Page 10-Tuesday, January 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily COACH EXUDES OPTIMISM: Bahr builds Wolverine DAILY SPECIALS ALL YOU CAN EAT! TUESDAY-SMORGASBORD $3.95 WEDNESDAY-SEAFOOD BUFFET $4.25 THURSDAY-SMORGASBORD $3.95 By PETE LEININGER After eating steak for so many years, Michigan wrestling coach Dale Bahr is not one to be content with the taste of hamburger for very long. Before coming to Michigan, Bahr was assistant coach for perrenial powerhouse Iowa State. Bahr has become accustomed to winning as a result of his years with the Cyclones, and hopes to get things rolling at Michigan. "IN A FEW years we hope to be in the top five in the country and have enough depth to be fighting for an NCAA title," commented Bahr. Bahr, not waiting for the future, has already produced impressive results. Taking over a largely inexperienced Michigan squad, Bahr has taken the team from a number twenty ranking to its present number ten position. Bahr cited several reasons for this Wrestling top twenty year's success. "Willie (assistant coach Willie GadsonY and I have worked on toughing up mentally and physically. The kids have a lot of pride, they aren't used to losing. We work on pride." "THIS YEAR we have already ac- complished one of our goals; doing well in dual meets (10-2 thus far). We hope to weekend against Purdue (34-9) and Illinois (29-13), despite the absence of two-time NCAA champ Mark Churella who was wrestling in Russia. In the Illinois meet, falling into a familiar position, the Wolverines found themselves down 13-2 only to storm back and win the next seven matches. INJURIES AND inexperience have 'In a few years we hope to be in the top five in the country and have enough depth to befighting for an NCAA title.' -Michigan wrestling coach Dale Bahr vrestling "WE WILL RELY primarily on recruits and work with the kids we have here. Michigan is an easy school to sell because of its tradition. It's also well- situated between Chicago, Ohio, and Pennsylvania." Bahr also hopes to draw larger crowds for wrestling at Michigan. "Iowa State averaged between two and five thousand people a meet and up to 15,000 for the Iowa meet. "I'd like to work on publicizing, but you have to win (in' order to draw crowds). The Big Ten is probably the finest. wrestling conference in the coun- try. Right now, four of the top ten teams are in the Big Ten." IN THE NEXT two weeks Michigan faces number one-ranked Iowa, third- ranked Wisconsin, seventh-ranked Minnesota, and 16th-ranked Michigan State. "If we can split the next four, I'll be very happy. We started slowly, but have' now worked to our potential, and that's all I can ask. This has been one of the most enjoyable seasons in the past ten years for me." If things keep progressing as they have been for the wrestlers, Bahr can look forward to many more enjoyable seasons at Michigan. 9~ ommft- DOWNTOWN EZMED'S 114 East Washington end up in the top four in the Big Ten tournament and top ten in the country." Bahr decided to come to Michigan for several reasons. "I had the chance to coach one of the top teams in the coun- try, and a school with a winning tradition. Most of the team will be made up of state wrestlers, and Michigan has good wrestlers at the state level." The Wolverine grapplers captured a pair of Big Ten victories this past greatly hampered the production of Michigan's lighter weights, putting ad- ded pressure on the heavier weights. "We will need recruits at the 118, 126, and 142-pound weight classes for next year," stated Bahr. "Larry Hann (who was red-shirted with an injured knee) should help out at 134 next year." Bahr sees recruiting as the major determinate of success in the future of Michigan wrestling. ...---- -ac :----- . i 4 4 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Iowa Iowa St. Wisconsin Oklahoma St. Oregon St. Oklahoma Minnesota Cal Poly Cleveland St. MICHIGAN 11. Lehigh 12. Brigham Young 13. Louisiana St. 14. Missouri 15. Clarion St. 16. Michigan St. 17. Arizona St. 18. Bloomsburg St. 19. Temple 20. Auburn AXON PACES SQUAD Women gymnasts place second By ALAN FANGER Michigan's women gymnasts offset their continuing problems on the balan- ce beam with strong efforts in the other three events to place second Saturday in the ten-team Windy City Invitational held at Illinois-Chicago Circle. an& w: w_ . . j W, we b /i W Anal Cottage INN (good only with this coupon) Carry-Out and FREE Delivery FREE-2 LARGE PEPSIS With any medium or large pizza GOOD MON THRU THURS. (DON'T FORGET to ask for your free Pepsis WHEN you place your order) " 12", 14", 16" PIZZAS-10 items including ' Zucchini & Eggplant. . COTTAGE INN'S Very Own SICILIAN DEEP DISH PIZZA " SANDWICHES, SUBS, PIZZA SUB. COTTAGE INN DELUXE ' * Expertly prepared ITALIAN DINNERS: Spaghetti, Lasagna, ' Connelloni, Manicotti Combination 546 PACKARD at HILL-665-6005 ----MONDAY-SATURDAY 42am SUNDAY 4-1 am The Wolverines (18-2) took first place in the uneven parallel bars, and finished second in the vaulting and floor exercise competitions to total 126.30 for the meet, second only to Nebraska's 129.65. Scott Ponto's young squad was once again victimized by several falls off the balanced beam, however, and their 29.70 score bridged them considerably from the first-place Cornhuskers. "It was a pretty typical performan- ce," said Ponto of his young, surprising squad. "We were better on bars, but worse on beam, and we're going to be working on that this week." Ponto was particularly impressed with co-captain Mia Axon, who finished fourth individually (31.65). The Ann Arbor native highlighted her afternoon with an 8.40 on the uneven bars. Trailing close behind Axon were Teresa Bertuncin, who placed sixth (31.50), and seventh-place finisher Sara Flom (31.45). The Wolverines were aided by the ef- forts of freshmen Cindy Shearon and Lisa Uttal, who balanced the scoring with floor exercise scores of 8.10 and 8.05, respectively.. "Lisa and Cindy really came through for us," said Ponto. "Teresa and Mia were off in their floor routines, so it's great that they could pull up their scores. We now have six or seven who are strong in floor exercises." Uttalwas performing with a severely bruised heel, while Bertoncin was han- dicapped by sprained toe. Both tum- blers incurred their injuries in practice last week. Although many coaches and'perfor- mers believe that judging in Michigan to be more stringent, Ponto thought the Chiacgo judging was equally,if not more, stringent than the judging for the Michigan State meet a week ago. "They were rather stiff. I thought we did a little better Saturday," said the first-year coach. "But Nebraska deser- ved to win either way." The Wolverines' final meet before the Big Ten Championships takes place Sunday, when two weaker teams, Eastern Michigan and Illinois State, in- vade Crisler Arena. "We're going to put in some new tricks for that meet," said Pont6. "Hopefully it won't hurt us." Friday- 15 Hot Dogs 2-5 p.m.-(while they lost)1 310 Maynard. St. HOURS: 1 PM-2 AM, FRI. 11:30 AM-2 AM, SAT. 11 AM-2 AM Heathcote sees hope . . for sinking EAST LANSING (AP) - Poor out- side shooting and the lack of a strong center is behind Michigan State's sagging basketball fortunes, Coach Jud Heathcote said yesterday. But. he refused to concede that' Michigan State is out of the Big Ten' race or the chase for a postseason tour- nament slot - although he' acknowledged his team. better get its act together immediately to stand a' chance." "WE ARE NOT considering our- selves out of the title race or the race for second or third, which probably will be good enough for a tournament spot," he said. "We're alive - we're just not1 well." Fourth-ranked Michigan State - defending Big Ten champs, highly touted, and ranked first in the nation for two weeks - suddenly finds itself U-M CENTER FOR AFROAMERICAN AND AFRICAN STUDIES presents "RESEARCH ISSUES & THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE BLACK EXPERIENCE' Dr. Philip Bowman Assistant Professor of Psychology Uni~'ersity of Michigan JANUARY 31-12:00-1:30 p.m. 346 Old A&D Bldg. 909 Monroe St. Sparans mired in the middle of the conference after disasters on the road against Michigan and Northwestern last week. Michigan nipped the Spartans Thur- sday night with a foul shot after time expired, and lowly Northwestern - winless in the conference at that point - blew the Spartans off the floor Satu- day. THAT LEFT Michigan State 11-5 overall and 4-4 in the Big Ten - tied fot fourth spot with Michigan, four games behind surprising Ohio State. "There's no way we can win the title without winning all the rest of our games - unless we find an ineligible player on Ohio State's team," Heath- cote commented. If Michigan State is to fight back, it must begin Thursday night against the front-running Buckeyes at Jenison Field House. That is followed by a revenge match against Northwestern Saturday, before a national television appearance against Kansas Sunday af- ternQon. HEATHCOTE SAID opponents are collapsing their defenses into the mid dle, choking off Earvin Johnson's quick inside passes and daring the Spartans to shoot from outside. The team then suffers by not having a big strong cen- ter to grab rebounds and make inside shots. "Maybe we overrated the club," Heathcote said. "But I still say we can play with any team in the country, and on some nights we can beat them." Call Red Cross toayabout learning CPR- cardiopulmonary resuscitation. - DvarI.g HELP!!! WE NEED DAILY CARRIERS!!! " No collecting. 0 Great pay * Extra cash for supplements 0 Light papers *"1OCCokes e No Monday deliveries * Vacations between terms