Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 132, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 January 1986 — Page 7

Sports scoreboard

Indiana High School Basketball By The Associated Press Wednesday's Games Dalevilles3, Cowan 45 Indpls Cha Lard 57 Indpls Roncalli M u West Noble 50 20T “I™ reoncau '» Westvlew 55, York town 49, Wapahani29 Marion Co. Tourney Lawrence North 76, Speedway 61 Pike 52, N. Central 43 Perry Meridian 64, Decatur Central 47 Warren Central 57, Ben Davis 51 Ind HS Top 26 Schedules INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Games involving The Associated Press T°p M indiaina high school boys' basketball teams the week of Jan. 13-16: 1. Marion (10-0) vs N 0.12 New Castle Fri; at Waraaw Sat. 2. Muncie Central (KM) at Anderson Fri; vs Blackford Sat. 3. Valparaiso (10-1) vs N 0.17 LaPorte Fri 4 Indpls Broadnßipple (KM)) at Indpls Arlington Fri. 5. Lafayette Jeff (KM) at Crawfordsville Fri 6 Noblesville (KM) at Greenfield Fri; vs N 0.13 Huntington North Sat. 7 Mich City Elston (8-0) vs S.Bend Washington Fri; vs N 0.17 LaPorte Sat. BMndpls Ben Davis (IOO) beat Franklin Central 0-44; beaten by Warren Central 57-51 Wed OMich.City Rogers (7 -2) vs E.Chicago Roosevelt Fri. 10. Southndge (12-1) vs Evansville Central Fri; at Dubois Sat. 11. Bloomington South (8-1) vs Bloomington North postponed toThurs; atNo.l9ShelbyvilleSat 12. New Castle (10-1) at No.l Marion Fri 13. Huntington North (8-2) vs Anderson Madison His. Fri; at N 0.6 Noblesville Sat. 14. Connersville (8-1) vs Greens burg Fri; at Bloomington North Sat. 15. Gary Wallace (8-3) lost to Hammond Noll 1643 16. Evansville Bosse (7-1) beat Evansville North 8147; vs Jasper Sat. £? P ° r , te <B - 2) at No 3 Valparaiso Fri; at N 0.7 Mich. City Elston Sat. 18. Boonville ( KM) beat Evansville Memorial 4*47; vs Tell City Fri. 19. Shelbyville (8-1) vs RushvUle Fri; vs No.ll Bloomington South Sat. 20. Lafayette Catholic (l(M)) vs McCutcheon Fri; vs Ft. Wayne Luers Sat. Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Wednesday's Games Ball St. 77, Ohio U . 73 DePauw 87, Wabash 69 Eureka 78, Anderson 89 Findlay 73, Manchester 52 Indiana 86, Ohio St. 66 lUPUI72, Franklin 70 Wilmington 77, Hanover 72 Wright St. 119, Marion 81 Wednesday’s College Basketball Bcores By The Associated Press EAST Boston U. 59, Hartford 56 BuckneU 79, Delaware 75 Canisius64, Maine 57 Drexel 90, Hofstra 88, OT Fairfield 46, St. Peter’s 44 Georgetown 73, Syracuse 70 Navy 71, Lafayette 56 Niagara 74, St. BonaventureS7 Northeastern 55, Army 49 St. John’s 74, Seton Hall 58 Wagner 81, Monmouth, N. J. 71 SOUTH Georgia 89, Florida 89 Kentucky 64, Mississippi St. 52 Louisville 85, Florida St. 64 Middle Tennessee 132, Alabama St. 101 N. Carolina St. 60, Clemson 57 N.C.-Greensboro 80, Methodist 59 New Orleans 81, S. Mississippi 89 Nicholls St. 81, Texas Southern 68 Richmond 74, Radford 52 Samford 74, Austin Peay 72 Vanderbilt 60, Tennessee 59 Virginia Tech 73, James Madison t& MIDWEST Ball St. 77, Ohio U. 73 Bowling Green 73, E. Michigan 72 Cent. Michigan 79, Toledo 65 Cleveland Ft. 90, DePaul 75 Indiana 69, Ohio St. 66 ■ ' ' f ' ■ ■ lowa St. 77, Kansas St. 73 Kansas 81, Nebraska 70 Memphis St. 89, Cincinnati 71 Miami, Ohio 58, Kent St. 51 W. Michigan 82, N. Illinois 76 SOUTHWEST ’ Houston 87, Arkansas 85, OT Rice 93, Sul Ross St. 50 Sam Houston 78, Alcorn 65 Texas A&M 55, Texas 54 Texas Christian 63, So. Methodist 54 Texas Tech 62, Baylor 48 FAR WEST E. Washington 79, Idaho 67 Oklahoma 94, Colorado 82 OHIO ST. (68) Sellers 9-1811-15 29, Hopson 4-12 2-416, McGee 38 (M) 6, Lomax 4-6 0-0 8, Burson 0-2 0-1 0, Anderson 0-2 66 6, Wesson 0-10-0 0, Wilson 5-91-111, Francis 1-3042. Totals 26-6114-2166. INDIANA (69) Calloway 6-122-214, Harris 3-7 046, Thomas 7-101415, Alford 12-20 84 32, Morgan 0-12-4 2, Meiero4o46, Robinson 0-104 0, Jadlow 04 04 0, Eyl 04 04 0. Totals 28-5113-Halftime—lndiana 39, Ohio St. 30. Fouled out—Harris. Rebounds—Ohio St. 35 (Sellers 16), Indiana 30 (Thomas 8). Assists—Ohio St. 7 (Lomax 3), Indiana IS (Morgan6>. Total fouls—Ohio St. 19, Indiana 22. Technicals—lndiana bench. A—15,173. National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W. L.Pct.. .GB Boston 28 8 .778 - Philadelphia 25 14 .641 4(9 New Jersey 24 16 .600 0 Washington 10 20 .487 10(9 New York 14 24 .366 15 Central Division Milwaukee 26 14 .650 Atlanta 20 16 .556 4 Detroit 17 21 .447 8 Cleveland 16 22 .421 9 Chicago 15 25 .375 11 Indiana 10 28 .263 IS WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Houston 26 13 .667 Denver 23 IS .605 2(9 San Antonio 21 19 .525 5(9 Dallas 18 17 .514 6 Utah 19 22 .463 8 Sacramento 13 26 .333 13 Pacific Division LA. Lakers 30 6 .833 - Portland 25 18 .581 9(9

[" American Legion i i Post 58 Activities [ j Jan. 17-Fri. i ] Dining Room open 6-9p.m. f ■ Jan. 18-Sat. | | Dining Room open 6-9p.m. I | Jan. 19-Sun. ■ I Post Closed. I ■ Jan. 20-Mon. ■ . Executive Committee Meeting! ■7P.M. i I Jan. 21-Tues. | I Post Open regular hours. 1 | Jan. 22-Wed. ■ | Bingo 7:30P.M. « ■ Jan. 23-Thurs. ■ I Post Open regular hours. I ■Jan. 24-Fri. I * Dining Room open 6-9P.M. | I Jan. 25-Sat. | | Dining Room open 6-9p.m., Dan-. Icing 9:30p.m.-l :30a.m., Cross Coun-J l ,ry American Legion | | POST 58 I * Clip and San | | Jan. 26-Sun. | Post Open 1 2:30p.m. mm d

Phoenix 14 22 .389 16 Seattle 15 24 .385 16(9 Golden State 14 28 .333 19 L.A. Clippers 13 27 .325 19 Wednesday’s Games Boston 123, Denver 100 New Jersey 123, Philadelphia 89 Detroit 123, Chicago 115 Portland 109, Indiana 104 New York 116, Dallas 112 Houston 119, San Antonio 113 L.A. Clippers 110, Seattle 103 Golden State ISO, Utah 104 Thursday’s Games Cleveland at Atlanta Washington at Milwaukee L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers Friday’s Games New Jersey at Washington Denver at Detroit Boston at Indiana Philadelphia at Chicago New York at San Antonio Dallas at Utah Seattle at Phoenix Sacramento at Golden State National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W .L..T Pts. GF.GA.. Philadelphia 33 11 0 66 201 129 Washington 25 13 4 54 166 139 NY Islanders 18 16 9 45 173 159 NY Rangers 20 21 3 43 156 149 Pittsburgh 19 20 5 43 169 165 New Jersey 15 26 l 31 157 197 Adams Division Quebec 25 16 2 52 180 141 Montreal 24 15 4 52 199 155 Boston 19 17 7 45 167 156 Hartford 21 20 l 43 167 163 Buffalo 19 19 5 43 158 150 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division Chicago 21 17 5 47 197 192 St. Louis 19 16 6 44 162 163 Minnesota 16 18 8 40 171 162 Toronto 12 25 5 29 168 205 Detroit 9 30 5 23 144 237 Smythe Division Edmonton 32 9 4 68 239 179 Calgary 19 20 3 41 171 165 Winnipeg 14 27 5 33 165 214 Los Angeles 13 24 5 31 147 207 Vancouver 13 26 5 31 153 182 Wednesday’s Games Edmonton 4, Hartford 1 Montreal 4, Winnipeg 0 Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Islanders 3 New Jersey 4, Detroit 3, OT St. Louis 10, Toronto 1 Chicago 4, Buffalo 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, Los Angeles 3 Thursday’s Games Calgary at Boston St. Louis at Minnesota Friday's Games Quebec at Hartford Montreal at Buffalo N.Y. Islanders at Philadelphia Washington at New Jersey Chicago at Winnipeg Los Angeles at Vancouver International Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press East Division W L..T . Pts. GF. GA Muskegon 29 14 0 60 200 142 Saginaw 23 17 0 52 158 137 Kalamazoo 18 21 0 39 157 158 Toledo 14 28 0 34 160 205 Flint 11 34 0 26 145 237 West Division Fort Wayne 25 16 0 54 167 135 Salt Lake 25 17 0 50 178 159 Peoria 20 20 0 45 153 147 Milwaukee 20 17 1 44 159 138 Indianapolis 19 20 1 43 132 149 Wednesday's Games Fort Wayne 9, Flint 0 Indianapolis 5, Saginaw 4 Peoria6,SaltLake3 Thursday's Games Peoriaa (Milwaukee Friday's Games Fort Wayne at Muskegon Saginaw at Kalamazoo Peoria at Toledo IndianapoiisatSaltLake Wednesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BABEBALL American League MINNESOTA TWINS-Signed Ron Washington, infielder, and Pete Fibon and Eric Broersma, pitchers. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Signed Jimmy Key, pitcher, Jeff Hearron, catcher, and Glen Hill, outfielder. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Signed Ozzie Virgil, catcher, to a three-year contract. NEW YORK METS—Signed Davey Johnson, manager to a three-year contract through the 1988 season. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association INDIANA PACERS-Activated Clark Kellogg, forward. Placed Quinn Buckner, guard, on waivers. SEATTLE SUPERSONICS—Signed David Pope, forward.GOLF Professional Golfers Association THE INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENT-Named Larry O. Thiel executive director. HOCKEY National Hockey League HARTFORD WHALERS—Loaned Sylvain Cote, defenseman, to the Hull Olympiques of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

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808 KNIGHT Officially upset

Georgetown over Syracuse no upset

By WILLIAM R. BARNARD AP Basketball Writer Although Georgetown had won only two of its previous five games and Syracuse had lost for the first time, Coach John Thompson wouldn’t call the Hoyas’ victory over the Orangemen an upset. “If they come here, we should beat them,” Thompson said after No. 15 Georgetown edged No. 4 Syracuse 73-70 at the Capital Centre Wednesday night. “We needed it.” The last two weeks had exposed some possible weaknesses on Georgetown’s front line, which further brought into question its ability to win consistently without former All-America Patrick Ewing, now the top rookie in the National Basketball Association. Against Syracuse, however, the quartet of 6-foot-ll Ralph Dalton, 6-10 Grady Mateen, 6-8 Ron Highsmith and 6-8 Jonathan Edwards all played well. “I was sick of reading about people dunking on us and jumping over the top of us, that we were small because Pat’s gone,” Thompson said. “I told them I never had a team in my life where so many people talk about how they jumped over, jumped around us. So we had a big-man practice this week.” In other games involvingnThe Associated Press Top 20, it was No. 6 Memphis State 89, Cincinnati 71; No. 7 Oklahoma 94, Colorado 82; No. 8 Kansas 81, Nebraska 70; No. 9 St. John’s 74, Seton Hall 58; No. 11 Kentucky 64, Mississippi State 52; No. 16 Virginia Tech 73, James Madison 65; and No. 18 Louisville 85, Florida State 64. David Wingate led Georgetown, 12-3 overall and 3-2 in the Big East Conference, by scoring 12 of his game-high 18 points in the second half, including four points in the last 20 seconds. Wingate’s dunk off Michael Jackson’s alley-oop pass with 20 seconds left put the Hoyas ahead 71-68. After Syracuse’s Wendell Alexis cut it to 71-70 with four seconds remaining, Wingate made two free throws with two seconds left for the final margin. Top Ten William Bedford scored a game-high 23 points and triggered a second-half rally that led Memphis State over the University of Cincinnati. Memphis State, 16-0, hit a sizzling 68 percent from the floor in the first half as it built a 19-point lead, only to let it slip away after the intermission.

IU survives officiating

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - Indiana led by 12 points in the first half against Ohio State and carried a 39-30 lead going into the break. But it was what happened after the intermission that got Coach Bob Knight steamed. “(Steve) Alford gets fouled on the first play of the second half, and we get a nocall,” Knight said after the Hoosiers beat the Buckeyes 69-66 Wednesday night. Alford opened the half with a miss on which an apparent foul went uncalled, and seconds later Clarence McGee hit a layup for Ohio State. When referee Darwin Brown passed by the Indiana bench, Knight gave him an earful, and Brown responded by calling a technical foul.

Cincinnati cut the lead to five points with 14 minutes left in the game before Memphis State reasserted itself behind Bedford, who hit 15 points in the second half. Memphis State’s 16th win tied the school record for consecutive victories set in 195455. Memphis State has won its last nine games against Cincinnati. Tim McCalister scored 27 points and Darryl Kennedy added 23 as Oklahoma defeated Colorado to remain undefeated. McCalister’s 12 points in the first half staked Oklahoma, 16-0, to a 45-43 lead and a blistering effort in the game’s final 12 minutes, during which the Sooners outscored the Buffs 40-21. Danny Manning scored 21 points to pace Kansas to a come-from-behind victory over Nebraska. The triumph improved the Jayhawks’ record to 15-2. Trailing 37-32 at halftime, Kansas went on a 17-5 tear at the start of the second half to take a 49-42 lead. The spurt was keyed by guard Cedric Hunter, who scored three straight layups to give the Jayhawks a 4341 lead that they held the rest of the game. Walter Berry overcame a tight defense to score 20 points and St. John’s limited Seton Hall to 14 points in the final 13 minutes to beat the Pirates. St. John’s built a 48-36 lead early in the second half, but the Pirates came back with an 8-2 surge to cut the lead to 50-44 with 13:12 tongo. That was as close as they would get. The Redmen, 16-2, went on a 144 with ,VyiJlie Glass and Ron Rowan scaring four points qgjpce.

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Brad Sellers hit both foul shots for Ohio State, and Dennis Hopson’s bullseye from 22 feet on the next possession made it 39-36. The Hoosiers retained only tenuous control of the game the rest of the way. “I get upset and get a technical foul and the no-call ends up being worth six points,” a still-sore Knight said afterward. “I’ve seen Bob Wortman (supervisor of officials in the Big Ten) do so many good things since he’s been here,” the Hoosier coach continued. “If he can get this thing straightened out he ought to win a Big Ten medal.” The Indiana victory, which snapped a seven-game Big Ten home losing streak for the Hoosiers, included a 15-point per-

Cardinals remain atop Mid-American Conference

By The Associated Press With Dan Palombizio and Derrick Wesley combining for 41 points, Ball State defeated Ohio University 77-73 and remained atop the Mid-American Conference college basketball standings. Elsewhere, DePauw clubbed Wabash 87-69, Eureka downed Anderson 78-69, Findlay overpowered Manchester 73-52, lUPUI edged Franklin 72-70, Wilmington edged Hanover 77-72 and Wright State overwhelmed Marion 119-81. Palombizio scored 21 points, Wesley 20 and Chris Shelton 12 for the Cardinals, 11-3 overall and 4-1 in the conference. Ball State trailed by as many as 15 points early in the first half and eight in the second half before staging comebacks. Both teams shot well, with Ball State making 33 of 60 field goal attempts for 55 percent while Ohio was 28 of 52 for 54 percent. In Greencastle, Tim Vieke hit 16 points for DePauw. The Tigers led all the way, despite a game-high 21 points from Chris Whitfield for Wabash. DePauw has won 42 consecutive games at home and holds a 12-1 record. The Little Giants fell to 4-7. Randy Kortokrax had a game-high 31 points for Findlay College in the Hoosier-Buckeye Conference game.

January 16,1986, The Putnam County Banner Graphic

formance by Daryl Thomas, who was sidelined for three games because of an ankle injury. Thomas also had a team-high eight rebounds, and his layup with 7:28 to go in the first half gave the Hoosiers their biggest lead of the game, 12 points at 27-15. Alford scored 32 points, including Indiana’s last three in the final 15 seconds, to bring the Hoosiers to 3-2 in the conference and 11-4 overall. “It was a typical game for us an up and down game,” said Buckeye Coach Eldon Miller. Sellers had 29 points, Curtiss Wilson added 11 and Hopson 10 for the Buckeyes, now 9-5 overall and 3-2 in the Big Ten.

Kortokrax also grabbed a gamehigh 13 rebounds as the Oilers moved to 15-1 overall and 2-0 in the conference. Scott Jennings had 18 points to lead Manchester. Aaron Roth added 16 and Royce Lasion had 12 for the Spartans, now 1-15 and 0-2. Mike Landis scored 18 points to lead Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis. After leading 35-31 at halftime, lUPUI fell behind 41-43 about midway through the second half but went ahead for good with 13 minutes left in the game. The Metros are now 5-12. Franklin is 3-1. Adray Gibson had 14 points and Jeff Roach had 13 for lUPUI. For Franklin, Mike Briggs had 17 points, Andy Miller had 13 and Mike Hackett had 10. Greg Nunn pumped in 30 points and Rick Taylor added 24 for host Eureka. Anderson, 7-10, led 31-24 at the half. The 9-3 Red Devils scored 16 of the second half’s first 20 points. Jeff Howard led Anderson with 20 points. Host Wilmington hit 21 of 25 free throw attempts while Hanover got eight of 12 in their Hoosier-Buckeye Conference matchup. Bill Daugherty scored 27 points for the winners, now 5-11 overall and 1-2 in the league. The Panthers fell to 2-12 and 0-2.

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