4 Page 0 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, February 3, 1985 'M' marvelous in Madison jouberi leads Blue to 7th straight win (Contifund from Page 1) THE WOLVERINES shot a hot 61.1 percent from the field and got 15 points from Tarpley and 14 from Joubert. Meanwhile in the first half the Badgers struggled, hitting only 40 percent from the floor in the opening 20 minutes, missing three shots in the first four minutes that would have kept the game close. "I think to start with the first four minutes of the game when Michigan started out 8-0, we missed three pretty easy shots," said Wisconsin coach Steve Yoder. "We could have made it 8- 6 if we made those." During the first half Michigan also did a good job of shutting down Wiscon- sin guard Rick Olson and forward Scott Roth. Olson, who killed the Wolverines with 39 points in Madison last year and averages nearly 17 points a game this season, scored just two points before the intermission and finished the game with four. According to Frieder, the credit for containing the 6-1 junior went to freshman Gary Grant. "GARY GRANT's a pretty good defender," said the fifth-year head coach. "And he's done a great job this year on some key people. He guarded Steve Reid at Purdue and did a nice job, (Bruce) Douglas at Illinois, and now Olson. He gave us good, steady defen- se." Grant said the defensive strategy he used against Olson was simple. "First of all, I tried to detain him as much as possible," explained the 6-3 freshman. "Secondly, when he did get the ball I tried to make him go to the left and make it difficult for him. He likes to go to the right. In all the films we wat- ched he liked to go to the right. So if he had to go left-handed, it would have been hard for him." ROTH, WHO sparked a second-half comeback attempt and scored 22 points on the afternoon, was held to just six points in the first half. While the Wolverines dominated throughout the first half, they ex- perienced a breakdown after the inter- mission that kept the contest from becoming a blow out. But they still remained in control. "The second half we kind of let up," Frieder said. "You combine a little let- up with a team like that who plays aggressive and you can see what hap- pens." WHAT happened was Wisconsin out- shot the Wolverines from the floor 47.1 percent-to-41.2 percent and out-scored them, 51-44. With Tarpley and forward Rich Rellford each picking up his fourth foul midway through the second half, Frieder went to his bench and the Michigan advantage, which at one time had been 24 points, dipped to 11. Big Ten Standings Conf. Overall MICHIGAN......... 7-2 16-3 Iowa ............... 7-2 18-4 Illinois ............. 6-3 17-5 Roth hit 10-of-10 free throws to start the half and added six other points to finish with 22. Center John Ploss, who had a career-high 21 points in the con- test, added 13 during the second half for the Badgers. Nonetheless, the effort was not engough to overtake the Wolverines. "I was a little disappointed with our second-half effort," explained Frieder. "But I felt we were in the contest and wanted to get our bench in. We got them in fairly early and they let the lead slip away." WHILE THE victory keeps the Wolverines at the top of the standings with Iowa, which defeated Ohio State 67-58, Frieder was not too concerned about his players' heads swelling. "We have no reason to be confident," said Frieder. "These kids in our program haven't accomplished anything. They haven't been to the NCAAs. They haven't won the Big Ten. They've got no reason to be overcon- fident. They've still got to prove them- selves." But Frieder said he has noticed a great deal of improvement sinceethe Wolverines were thrashed by Indiana a month ago in the Big Ten opener, mostly in shutting down opponents' of- fenses. "I think the biggest thing is that after the first week, we've been very deter- mined to play better defense," noted Frieder. "Our team defense is much, much improved since the first week of Big Ten." Judge-ment Day MICHIGAN WISCONSIN Min Ripley.........16 Weber.........12 Ploss .......... 36 Olson.......... 24 Roth .......... 35 Laszewski. 10 Barnes .........24 Smith ..........24 Steinhaus;...... 18 FG/A 0/2 2/4 8/12 2/9 6/12 2/5 5/11 2/6 3/8 FT/A 0/0 0/0 5/9 0/0 10/11 0/0 2/2 2/2 2/2 R 5 3 7 1 1 5 1 1 A 0 0 2 4 3 2 0 4 0 PF 2 4 5 0 1 2 1 2 Pts 0 4 21 4 22 4 12 6 8 Viin Reilford ....... 20 Wade..........29 Tarpley ....... 32 Grant .........28 Joubert.......34 Henderson .... 22 Rockymore.... 9 Thompson. 19 Stoyko .........7 Gibas ..........1 Team Rebounds TOTALS. !00 FG/A 2/5 5/9 8/14 6/13 11/16 1/7 1/3 2/3 0/0 0/0 FT/A R A PF Pts 4/4 3/5 6/7 4/4 2/2 3/3 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 3 11 7 3 4 3 1 0 0 0 1 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 5 3 3 2 1 0 0 0 8 13 22 16 24 5 2 4 0 0 Ohio State........ Purdue........... Michigan State ..... Minnesota........ Indiana ............ Wisconsin.......... Northwestern...... 5-4 5-4 5-4 4-5 4-5 1-8 1-8 13-5 14-5 14-5 11-8 12-7 10-9 5-14- 4 Team Rebounds TOTALS.......200 30/69 10 21/26 36 15 18 81 First half score: MICHIGAN 50, Wisconsin 30 Attendance: 7,106 12 30/36 22/25 45 9 19 94 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Richard Rellford eyes the hoop as he goes at Wisconsin's Jay Laszewski (54) during the Wolverines' 94-81 triumph yesterday. .1 WIN KEEPS HAWKEYES TIED FOR FIRST: Iowa club COLUMBUS (AP)-Iowa, led by Greg Stokes, scored 12 straight points and held Ohio State scoreless for almost seven minutes in the second half last night, for a 67-58 Big Ten basketball victory. Stokes, a 6-foot-10 senior center, hit 20 points to keep the Hawkeyes, 18-4 over-all and 7-2, tied for the league lead. Ronnie Stokes' outside shooting, worth 24 points, wasn't enough to stave off the Buckeyes' first home defeat in 10 games this 1 season. Ohio State, 13-5 overall, fell two games off 1 the Big Ten pace at 5-4. Greg Stokes scored two baskets and freshman guard Jeff Moe, who had 18 poin- ; ts, added two more field goals in the key Iowa spurt. It gave the Hawkeyes a 46-34 lead with 9 minutes remaining. Ohio State missed 10 straight floor shots and went 6:53 without scoring while Iowa seized its 12-point lead. Once Iowa built its margin, the Hawkeyes stayed at least five points ahead of the Buckeyes. Ohio State scored the first six points of the game, but Iowa hit the next six. The Hawkeyes led by as many as four points before the Buckeyes pulled to a 28-28 half- time tie. Indiana 89, Minnesota 66 BLOOMINGTON (UPI) - Center Uwe Blab scored 22 points in an almost perfect first half for Indiana and the Hoosiers eased past Minnesota, 89-66, yesterday to break a four-game losing streak. s OSU Blab, a native West German in his final year as a project for coach Bob Knight's teaching talents, finished with 26 points af- ter making all 10 of his field goal attempts in the first half. "BLAB OBVIOUSLY had an excellent game and we got the ball to him well," Knight said. Indiana shot 84 percent from the field in the first half (21 of 25) on the way to a 57-24 halftime advantage. "When they established Uwe inside, the game was really over," Minnesota coach Jim Dutcher said. "Uwe has made steady improvement each year. He's gotten better and he looks like he is enjoying playing. I think he had a good time today." Michigan State 68, Northwestern 54 EVANSTON (UPI)-Scott Skiles scored 17 points, 14 in the second half, to lead Michigan State to a 68-54 Big Ten victory last night over cold-shooting Northwestern. Sam Vincent added 16 and Ken Johnson 11, 10 in the first half, for the Spartans who improved their league mark to 5-4 and their overall record to 14-5. Northwestern, which was led by Andre Goode with 14, fell to 1-8 in the league and 5-14 overall. THE SPARTANS, who led 30-19 at half- time, broke the game open early in the second half with a 13-4 scoring spurt that saw MSU take a 51-33 lead with 11:12 left. Skiles scored eight of the points in that stretch. Associated Press Indiana's Uwe Blab licks Minnesota's John Shasky on a sky hook in the Hoosiers' 89-66 win. Blab scored 26 on 12 of 15 field goal shooting to lead all scorers. full court PRESS Halfway through .. time for awards By TIM MAKINEN MADISON A S FAR AS first halves of seasons go, this one is probably suitable for framing. It's a bit premature to speculate on any final-four match- ups for Michigan, but the Wolverines are certainly flying high, demonstrating to the nation that they are a force reckoned with. At the midway point of the Big Ten campaign, 10th-ranked Michigan rests atop the Big Ten along with Iowa, showing off a 7-2 conference mark and a 16-3 record overall. It is frightening how well the Wolverines are playing. The 41-point spread against Minnesota, the whipping of the cross- state rival Spartans, and the absolute destruction of Kansas on national television all exasperate one's senses with the methodical precision of Michigan's performance. Even the heart-stopping, triple-overtime victory against the Iowa Hawkeyes at Crisler Arena demonstrated the per- severance and spirit of this Wolverines squad. One must not forget that just one month ago Michigan opened up the Big Ten season with the Indiana embarrassment, falling 87-62 to the Hoosiers at Crisler. People called the Wolverines over-rated, horrid on defense and weak off the bench. Since then, however, Michigan has gelled, building the momentum it now holds at this halfway point of the season. For the moment it might be fitting to offer some awards for highlights of season's first half. " Most pleasant surprise award: Gary Grant, the fresh- man sparkplug from Canton, has proven that he not only can play with other Big Ten guards, but can outplay many of them. Quick quiz: Can you name the player whom Grant replaced? " Most underapreciated player award: Antoine Joubert has been playing in the shadow of Grant as of late, but the sophomore from Detroit has been the catalyst in Michigan's most recent victories. Jouber notched a Wolverine-record 13 assists at Northwestern and led all scorers with 24 points yesterday. " Best shot at the end of the first half award: Unquestionably, Leslie Rockymore's half-court bomb against Kansas earns this distinction. " Best shot at the end of the game award: Anyone who saw Tarpley's last-second bank shot in the Iowa classic knows what excitement is. But this award goes to Ron Gibas for icing the Minnesota cakewalk and getting on the scoring sheets for the first time this season. " Fall on your face award: The highly touted trio of Min- nesota guard Tommy Davis, Andre Goode of Northwestern and Michigan State's Ken Johnson earns kudos, or rather cheers, for their pathetic performances against the Wolverines. The three tallied a collective total of nine points in competition with the Blue. " Fall on your face award II: Michigan's Steve Stoyko earns this honor easily by spreading his talent all over the court and into the stands-literally. " Biggest jerk award: Spartan Scott Skiles wins this dubious distinction hands down for his blatant body check of Wolverine forward Richard Relford. Skiles was booed the rest of the night, and deservedly so. " It's my ball and I'll play who I want award: Indiana coach Bobby Knight tabs this honor for playing four fresh- man and senior Uwe Blab against Illinois. Knight made two substitutions in the game-both freshman. " It's my team and I'll give a ride to whomever I want award: The irrepressible Knight told two of his players, Winston Morgan and Mike Giomi, that they could find their own way home from a contest at Ohio State. Knight was up- set with the pair's defense. 4 4 4 4 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP: Lee, Memphis State rip Va. Tech I , MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-Senior forward Keith Lee scored 25 points and grabbed 12 rebounds yesterday as third-ranked Mem- phis State held on to first place in the Metro Conference by defeating Virginia Tech., 91- 82. The Tigers, now 17-1 overall and 7-1 in conference play, also got 18 points each from sophomore center William Bedford and freshman guard Vincent Askew. Junior forward Baskerville Holmes contributed 12 points for Memphis State. Oklahoma 83, Oklahoma St. 81 STILLWATER, Okla. (AP)-Tim Mc- Calister hit a 20-foot jumper with two secon- ds remaining to give seventh-ranked Oklahoma an 83-81 come-from-behind Big Eight Conference basketball victory over Oklahoma State yesterday. McCalister-who made all seven of his field-goal attempts in the second half and finished with 20 points-had 12 of his points during a 10-minute span that saw Oklahoma erase a 58-48 deficit and take its first lead of the second half, 72-70, with 5.40 remaining. Georgia Tech 72, Maryland 60 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP)-Yvon Joseph scored 11 of his 20 points in the second half as eighth-ranked Georgia Tech (16-4) held off a mild rally by 17th-ranked Maryland and defeated the Terps 72-60 in an Atlantic Coast Conference game yesterday. The loss snapped a 16-game home winning streak for the Terps (17-6) and created a vir- tual three-way tie for the ACC lead. Maryland remained at the top with a 4-2 record, followed by Duke and Georgia Tech at 5-3. N. Carolina 77, Furman 55 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)-Brad Daugherty scored 15 points, Steve Hale ad- ded 14 and Kenny Smith scored 12 as No. 11 North Carolina romped to a 77-55 college basketball victory over Furman last night. North Carolina outscored Furman 34-18 for a 21-point lead at 66-45 with 3:35 left on two free throws by Dave Popson. From there, the Tar Heels used their fast break of- fense to put Furman out of reach. i 14 SCORES St. John's 97, Connecticut 64 Louisville 77, DePaul 73 Wake Forest 91, N. Carolina State 64 Kansas 91, Nebraska 80 Arizona 73, Washington State 56 IM SCORES ME 0 m "W w - w i : A% AIIT. IJ