t The DAILY'S PHONE NUMBERS: Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Page 12-Thursday, October 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily KICKERS KLICK: M club sports fair well By PETE LEININGER The undergraduate soccer club, coming off a 4-0-loss to Oakland, faces a club from the University of Detroit this Saturday at 7:30 on Tartan Turf field. On the loss to Oakland this past Saturday, Michigan coach Steve Olson commented, "All the breaks seemed to go their (Oakland's) way, while our shots either hit the post or crossbar. "THEY'RE PROBABLY the best team in Michigan now," added Olson. "They dominated the first half but we came back and played even the second half." The U of D club, on the other hand, is in its first year and doesn't expect to pose much of a threat for the Wolverines. In fact, according to Olson, the game might possibly have an ad- verse affect on his team's play. "It's bad to have a week layoff and then blow out a team only to meet tough tams (Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, and Michigan State, to name a few) the next weeks," said Olson. DESPITE THE layoff and the 4-0 loss, Olson is pleased with the team's play and looks forward to future suc- cess. "Considering we're not a varsity team and we have a low budget, we're really hanging in there." The undergrads now hold a 6-4-1 record. "With a full-time coach we might have won some of those games that we lost," added Olson. Graduate Soccer The graduate soccer club raised its record to 4-2 after capturing the inter- national soccer meet with a 2-0 victory over a Turkish squad in the finals. The Blue kickers reached the finals via a hard fought 1-0 win over a team composed of native Africans. Michigan won that game with a five shot shoot- out, after both teams were held scoreless in regulation time. THE GRADUATE soccer club travels to Southfield for a game with Lawrence Institute of Technology this Saturday. Last year Michigan won both games against LIT by the scores of 2-0 and 6-0. Despite last year's apparent domination by the Michigan club, coach Matt Lyons stated, "It's always tough to tell what a team will be like a year later." Lacrosse This will be the first week of action for the lacrosse club in its abbreviated fall season. The Blue stickmen travel to Chicago for a Saturday contest against the rival Chicago lacrosse club. The Chicago club has won the Mid- west city-club championship for the past few seasons and should be tough again this year. Last year these two teams played three overtime periods before Chicago came out on top. "I SEE THE game pretty close, with our young kids against their older men. What they (Chicago) lack in speed they make up in experience, and what we lack in experience we make up in speed," commented Michigan coach Darrell Balchan. In club lacrosse, there is no age limit on the players' ages. Occasionally men in their mid-thirties and older are seen on the playing field. The lacrosse club plays most of its game in the spring season, only having two or three games.on their fall slate. "About one-quarter of the players in the fall don't play in the spring. It (the play) gets serious in the spring," added Balchan. Water Polo Looking at the water side of things, the water polo club heads up to East Lansing for the Michigan State tour- nament this weekend. The Michigan club opened its season last week, dropping a close 9-8 encoun- ter with the Spartans. "We lost on a disputed goal which went in the side of the net. But you just have to go along with what the ref says," said water polo coach Andy Katzenstein. BESIDES THE Spartans, the Wolverines will face squads from, Western Michigan, Lansing Com- munity College, and possibly Oakland University in this weekend's tour- nament. Despite their opening loss, Katzen- stein is quite impressed with the Wolverine club. "We're much better than ever before. We look tough, real tough, and things are only going to get better." The women water polo team begins action this weekend, after successfully acquiring pool time and equipment. Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News & Happenings 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 Michelaingelo Antonioni's 1960 L' AVVENTU RA A powerful, provocative film about Italy's idle rich. A woman's disappearance almost goes by unnoticed. It was with this film that Antonioni developed his slow, subdued lyrical style with strong character development. FRI: Hawk's "TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT" CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:30 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 I We all love a winner -even Steinbrenner Pressing the issue 'h6 MILLER The 'Big Two'is dead .. . ...long live the.Big Ten . . . expect the unexpected" -Rick Venturi Northistern fooball coach B REAK UP THE "Big Two"? The problem is not how to do it, but who to do it to. This week the "Big Two" is Purdue and Wisconsin. Next week it could be anybody-Michigan and Indiana, Iowa and Ohio State, or any of the 241,920 different combinations of the eight teams within one game of the league lead. Can anyone remember the last time the Big Ten had a more interesting race for the title just TWO games into the conference schedule? I doubt it. And you know what-I kinda like it. Break up the "Big Two"? There ain't no such animal, at least not in 1978. Purdue saw to that by dumping Ohio State (the Buckeyes are struggling at 2- 2-1) and Michigan State solidified the situation with its 24-15 conquest of the Wolverines. With the fall of the Two-Team Empire, the league has on its hands a bonafide title chase for the first time since 1967 when Indiana, Purdue and Minnesota tied for the lead. The Ohio State-Michigan years weren't races, they were more like ten week strolls and late November muggings. If teams like the Boilermakers, Badgers and Spartans keep improving, more and more conference games should have a direct outcome on the final standings. Actually it wouldn't hurt the Big Ten any for this to happen. Such is already the case in the Pac-10 and the Big Eight and nobody complains. about the brand of football they play in those conferences. Closing the gap It might be interesting to see what Mark Herrmann could do against UCLA in the Rose Bowl, or even, Wisconsin with Ira Matthews running wild against USC in a rematch of the 1963 game when the Trojans won 42-37. Hopefully this isn't a premature obituary of the "Big Two" because on more than one occasion an early prediction has come back to haunt a spor- tswriter. But I do hope the "Big Two" is dead. I am not saying that Michigan doesn't have a chance to win the Big Ten this year, or even that Michigan doesn't have a powerful team, all I propose is that some of the other conference schools have cut into the gap that used to separate eight of the teams from the other two. What's so bad about that? At one time the Big Ten was respected as being the toughest conference in college football. There was a great deal of evidence to support that statement. Only the Big Ten has had at least one team finish in the top ten in both polls since they began:. . the Big Ten has the largest stadiums and the highest attendance of any conference in the nation. .:. every team in the league has won the title and won the Rose Bowl (other conferences have members that never won their championship) . . . the pro's have drafted more Big Ten players than any other conference, and so on. Northwestern undefeated Once, in an 11 year span from 1957 to 1967, every team except North- western captured the league title. But right after that it has been Michigan and Ohio State, Ohio Stae and Michigan or just Michigan or only OSU. the only balance the league had then was that the Wolverines and Buckeyes would alternate taking their lumps in bowl games. This isn't the first time in the "Big Two" era that a "Little Eight" team has jumped off to a fast start. MSU, Minnesota and Wisconsin have done it. Even Northwestern came to Ann Arbor undefeated in 1975, and four years earlier finished in a tie with Michigan for second place (the Wildcats were undisputed runners-up the following year). But this is the first time since 1967 so many teams were still in the race halfway through the season. The question of contenders or pretenders will be answered as the schedule draws towards an end. No doubt the Big Ten hasn't heard the last of Woody or Bo this year, but it won't be a cakewalk for anybody. Looking at the standings, Purdue is on top and deservedly so. Many people think the young Boilermakers are in the driver's seat having already played and defeated MSU and OSU. An untested Wisconsin team is currently second followed by six teams tied for third. Illinois and Northwestern finish up the roster. For the first time since the 1967 season there is a realistic possibility of another team other than Michigan or Ohio State winding up first and second. If the people around here and in Columbus are spoiled enough to think that even second place is unacceptable, what's going to happen when their favorite teams finish third or fourth? It could happen this year in the Big Ten. LIN BILLBOARD Students may still purchase season and Talk t Our - tickets for the 1978-79 Michigan hockey season. The season pass costs $21 and is ble & Friendly Staff available at the Athletic Department rSkiingNTicket Office on the corner of South our gNeeds State and Hoover. The first game of the >m HEAD, K2, ROSSIGNOL, year takes place this Friday, October 21 FT, HANSOM, LANGE against the Bowling Green, Falcons at D, ROFFEE, DEMETRE, & others. Yost Ice Arena. Starting time for the oth X-C and Downhill game is 7:30. S-FAST SERVICE Michigan students interested in purchasing basketball season tickets must apply for their tickets this Friday BANKAMERICARD and Saturday, October 20-21 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. at the Track/Tennis Mi. N. of 1-94 & Briarwood Building. The tickets are priced at $26. Bring cash or check as well as your student identification. Pick Your Own Hours APPLY IN PERSON Ol gas Kitchen State and Washington By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES-Three months ago, owner George Steinbrenner gave up on the New York Yankees. Now, in the wake of a major baseball miracle and a second consecutive world title, he says the 1978 club rates with any in the proud, pin-striped past.. "I felt we were gonna get close, but I thought we would run out of real estate," a champagne-soaked Stein- brenner said after his comeback team did it one more time, whipping the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-2 Tuesday night in the sixth and final game of the World Series. "I DON'T care about the 1927 Yankees or the 1936 Yankees of the Casey Stengel Yankees," Steinbrenner said. "This is as great a team as there ever was. They overcame everything. Show me another Yankee team that ever did what this one did. I never saw anything like it in sports." After the All-Star break, Steinbren- ner ordered ailing catcher Thurman Munson switched to right field, benched the left field tandem of Roy White and Lou Piniella in favor of Gary Thomasson and 'made a part-tinie designated hitter of slugger Reggie Jackson, But before too long, things were back to normal. The Yankees also got unex- pected help from pitcher Catfish Hun- ter, who came back from the brink .of retirment when a sore shoulder threatened to end his career, and from a bench that produced World Series standouts like second baseman Brian Doyle, pitcher Jim Beattie and' center fielder Paul Blair. PLUS THE PITCHING of Ron Guidry, Hunter, Beattie and relief ace Rich Gossage; timely hitting by Mun- son, Jackson, Doyle,' White, Piniella, center fielder Mickey Rivers and shor- tstop Bucky Dent, the Series' Most Valuble Player, and a brilliant defense keyed by third baseman Graig Nettles. "They took it to us," said second baseman Davey Lopes, the Dodgers' captain. 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