Friday, January 19,_ 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Frdy aury1,17 H MCIASAL Swi t By CHUCK BLOOM Since the current swimming season has begun, there has been one name dominating the headlines and copy when it comes to Michigan swimming: Tom Szuba. The Dear- born freshman has performed brilliantly in his very brief career as a Wolverine, recently breaking Carl Robie's long-standing record in the 500-yard freestyle with a clocking of 4:42.28. Outside the halls of Matt Mann Pool, Szuba is quite humble and quiet about his many accomplishments while swimming for Dear- born High. Szuba led his team to two state championships, garnishing eight individual championships in four years, and last August qualified for the finals of the 400-meter indi- vidual medley in the U.S. Olympic Trials. As one of the best schoolboy swimmers in they nation, Szuba could have had his pick of a score of prospective schools. But for him, Michigan has always been it. "It is a good school," Szuba said. "It's close to home and anyway, I've always liked Gus (Michigan coach Gus Stager). I was recruited by such )zuba set for schools as Tennessee, Ohio State, Southern Illinois, Florida, and Washington. It wasn't that they didn't appeal to me, but somehow I always knew that I would go to Michigan." UNLIKE MOST swimmers today, Szuba does not specialize in any one stroke as he is prolific in several. "When I was young, I used to swim nothing but freestyle," Szuba stated, "but after ninth grade, my coach, Jeff Longstreth thought I could be a good medley swimmer. Now I swim medley, freestyle, backstroke, and but- terfly." What makes Szuba so valuable is this kind of versatility. Szuba swims everything from the 100-yard butterfly to the 1000-yard free- style; as diverse a pair of races as one can swim. To emphasize the point, Szuba will swim the 400-yard I.M., 200-yard backstroke, and 500-yard freestyle in both the NCAA Champion- ships in Knoxville and the Big Ten Champion- ships to be held in Ann Arbor at the beginning of March. SZUBA SAID HIS greatest thrill at the young age of 18 has to be qualifying f meter I.M. final at the Olympic Ti morning it was pretty cold and I lc in cold weather. So I was prettyI I swam in the heat with Gary Hal fied seventh." "Then that evening came ther thought it was my best crack to team. I was introduced first, the announcer started calling off the n Collela, Furniss. By the time th had been introduced, I was sh never been so scared in my life." SZUBA FINISHED sixth in the four seconds from Munich but h eight seconds faster to finish sixtht ever swum in his life. Stager recognizes Szuba's nature the water but feels somethinge him a great swimmer. "He has g coordination. The ability to be told to comprehend it mentally, then tc it into physical action. If he is to an adjustment on strokes or turns greatness or the 400- immediately and works on it again and again." rials. "That ove to swim STAGER WANTS Szuba to be a national psyched up. champion, even in his freshman year. "He 1 and quali- (Szuba) wants to be great and wants to win," Stager exaulted. "He could be the greatest race. I had swimmer I've ever coached and that includes make the Robie, an Olympic medalist, (Juan) Bello, n the P.A. and many others." ames; Hall, But Szuba's goals are not as subjective. "I e last man want to help Michigan place sixth in the Na- aking. I've tionals. I'd like to make the finals in all three individual events and maybe win one national championship. But the team is more impor- race some tant." e had gone Szuba's future plans are to be a high school than he had swim coach, fashioning himself after Stager whom he considers "a swimming genius." al ability in Swimming fans in Ann Arbor will have am- else makes ple opportunity to see Szuba in action as reat motor- upcoming meets include powerhouses Southern something, Methodist and Indiana, and the Big Ten o coordinate Championships. But Szuba has a lot of time, )ld to make three more years, to establish his greatness , he does it at Michigan. Doily Photo by RANDY EDMONDS FRESHMAN TOM SZUBA is one of the main reasons Michigan could challenge In- diana for Big Ten honors and a sixth place finish in the NCAA Championships. .I ___ -._._ -- STUN NCAA CHAMPS: Gymnasts SABRES CUT HAWKS By RICH STUCK Ward Black set the pace with a' great floor exercise routine and the rest of the Wolverines followed suit last night as the Michigan gymnasts pulled a stunning upset over previously unbeaten and de- fending NCAA champions Southern Illinois. Although Michigan led throughout the meet it came down to the final event before the men in blue could nail down the hard- BULLETIN DETROIT-The Michigan non-j tendered freshman squad drop- ped its second decision of the season to Shaw College of De- troit last night, 100-58. William Burress with 16 points1 and Don Johnson with 11 led the Wolverines, who lacked the per- sonnel to match Shaw's tender- ed athletes. The freshmen get back into action Saturday after the varsity game at Crisler Arena, against U of M Dear- born. earned 162.25-161.80 conquest. Leading by a scant .7 points go- ing into the finale, the high bar, it appeared that with the nation's top high bar team the Salukis might overtake Michigan, but Cary Culbertson spun to a 9.15 mark and Bob Darden scored a brilliant 9.3 to offset a 9.4 performance by Ross, Olson. Black had his usual outstanding evening and his opening 9.35 seem- daill spot NIGHT EDITC CHUCK BLOC ed to spark the Wolver lead they never relin "Ward. definitely ga with his great show," Michigan mentor Newt set the pace and the picked it up." Black's showing was many superb effortst the Wolverines to roll ond dual meet victory son without a loss. Terry Boys combi mark with Black's s floor event to give Lo a quick lead. South came back to take th as Rupert Hansen w Wolverine to break 9.0 ed to a 9.15 mark. Although Michigan] rings event, the 1-2 pu Falb and Joe Neuens devastating. Falb, as last Saturday agains earned the Wolverine of the meet, this tim maneuvering to a fi Neuenswander wasn't nip sIU as he stunned the crowd with a great 9.3 performance. While Black started off well and Falb and Neuenswander were great on the rings, it was Captain Ray Gura who provided the in- spirational lift in the middle of the meet with his courageous 9.3 mark from the vaulting competition. 0M After spraining an ankle against the Buckeyes last week it was ines into the doubtful whether Gura would be quished. able to perform in the two events that really wear on the feet. He ve us a lift sat out the free exercise and was commented scheduled to also sit out the vault- t Loken. "He ing. But to everyone's amazement other men all of a sudden out walked Gura to take his place at the line. Show- only one of ing no signs of his injury, the gutty that enabled senior flew through the air and to their sec- was swarmed on at the middle of y of the sea- the floor by a fired-up bunch of Michigan Wolverines. ned his 9.0 On the fifth and next-to-last core in the event, the parallel bars, SIU gain- ken's leapers ed ground, not through their own hern Illinois efforts, but mainly by some sloppy ie side horse Michigan performances. Gura led vas the only Michigan in the bars with a 8.95 as he twist- mark. There was some excitement in this event however, as Jim lost the still Burwick did an almost unbeliev- nch of Monty able hand flip on the bars, remi- swander was niscient of Olga Korbut's stunt at was the case the Olympic Games. t Ohio State The Salukis were closing in dur- as' top score .ing the high bar but Culbertson, ne gracefully Darden, and Bruce Medd who fantastic 9.4. turned in a fine 8.9, put a squelch t far behind to whatever comeback hopes the r& ;;.Carbondale men had. BOSTON (AP) - The New York Then the Bruins began a rush with Islanders, in the biggest scoring a power play goal by Wayne Cash- outburst of their brief history, man and a pair of scores by John scored five first - period goals and Bucyk, his 22nd and 23rd of the shook off repeated Boston chal- season. lenges yesterday in snapping a Defenseman Bryan Lefley set 12-game National Hockey League back the Bruins' challenge as he losing streak with a 9-7 victory came out of the penalty box and over the Bruins. scored his first goal on a three-on- Don Blackburn and former one break at 15:29. Bruin Eddie Westfall each scored Hawks scalped twice as the first-year Islanders BUFFALO, N. Y. (AP) - Gerry posted only their second victory Meehan scored two goals and as- in their last 29 starts and picked sisted on a third as the Buffalo on the defending Stanley Cup Sabres defeated the Chicago champions for their initial tri- Black Hawks 5-1 last night in a umph over an established NHL National Hockey League game. team. New York, which has won only five games, shocked the Bruins as Blackburn scored twice and Billy Harris, who also garnered a pair of tallies. Ron Henning and West- fall once each in the first 18 min- utes against rookie goalie John Adams. Westfall made it 6-1 with his 12th_ 1 Lowly Islanders shock Bruins Linemate Hugh Harris had a goal and three assists. Between Meehan's goals, Den- nis Hull scored for Chicago on a hard shot from the blue line which t seemed to surprise Sabre goalie Roger Crozier, who was making his first start since Dec. 23 after being hospitalized with pancreati- tis. Jim Lorentz got Buffalo's third score, putting a rebound of Don Luce's shot past Chicago goalie Tony Esposito. Rick Martin hit for his 27th goal of the season early in the final period and Har- ris made it 5-1 a few minutes later. ----- ing goal early in the second period. WHA New York 4, Quebec 4, tie Houston 8, Chicago 3 Ottawa 6, Minnesota 3 ABA Indiana 116, Dallas 109 Virginia 116, Denver 110 ,wnar you wini your universiy cellar 9-10 p.m. weekdays 11-5 p.m. weekends i * ... -0 vs yy.:.. :" .'":":ti{4:'::C":":":": ':d4:d" 1:5.}}X 'r:{4:v?:"::r:.-:?y }:,v,'""s".j?: }i?' $:":t:j^{ : 'r: "."'r' r' s>{{ .'"{}t}::v:::{:? ic::":7 S:v id :K'q g?"'>'.":.::L?':"}..:° i' ...............:{4:"..... r.".4":a..{.:e."............ :..........: m.. Professional LE eague Standings Portland at Milwaukee Cleveland at Houston New York at Los Angeles l I 1 T 1 3 1 7 1 NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division WVL Pct. G Boston 37 7 .841 - New York 39 10 .796 Buffalo 14 31 .311 221, Philadelphia 4 45 .082 35 Central Division Baltimore 27 17 .614 - Atlanta 26 24 .520 4 Houston 17 28 .378 10 Cleveland 16 30 .348 12 Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 34 13 .723 - Chicago 29 117 .630 41 K.C.-Omaha 24 28 .462 121 Detroit 19 28 .404 15 Pacific Division Los Angeles 33 11 .750 - Golden State 30 15 .667 3 Phoenix 23 24 .489 111, Seattle 16 34 .320 20 Portland 11 37 .229 24 Yesterday's Results Buffalo 127, Atlanta 125 Kansas City-Omaha at Phoenix, inc. Tonight's Games Seattle at Boston Detroit at Buffalo Baltimore vs. Philadelphia at Hershey, Pa. Golden State at Chicago B %2 Montreal Boston N.Y. Rangers Buffalo 11Detroit Toronto Vancouvners N.Y. Islanders Chicago Minnesota Atlanta Los Angeles Philadelphia 4 Pittsburgh j/ 1 St. Louis NHL East W L T 28 6 11 28 11 4 28 13 4 24 14 7 21 17 6 15 23 7 13 27 6 5 37 4 West 2517 3 21 17 6 20 19 8 20 20 '5 19 20 6 18 22 6 15 21 8 Pts 67 60 60 .55 48 37 32 14 53\, 48 48 45 44 42 38 The crowd of over 1500 saw IMichigan extend its gymnastics mastery over SU winning its fourth straight without a loss. The Michigan squad was bril- liant last night almost completely GF GA I eliminating the mental and physi- 193 130 cal lapses that plagued them Sat- 171 116 urday. An excited Black summed 162 125 140 137 up the situation best: "We had 133 198 great team spirit this year. Tonight: 90 215 was really cool, everybody was 166 136 pulling for each other." 140 125 With a few more shows like the 124 1281 134 139 one witnessed last night at Crisler 151 155 Arena there will be a lot more 155 152 123 147. people pulling for the Michigan! 127 179: gymnasts. Daily Photo by RANDY EDMONDS RINGS SPECIALIST JOE NEUENSWANDER scores a fine 9.3 on the still rings in helping the Wolverin gymnasts last night to an upset victory over NCAA Champion Southern Illinois. Teammate Monty Falb scored an incredible 9.4 on the rings. A New Art of Speech Based on Rudolph Steiner's Spiritual Science by Sophia Walsh from Dornach, Switzerland Sunday, Jan. 21, 8 p.m. Second Floor Michigan League IN THE MICHIGAN ROOM SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. r "1x {j 2 z s t j . E !ti F California 8 24 1127 Yesterday's Results Montreal 5, Pittsburgh 2 New York Islanders 9, Boston 7 Buffalo 5, Chicago 1 Philadelphia 6, Minnesota e Tonight's Games New York Rangers at California Los Angeles at Vancouver St. Louis at Atlanta Only games scheduled ___ . CREATIVE REFORM SHABBAT SERVICE Cricle-Creative Poetry-Torah Study Wine and Chalah 8 p.m. FRIDAYS HILLEL LIBRARY 1429 Hill Street f. - ' IN PRE-LAW STUDENTS Do you need titles for your law school application? s THE BIG SHOE FOR YOUNG MEN who dig wide leg cuffed baggies, who lay on the layered looks, who wear flapping, flaring jeans. For him, and his get-together looks, this is the shoe! The five-eyelet moc oxford with stacked tall heel and platform sole. . .super-crafted in Italy of polished leather. Wine, THE ERAL LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT HAS SEV- IMPORTANT-SOUNDING POSITIONS OPEN. " LSA Student Judiciary (3 openings) I I