4 Page 12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 7, 1986 'M' bludgeons Buckeyes (Continued from Page 1) minutes into the first half, and sat our the remainder of the stantza. "I wasn't a factor tonight, it's as simple as that," said Sellers. The only-Buckeye who was a factor was Dennis Hopson, whose 27 points led all scorers. The 6-5 guard was most effective in the first half, when he scored 17. AT ONE point before intermission, Hopson scored five straight baskets for Ohio State, the fourth of which brought the Buckeyes within seven, 26-19, which was as close as they would get. Frieder said Ohio State never should have been that close, especially with their leading scorer on the bench. Tarpley leads onslaught "The thing we didn't do is take ad- vantage of Sellers being in foul trouble," said Frieder. "We let it go for six or seven minutes there." The Wolverines let go in the second half with everything they had. Michigan displayed a fearsome run- ning game that looked like a dress rehearsal for Saturday'sknationally televised game against Indiana. First it was Tarpley throwing long to Glen Rice in the right corner. Rice hit Garde Thompson with a pass along Farew Eldon the baseline past two Buckeyes, and Thompson hit a reverse layup. Then the order changed. Rice with the outlet to Gary Grant, who fed Tar- pley for an alley oop dunk. Thompson continued the show with two double-pump jumpers, giving Michigan an 80-52 lead. After a couple basic jump shots, Thompson fed Tarpley for another dunk, before Rellford finished with the five minute highlight film with a reverse double-pump jam. Two more baskets by Rice, the last with 4:48 remaining, gave Michigan its biggest lead of the game at 92-60. Thompson's presence in the game was partly due to an ankle injury suf- fered by Antoine Joubert in practice Wednesday. Joubert still managed to score 17 points. Michigan Daily SPORTS 763-0376 Grant contributed 14, along with nine assists, while Rice ended with 15, Rellford 12 and Thompson 10. The win keeps Michigan tied with Indiana for the Big Ten lead, and makes Saturday's game with the Hoosiers a tie-breaker to decide the title. lI I 'A MICHIGAN OHIO STATE MinFG/A FT/A RE A PF Pts. Min Relford..........30 Wade............ 22 Tarpley..........29 Joubert ......... 27 Grant ........... 31 Rice............. 20 Thompson .......20 Henderson .......4 Hughes.........7 Stoyko .......... 5 Butts ............ 4 Gibas ...........1I Team Rebounds. FG/AFT/A F 5/7 2/2 7 3/5 1/2 4 6/14 10/11 7 6/12 5/7 4 7/11 0/0 6 5/9 5/6 5 4/6 2/2 1 1/2 0/1 1 0/i 0/0 2 0/1 0/0 0 0/3 0/0 0 0/0 0/0 0 5 A 0 3 5 9 1 3 0 0 0 0 PF Pts. 4 12 7 7 3 22 1 17 4 14 4 15 2 10 1 2 1 0 2 0 I 0 0 0 Sellers...........22 Francis ......... 18 Wesson...........18 Lomax...........19 Hopson .......... 35 Wilson.........25 White.......... 11 Burson.........21 J. Anderson. 10 McGee.......... 8 S. Anderson ..... 8 Dumas .......... 5 Team Rebounds . 4/9 3/4 3/3 0/3 10/19 3/8 1/4 2/4 0/2 1/3 1/2 2/3 0/0 0/2 2/4 0/0 7/8 2/2 3/4 1/2 1/2 4/5 2/2 0/1 4 4 3 0 10 1 2 4 0 2 1 5 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 4 4 3 1 2 2 2 0 1 8 6 8 0 27 8 S S 6 4 4 Tarpley ... nets 22 BIG TEN STANDINGS TOTALS.........200 37/71 25/31 41 23 26 First half score: MICHIGAN 47, Ohio State 36 Attendance: 13,609 (sellout) 99 TOTALS.........200 30/64 22/32 41 8 24 82 Conf Overall I The heat is on. This summer may be your last chance to graduate from college with a degree and an officer's commission. Sign up for ROTC's six-week Basic Camp now. See your Professor of Military Science for details. But hurry. The time is short. The space is limited. The heat is on. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS CALL CAPTAIN GALLAGHER 764-2400 mad g 47i .Q 7r *1w /+ WL MICHIGAN ........... 13-4 Indiana ............... 13-4 Purdue.................11-6 Mich. State ............ 11-6 Illinois............... 10-7 Iowa................ 9-8 Ohio State ............. 8-9 Minnesota ............ 5-12 Wisconsin ............. 3-14 Northwestern ......... 2-15 WL 26-4 21-6 22-8 20-7 20-9 19-11 14-13 15-16 11-16 8-19 Daily Photo by PETE ROSS Antoine Joubert happily lays one in over Buckeye reserve guard Curtis Wilson during Michigan's 99-82 lambasting of Ohio State last night. The Judge had reason to celebrate: he recorded 17 points and 5 assists for the game. w(-Iper MTgTl&i HERB DAVID Guitar Studio 302 E. LIBERTY 665-8001 Sales - Lessons - Rentals- Expert Repairs Repair Bows - Repair Violin " Cello 9 Bass $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ MONEY $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ STUDENT CALLERS NEEDED FOR COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING PHONATHON MARCH 16 - 20 & 22 - 27 MON.-THUR. 6:30-10:30; SAT. 1-5; SUN. 1 -5, 6:30-10:30 4 HOUR SHIFTS, $4.00/HR. + INCENTIVES FOR MORE INFO. CONTACT: KATHLEEN VAKALO, 235 Chrysler, 763-2160 WHEN IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VISIT NIVERBAL WAN MCA.COMPANY STUDIOS TOUR OSU nails lady cagers Special to the Daily' Ohio State may have lost one battle" on the road last night, but it had no problems with its home-court contest as its women's basketball team whip- ped the Wolverines at St. John Arena last night, 73-48, to clinch the Big Ten championship. Tracey Hall led the Buckeyes, grab- bing 12 rebounds to go along with her 11 points. She was assisted by Nikita Lowry (17 pts) and guard Jodi Rot (16 pts) in spearheading Ohio State 73 percent first-half shooting attack which was 59 percent for the game. THE OHIO State defense was just as impressive, holding Michigan to a sub-par 36 percent shooting mark, from the floor while collecting 10 steals and forcing 25 turnovers. The Wolverines were unable to penetrate the paint, as their paltry total of 8 free throws to the Buckeyes' 25 would attest. Michigan was led by senior Wendy Bradetich with 21 points and 14 rebounds. Michigan can improve its Big Ten record to 9-9 with a victory at Indiana on Saturday, while Ohio State can rest easy with its current 15-2 mark, since Iowa eliminated itself from the Big Ten race with a loss last night to Illinois. -~SWEDEN --- "Most of all 'Out of Africa' does not tell about then, but about now and about love, friendship, equality, warmth and understanding. It is told in images and sounds as never before and with the best of actors." -Jacob Dablin, SwedishNational Radio P3 SSPAIN ~- "Noble, brilliant melodrama... a story woven of many threads, each one of them a noble film in itself, the end results multiplying that nobility" -El Pais DENMARK~ "Highest Rating. Sydney Pollack's 'Out of Africa' is a pearl of a film on all levels. A superior and moving tribute that is successful above all expectations. 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