4 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, February 17, 1985 P Go hers Butchered on last minute lai T ly sore 21ayn L T a rpescores in 11th straight win (Continued from Page 1) foul shots to make it 62-60, explained that the Wolverine forwards had been working well on the offensive boards all afternoon. "WE WERE getting position in the first half but the shots were missing in such a way that they would bounce way out around the free throw line," said the Lansing resident, who had seven boar- ds in 14 minutes. "So it was just a mat- ter of time before the odds went our way." The fifth foul on Williams meant that Minnesota coach Jim Dutcher had to go to his depleted bench and insert 7-0 Paul Van Den Einde. Having confused Michigan all afternoon with varying zones, the Gophers were now limited on defense. "When we got down to the end, we were out of options," said Dutcher whose eigth-place club is now 5-7 in the Big Ten, 12-10 overall. "With Van- DenEinde in there, there's only one zone we can play and that's the one-two- two. (Williams) is the guy who plays the baseline in our one-three-one and Paul can't play that." BILL FREIDER'S club quickly took advantage. The next time they had the ball, the Wolverine's pounded the boar- ds as a team to tip in a Rellford miss and tie the contest for the first time sin- ce the 11:45 mark. Henderson got credit for the hoop but nobody was sure who tipped it. "Both Roy (Tarpley) and I had a hand on that," Henderson said. The biggest play of the game developed after Henderson's basket. Alexander took the inbounds pass and was called for a charge into Grant. A Tarpley tip-in soon followed and Michigan had a 64-62 lead. "THAT WAS a bad, bad call," said Dutcher. "It's the one that put them ahead and it was no charge. Jesus, the guy slides and falls." "I knew it wasn't a charge," Alexan- der added. "I had at least a foot-and-a- half to get around him. He stuck his knee out and did a good job acting." Responded the accused freshman, "He went into the corner and I wasn't going to let him out. I was going to fake like he charged into me. But is was, a good call. He had some contact on me. ' THE GOPHERS tied it up for the last time at 0:59 when VanDenEinde, a thir- ty seven percent foul shooter, made two free throws. Tarpley, the game's high scorer and rebounder with 21 and 15 respectively, was disqualified on the play for committing his fifth foul. The first 14 minutes of the second half consisted of three surges, two by the Gophers. Eight straight points from Wilson helped Minnesota establish a 46- 41 lead. The Wolverines ran off six in a row to lead by one but Minnesota responded with a string of eight. "When we caught them in the middle of the second half and then they went back ahead," said Freider, "you start to think that possibly you've made your surge and now you're not going to get there." It was pretty scary for a while. But Freider could smile after the game. Dutcher's emotions were summed up in one word. "Frustration," he said. "Because it was there and we had great oppor- tunities. But Dutcher was facing a great team. And great teams come back from ad versity." The magic number is four MICHIGAN MinFG/AFT/A R A PF Pts 0 3 11 MINNESOTA MinFG/A FT/A R Rellford ........... 17 Wade .............. 32 Tarpley ...........34 Joubert..........25 Grant..............40 Thompson ......... 8 Henderson.........14 Rockymore.......10 Team Rebounds.. 5/8 1/3 $/18 5/16 6/14 0/0 1/3 1/2 1/1 3/4 5/5 0/0 0/0 0/0 3/5 0/0 3 7 15 1 1 0 7 0 1 1 3 4 I 0 0 3 0 5 21 10 12 0 5 2 Davis............. Williams........ Shasky ............ Alexander ......... Wilson............ Jackson ........... VanDenEinde . Team Rebounds ".. TOTALS ........ 40 30 40 40 26 14 10 5/11 2/3 2/5 4/7 8/14 3/4 1/1 7/7 0/0 5/7 0/0 0/0 0/0 2/2 4 6 5 4 2 1 0 2 24 A PF Pts 2 2 17 2 54 2 2 9 4 3 8 1 4 16 1 0 6 0 0 4 12 16 64 TOTALS...........200 27/64 12/15 35 10 16 66 200 25/45 14/16 TechnicaIs: M-Tarpley Halftime score: Michigan 34,Minnesota 32 Attendance: 15,162 BIG TEN ROUNDUP: 4 Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Michigan guard Gary Grant goes up for a dunk in action against Kansas earlier this season. The freshman star scored 12 points and handed out four assists in yesterday's 66-64 Wolverine victory. Spartai IOWA CITY (AP) - Michigan State guard Sam Vincent scored 23 points, in- eluding the game-winning basket, as the Spartans defeated the 11th-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes 57-55 yesterday in a Big Ten Conference game. Iowa had a 31-29 lead at halftime, but Michigan State scored the first nine points of the second half and never gave BIG TEN STANDINGS Conf. Overall W L W L MICHIGAN..........11 2 20 3 Iowa .................. 8 4 19 6 Illinois ................ 8 5 20 7 Purdue ................ 8 5 17 6 Ohio St................ 7 5 15 7 Michigan St..........7 6 16 7 Indiana ...............6 6 14 8 Minnesota ............. 5 7 12 10 Wisconsin ............. 2 11 11 12 Northwestern..........1 12 5 18 ~IS up the lead. Iowa came within one p twice and had a chance to tie the g with seven seconds left, but Jeffl missed on a last-second jump shot. The Spartans shut down Iowa ce Greg Stokes, who scored 11 points cluding only two in the secondr That basket brought Iowa within point at 53-52 with 44 seconds left. MSU's Darryl Johnson then hit free throws and Vincent scored hisf basket for a 57-52 lead. Iowa's Mic Payne hit one jumper and StokesI free throw to end the scoring. Purdue 76, N'Western5 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) Freshman Todd Mitchell producedf of his season high 16 points as Pur scored the final eight points in thef half, taking the lead for good on the to a 76-57 victory over Northwester Big Ten Conference basketball yes day. Senior Jim Bullock, hitting nineo stun Hawkeyes, point from the field, had a game-high 20 poin- tory 'o ame ts as Purdue topped the Wildcats for the double Moe 13th straight time at Mackey Arena. LaF A JUMPER by freshman Troy Lewis pass f nter broke the game's fifth and final tie and foulc , in- Purdue took a 30-28 edge'late in the first throug hhalf. fourth one Mitchell followed with two free had s two throws and a field goal and Bullock's I11in final basket gave Purdue a 36-28 halftime advantage. CHA hael A Bullock layup on a fast break with wardI hit a 13:52 remaining ignited a 10-2 Purdue No. 15 spurt and the Boilermakers went on to attack 57 open a 20-point advantage. Ten g The victory moved Purdue to 17-6 Illir four overall, and 8-5 in the Big Ten. playe 20-7a rdue N'Eastern 76, Badge first Ohio State 7 Ten. way Nor rn in EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (UPI) - nine f ster- Andre LaFleur's 17-foot jumper with Ton two seconds remaining yesterday witha of 11 propelled Northeastern to a 76-74 vic- the Il 57-55 ver Ohio State in the nightcap of a e-header at the Meadowlands. Fleur, who scored 14 points, took a rom Wes Fuller at the right of the circle and his jumper swished gh to give Northeastern, 14-8, its consecutive victory. The Huskies quandered a 17-point lead. iois 68, Wisconsin 49 AMPAIGN (UPI) - Reserve for- Ken Norman scored 17 points and 5 Illinois used a balanced scoring k to defeat Wisconsin 68-49 in a Big ame yesterday. nois, which had three other rs in double figures, improved to and 8-5 in the conference. The ers fell to 11-12 and 2-11 in the Big man scored seven of Illinois'last ield goals. ny Wysinger, who left the game an injury, scored 6 points to help lini to a 31-19 halftime lead. ...So Shoot Me By Joseph R. EWING * Winning the close ones... .the mark o a great team MINNEAPOLIS WI3AT if Michigan only beat Minnesota by two points yesteday afternoon, that really doesn't matter. Forget about how the Golden Gophers, who were totally humiliated last nfonth in Ann Arbor by the Wolverines, 97-56, led for most of the contest. That doesn't change anything. Big deal if Michigan shot a putrid 36.3 percent from the floor in the second half (42.2 percent for the game). That's not what counts. The thing that really counts is the tally mark in the win column, and how the Wolverines were able to get it. What really matters is that Michigan was able to grab a 'W' when it was looking like it was going to be handed an 'L'. The fact that it might not have been the prettiest victory of the season doesn't affect the Big Ten standings, or Michigan's bid for the NCAA playof- fs. The fact that they survived the game does. The win, coupled with a triumph in Iowa Thursday night and Michigan State's upset of the Hawkeyes yesterday, opens up a huge margin between the first-place Wolverines and the second-pluce Hawkeyes in the Big Ten. race. Now all Bill Frieder's squad needs to do is come out on top three of their final five games to win their first Big Ten title since 1977. The victory, Michigan's 20th of the season, should also help Michigan keep its lofty spot in the national rankings and insure'the Blue their first NCAA tournament birth in eight years. Remember Northwestern? Although the Wolverines may have had to come from behind against the eighth-place Gophers and may have blown some crucial opportunities during the game, the mistakes they made were not indicative of their level of ability or maturity. What indicated how good and how mature the Wolverines are as a team is the fact that they were able to overcome those mistakes and stage a comback against a Big Ten opponent. The Big Ten has always been a tough league to win in. There have been several times in the past when one of the lower teams in the standings has destroyed conference title and NCAA dreams of one of the top teams with an upset. In fact, just last year all Michigan needed to gain a spot in the NCAA tourney was to win their final game at lowly Northwestern, but the Wildcats refused to die and sent the Wolverines to the NIT instead. "This is a great league," said Frieder. "All ten of those teams are capab- le of beating you if you don't play well." So just being able to make it through a game like yesterday's without choking is an accomplishment in itself for the Wolverines. And it also shows that they've taken another step on the road between being a good team and being a great team - they've learned to stay in a game when they're losing. A new experience It's easy to win when you go into a ball game and dominate throughout the contest, like Michigan has done most of the time this season. The hard part is winning when you're not in control of the game, as was the case yesterday. The way the Wolverines have done this is by taking every game seriously and not letting their record or past performances go to their heads. "If you've been around this league," said Frieder, "you know to take them one at a time and not to look back at scores and rest on your laurels. Every game is a new ball game and it really doesn't matter what's happened to you before." You've got to be prepared for a game situation like the Wolverines faced yesterday, you can't just walk into it blindly and expect to win. Needless to say, the Wolverines were ready for the Gophers. "I thought it was going to be a tough game," said Frieder. "I really did. I think they've done a good job up here (at Minnesota). In the face of a little NCAA ROUNDUP: Sooners down Tigers , - ,' COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - All- American Wayman Tisdale and every other Oklahoma starter scored in double figures yesterday to power the fourth-ranked Sooners past scrappy Missouri 88-84 in a hard-fought Big Eight Conference basketball game. The Sooners' victory stretched their record of consecutive Big Eight regular-season victories to 23 and tied Missouri's conference mark of 11 straight league road victories. The Sooners are now 21-5 overall and 10-0 in the Big Eight. The Tigers erased a big first-half deficit behind the torrid shooting of senior forward Malcolm Thomas, who scored a game-high 33 points. A bucket by Darryl Kennedy gave Oklahoma an 82-80 lead and, with 27 seconds remaining, Anthony Bowie took a pass from Kennedy and hit a short jumper for an 84-80 advantage. Virginia 62, Georgia Tech 55 CHARLOTTSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Sophomore Tom Calloway scored a season-high 16 points as Virginia built a 13-point halftime lead and was never in serious trouble thereafter in surprising No. 6 Georgia Tech 62-55 yesterday in SPORTS OF THE DAILY: an Atlantic Coast Conference basket- ball game. The victory was only the second in 10 ACC games for Virginia, which im- proved its overall record to 14-11. Georgia Tech, which had won eight of its last nine games, fell to 7-4 in the con- ference and 18-5 overall. Olden Polynice added 14 points and Tom Sheehey 13 for the Cavaliers. N.C. State 85, North Carolina 76 RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Anthony "Spud" Webb scored nine of his 20 poin- ts in the final five minutes as North Carolina State broke a second-half tie and pulled away to an 85-76 victory over 13th-ranked North Carolina yesterday in Atlantic Coast Conference basket- ball. Webb scored on an inside jumper with 5:19 left that enabled the Wolfpack to tie the game 68-all. SCORES Memphis State 70, Florida State 68 Duke 81, Notre Dame 69 Syracuse 76, Louisiana State 64 SMU 72, Louisville 64 Iowa State 72, Kansas 70 UNLV 99, California Irvine 89 Boston College 62. Villanova 61 Washington 60, Oregon State 45 Associated Press University of Virginia's Mel Kennedy (21) goes to the hoop after getting around Georgia Tech's Jack Mansell yesterday. Virginia won the game, 62- 55, upsetting the sixth-ranked Yellow Jackets. Trackmen take title over EMUS 1 04-76 By DEBBIE deFRANCES The crowd at the Track and Tennis Building rose to its feet to cheer on Chris Brewster as he glided over the finish line to win the two mile run in yesterday's Central Collegiate Championships. Brewster's victory was not good enough to qualify him for the NCAA Championships in that event, nor was it even a record-breaking time, but it did lead the Wolverines to a team championship in the sixteen team field. MICHIGAN dominated the final team standings with 104 points. Eastern Michigan finished second with 761/2. Coach Jack Harvey admitted that the victory was a pleasant surprise. "The team (Michigan) that ran here today was a much different team than I've seen in the last three weeks," he said. by the Wolverine runners, was a one-two finish in the 5000 meter run. Dave Meyer won the event with a time of 14:17.63 followed by teammate Bill Brady at 14:28.23. Junior Todd Steverson won the 600 yard run in 1:10.32 for the Blue, while Tom Wilcher managed to pull off second place in the 60 yard high hurdles in 7.42 secon- ds. Bob Boynton and Ron Simpson recorded second and fourth place finishes in the 880 yard run with respective times of 1:52.72 and 1:54.12. Rollie Hudson ran 2:12.20 for third in the 1000 yard run. According to Harvey, the surprise of the meet was Scott Crawford's fourth place in the high jump. Crawford who jumped 6'10", was performing with an injured hamstring muscle. Harvey was oleased with his team's effort. three meter diving events. Michigan won the meet 66-47 and bettered their record to 7-0 overall and 4-0 in the Big Ten, while Ohio State drops to 6-6 and 3-2. ADDING TO THE Wolverine win were standout4 performances by both Marc Parrish and Bruce Kim- ball. Parrish rose to the occassion in the 400-yard in- dividual medley, chalking up a 4:02.54 time, while Kimball managed a third and first place finish in the one and three meter events. "The diving was at its best," said head swim coach Jon Urbanchek. "Ferguson and Kimball deserve the credit." Urbanchek only echoed the sentiments of head diving coach Dick Kimball who said that Ohio State would be a tough competitor. "OHIO STATE has some great divers," said Kim-s