 12, 1984 - Page 11 Joubert 1s player of the week CHICAGO (UPI) - Michigan guard Antoine Joubert, who led the Wolverines to three victories last week, was named as the Big Ten player of the week yesterday. Joubert had 42 points and 27 assists in leading the Wolverines to wins over Youngstown State, Dayton, and Western Michigan. Joubert, a 6-foot-5 sophomore, had 21 points, 10 assists and five rebounds in the Michigan 87-78'win over Dayton. S-K- RENAALS-_ _Weekend: INNER TUBES X-Countr Innertub es ID Daly Rate: X- Country Innertub es O &O 0SPCENCVTR SPECIAL VACATION Ri Skis....8.00 s...... 2.00 S.. Skis... 4.00 ,,,.,, .100 HOURS: Mon., 3-6pm; Tues. - Thurs., 4-6pm; Fri., Noon-6pm. For more info, call the NCRB Gymnasium at 764-3967. ATES AVAILABLE The invitation just said black tie. Thanks to your friends, you also wore a jacket and pants. When none other than the Dean invites you to a black tie reception, what do you do? Start borrowing: a jacket here (40 regular), a pair of pants there, and before you know it, you're looking pretty sharp. And when your formal party is over, a there's another one you should arrange. ITt AMIN