Hockey vs. Notre Dame Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena The Michigan Daily SPORTS Wrestling vs. Northwestern Sunday, 1 p.m. Crisler Arena Page 9 Friday, February 10, 1989 WRESTLERS SIGHTS PINNED ON THREE WINS Steve Blonder Blonder's Ponders > Time to give Frieder his due in Iowa win it started out as a game neither team deserved to win. Michigan reverted to times of the past, as the basket seemed to move whenever a Wolverine shot was in the air. And for Iowa, they must have felt as if they were playing in parts unknown, as even on their home floor, the Hawkeyes could not buy a basket. But by the end, it was a game neither team deserved to lose. The crowd let their feelings be known early as they hooted and hollered while throwing things at Michigan coach Bill Frieder. They didn't care that their team was down by 18. The crowd never lost faith in their fellow students. Michigan's oft-maligned bench did its job. Sean Higgins got the big basket when his team needed it. His three three-pointers in the first overtime, and 22 points overall, kept the Wolverines from a (relatively) early; shower.' The one factor that didn't come into play was what a Purdue basketball writer termed "the Frieder factor". Simply put, this reporter said if a team can stay close to Michigan until five minutes are leftZ- b in the game, the Wolverines will F r e l d e r always lose because of their coach. ...coached great game Frieder could not have coached this game any better than he did. Despite rumors emanating from the West suggesting Frieder would bolt the cold midwest winters for the warmth of Arizona State, Frieder put the distraction behind him and got the most out of his charges. "You have to give credit to the coach, because he taught us to handle pressure, This victory belongs to him," said Michigan forward Glen Rice. Frieder says his team needs to shoot 55 to 60 percent every game to win. But to win this game, his team needed something else - character. That's what this game is all about. Michigan saw Iowa erase a 18 point deficit and take the lead. But the Wolverines never gave up, even when they found themselves trailing in overtime by five. They kept their composure and worked to get the shot they strived for - the three- pointer. RUNNING OFF THE COURT screaming "we did it," Frieder pumped his arms in the air and gave Higgins a Michigan sized bear hug. For these two, each of whom has been much maligned by the press this season, the game was a moment of triumph. But such wins only last for a day. Tomorrow, Michigan will have to battle it out again against a Minnesota squad that hasn't lost a Big Ten game at home this season. "The biggest thing we have to is forget about Iowa," Frieder said. "Any type of let down will be disastrous." The players may forget, but the rest of us will remember one thing. It all boils down to character. 'M' continues to tag BY STEVEN COHEN "I'm waiting for next year," declared Ohio State wrestling coach Russ Hellickson, when asked how his No. 18 Buckeyes wouldwfare against Michigan today in a three-way meet with Tennessee-Chattanooga. The Wolverines face No.13 Northwestern at Crisler on Sunday. "We're not in their caliber this year," continued Hellickson. "I don't have a bad squad, but I've made the decision to redshirt a lot of people. Michigan has a great team. I don't ever like to concede a match, but we would have to wrestle out of our minds to win." The Wolverines defeated the Buckeyes, 30-6, last month at the Virginia Duals, winning every match from 134 pounds and up. But this time around the Ohio State squad is weaker due to the loss of 150-pounder Kenny Ramsey who is in the process of moving down to 142 pounds and 134-pounder Mark Marinelli who is out with a skin infection. MICHIGAN also has undergone some changes. 126-pounder John Moore has a sore neck, and 150-pounder Sam Amine has bruised ribs. Moore is questionable while Zac Pease will fill in for Amine. "This is the toughest time of the year," said Michigan coach Dale Bahr. "It's tough in late January and February. It's the low part of the season. You've been watching your weight for three or four months and you're still four weeks away from the tournaments (Big Ten and National Championships). "We just want to finish this weekend with three wins," said Bahr. Though Tennessee-Chattanooga has fourth- ranked Charlie Buckshaw (190 pounds), eighth- ranked heavyweight Chris Thornbury, and eleventh-ranked Ben Reichel (118), Michigan shouldn't have too much of a problem against them or Ohio State. Michigan counters with Fritz Lehrke, Bob Potokar, and Salem Yaffai. THE WILDCATS, at 11-4, will pose some problems for Michigan. They finished fourth at the Great American Duals Classic and have five top teams parucularly soua wrestlers: second-ranked 190- pounder Mark Whitehead; fifth-ranked 118 and 134-pounders Jack Griffin and Joei Bales; sixth- ranked 167-pounder Brad Traviolia; and 1987 All- American 177-pounder Mike Funk. Northwestern's strength at those positions could make it a close match, but the Wildcats' lack of a true heavyweight will hurt them. Potokar should beat Matt Case, who last year was a 167-pounder. Michigan's Mike Amine defeated Case, 10-1, last season. Michigan's John Fisher has wrestled Bales several times and, though the scores have sometimes been close, Fisher has always been victorious. Northwestern's talent at 167 could also go to naught. No. 5 Mike Amine defeated Traviolia earlier this season and would like to redeem himself after a loss against Minnesota. Michigan is likely to pick up extra points from top-ranked Joe Pantaleo and eighth-ranked Larry Gotcher at 158 and 142 pounds respectively. OT Continued from Page 1 Iowa came right back with Roy Marble, who led the Hawkeyes with a career high 32 points, hitting a layup with :07 remaining. After a marvelous clutch hoop, all looked grim for Michigan when reserve point guard Demetrius Calip, play- ing because both starter Rumeal Robinson and backup Kirk Taylor had fouled out, slipped and fell with the ball in the Iowa zone. Calip had enough presence of mind, though, to keep his dribble and pass it to Sean Higgins, who contributed 22 points off the bench, subsequently gave it to Vaught for the game-winning basket. The Wolverines were down in both overtimes before coming back to pull the victory out. Michigan was down six points in the first ex- tra period and five in the second. "The motto of the week was poise and pride under pressure," said Michigan Assistant Coach Steve Fisher. "I say we did what we wanted to. Wouldn't you?" Michigan had a 16-point lead at halftime, 45-27, that was at one time extended to 18 before the, Hawkeyes stormed back. Iowa took the lead, 82-80, for the first time since the 1:10 mark of the opening period and was seemingly in control until Michigan fought back. "The way Iowa plays, any kind of a lead is never safe," said Wolverine center Mark Hughes. "Their style is such that any team can be caught at any time." Mike Griffin cut the Iowa lead to one with a free throw, 82-81, before Hawkeye senior guard B. J. Arm- strong hit one of two foul shots to make the lead two once again. After a Michigan miss, Iowa for- ward Ed Horton was fouled. The 56 percent foul-shooter missed his first shot and the rebound went to Taylor. He threw the ball to Griffin, who missed his shot, but it was re- bounded and put in on a fallaway jumper at the buzzer by Terry Mills to send the game into overtime. "I think we smelled the opportu- nity for a Big 10 championship," said Taylor. "We wanted it more than they did, and it showed." On a sour note for the 18-4 Wolverines, who are 6-3 and in sec- ond place in the Big 10, Robinson was diagnosed as having torn liga- ments in his thumb. The junior guard, though, still came back in the game during the first overtime, when the Wolverines needed someone to a# y play. Robinson tallied 20, and Vaught added 18 points for the Wolverines, who shot only 41.7 percent from the field, a far cry from their nation- leading percentage of 58.7. Armstrong and Horton both had 19 points for the Hawkeyes, who dropped to 17-5 overall, and 5-4 in the conference at the halfway point of the Big 10 season. "They're (the Michigan players) not getting credit for playing their butts off. These kids are playing hard," said Frieder, who was swarmed with questions concerning his apparent contact with Arizona State, which is looking for a new coach. 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