Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 147, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 January 1986 — Page 7

Sports scoreboard

Big Ten At • Glance By The Associated Press Conference Overall . W L Pet W L Pet. Michign « j .750 18 2 .000 f 1 5 3 .625 16 5 .762 Indian 5 j 7M 13 5 722 *»-» 5 3 .625 15 6 .714 Mch Sit 4 4 .500 13 5 .722 4 4 .500 13 6 .684 Minnest 4 4 .500 14 7 .667 O' l * Stt 4 4 500 10 8 .556 Wiscnsn 2 6 .250 10 8 .556 N westrn 1 7 .125711 .380 Saturday’s Results Wisconsin 60, lowa 63 Illinois 71, Indiana 60 Ohio State 73, Purdue 66 Michigan Stateol. Michigan 70 Sunday’s Game Northwestern def. Minnesota, forfeit Thursday’s Games Michigan 82, Northwestern 45 Michigan State 83, Wisconsin 81 lowa 70, Indiana 69 Minnesota 70, Ohio State 65 Saturday's Games Northwestern at Michigan State Wisconsin at Michigan Indiana at Minnesota Ohio State at lowa Thursday’s College Basketball Scares By The Associated Press EAST Boston Coll. 76, Seton Hall 65 Canisius 70, Boston U. 61 George Washington 77, Massachusetts 67 Loyola, Md. 68, Robert Morris 56 Marshall 85, VMI77 Northeastern 90, Niagara 75 Penn St. 59, St. Joseph’s 54 Siena 64, St. Francis, N.Y. 56 St. Bona venture 79, Rutgers 68 SOUTH Alabama St. 85, S. Carolina St. 73 Ala.-Birmingham 71, Old Dominion 58 Ark.-Little Rock 106, SE Louisiana 97, OT Davidson 62, W. Carolina 59 Jacksonville St. 94, Troy St. 83 Louisiana Tech 82, Lamar 61 NE Louisiana 72, McNeese St. 63 NW Louisiana 80, Centenary 62 S. Mississippi 95, 111. Wesleyan 88 SW Louisiana 69, Tennessee Tech 51 Temple 66, Lee 57 Tennessee 78, Georgia 77 Va. Commonwealth 60, William & Mary 44 Virginia 86, North Carolina 73 Virginia Tech 71, Richmond 67 < W. Kentucky 78, N.C. Charlotte 67 MIDWEST 111 .-Chicago 85, E. Illinois 79 Indiana St. 75, Creighton 51 lowa 79, Indiana 69 Michigan 82, Northwestern 45 Michigan St. 83, Wisconsin 81 Minnesota 70, Ohio State 65 S. Illinois 65, Wichita St. 57 Tulsa 61, Illinois St. 54 SOUTHWEST Bradley 63, W. Texas St. 54 Georgia St. 66, Houston Baptist 57 Hardin-Simmons 63, Samford 57 N. Texas St. 70, Arkansas St. 66 FAR WEST Cal.-Irvine 89, Utah St. 79 Cal.-Santa Barbara 56, Long Beach St. 54 Chicago St. 110, U.S. Inti. 87 Colorado St. 75, San Diego St. 72 Denver 64, S. Colorado 46 Gonzaga 70, Santa Clara 62 Loyola, Cal. 81, St. Mary’s, Calif. 72 N. Arizona 78, Boise St. 42 Nev.-Las Vegas 62, San Jose St. 55 Nev.-Reno 82, Idaho 69 New Mexico St. 59, Fullerton St. 57, OT Portland 71, San Francisco 59 San Diego 69, Pepperdine 64 Washington 72, Arizona St. 58 Washington St. 65, Arizona 63, OT Wyoming 77, Hawaii 58 CREIGHTON (51) Evans 4-8 2-3 10, Smith 6-6 OO 12, Johansen 0-4 1-2 1, Swain 2-6 0-0 4, Morris 9-18 0-0 18, Edwards 3-8 00 16, Whetstone 0-2 0-0 0, Stefaniak 000-00, McCracken 0-3 00 O. Totals 24-57 3-5 51 INDIANA STATE (75) Harris 2-3 3-7 7, McComb 4-7 03 8, Applewhite 4-53-311, Gillespie 7-121-215, Williams 6-16 0012, Kegerreis 66 00 12, Martin Ol 00 0, Cantrell 00 000, Bush 4-4 2-210, Marshall 00 00 0. Totals 33-56 017 7S. Halftime—lndiana St. 34, Creighton 28. Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Creighton 30 (Johansen 8), Indiana St. 32 (Williams 8). Assists—Creighton 15 (Evans 3, Swain 3, Morris 3, McCracken 3), Indiana St. 24 (Gillespie 8). Total fouls—Creighton 15, Indiana St. 6. A—4,237. IN DIANA (69) Harris 3-7 3-4 9, Calloway 8-12 5-7 21, Thomas 56 3-3 13, Robinson 1-7 1-2 3, Alford 5-11 OO 10, Morgan 4-716 9, Eyl OO OO 0, Jadlow OO OO 0, Meier Ol 2-2 2, Witte Ol 2-2 2. Totals 205217-2309. lOWA (79) Wright 46 6614, Marble 46 2-210, Lorenzen 4-10 OO 8, Banks OH 46 16, Moe 1016 46 24, Lohaus 26 00 4, Jones OO OO 0, Gamble Ol OO 0, Armstrong 1-1 OO 2, Morgan OO 00 0, Horton 00020, Hill 000-00, Reaves OO 1-21. Totals 316717-2479. Halftime—lowa 44, Indiana 28. Fouled out—Lohaus. Rebounds—lndiana 28 (Calloway 9), lowa 35 (Wright 9). Assists— Indiana 12 (Robinson 6), lowa 16 (Moe 7). Total fouls—lndiana 20. lowa 20. A—15,450. IndHS Wrestling Poll INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association final Top 20 teams for 1986: 1. Indpls Cathedral, 200 2. Delta, 14-2 3. Evansville Mater Dei, 17-1 4. Bellmont, 18-1 5. Franklin Central, 12-1 6. Penn, 14-1 7. Beech Grove, 146-1 8. Wawasee, 15-1 9. Indpls Ben Davis, 18-0-1 10. Adams Central, 14-1 11. Greenfield. 18-1

Indiana State scores Missouri Valley win

By The Associated Press Antonio Gillespie scored 15 points to lead Indiana State scorers as they turned back Creighton 75-51 in a Missouri Valley Conference basketball game. Elsewhere Thursday night, In-diana-Purdue, Fort Wayne edged Northern Kentucky 67-63, Kentucky Wesleyan shaded St. Joseph’s 80-78, Southern Indiana beat Lewis 72-64 and Wisconsin-Parkside dumped PurdueCalumet 77-64. Bryan Kegerreis and John Sherman Williams contributed 12 points apiece for Indiana State, now 9-8 overall and 3-5 in the conference. With Indiana State leading 34-28 at halftime, the closest the Bluejays could get in the second half was six points, 38-32, on a bucket by Keith Smith, who finished with 12 points. Senior guard Reggie Morris had a game-high 18 points for the Bluejays, who fell to 6-11 and 2-6. In Evansville, Andre and Stephen Jackson scored 17 and 16 points respectively to lead Southern Indiana in a Great Lakes Valley game. The Screaming Eagles led 30-25 at halftime. The Big Red Flyers were paced by

12. Merrillville, 10-1 13. Mishawaka, 15-1 14. Valparaiso, 156 15. Jay County, 10-1 16. Avon, 16-2 17. Crown Point, 10-2 18. Princeton, 14-1 19. Warren Central, 106 20. Clinton Central. 13-1 National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W. L.Pet. GB Boston 34 8 .810 Philadelphia 30 16 .652 6 New Jersey 27 21 .563 10 Washington 23 22 .511 124 New York 16 30 .348 20 Central Division Milwaukee 32 16 .667 Atlanta 25 19 .568 5 Detroit 23 23 .500 8 Cleveland 18 28 .391 13 Chicago 16 31 .340 154 Indiana 13 32 .289 174 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Houston 32 14 .696 Denver 27 20 .574 54 San Antonio 25 23 .521 8 Dallas 22 21 .512 84 Utah 23 25 .479 10 Sacramento 18 29 .383 144 Pacific Division LA. Lakers 34 10 .773 Portland 28 22 .560 9 Phoenix 17 27 .386 17 L.A. Clippers 18 30 .375 18 Seattle 17 29 .370 18 Golden State 14 36 .280 23 Thursday’s Games Seattle 89, New Jersey 82 Boston 101, Chicago 91 San Antonio 112, Cleveland 99 Denver 102, New York 97 Milwaukee 120, Golden State 108 Houston 111, Sacramento 109 L.A. Lakers 118, Portland 94 Friday’s Games Boston at Washington Detroit at Atlanta Seattle at Indiana Cleveland at Dallas Sacramento at Utah New York at Phoenix Philadelphia at L.A. Lakers Saturday’s Games Houston at Chicago Milwaukee at Denver Atlanta at New Jersey Washington at Detroit Phoenix at San Antonio L.A. Clippers at Portland Philadelphia at Golden State Sunday’s Games Seattle at Boston Chicago at Indiana Utah at Dallas New York at L.A. Lakers National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W .L. T .Pts. GF.GA. Philadelphia 35 IS 1 71 221 157 Washington 29 16 4 62 195 171 NY Islanders 23 17 10 56 211 182 Pittsburgh 23 22 6 52 195 185 NY Rangers 22 24 4 48 175 175 New Jersey 15 32 2 32 181 236 Adams Division Montreal 29 17 5 63 228 174 Quebec 28 19 3 59 208 173 Boston 25 18 7 57 201 180 Hartford 26 22 1 53 206 185 Buffalo 22 23 5 49 185 178 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division Chicago 24 19 7 55 223 218 St. Louis 20 20 7 47 179 187 Minnesota 19 23 8 46 201 194 Toronto 13 31 5 31 187 241 Detroit 11 34 5 27 170 266 Smythe Division Edmonton 35 11 5 75 268 207 Calgary 23 21 5 51 210 192 Los Angeles 16 27 6 38 178 239 Winnipeg 16 31 5 37 186 240 Vancouver 15 27 7 37 177 205 Thursday’s Game N.Y. Islanders 8, Philadelphia 4 Friday’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo St. Louis at Detroit Calgary at Edmonton Minnesota at Vancouver Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders N.Y. Rangers at Hartford Philadelphia at Quebec New Jersey at Washington Chicago at Toronto Boston at Montreal Los Angeles at Winnipeg Edmonton at Calgary Detroit at St. Louis Sunday’s Games Toronto at Chicago N.Y. Islanders at New Jersey Pittsburgh at Boston Washington at Hartford Quebec at Buffalo Los Angeles at Winnipeg International Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press East Division W L. T . Pts. GF. GA Muskegon 32 17 0 66 227 167 Saginaw 2 7 19 0 60 188 152 Kalamazoo 23 24 0 50 192 185 Toledo is 34 0 36 180 238 Flint 12 38 0 28 157 277 West Division Fort Wayne 30 16 0 64 189 145 Salt Lake 26 23 0 53 200 195 Milwaukee 24 19 1 52 183 156 Peoria 23 23 0 51 177 172 Indianapolis 23 22 1 51 167 173

brothers Mark and Tom Niego, who each chipped in 15 points. Southern Indiana is 12-7 and 5-4, while Lewis fell to 16-3 and 6-3. Schann Leathers scored 25 points to lead host Indiana-Purdue at Fort Wayne in a Great Lakes Valley Conference match. Leathers hit 10 of 12 field goal attempts and all five free throw attempts. Scott Reed added 15 for the Mastodons, now 7-12 and 2-6. Northern Kentucky’s Wille Schlarman had a game-high 26 points. Derek Fields added 14 and Bob Scholemer had 12 for the Norsemen, who fell to 910 and 3-7. Kentucky Wesleyan withstood a steady St. Joseph’s comeback in the second half for its Great Lakes Valley victory. The hosts led 43-33 at halftime. Chuck Wingard of St. Joe led all scorers with 25 points. Stan Kappers added 17, John Stitz 16 and Matt Weber 12 for the Pumas, 11-6,4-4. Wesleyan, 15-4 and 6-2, was led by Dave Bennett’s 22 points. Wesleyan rnked No. 8 in NCAA Division 11, led by as many as 16 points in the second half.

Moe looks like starter to Indiana

lOWA CITY, lowa (AP) - All sophomore guard Jeff Moe wanted was a chance to start and when he got it, he responded with 34 minutes of inspired basketball. “I haven’t been playing that well and this was my chance. I knew I had to take advantage of it. Chances in life don’t come around that often,’’ Moe said. Moe, starting in place of the injured Bill Jones, scored a career high 24 points and dished out a game high seven assists on Thursday night as lowa defeated No. 15 Indiana 79-69. Moe, who started 24 of 30 games last season, had not started any Big Ten Conference game this season. lowa Coach George Raveling said he started Moe on a hunch. “Just before the game, our trainer told me he thought Bill could probably start and play for short periods. But I said, ‘I think I’ll play a hunch and start Jeff.’ I have great confidence in him as a player,” Raveling said. The coach said he also noticed last season that Moe, who is from Indianapolis, plays particularly well against Indiana. “All week long Jeff has been pumped. I wasn’t at all surprised that Jeff Moe played as well as he did,” Raveling said.

Smith not surprised by Tar Heels' loss

By The Associated Press “Lose one?” North Carolina Coach Dean Smith asked rhetorically, as though he expected to lose a few more. And, maybe he did after seeing his team’s 21-game winning streak snapped Thursday night at Virginia with an 86-73 loss, leaving No. 2 Memphis State as the only major unbeaten team in the country. “I’m surprised we got this far without losing one, and I’m surprised at Memphis State going this far,” the coach of the topranked Tar Heels said. “We had a chance to lose up at Maryland, against Duke and against Marquette. I thought Georgia Tech was a close game, and Notre Dame, too. “They all seemed close. Maybe they will all be close from here on out.” The Cavaliers, 14-5 and 4-3 after the

Minnesota already improving program

By The Associated Press Minnesota’s Golden Gophers had only six of their 12 basketball players on hand but they managed to beat Ohio State. “In light of the events of the last five to six days, this is one of the best wins I’ve ever been involved in,” said Jimmy Williams, after his first game as Minnesota’s interim coach ended in a 70-65 victory Thursday night. Michigan, the nation’s ninth-ranked basketball team, moved into sole possession of first place, a half game ahead of idle Purdue, with an 82-45 stomping of last-place Northwestern. In other Big Ten games Thursday night, lowa beat 15th-ranked Indiana 79-69 and Michigan State got by Wisconsin 83-81. At Minneapolis, much of the credit for the Golden Gophers’ stunning victory before 13,443 fans went to freshman Ray Gaffney. After averaging only two minutes a game in the three Big Ten contests he has played in, the 6-foot-2 guard scored 17 points and played the entire 40 minutes. “I just wanted to show people I could play,” said Gaffney. Minnesota’s whole team shared that goal because of a scandal involving sexual assault charges against three players that caused university administrators to consider canceling the remainder of the season. Minnesota which suited up two football players and another student for

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Hartman calls it quits

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) - When the fun is gone, it’s time to go. Noting that college basketball is a different game and that he’s had enough, Kansas State’s Jack Hartman became the latest college basketball coach to announce his retirement. “Nothing could have happened to keep me from resigning,” the 60-year-old Hartman said at a locker room news conference Thursday night. “I think I’m satisifed, I’ve had enough.” Hartman is the latest of several well-known major college coaches to announce resignations in recent days. Minnesota’s Jim Dutcher, Florida State’s Joe Williams, and Houston’s Guy Lewis are the others.

But Moe said he wasn’t the only Hawkeye who gave an inspired performance on Thursday. “We were all clicking tonight. We came out on fire. We were really on,” he said. Indiana Coach Bob Knight said lowa played a better first half than any other team the Hoosiers have faced this year.

Atlantic Coast Conference victory, got 19 points from center Olden Polynice, built a lead of as many as 19 points late in the game and survived a late North Carolina rush. The Tar Heels fell to 5-1 in the conference Other Top Twenty results: No. 9 Michigan 82, Northwestern 45; No. 10 Nevada-Las Vegas 62, San Jose State 55; No. 13 Bradley 63, West Texas State 54; lowa 79, No. 15 Indiana 69, and No. 16 Virginia Tech 71, No. 20 Richmond 67. The Virginia victory broke a sevengame losing streak against North Carolina dating back to Ralph Sampson’s junior season in 1982. “It was a great team effort, and we’re deliriously happy,” Virginia Coach Terry Holland said.

emergency purposes used only one substitute against the Buckeyes, who fell to 108 and 4-4. The Gophers’ record improved to 14-7, including 4-4 in the Big Ten. One of the loses was a forfeit to Northwestern last Sunday after Jim Dutcher quit as coach in the wake of the scandal. At Ann Arbor, Mich., the Wolverines and their guard, Antoine Joubert, both broke out of slumps. The ninth-ranked Wolverines had lost two of their last three games and Joubert had been in a scoring slump. Joubert, a 6-5 junior, scored a game-high 19 points, 13 in the second half. “I’ve been working pretty hard on getting my shot back,” Joubert said. “I think I’ve got it back together now.” The victory improved the Wolverines’ record to 18-2 overall and 6-2 in the conference. Northwestern fell to 7-11 and 1-7. At East Lansing, Mich., Spartan Coach Jud Heathcote didn’t scratch his head while deciding who would take his team’s final shot. Knowing he had Big Ten scoring leader Scott Skiles, who had hit 17 of 20 shots before that point, made Heathcote’s decision easy. It was Skiles’ six-foot jumper with seven seconds remaining that provided the winning margin and gave him 36 points for the night. “It was my option to take the shot,” said Skiles.

“I think my age group and era ... there seems to be a passing of that group,” said Hartman, who ranks 14th in victories among active coaches. “I’m not real happy with college athletics right now. I see it deteriorating ... a lot of the fun is gone.” Hartman’s Kansas State teams won three Big Eight championships, two post-season tournament titles 20 games or more in seven seasons. The Wildcats are 292-162 under his direction. Hartman will finish the season out, but said he will not participate in the process of finding a successor.

“Our problems tonight came right from the beginning,” he said. “I don’t think we’ve ever been in a game against any opponent this year that I thought we didn’t have a chance to win. But tonight lowa took us out of it right at the beginning.” “They are quicker than we are,” Knight said. “Our problems then were com-

No. 9 Michigan 82, Northwestern 45 Roy Tarpley ignited a 16-3 first-half run with a pair of free throws. And Antoine Joubert had 13 of his 19 points in the second half as Michigan pulled away from Northwestern in a Big Ten Conference game. Michigan is 18-2; 6-2 in the conference. No. 10 UNLV 62, San Jose St. 55 Nevada-Las Vegas recovered from a 3730 halftime deficit, scoring the first seven points of the second half, and taking the lead for good, 52-51, with 4:48 to play in beating San Jose State in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association. Guard Freddie Banks scored 21 points to lead the Rebels, 9-0 in the PCAA and 20-2 overall. UNLV was ahead 56-51 with 2:43 left.

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January 31,1966, The Putnam County Banner Graphic

pounded by how efficiently they scored.” Moe scored the first field goal of the game to give lowa a 4-0 lead and then had back-to-back baskets with eight minutes gone to start a 10-point spurt that put the Hawkeyes ahead 22-6. The Hoosiers, 13-5 overall and 5-3 in the Big Ten Conference, suffered 11 first half turnovers and trailed 44-28 at intermission. Moe’s 10-foot jumper midway through the second half put the Hawks up 22 points, 67-45, to tie their biggest lead. Indiana then rattled off 10 straight, including five by freshmen Rick Calloway. Calloway’s bank shot with 2:30 remaining pulled Indiana to within eight, 71-63, but the Hoosiers never got closer. “I don’t know in the second half whether we played better or whether lowa just didn’t play quite as well,” Knight said. “In the first half, I think we played about as well as we are capable of playing, based on our experience,” Raveling said. “Then in the second half we fell off. We got a couple of our starters hurt and we just didn’t play quite as well.” Indiana got only 10 points from junior guard Steve Alford, who averages 25 points. Calloway was high scorer for Indiana with 21 points and high rebounder with 9.

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