Page 14 SPORTS Friday, May 17, 1985 The Michigan Daily BA TSMEN HOST BIG TEN PLA YOFFS 'M' meets Minnesota By ADAM MARTIN Indiana and Purdue at 8-8 in the Big Ten. With a 24-game winning streak and THE Wolverines square off against a 51-9 overall record - Michigan's Minnesota at 1:00 p.m. today at Ray best ever - most would expect the Fisher Stadium. Illinois will battle the Wolverines to be the favorite at this Buckeyes at 4:00 p.m. weekend's Big Ten Playoffs. Despite Middaugh's claims, the rest Not so, says Michigan coach Bud of the field gives Michigan most- Middaugh. favored-team status. "THE greatest thing about this "Hopefully, the three of us (Illinois, tournament is that it'll determine Minnesota and Ohio State) will go af- who'll be the best on this particular ter Michigan," Illinois head coach weekend," Middaugh commented at Tom Dedin said last night. Dedin's the playoff press conference last club no doubt expects to challenge the night. "To get it done, you have to put Wolverines. The same goes for John it together this weekend. It's a wide- Anderson's Gopher club, a 30-21 open tournament." finisher. But Anderson, like Dedin, is Hard to believe, David Letterman reservedly optimistic. would say. "WE'RE HERE and we've got to The opponents - Minnesota, Ohio play (Michigan)," Anderson said. State and Illinois - earned their "Our season has been up and down. playoff berths in 1985. The Illini Hopefully, we'll be on the up this captured the Big Ten West Division weekend." title with a 12-4 conference mark, 46- Michigan has been "on the up" since 19 overall. Minnesota took second in mid-April. In their last 12 games, the the west, and the Buckeyes won the Wolverines have outscored opponents second berth in the east after tying 104-25 and out hit opponents 109-53. Questions remain about the caliber of Michigan's opponents during the season, but if history is any predic- tion, the Wolverines should be as much of a force in post-season play as they were in the regular season. "We're just going at it one game at a time," Middaugh granted. But as Anderson put it, "you can't make the mistakes against Michigan and ex- pect to win." Making anything against the Wolverines might be difficult tomorrow. Middaugh will throw freshman Jim agemy at the Gophers while Bryan Hickerson will face the Maize and Blue 'from the box. Agemy led Michigan with a 9-0 record this season, striking out 34 in 65 innings. Hickerson, Minnesota's ace, led his club with an 8-4 mark in 14 appearanc- es. The 6-2, 195 pound southpaw fan- ned 61 while compiling a 3.61 ERA in 74 innings. The numbers speak for themselves. It's up to Michigan's visitors to disprove and disarm the favorite. 9 4 " MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)-Monda: w in s night, Minnesota Twins reliever Ron Da was in tears after giving up a nin r inning home run to New York's D h 4 '!, b la st Mattingly. . .. T g r On Thursday, Davis was all smiles HE STRUCK out three in the nin Daily Photo by DAN HABIB E to earn his fifth save, Tom Brunansl First baseman Ken Hayward cracked his career record-tying homerun belted a two-run homer and Kir against Purdue last week. Hayward and the rest of the Wolverines hope Puckett drove in three runs to lift t they can follow suit when Michigan takes on Minnesota today at 1:00 p.m. Minnesota Twins to a 7-5 victory ov at Ray Fisher Stadium. MORROW, PANET TA LEAD WOMEN TO SECOND-PLACE FINISH: Softballers s it season finale y the Detroit Tigers. vis Ken Schrom, 3-2, gave up eight hits, th- walked one and struck out three in on eight-plus innings. The Twins led 7-1 heading into the Tigers' ninth. But Schrom faltered, S. giving up the Twins' sixth ninth-in- th ning homer in the last seven games, a ky no-out two-run shot by rookie Mike by Laga. Darrell Evans followed with his he fourth homer to pull the Tigers within er 7-4. By BRAD MORGAN Led by shortstop Lisa Panetta at the plate and right-hander Vicki Morrow on the mound, the women's softball team concluded its season May 10-11 by splitting a four-game series with Min- nesota to finish 16-8 in the Big Ten and 28-20 overall. The 16-8 mark was good enough for second place in the conference, four games behind the North- western Wildcats. The Wolverines had won three- of-four games from Northwestern early in the season, and first-year head coach Carol Hutchins was upset her team finished behind the Wildcats. "I HAVE to say that we were shooting for the top," said Hutchins, who served as 'M' assistant coach for two years before taking over the top spot. "After we knocked off Northwestern the first weekend, we were a little disappointed we didn't win it. "I can't say I'm not happy with second because I am, but still, second isn't good enough." Throughout the Big Ten season, an inability to sweep doubleheaders proved to be the Wolverines downfall. Of the 12 league twinbills, Michigan could manage no better than a split in six of them. Hutchins said the team just never seemed to find a good groove. "WE STRIVED to be consistently good every day, not great and not terrible, but good, and we just never got there. We were definitely an up and down team, and Minnesota is a good example of that. We played like the Big Ten champs the first day (6-2 and 2-0 wins), and the next day, we were a different team (3-0and 10-6 losses)." The team's inconsistency certainly didn't rub off on Panetta or Morrow. Panetta, a senior out of St. Clair Shores, set season and career marks for triples, and earned first-team All-Big Ten honors, hitting .369 in conference play (.367 overall). Panetta also tied for the team lead in stolen bases with 14 and tied for second with 17 RBI. Hutchins praised Panetta, and said her numbers were a slightsurprise to the coaching staff. "SHE JUST exploded this year," exclaimed Hutchins. "We knew she was a good player, but she just played out of her mind. She was really a team inspiration." Morrow, ,a second-team All-Big Ten selection last year as a freshman, duplicated that feat this year by going 12-3 in the conference with a 0.96 ERA. Overall, she finished 15-5 and was named Michigan's Most Valuable Pitcher at the team's banquet. "Vicki Morrow and Lisa Panetta were the biggest factors in our second-place finish," said Hutchins. "When the going got tough this year, (Morrow) got tough. Last year, she tended to fall apart as the going got tough." TWO WOLVERINES who found the goinga little tough this year were freshmen Michele Bolster and Bridget Venturi. Both newcomers were ex- pected to contribute, but Bolster, a pitcher, and Venturi, a third baseman, were victims of "freshmanitis", according to Hutchins. "It's hard for those freshman to come right in out of high school," explained Hutchins. "Third base is a tough way to break in for Bridget, but we know she'll come back and turn it around, she was just a little bit scared out there. "With Michele, we know it's the same thing, and we know she'll learn from it and bounce back. We're not worried about them at all." Besides Morrow and Panetta, Mena Reyman and Alicia Seegert were also named to the second- team All-Big Ten squad, and rookie coach Hut- chins was rewarded for her efforts by being named Big Ten coach of the year. Reyman and Mary Bitkoski were named to the first-team Academic All-Big Ten squad. At the team banquet, additional awards were given. Panetta was named Most Valuable Player, Martha Rogers was named Rookie of the Year, and Bitkowski took home the Maize and Blue Award for leadership. Jordan named NBA Rookie of the Year NEW YORK (UPI) -Michael Jordan, who led all players in poin- ts during one of the most remarkable first-year performan- ces in NBA history, was the runaway winner yesterday in the league's Rookie of the Yearvoting. Jordan, the 6-foot-6 guard of the Chicago Bulls, beat out Houston center Akeem Olajuwon in the voting-57% to 20 . Jordan and Olajuwon were the only players to receive votes from 78 members of the media, three from each league city and nine members of the national media. JORDAN became only the sixth rookie to lead the league in points scored with 2,313. His average of 28.2 points per game, third best in the league, was the highest for a rookie since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar averaged 28.8 ppg for the Milwaukee Bucks in 1969-70. Jordan, from Wilmington, N.C., broke six Chicago records and led the team in just about every statistical category, including rebounds (534) and assists (837) to take the team to the playoffs for the first time since 1981. A I 0