Sports Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 Guy, Magley lead KU back into race By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor As go Tony Guy and David Magley so do the Kansas Jayhawks. Once again that was the case Saturday night in the Jayhawks 55-85 victory over the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Guy, who had his second good shooting game in a row and appears to be out of his slump, the Jayhawks with 23 points while Magley, the leading rebounder in Big Eight Conference play, was the only other Jayhawk in double figures, scoring 14 points. He also grabbed 10 rebounds "IT is an absolute necessity that we have their leadership," Coach Ted Owens said. "They did a great job this week after the two losses (Missouri and K-State)." The co-captains have led KU to three straight victories to raise the djahywahs conference trophy. In those three games, Guy went 20 of 37 from the field, and 14 of 21 from the free throw line to score 54 points. Magley went 22 of 40 from the field, and 16 of 21 from the free throw line for 62 points and grabbed 29 rebounds. "When those two are on, it pumps the rest of us up," Brian Martin said. "Their leadership is so The importance of their leadership showed in the first four games of the conference. After those four conference games, KU stood 1-3 and Guy and Magley were struggling. IN THOSE games, Guy shot a meager 32 percent from the field and Magley was hitting only 38 percent, and the two of them did not combine for more than 21 points. "When we were in a slump it wasn't just the Martin. Martin said, 'Everybody was in a slump.' "one of us has to have a good shooting night for us to win." Macvee said. However, since the Jayhawks have returned home it has been a different story for Guy and Magley. One or the other has had a good shooting night, if not both of them. "Hopefully, we're out of our slump." Magley said. "I believe that I'm out of my slump." "I was lacking concentration," Guy said about his slump. "I was thinking about so many things." "Now I'm just being more aggressive when I get the ball." Guy's aggressiveness showed throughout Subplav's game. After the Sooners opened up a 8-0 lead three innings into the game, Guy went to work with the opposing team. THE TWO combined to score 14 of the first 10 points the Jaawks scored in the game. Guy had of the first 12 points, and, before you knew it, KU trailed only 17-16. They went on to score eight more points in the half to give KU a 32-29 lead at intermission. Guy hit a 16-foot jumper to give KU a five-point lead, 34-29. 'Any team that has any success needs leadership. They have to have guys to go to in tough situations. David and Tony are two such players.' —Assistant coach Bob Hill But after Guy's shot, the Sooners offed 10 straight points to open up a five-point lead. After the Jayhawks found themselves down by five, Gus inserts his leadership and ok control He scored the next six points to put the Jahvah背 back on top, 40-39. With the game close the rest of the way, the Jayhawks called upon Guy and Magley down the stretch. They scored the last five KU points and preserved the victory. "WHEN IT gets tough our teammates look to us, "Guay said. "They look up to us." "When they do that you want to come through so bad. That just puts more pressure on you than not." Being in a leadership role is something everybody dreams of. "That's what you work for in your career." Maley said. "You want to be a leader." However, the leadership role is different for the Jayhawks co-captains this year compared to years past. This year, there haven't been the attitude problems that KU has had in the past. "This is a great bunch of guys," Magley said. "There is no dissention," Guy said. "We sincerely care for one another." "This is one team where you can actually say that everybody on the team is a friend." ANOTHER AREA that differs from the years' past is that the newcomers on the team are accepting the leadership provided by Guy and Maley. "You couldn't ask for better captains," freshman guard Tad Boyle said. "They don't put themselves above the younger players on the team." "They lead by example, and they don't try to be authoritative. We are fortunate to have both of them." Hutchinson Junior College transfer Jeff Dishman agreed with Boyle, "I've seen a lot of older guys that put pressure on the younger guys on the team. David and Tony don't do that." "They don't harp on you. They help you." "It's a group effort," said Lance Hill, who transferred from San Diego City College. "The two captains and the rest of the team get together a lot and we talk things out." "If we continue to do this, we'll continue to get a lot better." "Any team that has any success needs leadership," assist coach Bob Hill said. Suspicious that sacrifice things and guys to go to tough situations, David and Tony are two such players." Larry Hendrix MID 27 54 04 TREB A 0 PP 1T David Little MID 27 58 04 TREB A 0 PP 1T Charles Jones MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Owen Overton MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Overton MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Raymond Whitley MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Cain Pierce MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Cain Pierce MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Daryll Allen MID 12 0.2 2.2 0 2 2 3 Ian Pannell MID 12 0.2 2.2 0 2 2 3 290 289 25-4 24 28 8 13 | | MU | MB | TW | FT | REB | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | David Maagley | 40 | 7-15 | 0-14 | 19 | 4 | 1 | 21 | 4 | | Michael Furman | 28 | 6-15 | 0-14 | 19 | 4 | 1 | 21 | 4 | | Brian Martin | 33 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 22 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Ted Boyle | 10 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 25 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Bill Davis | 10 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 27 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Kelly Knight | 21 | 3-23 | 0-14 | 33 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4 | | Lasha Hill | 20 | 2-34 | 0-14 | 9.13 | 23 | 1 | 4 | 5 | | Total | 290 | 12-47 | 0-13 | 12.13 | 23 | 1 | 10 | 5 | 29 24-53 37 23-55 Jayhawks end 'long' January with loss Associate Sports Editor BvGINO STRIPPOLI On Dec. 19, the women's basketball team ran their record to 7-1, with their only loss coming at the hands of No. 1-ranked Louisiana Tech. Two days later, after most of the students had left for semester break, the ninth-ranked Jayhawks lost to Jackson State in a near-empty Allen Field House. LITTLE DID anyone realize that that loss would prove to be the beginning of a long drought, which has seen the Jayhawks drop 8 of 13 zarnes in January. The Jayhaws ended January as they started it Saturday, with a 64-61 loss to the Oklahoma Sooners in Allen Field House. It was the second time the Sooners have beaten the Jayhawks in January. "We did't play until the second half," Coach Marain Wianholm said. "We haven't been shooting well, and we were a step behind on defense." Kansas' offense was nonexistent in the first half. It took the Jayhawks 2:30 to score their first basket. Twice in the first half they went on a run with four saves, and they trailed 35-22 at the intermission. ONE OF THE main reasons for the Jayhawks' offensive problems was Tracy Claxton. Claxton, who leads Kansas in scoring and rebounding, got in early foul trouble and had to sit out the last 6:52 of the game. He points and 5 rebounds in the first 20 minutes. The rest of the Jayhawks were just as ineffective. Angie Snider and Chris Stewart combined for 4 of 15 shooting from the field in the first half. Their percentage of 27 was slightly higher than the teams', which as 22 percent of the shots hehawks' free throw sniffed wasn't much better, as they made 10 of 17 for 59 percent. Snider led Kansas in scoring with 8 points, and Stewart and Rose Peenies had 5 each. Ladanah Sanders, who scored 21 points in the two teams' first meeting, was once again a thorn in the Jahayhwals' side. She and Carla had both had 8 points for the Sooners in the first half. "We have to realize that we have to find the intensity in the first half," Washington said. "We are young and we are making too many mistakes." "WE ALWAYS talk about starting quick," sander said. It just seems this team takes advantage of it. The Sooners, sensing a blowout, came out and extended their lead to 18 with 8:23 left in the game. Angela Taylor, who played only 15 innings, came out and then came off the bench and sparked Kansas. Daklaoma hit a three-point play with 12 seconds left to ice the victory. "It takes just one person to spark us on defense," Snider said. "Tonight, it was T "The team responded well in the second half," Washington said. "It shows a lot to be behind by that many and make a run at a win." Angie Taylor hit two baskets in a row to start Kansas on its way to a 34-8 spurt. During this stretch, Taylor had 8 points and 7 steals and Suider had 11 points. Free throw shooting doomed the Jayhawks down the stretch. They missed the front end of 9 one-and-one four times. Two other times, they missed. The team finished the game 15 of 28 from the foul line. Kansas closed the gap to two and had the ball with 29 seconds left on the clock. Lenora Taylor took a pass from Angie Taylor at the foul line, but her shot was off the mark and The Jayhawks were led by Snider with 23 points and Angela Taylor with 10. Peeps scored 9 and Claxton, who had her first off 8 points, year, scored 7 points and had 13 rebounds. THE SOONERS were led by center Janet Southard. Southard, who scored just 4 points in the first half, finished the game with 17 points. Jeremy Sanders added 16 points and Jenue Ogle 12. The Jayhawks are still hoping to find out what is wrong and turn the season around before it too late. Snider said that it would probably take 20 victories for the Jayhawks to get into post season action. The Jayhawks now would have to win the rest of their regular season games to end the season with 20 victories. Kansas will attempt to break its slump with three road games this week. They play Missouri tomorrow, Iowa State in a doubleheader with the men's team on Wednesday, and a preliminary game to the Kansas City Kings on Friday against the National College of Education at Kemper Arena. JOHN HANKAMMERIKansan Staff After fouling out, Mary Churchel, center, and Tracy Claxton talk about what went wrong in the Jayhawks' loss to Oklahoma, 64-61. It was the Jayhawks fourth straight loss. JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff Tony Gray 100% to pass to teammate David Magny in Saturday's sack victory over Vancouver City and Magley have led the Jayhawks to three straight triumphs. Lowerv kicks AFC to 16-13 victory By United Press International HONOLULU-Nick Lowery of Kansas City kicked a 24-yard field goal with six seconds to play yesterday to give the AFC a 16-13 victory over the NFC in the Pro Bowl. Just before, the NFC, previously unable to generate any kind of offense, had gone 74 yards in a single game. The team was able. With the score tied at 13, the AFC, behind quarterback Dana Fouts of San Diego, marched from its 36 to the NFC's 5 in a span of 2:37 to up Lowery's kick. Fouts hit for 46 yards in passes on the drive to Denver's Steve Watson, Dallas Newsome and San Diego's Kellen Winslow. over from 5 yards out to tie the game with 2:43 left. The AFC, trailing 6-0 at the half, scored twice in the third period with San Diego's Chuck Muncie scoring from 2 yards out and Earl Watson scoring from 1 yard out. The AFC a 13-4 advantage after three quarters. The NFC, after penetrating into AFC territory only twice in its five possessions of the first half, capitalized on Everson Walls' interception to set up the first score of the game. The Dallas cornerback, whose other interception led to the NFC's fourth-quarter touchdown, picked off a pass from Fouts at the FC A13 and returned it to the 4 with 1:16 left before the half. On the next play, Joe Montana hit Jimmy Giles of Tampa Bay for the score. st et, id bs. bn By United Press International Bird leads East in All-Star game 121-108 victory over the West in the 32nd annual NBA All-Star game at the Meadowsland Arena EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.-Larry Bird, rising again to fourth quarter heroes, scored 19 points along with 12 rebounds and 5 assists and Boston teammate Robert Parish added 21 points yesterday, leading the Eastern Conference to a Bird, playing in his third All-Star game in three seasons in the league, was reinserted into the Eastern lineup by Celtics coach Bill Fitch after the West had scored 6 points in a row sird score 12 of his team's final 15 points and was voted the game's Most Valuable Player. Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Dive Shields Team Houston Philadelphia Washington New York Newark W 10 L 14 L 14 L 682 2% 2% 22 29 20 524 453 19 19 24 19 24 Atlantic Division Milwaukee 29 19 674 Atlanta 19 14 674 Indiana 18 34 49 Chicago 18 26 419 Detroit 18 26 499 11% Dallas 18 34 190 20% Scoreboards Western Conference Midwest Division Los Angeles . . . . . San Antonio 28 14 607 Denver 28 14 607 Houston 21 22 71% Kansas City 14 29 328 Utah 14 29 310 Idaho 13 29 310 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS All-Star game Eastern Division 120; Western Division 118 | Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 7 | 0 | 1.00 | 2½ | | Kansas State | 7 | 0 | .667 | 3½ | | Oklahoma State | 4 | 2 | .667 | 3½ | | Kansas | 4 | 2 | .667 | 3½ | | North Dakota | 3 | 2 | .500 | 3½ | | Oklahoma | 2 | 1 | .333 | 3½ | | Iowa State | 4 | 1 | .187 | 4 | | Colorado | 1 | 6 | .163 | 6 | UPI TOP 20 RESULT! UPITOP 20 RESULTS Wake Forest (20) 49, Arkansas (11) 48 St. Joseph's 84, Villanova (19) 64 Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. 11 (19) 56 Kansas State (13) 58 Kansas 55, Oklahoma 83 Oklahoma State 69, Iowa State 60 Patrick Division Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Team W L 19 G 26 GA 19 Pts. Nashville 10 13 6 16 64 Philadelphia 15 17 8 14 116 NY Rangers 24 21 7 18 197 Pittsburgh 20 17 7 18 197 Washington 14 29 8 14 126 | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 29 | 14 | 9 | 205 | 157 | 67 | | 27 | 11 | 12 | 363 | 143 | 66 | | 28 | 16 | 7 | 211 | 180 | 65 | | 29 | 16 | 8 | 211 | 180 | 58 | | 29 | 16 | 7 | 211 | 180 | 58 | Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 21 16 15 13 220 186 171 St. Louis 24 13 12 291 269 521 Wilmington 19 12 19 11 117 125 Oklahoma 16 24 13 125 236 49 Chicago 16 24 13 125 236 49 Houston 14 28 11 177 125 38 | | 13年 | 12年 | 11年 | 10年 | 9年 | 8年 | 7年 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Edmonton | 13 | 12 | 10 | 197 | 207 | 216 | 75 | | Calgary | 19 | 22 | 12 | 296 | 261 | 259 | 80 | | Vancouver | 17 | 24 | 11 | 180 | 190 | 194 | 40 | | Los Angeles | 17 | 24 | 11 | 180 | 190 | 194 | 40 | | San Diego | 14 | 31 | 8 | 151 | 146 | 230 | 40 | YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Soccer Boston 4, Colorado 2 Quebec 4, Hartford 2 Alabama 4, Georgia 3 Toronto 5, Philadelphia 4 Edmonton 7, Philladelphia 4 Los Angeles 5 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L L Pet. GB Pittsburgh 15 12 478 New York 13 12 900 Baltimore 14 6 190 Buffalo 9 6 450 Cleveland 8 10 444 Philadelphia 9 10 350 New York 13 12 230 1 St. Louis...16 11 842 Wichita...13 11 857 3 Dover...18 8 414 Memphis...10 12 455 7% Phoenix...10 12 466 11% Kansas City...10 12 366 11 TREASURY A SUCCESS St. Louis 8, Murray 5, Buffalo 4, New Jersey 1, Baltimore 6, Phenix 9, Pittsburgh 11, Philadelphia 0