Sorts Monday Trivia In 1977, the NBA, NFL, NL and AL rookies of the year all had the same initials. Name them. (For the answer, turn to the bottom of page 2) Inside Sports Monday 'M' Sports Calendar Athlete-of-the-Week Fraternity IM Standings Q&A Gill Again Men's Basketball Ice Hockey Women's Basketball Swimming Football Recruting Gymnastics 2 2 2 3 3 4 5 6 6 7 7 , The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday January 28, 1991 Wolverines succumb to Illini, 72-67 Andy Gottesman Gotta Love It Michigan shoots itself into Big Ten slump When you sit down before a Michigan basketball game, munching on a Crisler Death Dog and perusing a program, you might come acrossY one of those statistics that seems really obvious. "Well, of course a team shooting under 50 percent will lose most of its games," you think. But in Michigan's case, that statistic is becoming a glaring standard of the team's failure ' a to simply put the ball in the hoop. First, let us imagine we are sitting in our seats d before the Minnesota game this coming Thursday. _ .. . Here is what we would see: r In all games, Michigan is shooting 45 percent from the field. In Big Ten matchups, the Wolverines are hitting on 43.1 percent of their .. attempts. And it's not that any one player is responsible for the dearth of good shooting. Two players - Rich McIver and Freddie Hunter, who have taken 34 and nine total shots, respectively - : 50 pIllinois guard Brooks Taylor dribbles around Michigan gJENFER D Et See GoTTESMAN, Page 4 Calip in the Wolverines' Saturday loss. Freddie and the Thirteen Second-half fouls seal Michigan defeat by Jeff Sheran Daily Basketball Writer 2nd place Icers sweep Bulldogs by Jeni Durst Dil Sprs tWriter Something was afoul in Michigan's 72-67 Ic Illinois Saturday. The Wolverines opened theg with a 14-4 run before the officials called time That wasn't all they called, as Michigan ama costly fouls throughout the remainder of the gam( While producing most of the offense, Wolverine backcourt bore the brunt of the c Michael Talley posted 15 points and five assist: fouled out with :32 remaining in the game. Likes Demetrius Calip sank a team-high 25 points, committed four fouls. Fellow guard Kirk Taylor's fourth foul 8:48 the second half put Illinois in the bonus. Sl after, the Illini took a 59-57 lead - their first c game - on two Larry Smith bonus free throws "I felt our defense was good, but we fouled much at the end," said Michigan center Eric i who finished with four fouls of his own. "Fos throughout the whole game really hurt us." The other element that hurt the Wolverines (2 the Big Ten, 9-9 overall) was Smith. The 6-fool senior exploded for 28 points and 10 rebounds, commanded the Illini comeback with 22 seconc points. 'y "Smith had a tremendous ballgame," Illinois ( See ILLINOIS, Pa Wolverine .;..flflG Walk-on provides spark for Michigan by Theodore Cox Daily Basketball Writer ..V -. The story.of Michigan walk-on Freddie Hunter becoming a starter in one season appears magical and mysterious. It has been made out to sound like a Hollywood script: Hunter was playing basketball one day and a coach approached him and said, 'I can make you a star.' But in reality, Hunter had to exhibit a lot of dedication and patience in order to make it to the 'Big Show.' The upward climb didn't come over night and it required work at both the academic and athletic end. Three years ago, Hunter found himself on Michigan's Dearborn campus after academic problems checkered his first semester on the Ann Arbor campus. His life seemed to be losing direction. The two goals he had set when he graduated from the University of Detroit Jesuit High School - to graduate from Michigan and play college basketball -- seemed completely out of reach. Coach Bill Frieder and the rest of the Michigan basketball team had never heard of him. After all, he only averaged 8.8 points and 7.6 rebounds his senior year in high school. Not one recruiter came to his door. But more important to Hunter was his education. He wanted to attend Michigan, even though he had a better chance of playing at a lesser academic institution. Yet, his academic life was also in turmoil. He lived in Bursley Hall on North Campus his first year. Too often, he stayed on Central Campus, away from the books, playing video games and basketball at the various recreation centers. What makes Hunter so special is the fact that he didn't give up on either account. He knew all along that he had the intelligence to make it academically, and he had the athletic ability to make the basketball team. That summer, Hunter changed. He grew up and learned how to manage his time. "I bore down and became more disciplined as a student," Hunter said. "It taught me a lot. Nobody's going to do what you need done except for yourself. See FREDDIE, Page 4 BIG RAPIDS, Mich. - Just before the third period of Saturday night's game at Ewigleban Arena, Ferris goaltender Pat Mazzoli tripped and fell coming onto the ice. The rest of the Bulldogs then fol-lowed Mazzoli's lead, dropping two conference games to Michigan in Big Rapids and falling even further behind in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association rankings. The Wolverines (19-4-3 CCHA, 22-5-3 overall) narrowly escaped the bite of the Bulldogs (12-7-5, 18-7-5) Friday night, 3-2, but came out with strong Saturday, manhandling Ferris 5-1. The Wolverines were plagued with problems in the first game. The Bulldogs blasted out of the gate early in the first period when Ferris' Jeff Jestadt caught a rebound off of Michigan goalie Steve Shields in front of the net and slammed it straight past the Wolverine netmind- er for a power play goal. Jestadt's strike was similar to the rest of the game as the Bulldogs continued to outshoot the Wolver- ines and batter the Michigan defense. "I just wasn't pleased with our overall defensive effort (Friday) night; our overall defensive work ethic," Michigan coach Red Beren- son said after tallying his .500 career victory. "We didn't execute and we gave up too many three-on-twos, we gave up a couple of breakaways. We just didn't play like the team we proved we were last weekend (against Bowling Green)." But Ferris remained unsuccessful in converting on all but two of its shots due to the tenacious effort of the rookie Shields, allowing individ- ual offensive efforts by center Brian Wiseman, defenseman Patrick Neat- on, and center Jim Ballentine to grab the advantage in the game. Shields rejected 31 of Ferris' shots-on-goal, while his only two lapses came during the Bulldog man-advantage. "The big factor in (Friday's) game was Steve Shields and the way he played," first-year leftwinger Cam Stewart said. "He kept us in there. There were a lot of times when they had great scoring opportunities and he just stoned them." On Saturday, Shield's work ethic infected the remainder of the Michi- gan squad. The Wolverines came out with a greater focus and intensity, holding the Bulldogs scoreless until eighteen minutes and two seconds into the third period when the nation's leading goalscorer, Rod Taylor, slipped one past Shields on a power play. The defensive squad was far more effective, limiting Ferris to only 44 attempted shots, and not a single shot in the second period until nearly 12 minutes ticked off the clock. "I thought our team played a much better game defensively," Berenson said. "We ended up having to kill I don't know how many penalties in the game. Overall it was See FERRIS, Page 5 Fan favorite Freddie Hunter (third from right) with five of his Seven Dwarfs. SPECIAL TO THE DAILY Next Hunter is probably not on IM horizon by Ken Davidoff Daily Sports Writer With the success on this year's Wolverine hoop team of past in- tramural basketball superstar Freddie Hunter, the natural question to ask is, "Why don't we see this more often? Why is it that Hunter's success as a walk-on is such a rarity?" The sobering reality is that for every Freddie Hunter who fulfills his wildest dreams, there is a multitude of athletes whose aspirations of scoring the winning touchdown or tabulating the go-ahead goal are unrealized. Jamie Cohen, a Michigan senior who led his Chi Phi football team to the Fraternity A championship this year, had hopes of running the Maize and Blue offense when he first arrived on campus three years ago. A quarter- back for his Harrison, N.Y., high school team, Cohen experienced success but received little notice from recruiters. His father, hoping to catch the eye of unsuspecting teams, prepared a te~n minute highlight film and sent it to 25 different schools. There was significant interest by some colleges, and Cohen was both delighted and shocked when he received a call from Michigan recruiter Fritz Seyferth. "Michigan was the last school I heard from, and the last one I expected to hear from," Cohen said. "I came out here and talked to some of the coaches, and they offered me the chance to walk-on." Cohen only practiced with the team for two weeks before he was informed he would not make the cut. "It was a little more than I expected," he admitted. "I guess it just wasn't in the cards. I gave it a shot - I took football as far as I could go." At first, Cohen was disappointed that he had not tried honing his football skills at a less competitive school than Michigan. Now, as a senior, "I have no regrets. I came here to be a student. I'm just pretty happy to have gotten the See LONG ODDS, Page 3 Wrestlers go 1-1 over weekend by Eric Sklar Daily Sports Writer The Michigan wrestling team finished a grueling stretch of competition (five meets in seven days) by falling to fourth-ranked Iowa State (25-10), before defeating Northwestern (31-9). The Cyclones visited Cliff Keen Arena on Friday night in what looked to be a good matchup of two nationally-ranked teams. However, Iowa State jumped out to an early 11-0 lead over the Wolverines (9-4) lose hurt us psychologically as much as anything else. "When we lost those first three, including two that we really thought we had a chance to win, it put us in a hole," he said. Sophomore James Rawls (142) then brought the Wolverines back with a 6-0 decision over Shawn Rustad, but the Cyclones proceeded to pull away, winning the next three matches. Iowa State's Torrae Jack- son (150, ranked No. 3) and Steve Hamilton (158, ranked No. 2) Later in the bout, at the closing of the second period, Iowa State coach Jim Gibbons exploded after what he considered a bad non-call on a potential takedown by the referee. He lost his temper, throwing a roll of tape onto the mat and getting in the referee's face. The official penalized the Iowa State team two points. Another team point was taken away during the 177-pound bout when Gibbons again argued with the referee. However, the point deduction -... C - ..,.,.,.. - _- T . .. - ~ ~9