4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 3, 1986 'M' pulls curtains on vacation foes (Continued from Page 1) against UAB. The Blazers stayed with Michigan throughout the first 20 minutes of play, trailing by two at the half, but finally lost their way and fell, 62-54. Silencing Tarpley throughout the frame was the key to UAB's success, as it held the 6-11 center scoreless. The Detroit Cooley High graduate managed just two field goals on the day. "They're sagging in on Roy," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. "So we tried to find the open spots on the perimeter. We did a pretty good job. They're sagging in on him and making us shoot." ANTOINE Joubert woke the Wolverines up in time to answer the challenge. The 6-5 guard scored 12 of his 20 points in the second half, in- cluding Michigan's first eight points after intermission. "Joubert played well and shot well, and Gary was tough down the stret- ch," Frieder said. "Gary did a great job defending UAB guard Steve Mit- chell the entire game." "Obviously Grant and Joubert just played phenomenal games," said UAB head coach Gene Bartow. "I think Michigan's guards rank right there with the best of them. "EVEN THOUGH we felt we con- trolled the tempo pretty well and played the game as we wanted to play it, we still couldn't (win). We had a seven-point lead at one time, but just couldn't get over the hump with it." The Blazers were up 45-38 at 10:13 of the second half before Michigan's full- court press deflated the margin. BIG TEN STANDINGS But Kniht and his Hoosiers lie ahead good at 5:25, when a Glen Rice jump shot gave them a 50-48 lead. The freshman forward, who is seeing more playing time as the season progresses, fared well in 21 minutes at Northwestern. Rice scored 14 points on seven-of-14 shooting and ripped five rebounds against the Wildcats. "Rice off the bench has given us a big lift," Frieder said. "When it looked like we were going down the tubes we surged and made big plays to hang in there," Frieder said. "We got a good timeout and we responded with a couple quick baskets to get us back in the game. I think that was the crucial, most important part of the game." "From that time on, we were the aggressor and the momentum came our way." THE Wolverines went ahead for I 0 MICHIGAN ............. Indiana ................. Michigan State .......... Purdue ................. Illinois .................. Iowa .................... Ohio State .............. Minnesota .............. Wisconsin............ Northwestern ........... Conf. W L' 12 4 12 4 11 5 10 6 10 6 8 8: 8 8: 5 11 3 14 2 15 Overall W L 25 4 20 6 20 6 21 8 20 8 18 11 14 12 15 14 11 16 8 19 i Daily Photo by JAE KIM Richard Rellford drives past Alabama-Birmingham's Michael Charles in Michigan's 62-54 win over the Blazers. Rellford scored the Wolverines' first four points in the contest, but finished with only six. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Celts rip Pistons, 129-109 BOSTON (AP) - Danny Ainge scored a career-high 27 points and joined Kevin McHale to spark a surge late in the third quarter that boosted the Boston Celtics to a 129- 109 victory that ended the Detroit Pistons' franchise- record 10-game NBA winning streak yesterday. The Celtics broke open a close game by taking a 98-89 lead after the third quarter. A 16-0 spurt helped them run away from the Pistons in the final period, when Larry Bird got 11 of his game-high 35 points. THE LEAD had changed hands 30 times before Boston went ahead to stay by closing out the third quarter with an 11-2 run. It capped a 21-6 burst that began with Bird's scoop shot with 6:01 left in the period after the Pistons had gone in front 83-77. Seldom-used center Greg Kite gave Boston a lead it never lost with a layup off an offensive rebound, making the score 89-87 with 2:41 to go in the third quarter. McHale hit two free throws before Detroit's Bill Laimbeer sank a jumper. The Celtics then reeled off the last seven points of the quarter on a layup and a medium-range jumper by McHale and a 15-foot shot and free throw by Ainge, who shook off a slump in which he had averaged 6.2 points in his previous 11 games. Boston finished off the Pistons by scoring 16 consecutive points, seven of them by Bird, to turn a 110-101 lead into a 126-101 bulge. The victory was the Celtics' fifth in a row and 17th straight at home, four shy of the club record. They are 26-1 at home this season. Duke 82, North Carolina 74 DURHAM, N. C. (AP) - Senior David Henderson scored 11 points during a late 14-4 run for top-ranked Duke as the Blue Devils beat No. 3 North Carolina 82-74 yesterday and won the Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season basketball title. It was the first time the Blue Devils, 29-2 for the season and 12-2 in the ACC, had won the conference title outright since 1966. They tied with North Carolina for the crown in 1979. The victory also gave Duke the No. 1 seed for the ACC tournament which starts Friday. The Tar Heels, losing for the third time in the last four games, dropped to 10-4 in the conference and 26-4 overall. Louisville 70, Memphis St. 69 LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Senior guard Milt Wagner nailed two free throws with one second remaining as 13th- ranked Louisville defeated seventh-ranked Memphis State 70-69 yesterday to take the 1985-86 Metro Conference regular season crown. Louisville upped its record to 24-7 overall and 10-2 in the conference in winning its ninth straight game and its seventh Metro Conference title. Louisville will have a fir- st-round bye in the Metro postseason tournament, to be played in Louisville March 7-9. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Ponder. Tarpley's recently- 4 Gary Grant holds Roy Tarpley back from Alabama-Birmingham's James menacing play has led Michigan to three straight wins. Indianarga-i-s tie for fir-st Icers bow twice to end season (Continued from Page 7) conference, 12-26 overall) and expect them to come up here and take two out of three." MICHIGAN'S best chance at taking one came in the opener. The Wolverine defense frustrated the Sweep, not sweet (Second game statistics) FIRST PERIOD Scoring: None. Penalties: MSU-Cole (roughing) 10:07; M-Goff .roughing) 10:07; M-Brost (roughing) 13:29; MSU- Shibicky (roughing) 13:29; M-Stiles (tripping) 15:09. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. MSU-Donnelly (Messier) 5:46; 2. MSU-Rendall (Beck, McSween) 8:00; 3. MSU- Rendall (Beck, McReynolds) 8:55; 4. MSU-Parker (Clement, McReynolds) 14:20. Penalties: M-Cusack (roughing) 3:18; M-Baker (high sticking) 3:18; M-Baker (roughing) 3:18; MSU-Fernandez (roughing) 3:18; MSU-Arkeilpane (high sticking) 3:18; MSU-Arkeilpane (roughing) 3:18; MSU-Clement (elbowing) 6:54; M-Downing (elbowing) 6:54; MSU-Miller (hooking) 9:21; M- Carlile (hooking) 12:04; M-Sties (roughing) 18:45; M-Norton (roughing) 18:45; MSU-Cole (roughing) 18:45; MSU-Beck (roughing) 18:45; MSU-Beck (roughing) 18:45. THIRD PERIOD Spartans' top-scoring line featuring left-winger Mike Donnelly, whose 53 goals lead the nation. Donnelly not- ched just one assist, and was held without a goal for the first time in the last seven games. Spartan freshman Joe Murphy (24-35-59) did not play in the series. Michigan goaltender Tim Makris bothered the Spartans who did play, stopping shots on more than a dozen breakaways. Despite being over- shadowed by Foster and Essensa, Makris made 22 saves Friday and 36 kept the game close, and with a break either way it could have been a dif- ferent score. "It's a first-place team against a last-place team, but there is not a big difference between their team and ours. There's a difference, but not a huge difference." Mason agreed. "Michigan is not an eighth-place hockey team when they play Michigan State," he said. Like most Michigan-Michigan State series, emotions ran high, and several fights resulted. Wolverine defen- BLOOMINGTON (AP)-Guard Steve Alford scored 25 points yester- day as 16th-ranked Indiana survived a second-half rally and beat Iowa 80-73, gaining a first-place tie with Michigan going into the final week of the Big Ten Conference basketball race. The Hawk eyesrallied from a 19- point deficit and trailed by only one point with possession of the ball with three minutes remaining. But Iowa missed two shots, Alford made two baskets and Indiana's Winston Morgan clinched the victory with a pair of free throws. ALFORD HAD 15 points in the first half, including six during a 15-4 spurt that gave the Hoosiers a 40-22 lead with three minutes left before inter- mission. Indiana took its biggest lead, 64-45, seven minutes into the second half before a 24-6 burst brought Iowa back into contention. The key baskets by Alford and free throws by Morgan pushed the Hoosiers' lead to 76-69 with 44 seconds left. Rick Calloway had 16 points. Andre Harris 15 and Darryl Thomas 14 for Indiana. Iowa was led by Gerry Wright, Jeff Moe and Ed Horton with 12 points apiece. Iowa, which had beaten Indiana in each of their past three meetings, fell to 8-8 in the Big Ten and 18-11 overall. The Hoosiers are 20-6 overall and tied with Michigan at 12-4 in the con- ference. Michigan State 84 Wisconsin 71 MADISON (AP)-Scott Skiles scored 28 points and backcourt mate Darryl Johnson added 18 to give 17th- ranked Michigan State an 84-71 Big Ten basketball victory over Wisconsin yesterday. Michigan State improved to 20-6 man guard who had been sidelined for most of the season with an ankle injury, gave Wisconsin a 30-30 tie with four seconds left. But Vernon Carr conver- ted two free throws that enabled the Spartans to take a 32-30 halftime lead. The Spartans opened the second half with a 15-10 run to move into a 47- 40 lead with 12:56 remaining. John- son, a junior guard, had 10 of Michigan State's points in that streak. Ohio St. 68, Minnesota 55 COLUMBUS (AP)-Dennis Hopson scored 26 points and Brad Sellers added 20 as Ohio State pulled away in the closing minutes to defeat Min- nesota 68-55 in a Big Ten Conference college basketball game yesterday. Minnesota, 15-14 overall and 5-11 in the conference, led throughout the fir- st half. 4 I wasn't surprised we won the series. You can't take a team with a record like theirs (Michigan's) and ex- pect them to come up here and take two out of three.' -Ron Mason IOfCTT TLanr l Pnnn ... , _ __ . im