4 Sports Page 12 Tuesday, July 28, 1981 The Michigan Daily SPORTS OF THE DAILY Indiana's Turner still INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The Indiana Hoosiers' hopes of .defending their NCAA basketball championship suf- fered a crushing blow last weekend with the probable loss of Landon Tur- ner, who was involved in an auto ac- cident and is hospitalized with- paralysis in his legs and arms. Fred Price, a spokesman for Methodist Hospital, said yesterday the 6-foot-14 Turner had been transferred to the hospital's intensive care unit after experiencing some lung difficulties. He still is in serious condition, and doctors THE SPORTING VIEWS Cazzie and Campy Show . .. . . .a fun evening of hoops By JOE CHAPELLE Daily sports writer IMAGINE IT. Both Cazzie and Campy Russell, two of the greatest basket- ball players in Michigan history, sharing the same court and performing again in Ann Arbor. Just the thought of that duo playing on the same ballclub would make any longtime Wolverine hoop fan's mouth water - and it was reality last Saturday night at Ann Arbor's Pioneer High School. Both of the Russells, along with a group of athletes that several NBA owners would trade their entire squads for gathered to put on an all-star show and help raise money for the Cazzie Russell-Sandy Sanders Basketball Camp, which is becoming an annual summer feature in Ann Arbor. The team rosters included such notables as Darryl Dawkins, the famed "Chocolate Thunder" of the Philadelphia 76ers, Terry Tyler and John Long, both from the Detroit Pistons, Eddie Johnson of the Kansas City Kings, and former Wolverine Ken Grady, who is currently playing in Europe. Although the game's primary objective was to showcase the brilliant basketball talent which was present, it also provided Wolverine boosters with the vehicle to travel back in time to the days when the Russells played for Michigan. Cazzie led the Wolverines to successive championships in 1964, 1965, and 1966. Because of the large crowds which he helped attract to Michigan basketball games during his college years, Crisler Arena, upon opening the year after Russell had graduated was nicknamed the "House that Cazzie Built." On Saturday night, Cazzie Russell, who went on from Michigan to play for the New York Knicks, demonstrated to the crowd that he could still play the game. Delighting the fans with lay-ups and outside shots, he showed why Michigan enthusiasts were so anxious to see him play over 15 years ago. Campy Russell, who paced the Wolverine cagers to a first-place finish in 1974, also displayed his abundant talent. Campy, who incidentally, currently plays for the New York Knicks, used his quickness to break away from defenders for several lay-ups. The major purpose of the game was to raise money, but the spirit of cooperation between the NBA players who showed up to play was what made the event a memorable one -it gave the spectators an opportunity to enjoy the pure delights of the game of basketball. It provided not only a chance for Michigan basketball aficionados to reminisce about the glory days of Wolverine cage history, but also a refreshing look at the interactions bet- ween professional athletes. What made the game fun for the fans gathered to watch these stars compete was the fact that the players themselves were there to have fun. That is a part of the professional sports scene often overlooked during the regular seasons of basketball, football, and hockey. Physical altercations, name-calling, and referee abuse were absent from the game, replaced by good-natured laughter and competition. In short, the game was fun for everyone. At one point during the contest, Long playfully tackled fellow Piston Tyler as he was about to makea shot. The clowning around, however, did not ruin the competitive aspect of the game, as both teams very definitely played to win. The spirit in which they competed was something that is often lacking in professional sports. Many pro players simply do not have fun while performing. And that is something which fans will be the first to notice. Cazzie Russell set the mellow, let's-have-fun tone in his pre-game remarks. "If you have to dunk, please do it with finesse," he said, referring to the fact that there no replacement backboards are stored at Pioneer. Oh, and for those who are interested, the Blue squad got the better of the Gold by a 119-110 count. paralyzed hospital visitors yesterday. "Coach Knight and former Gov. Otis Bowen both visited Landon this mor- ning," said Rita Turner, Landon's mother. "And many of his teammates have also come to the hospital. Isiah Thomas flew here from the Virgin Islands, and he just -doesn't want to leave." The loss of Turner would strip the Hoosiers of three key players from last year's 26-9 squad that pulled together after losing five of ita first 12 games to win its second consecutive Big Ten title and then stormed through the NCAA's. A.J. is OK By The Associated Press Race car driver A.J. Foyt was released yesterday from a hospital fnwherehe was taken after suffering arm and leg injuries in Saturday's Norton Michigan 500 at Michigan International Speedway. CHRIS CHAPMAN of the University ors of Michigan Hospital said earlier that rmanent. doctors wanted Foyt to remain in the scious with hospital another week. But Sandy paralyzed," Helble of the hospital's public infor- scheduled, mation office said Foyt was released 1 about a between noon and 1 p.m. yesterday af- fully con- ter doctors declared he was in good condition. include a Foyt, 46, suffered a compound frac- iana coach ture of his right arm and a puncture his biggest wound in his left leg after his Cosworth- months ago, powered Coyote drove into some oil and ically about slammed against the wall on the second ng much of turn during the injury-and fire-plagued y to develop race in Brooklyn. He underwent two d-nosed kid hours of surgery. basketball "The surgery went very well, and doctors expect a good recovery," t chance. Chapman said. "They anticipate he Turner's (Foyt) will regain full use of the arm." 4 I T urner ... receiving visit say the paralysis could be pe "HE'S STILL semi-cons both legs and both hands1 Price said. "No surgery is and it's difficult to tel prognosis until Landon is scious." Turner's injuries, which fractured spine, leave Ind Bobby Knight with one of challenges. Less than fourr Knight was talking optimist the following season, pinni his hope on Turner's ability into a "mature, tough, har who wants to be a great player." Now he may never get tha KNIGHT WAS among 4 4 NFL NOT SINGLE ENTITY: Judge simplifies case LOS ANGELES (AP)-The judge in the Oakland Raiders-National Football League antitrust trial gave instructions yesterday that appear to streamline the jury's job in the complex case. An attorney for the plantiffs began closing arguments by describing the current league structure as one of lordships and fief- doms. U.S. District Judge Harry Pregerson listed three issues for the jury of seven women and three men to consider in their deliberations. Last Friday, Pregerson eliminated one of the most complicated questions, declaring that the NFL is a group of competitors rather than a single entity and freeing the jurors from having to consider that question. PREGERSON TOLD the jurors that the three claims they would have to con- sider are whether the NFL and its member clubs, the defendants, violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by refusing to let the Raiders move to Los Angeles; whether the league breached an oral contract to allow that move, and whether the defendants violated their implied promise of good faith and fair bargaining by blocking the move. Attorney Maxwell Blecher, representing the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission, asked the jury to declare that no club owner could consider any territory solely his own. Speaking of the land deal the late Carroll Rosenbloom received when he shifted the Rams from the Coliseum to Anaheim, Blecher said: "NFL Rule 4.3 was such that Rosenbloom was the master of all he surveyed. So the lord, who had been given the kingdom of Los Angeles as his fiefdom, decided to move from one part of it to another." RULE 4.3 REQUIRES that any franchise move be approved by three quarters of the league's 28 team owners. The Raiders were voted down, 22-0, in their quest to move to Los Angeles. 4 4 4