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February 17, 1979 (vol. 89, iss. 116) • Page Image 7

… Wisconsin goalie Roy Schultz after receiving a pass from Wolverine Roger Bourne. The score temporarily put Michigan on top in the first period 1-0. Badgers best sagging lers By BRIAN MILLER Wisconsin brought…

… its fans and it brought its band but it was the Badger hockey squad that had a party as the visitors from Madison skated to an 8-3 victory over Michigan's Wolverines at Yost Ice Arena last night. The…

… if it were going to run the Badgers right off the rink. The Wolverines opened- the game's scoring midway through the first period when Brian Lundberg, playing right wing instead of his customary right…

… puck, skated in alone on Wolverine goalie Rudy Varvari, and scored. However, the tie didn't last long as Michigan regained the lead just :18 seconds after the Wisconsin goal. That score, by Gordie…

… Hampson allowed the Wolverines to skate off with a 2-1 lead after one period of play, although Coach Dan Farrell wasn't exactly pleased. "We couldn't take advantage of the first period chances (scoring just…

February 17, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 115) • Page Image 8

…? Michigan hockey fans will be able to decide that for themselves this weekend, as the icers, losers of 13 of their last 14 conference games, host the Tigers of Colorado College. the Wolverines' fatal fall has…

…, and the eighth place Minnesota- Duluth Bulldogs stand a mere one point behind the Wolverines. The icers realize the importance of this series, as any possibility of produc- ing something out of the…

February 17, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 115) • Page Image 9

… most inconsistent teams in the cir- cuit. After playing catch-up most of the evening, Michigan had the ball with :57 remaining and the game tied at 66. The Wolverines worked their delay tactics until…

…, had the ball. After a time out, the Badgers were con- fronted by a 1-3-1 Wolverine zone. It was the first time in the game that Michigan went to the Zone. The Badgers-worked the ball around the…

… half), then we played very hard," said a pleased Michigan coach Johnny Orr. The victory keeps the Wolverines in the thick of the Big Ten race, or at least kept their NCAA bid hopes alive. They now sport…

…- ting at a pace that would embarass a snail. The Wolverines didn't hit their first point until four-and-a-half minutes had been played. Alan Hardy got the initial bucket from short range. It turned out to…

… bucket to give Wisconsin a 30-28 halftime edge. Wisconsin opened the lead in the second half, but the Wolverines refused to fold, and-Joel Thompson, who was tough all night with nine boards and 16 points…

… seven straight points for Michigan during one stretch, including a three-point play that gave Michigan a 63-60 lead. But the Badgers decided not to die, either. They kept pace with the Wolverines and…

…. "Gregory is the most improved player we've seen," said Orr, "up at our place I didn't even know he was in the game." The Wolverines must put two wins back-to-back to stay in the race. Something they haven…

Wolverines eight or ten. The small number is due to the recent inception of the team and Simmons believes in using only those athletes who have shown potential. As a result, he finds himself of- ten without…

February 17, 1976 (vol. 86, iss. 118) • Page Image 8

… Cleveland. AND THE Wolverines came away with a big victory in the 6 Fred Weekdays from noon to 1p.m. university mile relay beating Eastern power Villinova. The Wolverine team of fresh- man Harlan Huckleby…

…, Jeff Mc- Leod, Jim Grace and Dave Williams turned the mile in :17.3. Huckleby sprinted out to he lead on the first leg and the Wolverines were never headed after that. Dave Williams, the Big Ten 604…

… champion, grabbed a third n that event at the Knights Relays with a 1:11.1 clocking. The Wolverine two mile relay eam blazed to a second place inish behind Villinova. Dave re la e rs Furst kicked it off…

… hey battled to a height of 18-0. NCAA aybe a The Wolverine thinclads' next d Har- competition will be Saturday at taught Eastern Michigan in the Cen- on the tral Collegiates. Playboy's guide to the…

February 17, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 116) • Page Image 1

… Steve Green and an inpenetra- ble defense, moved into sole pos- session of first place in the Big Ten by drubbing the Michigan Wolverines, 93-81, before a rabid record Assembly Hall crowd of 17…

…,521 yesterday. Shooting and scoring with pin- point accuracy from all over the court, the 6-7 Green converted 17 of his 24 field goal attempts en route to his game-high total of 37 points. Four Wolverines tried…

February 17, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 116) • Page Image 8

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 17, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 17, 1974 - , - - - - a olMdmWlN Indiana Green BY GEORGE! George Hastings - Those gutty Wolverines: down but not…

Wolverines have not seen it played against them this year. -The Hoosiers are now in command of the Big Ten. Sure, Indiana had a lot of things going for them. The Hoosiers had their sparkling Assembly Hall…

… Michigan in the biggest game yet of the Big Ten season. Steve Green was utterly fantastic, running around and shooting over the parade of Wolverine defenders who made attempts to cover him, in a performance…

… statistics were undistinguished, and Indiana coach Bob Knight did not bother to bring him off the bench even once in the first game against the Wolverines. But yesterday, Benson was everything Knight had…

…. Of course, Indiana was not the only team on the court at Bloomington. The Wolverines did not go down without a fight, and not without a few bad breaks. A pair of missed layups and a foolish offensive…

… visiting squad to make up in Assembly Hall. Still, the gutty Michigan team did not lose its poise, and when the Wolverines crawled back to within four points visions of yet aonther Maize and Blue miracle…

… materialized. But stripped of their play-making guard, and with no-one capable of slowing down Green or Benson, the Wolverines were just not about to win this game. Orr was gracious and dignified in defeat…

…. Unlike many times last year, his squad had been beaten by a better team, not by its own poor attitude. Even though the Hoosiers seem to have a wide inside track to the Big Ten title, the Wolverines are not…

… more of a long shot than was the chance back in October that this Wolverine team would be 16-4 on Feb. 17. folds (Continued from Page 1) in the game was costly as play- making guard Joe Johnson was lt…

… for Michigan to catch up, and the Wolverines just didn't have any left. The Hoosiers ran off eight straight points to take a 73-57 lead and, for all prac- tical purposes, bury the depleted Wolverines

February 17, 1973 (vol. 83, iss. 115) • Page Image 7

…-0 season for the Wolverines, the first such one in six years. The win also marked the first time that a Mich- igan wrestling team has gone 9-0 in the Big Ten. "It was a gutty performance from all our guys…

… wrestled well an undefeated season was a possibility," added Johannesen. "In fact, that was one of our major goals for the year." In achieving their "major goal" the Wolverines couldn't have done it in more…

… for the Michigan Mat reckoned with in the Big Ten Machine the biggest part of the meet. year is yet to come. Wolverine Gary Ernst, at heavy- weight, chalked up the only pin of the night as he layed Jim…

… the most successful dual meet season in years, per- haps THE most successful that Michigan wrestling has ever It's on to Minneapolis for the Wolverine grapplers as they at- tempt to wrestle the Big Ten…

… night in the Olympic Invitational Track and Field Meet in'New York. escape. The Wolverine junior made his Michigan took the first six slim lead stand up through a matches while building up a com…

February 17, 1972 (vol. 82, iss. 108) • Page Image 9

…S/ r - . . . on the varsity Randy Phillips WHILE Michigan's varsity cagers were floundering to a dis- appointing 5-5 non-conference record amidst suspensions and ineligibility requirements, Wolverine

… race, fans are not able to resist the temptation of comparing the two Wolverine squads. Speculations like "the freshmen could do a better job" and wishful thinking like "wouldn't it be great if the…

… the Wolverines great depth at all positions. The freshmen really aren't very far away from the varsity this season. Intra-squad scrimmages have told the story, and they lend some support for those 'wild…

February 17, 1971 (vol. 81, iss. 117) • Page Image 7

…, snowstorms, falling buses, foul trouble, and the Boilermakers themselves, is, according to Wolverine captain Dan Fife, "what makes a team a winner." A winner is exactly what the Wolverines can be called now…

…- cause we know he's back there." When the Wolverines don't use the fast break, they go into a stack offense. Fife explains, "The coaches came up with it as a way of utilizing Hank's (Wilmore) great…

… offensive talents." Against Purdue. however, the Wolverines prov- ed they could win without Wilmore who was hampered by early foul trouble. Fife attributes this to bench strength, and most of all the people…

February 17, 1970 (vol. 80, iss. 115) • Page Image 6

… might win a place on one of breed of track stars not afraid the Canadian national teams this' to speak their minds. Wolverine summer and represent his country track captain Paul Armstrong is a in…

…. Con- Now in his fourth year with the cerning the issue that has literally team, he is one of the Wolverines torn the track world into two fac- leading and most consistent per- tions, that of amateurism…

… in them when he said that "we'll be right in there." AS TO the NCAA's he feels the Wolverines have the ability to put on an excellent showing, especially considering the fact that the championships…

… Arborland-CampuS Maple Villoqe By RANDY PHILLIPS With 101 shots on Michigan's goal in last weekend's series split with Wisconsin, one might think that the Wolverine's defense had been left back in Ann Arbor…

… indication of poor defense on the part of the Wolverines, but as a distinct difference in offensive styles of play. "Every time they get over the blue line they shoot-... We try to set up plays." He also…

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