Intramural Paddleball Tournament Entries due today IM Building SPORTS Synchronized Swimming Michigan Invitational Saturday, 1:00 p.m. CCRB Page 7 The Michigan Daily Thursday, February 7, 1985 -- -------- Purdue rides roller coaster into Crisler By JEFF BERGIDA Purdue coach Gene Keady and his veteran players know what it's like to be the surprising team on top of the pack. One year ago, it was the Boiler- makers who had an 8-1 conference record at the midpoint of the Big Ten season. The 1984 co-favorites, Michigan State and Iowa, were buried in the second division. NOW IT'S Bill Frieder's Wolverines who, along with Iowa, have confounded the experts. Michigan's 7-2 mark places, Inconsistent Boilers out for another upset it ahead of heavily-favored Illinois and Indiana, which have records of 6-3 and 4-5, respectively. The Wolverines will go for their eighth straight win tonight as Purdue visits Crisler Arena. Keady characterizes this season as a roller coaster ride for his team. Purdue jumped out to a 9-1 start (It's hard to find a Big Ten team that didn't), in- cluding victories over Kentucky, South Carolina and Texas El Paso. The Boilers then proceeded to lose three of their first four conference games. The third loss was an 81-65 drubbing at the hands of Michigan at Mackey Arena. Four wins in its last five games, however, have brought Purdue back above .500 at 5-4. Last Wednesday, the Boilermakers thoroughly embarassed fifth-ranked Illinois, 54-34, on national television. The Illini managed only 15 points in the entire second half as Keady shifted from various zones to man-to-man defense on nearly every possession. "PURDUE WAS VERY impressive against Illinois," said Frieder, who ex- pects the Boilermakers to utilize some offbeat defensive tactics tonight. "They- 're playing much better right now than they were when we beat them in Lafayette." Keady knows his team must play bet- ter in order to defeat a Wolverine club that has stomped on its last four op- ponents. "They have a great starting five," said the former Pittsburgh Steeler run- ning back. "Roy Tarpley has developed into a great center. Butch Wade is a tremendous strong forward and (Richard) Rellford is shooting very well which gives them another dimen- sion they didn't have last year. "BUT THE THING that really makes them go is Gary Grant. Without him, they would be in the middle of the pack but with him, they're a potential Final Four team." Grant appreciates the praise but modestly disagrees. "We've got great guards here," said the freshman who leads the eighth- rated team in the country in field goal shooting, free throw percentage and steals. "If Garde Thompson had the op- portunity to start, he'd go out there and play just as good or even better. (Leslie) Rockymore would do the same." THE LAST meeting between these two clubs was close for 25 minutes until the Wolverines went on a tear, blowing Purdue off its home court en route to a 16-point win. Tarpley had 23 points and 10 rebounds in dominating Boilermaker center Robert Littlejohn. "There were two or three things in the Michigan game here that really hurt us," Keady recalled. "We went to a zone and (5-9 guard) Steve Reid got caught on the weak side against (6-8, :235-pound) Butch Wade. "Wade really hurt us, we didn't have our guards back to stop their fast break and our forwards (James Bullock and Mark Atkinson) didn't play well." BULLOCK AND Atkinson turned in sterling performances against Illinois. Atkinson was named Gilette Player-of- the-Game with 13 points and a season- high nine boards. "I don't think Mark gets as much credit as he deserves," Keady said of his senior forward. "He has really im- proved his defense. He did a great job on (Indiana's Steve) Alford and he works as hard as anybody in practice." If Purdue is going to give the Wolverines a hard time, it will need a big effort out of guards Reid, Mack Gadis, and Troy Lewis. While Lewis, a freshman from Anderson, Ind., has developed into the team's third-leading scorer, Keady is looking for more from his backcourt tandem. "THE MAIN THING I'm disappoin- ted in is that I feel we have a lot better shooting guards than what they're showing," he said. As far as the Michigan players are concerned, they've adopted their coach's attitude toward Big Ten basketball - treat every opponent as if it were the Philadelphia 76ers. "They're going to be good and they're going to be tough because they play good defense," Antoine Joubert said. "I want to beat them because I like Gene Keady and he likes me, so it's a challenge to me and I want to get him twice." Keady would be perfectly happy if Joubert demonstrated his fondness by having a poor game. Purdue's roller coaster doesn't need another 90-degree drop. Keady impressed with Wolverines . ......... ........... Judge rules backcourt By JOE EWING Usually when one part of a machine gets hot, it isn't too long before the rest of it heats up. Recently, the Michigan basketball machine has been steaming, as the Wolverines have moved into the top of the Big Ten standings and up to the number eight spot in the national polls, meanwhile gaining recognition across the country. WHAT MANY fail to realize, however, is how red-hot one of the machine's major components, guard Antoine Joubert, has become this season. The former high school scoring machine has played in 18 games so far this season and has scored in double figures in each of those contests. Last Saturday, the 6-5 sophomore tossed in 24 points to help the Wolverines down Wisconsin. toward the rookie superstar. "HE'S EARNED his publicity, no one's just given it to him," said Joubert of his backcourt partner. "He's a good player and a good friend and I love the kid." "Joubert has done a great job handling it," said Frieder. "He had a lot of press as a high school player and as a fresh- man, and now all of a sudden here comes Gary Grant and he gets a lot of attention. I think he's done a phenomenal job. I haven't seen him upset over it, I think he's accepted Gary well." Another factor that Joubert has added to his game this year is defense. Last year when he entered the Michigan program, Joubert brought with him the reputation of a good scorer who was a weak defender, a label that he did not think was warranted. Earlier in the season he scored 27 against . Ohio State, bringing back memories of his senior year at Detroit Southwestern when he averaged 31 points per game. Joubert has averaged nearly 15 poin- ts a game this season, second on the team only to center Roy Tarpley. But while these scoring feats are im- pressive, the Judge has started to shed his image as a scorer, or at least the image that he is just a scorer. JOUBERT has now started to take on a new, multi-dimensional role for the 'He's a leader out there. If things get out of hand, he fixes them up. He talks to me and tries to make me a better player. He gets me to do things that help the team out. I like that.' - Gary Grant Hawkeyes grab Big Ten lea4, 70-65 IOWA CITY (AP) - Greg Stokes scored 18 points and Jeff Moe continued his second-half heroics in leading Iowa to a 70-65 victory over Minnesota last night. The victory gave Iowa sole possession of the Big Ten Conference lead, at least for a day, and avenged an earlier loss at Minnesota. AFTER A CLOSE first half, Moe scored Iowa's first six points of the second half to open up a 43-33 lead. Moe ended the game with 12 points. The Hawkeyes built a 12-point lead in the second half before Minnesota, behind the torrid shooting of guard Tommy Davis, slowly began chipping away and came within three points with 1:07 remaining in the game. Moe was almost the goat of the game when he committed two personal fouls with less than a minute left and the Hawks holding only a three point lead. But Minnesota guard Marc Wilson couldn't connect on the free throws and Moe came back with two free throws of his own to account for the final margin. Big Ten Standings Conf. Overall W LW L "I USED TO play defense pretty good in high school," claims Joubert. "But people never really noticed it because I make a lot of baskets. They would say, 'He's an offensive player and he can't check people.' " This year, he's proving the critics wrong. In a contest with Minnesota, he drew the assignment of guarding Tommy Davis, then the conference's leading scorer, and held Davis to a mere five points. Then on national television against Kansas, he stopped Ron Kellogg, who was averaging 19 points a game. Joubert allowed the Wolverines. This year, as well as being a scorer, he has become a playmaker, a leader and most notably, a good defensive player. "I'll .tell you," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder, "he's playing extremely well overall." One week ago against Northwestern, Joubert proved he could set up the plays as well as make them as he dished out 13 assists, tying a Wolverine single-game record. On the season, he has a team-leading 105 assists. AS A TEAM leader, however, Joubert's talents go beyond setting up plays. He is also an unselfish role model who has warmed up to players like freshman sensation Gary Grant "He's a leader out there," said Grant. "If things get out of hand, he fixes them up. He talks to me and tries to make me a better player. He gets me to do things that help the team out. I like that." Grant has received most of the media and fan attention this season, something that would stir up most veterans, who are used to getting the publicity. But Joubert feels no jealousy Jayhawk forward only four points, while he himself scored 17 and added eight assists. "I think Joubert didn't get near the credit that he deserved for his performance (against Kansas)," said Frieder. "He had a complete game. He made the big baskets, he had eight assists, and Kellogg had what, four points? BUT FRIEDER points out that there still is room for im- provement in Joubert's defensive game. "He's doing a great job guarding the wing players," said the Wolverine coach. "But he's not doing as good a job guar- ding the guards out on the floor. For example, he'll have a lit- tle more problem with a Skiles or a Vincent or a Taylor or a Stokes versus a kid like Kellogg or Davis, who plays primarily the wing." But Joubert is still a sophomore and still has time for some more fine tuning on his engine, which should be okay, as long as they keep him running hot. Rogers deserts ASU PONTIAC (AP)-Darryl Rogers, who denied reports he was leaving Arizona State University, was named .:coach and director of operations yesterday of the National Football League's Detroit Lions. The ASU coach, who used to coach at Michigan State University, replaces Monte Clark who was fired Dec. 19 after seven seasons with the Lions. "WE HAD hoped that we could wait until the college recruiting was over," "'Russ Thomas, general manager of the Lions, said in a prepared statement. "It did leak, however, and we decided to go ahead with the announcement on it." Earlier, in Tempe, Ariz., Athletic Director Dick Tamburo said Rogers assured him during a 35-minute meeting yesterday that he was not heading for Detroit. Rogers has been under fire for a 5-6 season with a young ASU team in 1984. Rogers' four years in East Lansing were the most exciting Michigan State grid period since Duffy Daugherty's glory days of the 1960s. The only smudge was that the Spartans were on NCAA probation for the first three years, blocking a trip to the Rose Bowl after the 1978 season. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Michigan guard Antoine Joubert gets a helping hand from Kansas guard Mark Turgeon during the Wolverine's 96-77 rout of the Jayhawks. Joubert had one of the best all-around games of his college career against Kansas, providing 18 points and eight assists while holding Jayhawk forward Ron Kellogg to only four points. Although his performance against Kansas was overshadowed by teammate Gary Grant's 20-point outburst in the first half, Joubert's consistent play was a key ingredient in the game, as it has been all season. ENGINEERING MAJORS HAVE ENOUGH STRESS WITHOUT HAVING TO WORRY ABOUTTUITION. ,. If one of the angles you've been studying lately is a way to pay your tuition costs, Army ROTC would like to offer some sound advice. Apply for an Army ROTC scholarship. Recently, we set aside hundreds of scholarships solely for engineering majors like yourself. 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