6 Page 8-- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 16, 1986 WYLAND, TROST STAR IN 38-6 WIN Matmen maul Hoosiers By PETE STEINERT After a disappointing 1-2 start in the dual meet season, the Michigan wrestling team that everyone is so used to seeing dominate their op- ponents showed up last night at Crisler Arena, defeating Indiana, 38-6, in its Big Ten opener. "We had a coaches' meeting on Monday night, and we decided that the difference between last year and this year is thateweweren't working quite as hard," said Michigan head coach Dale Bahr. "We really picked up running in practice on Monday and Tuesday, and I think it really showed tonight. "THE KIDS were much more con- fident and aggressive," he added. William Waters (118 pounds) and Doug Wyland, who moved to 126 from his normal 118 weight class, set the tone for the rest of the meet. Waters won by a technical fall and Wyland pinned his opponent at 1:55 of the first period. Bahr commented, "That started us off right and put us in the driver's seat." Wyland will continue to wrestle at 126 for at least the next three meets. ALTHOUGH KYLE Garcia lost his match to Brian Dolph, 7-6, Bahr was pleased with his effort. "Kyle has been getting blown out, but he hung right in there, said Bahr. "He is still making some mistakes, but he is scoring more points all the time." At 150, Tony Latora and Scott Dun- can wrestled the most exciting match of the night. Down 4-0 after two periods, Latora came back and scored seven points in the final period. "He wasn't in very good condition so I got on him and tried to stay in his face and he just folded at the end,'' Latora explained. "The main thing is you have to stay intense the whole time.''" "OF ALL the guys that wrestled tonight, I was most pleased with Tony," said Bahr. "He was behind and he sucked it up and beat the guy." "Usually when Tony gets in those situations, he doesn't come back." As has been the case all season long, the backbone of the Wolverines was the seniors. Kevin Hill (177), Scott Rechsteiner (190) and Kirk Trost (heavyweight) all scored decisive vic- tories. TROST PINNED Bill Paxton at 1:28 of the first period, and Rechsteiner notched his team-leading 25th victory. "I thought we really came on tonight," Hill said. "The first couple of dual meets we were having some problems, things weren't fitting together, but watching people tonight, everybody seemed to jell real well." Despite Michigan's impressive win, the Hoosiers are not in the same field with Wisconsin or Iowa. "Jim Hum- phrey is rebuilding down there," ex- plained Bahr. "They looked like a team that was young, and they're going to take their hits against some more experienced wrestlers." Bahr could not help but be pleased, however, about how his team wrestled. "We could have been easily down after last weekend going 1-1, but they came back and actually wrestled the best they have all year. "We want to sustain that now through the rest of January and into February." THE SPORTING VIEWS High school hoops... ... best of the bunch By CHRISTIAN M. MARTIN OW THAT the 1985-86 college basketball season is almost halfway over, we can look back and see which of last year's high school blue- chippers panned out and which were flops. Among the many prep phenoms that lived up to their advanced billing Pervis Ellison (Louisville), Rick Calloway (Indiana), Tom Hammonds (Georgia Tech), Roy Marble (Iowa) and Sean Elliott (Arizona) seem to be the best of the bunch. All have busted into the starting lineups and are big contributors to their teams, outstanding accomplishments for a freshman. However some of the big stars of last year's class like Tito Horoford of Houston, no LSU, no American University, no, oh Houston again, okay, and Steve Benton of Boston College have gone from being Top 40 players to not even playing for a team. This will be a preview of this year's top 15 high school players, where they are going or will go and what are the strong points of their game. J.R. Reid - from Virginia leads off the bunch. Scouts can't decide if his athleticism in the paint reminds them more of James Worthy or Moses Malone. He is the prototypical pivot player with great strength and good hands. Will either attend UCLA, Virginia, Iowa, North Carolina or Maryland. Terry Mills - the number-one power forward prospect in the land has already committed to the Maize and Blue. His calling cards are finesse, shot blocking, ball handling, and outside shooting. Has been favorably compared to Danny Manning of Kansas. Chris Brooks - from New York but plays his high school ball in Virginia. He is a great jumper, can dominate games offensively, and is best athlete of the bunch. He has long line of suitors led by St. John's, Providence, West Virginia, UNLV, DePaul, and Louisville. Rex Chapman - the best off-guard in the country, he does it all. Ac- curate from 20 feet, penetrates, passes and is a great leaper who won the Las Vegas schoolboy dunk off. Signed with Kentucky. Michael Christian - supposed to be the best player ever to come out of Colorado, and that is a bunch that includes Michael Ray Richardson. Coaches are torn between wanting him as primary scorer and point guard. Complete player with 41" verticle leap. Signed with Georgia Tech. Rumeal Robinson - another future Wolverine having given his verbal commitment to coach Frieder as a Christmas present. Has great strength that he uses to post smaller guards near the basket, is also great penetrator and passer. Nick Anderson - hails from Chicago. Great jumping ability, tremen- dous body control, good hands, can drill it from 20 feet. He is torn befween Illinois and DePaul. David Butler - from Washington D.C., was projected as best small forward of bunch over Chris Brooks and Nick Anderson. Academic problems have hounded him this year, however, forcing him to sit out basketball first semester. Georgetown holds the inside track over West Virginia and Maryland if he graduates. Felton Spencer - from Kentucky, he already has a pro body at 7-1 275 pounds, but needs to show up for all his games. He scores 41 one night and 10 next. If he grows into his body watch out. He's already signed with Louisville. Anthony Pendleton - plays for Glenn 'Rice's alma mater, Flint North- western, but will not follow Rice to Michigan, instead opting for George Raveling and the cornfields of Iowa. He has a picture-perfect jump shot from 25 feet to complement his excellent handle. Fess Irvin - from Louisiana is the perfect point guard. He can score, pass, dribble, and will always hit the open man. Unfortunately, he is only 5-11 at best, in a world of 6-4 point guards. He has verbally committed to LSU but will back out if they are heavily punished by the NCAA probe. Stevie Thompson - is out of the high school sports machine Crenshaw of Los Angeles, which has produced such luminaries as Darryl Strawberry, Wendell Tyler, and Marques Johnson. Stevie Thompson is supposed to be next. He can't shoot, can't dribble, but still averaged 28 points, 12 rebounds, and 4 assists as a junior. Signed with Syracuse. Larry Rembert - hails from Alabama and will join Gene Bartow at UAB. He has great strength, quickness and jumping ability, and will add needed muscle to Bartow's soft front line as a power forward. Chris Munk - of California is one of the best power forwards coming out this year. His great body and rebounding ability rate among the best of the bunch. He desperately wants to attend Stanford but they may not admit him to the university. Scott Williams - headed for Dean Smith's land of the Tar Heels. He is a great post player who some say is a Sam Perkins clone. Still growing at 6- 10. Men tankers swim 6 6 0 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Michigan freshman Kyle Garcia takes the upper hand on Indiana's Brian Dolph during last night's Wolverine 38-6 victory. Garcia came up just short in losing a tough 7-6 decision yet received praise from head coach Dale Bahr. Manrs deserve By JERRY MUTH E VERY professional baseball player has the dream of some day being inducted into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York. And yet, as it should be, very few men establish themselves as stan- douts among their peers - the kind of FUJI RESTAURANT Japanese Restaurant Featuring SU K IYA KI - Prepared at your table. Beef, bean curd, Japanese vegetables and noodles carefully cooked in FUJIsaucee.............. .... $9.50. SHRIMP TEMPURA - Lightly battered, delicately flavoredfriedshrimp. ........................ $9.50 Full Restaurant "327 Braun Ct. " 63-3111 ACROSS FROM KERRYTOWN players that can respond to pressure and live their game to a new level. That rare breed of player is what makes induction into Cooperstown a dream for every major leaguer. THE SPORTING VIEWS Debates have raged over the years the Hall of Fame has existed. Of cour- se there have always been the givens: the Ty Cobbs, the Babe Ruths, the Mel Otts, etc. whose induction has always been certain. But there have always been some individuals whose abilities have been questioned. Thus their in- duction into the Hall has always hinged on the prejudices of a few spor- tswriters who cast ballots in the elec- tion process for potential inductees. Roger Maris, who passed away last month of cancer, was one ballplayer whose ability was always questioned. He was perhaps one of the least un- derstood heroes of his time. Maris never claimed to be the second coming of Babe Ruth, and he wasn't. What he was was an exceptional R place 1 ballplayer who never really received the publicity he was due. During the midst of Maris' run at Ruth's one season homerun mark of 60, the press seemed to thrive on discrediting the talents of Maris. Af- ter the game in which Maris launched his 59th homerun, the nation's newspapers proclaimed Maris' failure to tie Ruth's record in a 154 game season (the season length when Ruth played). Maris, however, survived the, tremendous pressure that assaulted him in his dance with destiny. He smashed his 61st homerun in the last. game of the 162-game season. But. even then baseball commissioner- Ford Frick ruled that an asterisk would be placed next to Maris' new mark in the record books because his 61 homers were hit in a 162-game season. Maris, perhaps, was the right man in the right place at an inopportune time. Rather than celebrating the amazine pace Maris set during the 1961 season, the New York City repor- ters preferred to praise the gifted at- tributes of Maris' better known teammate Mickey Mantle. Maris, the North Dakota Kid, was never a child of the media the way the flamboyant, fast-tracked Mantle was. Besides, New York already had an established star in Mantle and the dramatic turn in Maris' fortunes were considered a comileHall fluke for a player that managed to compile only a .258 lifetime batting average coming into the 1961 season. But to his peers, Maris was recognized as the kind of ballplayer that led by example and was capable of far more than hitting the longball. As New York Yankee teammate Whitey Ford once remarked, "We only got Maris the year before (1960) from Kansas City, where he hit like 16 homeruns, but everybody knew he had terrific power and was a real pro as a ballplayer. In his first game with us in Boston, he got four hits and busted his ass hustling a couple of singles into doubles. And I thought, boy, we've really got a good one." In his short 12-season career, Roger Maris played on seven pennant win- ners and won two MVP awards. He was a valuable addition to all his teams, particularly in New York and later St. Louis. And although Roger Maris was never the best player of his era, he was, at least for two years, the best player in his league. It will indeed be a shame if the Hall of Fame balloters choose to keep Roger Maris out of the Hall of Fame. His contributions to baseball extended beyond the records he set. His love for the game, even under the most grueling pressure, can never be measured in terms of records, asterisks or no asterisks. 6 0 0 past Oakland, 69-41 Become a Daily photographer - Get into concerts for free, Go backstage and meet the stars, Stand on the sidelines at U of M football games, Impress members of the opposite sex (or the same sex, if you prefer). --- _a New Fraternity Oe/ta 5/gm, Phi/ Returns * A National Fraternity * Strong Alumni Support 3F M~A ms3mh~r They came, they swam, they conquered. The mens' swimming team traveled to Oakland University last night, and came out with a 69-41 win. Junior Dave Kerska was dominant, winning the 100-freestyle and 200- freestyle plus participating in the winning 400-free and medley relays. Kerscka posted a 46.07 and a 1.41.86 in the 100- and 200-free style. Senior Marc Parrish did swim- mingly as well, posting wins in the 200 individual medley and 200 breast- stroke. Parrishs' times were 1.55.32 and 2.07.18. The Wolverines won the 1000 freestyle, 200 butterfly, and 200 backstroke as well. Coach Jon Urbancheks' squad next travels to Madison to face Wisconsin Saturday. Pistons 123, Bulls 115 PONTIAC (AP) - Isiah Thomas scored 28 points and Bill Laimbeer added 24 last night to lead Detroit to a 123-115 NBA victory over the Chicago Bulls, only the third win in the last 15 games for the Pistons. The Bulls were playing without starting center Jawann Oldham, who was sitting out a one-game suspension for fighting Tuesday with Washington's Manute Bol. A PAIR OF free throws by Tony Campbell gave Detroit a 119-115 lead with 44 seconds to play. After a wild shot by Chicago's Orlando Woolridge, Thomas grabbed the ball and, falling out of bounds, threw the ball off the Bulls' Sidney Green. The ball went out of bounds and was awarded to Detroit. Moments later, Thomas was fouled and made two free throws that gavpt the Pistons a 121-115 lead with 14 seconds to play. GEORGE Gervin led the Bulls with 27 points. Woolridge finished with 19 and Green 17. The Silverdome game clock broke midway through the third quarter and was not operating the remainder of the game. Time was kept at the of- ficial scorer's table. Joe Dumars, scoreless at halftime, scored 13 points in the third quarter to help the Pistons to a 94-91 lead at the end of the period. Vinnie Johnson and Dumars finished with 15 each for Detroit. C.ooawd Skoj it