Men's Basketball vs. Northwestern Wednesday, 8 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Indoor Track Silverston Invitational Saturday Track and Tennis Building The Michigan Daily Monday, February 29, .1988 Page 11. Rush Delivey BY JEFF RUSH No need for Mr. Bill to lose his head now IOWA CITY - Oh no, Mr. Bill! That must have been what Michigan fans were thinking when coach Bill Frieder put Gary Grant back into the lineup with 1:06 left in the first half. Grant already had picked up his third foul, and the fans didn't want to see him pick up another before the half ended. Frieder, a gambling man, decided to put Grant in for Rumeal Robinson when the latter committed his sec- ond foul. Frieder wanted Grant in for offense and didn't want Robinson also picking up his third foul. OK. Michigan was on offense. Grant is an experi- enced player, and he wouldn't commit another foul in the remaining minute, thought Frieder. Easy as count- ing cards in a Las Vegas casino. Oh no, Mr. Bill! (or something worse) was what ;Michigan fans must have shouted and what Frieder must have thought when Grant committed his fourth foul three seconds later. Mr. Bill's luck on this Saturday afternoon livej broadcast was as bad as his namesake's luck used to be on Saturday Night Live. "We took him (Grant) out on defense and put him back in on offense," said Frieder. "That's just one of those things. "If we could somehow get it (the lead) under 10 or something, we'd have a lot better chance in the second half, but that just didn't work. That ends up really urting us." Frieder keeps cool Unlike his clay counterpart, however, Frieder didn't lose his head. Keeping his team in the locker room until there was ;just over a minute left in the intermission, Frieder fig- ured out a strategy to pull his team back from an 11- point deficit and nearly win this road game against a ;tough team. Michigan blowing an eight-point lead was the negative part of this day. But there were many posi- tives. Both teams played outstanding basketball. The Big Ten announced that there are several league teams ready to defend the national title that Indiana won last year. "It was a great game just from the standpoint it showcases our conference," said Iowa coach Dr. Tom Davis. For a road game, Michigan played very well. The Wolverines shot 56 percent from the floor and had a balanced scoring attack. "Playing on the road and playing against all these great fans and things like that - it can't do nothing but (make us) better," said Grant. And Michigan probably won't have to play on an opponent's home court in the NCAA tournament. 7 Grea4 great guard Finally, Grant's ability to play the entire second half with four fouls and not foul out shows what he can do when necessary. And he wasn't just hanging on for life - he scored 15 of his 24 points in, the second -half. Davis said he was surprised at Grant being able to play the last 20 minutes without fouling out. "You get those fouls and all of a sudden it's like there's an invisible shield around the star," said Davis. .,"You got to give him credit too for not doing anything foolish and still being as effective as he was. He's a n geat, great guard." Great, great guards like Earvin "Magic" Johnson and SIsiah Thomas led Big Ten teams with weaker support- .. ig casts than Michigan's to national championships. Oh yes, Mr. Bill! Shucks '31' league title hopes fade after loss in corn country (Continued from Page 1) fouled out. To add insult to injury, Horton's rousing slam dunk with one second left brought the boisterous crowd of 15,500 to its feet one last time. HORTON HURT the Wolver- ines all day. The 6-8, 230-pound ju- nior scored 16 points and grabbed a game-high 11 rebounds. He and backup Kent Hill (10 rebounds) helped the Hawkeyes outrebound Michigan, 39-29. "I think the real key to the game was that they crushed us on the boards," said Frieder, who lost for just the second time in his last 11 meetings with Iowa. "They're quick, strong athletes." It did not help either that Gary Grant played the entire second half with four fouls. "I couldn't pressure the ball hard," Grant said. "And I had to let them cut through and things like that just to make sure they (the referees) wouldn't call a sissy foul on me or whatever you want to call it." GRANT still managed to lead the Wolverines in scoring with 24 points, including 15 in the second half. He also handed out seven as- sists. Roy Marble led five Hawkeyes in double figures with 19 points. "It's amazing to see the guys in double figures that we've had game after game," Iowa coach Tom Davis said. "I think that says something about the unselfishness 9f this team." In addition to his offensive prowess, Marble played a major role in holding the Big Ten's leading scorer, Glen Rice, to 20 points on eight-of-17 shooting. Eleven of those points came early in the sec- ond half. "The guy 's a great scorer," said Marble, the runner-up to Rice for Michigan's Mr. Basketball in 1985. "I know that better than anybody. "I tried to do everything I could just to make him change up his routine, because if you chase him 40 minutes, that will be about as many points as he'll score at the end of the game." MARBLE rebounded from an eight-point effort in a 120-103 loss to Michigan earlier in the season in Ann Arbor. Although the outcome was dif- ferent this time, the game resembled* the two teams' earlier confrontatiot in its up-tempo style. The two highest scoring teams in the confer4 ence ran and ran some more, result- ing in several momentum shifts. "Running games are going to have that," Davis said. "Anytime you run, you're not going to be as steady and consistent as if you' played a 50-, 60-point game. That's pretty easy tocall." Although the loss of forward Al Lorenzen to a back injury in early February weakened Davis' bench, he kept the eight players he used fresh by running them in and out of°V lineup. The Hawkeye bei outscored the Wolverines', 24-10a, Foul trouble to Griffin force1Z Frieder to play essentially just si' players, perhaps explaining in part why a tired Michigan team could not;: hold onto its second-half lead. Said Frieder, "So often when you have to play catch up against a godd basketball team, and you finally: catch 'em, and you go ahead, and then you don't sustain it." ". - CORNER OF STATE AND HILL 994-4040 Daily Photo by BRAD MILLS Michigan's Glen Rice shoots over Iowa's Roy Marble in the first half of Saturday's loss to the Hawkeyes. Marble's stellar defensive performance limited Rice, who is the Big Ten's leading scorer, to 20 points. I GET IT! The Personal Column MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIID ADS Think You 'rePregnant? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Family Life Services 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (Any Time) ALL YOU CAN EAT PIZZA Every TUESDAY $3.50 6:00p.m..to9:00 p.m. BLUE BANTER -Do Hawkeye fans dislike Bill Frieder? Is Iowa flat? When the Michigan coach and his team left the court right before the singing of the national anthem, one fan yelled, "That's right, Bill, take 'em in the locker room where you can swear at 'em!" The vocal yokel was apparently referring to last season when Frieder had some choice words for Iowa guard Jeff Moe, which could be lip-read by the the national- television audience. -The home crowd didn't stop at Frieder either. The Iowa faithful chanted, "S-A-T! S-A-T! S-A-T!" at Proposition 48 casualities Terry Mills and Rumeal Robinson late in the first half. Ironically, a story appeared in Saturday's Des Moines Register saying the average ACT score for Iowa high school students dropped off this year. Hmm. -Last Monday at Crisler Arena, Michigan defeated Michigan State, 77-67, behind Rice's 33 points. Fan favorite Steve Stoyko received a large ovation from the less-than- capacity crowd when he sank a three- pointer from the top of the key as time ran out in the first half. His ,three points in the game marked his season high in the Big Ten. FREE PLAY 1A 2 CA * P Ba * 0 * 0 * £ * 2 n * * -0ht ot ol al osale -*x rs34/0* "e 643 E. William St., Above Stereo Shoppe " Lximir/ers /1 y " * On South University Next to Middle Earth - Not valid Fri. &Sat. 7pm-Midnight g T"0 i i s F. 0GE '-:,mD ::... !! 0 EXPLORE YOUR SPIRITUALITY A Counseling Services workshop designed for people who wish to address: " What is spirituality? How does it relate to religion? . 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