4 Page 12 - The Michigan Doily - Tuesday, March 31, 1987 Off on some random tangents Mviller Time 4 BY SCOTT G. MILLER A few thoughts on this cold spring day: 1) It warmed my heart to see 93, 173 Hulkamaniacs at the Silverdome on Sunday. I was proud to be part of the largest indoor crowd in history. 2)Wrestlemania III established professional wrestling as the premier sport in America today. Over two and a half million people around the world viewed the event on closed circuit television. Long live Vince McMahon Jr. 3) Don't count on the Pope drawing a larger crowd in the Silverdome. 4) Hulk Hogan is a real American. 5) If only Michigan fans could make half the noise the wrestling fans generated on Sunday, Michigan Stadium's foundation would crack. 6) After experiencing a fabulous sporting event with dedicated fans, I realize how much I hate Wolverine basketball fans. Besides the 1,000 fans who sit behind the basket closest to the visitors' bench, Michigan has no fans. 7) Next season Bill Frieder will face a pleasant problem, having too many talented players. Frieder should start Glen Rice and Mark Hughes at forward with Terry Mills in the pivot. Gary Grant and Rumeal Robinson will start in the backcourt with swingman Sean Higgins as a the team's sixth man.M 8) Basketball guru Dick Vitale picked Michigan as the top team in the land next season. Come on babyF be serious. 8.5) As Vitale would say, fans will be rocking and rolling on Bourbon Street after the NCAA5 championship. The Smart fans will be singing Phil Collins', To-Knight, To-Knight, To-Knight, no doubt. 9) With all the attention focused on Wolverine football and basketball, the hockey program is quietly becoming a power. Coach Red Berenson will have hisK team finish in the CCHA top four next season. 10) Defending champion Michigan State lost the NCAA hockey finals on Saturday. I'm all broken up. 11) I'm even more upset that Harvard lost in the semi-finals. The high and mighty from that institution should be playing chess and not a layman's game like hockey. 12) Harvard does not deserve to have a good team in any sport. Listening to the Harvard administration is enough to make anyone sick. The Crimson may not give athletic scholarships per se, but they do everything else to help athletes. 13) Hobey Baker winner Tony Hrkac (Hur-kus) of North Dakota is a player to watch. Look out Red Wing fans. Hrkac, the nation's leading scorer, will form his next Hrkac circus in St. Louis for the Blues. 14) I predict an early playoff exit for the Red Wings. Demers is great, but I question any team where Harold Snepts is the second-best defenseman. 15) Detroit Red Wing Joe Kocur is a lousy hockey player. 16) My favorite pro hockey goon is Calgary Flame Nick Fotiu. Second is ex-Wing Basil Macrae. My all-time favorite is retired Boston Bruin Stan Jonathan, who was only 5-7. 17) Someone has to shut up Pistons' rookie Dennis "Oil Can" Rodman. This guy's act belongs in the CBA. 18) Will Tiger manager Sparky Anderson ever stop exaggerating about the ability of some of his players? 19) Football season is only five months away. I can hardly wait for Michigan coach Bo Schembechler to analyze some of his team's weaker opponents. "(Fill in the blank University) may have a poor record, but they have fine athletes," the Wolverine mentor will say. "They have excellent quickness, and some real smart players. They'll be tough." 20) Michigan is a beautiful state. Where else in America can you see a Domino's Pizza every block? 21) When will winter finally disappear? 22) I could eat Chinese food every day with or without chopsticks. 23) Words cannot describe how much I hate Joe 'Falls' random thoughts columns. 24) How could anyone read an entire Falls' thought column? 4 Associated Press Keith Smart fires the winning shot in the NCAA championship game for Indiana. The jumper over Syracuse's Howard Triche put the Hoosiers ahead 74-73 with one second left. Smart shot propels IU to nationaltil l_'. night 'M' thrown at Bronco's meet By JULIE HOLLMAN As the Big Ten championships approach for the men's gymnastics team, the future still looks bright but after last weekend's performance while the past is very gray. In their last chance to notch a victory before the conference title meet, the Wolverines could do no better than fourth out of a field of five in the Bronco Invitational last weekend in Kalamazoo. Michigan recorded a 262.15 beating only Illinois-Chicago. Michigan State won the meet with a hefty 272.5, Wisconsin followed with a 267.90, and Western Michigan scored a 266.05, good for third. Despite the low score the Wolverines still managed to rake in some top performances. Scott Moore's first place 9.70 on the vault marked a season's best and Mitch Rose turned in a career high and event winning 9.75 rings routine. In the all-around, Michigan's Brock Orwig came in second with a 55.35 behind Michigan State's Keith Pettit. Pettit avenged a loss to Orwig that he suffered two weeks ago when the Spartans visited Ann Arbor. Michigan was in pace with the competition until the last event, the high bar, when the bottom dropped out. Despite Orwig's 9.2, the Wolverines ended the event with a 41.2, five points lower than their season's average and over four points behind MSU's event winning score. "We were on a 270-plus role until the high bar and then we just stumbled and that really brought us down a considerable amount," said Michigan head coach Bob Darden. Michigan started on the right track by winning the floor competition but then faltered on the pommel horse, which has been the team's Achilles heel all season. But then things again took a turn for the better when Rose and Orwig led the squad to a second place finish on the rings. After strong showings on the vault and parallel bars, however, the miseries began. These problems on the horizontal bar, however, don't worry Darden. "It was just one of those things. It was like a bug on the squad in the sense that one guy got it and then they all got it and they all missed." (Continued from Page 1) "We went to the box-and-one to keep Alford from shooting the, ball, and Smart made a great shot," said Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim. Knight joined the select1 company of UCLA's John Wooden, with 10, and Kentucky's Adolph Rupp, with four, as coaches who have won more than two NCAA crowns. Knight, who ; won titles in 1976 and 1981, saw the fulfillment of the recent adjustments he made. Previously, he was reluctant to sign junior college transfers and had been opposed to using zone defenses. But those changes helped Knight share the Big Ten title with Purdue this year and ultimately took him to New Orleans. Steve Alford, Indiana's all-time leading scorer, added 23 points, hitting seven of 10 from three- point range. His only other goal was a layup. Forward Daryl Thomas added 20 points and Dean Garrett, another junior college transfer, had 10 points and 10 rebounds. Syracuse, which shared the Big East title with Pittsburgh and Georgetown, got 20 points from point guard Sherman Douglas, 18 from center Rony Seikaly and 12 from guard Greg Monroe. I '0' r W% F TH HTTICKET TO EUROP EMIs is Celandair /TS4' 004, *COOLRIC .R 4. i"ii~ti( - ti Icelandair Direct to Luxembourg from Chicago is only $689 round trip! * Free express motorcoaches to Germany, Holland and Belgium. * Only $15 by train to Switzerland and France. Economical Eurailpasses are available. * Kemwel Rent-A-Cars with no mileage charge start at only $79 per week short term and even lower for long term rentals* * Prepaid Hotelpak coupons, start at only $26.00 per night in 19 European Countries**