Sports University Daily Kansan 13 Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1985 News Briefs Local services today for Kansas swimmer A memorial service will be conducted in Lawrence today for Tammy Pease, the KU swimmer who was killed in a car accident Saturday. The service will be at 7 p.m. at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1900 University Drive. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. today at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Miss Pease's hometown, Bartlesville, Okla. Burial will be at Memorial Park Cemetery in Bartlesville. Contributions to her memorial fund may be made at the Lawrence service or sent to the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1900 Southeast McKindley Road, Bartlesville, Okla. 74006. Dionne was in a coma and in critical condition yesterday at Hillecrest Hospital in Tulsa, Okla. a hospital spokesman said. Clayton Cagle, assistant swim coach, said Monday that Dionne suffered severe head and chest injuries in the accident. Miss Pease, 21, an All-America swimmer, died when the car she was riding in, driven by teammate Karen Dionne, slid out of control after hitting a patch of ice and collided with another car. Tickets put on sale The Kansas Athletic Department will sell $4 general admission tickets to three men's basketball games that will be played over the winter break. Tickets will go on sale at 8 a.m. today at the Allen Field House ticket office. Three thousand tickets will be sold for the Dec. 23 game against George Washington University. 1,000 tickets will be available for both the Dec. 21 game against Arkansas and the Jan. 11 game against Southern Methodist. Women beaten 83-50 The KU sports information office said the seating would be available because many students who purchased student season tickets would not be in Lawrence during the break. Men's basketball tickets were sold out early in the semester. Louisiana Tech, ranked fourth in the nation in Street and Smith's basketball magazine preseason poll, trounced the Kansas women's basketball team 83-50 last night in Ruston, La. Guard Tomi Webb was Kansas' top scorer with 13 points, and forward Sandy Shaw had nine points. Forward Vickie Adkins, considered one of the top players in the nation, was held to four points. The loss dropped Kansas to 3-1. The Jayhawks play Northwestern State tonight in Natchitoches, La., and will play Oral Roberts University Saturday in Tulsa, Okla. They return to Lawrence to play Avila College at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. Colorado ski report Arapahoe Basin - 5 new, 33 depth, 297 acres, powder, packed powder. DENVER — Colorado Ski Country USA reports the following conditions at main Colorado ski areas yesterday. Aspen Mountain — 6 new, 10 percent snowmaking, 550 acres, powder, packed powder. Chad DeShaze/KANSAN From staff and wire reports. Jayhawks win, but Brown isn't pleased Kansas freshman forward Jerry Johnson nails a slam dunk. The two points for the dunk. Johnson's only points in Kansas. 86-71 victory last night over Southern Illinois Edwardsville, were his first in a regular season game in Allen Field House. AP drops 'Hawks to No. 7 The Associated Press The first tip-off that Michigan might be moving up in The Associated Press college basketball poll came in the Tip-Off Classic, when the Wolverines knocked off second-ranked Georgia Tech. Yesterday, a nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters made it official, giving Michigan 12 first-place votes and, 1,165 points — not enough to seriously threaten North Carolina's hold on first place ing Saturday's nationally televised 49-44 loss to Michigan in Springfield, Mass., that put their record at 2.1. The Rambing Wrecks from Georgia Tech, who sat atop the pre/season poll and slipped to second a week ago, are fifth this week follow- - but enough to move the 4-0 Wolverines up from third to second. Kansas, 3-1, fell from fifth to seventh with 830 points. Duke also rode a tournament triumph northward in the rankings, receiving four first-place votes and 1,112 points to jump from sixth to third. North Carolina, 5-0, and the winner of the Great Alaska Shootout last weekend, received 45 of a possible 63 first-place votes and 1.239 points. AP Top 20 The Blue Devils won the inaugural Big Apple National Invitation Tournament last weekend in New York, defeating fifth-ranked Kansas 92-86 for the title. And on Monday night, Duke, playing its second game in less than 24 hours and third in four days, routed East Carolina 98-66 to run its record to 6-0. First place wins in parentheses; total points based on 20.19.18 etc, record through Dec 2 and Jan 23. | | Record | Pts | Pts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1 North Carolina (43) | 50 | 1291 | 1 | | 2 Michigan (12) | 40 | 1155 | 1 | | 3 Duke (4) | 60 | 1112 | 6 | | 4 Syracuse | 10 | 1054 | 4 | | 5 Georgia Tech | 21 | 910 | 2 | | 6 Georgetown (1) | 24 | 890 | 8 | | 7 Kentucky | 85 | 890 | 5 | | 8 Oklahoma | 50 | 753 | 13 | | 9 Kentucky | 20 | 690 | 10 | | 10 Notre Dame (5) | 20 | 636 | 11 | | 11 Louisiana State | 20 | 616 | 11 | | 12 Illinois | 20 | 527 | 7 | | 13 Memphis State | 20 | 469 | 14 | | 14 New Las Vegas | 20 | 445 | 14 | | 15 Louisville | 20 | 416 | 14 | | 16 Louisville | 22 | 287 | 10 | | 17 Birmingham AIA | 21 | 186 | 20 | | 18 Iowa | 40 | 126 | — | | 19 Auburn | 1 | 122 | 19 | | 20 Indiana | 1 | 122 | 19 | The Kansas Jayhawks defeated Southern Illinois-Edwardsville 86-71 last night in Allen Field House, but KU head coach Larry Brown was not pleased By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Others receive votes North Carolina State 11, Defaulter 78, Maryland 63, Pittsburgh 99, Arkansas 80,hoe State 92, Virginia 41, Tennessee 50, Oklahoma 8, Bradley 14, Washington 13, Navy 12, Alabama 11 tice with about six minutes remaining in the game. In fact, he put his team through a post-game practice. "I have a lot of respect for Southern Illinois, but we are supposed to win these games easily." Brown said. "If we play this way tomorrow night (against Western Carolina) we're going to lose and we'll practice again after the game." Cougar head coach Larry Graham said the sixth-ranked Jayhawks were flat after their great effort in the Big Apple National Invitational Tournament, but Brown said that was not the case. "I thought we would be ready and I thought we learned our lesson after last year." Brown said. "Duke chartered a flight out of New York, played the next night and won by 35 points. Great teams will do that, and that is why I'm so disappointed in our performance tonight." After the Cougars took a 2-1 lead, Kansas scored eight unanswered points to take the lead for good, but the Jayhawks couldn't quite put the game out of reach in front of a less than capacity crowd. "They played a belluva lot harder than we did and actually had a chance to win the game," Brown said. Southern Illinois cut the Jayhawk lead to seven last in the second half. James Jappa scored four of his 12 points on a jump shot and two free throws after an intentional foul to cut the lead to 63-56. Southern Illinois got the ball after Jappa's free throws, and had a chance to cut the lead to five. But AI Alexander missed a jump shot, and the Jayhawks regained control of the game. Kansas outscored the Cougars 17-8 in the next four minutes to take a 80-64 lead with 3 minutes, 25 seconds left in the game. Archie Marshall, who led Kansas with 18 points, scored six points and Danny Manning scored four of his 14 points during the stretch. Kansas had a decided height advantage — the tallest Cougar was 6-foot-6 — but the Jayhawks outbounded Southern Illinois only 36-30 Kansas turned the ball over three more times than Southern Illinois, but most of those came when the Jayhawks were trying to run their fast break. The Kansas full court pressure defense forced three successive Cougar turnovers to take a nine point lead in the first half. After the Cougars cut the lead to 10-9, Ron Kellogg converted a three-point play and Manning, Cedric Hunter and Marshall hit consecutive jump shots to give Kansas a 19-10 lead. Kansas carried a nine point lead, 41-32, into the lockerroom at halftime. Southern Illinois starting center Mike Dillon scored seven first half points, but he picked up his fourth foul with 2:35 left in the half. The 6-5 Dillon had the task of covering 7-1 Greg Dreiling. It was the first loss for the Cougars, who evened their record at 1-1. Kansas improved to 4-1. The Jayhawks will face Western Carolina at 7:30 tonight in the field house. Southern Illinois-Edwardsville concludes its tour through Kansas with a game tonight against Kansas State in Manhattan. Kansas guard Calvin Thompson has been named the Big Eight Conference Player of the Week, the first time the honor has been given this season. In Big Apple NIT games this past weekend, Thompson scored 25 points against Lousville and 22 points in Kansas' loss to Duke. Thompson and Kellogg were both named to the Big Apple NIT all-tournament team. The Kansas junior varsity team will play Barton County at 5 tonight, preceding the Kansas-Western Carolina game in the field house. Marshall shines as top KU scorer Rv Sue Konni Associate sports editor Head basketball coach Larry Brown said he just wanted to give everyone a chance to get some playing time. Forward Archie Marshall took his opportunity a little more seriously. "I work hard at practice so when it's time for me to play, then I play. Mammal" Marshall did just that last night. The 6-foot-4 Marshall hit 8-of-10 field goals and added two free throws to lead the Jayhawks with 18 points in Kansas' 86-71 victory over Southern Illinois-Edwardsville last night in Allen Field House. Averaging three points a game before last night, Marshall put his philosophy to work early. Replacing forward Ron Kellogg with just two minutes gone in the first half, Marshall hit a jump shot from the corner to give Kansas a 4-2 lead. Marshall, who transferred to KU from Seminole Junior College in Seminole. Okla., hit two of his next three shots as the Jayhawks took a 41-32 halftime lead. Marshall's hot hand never cooled. Shooting 80 percent in the second half, he sparked the 13,100 fans in attendance with two behind-the-back slam dunks. "The crowd was terrific," he said. "They have always been wild and tonight was no exception. It was great to finally be home." Kansas will have the home-court advantage again tonight when the team faces Western Carolina. Marshall said he hoped to see plenty of playing time against the Catamounts. "Once Archie starts playing up to his potential, he will help the team tremendously," Kellogg said. Marshall's tally of 18 points may have suprised a few Jayhawk fans, but the forward is used to the limelight. He averaged 15.1 points per game last year for Seminole. "I shot the ball well, but that's the way our offense is set up." Marshall said of his performance last night. "They just turned out to be good shots." Marshall's hot hand may have been one of the few positive aspects of the evening for Kansas, however. Following the game, the Jayhawks replaced their game jerseys with practice jerseys. Brown said that although he didn't want to take anything away from the Cougars' performance, the Jayhawks didn't play as well as they should have. "I'm embarrassed in that I feel that they played better than we did." Brown said of the Division II school. "We've missed a lot of practice, so we're gonna start now." Miami now No.2 The Associated Press CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Miami received respect that Head Coach Jimmy Johnson thought was long overdue yesterday when the Hurricanes vaulted to No. 2 in The Associated Press poll and within striking distance of their second national football championship in three years. A critic of balloting in recent weeks because of his team's slow rise despite victories on the road over Oklahoma, Florida State and Maryland, Johnson was ecstatic that the Hurricanes climbed from fourth in the next-to-last regular season poll. Miami has won 10 games in a row since losing its season opener to Florida and is traveling a path that is similar to the road it took to the national championship under Howard Schnellenberger two years ago. No. 1 Penn State, which completed an 11-0 regular season a week earlier and will meet fourth-ranked Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl, received 47 of 59 first-place votes and 1,164 of one,180 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and sportscasters Miami received three first-place votes and 1.063 points to move past Iowa and Oklahoma, which had held down the No. 2 and No. 3 spots a week ago. Rose Bowl-bound Iowa received three first-place ballots AP Top 20 First-practice videos in parentheses, season record (list points based on 2019-18 ete, etc.) Record Pts Pts 1 Penn State (47) 11-0 1,093 2 Miami, Fla. (3) 10-0 1,064 3 Iowa (3) 10-0 1,050 4 Oklahoma (5) 10-0 1,048 5 Michigan (1) 9-1 935 6 Chicago (1) 9-1 934 7 Nebraska 9-2 779 8 Tennessee 8-1 746 9 Brynigh Young 10-2 657 10 Air Force 11-1 609 11 Air Force 11-1 609 12 LSU 8-1 562 13 Arkansas 9-2 416 14 UCLA 8-2 410 15 UCLA 8-2 410 16 Auburn 8-3 318 17 Ohio State 8-3 255 18 Florida State 8-3 140 19 Florida State 8-3 127 20 Bowling Green 11-0 73 Other receiving votes: Georgia Tech 71, Maryland 69, Texas 36, Baylor 26, Arizona 18, Georgia 16, Army 13, Washington 5, Arizonna State 4, Michigan State 1, West Virginia 1. Brett wins first Gold Glove United Press International ST. LOUIS — Kansas City third baseman George Brett was among six players named yesterday as first-time winners of the Gold Glove award for fielding excellence. Three other newcomers carne from the American League: first baseman Don Mattingly of the New York Yankees, shortstop Alfredo Griffin of Oakland and outfielder Gary Pettis of California. Third baseman Tim Wallach of Montreal and pitcher Rick Reuschel of Pittsburgh were winners for the first time in the National League. For the first time in the 29-year history of the award, there was a tie in the voting at one position. Dwight Evans of Boston and Dwayne Murphy of Oakland tied for the third outfield spot on the AL team, necessitating the inclusion of four outfielders on the squad. the other AL members were second baseman Lou Whitaker of Detroit, outfielder Dave Winfield of the Yankees, catcher Lance Parrish of Detroit and pitcher Ron Guidry of the Yankees. The NL Gold Glove winners were first baseman Keith Hernandez of the New York Mets, second baseman Ryne Sandberg of Chicago, shortstop Ozzie Smith of St. Louis, Wallach, and catcher Tony Pena of the Pirates. Minnesota needs coach soon United Press International MINNEAPOLIS — Lou Holtz, named last week as head football coach at Notre Dame, will not coach for Minnesota in the Independence Bowl Dec. 21 so he can devote himself full time to his new job, officials said yesterday. Athletic Director Paul Giel said Holtz would be "relied on his duties as head football coach at Minnesota immediately." Holtz, who was in South Bend, Ind. to meet with the current Notre Dame staff, was named last Wednesday as the successor to Gerry Faust, who resigned under pressure. Giel said he hoped to name a new head coach who would be on the sidelines when Minnesota plays Clemson in the Independence Bowel at Shreveport, La. Holtz was one of the reasons the Independence Bowel committee expressed interest in the Gohers. Giel said the assistant coaching staff, headed by defensive coordinator John Gulekunst and offensive coordinator Larry Beckish, would handle the preparations for the game. Gutekunst has applied for the head coaching position and was singled out by Holtz as a top candidate. "I have met with Lou's current coaching staff, and despite the void left by his departure, they have indicated they are going ahead with preparations for the Independence Bowl game with Clemson with every intention of winning." Giel said in a statement. Holtz had three years left on his five-year contract at Minnesota but decided to leave for Notre Dame. Kansas 86 SIU-Edwardsville 71 Percentages: FG, 470, FT, 600. Blocked Shots: 1 (Stanley 1). Turnovers: 17 (Alexander 5. Edwards 4). Steals: 12 (Japha 5). Technicals: None | | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Willis | 28 | 4-8 | 0-2 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 38 | | Edwards | 24 | 2-7 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 4 | | Dillon | 12 | 4-7 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 9 | | Jappa | 27 | 5-13 | 2-2 | 8 | 4 | 1 | 12 | | Jenny | 21 | 6-13 | 2-4 | 7 | 1 | 12 | 18 | | Jenny | 29 | 8-14 | 2-4 | 7 | 0 | 18 | 18 | | Hippen | 21 | 2-6 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 4 | | Akndrk | 19 | 3-6 | 0-2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 8 | | Goodwin | 16 | 1-2 | 2-3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | | Bass | 8 | 2-3 | 1-3 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 4 | | Switzer | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Total | 31-66 | 9-15 | 30-12 | 12 | 22 | 0 | 71 | SIU-Edwardsville Kansas Manning M FG MF FT R A T F TP Kellogg 31 7-11 10-7 7 1 1 1 14 Dreiling 25 4-8 3-5 6 6 3 11 Hunter 25 5-8 3-4 6 6 3 14 Marshall 22 5-8 0-0 1 1 1 3 10 Marshall 27 5-8 0-0 1 4 3 10 Juhrsnjn 28 8-10 2-2 4 3 4 18 Juhrsnjn 18 1-2 0-0 2 0 1 2 Turgeon 17 1-2 0-3 3 6 1 4 Pipe 7 0-1 0-0 1 0 1 2 Pipe 6 1-1 0-0 1 0 1 2 Total 37-57 12-23 36 29 12 0 86 Percentages: FG, 649, FT, 522, Blocked Shots: 6 (Draining 4), Turnovers: 20 (Manning 4, Marshall 4), Steals: 9 (Manning 2, Hunter 2, Thompson 2), Technicals: None. Sternberge Robinson A: 13,100. Half: Kansas 41-32 Officials: Mayfield Starmire Benchore 30-22