Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, February 10, 1985 Tarple, Grant shine as streak hits nine ____________________________________________________________________(__ontinued (Cntined fomgPge11 "HEY, WE MISSED SOME layups, we missed some free throws, the deflec- tions went to them," he added. "Yet we're in this ball game and if we score in this first possession we're going to be right back in it." And that's exactly what Michigan did. Seventeen seconds into the second frame freshman Gary Grant hit a jum- per from the corner to tie the contest at 26. After exchanging a couple of baskets the Wolverines went on an eight-minute, 16-4 tear that got the crowd of 13,609 at Crisler all riled up. During that run, which put Michigan on top 46-35 with 6:46 left, guard An- toine Joubert was the hero, scoring eight points and adding an assist despite being hampered by a bad ankle. In fact the ankle which Joubert injured Thursday night against Purdue, was so bad that it almost kept the 6-5 sophomore out of the contest all together. "THERE WAS A little doubt (about playing)" said Joubert after the game. "I got treatment last night and I got treatment yesterday. I just sat at prac- tive (on Friday) because i couldn't run." "We were very close (to not playng him)," said Frieder. "It just went down to how he warmed up. He didn't practice yesterday and he had swelling last night. Personally I didn't think he was going to be ready." Joubert finished the afternoon with 10 points, six rebounds and six assists. One of those assists came with four minutes left and helped spark a 9-1 Wolverine run that put the game on ice. DURING THE second half Michigan shot considerably better from the floor, hitting on 56 percent of its attempts. "They shot well in the second half," said Frieder. "I don't think they took one bad shot in the second half." But offense was no the only area the Wolverines shined in the second stanza. They also played like demons on defen- se, allowing Illinois to hit on only 36.3 percent of its shots from the field and out-rebounding the Illini, 18-11. "WE DID play a great second half," claimed Frieder, "There's no question about it. The kids responded, they ar- ced, they sparked, they played together." "We took our time (in the second half)," said Joubert. "We played good defense. When we had the lead we played together." Roy Tarpley led the Wolverines with 17 points, while Grant added 14. THE LOSS was Illinois' third straight IlliNIT in the conference. On Thursday, the Illini were upset by Michigan State in East lansing, 64-56. Before that, they were shocked at Purdue, 54-34, on January 30. Illinois head coach Lou Henson placed most of the blame for the skid on the illinis' failure to com- plete their shots. "It's a thing that's been with us this year," said Henson. "We haven't shot the ball very well, that's why we haven't been winning. We've done the other things, but we haven't shot." The Illini have also had to play without starting center George Mon- tgomery, who broke his foot early in the second half at michigan State. "MONTGOMERY IS by far our best rebounder, the best defensive player and best ball handler other than Bruce Douglas," said Henson. "So we're hur- ting without him. I think he could have done a lot for our ball club today. But Montgomery's replacement Scott Meents, didn't do that bad of a job him- self for the Illini, leading them with 14 points and five assists, as well as hauling in three rebounds. "I think the biggest thing there was that they didn't have the depth that they had before," said Frieder of the Illini who were down to eight players following Montgomery's injury. "You could see that Meents gives them more offense, he was killing us in the first half." 4 4 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Wolverine guard Antoine Joubert cuts past Illinois forward Anthony Welch in Saturday's action. Joubert contributed 10 points and six assists in Michigan's ninth straight win. BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Boilers lance Spartans I EAST LANSING (AP) - Freshman guard Troy Lewis scored 18 points, in- cluding the game-winning jump shot with three seconds left, as Purdue squeaked past Michigan State 66-65 in Big Ten college basketball action last night. Lewis scored 12 points in the second half, including the rebound jumper with three seconds remaining that gave the Boilermakers their victory margin. The.Spartans took the lead, 65-64, on a nair of free throws by Sam Vincent with 18 seconds remaining. The senior guard led all players with 20 points. After taking a 2-0 lead, Purdue trailed for the rest of the first half. But the Boilermakers came up with a 10-point run in the second half to take a41-39 lead with 13:19 to play. Wisconsin 92, Ohio State 78 MADISON (AP)-Rick Olson scored 32 points and Scott Roth tallied all but two of his 21 points in the second half as Wisconsin snapped a nine-game losing streak in a 92-78 Big Ten basketball vic- tory over Ohio State yesterday. Having trailed by as many as nine points late in the first half, Wisconsin rallied to a 58-52 lead with a 19-9 spurt opening the second half. Olson scored eight points and Roth six during that span. Ohio State regained a 63-62 lead with 8:26 to play on a drive by Ronnie Stokes but, paced by four Roth baskets, the Badgers rip- ped off a 19-5 run to take a commanding 81-68 lead. Wisconsin, which also got 16 points from J.J. Weber, upped its record to 11- 10 overall and 2-9 in the Big Ten. Ohio State, 14-6 and 6-5, was led by Troy Taylor with 23 points and Stokes with 19. Indiana 78,Northwestern 59 EVANSTON (AP) - Uwe Blab scored 24 points and Steve Alford added 21 as Indiana pulled away with an early second-period surge en route to a 78-59 Big Ten basketball win over North- western last night at McGaw Hall. Indiana now has won three in a row and is 14-7 overall, 6-5 in the league. The loss was the fourth straight for the Wildcats and dropped them to 5-16 overall and 1-10 at the bottom of the Big Ten. The surprising Wildcats shot 52 per- cent in the first half and built a 33-32 lead at intermission. Indiana connected on 44 percent of its attempts from the floor in the first half, including a slow- starting 3-of-9 performances from Alford. The sophomore guard also missed his first free throw of the evening to snap a streak of 30 straight. But the Hoosiers came out smoking in the second half and outscored Nor- thwestern 20-4 in the first seven minutes to build a 52-37 lead. Blab had 10 points in that streak. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Richard Rellford brings the ball up court while Illini guard Bruce Douglas defends. Douglas, however, was stymied by the Michigan defense, making only four of 10 shots from the field. / 4~ full court. MICHIGAN Min FG/A FT/A I 11 Rellford ....... wade.......... Tarpley ....... Grant ....... Joubert ... Thompson..... Henderson .... Rockymore .... Stoyko ........ 32 36 39 36 36 10 3 7 1 3/7 3/5 8/12 6/13 5/10 0/2 0/2 0/1 0/0 4/6 0/0 1/2 2/2 01 01 0/0 0/0 0/0 R 6 7 8 6 6 1 1 1 0 A 0 1 3 3 6 2 0 1 0 PF 3 2 3 3 2 0 0 1 0 Pts 10 6 17 14 10 0 0 0 0 I S Team rebounds TOTALS ...... 200 25/52 0 7/12 36 16 14 57 ILLINOIS Min winters ....... 33 Welch ........25 Meents .......29 Altenberger ... 33 Douglas ....... 39 Norman.......30 Haffner....... 9 Wysinger... 2 FG/A 1/3 2/5 6/9 3/11 4/10 2/7 0/1 1/1 FT/A 1/s 0/0 2/4 2/2 2/2 0/1 0/0 0/0 R 5 2 3 2 6 6 0 0 A 2 1 2 1 1 0 PF 3. 3 1 2 3 2 1 1 Pts 3 4 14 8 10 4 0 2 Team rebounds TOTALS ...... 200 19/47 1 7/14 25 12 16 45 Halftime Score: Illinois 26, MICHIGAN 24 Attendance: 13,609 Associated Press Michigan State center Ken Johnson takes to the air in an effort to block the shot of Purdue's James Bullock in action last night at Jenison Field House in East Lansinig. The Boilermakers pulled out a tense 66-65 victory over the Spartans. NCAA R OUNDUP: m fi J Bi St. Jo hns ripsVi PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Chris with an array of offensive maneuvers N. Carolina St. 82, SMU 7 [ullin scored 12 of his 21 points in the while scoring 34 points yesterday and RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Terry Gat nal 6:14 of the game as top-ranked St. leading 13th-ranked Kansas to a 75-71 non scored 19 points, including two fr ohn's rallied to beat Villanova 70-68 in college basketball victory over the throws that sent North Carolina Stat ig East basketball yesterday. Tigers. into ov a t he W1X7nn...-L. ertime~ th W 1 VUIj.flf k ~ Big Ten Standings Conf. Overall W L W L MICHIGAN ........... 9 2 18 3 Iowa .................. 8 2 19 4 Illinois ................ 6 5 18 7 Michigan State.........6 5 15 6 Ohio State ............. 6 5 14 6 Purdue ................ 6 5 15 6 Indiana ............... 6 5 14 7 Minnesota ............. 4 6 11 9 Wisconsin ............. 2 9 11 10 Northwestern..........1 10 5 16 SCORES St. John's 70, Villanova 68 Kansas 75, Memphis St. 71 Duke 70, Maryland 62 Auburn 75, Tennessee 60 Clemson 98, South Carolina 81 Fresno St. 63, Nevada - Las Vegas 52. N. Carlina St. 82, SMU 78 (OT) Loyola, 111. 127, Detroit 100 Tulsa 87, Wichita St. 75 W. Michigan 71, C. Michigan 69 W. Virginia 73, Rutgers 57 Virginia 74, Lousville 65 Missouri 73, Iowa St. 70 Syracuse 65, Notre Dame 62 Washington 67, UCLA 61 Pittsburgh 80, Seton Hall 68 Party time at Crisler... . ,even Frieder joins in By TIM MAKINEN B ill Frieder smiled. In fact, the Wolverine coach didn't just smile, he beamed and he laughed, and if my eyes weren't failing me, Frieder even at- tempted a high-five with Michigan forward Richard Rellford. Frieder, the eternal pessimist, the man who finds fault in 11-point victories such as last Thursday's win against Purdue, had every reason to be happy. His Wolverines had just downed the hated Fighting Illini of Illinois, boosting; Michgan to the top of the Big Ten. If ever the Wolverines deserved a moment of exaltation,a moment of self- gratification, even perhaps a moment of legendary Michigan arrogance, it was during yesterday's 57-45 squelching of Illinois. Big Ten-style basketball had returned to Crisler Arena and Michigan was equal to the challenge. This was not the weak variations of Purdue, Michigan State, or non-conference Kansas. It was truly physical, defensive-oriented, grueling basketball. The Illini, in their hideous orange and blue jerseys, scrapped and fought and kept things tight for the most part. But Michigan clawed right back and snared the victory. And with 48 seconds remaining in the contest, a 16-point lead, and the sold out Crisler crowd in near pandemonium, F-rieder and the Wolverines took their special moment. Illinois called a time out, the Wolverines converged on Frieder, and a party atmosphere ensues. Rellford hugged teammate Butch Wade. Wade grabbed Roy Tarpley. Tarpley high-fived Gary Grant. Antoine Joubert, busy flashing the number- one signal to the crowd, then was pulled into the frenzy. Every Wolverine got into the act, arms swinging, index fingers extended high. In the middle of it all was Frieder, laughing, grinning, and soaking in the celebration. It's a long difficult season, and Frieder must be given his moments of joy. If the Michigan coach occasionally worries unnecessarily and says silly things like, "Northwestern and Wisconsin are tough, they really scare me," it's because his concern for the Wolverines is paramount to almost everything else. The man eats, sleeps, and breathes basketball. In preparing for a confron- tation with the highly-ranked Illini, that means Frieder has either an upset stomach, a restless night, congestion, or any combination thereof. Yesterday's victory was just what the doctor ordered. In fact, when the Illinois time out finally expired, the Michigan party went on. Frieder had to call another time out to restore order. "We were just all juiced up," said the fifth-year coach, "and we didn't get our assignments, so we took another time out so we could get them. We didn't want to go crazy and give (Illinois) 55 points or something." Added Wolverine Garde Thompson, "We knew the game was over. We just wanted to'have a little time for the team to be together and just joke around and have a little fun. You don't really have that much opportunity during the year to have something like that." The moment should be preserved forever. The Michigan players, "The Best Ten in the Big Ten" as one banner proclaimed, bonded together in the second half yesterday and demonstrated what unselfishness means. Illnois a school which has been a thorn in Michigan's side in all sports for the past few years, virtually falls to the wayside in the Big Ten race. 4 .4 8 in- ee ate !t 4 4 The victory was the 19th of the season against one loss overall and 11-0 in the Big East for St. John's. The 19th-ranked Wildcats slipped to 15-6 and 7-4. Villanova cut St. John's lead to 61-59 with 3:04 to go. But Bill Wennington, who scored 14 points, and Mullin followed with field goals for a 65-59 lead with 1.22o n nlna The 6-foot-5 junior forward connected for 12 points in the first half to help the Jayhawks take a 34-28 lead at the in- termission, then made eight of his first nine shots in the second half as Kansas appeared to be cruising to victory. NnwpvprKth n r.. anmiliaRn- lu lG11, as L1e woupac upset fourth-ranked Southern Methodist 82-78 yesterday in college basketball. Gannon collected 10 points in the final 13 minutes of regulation to help bring the Wolfpack, 14-7, from a 63-51 deficit to a 71-71 tie. The Wolfpack held the Mustangs, 18- 4. scoreless for the final R:14 of J