Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 3, 1986 Tarp buries Badgers in 91-64 victory By BARB McQUADE The Roy Tarpley of old emerged Saturday, triggering Michigan's 91-64 shootout over Wisconsin at Crisler Arena, improving the Wolverines' record to 7-2 midway through the Big Ten season. The 6-11 senior, who has appeared to suffer from amnesia on the court this season, remembered who he was, scoring 27 points on 69 percent shooting. "I was shooting the jumper," Tar- pley said. "That kind of opened it up for me inside." The Wolverine center's success from outside kept the lane clear for his teammates, too, as they defined balanced scoring. Gary Grant, An- toine Joubert, Richard Rellford, But- ch Wade and Glen Rice notched 10 points apiece. All 10 players who saw action scored. "Our kids were ready to play from the beginning," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. "We were the aggressor. We got it done early and established control when we had to in the first 20 minutes." "We didn't want to give them any intention that they can beat us on our floor," agreed Grant. "We just went out there and got an early lead and that's what sparked us." That spark kindled Michigan at both ends of the court.. "We played great defense and I think that was the biggest thing," said Joubert. The hard-working Wolverine defen- se forced 22 turnovers and tallied eight steals and four blocked shots, three by Tarpley. Grant was the defensive dynamo, holding Wiscon- sin's Rick Olsen to 12 points with just one field goal in the first half. The Badger guard is averaging 19.5 points per game after scoring 32 at Michigan State Thursday. "We've got (Grant) concentrating on defense a little more," said Frieder. "He's working at it. You never think you're going to hold Olsen like that." "My role was just to stop him," said Grant, who started Saturday after recovering fully from an ankle strain suffered in Thursday's 82-45 victory over Northwestern. "We had great team defense and a lot of intensity." Michigan's bid for dominance sent it out to a 15-4 lead in the first five minutes of play. During that stretch, Wade began the dunk parade, stealing the ball and slamming it for two poin- ts. The Wolverines stuffed seven more throughout the contest, four by Tar- pley. But while Michigan dazzled the crowd, it didn't make a deep im- pression on Wisconsin head coach Steve Yoder, who said he felt his team turned in a sub-par performance. "That wasn't the same team we had down at Michigan State or Iowa or against Minnesota," said a curt Yoder. "We weren't ready to play. That's probably my fault. Blame this one on the coach." Joubert would rather attribute, some of Michigan's success to its backcourt aggressiveness. "We started penetrating just a little bit more and we're creating more things on the floor." Those things translated into points. The Wolverines outshot their op- ponents 76-36, and outscored them from the free throw line, 19-8. Hender- son regained his perfect touch from the stripe, putting in both of his at- tempts after missing his first free throw of the conference season in 18 tries Thursday. Rice made good on all six of his chances from the line, after going zero for eight in his college career. The free throw line wasn't the only place Rice shined against Wisconsin. The freshman forward tore down seven rebounds in 17 minutes of play. Although his two-of-eight shooting in- dicates he still needs more seasoning, Rice showed he's got the ingredients with keen court vision. At 3:07 of the first half, he dealt a quick feed to Grant behind him in the lane on a fast break. The layup was awarded on a goaltending call. While the Badgers took a beating, no one suffered more blows than guard Mike Heineman. The 6-3 junior led Wisconsin in scoring with 16 poin- ts, but was also first in the bruise department, getting knocked around all day. With :52 remaining in the first half, 6-9 sophomore Steve Stoyko leveled him when both clambered for a rebound. At 16:28 of the second period, Tarpley smacked Heineman out of bounds while attempting to block a shot. That was just one piece of evidence that Michigan's center was king of the hill. Moreover, after some disappoin- ting play throughout the early part of the Big Ten season, Tarpley couldn't help but be happy with this outing. "This is the first game I've been pleased with in a long time." But while Tarpley sunk 11 of 16 shots, the rest of the team recorded only 41.6 percent accuracy from the floor. "We're still not shooting the ball the way we have to if we want to be a fac- tor in the tournament," Frieder said. One Wolverine who was perfect from the field was Stoyko. The reser- ve forward powered in his only at- tempt following a head fake with 22 seconds left in the game. For Stoyko, who saw rare first-half playing time, those two points were his first in the Big Ten this season. "I was glad that I played a lot today, especially in the first half because I was more relaxed going into the second half," he said. "It's good t get into the scorebook." Stoyko's 100 percent shooting is consistent with his career average in conference play, in which he is now three of three. Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY res down a rebound during the nsin Saturday. Wade grabbed ten Michigan forward Butch Wade sna Wolverines 91-64 victory over Wiscon rebounds to go along with his ten point s. :... ... S i....... et . zk~ 3:F1 .b ... ': ebr . mpe c . a ski 04AL MboFGI FTA R A P i .26 3- 4 52 2 . 10 .24 4-10 2 1* 10 31 11-18 -5 3 2 7' .26 , -11 #t0 2 . 10 .20 24 24 402 .024 2-2 3 20 40 .17 2- 4 601Z 2 4 5 1 - 34 0 1 1: . .20 M 7 S41 4i q12 WISCONSIN MlaP:GIAfl'JA ERA ! P "t N"* "4. 5 3 24 6 2 4-1002 4 .. 20 1 802 2 .t# 612 4.4 7. 5 3 1$; .22 542 24 4 1 2 12 .27 4 244 0 2 10 14 445 0-1 7 4 2 14. . 11 16 I t# U 2. .1 H H 840! 6* ' 7 .21#6' 2 28-3* 1$ 16 '' 44 By Steve Wise "Roy Tarpley was awesome Saturday. His 27 points keyed Michigan's win and established him again as the Big Ten's most dominating player. "In fact, Tarpley demonstrated Saturday that all his pre-season All-America ratings were more than true. He could be the best center in the country." That's about how Brent Musburger and his merry band of superlatives would probably describe Tar- pley's play against Wisconsin. If he was watching, Musburger would have joined a lot of Michigan basketball fans who gloried at the sight of "the real Roy Tarpley" or "the Tarpley we've all been waiting for." Viewed without the benefit of Brent's special magnifying goggles (It can't be normal vision that makes him blow everything out of proportion that way), the picture changes a bit. In the harsh light of Monday morning reality, we see that Tarpley played a decent game. Hitting 11 of 16 field goals and all of five free throws, Tarpley put on an offensive show that could run to a Musburgerian soun- dtrack were it not for one thing. The Wolverines were matched with the dairy state's finest. Tarpley was playing against a bunch of guys whose ability, speed and strength approximated that of brick cheese. Going around, through and over Wiscon- sin was, for Tarpley, like putting a hot knife through... uh, you get the idea. "He's a lot quicker than Wisconsin's players," said Bill Frieder, the Michigan coach whose understated tone could do a lot for some broadcasters. The point here is that in the context of a home contest against one of the league's weakest teams, the num- bers don't mean that much. What is significant about Tarpley's game Saturday is that it was devoid of the problems that have plagued the 6-11 senior lately. Tarpley never came close to the foul trouble that for- ced him into early exits against Michigan State and Northwestern. The three fouls he did commit came af- Tarpley on track .. . ...well, sort of ter a clean first half and never hampered his play. Nor did Tarpley put the ball on the floor too often. Dribbling in the lane cost him a rejection and a travelling call early, but the rest of the game saw Tar- pley rarely putting it down in traffic. When he did dribble inside, it was part of a slashing move to the hoop, left forearm leading, that netted two three-point plays late in the second half. "I'm trying to be a little smarter with the ball, make a quick dribble instead of, you know, look in and then dribble. That gives (the defense) time to collapse on me," Tarpley said. Correcting what he admitted was a "bad habit" looked Saturday like part of an effort, conscious or otherwise, to reestablish an NBA future that had been collapsing on Tarpley like those enemy zones. There he was, slapping the ball away from a driving Badger and then blocking two shots following the in- bounds play. And there he was on other defensive plays, causing two steals for which he got no credit on top of the one that made the score sheet, the one he took to half court by way of a behind-the-back dribble. And there was Michigan's lanky center drifting out- side for three medium-range jumpers, an 18-foot rain- bow midway through the first half simply crying out for a small forward spot in the pros. "I was just trying to show off every aspect of my game," said Tarpley. He showed it off well enough to warrant a strange request from one adoring fan. Apparently convinced that Tarpley had regained his status as a "money player," the man asked for an autograph on the face of a $20 bill. Tarpley obliged, and, he joked, "I asked if I could keep it." Instead Tarpley will try to hang on to the many things he did right Saturday. If he can, the money Will take care of itself. GOING OVERSEAS? Learn Spanish, French or German Quickly at ACCESS night & day tutorial classes English as Second Language also available Call 994-1456 OR VISIT 617 E. University Suite 250 LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN Michigan's 1st & Only State & Certified Commercial Translating Study Program I *1 V Illini dump Purdue A -Aerobic Dance -Ballroom Dance -Bartending -Beer Appreciation -CPR -Dream Interpretation -Financial Planning -Massage -Personal Nutrition & Health -Of Mice & Menus -Pilot Ground School -Sign Language -Speed Reading -Vegetarian Cooking -Wine Tasting -Yoga/Meditation CHAMPAIGN (AP)-Junior for- ward Ken Norman scored 23 points to lead Illinois to an 80-68 triumph over Purdue yesterday. The win lifted Illinois to a 14-6 record overall, and 5-4 in the con- ference. Purdue fell to 16-6 and 5-4. THE Boilermakers were led by sophomore guard Troy Lewis, who had a game-high 30 points. Besides Norman, Illinois had three players in double figures. Tony Wysinger came off the bench to score 12 and Efrem Winters added 11 for the Fighting Illini. Bruce Douglas didn't make a field goal but hit 11 of 12 free throw attempts to help ice the victory. Sparked by Lewis' 16 first half poin- ts, Purdue took a 34-31 lead at the break. ThekBoilermakers held the lead for the first 10 minutes of the second half before a Winters field goal gave Illinois a brief lead at 49-48 margin. THE LEAD changed hands until Illinois finally took control with three minutes remaining on a three-point play by Scott Meents and four straight Douglas free throws. Sunday's contest was the first of three straight home games for Illinois this week. The Illini play Michigan State Thursday and Michigan Satur- day. Purdue will square off against Michigan on Thursday Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Wolverine center Roy Tarpley gets two of his 27 points the easy way during Michigan's victory over Wisconsin Saturday. Big Ten Standings 0 Registration Begins Monday, Jan. 27 through Friday, Feb. 7 at the Michigan Union ticket office. For more info, call 763-1107 MICHIGAN ................. Indiana ..................... Iowa ........................ Purdue ...................... Illinois ..'................. Conf. W L 72 6 3 6 3 5 4 5 4 Overall 19 2 14 5 16 6 16 6 14 6 Michigan State............ Ohio State ................... Minnesota ................... wisconsin ................... Northwestern ............... 5 4 4 5 4 5 2 7 1 8 14 5 10 9 14 8 10 9 7 12 THIS WEEK AT GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR MI 48104 BE GUILD HOUSE WRITERS SERIES Monday, February 3 8:00 p.m. P. F. Anderson and Mary Lacey DCr~ %Ih.II . I-V^AA TUCID I~AI^DVCLF DONORS NEEDED - WE PAY CASH - Ypsilanti Plasma ' ' CenterI MICHIGAN AVE. I 1 $10 bonus with this ad PEARSON* on first donation' 1 1 - Frn t. 4 in to 4:1.1..nor ...*L TAKE THE LEAD Help New Students Discover the Diversity of Michigan BE A FALL ORIENTATION I a