Page 14-The Michigan Daily- S turddy',May 14, 1983 SPOR TS OF THE DAILY Houston to lose Drexier; Olajuwon is stillupin air HOUSTON (AP) - Forward Clyde Drexler, a member of the University of Houston's Phi Slama Jama dunking fraternity, announced yesterday that he would make himself available for the National Basketball Association draft. Drexler, a junior, and 7-0 center Akeem Olajuwon, a sophomore, have been under pressure to make a decision since the Cougars were beaten in the NCAA championship final by North Carolina State last month. OLAJUWON announced Tuesday that he would remain in school, but Thursday said he still was undecided. The deadline for declaring for the NBA draft is midnight Saturday. Drexler said he quit listening to ad- vice from others and decided what he wanted to do and now the decision is final. "It took me so long to come to a decision. I don't think I'll change," Drexler said. "Leaving college was something that was very hard to do, especially with the organization like Houston." THE COUGARS advanced to the NCAA Final Four two straight years with Drexler and Olajuwon as the backbone of the team that specialized in dazzling dunk shots. Drexler and Olajuwon failed to attend a news conference they called at the school's athletic officie Thursday after an hour-long discussion with the team's assistant coaches. Drexler was prepared to make an an- nouncement but decided to wait when he learned that Olajuwon would do whatever Drexler decided. "I KNEW MY decision would involve Akeem to some degree so I had to have a separate conference," Drexler said. "Akeem said it wouldn't but I know Akeem. Akeem was in the middle. He was very indecisive. Anything I would have said would have made him make up his mind. But now he can make up his own mind." Olajuwon led the Cougars with 67 dunks and was among the nation's leading rebounders with an 11.2 average last season. Drexler was a second team Associated Press All- American and was the team's No. 2 scorer with a 16.3 average. The Cougars will lose forward Larry Micheaux, the only senior starter last season. Denver is site of USFL Championship DENVER (AP)-United States Foot- ball League Commissioner Chet Sim- mons made it official yesterday after- noon. Denver will be the site of the new league's inaugural championship game. "This was not a well kept secret," Simmons joked in announcing the title game to a crowd of reporters, and city and state officials gathered at the Brown Palace Hotel for the news con- ference. Word of the selection had been leaked to both of Denver's daily newspapers the night before. The game will be played at Mile High Stadium, home of the USFL's Denver Gold, on July 17 and telecast nationally by ABC TV, while being carried on national radio by the ABC network. Denver won out over four other cities officially bidding for the USFL Cham- pionship Game, as it will be called, in- cluding Los Angeles and New Orleans. Simmons said the Gold's high atten- dance record, never falling below 41,000 fans at Mile High Stadium, was a "very important consideration" in choosing Denver as a site for the inaugural championship game. THE SPORTING VIEWS Big Ten tosses out three-pointers ... ... a step toward uniformity By JEFF FAYE THE BIG TEN screwed up again. In 1973 it sent the Buckeyes of Ohio State to the Rose Bowl to "better" represent the conference. In 1980 it declared Dave Wilson of Illinois ineligible. Now it has done something worse, going beyond hurting one player or one squad - it has completely removed one facet of Big Ten Basketball. As of May 11, 1983, it was official. The three-point shot no longer exists in league play. Last season, many of the conferences across the country adopted a three- point rule for experimental purposes. The idea was to raise scores, boost at- tendance and make the game more exciting. Under NCAA guidelines, the trial rule changes were to go under review. this year and the conferences had the option of using the three-point shot, a 45-second shot clock or neither. The Big Ten coaches voted 7-2 against both. The only abstention was reported to be Bill Frieder. The two coaches who voted against throwing out the shot were Jud Heath- cote (MSU) and Gene Keady (Purdue). They both felt the shot was good for Big Ten Basketball and for themselves. Keady had two reasons why he voted for the shot. "Curt Clawson and Steve Reid." However, he added that "obviously they are not the whole reason. I felt that the rule was successful. All the fans I've talked to liked it. the conference needed it. It helped move away from our physical style of play." Heathcote concurred. The shot did help shove away from the hard play we have had for years. Not only that, but with the players in the Big Ten their size tends to congest the area under the hoop and the results are set, laid- back defenses and cautious offenses. The shot gave another dimension to scoring and the guys on "D" had to move out there." Why the shot fell short Perhaps Keady's response best explains the reason for the failure of the shot. If his vote for the rule was influenced by the shooting ability of two of his players, the graduation of some of the gunners of the Big Ten could show why so many coaches changed their votes. Here are the teams in the league that voted no: " Indiana: The loss of Ted Kitchel and Randy Wittman is enough to make Bobby Knight change his mind about the three-pointer. No one else can hit it for him. * Illinois: Derek Harper fled to the NBA's greener pastures. " Iowa: No real threat from outside unless Bob Hansen or Mark Gannon got hot, but they've graduated, and Steve Carfino is erratic at best. " Minnesota: Jim Dutcher said goodbye to Trent Tucker and Darryl Mitchell two years ago and hasn't had anything since. With nobody to hit from outside the shot are he couldn't support three-pointers. " Northestern: Rich Falk no longer has Jim Stack. He was everything he had from the outside. What will he do without him. Easy - shoot inside. " Ohio State: Larry Huggins was supposed to be the glue that held together Eldon Miller's squad. Ron Stokes only does well against Michigan. Good enough reason there. " Wisconsin: All Steve Yoder had was Ricky Olson. Why give an advantage to his hapless Badgers' opponents? Of course he said no. To say that these players leaving their respective teams was the only in- fluence on the votes cast by seven of the Big Ten coaches would be im- prudent, but certainly it has to be considered as a strong possibility. At any rate, it is a sad circumstance for basketball. In the last 20 years or so, taller men have taken over the game within the lane. Smaller players tend not to go inside for fear of having their shots han- ded back to them for lunch. The three point shot gave the little guys an op- portunity to play despite their size. Sure you can go inside to a Randy Breuer, but Trent Tucker, Randy Wittman or Eric Turner can hit from 23 or 24 feet.for the extra point. Equality was brought about by the three-pointer. Almost anyone who is 6'7" or over and in decent shape can score on a dunk, but how many can hit a 25-footer? At any rate, the removal of the shot arc was a step backward. "These rule changes are indicative of a move toward uniformity in basketball. In the next five to 10 years we should see the same rules on all levels except the NBA," predicted Falk. "Uniformity means international, but not by the NBA's rules." "I'd like to see that," said Heathcote. "It would make adjustments from one level to another less difficult. Also, with all the international play going on, the quality would improve immensely." What all three coaches suggested for major international rule changes are a 45-second shot clock to be turned off with four minutes to go and 19 to 21 foot three point shot. According to Keady, the NBA should use those rules as well. "Twenty-four seconds is too short. It should be at 45," he said. With rule changes every year and (hopefully) a movement by all the con- ferences toward uniformity, the Big Ten is just closing the door on itself. Maybe if they are left out in the cold like an old maid the coaches will learn a lesson about the over-protection of their teams. Even so, at this point in time, the conference has repeated itself. Well, add one more to the list. The Big Ten blew it again. PHOTOFINISHING FOR YOUR FAMILY AND YOUR BUSINESS HOUR Color Print and Slide Processing At 3120 Packard *@@@O@O@O@@O@O@@e O OO @@@@@@@.@ 4Hour 619S. Maple Service 3 A t 1315 S. University