The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 16, 1987-- Page 13 SPORTS OF THE DAILY Tip of the Kap By Rick Kaplan Ayawner. A snoozer. This was Michigan against Michigan State? The 78-year history of the Wolverine-Spartan basketball rivalry may never have seen a more boring game than last night's 74-70 Michigan win. A duller four-point game may never have been played. A game billed as a matchup between two evenly matched, run-and-gun teams ended up a plodding, half- court battle.The fans who left with eight seconds left and the score tied in Monday night's thriller against Indiana were probably gone by halftime yesterday. The fans who stayed may have regretted their decision. Hey, isn't the Cosby Show on? Michigan State coach Jud Heathcote did not enjoy the show he was watching. "I thought we played, in the first half, about as poorly as a team can play," he said. "I'm not giving Michigan much credit. I do not think that they played very well. It just wasn't good basketball in the first half." The second half was a little more exciting, but still had all the glamour and thrills of the Goodwill Games. Overall, the Russians could easily show the game film as anti-American propaganda. When the Spartans staged a quiet comeback in the second half to tie the game, it appeared things may finally become interesting. Glen Rice awakened the slumbering sell-out crowd (many people were probably dreaming of an evening in the library) with two thunderous rejections on Carlton Valentine attempts with five minutes remaining. The fans made noise the rest of the way, but it wasn't the sincere, rah-rah "LET'S GO BLUE!" type of noise. It was the phony, "let's go blue, unless you don't feel like it" variety. M' wins... ...game bores A small dose of fun was added by the oversized body of Michigan State forward George Papadakos. With all the hand-eye coordination of Mr. Magoo, the 7-foot transfer from Syracuse is, inch-for-inch, the goofiest, most useless player in the Big Ten. Papadakos is fulfilling his role as MSU's new Larry Polec. But at least Polec could shoot. Also coming off the Spartan bench was something called Mario Izzo. A 6-11 center, appropriately from New Jersey, Izzo first stepped on the floor with 1:17 remaining in the first half. MSU's Carlton Valentine was at the line shooting a pair of free throws. When the second shot bounced off the rim, Izzo fouled Michigan's Mike Griffin on the rebound, after being officially in the game only one second. At that rate, some press row humorists theorized, Izzo would commit 2,400 fouls in a full game. Papadakos must have been jealous. It was also noticed that the Spartans have an assistant coach named Tom Izzo. The MSU media guide gives no indication as to any relation between the Tom and Mario. Kansas hired Danny Manning's father as an assistant coach to help recruit the superstar. Somehow, the thought of Michigan State hiring a relative of Mario Izzo to bring him to East Lansing just isn't as feasible. Aside from Papadakos and Izzo, only Griffin provided a little change of pace from the "So, what else is new" contest. The redshirt freshman swingman shook off his nightmarish showing against Indiana to play his best game of the year. He shot four-for-four from the floor and four-for-four from the line, for a season-high 12 points. Heathcote final point summed things up nicely: "We looked so slow and so blah." So did the game, Jud, so did the game. Indiana whips BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - Steve Alford scored all of his points on seven three-point goals, including two as No. 4 Indiana scored the game's first 12 points, as the Hoosiers routed Wisconsin 103- 65 in Big Ten action last night. Indiana moved to 13-1 with its 10th consecutive victory and is 4-0 in conference play. Wisconsin, which hasn't defeated Indiana since 1980, dropped to 10-8 and 0-5. Trent Jackson had 16 of his 21 points in the second half for Wisconsin. Alford, the No.3 scorer in Indiana history, raised his career- point total to 2,008 while playing only 29 minutes. He was seven of eight from outside the 3-point line and didn't attempt a shot inside it. Oklahoma 76, Kansas 74 NORMAN. Okla. (AP) - Tim McCalister's jump shot with eight seconds remaining broke a tie and Ricky Grace blocked a last-second shot as No.16 Oklahoma defeated 20th-ranked Kansas 76-74 last night in a Big Eight Conference basketball game. McCalister, who finished with 21 points, hit his fading jumper from the left of the key after Oklahoma twice got offensive rebounds in the final minute to keep possession of the ball. Kansas, which had to go the length of the floor following a timeout after McCalister's jumper, got the ball to reserve guard Mark Turgeon. But Turgeon's three-point attempt was cleanly blocked by Grace as the buzzer sounded. Oklahoma, 11-3 overall and 1-1, in the conference, trailed 61-56 with 6:50 remaining after Kansas went on a 9-0 run, six of the points coming from guard Kevin Pritchard. But the Sooners went on a run of their own, with David Johnson coming off the bench to score five points in just over a minute as Oklahoma went ahead 64-61 with 5:39 left. A three-point play by Keith Harris tied the game, but Oklahoma moved ahead 70-66 with 4:14 remaining on foul shots by McCalister and Harvey Grant. From then on the two teams traded baskets. Kansas, 9-5 and 2-1, took a 74-72 lead with 1:54 to play when Mark Randall made two free throws. Oklahoma then missed three shots and Kansas missed one before McCalister's game-winning shot. Kansas, which shot 65 percent from the field, got 21 points from Danny Manning. Toronto bests Detroit 3-1 DETROIT (AP)- Goaltender Allan Bester turned aside 37 shots and Vincent Damphousse scored two goals last evening as the Toronto Maple Leafs broke a four- game losing streak with a 3-1 NHL victory over the Detroit Red Wings. Toronto improved to 18-21-5 and jumped into second place in the Norris Division. Detroit, losers of four straight, fell to 16-20-8. Bester surrendered only Bob Probert's second-period rebound goal as he ran his personal season mark and the 'Maple Leafs' team record against Detroit to 5-1-1. The division rivals complete their season series Jan.31 at Toronto. Damphousse, the Maple Leafs' first-round draft choice last June, opened the scoring at 7:45 of the first period, taking a pass from Rick Vaive and beating Red Wings' netminder Greg Stefan from the slot. Toronto increased the lead to 2-0 at 4:45 of the second period. Following a flurry of activity around the Toronto net, which saw Bester thwart Adam Oates' close-in shot, Damphousse broke clear across the Detroit blue line and beat Stefan with a 35-foot slapshot for his 14th goal. r r I1 f mmTMannIeU UE E COUPON $1.50OFF"M"ithmthis entire adT.0 off any adult evening * * ~"M" amsin except Tues. - good thru 1/22/87* CRIMES OF TWIGHT LITTLE SHOP THE HEART sHows OF HORRORS Call for show times COME JOIN OUR STAFF The University of Michigan Housing Division RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1987-88 The Housing Division is looking for well-qualified candidates to serve as resident staff members in Residence Halls. We specifically are looking for students interested in: -Serving as positive academic and group living role models -Fostering a spirit of community -Developing and strengthening leadership, communication and group skills and -Developing programs for a diverse student population. THERE WILL BE TWO INFORMATION MEETINGS: Sunday, January 25, 1987 - 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 27, 1987 - 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. IN AUDITORIUM 3 - MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING Representatives from the Housing Division will be there to provide information and answer questions regarding candidate qualifications, selection processes and job expectations. Applications are available only at these meetings. ALL NEW APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO ATTEND ONE OF THESE MEETINGS An Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer r 1 t!7 o I tl l V I kI t , 1 I _ . _ F EK~I~I~RW~i!M THINK ABOUT IT... In this little self contained package, known as a sandwich, is a complete meal Bread - carbohydrates/fiber Meat - protein Tomato - fruit Cheese - dairy Lettuce - vegetable Pickle - speaks for itself -G 4. I I