i i C' A SPORTS the Michigan Daily. Wednesday, September 29, 1982 Page 7 SETS'M' CAREER FIELD GOAL RECORD Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRlEF Ali Haji-Sheikh kicks a 47-yard field goal in Saturday's game against UCLA. Haji-Sheikh also hit a 48-yarder in the game, the longest of his career. Rich Hewlett is the holder. Club Sports Roundup RUGBY Michigan's 'A' Rugby Club, last year's National Collegiate semi-finalists, upped their record to 2-0 with a 19-13 victory over the Fort Wayne Rugby Club last Saturday in Fort Wayne. Jeff Hinkle's second-half try sealed the win for the 'A' squad after a tightly played first half. The 'B' team also raised its record to 2-0 by beating Fort Wayne's second group, 56-0. It was the second consecutive lopsided victory for the Ruggers' second . squad, as they blasted the Detroit Tradesman Rugby Club two weeks ago by the score of 37-0. Seven different players recorded tries for the 'B' Ruggers, and Mark Hoch hit for three conversions. The 'A' team also defeated the Detroit Tradesman squad last weekend, chalking up a 13-11 win. Michigan constantly fought off the feisty Detroiters, clinging to a slim lead throughout the entire contest. David Weber and Peter Maglocci each made tries to pace the Ruggers, and Jack Goodman added a conversion. This Saturday, Michigan plays host to the Detroit Rugby Club at Elbel Field. The 'A' and 'B' squads will be joined in action by the 'C' team, which will be competing in its initial contest of the season. SAILING Twenty teams from all over the nation joined the Michigan Sailing Club in the Navy Fall Invitational Regatta in Annapolis, Maryland Saturday. Michigan finished tenth overall, as Navy blew by the pack-to claim victory by a large margin. Kings Point Merchant Marine finished second, and Tulane placed third. Michigan's stand-out performer was C-Division sailor, Jorge Freeland, who placed fifth in his divisional competition. Doug Wefer, Michigan's D- Division sailor, was somewhat pleased with the squad's performance. "This was kind of an off week," he said, "but some new people got to sail, so it was a building weekend." This weekend, the Sailing Club hosts the Cary-Price Memorial Regatta on Baseline Lake in Dexter. The sailors hope to rebound from their mediocre finish last week to showlavorably in more friendly waters. SOCCER Michigan's Undergraduate and Graduate Soccer Clubs were both in action this past Saturday, as the Undergrads played host to Central Michigan at Ferry Field, and the Graduate team travelled to Dearborn to meet the Detroit College of Business squad. After spotting CMU a first-half 3-0 lead, the Wolverines finally got on the board when Tong Park hit the back of the net. After another Chippewa score, Michigan narrowed the gap to 4-3 on successive goals by Eric Freeburg and Paul Oren. Although the Undergrads had numerous chances at the close of the game, they could not net the equalizer. The Graduate team opened its season last Saturday in Dearborn against the Detroit College of business with the hope of improving on last year's 4-5-1 record. They accomplished part of that, tying the Detroiters 1-1. Carlos Selke opened the scoring about 15 minutes into the second half with a blast from 20 yards out, Detroit scored the tying goal six minutes later, and the rest of the game featured strong defense and solid goalkeeping by both squads, as the game ended without additional scores. The Graduates continue their season Saturday when they take on the Michigan Undergraduate squad at Elbel Field. Game time is 6:30 p.m. 0e Haji-Sh By BOB WOJNOWSKI Three years ago, when the Iranian kicker with the funny name arrived on campus, Michigan fans would chant "Ali, Ali, Ali," in an insane, fanatical ritual every time the man they call Sheik prepared to kick. Today, Ali Haji-Sheikh's name is not as novel and the chants are not as vocal, but his kicking continues to im- prove. In last Saturday's 31-27 loss to UCLA, Haji-Sheikh hit a 47- and a 48- yard field goal which made him the all- time Michigan leader in career field goals with 22, but the quiet senior from Texas downplayed the accomplish- ment. "THEY WERE two of the better kicks in my career," he says. "But I didn't think too much about the record until someone mentioned it." And that is not out of character for Haji-Sheikh. He is an unexcitable character with an icy coolness and, now, a burgeoning confidence that has been borne out of a resolve to seek suc- cess, rather than avoid failure. "My freshman year, it was 'What if I miss?' instead of 'I'm gonna make it,' he says. "It was confidence, not pressure that got to me." INDEED, Haji-Sheikh professes im- munity to pressure, though he has not yet been forced to attempt a last-second field goal. "I try to not really think about it (the pressure) - I think like it's just practice," he says. "Once I look at the tee and the goal posts, I never look up. When I hear the ball hit the holder's hands, then I know to kick it." Haji-Sheikh has kicked it to the tune of 42 consecutive extra points - the seventh longest streak in Big Ten history- and three of four field goals this year. And Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler isn't at all surprised with his kicker's steady improvement. "HE'S ALWAYS had the potential but he has missed a few kicks in the past," says Bo. "He's always had a strong leg - 50-yarders in practice are not un- common." What is uncommon about Haji-Sheikh is his name and his background, both of which probably get more attention than any record-breaking field goals. His father is a native of Iran and a graduate of Michigan. Ali was born in Univer- sity Hospitkland moved to Texas at an early age. His father is currently a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Texas-Arlington, and it was as a grade-school youth in Arlington that Ali took up soccer and then football and nurtured hopes of k h give, returning to Michigan to play for the Wolverines. "M1y total goal since high school was to come up here and kick," says the man whom the late Bob Ufer once referred to as the "only Iranian kicker who wears cowboy boots." SO IN THE fall of '79 he walked on to the team and into the midst of the Wolverines' famed kicking woes, and earned a spot as Bo's kicker. At the hostages were seized in Iran a while ago. "Some guys on the team would kid me and say 'Where are you hiding them?,' " he says. For now, Haji-Sheikh is content to pursue his degree in geology and wait to see what the pro scouts have to say about him. He is happy about his con- tinued improvement after what he ad- mits was a tough freshman year and he I RMY 2SURPLUS 201 E. Washington at Fourth OPEN M-SAT, 9-6 OPEN FRI. 9-8 994-3572 NJ Blue a f 15% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE WITH THIS COUPON (Except Sole Items) Selected Merchandise up to 50% off in our new bargain basement. (Exp. Sat., Oct. 2, 1982) MD Haji-S'eikh ..22 career field goals big kick awaits that last-second field goal try and a chance to show off his nerves of steel. Until then, he'll labor as the Michigan kicker with the funny name; "I'll introduce myself at a party as Ali Haji-Sheikh, and they'll say 'Come on, what's your real name?' " Maybe now as Michigan's all-time field goal leader, they will know. U of M School of Musicy PeA.Cee Preparatory and Community Enrichment Because of demand registration has been extended through Thursday, Sept. 30. CLASS LESSONS IN: VOICE, VIOLIN, PIANO, GUITAR AND PERCUSSION $42.00 for 12 half hour lessons. 12 weeks. Plus $5.00 Registration CLASS LESSONS IN: BEGINNING BALLET, JAZZ DANCE AND MODERN DANCE. also INTERMEDIATE BALLET AND MODERN DANCE. $144.00 for 24 lessons, 12 weeks. Plus $5.00 Registration REGISTRATION IN ROOM 602 BURTON MEMORIAL TOWER- 9 a.m. to 3s P.m. September 27, 28, 29 and 30. Mon. through Thurs. Call: 764-6118 conclusion of his freshman year he was offered a scholarship and he has been the Michigan kicker ever since. Perhaps his greatest asset as a kicker is his ability to consistenly deliver non- returnable kickoffs, though the one that the Bruins' Dokie Williams returned 65 yards on Sat.urday was obviously retur- nable. "That's the first time anyone's run one back on us," he says. "I'm not used to doing a lot of tackling - I didn't have the right angle on the guy." LIKE MOST kickers, Haji-Sheikh . has his mannerisms and nuances that he goes through before a game, though nothing of the proportions that would qualify him as a flake. "I do the same little things every week," he says. "Like for instance, I never eat scrambled eggs during the pre-game meal because 1 had a good game my sophomore year against MichiganState and I didn't eat scram- bled eggs before that game." That's as off the wall as Haji-Sheikh gets. He jokes now of the kidding he took for his heritage when the American SCORES American League Detroit 9, Baltimore 6 Toronto 3, Minnesota 0 New York 6, Cleveland 4 Milwaukee 9, Boston 3 S c h o o l o f E d u c a tio nAs Fall Lecture Series Public Policy and an Educated Society A Continuing Dilemma Thursday, September 30 Torsten Huse~n Why Comprehensive Education? - Some European Experiences 8 to10 p.m. Rackham Amphitheatre Dr. Husen will return for discussion of his remarks: Friday, Oct. 1, 10 a.m. to Noon, East Conference Room, Rack- ham Building. Dr. Husen is Chairman in International Education and Director of the Institute of International Edu- cation, University of Stockholm. He has written more than forty books, including The School in Question: A Comparative Study of the School nr-,/ e F At Ilr. 7 si,,,- in tI./c t rn nr'.ipti HP 14Z A 'I Here it is! Herpes Simplex Virus Types Iand II are viral infections affecting an estimated 20 minion Americans. To date, there is no known cure for Herpes. n Now, Virex, Inc. is offering HERPOEZ" Tablets and Drops, both containinrg 2,6-di-tert-butyl-p-cresol, a compound -which has been demonstrated to be alrn potent inactivator of Herpes Simplex Virus.->aor HERP-EZ" Drops contain 2,6-di-tert-butyl-p-cresol sehave dispersed in mineral oil, to be used in conjunction with _ card reat HERP-EZ" Tablets, a dietary supplement (to be taken the oper with meals) containing both TheiOnized-- I