Page 12-Friday, March 5, 1982-The Michigan Daily -v'M'tracksters Bean and Harper I-compete for top long jumper spot By SARAH SHERBER Ever since Vince Bean and Derek Harper were in high school, the two have been engaged in a running battle, or more appropriately a jumping bat- tle. The pair have competed against each other for top long-jumping honors since Bean was enrolled in Southfield High School and Harper was at Pontiac Nor- thern: NOW THE DUO are fighting for top Michigan honors. With the loss of last year's Big Ten Indoor long jumping champion, James Ross, who has become ineligible to ann nn DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR " 200 Rooms Color T.V.'s * Cocktail Lounge * Direct Dial Phones * NearU of M * Commercial Rates & Group Rates Available " Major Credit Cards Honored * Call'for Reservations 100 S. Fourth Ave. 769-9500 compete this year, the position for the best jumper is now open. Track coach Jack Harvey does not seem too worried about the loss of all- time varsity record holder Ross. Ac- cording to Harvey the problems are "less than they would have been if we hadn't had two good back-up jumpers." AND SO THE competition begins again. Looking at their accomplishments, both Bean and Harper seem evenly matched. Last year Bean finished second in the Big Ten Indoor meet with a jump of 24'7". During the spring Harper took the runner-up spot in the out door meet leaping 24'31/4". Throughout every meet this season the pair have finished in the one-two spots. Harper won the first four com- petitions and Bean captured the 'last two. At last weekend's Wolverine In- vitational the two broke the 25' mark (Bean-25'31/2", Harper 25',3") and both have earned invitations to next weekend's NCAA meet at the Silver- dome. BUT THE question of the long dual remains. "I think that their rivalry is a good rivalry. There is no feeling of animosity between them," said Har- vey. "We're still rivals," said Harper, though he admits that it is to his advan- tage. "Some of my best jumps have been against (Bean)." "We still compete but it's more of a friendly type of competition," added Bean. THERE MIGHT be a little extra in- centive for Bean to excel in college sin- ce according to the two-sport man (he plays football for the Wolverines it was Harper who finally won the high school title. "He won the state meet with 25 feet," said the split end. While their accomplishments are similar, the methods in attaining them are different. Harper has relied primarily on his speed while Bean ap- pears to depend heavily on his strength. CHANGING sports for Bean has not been that much of a problem for him. "It was last year," admitted the sophomore, "but this year not at all." "(The long jump) is one of the few events you can to straight to from foot- ball," said Harvey. Though Bean will attest to the fact that he enjoys track much more than football, he has no plans of giving up either. "I WASN'T SURE if I was going to long jump any more I came here for football," said Bean. "The person who got me to try out was Dave Hall." Hall, who also plays football, had competed in the long jump until this season when he defected to the basketball team. The next match for both Bean and Harper will be today and tomorrow as they compete in the Big Ten Indoor Championships in Bloomington. Since they hold the best (Bean) and second best (Harper) jumps in the Big Ten this season, the outcome of the meet seems predictable. Bean feels that he knows exactly how the outcome will be. "(The winner) will definitely be the person who has the last jpmp. That's what it's gonna come down to." THOUGH THE pair seems to have this meet in tow, next week is a dif- ferent story. "I look back at the NCAA's last year and 25'2" took sixth place, said Harper on his chances to score next week. "We're both just happy to get there," said Bean. 0 Harper and Bean ... Michigan long-jumpers continue rivalry SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Pistons corral Bulls for sixth time By BOB WOJNOWSKI Special to the Daily PONTIAC - It wasn't a Notre Dame alumni reunion - though it looked like it. But then again, it wasn't really even a game - though it looked like it. What it was, was a Detroit Pistons sixth straight beating of the Chicago Bulls; but unlike the others, this was an old-fashioned pummeling, as the Pistons blasted the Bulls, 122-97, last night at the Silverdome. WITH FORMER Notre Dame players Bill Laimbeer and Kelly Tripucka star- ting for the Pistons, and reserves Orlando Woolridge and Tracy Jackson - also.Notre Dame grads - playing for the Bulls, one would have thought the site was South Bend and the year was 1979. Certainly the Bulls wished it so. "They're good players (Jackson and Woolridge) and I enjoy playing against them," said Laimbeer, who started at center and finished with 10 points and 18 rebounds. "It's good to beat them, though it was the sixth time," said Tripucka, who scored a game-high 24 points. AS CHICAGO head coach Rod Thorn said, the game was out of reach" with the opening jump ball." The Pistons lead by just three points af- ter the first quarter, but blew the game wide open by outscoring the Bulls 28-15 in the second period. Forward Terry Tyler came off the bench to score 10 points and spark that rally. Chicgo could get no closer than 12 points the entire second half, as Tripucka scored 10 points in the third period. Detroit held advantages of as many as 30 points in the fourth quarter. "I WAS PROBABLY as proud of this win as any this year," said Piston coach Scotty Robertson. "Chicago is a good team and we had three guys in street clothes tonight (Kent Benson, John Long, Edgar Jones)." Terry Tyler followed Tripucka in the scoring with 22 points, including 11 of 13 from the floor, and Isiah Thomas added 21, despite the fact that he was in a minor car accident before the game, and slightly reinjured his toe. Woolridge led the Bulls with 21 points while Reggie Theus tallied 15. The Pistons playing before a crowd of 3,439, upped their record to 26-33, while the Bulls fell to 23-35. Summers traded From wire service reports The Detroit Tigers have acquired in- fielder Enos Cabell and a player to be named later from the San Francisco Giants in exchange for outfielder Champ Summers, General Manager Jim Campbell announced yesterday. CABELL, 32, a righthanded hitter, is a veteran of 10 major league seasons- three with Baltimore, six with Houston and one with San Francisco. Summers, 33, came to Detroit in May 1979 from the Cincinnati Reds. Cabell has played in two league championship series, in 1974 with the' SEA QUARTER You can be a student-sailor for a college semester aboard the 95-foot U.S. Coast Guard inspected SCHOONER HARVEY GAMASE. From New England to the Carib- bean, the sea is your field laboratory in a practical and intensive educational ad- venture. SEA QUARTER is sponsored by Northeastern University and courses taught by faculty members. You will earn full credits in sciences and humanities and the credits may be transferred. For curriculum, cost and schedule, write or telephone- DIRIGO CRUISES 39 Waterside Lane, Clinton, CT 06413 Telephone: (203) 669-7068 . young players, infielder Jeff Cox and catcher Scott Meyer, in exchange for three minor leaguers. The A's acquired Darrell Brown, an outfielder who hit .270 in Class AAA ball last year, and pitchers Mark Fellows and Jack Smith. All three players will be assigned to minor league rosters. Netters edged, 5-4 Special to the Daily CORPUS CHRISTI,. Texas- The Michigan men's tennis team lost a heartbreaker to nationally 7th-ranked Texas, 5-4, in the second round of the Corpus Christi team tournament yesterday. Michael Leach won a three set match over Sonny Levine, ranked 25th in the country, by a 6-3,,6-7, 6-4 score, and Mark Mees followed at second singles with a 6-4, 6-7, 6-2 victory over Paul Crozier. THE NEXT two singles matches went to the Longhorns, with Craig Kar- don and Tom Fontana downing Michigan's Tom Haney and Ross Laser in straight set victories. Transfer student Bill Godfrey downed Texas' Gavin Forbes 6-1, 7-5, and Doug Crawford gave Texas a split of the singles matches with a 6-4, 6-2 win over Ihor Debryn. Leach and Mees easily downed Kar- don and Crawford in straight sets at fir- st, singles, 'but Levine and Fontana countered with a win over Haney and Debryn to set up the final match. After splitting two sets, Ted Erck and Crozier overpowered Godfrey and Laser to give Texas a 6-3, 2-6, 6-0 match, and 5-4 win of the day. The Wolverines, now 1-1 in the tour- nament, square off against Texas A&M today. . SCORES Villanova 88, Seton Hall 73 Georgetown 62, Providence 48 Old Dominion 70, George Mason 62 Iona 58, Fordham 55 Alabama 85, Georgia 74 Mississippi 59, LSU 52 Tennessee 57, Vanderbilt 54 Boston College 94, Syracuse 92 N.W. Louisiana 85, Mercer 74 Summers ... off to San Francisco Orioles and 1980 with the Astros. His career batting average is .273. Last season with the Giants, Cabell batted .255 in 96 games and collected 20 doubles, one triple and two homeruns. He scored 41 runs, knocked in 36 and stole six bases. In another deal yesterday, the Tigers traded with the Oakland A's for two FED UP WITH RISING PRICES? Join us at ... ~OLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE PRE-INVENTORY SALE I s,% REMOTE CARS c'HOT TOT..;' loom PALL. ROBOT WARS (313) 662-6594 322 S. 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