Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 12, 1985 l' tull court PRESS Knight absent at conference .. . 0 ..so what? By TIM MAKINEN There may still be some die hard journalists waiting in the Indiana interview room, but they may as well go home. Bob Knight will not show up. The Hoosier mentor, whose squad suffered a heartbreaking 73-71 defeat at the hands of the visiting Wolverines Sunday, decided the post- game ritual was not worthy of his presence. Who cares? The pompous Indiana coach did everyone a. favor, by not trying to upstage Bill Frieder and triumphant Michigan. It was a remarkable game with a fantastic finish which climaxed an incom- parable Big Ten season for the Wolverines. A real "wing-dinger" as the eternally amiable Frieder described it on national television. Knight could not have added anything of significance to the proceedings. Although he has helped Frieder on numerous occasions in the past, something for which the Wolverine coach is grateful, any words of congratulations from Knight on Sunday would have come across as hollow and insincere. A 15-13 record, the worst ever for Knight, simply does not produce an overabundance of gratitude or cordiality in the Indiana ogre. Besides, the gum-chewinig, lip-smacking Wolverine taskmaster received enough praise from the hardy handful of Michigan supporters at Indiana and the national press covering the game. Obviously basking in the joy of the emotional victory, Frieder still maintained a quiet dignity and humility after the contest. No flippant boasts, no demeaning comments to anyone, and no flying chairs. Only respect and admiration for both a fallen opponent and his own players who refused to wilt in the pressure, tension, and foreboding tradition of Assembly Hall. Thus when the Indiana sports information direc- tor came out into the press room and said, "I don't know where coach Knight is, which means he might not show up," no great regret existed at having to forego a less dignified diatribe than Frieder's. Achtung In Knight's absence, though, the Indiana lockerroom was open for player interviews, a true rarity in the sheltered atmosphere of Hoosierland. Upon entering the room, a feeling of death cast its pall upon the otherwise bright red walls and decor. Instead of the usual banter and milling around which accompanies even losing lockerrooms, the Indiana players sat motionless in front of their respective lockers. No one spoke, and a vacant stare in each one's eyes belied the fact that these players, all upright and clad in business suits, had in fact played a game of hoops in the afternoon. One expected to find a bare lightbulb dangling from the ceiling and perhaps a monacled man shifting from player to player declaring "Ve have vays of making you talk.'' But as the reporters congregated around Steve Alford and Uwe Blab, the rest of the team maintained its silent vigil in front of the lockers. For their part, both Alford and Blab demon- strated a lot of class in their barely audible statements to the press. The pair exhibited com- posure under trying times and under the stifling, suffocating rule of Knight. After a few minutes or so, a man informed everyone that the players had said enough and that everyone was to exit immediately. Knight, of course, was nowhere to be seen. With that, everybody filed outthe door to room 087 in the Southeast hallway of Assembly Hall slammed shut, and a guard quickly applied key to lock to seal the Hoosiers in and everyone else out. Hospitable? Hardly! Asked if this was how post-game interviews always occurred, a cameraman from Channel 13 in Indianapolis replied, "There's nothing 'always' done here. Sometimes you get to see the players, sometimes you don't." Contrasted to the Michigan lockerroom and Frieder, a state of siege existed for the Hoosiers The Wolverines were ecstatic. Indiana, even with the tough loss, was incredibly lifeless and sup- pressed. Knight would have no part of any of it, neither the joy of the Wolverines nor the trauma of his own players when the press came in. If the state motto in Indiana is "Hoosier hospitality is no accident," for Knight that should read "Hoosier hospitality is non-existent." Doily Photo by STEVE WISE Michigan coach Bill Frieder and Indiana's Bob Knight peacefully consort before Sunday's game at Assembly Hall. The Wolverines went on to defeat the Hoosiers 72-70. AP All-Americans First Team Patrick Ewing, 7-10, senior Georgetown; Keith Lee, 6-10 senior, Memphis State; Xavier McDaniel, 6-7 senior, Wichita State; Chris Mullin, 6-6 senior, St. John's; Wayman Tisdale, 6-9, junior, Oklahoma. Second Team Len Bias, 6-8, junior, Maryland; Johnny Dawkins,, 6-2, junior, Duke; Jon Koncak, 7-0, senior, Southern Methodist; Mark Price, 6-2, junior, Georgia Tech; Kenny Walker, 6-8, junior, Kentucky. Third Team A.C. Green, 6-9, senior, Oregon State; Alfredrick Hughes, 6-5, senior, Loyola, Ill.; ROY TARPLEY, 6-10, JUNIOR, MICHIGAN; Sam Vincent, 6-2, senior, Michigan State; Dwayne "Pearl" Washington, 6-2, sophomore, Syracuse. Cagers to face the ..~. ~ i~ 1.G 2. 3. S 4. 0 5. N 6. G 7. N 8. L 9. A 10.1 11. 12.I 13.1 14. 15. 16. 17.1 18.' 19. 20. L AP Top Twenty Record eorgetown (63) ...... 30-2 ] MICHIGAN .......... 25-3 ] St. John's ............ 27-3 ] Oklahoma ............ 28-5 ] hIemphis State ....... 27-3 ] -eorgia Tech ......... 24-7 4. Carolina........... 24-8 Louisiana Tech ....... 27-2 Nev.-Las Vegas ...... 27-3 Duke ................ 22-7 Virg. Commonwealth 25-5 Illinois............... 24-8 Kansas .............. 25-7 Loyola, Ill............ 25-5 Syracuse ............ 21-8 N. Carolina St........ 20-9 Texas Tech .......... 23-7 Tulsa ................ 23-7 Georgia ............. 21-8 Louisiana St........... 19-9 Pts 1260 1175 1124 1061 1004 901 794 737 724 653 581 518 506 417 351 262 222 138 132 105 UPI Top Twenty 1. Georgetown (40) .......... 30-2 2. MICHIGAN ............... 25-3 3. St. John's ..............27-3 4. Memphis State ............ 27-3 5. Oklahoma ................ 28-5 6. Georgia Tech ............. 24-7 7. North Carolina ............ 24-8 8. Louisiana Tech ........... 27-2 9. Nevada-Las Vegas ........27-3 10. Illinois ................... 24-8 11. Virginia Commonwealth.. 25-5 12. Duke................... 22-7 13. Kansas ...............25-7 14. Tulsa .................. 22-7 15. Syracuse ................ 21-8 16. Texas Tech ............... 23-7 17. Loyola, Ill................ 25-5 18. North Carolina St......... 20-9 19. Louisiana State.........19-9 20. Michigan State ......... 19-9 600 556 534 513 479 358 296 276 258 193 180 154 145 77 66 58 30 28 26 16 - Earn college credit t studying -abroad. - CCIS offers high quality, low cost academic programs. e Programs available for all undergraduate levels- freshman through senior. - Many courses taught in English. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT COLLEGE CONSORTIUM FOR U INTERNATIONAL STUDIES L 866 UN Plaza, Suite 511, New York, NY 10017,212-308-1556 Please indicate the college you attend, number of semesters completed and your home city and state. RUN' The 1985-1986 Michigan Student Assembly ELECTIONS Make your voice heard, and get the experience of a lifetime. RUN FOR AN MSA OFFICE Run, don't walk, to 3909 Mich. Union and pick up a candidacy packet Filing deadline: 5:00 p.m., March 20. for more info, call 763-3241. msa, unknlown ii (Continued from Page 1) judgement: I've been going in with the idea that if I missed the first one, I wasn't going to play well. "I've had a tough time concentrating. Today I came in with the attitude that I was going to make the first one." Uwe Blab also broke a recent slump, leading Indiana with 23 points, and seven rebounds while nearly smothering Tarpley on the defensive end. BUT BLAB was hindered most of the second half by Henderson who played probably his most intense game of the season. The 6-10 junior earned the Chevrolet Most Valuable Player award for his defensive play and eight reboun- ds. Frieder said that kind of intensity, along, with the composure with which the comeback was mounted, sets Michigan in good stead for its first- round NCAA game. "I don't buy the theory that a loss would have done us good," said the fif- th-year Michigan head man. "I buy the theory that hey, we sustained a great' Ohio State comeback on Wednesday, and we came from behind (Sunday) to beat a great Indiana team. "THOSE ARE the types of things.that make a good tournament team, not losses." The question' now is whether Michigan really needs to be a good r opener team to.get past Fairleigh Dickinson, its opponent in Friday's game. The 21-9 Knights come from a con- ference featuring such national nobodies as Wagner and St. Francises (Pa.) and (N.Y.) "I WAS hoping to play anyone with the exception of Georgetown and Michigan, and not necessarily in that -order," said Fairleigh Dickinson coach Tom Green. Green said he is most worried about the' Wolverines' physical power. Having lost three of last year's starters to graduation, The Knight's most im- posing starter stands 6-7. "I saw (Michigan) play . . . and they're just so big and strong," Green fretted. "It appears to me that your football coach, Bo Schembechler, just let them out for four months to play some basketball." Though he says the Knights won't change their game for the tournament, Green jokingly suggested that his team was afraid of the Wolverines. "We had a brief team meeting this morning," Green said yesterday. "We had seven players vote to play and we had seven abstaining." It looks like perhaps the Wolverines can breathe a little easier now. Knighty Knight INDIANA Min FG/A FT/A R A P F Pts 135,000,000 miles for one. of your smiles. Eyl............ Thomas ....... Blab.......... Alford......... Robinson ...... Meier......... Brooks ........ Dakich ........ Team rebounds 40 26 40 38 39 10 3 4 2/5 5/10 9/15 11/16 4/8 0/3 0/0 0/0 0/0 2/3 5/6 0/0 0/0 2/2 0/0 0/0 6 3 7 6i 2 2 0 0 3 0 I 0 4 8. 0 0 2 2 4 4 12 1 23 0 22 2 8 1 2 0 0 0 0 /e 9/11 29 16 10 71 4 TOTALS ......200 31/57 MICHIGAN Min Reilford .......29 Wade.......... 17 Tarpley ....... 39 Joubert .......3' Grant ......... 29 Henderson .... 24 Thompson ..... 9 Rockymore.... 18 Team Rebounds FG/A 7/11 0/1 5/12 7/14 9/13 2/2 1/3 3/5 FT/A R 1/1 4 1/2 4 2/4 6 1/2 0 '0/0 0 0/1 8 0/0 0 0/0 2 3 A 0 0 2 10' 2 0 0 0 PF 3 3 1 4 4 0 0 0 Pts 15 1 12 15 18 4 2 6 TOTALS ...... 200 34/61 5/10 27 14 15 This year Domino's Pizza will have driven 135,000,000 miles and receive J countless smiles for our fast, free delivery! Our store near you is prepared to add more miles for your smile. Fast, Free Delivery 761-1111 East Ann St. 769-5511 Broadway 761-9393 Packard at Dewey When you're happy, we're happy. Halftime score: Indiana 38, MICHIGAN 29 Attendance : 16,082 Wolverine Team Awards Bill Buntin Most Valuable Player: Roy Tarpley Wayman Britt Defensive Player: Gary Grant Rudy Tomjanovich Most Improved Player: Richard Rellford, Robert Hen- derson, Antoine Joubert Steve Grote Hustler Award: Butch Wade, Garde Thompson Thad Garner Leadership Award- Leslie Rockymore , I $1.00 off any single 12" I pizza with one or more items I Offer expires March 14 I 1 I * Fast, Free Delivery I I Ad