Women's Tennis vs. Notre Dame Tomorrow, 1:30 p.m. Chippewa Racquet Club SPORTS Michigan vs. Akron Today, 1:00 p.m. Channel 2 The Michigan Daily Friday, March 14, 1986 Page 9 Aenacing Blue hoTes ear grips Zips _(ContnuedfromPage will. They will probably play a zone TH E LIN EU PS nnlhnci nruziu Ti a i THE ZIPS not only avoided the basement of their conference, but they managed to emerge on top. For all their hard work, they now must face the heavily-favored Wolverines. The prospects are not good for Akron. First, the Zips simply do not match up well with Michigan, particularly on the front line. When Huggins says he has the "best 6-3 center in the country" in Russell Holmes he's ac- tually speaking about the only 6-3 cen- ter in the country. Holmes, inciden- tally, was the last cut from a Pit- tsurgh Steelers tryout camp last year, so it's not too tough to figure his style on the court. Picture Earl Campbell in a tank top. Zips' forwards Shawn Roberts and Marcel Boyce both measure 6-6. Boyce, a transfer from Carl Elbert Junior Colege in Oklahoma, is the main producer for Akron. He averaged 17.5 points per game during the season, grabbing an average of eight rebounds. ADD A 5-11 guard to a small front line and you're looking at a long game against a Michigan front line whose smallest member is Richard Rellford. "I don't think we can grow fast enough," said Huggins. "There's a problem, no question, but anything's possible. "It's going to be an uphill battle on the glass, so we'll have to get them under control on the transition." The Wolverines have little to worry about in terms of the Zips' offense. The objective for Frieder, therefore, will be to work the ball in to Tarpley and let the eight-inch height advan- tage rack up the points. HUGGINS SAID that Akron would be playing a man-to-man defense primarily. If it does, the game will never be indoubt. The Zips will more likely do as Frieder anticipates they collapsing arouna arpiey. If the guards can get it to Tarpley, he will eat the Zips alive. If not, the guards will have to shoot well. If neither happens, it could be a real game. "We're far from being the most talented team, but we play with a lot of heart," said Huggins, who's in his first year at Akron. After last year's first-round fiasco against Fairleigh Dickinson, the Wolverines are careful in hazarding any optimism regarding the outcome of today's contest. Frieder is putting up at least token caution. "Any time you play someone who has won 22 games, you're playing someone who is capable of beating you," said Frieder. Should Michigan lose today's game, the season would be over. If the Wolverines win, they will advance to the second round where they will face the winner of the Iowa State/Miami (Ohio) game on Sunday. Game time for Sunday's game has not been determined. Michigan (27-4) PPg (6-6) Richard Rellford.......(11.9) (6-8) Butch Wade .............(6.1) (6-11) Roy Tarpley..........(15.7) (6-3) Gary Grant ............. (12.8) (6-5) Antoine Joubert........(12.4) F F C G G Akron (22-7) PPg (6-6) Shawn Roberts.........(7.2) (6-6) Marcel Boyce...........(17.5) (6-3) Russell Holmes .......... (9.8) (6-4) John Loyer .............. (6.1) (5-11) Michael Dowdell.......(10.1) SITE: Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome TIME: 1:07 p.m. TV: WJBK Channel 2 RADIO: WUOM (91.7 FM), WAAM (1600 AM), WWJ (950 AM), WPAG (1050 AM) LAST MEETING: MICHIGAN 87, Akron 75 (Nov. 29, 1982, Crisler) SERIES LEADER: MICHIGAN 3-0 UNIVERSITY PLAYERS IN By Michael Weller Directed by William Wright 1966 ... America is on the way to the moon ... and to Vietnam ... an irreverent play about funny people in crazy times. MARCH 13,14 at 8:00 P.M. MARCH* 15 at 5:00 Et 9:00 P.M. MARCH 16 at 2:00 P.M. Doily Photo by DAN HABIB Gary Grant looks to jam the Zips in today's game at the Hubert H. Hum- phrey Metrodome in Minneapolis. Grant's quickness and tenacious defense often result in a crowd-pleasing 'steal and slam,' and such play has helped the Wolverines to a recent surge. Tarpdley .eight-inch advantage bawkins Scores 27 in Duke s .35-78 win GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - John- ny Dawkins scored 27 points, 20 in Ie second half, to guide top-seeded Duke to an 85- 78 victory over upset- minded Mississippi Valley State in the first round of the NCAA East Regional basketball tournament yesterday. The Blue Devils raised their record 33-3, best ever for an Atlantic Coast onference basketball team, but not before the Delta Devils took seven- point leads on two occasions. The last time was a 44-37 edge on two baskets at the start of the second half by Mack Ferguson. Aided by a trapping zone defense that forced 11 Duke turnovers, Valley had led 19-12 early in the first half. Ferguson scored 12 of his teams fir- st 14 points in the second half and valley took a 54-49 edge with 14:24 left. Duke cut the gap to 54-53 on two free throws and a follow shot by Danny Ferry. After Joe McKinley scored for Valley, Mark Alarie scored six straight points to give Duke the lead for good at 59-56 with 11:28 left. Georgia Tech 68, Marist53 BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Long- *inge gunner Mark Price led a 12-0 scoring surge over a four-minute span of the second half yesterday to lead ixth-ranked Georgia Tech to a 68-53 victory over unexpectedly tough Marist in the opening round of the NCAA Southeast Regional basketball tournament. -During the first six minutes of the second half, Marist erased a five- point halftime deficit to hold a 38-37 ad over Tech, the top seed in the outheast Regionals. Tech's John Salley tied it at 40-all on a three-point play, then Price went to work from the 20-foot range, and Marist went cold. It was 52-40 before Marist, making its first NCAA tour- nament appearance, could score again. Price finished with 20 points, get- ting eight of Georgia Tech's first 14 points. i S11v had 13 for Tech. now 26-6 NOTICE: PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL CHEERLEADING AUDITIONS info. for all teams send name/address and $9.95 check/money order to: BRANDE P.O. BOX 4035 BLOOMINGTON, IL 61702 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 ()FFICERS' TRAINING CORPS CALL CAPTAIN GALLAGHER 764-2400 Join us of CREATING CAREERS: WORKING FOR SOCIAL CHANGE A Career Fair A chance to talk with people whose work is making a difference Free Intensive on SELF-DISCOVERY MICHIGAN LEAGUE Henderson Room Sun., March 23'- 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Public Invited (Frieze At the Trueblood Theatre Bldg., State St. & Washington) Tickets $5, Students $3 Ticket Office, Michigan League 764-0450 L % --- - - - Ov EAST QUAD MARCH 14 & 15 FRIDAY 7-10 rm 126 Panel Discussion and Goal Setting Exercises SATURDAY 10-6 East Quad rms 10-11:30 Art/Theatre 52-54 Education 124 Social Services 126 Science/Technology 164 11:30-1 LUNCH - Halfway Inn 11:45-12:45 Public Sector Job Search rfraar fin. *