9,1982 THE MICHIGAN DAILY CAPTAIN'S CORNER: Leps Kicks Past Last Season in 880, Mile Purdue Poses Threat To OSU in Big Ten Golf By BOB ZWINCK compete in the tourney, are The Big Ten Golf Meet at I- schnlatically ineliiihl this yar. (EDITOR'S NOTE: Election to the captaincy of a Michigan athletic team is an honor few ever receive. To the qualities of leadership, sportsmanship, athletic ability and intangibles that make a Michigan captain what he is, The Michigan Daily pays tribute. This is the eighth of a series.) By DAVE GOOD If ever an athlete was made to order, for a stereotype, that man is Ergas Leps, Michigan's 1960 track captain. That's a name that's not easy to forget, and for three years track fans around the country have automatically associated it with an icy - emotioned, Lithuanian - born runner who is as sure as death and taxes to hang back in every race and then whiz past everybody at the last possible moment. But Ergas Leps is not an expres- sionless robot. In fact, he's not even a robot. His teammates will tell you that he's as loose and full of horseplay as anybody else. And he's not from Lithuania, either, contrary to popular be- lief. But Once a Year "Every year around Penn Relay time it starts up," sighed Leps, shaking his head. The truth is that Leps was born in Estonia, a little to the northeast of Lithuania and now a part of the USSR. Leps fled to Sweden with his parents when he was five and then came to Toronto when he was ten.. He took up running the mile as a sophomore in high school, and that brings up the matter of his being exclusively a stretch-runner. He is now, although he says that he doesn't have to be because he did't use to be. "I started out being a lead runner, but then when I came here I started running the big boys and I could barely keep up with them," he explained. He had been running mile races over 5:00 for his first two high school years, getting down to 5:02, a school record, when he was a junior. But working out in the summer and running harder the next year got him down to a gaudy 4:13.6, which was not a Canadian shcoolboy record because he ran it against seniors. First Experiment And that race was the turn- ing point in his career. "My 4:13.6 was really the first 'M'Sailors Finish High The Michigan Sailing Clubplac- fourth in the Annual Detroit Sail- ing Club Regatta held over the weekend at Belle Isle. Wayne State, with 102 points, Indiana and Notre Dame, with 94, and Michigan, with 89, topped the field of twelve contenders. The Michigan entry, which sail- ed in Flying Scots, was skippered by Paul O'Reilly and Travis Ran- dolph and crewed by Eric Hall, Mike Carr; and Eric White. The Michigan sailors held the lead after ten of the total of twelve races, but were disqualified in the last race for a rule infraction. The disqualification dropped the m from first to fourth place. The scoring system used in the Regatta was as follows: a school can get one point for each oppon- ent beaten (a possible 11 per race), a point for starting, and a point for finishing. race where I tried to stay back and kick," Leps pointed out. Then he came to Michigan, Coach Don Canham changed him from a front-runner to a stretch- runner for keeps. "In fact, we tell him to keep back before every race," Canham added. Now, approaching the end of his last season for the Wolverines, Leps has made the kick his trade- mark. He has anchored six winners at the Penn Relayg with it. He has won seven Big Ten mile or half- mile crowns with it (and is all but a sure bet for two more next week at Lafayette). He has set several varsity records and one conference mark with it. And he has become probably the best half imiler in the coun- try with it. Places Third Last year, Leps placed third in the NCAA 880-yd. run. This year, Canham thinks he should win it and lower his varsity record from 1:49.2 to 1:48.0. There's a sort of sad story be- hind that 1:49.2, too-one that Leps hopes to re-do with a happy ending this year. Leps had gone into the NCAA meet last year co-favored with Western Michigan's John Bork, who had defeated Leps badly in a dual meet several weeks before. But that was when Leps had just gotten over a cold and hadn't had a chance to work himself back in shape. Now a healthy Leps tore up the field in the semi-finals of the NCAA race, sprinting past Bork and the rest to a new varsity rec- . "}h ord. But Leps called this race one mistake-"showing him (Bork) what I had"--and Canham ex- plained another that was to fol- low in the finals the next day. Leps Holds Back In this race Leps was following his usual policy-keeping in touch with the leader and running sec- ond going into the backstretch of the second lap. Then Bork tried a bold maneuver. "He started sprinting from 300 yds. out," ex- plained Leps. "I tried to stay with him but I really didn't start sprinting all out until it was too late." By this time Bork, a skinny sen- ior with a driving arm motion, was far gone, and to add insult to in- jury, Oregon's Sig Ohlemann passed Leps for second in the last few yards. of the race. Bork had run the best time of his life, 1:48.3, and Leps still did a creditable 1:49.8. "That's the only race I can re- member that he made a tactical mistake in," Canham commented. "He let Bork get away from him and that was it. But other than that Ergas just doesn't make mis- takes and everybody knows it. "And he's so much better his year. He's a year older-stronger, facter, more racing experience and more confidence. I think he can run the quarter in :47 and out- side of (Oregon's Dyrol) Burle- son, he's the only miler in the country who can. Best in Nation "I think he's the best half-miler in the country right now. If he ran Burleson, it would be one hell of a race and I don't know who would win, but I feel sure that Ergas could beat him. "The only way.he can be beaten is to run away from him. A guy like (New Zealand's world record- holder Peter) Snell could beat Ergas because he'd run a 2:58 for three quarters and take all the kick out of him. But Ergas knows that when there are no Snell's in the race he can stay up and then kick." Ironically enough, Leps has al- ready had the experience of racing Snell. Back in 1960 when the Michigan sophomore was repre- senting Canada in the Olympic Games,s he was ousted from his quarter-final heat of the 800- meter run, which was won by Snell. Snell, then a nobody, went on to defeat Belgium's Roger Moens in the finals. And if it was a sur- prise to the world, it was a sur- prise to Leps. "I didn't think any- body could beat (ex-Illinois run- ner George) Kerr. I think what hurt Kerr was running the four heats. A guy like Snell is strong and can take it," Leps remarked. Now Leps is looking toward the Big Ten meet, the NCAA meet, and farther ahead still, the 1964 Olympics at Toyko. He plans to teach physical education in Toron- to after graduation, and chances are that he's going to be remem- bering the name of Peter Snell all the while. linois two weeks may well yield a pion this year. from Saturday, different cham- Last year's Big Ten Champions, Ohio State, took the title with a 1527 team score, winning by nine strokes. However, their top three shooters are no longer around. Jack Nicklaus was the medalist with a brilliant 283, but he now shoots for money. Mike Podolski, who finished third on a 299 card, and Dave Daniels, a 311 golfers, have both graduated. Nevertheless, Joe Coleburn, who shot a 314, Chuck Meek, who card- ed a 320, and Russ Jimeson, with a 321, all will be back. Two others from last year's squad, Frank Kurtz and Fred Hamilton, but they were not in the Big Ten's last year. Purdue has a solid team of veterans. Every linksman who competed in the Big Ten's is back, an dlast year they came in fourth with a 1544 aggregate. Jerry Jackson led the team and placed fifth overall with 304. In addition, Howard Klein and John Thorington will be available, but of course neither saw action last year. Michigan State will be without the services of four of their third place team. They finished with a total of 1539 strokes. Gone via graduation are two three-year lettermen, C. A. Smith, whose 305 took sixth in the Big Ten, and Tad Schmidt, who fired a 311. Marty Kleva, who also graduated, shot a 335. Both Gene Hunt, a 307 scorer, and Larry McMillan, who didn't BILL NEWCOMB ... team captain Big Ten Scores BASEBALL Illinois 9, Indiana State 8 (10 inn.) Indiana 9, Miami 4 Wisconsin 3, Notre Dame 2 Michigan State 7, Detroit 3 TENNIS Northwestern 8, Notre Dame 1 Iowa 8, Minnesota 1 -Daily-Bruce Taylor ANOTHER RACE, ANOTHER VICTIM- When Ergas Leps wins a race, which is nearly always, somebody has to be the victim of his strong stretch run. This time it's Indiana's Steve Hibler and Michigan's Jim Neahusan in the mile run last Saturday. ERGAS LEPS ... man with kick AS SALE MAY 4-MAY 11 iscount records, 337 South Main Street I I FROM CAPITOL RECORDS R E co RD5s THE TOWN'S NEWEST HIT ALBUM! AND WE'VE GOT YOUR COPY NOW! THE COMPLETE CAPITOL CATALOGUE IS ON SALE INCLUDING THESE GREAT .NEW RELEASES: ,~ , ';, : '. 7 4 (S) T-1711 ONCE UPON A TIME...The Lettermen (S) T-1727 TUFF JACK (RUSH) ...Jack Marshall (S) T-1706 LATIN AND HIP... The Brothers Castro (S) -T1705 THE BEST OF THE KINGSTON TRIO DW-570 MUSIC TO REMEMBER HER .. . Jackie Gleason DW-632 MUSIC TO CHANGE HER MIND... 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