Page 2C-Thursday, September 6, 1979-The Michigan Daily PITCHING KEY TO BLUE SUCCESS: Softballers find 9 0 winning recipe By LEE KATTERMAN Making your first cake from scratch can, at best, be a trying experience. In softball, building a team from scratch can be just as difficult. Yet, after only two seasons, head coach Gloria Soluk has blended together some prize-winning ingredien-, ts. TWO YEARS ago, in the women's softball team's - first season, Soluk fielded one of the state's best batteries she placed eleven freshwomen on the squad. Five of them made significant contributions during the Wolverines' rather successful 21-9 campaign. But with a schedule loaded with top- flight tournaments, Soluk has a new goal in mind for this coming season - a state championship. IN ADbITION to scheduling doubleheaders for nearly every day of the week during April, as the team did last season, the Wolverine softballers will play in three weekend tourneys. "No matter how much you practice, it takes game experience to build con- fidence and overcome the mental mistakes that hurt us so many times last season," said Soluk. Tentative plans have also been made for a spring trip south. Since ten of last season's first twelve games were rained out, the opportunity to play out- doors early will undoubtedly help the players work out their winter kinks. THE SPRING monsoons were ac- tually a good omen for the Wolverines in 1979 - Soluk's squad took eight of their first ten contests. But Mother Nature wasn't 100 per cent benevolent, as rain forced the cancellation of a doubleheader with highly-rated Western Michigan. Perhaps the Wolverines' progress last season could be described in one word - "Smoke". That's the nickname fireballing pitcher Gardocki earned en route to a team-leading 13-1 record. Fortunately for Soluk, her hurling ace has one year of eligibility remaining. And Gardocki's return to the lineup weighs heavily upon Michigan's state championship hopes. TO FURTHER beef up her mound corps, the Blue mentor signed "the number one pitcher in the state'} as her top recruit. Barb Barcley of Fenton is expected to add her talents to an already fine staff. Sophomore Julie Zyjewski, 5-6 last season, will complete the starting rotation. Soluk plans to shift around her ex- perienced players. Debbie Hatch, another sophomore, will likely move to shortstop from the third base spot she occupied last spring. As a leadoff hitter, Hatch batted .343'and led the squad in extra-base hits. The softballers will waste no time in getting organized for the spring cam- paign. Soluk plans to have practice and tryout sessions in the fall, and says she'll have her squad selected before the first snowflake falls. In her mind, that's how long it will take to blend some winning ingredients together for a state title. BUT RECR UITS MA Y SPEED DE VEL OPMENT Growing pains affect linksters Gardocki in pitcher Theresa Gardocki and cat- cher Sheryl Tominac. "Gardocki and Tominac were keys to (our first) season," said Soluk. "They allowed us to go from no program to a competitive one in just one season." Last season, Soluk's recipe called for a sprinkling of new talent. In response, By M. J. SCHNEIDER Among the athletic giants at Michigan, there is a relative infant. Overshadowed by some of the more spectacular sports, such as football and basketball, the women's golf program struggles for recognition. The lack of attention given the linksters is partially explained by the fact that the team has been in existence for only three years. When compared to the 100-year history of football at Michigan, the time since the birth of the* team seems very short, indeed. ACCORDING TO Coach Tom Simon, that comparative lack of notoriety wil end with the upcoming fall campaign. "We're going to go from a team that just shows up, to a contending team," he said. In his attempts to produce a winning squad, Simon will be aided by four returning players and two newcomers. Linda Drillock, Robin Sabota, Elaine Crosby and Alison Smith comprise the list of linksters coming back to compete in the fall. MUCH OF Simon's hopes for a win- ning team lie with the talents of a freshwoman named Elaine Satyshur. The Erie, Pennsylvania native boasts two junior city championships, a vic- Daily Photo THE ECONOMIC THEORY of profit maximization applies well to the Mich- igan women's track team, and especially to Debbie Williams (above). Williams was the star of last year's financially constrained squad, taking first in the javelin throw at both the Big Ten and AIAW Midwest Regional championships. She'll return to compete for the Wolverines again next spring. Tra cksters'budget thin, but talent grows thicker By ELISA FRYE Money is always a bottleneck in athletics-especially for minor sports. And women's track is no exception. Money, according to coach Red Simmons, is preventing Michigan from getting the best recruits. "They have to want to come to the University first; they'd get free rides anywhere else," he said. AND MONEY may keep Michigan from getting the best track coach it can after Simmons retires at the end of the year. "If they want to get fine quality coaches, they have to come up with money," commented the "father" of women's track at Michigan. "I think they'll keep me as long as I'll stay. The pay doesn't mean anything to me; I like the job and building up the team," Simmons added. In spite of that lack of funds, Simmons has two things to look forward to this season: a promising group of recruits, and a cross country team to work with. THE EXISTENCE of such a team, according to Simmons, means he can now recruit distance runners more easily, but extra coaches and facilities are not needed; there will be only traveling expenses. Many of the recruits are local products. Joanna Bullard (hurdler) and Suzanne Frederick (distance runner) hail from Ann Arbor's Pioneer and Huron high schools, respectively. Branching farther out, Simmons has signed hurdler Maureen Minor from Ortonville-Brandon high school, Melanie Weaver from Mason County Central and sprinter Linda Kazinec from Euclid, Ohio. IN ADDITION, Simmons has the core of "an improved team" returning. Included are discus throwers Penny Neer and Deb.Williams. Neer was third in the Big Ten with a toss of 144-9, which broke a Michigan record. And Williams, who specializes in the javelin, also set a new record with her 157-8 throw in the AIAW Nationals in East Lansing last June. . P, Aft Simon tory in the Junior Invitational ,held in Washington, D.C., and a second-place finish in Erie's women's city tour- nament. As a walk-on, Lisa Conney presents a similarly impressive list of golfing credentials. In 1976 and the year previous, Conney won the Madison, Wisconsin city golf tournament en route to the 1976 women's state PGA junior title. With these credible statistics, Satyshur and Conney are certain to bring attention to the links this fall. NO CHARGE FOR COLLATING * FAST, FRIENDLY SERVICE * U of M Pt' s WELCOME * TYPING * RESLME =ERvICE * AREPK REDUCTIONS * BINDING OPEN DAYS TLL L pm