Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 129, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 January 1986 — Page 6

A6

The Putnam County Banner Graphic, January 14,1986

tIIIi

Josh Stewart was just one of 170 boys and girls who received instruction from the DePauw University basketball team Saturday during the annual Free Basketball Clinic. Guard Phil Wendel (right) helped Stewart with his passing

Brooks going to start over at Providence

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Former Indiana University basketball player Delray Brooks has agreed to attend Providence College, according to an athletic department official at the Rhode Island school. No official announcement by Providence was made, but the spokesman confirmed that Brooks told first-year Providence Coach Rick Pitino Sunday night of his intentions to enroll at the Big East school. Meanwhile, the athlete’s father, Ray Brooks,said in Michigan City, Ind., “Del

Tiger Cubs sweep pair

The Greencastle freshman basketball teams swept two games from Rockville Thursday night. The Tiger Cub A-Team is 4-3 after a 34-26 win, while the B-Team is 5-0 after beating the Rox 25-21. Scott Rehlander led the A-Team victory with 11 points, followed by Todd Lancaster and Pete Huber with six

Cougars play defense

ROACHDALE—HoIding Eminence to just three second-half points the North Putnam seventh grade basketball team broke away from a tight 1816 halftime lead to a 41-19 victory Thursday night.

North is defeated

Max Pipes scored 15 points for the North Putnam eighth grade Thursday night, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Eminence during a 61-30 loss on the basketball court.

South wrestlers set for conference meet

MONROVIA—With four of the stronger teams from the West Central Conference entered, the Monrovia Invitational could be called a warmup for the Jan. 25 meet at South Putnam High School and South Putnam is ready. The Eagles finished second in the seventeam tournament Saturday with Brian Hayden and Kevin Raisor leading the way as champions. Danville won the meet and South beat both Monrovia and Owen Valley, as well as football playoff rival Eastern Hancock. “I WAS REAL happy with our place. I thought we lost a couple of matches we shouldn’t have,” coach Mark Wildman said. “I was happy to beat Monrovia. One of our goals was to beat Owen Valley because they beat us early in the season. Hayden remained undefeated at 155 pounds, while Raisor surprised everyone in the 177-pouno class. Now 18-0, Hayden won his first two matches by first period pins, then scored an 8-5 decision over Danville’s Shorter, a wrestler he could meet in the WCC. Raisor is now 10-6 and had to beat Danville’s Schmink, the Hendricks County champion for the title, scoring a first

during one of the drills, but it was Wendel's 16 points that helped the No. 3 ranked Tigers win in doubleovertime at Taylor Monday night. (Banner-Graphic photo by Steve Fields).

wanted a situation where he could get away from the Midwest, get an opportunity to play and start all over again.” Brooks, a 6-foot-4 Michigan City native who shared Indiana’s Mr. Basketball high school award in 1984 and was one of two high school players invited to the U.S. Olympic team tryouts, announced last week he would transfer because of the lack of playing time. Brooks was reportedly in Bloomington Monday making final arrangements to

each, Chris Hutchings three and Mike Chadd, Ron Sutherlin and Joe Whybrew netted two each. Darby King put up 13 points to lead the undefeated B-Team. Marty Hanks had six points and Wes Trout, Joe Mazur and Nick York each scored two. Greencastle travels to North Montgomery Monday.

The win evened North’s record at 55 going into the two week break. Glenn Runnels led North with 14 points, followed by Brock Barnhart with 10, Chad Wehrman seven, Shawn Jones four and Brandon Ferrand two.

Along with Pipes’ 15, North got nine points from Doug Parent, three from Brian Cole and two each from Scott Spencer and Justin Galford.

period pin. SOUTH ALSO GOT second place finishes from Richard Fox and Tony Cash. Fox, who received a first-round bye at 167 pounds, lost a 20-3 technical decision to Eastern Hancock’s Dusang. Cash scored one of the more popular victories to get into the heavyweight title match, pinning Eastern Hancock’s Bryan “The Ice Box” Ellison in the first period. Cash, however, was pinned by Rawlins of Danville in the second period of the final match. Pat Thibodeau, John Stigler and Dan Smetzer took third places for South Putnam. TEAM SCORES Danville 219, South Putnam 1314, Monrovia 126, Owrn Valley and Eastern Hancock 121, Indianapolis Ritter 44. Indianapolis Washington 39. INDIVIDUAL RESULTS 98--Jeff Starks, SP, lost second period pin. Lantz. OV; lost third period. Hampton. M. 105-Nathan Sutherlin, SP, lost first period pin, Williamson, D; lost first period pin, Sperry. IR. 112-Pat Thibodeau, SP (third place), lost 15-9dec., Ellis. M; won second period pin, Mason, D. 119-Jerrv Fmr SP (second ulace). won first neriod pin. Benge, IW; won third period pin. Wevetly. M: lost 17-1 third period technical fall, Molloy, D. 126-John Stigler. SP (third place), won second period pin, Foreman, EH; lost 16-7 maj. dec.. Stamper, M; won first period pin, Wright, OV; won 12-4 maj. dec.. Mooney, IR. 132—8U1 Harris, SP, lost second period pin. Rose, EH; won third period pin, Berling, M; lost second period pin.

Wabash coming to town Wednesday

Tigers win 11th in double-OT

By JOE OWENS DePauw University Sports Information Director UPLAND—After 15 lead changes and 14 ties, the DePauw University men’s basketball team finally prevailed over a very good Taylor University team, 65-61, in double-overtime Monday night in Upland. Mike Steele’s Tigers, ranked third among NCAA Division 111 teams, won their 11th game in 12 outings, while the Trojans of Taylor dropped to 15-3 and snapped a 12-game win streak. “TONIGHT’S GAME WAS just a good hard nose basketball game between two good teams,” said a happy Steele after the victory. “That was the most intense 50 minutes of play I have seen in a long time.” The Tigers, who are looking for their third straight Division 111 playoff berth, again played with the pride and character that championship teams must possess. As they did earlier in the season on the road against Illinois Wesleyan College, the Tigers kept fighting back with a never-say-die attitude. DePauw junior Scott Lewis stepped to the free throw line with 2:52 left in the second overtime period for a one and one opportunity. The 6-2 guard hit both attempts to give the Tigers the lead they would never relinquish before a loud partisan Trojan crowd. TWENTY SECONDS LATER the Trojans had a chance to tie the score, but Steve Fortenberry missed the front end of a one and one, and the Tigers came down with the rebound. With 1:43 remaining on the clock senior All-America candidate Phil Wendel hit two of his team-high 16 points to give the Tigers a 61-59 lead. “Phil was just outstanding,” Steele said of his four year starter. “This is perhaps

depart lU. He was expected to enroll later this week at Providence, which began spring semester registration Monday. Brooks will be eligible to compete beginning with the spring semester of 1987. Brooks said last week he was leaving the IU basketball team in hopes of getting more playing time at another school. He visited Providence over the weekend and watched as the Friars lost 78-77 in double overtime to Villanova. Late in the game, according to spor-

Mann near milestone

Debbie Mann scored 27 points Thursday night and 24 Saturday, yet in that threeday period the Cloverdale High School girls basketball team went from one end of the spectrum to the other. Thursday they ripped visiting Clay City 83-28 and Saturday fell 68-48 at Terre Haute North. The split, plus a 68-40 pre-holiday loss to Terre Haute South, sends Cloverdale into Monday night’s West Central Conference game with visiting Cascade at 4-6 THE CLOVERS HOST North Putnam Thursday night in what could be a landmark contest for Putnam County high school girls basketball. Mann currently has 950 career varsity points and could possibly become the first girl in the county to score 1,000 points. Unofficially, the 5-9 senior guard has 217 points this season alone, an average of 21.7 points per game. She netted just 24 against Clay City in a limited role, and put up 27 against Terre Haute North. Mann was one of four Clovers in double figures against Clay City. Ann Hutcheson scored 19 points, Shari Craig 12 and senior Traci Sharp returned to form with a 12point game. “I WAS REALLY pleased with how we played. For the first time all eight of our

Littrell, D. 138-Shannon Robinson, SP, lost second period pin, McGee, IW; lost first period pin, Morin, OV. 145-Dan Smetzer, SP (third place), lost 12-10 dec., Allen, M; won 8-2 dec., Swift, IR; won 8-2 dec., McGhee, D. 155-Brian Hayden, SP (champion), won first period pin, Conley, EH: won first period pin, Rhim, IW; won 8-5 dec.. Shorter, D. 167-Rlchard Fox, SP (second place), won first period

Turkey Run beats North with rebounding strength

MARSHALL—Outscoring North Putnam 17-7 in the third quarter, host TurkeyRun raced to a 55-40 victory Saturday in a nonconference high school girls basketball game. The loss sends North Putnam into Thursday night’s West Central Conference game at Cloverdale with a 5-8 overall record. The Cougars are 3-2 in conference play. “WE DIDN’T REBOUND with them very well after the first quarter so we got beat 55-40,” North coach Bill Bays said. “They got too many second and third shots. We couldn’t keep them from putting them back up there. Just like the Green-

the most aggressive I’ve seen Phil play in four years. He dove for loose balls, he took his shots, and he was the leader on the floor that we need him to be.” Wendel made 7 of 10 shots from the field and was a perfect two-for-two at the charity stripe, in addition to passing out four assists and coming up with three steals. ALTHOUGH WENDEL PUT the Tiger’s up by four, the Trojans were not about to give up. Greg Habegger scored to cut the lead to 61-59 with a minute and a half to play. DePauw sophomore forward Dan Falotico then hit four pressure packed free throws to ice the important victory for the Tigers. Falotico had a chance to win the game at the end of the first overtime but missed the front end of a one-and-one with four seconds to play. Taylor grabbed the rebound and called timeout to set up one last play with a second remaining on the clock. Habegger got off the good 13 foot jumper but came up short as the game went to yet another five minutes. The Trojans played most of the second and part of the first overtime without their top two scorers, junior forward Ralph Gee and senior guard Tom Grantiz. Gee, who tallied 15 points, fouled out with 38 seconds to play in the first overtime, and Grantiz, who poured in a game high 22 points, left the game with five fouls midway through the final overtime. GRANTIZ FORCED THE game into overtime with four seconds left in regulation as he swished a 15-foot jumper from the right wing to knot the score at 46 apiece. Falotico gave the Tigers the lead with 15 seconds left on a driving layup before the Trojans called timeout with four seconds left to set up Grantiz’s game-tying basket.

tswriter Mike Stanton who covers the Friars for the Providence Journal, the home crowd chanted Brooks’ name. Brooks was a four-year starter at Michigan City Rogers, rolling up 2,324 career points, the state’s fifth highest high school total. He was the co-Mr. Basketball with Purdue guard Troy Lewis in 1984. This season, his sophomore year at lU, Brooks averaged 13 minutes of playing time in 11 of Indiana’s first 12 games.

Kids contributed,” coach Greg Hammond said. And he wasn’t all that disappointed with Saturday’s loss. A series of first and early second quarter turnovers got the Clovers in a 21-9 hole they never really recovered from. “The game was really closer than 20 points from the standpoint of our play against their play,” Hammond said. In addition to Mann’s 27 points, six rebounds and five steals, the Clovers got five rebounds from Sharp and Donda Morris. ATCLOVERDALE Clay City (28) Reagan 2 0-0 3 4, Dayhufr 2 0-0 14, Wilson 61-2 3 13, Craig 1 1-3 0 3, Reagin 0 0-0 5 0. Ridenour 1 2-3 1 4-Totals FG 12, FT 4-8. PF 13 Cloverdale (83) Mann 104-4 3 24, Sharp 60-0 1 12, Morris 01-211, Garrett I 2-2 2 3, Craig 6 2-2 1 14, Hutcheson 8 3-4 0 19, Price 20-13 4. Schwomeyer 3 0-0 1 6-Totals FG 36, FT 11-15, PF 12 QUARTERSCORING Clay City n 9 4 4.2 s Cloverdale 23 19 26 15-83 JUNIOR VARSITY GAME: Clovers 21, Clay City 5 AT TERRE HAUTE Cloverdale (48) Mann 131-33 27, Garrett 20-0 2 4, Price 00-0 20, Sharp 2 23 2 6, Craig 1 0-1 0 2, Hutcheson 41-3 2 9, Schwomeyer 0 0-1 00. Morris 00-00 0-Totals FG 22, FT 4-11. PF 11 Terre Haute North (68) Benfield 6 3-3 215. Endicott 112-21 24, Pink 10-012, White 7 0-1 4 14, Wester 21-14 5, Wallace 20-004, Forrester 1 0-0 0 2, Jacobs 0 0-0 1 0, Shaw 1 0-0 1 2-Totals FG 31, FT 6-7, PF 14 QUARTERSCORING Cloverdale 9 12 18 9-48 Terre Haute North 21 is 15 ie-68 REBOUNDING: CHS 27 (Mann 6), THN 37 JUNIOR VARSITY GAME: THN 32, CHS 23

pin, Dewess, OV: lost 20-3, third period technical fall, Dusang, EH. 177-Kevin Raisor, SP (champion), won first period pin, Hooser. M; won first period pin, Schmink, D. 185-Ron Timm. SP, lost second period pin, Hendrick, D; lost second period pin, Daugherty, M. Hwt.-Tony Cash, SP (second place), won first period pin. Ellison. EH: lost 17-1 second period technical fall, Rawlins. D.

castle game the other night, really.” North trailed only 29-23 at halftime, but was in a 46-30 hole when the final quarter opened. SARAH GRIFFIN WITH 17 points and Jannetta Sinnet with 14 were the only Cougars in double figures. Sinnet also had seven rebounds and Griffin seven steals. North Putnam (40) Ferrand 10-0 2 2, Sinnet 6 2-2 3 14. Gough 2 0-0 4 4, Griffin 5 7-12 4 17, Mars teller 1 0-0 3 2, Phipps 01-2 01, Park 0 0-0 0 0. Brooks 0 (M) 0 0, Jones 0 0-0 0 0-Totals FG 15, FT 10-16 PF 16 Turkey Run (55) Stites 5 5-6 0 15. Rahn 6 2-4 3 14. D. Schaub 0 0-0 4 0. Knott 5 2-2 4 12, Guns on 3 2-6 4 8, Spray 1 0-0 1 2, M. Schaub 2 0-0 I 4-Totals FG 22. FT 11-18, PF 17 QUARTERSCORING North Putnam u 12 7 10-40 Turkey Run 14 15 17 9-55

“The game was just a hard fought defensive battle,” Steele recalled. “Taylor is a very good defensive team, and I was more than pleased with the job we did on the defensive end. I believe our depth finally wore then down at the end. ” Grantiz made two free throws with one second left in the opening half to give the Trojans a slim one point lead, 23-22, in a very low scoring first 20 minutes of play. It took the Tigers 7:08 before they got on the board in the second half, but the Trojans managed only four points in that span. “I THOUGHT THAT was a key,” Steele said. “We came out in the second half and could not score, but they didn’t put us away. Our defense kept us in the game. It was important that we did not give up any easy buckets; we made Taylor work for their shots.” Taylor took the largest lead of the game, five points, 27-22, but the Tigers hung tough. “We overcame a lot of obstacles throughout the game,” noted Steele. “Our kids kept battling back; they were not going to be denied.” THE TIGERS SHOT 63 per cent (25-27) from the field during the see-saw game, while Taylor made good on 61 per cent (2658) of their field goals. DePauw, who hit only two of seven foul shots in the first half, completed the game making 15-24 (44 per cent). Steele received a fine performance from junior forward David Galle, who contributed 16 points and 10 rebounds. “I WAS PLEASED with the way most everyone played,” Steele said. “But I was really pleased with the job Neal Ogle did coming off the bench.” Ogle missed the first part of the season due to a knee injury. “Neal seemed to be himself again for the first time this year. He doesn’t always play much until the game is tight, but he comes and takes con-

Sports scoreboard

The Top Twenty By Associated Press The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, total points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1, record through Jan. 13 and last week’s ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. North Carolina (46) 16-0 1280 1 2. Michigan (15) 16-0 1231 2 3. Duke (4) 15-0 1173 3 4 Syracuse 13-0 1116 4 5. Georgia Tech 14-1 988 5 6. Memphis State 15-0 476 6 7.Oklahoma 15-0 909 7 B.Kansas 14-2 858 9 9.St. John's 15-2 720 10 10. Vegas 15-2 653 12 11. Kentucky 12-2 618 11 12. Ala.-Birmingham 16-2 596 14 13. Notre Dame 9-2 520 16 14. Louisiana State 15-2 375 8 15. Georgetown 11-3 332 13 16 Virginia Tech 12-2 296 19 17. Paso 14-2 240 15 18. Louisville 9-4 222 17 19. Purdue 14-3 219 20 20. Bradley 16-1 121 -- Others receiving votes: Michigan State 35, Illinois 34, Tennessee 23, lowa 22, Indiana 12, Navy 12, Auburn 11, Maryland 10, Pittsburgh 9, Richmond 9, St. Joseph's 9, Boston College 6, Temple 5, Clemson 4, Pepperdine 3, Tulsa 3, Marshall 2, North Carolina State 2, Weber State 2, Alabama 1, Arkansas 1. Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Monday’s Games BYU 30, Notre Dame 76 (OT) DePauw 65, Taylor 61 (20T) Detroit 75, Butler 73 Franklin 78, Anderson 73 lUSEB4, lUPUI7I Oral Roberts 76, Evansville 64 Wis-Green Bay 57, Valparaiso 53 Wright St. 67, IP-Ft.Wayne 61 Monday's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST Army 67, Manhattan 46 Brown 68, Yale 65 Bucknell 89, Lycombing 78 Duke 87, St. Joseph’s 66 Fairfield 71, Lehigh 68 Farleigh Dickinson 76, St. Francis, Pa. 64 Hartford 68, Maine 61 Moward 79, S. Carolina St. 66 La Salle 89, Holy Cross 63 Loyola, Md. 66, St. Francis, NY. 64 Marist 86, Monmouth 75 New Hampshire 84, St. Anselms 61 Niagara 89, Vermont 67 N. Carolina A&T6B, Morgan St. 59 Northeastern 76, Tufts 52 NYU 53, Widener 50 St. Bonaventure 82, Rhode Island 81, OT Tn.-Chattanooga 64, Furman 61 Villanova 68, Connecticut 59 West Virginia 63, Penn St. 53 SOUTH Alabama St. 89, Prairie View 78 Ala -Birmingham 77, South Alabama 64 Baptist 68, Col. of Charleston 58 Bethune-Cookman73, Delaware St. 72 Davidson 92, W. Carolina 71 E. Tennessee St. 75, Marshall 63 Florida AAM 77, Paine 71 Francis Marion 83, Citadel 76 George Mason 80, American U. 64 Jackson St. 74, Texas Southern 70 Louisiana St. 86, Mississippi 68 Louisville 59, S. Mississippi 54 Marquette 87, SW Louisiana 71 Middle Tennessee 61, Austin Peay 57 Miss Valley St. 81, Alcorn 74 North Alabama 95, Jacksonville St. 90 Old Dominion 94, N.C.-Charlotte 87 Richmond 79, N.C.-Wilmington 63 Southern 81, Grambling St. 44 Tennessee Tech 78, Murray St. 53 MIDWEST Akron 85, Morehead St. 75 Bradley 79, Dayton 77, OT Cleveland St. 101, 111 -Chicago 77 Detroit 75, Butler 73 Illinois St. 35, Creighton 34 Wis -Green Bay 57, Valparaiso 53 Xavier, Ohio7B, Loyola, 111 75 Youngstown St. 75, E Kentucky 69,20 T SOUTHWEST Oral Roberts 76, Evansville 64 Pan American 64, Houston Baptist 61 St. Louis 79, SW Texas St. 55 Texas-Arlington69, Hardin-Simmons66 Texas-San Antonio 76, St. Mary’s, Texas 67 FARWEST Brigham Young 80, Notre Dame 76, OT Oregon 83, Stanford 69 Pacific 50, Fullerton St. 46 INDIANA (108) Tisdale 15-21 2-2 32, Williams 7-15 5-7 19, Stipenovich 3-8 2-2 8, Fleming 6-12 2-4 14, Richardson 4-13 3-5 11, Garnett 2-3 6-810, Stansbury 0-11-11, Gray 04 W) 0, Martin 00 04 0, McClain 0-3 04 0, Buckner 0-1 04 0, Anderson 6-13 1-2 13 Totals 43-90 22-31108 GOLDEN STATE (119) Short 11-19 11-13 33, Smith 34 1-2 7, Carroll 11-19 64 28, Floyd 8-16 10-12 26, Mullin 24 2-2 6, Ballard 3-7 04 6 Huston 0-1 04 0, Teagle 54 3-5 13, Whitehead 0-1 04

trol.” Steele’s squad must now put the exciting win behind them and look forward to Wednesday night, when they host arch rival Wabash College at 7:30 p.m. in the Neal Fieldhouse. The Tigers have won 41 consecutive games in the fieldhouse dating back to the 1983 season. “IT’S SOMETIMES TOUGH to get up for two straight big games, but good teams have to do it,” Steele explains. If it were anyone else I would maybe be concerned with us not being ready, but our kids will be up for the Little Giants. You know, Wabash would love to come in here and break our win streak. We need all the fan support we can get.” DePauw (65) Galle 5-12 6-9 2 16. Falotico 5-13 5-7 4 14. Conner 14 04 3 2, Lewis 1-5 34 2 5, Wendel 7-10 2-2 1 16, Vieke 1-2 04 1 2, Mills 04 04 0 0, Ogle 04 04 1 0, Wiles 04 04 0 0, Sturgeon 04 04 0 0, Vanderkolk 5-9 04 4 10, Sandgren 04 04 1 0Totals FG 25-57, FT 15-24, PF 19 Taylor (61) Gee 6-113-5 515, Kastelein 34 04 26, Fortenberry 24 2-3 4 6, Granitz 9-18 44 5 22, Bushur 0-5 04 2 0, Habegger 5-9 0-1 210, Phillips 04 04 Polsgrove 1-3 04 42, Ferris 04 04 00Totals FG 26-58, FT 9-17, PF 25 Halftime score: Taylor 23, DePauw 22 End of Regulation Time: DePauw 46, Taylor 46 First overtime: DePauw 53, Taylor 53 Rebounding: DePauw 29 (Galle 10), Taylor 31 (Granitz 8). Assists: DePauw 14 (Wendel, Lewis 4), Taylor 12 (Granitz, Habegger4) Turnovers: DePauw 16, Taylor 14

Sports schedule TUESDAY Greencastle at Fountain Central, 6:30 p.m., swimming Plainfield at Greencastle, 6:30 p.m., wrestling South Putnam at Cascade, 6 p.m., wrestling South Putnam girls at Clay City, 6:30 p.m., basketball Terre Haute South at Cloverdale, 6:30 p.m., wrestling

O.Totals 4345 3340 119. - . ■ ! Fouled out—None. Rebounds—lndiana 51 (Williams 12), Golden State 54 (Smith 12). Assists—lndiana 28 (Fleming, Richardson 6), Golden State 21 (Floyd 7). - Total fouls—lndiana 34, Golden State 27. Technicals—Golden State 2 illegal defense. A—7,199. National Basketball Association , .. At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L . Pet. GB Boston 27 8 .771 Philadelphia 24 13 .649 4 New Jersey 23 15 .605 5'A Washington 18 20 .474 HP* - New York 13 24 .351 15 Central Division Milwaukee 26 14 .650 Atlanta 19 16 .543 4>/i Cleveland 16 21 .432 84 Detroit 16 21 .432 84 Chicago 15 23 .395 10 Indiana 10 27 270 144 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division , Houston 25 12 .676 - Denver 23 14 .622 2 San Antonio 21 18 .538 5 Dallas 18 16 .529 54*. Utah 18 21 .462 8 Sacramento 13 25 .342 124 * Pacific Division L.A. Lakers 29 6 .829 Portland 23 18 .561 9 Phoenix 14 21 400 15 Seattle 15 23 .395 154 ’ Golden State 13 28 .317 19 L.A. Clippers 12 27 .308 19 • - -,’ v Monday's Games New York 115, Sacramento 97 Washington 90, L.A. Clippers 77 Denver 119, Milwaukee 115 1 Phoenix 121, San Antonio 98 Golden State 119, Indiana 108 Dallas 90, Seattle 89 Tuesday's Games Philadelphia at New Jersey Sacramento at Atlanta Portland at Cleveland Washington at Chicago Utah at Houston Phoenix at L.A. Lakers Wednesday's Games Denver at Boston New Jersey at Philadelphia Chicago at Detroit Portland at Indiana New York at Dallas Houston at San Antonio Seattle at L.A. Clippers Utah at Golden State HS Boys Poll , „ W-L Pts Pvs 1 w an ? n i, 26) 10-0 520 1 2. Muncie Central in.l 4*l 4 3. Valparaiso 101 442 3 4. Indpls Broad Ripple 10-0 441 5 i jb af H a , yette i, Jeff Jo-" «9 2 7 « 10-1 363 8 7. Mich. City Elston 8-0 336 12 ? Mi d <. P v,V? en D Davis 9 -° 327 11 9. Mich. City Rogers 7.9 322 7 10. Southridge 12-1 272 13 11. Bloomington South 8-i 211 15 12. New Castle jO7 0 13. Huntington North g 2 189 6 is G o a n rv er w il , l i e 8-1 157 16 15. Gary Wallace 0.0 140 o j® , E a v p" s r yi lle Bosse s i 128 is 17. LaPorte g.o 94 10 18. Boonville , so 7 19. Shelbyville . , " 20. Lafayette Catholic 10-0 37 with 10 or more rating points: Woodlan 35, RichC 0 n'cor'd N ° ll2 ®’ A * exandr ' a 24, Bedford-N .Lawrence^! svi M» 18 ’ Ft Wayne Northrop 16, Barr-Reeve 13, Evanle Reitz n Warsaw 13, Elkhart Central 12. S Vermillion 111. Monday's Sports Transactions By The Associated Press AUTO RACING Ksssas National League fielder, and Urry Whitford wt/her" ' Remb,elai< m FOOTBALL ’ National Football League KANSAL CITY CHIEFS-Named Walt sive coordinator. " a * C°rey. defen- - United States Football League * - 1 ARIZONA OUTLAWS— Re-sianed Gerrv c, 11 * * HOCKEY 8 ' 10 " Reed ’ co ™rback tocScl *"• Cen ‘. * National Hockey League MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed Mai. iu 1 1 -1 -* left-wing, to a three year control M Naslund -; w ingjrorn" Marne of* tteAHL 0 UP A ‘ Slewart -Wt:‘ g^LTtSciibS^ Jacquwpianteto^ch.n:;