.i Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, January 13, 1985 Wolverines broil Boilers (Continued from Page 1) guard Mack Gadis, a 93-percent foul shooter, missed a free throw that would have pulled his team within one, 41-40. Two minutes later, at the 11:56 mark, Thompson put in a 10-foot jumper that set the Wolverines off on a 15-0 run. Before the storm blew over Michigan had a 58-41 lead. The Wolverines used their three- guard offense, in which Antoine Joubert takes the role of small forward, to break the game open. Joubert, Thom- pson and Gary Grant scored 13 of the 15 points while shutting down Purdue with help from center Roy Tarpley, who led all scorers with 23 points. "We decided to go small for a com- bination of reasons," said Frieder, whose club is now 2-2 in the Big Ten (10- 3 overall). "We felt we could match up defensively. Garde has been playing well and we had some foul trouble with Butch Wade." 'M' pummels Purdue; A first for Freider "YOU GOT to hand it to Michigan," he said. "They went on a tough road trip and won one of them so that puts them right back into the race." A "WITH GARY, Antoine and myself in there," said Thompson, "We get the ball on the break and we're gone. We got that going in the second half and we just gradually pulled away until, all of a sudden, we're up by 17." Purdue made a strong attempt to get back in the game. Aided by some poor foul shooting by Michigan, the Boilers put together a 14-4 run and trailed by only seven. "They did a great job coming back," Frieder said. "They got aggressive with the pressure. They were all over us on the boards." Soft Boilers PURDUE MinFG/A FT/A Atkinson .......... Bullock.......... Gadis........... Lewis........... Littlejohn ......... Mitchell ........... Reid........... Robinson ........ Stephens .......... Team Rebounds ... 35 32 30 16 25 15 31 11 5 4/12 4/7 7/13 2/4 2/3 1/4 5/10 1/6 1/3 2/2 3/5 0/2 2/2 2/2 0/1 2/2 0/0 0/0 R 8 A 1 2 6 6 1 3 3 A 3 2 3 0 0 1 3 2 0 PF Pts. 3 10 5 11 3 14 1 6 3 6 2 2 5 12 1 2 0 2 MICHIGAN MinFG/A FT/A Rellford........... 23 Wade............22 Tarpley ........... 40 Joubert............37 Grant ............. 37 Henderson........20 Thompson......... 20 Stoyko ............ 1 Team Rebounds ... 2/5 :2/3 10/1$ 5/15 7/13 2/5 3/5 0/0 0/0 0/0 3/5 5/8 2/4 2/4 7/8 0/0 R 4 5 10 1 6 3 4 0 3 A 0 1 1 8 6 0 0 0 PF Pts. 0 4 4 4 2 23 3 15 2 16 4 6 3 13 0 0 Associated rress Villanova center Ed Pinckney goes after a loose ball as Georgetown's Perry McDonald, left, looks on. His teammate, Horace Broadnax, tries to grab the ball. See story below. BUT TARPLEY and Grant ran a suc- cessful break with 3:32 remaining which ended with the big man laying the ball in the basket and getting fouled by Purdue's Steve Reid. The Boiler- makers never recovered. "They seemed to get everything going their way after that," said Gad- is, who led Purdue with 14 points. Grant had another outstanding all- around game. The 6-3 freshman finished with 16 points, six assists, six rebounds, and three steals. Perhaps even more important, the Canton, Ohio native held Reid below his 14.4 point scoring average. The 5-9 Reid, who had 26 points Thursday night in a losing ef- fort against Michigan State, finished with 12 and hit on only one of six attem- pts from the floor in the second half. "I THINK Gary Grant did a great, great job on Steve Reid," Frieder said. "Making him dribble with his left hand was the most important thing," Grant explained. "He had to turn his whole body to square up and take the shot off the screen. By that time, I'm off the screen and I can get a hand on it." Tarpley had a field day against Pur- due's 6-9 Robert Littlejohn, who does not appear to have all the skills necessary to be an effective Big Ten center. Grant said that the guards were working to get the ball inside to the pivot man. "WE TRIED to get it in to Tarpley because they didn't have the height to match up with him," said Michigan's newest hero. The Wolverines had their best defen- sive effort of the season, holding Pur- due to 44-percent shooting - nine poin- ts below its season average - and for- cing the Boilers into 19 turnovers. Along with Grant, Rob Henderson and Wade were defensive standouts, although neither produced much on the other end. Purdue, Big Ten co-champions in 1934, is now 1-3 in the league and its long history of winning at Mackey Arena seems to be in jeopardy. Boilermaker coach Gene Keady didn't have many positive things to say about his club but he did put in a good word for the victors. I Grant ... hits for 16 If the Wolverines are going to stay in the race, they're going to have to con- tinue to come up with big efforts on the road. This was Michigan's first victory at Purdue since 1977, but Grant still was not totally satisfied. TOTALS...........200 27/62 11/16 40 14 23 65 TOTALS...........200 31/62 19/298 First half score: Michigan 32, Purdue 30 Attendance: 13,243 Technical: Purdue bench 36 16 18 81 BIG TEN ROUNDUP: "We should have had both of (the games on this road trip)," he said. "Illinois slipped away from us and today we were determined to win." It's. that kind of determination that brings teams to the top of the Big Ten. Illinois pounds CHAMPAIGN (AP)-Anthony Welch scored 23 points to power 15th ranked Illinois to a 75-63 victory over 17th- ranked Michigan State in Big Ten Con- ference basketball yesterday. Welch scored 15 of his points in the second half after Illinois recovered from a mediocre opening half. DOUG ALTENBERGER added 17 points for the Illini and Bruce Douglas hit 14. The loss ended Michigan State's four- game winning streak and reduced the Spartan record to 3-1 in the league, 12-2 overall. Illinois now is 2-2 in the league, 13-4 overall. Illinois led at halftime 30-28, after trailing most of the half. Michigan State held leads up to eight points several times in the opening 20 minutes, but Altenberger led an Illinois rally, scoring five points in the last four minutes of the half. MICHIGAN STATE hit 56 percent of its first half field goal attempts, while holding Illinois to 38 percent from the floor. The Illini turned the game around at the beginning of the second half, scoring nine consecutive points and holding Michigan State scoreless for nearly four minutes with a swarming, full-court press. Illinois maintained leads. up to 14 points throughout the rest of the game, to notch its second consecutive home victory. Michigan State was led by senior guard Sam Vincent, with 20 points. Scott Skiles added 18 and Larry Polec hit 14 points. Indiana 90, Wisconsin 68 BLOOMINGTON (UPI)-The 11th- ranked Indiana Hoosiers are about as deep a team as there is in college basketball, and it was the contributions of reserves Winston Morgan and Steve Eyl that led to their 90-68 victory yesterday over Big Ten foe Wisconsin. Morgan, who has started eight games in Indiana's revolving door lineup, scored 14 points and handed out four assists while Eyl, a freshman forward, scored 11 points and pulled down six rebounds in reserve roles. "I FELT Morgan and Eyl played very well coming off the bench," Indiana coach Bobby Knight said. "Morgan did a good job taking the ball to the bucket. I think Eyl, coming in for (center Uwe) Blab, greatly improved our play at that position." "They've got great depth," Wiscon- sin coach Steve Yoder said. "It seems Spa rtans like when somebody gets tired,I somebody else comes in and does the job." Starting guard Steve Alford led In- diana with 20 points, including 12 in a three-minute stretch of the first half that helped the Hoosiers take a 44-34 halftime lead. INDIANA THEN doubled that advan- !' 75-63 tage during the first eight minutes of the second half and Knight started sen- ding in the second string of substitutes in his 15-man squad. "For us, the best part of play was the first seven minutes of the second half," Knight said. Yoder bemoaned the fact that his team made only six of 14 free throw at- tempts in the first half and finished only 14 of 25 from the line. "You can't shoot 6-of-14 from the line and be in many games," Yoder said. "We were fortunate to be down by 10 at halftime." Minnesota 65, Iowa 57 MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Tommy Davis scored 18 points, including a crucial three-point play late in the game, as surprising Minnesota knocked off No. 19 Iowa 65-57 yesterday in Big Ten basketball. The upset left both Minnesota and Iowa 2-1 in the conference. NINE POINTS by Davis and icy Iowa shooting enabled the Gophers to open a 31-22 half-time lead. The Hawkeyes shot only 36 pecent in the first half, compared to Minnesota's 52 percent accuracy. Iowa cut Minnesota's 11-point lead early in the second half down to 39-36 when Andre Banks hit a jump shot. That was the closest the Hawkeyes came. Iowa pulled within 47-43 when Greg Stokes scored two free throws with 3:50 to go. But in the next 44 seconds, Min- nesota scored seven straight points on a basket from backup center Paul Van Den Einde, Davis' three-point play and two free throws from Marc Wilson to go ahead 54-43. ON DAVIS' three-point play, back- court mate Wilson drove down court on a breakaway layup but missed, banging the shot off the front of the rim. The alert Davis grabbed the rebound, was fouled and converted the free throw. Stokes led Iowa with 21 points, while Michael Payne grabbed 16 Hawkeye rebounds. John Shasky, Minnesota's 7- foot center, added 14 points. Minnesota boosted its overall record to 9-4, while the defeat left Iowa at 13-3. Big Ten 4 Standings Conf. Overall WL WL .Wichigan State ............3 1 12 2 Indiana ...................3 1 11 3 Iowa ..................2 1 13 3 Minnesota .................2 1 9 4 MICHIGAN ...............2 2 10 3 Ohio State .................2 2 10 3 Illinois .................2 2 13 4 Wisconsin .................1 2 10 3 Purdue ....................1 3 10 3 Northwestern ..............0 3 4 9 j By Steve Wise Purdue not making the grade... @* eKeady starts tutorin WEST LAFAYETTE IT'S A GOOD thing classes aren't in session here, because Purdue's basketball players wouldn't have much time for homework. Gene Keady, headmaster of the Boilermaker basketball academy, decided to keep his pupils after school yesterday, calling them in for an extra { practice at 9:30 last night. "Maybe he thinks it'll get us up, or something like that. Maybe it'll work," said Purdue guard Mack Gadis, who explained that last night's was the first ever Saturday night post-game practice, at least in his three years with the Boilers. "I guess (Keady's) just dissatisfied with our play," said forward Mark: Atkinson. "He's trying to correct it any way he can. I don't know if tonight's going to do it." The uncertainty of both Gadis and Atkinson and the subdued tone in which both spoke are signs of what Keady is upset about. Michigan's 81-65 win yesterday gave Purdue its first pair of consecutive home losses in three years. It's only the fifth time the Boilermakers have dropped two straight in Mackey Arena since the place was built in 1967. And Keady thinks he knows why his team has flunked the home game tests. Concentration requirements "The main thing you can teach young men to be able to win at this level is to concentrate," Keady said, "and we're not concentrating. "I don't know what we're worried about, but there are things evidently on our minds besides basketball." The concentration problem showed in Purdue's second half free-throw shooting, which totalled just 50 percent. Gadis, a 93-percent free-throw shooter going into yesterday's game, typified the Boilers' struggles at the line, missing his only two free throws of the game. The problem also showed yesterday in Purdue's 19 turnovers. That num- ber is seven more than Michigan's total and about eight-and-a-half more than the Boilermakers have averaged this year. Keady gave an especially low grade to his team's shot selection, which netted, or rather didn't net, Purdue a 43-percent mark. That's about a C- for most teams, but the Boilermakers' 53-percent season average raises the curve, as well as Keady's ire. "I'm always disappointed in shot selection when you shoot the ball too quick," he said. "You shoot the ball with one pass in this league, and you're gonna get your ass beat." Yesterday's result also had something to do with the treatment Purdue's collective posteriors took in its overtime loss Thursday. After squandering a six-point lead in the last minute of regulation, the Boilers got outscored by nine in OT. "It was a game we felt we had won," said Gadis. "I think it had a great ef- fect on us coming into this game. "We wanted the win extra bad but it seemed like nothing went our way." So Keady's out to find a new way. He said he's deliberately maintained his starting lineup after the first loss, but now that may change. "Evidently," Keady observed, "nowadays in our high, loose-knitted societv nennle cnn't tnke sernritv and cmnIn'encv and get motivated " 14 14 r Associated Press MSU's Center Ken Johnson draws a swarm of Illinois defenders in roundball action yesterday. The Illini trounced MSU, 75-63. NCAA ROUNDUP: 4 Hoyas nip Vilan ova in overtime PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A pair of free throws by David Wingate with 12 seconds remaining in overtime triggered No. 1-ranked Georgetown to a 52-50 victory over 16th-ranked Villanova yesterday. The triumph was Georgetown's 15th straight this season, while Villanova's record dropped to 9-3. REGULATION ended 43-43 when Villanova's Ed Pinckney made two free throws with 11 seconds remaining. Georgetown took a 45-43 lead at 4:28 of the overtime, but Dwayne McClain, who led Villanova with 18 points, tied it at 3:01. Reggie Williams sent Georgetown ahead again 47-45 at 2:34 and made it for last year's NCAA tournament. Washington defeated Duke in the second round of last year's postseason tournament 80-78. The Blue Devils held a 51-34 lead at Half- time, but Washington scored six straight points to open the second half and pull to within 41-40. The Huskies went ahead once at 44-43 on Detlef Schrempf'sashort jumper with 15:06 left, but Duke quickly regained the lead on reserve David Hender- :son's jumper from the top of the key. North Carolina 65, Virginia 61 CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) - in the scramble for the rebound, the ball was knocked out of bounds and awarded to Carolina. Curtis Hunter got free for a dunk with 19 seconds left to put the Tar Heels up 63-59. A jumper by Simms and a pair of free throws by Kenny Smith at the :03 mark accounted for the final margin. DePaul 69, Houston 58 CHICAGO (AP) - Marty Embry scored a game-high 17 points and pulled down 11 rebounds to spearhead a muscular DePaul rebounding effort yesterday that carried the 13th-ranked Blue Demons to a 69-58 victory over Houston. 1:05 to start DePaul on the road to its 10th victory in 13 outings and stretch a consecutive game winning streak at home to 34. Oklahoma 98, N. W. Louisiana 62 NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Oklahoma's two-time All-American, Wayman Tisdale, scored 21 points and became the Big Eight Conference's all-time scoring leader as No. 8 Oklahoma overwhelmed undermanned North- western Louisiana State 98-62 in non- conference college basketball yester- day. Tisdalie a 6-foot-9 iunior. broke the dm