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October 06, 1982 - Image 10

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1982-10-06

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6

Page 10-Wednesday, October 6, 1982-The Michigan Daily

McCAR THY SCORES TWICE FOR WOLVERINES

'M' stickers scalp Chippewas, 4-1

By TIM MAKINEN
The Michigan women's field hockey
team demonstrated complete
domination yesterday as it dismantled
Central Michigan, 4-1, at Ferry Field.
The victory boosted the team's record to
an impressive 6-1.
The Wolverine stickers broke open
the scoring midway through the first
half when Kay McCarthy chipped in a
shot amid a mass of CMU defenders.
McCarthy notched her second goal
minutes later, and Lisa Schofield
followed htat with a blistering drive
past the hapless Chippewa goalie to put
the Wolverines ahead, 3-0.
CENTRAL Michigan organized a
rally late in the second half and
managed to close the gap to 3-1 with a
goal, .but the Blue defense then stiffened.
and suppressed the Chippewa threat.
In fact, the Wolverine defense so bot-
tled up the CMU attack that Central

failed to register a single shot in the
second half.
Schofield rounded out the scoring for
the Wolverines with her second goal of
the contest, a finely executed penalty-
corner shot set up by McCarthy and
Dee Jones. Three of the four Michigan
goals resulted in directly or indirectly
from penalty shot situations, as did
Central's lone goal, a deflected shot
from Rosemary Gross. Michgian
goalie Jonnie Terry, although not
heavily tested, did make some fine
saves.
Michigan assistant coach Laura
Pieri attributed the victory to "a solid
defense and the attackers being very
supportive of each other. Denise Com-
by earned the attack award as offensive
player of the game, and Allison Johnson
picked up the defensive honors.
Michigan will next face Northern
Michgian Friday afternoon at Marquet-
te. The stickers are not looking past

Northern to future opponents, but they
are not overly worried about their
Friday opponents.
"We don't anticipate to many
problems with them," Pieri said. "If
we play the same game against them
that we played today, we will win.
"We don't think ahead, just go one
game at a time. And that's what makes
the team effective - they just go out
there, do the job and win," she said.
Michigan is ranked fifth in the mid-
west, and after Northern,
theWolverines will host Iowa on Oct. 15,
at Ferry Field.

fi

McCarthy
... leads stickers

Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER
Dee "Jones hits the ball upfield in Michigan's 4-1 victory over Central
Michigan yesterday. Halfback Bridget Sickon looks on.

Angels blow by Brewers,

8-3

League playoff game.
Brian Downing led off with a single
and Doug DeCinces then hit a grounder
back to Caldwell. The pit.cher's throw
to second, however, pulled Jim Gantner
off the bag for an error as both runner
were safe. Downing wound up on third
and DeCinces on second on a wild pitch,
and one out later, Baylor drove in his
first run with a fly to deep center field.
IN THE Milwaukee second, Ted
Simmons led off with a single and
Thomas, who shared the major league
lead with 39 homers with California's
Reggie Jackson, lofted a 1-0 delivery
from John into the left field seats, just
barely fair.
In the third, Milwaukee scored again
on a fielder's choice grounder by Cecil
Cooper. Paul Molitor started it with a
one-out single and Robin Yount then hit
a grounder deep to the hole at shor-
tstop. 'rim Foli fielded the ball and
when he threw to first, Molitor scam-
pered to third, barely beating the throw
from Angels' first baseman Rod Carew.
Cooper then hit a bouncer to second,

beating the relay to first as Molitor
scored.
JIM SLATON replaced Caldwell on
the mound in the fourth after Bob Boone
opened the inning with a single. After
Slaton got Downing to fly out, DeCinces
grounded to third and the ball bounced
between Molitor's legs and into left
field for an error, with Boone advan-
cing to third.
Grich walked, then Baylor laced a
single to left to push across two more
runs and tie a playoff series record for
RBI in one game.
Baylor ran his RBI total for the game
to five with a bases-loaded single in the
fourth as the Angels stretched their
lead to 7-3. Fred Lynn's solo homer in
the fifth put California up by five.
BILLBOARD
Tickets for the 1982-83 Wolverine
hockey season are now available at the
Athletic Ticket office at the corner of
State Street and Hoover. Friday night
season ticket price will be $37 and a
Saturday night season ticket will be $33.
The rest of the season ticket packages
will remain the same; staff $45, student
$30 and general public $70. Individual
reserved tickets will be $4 and general
admission tickets $3.
The Michigan hockey team will begin
their 1982-83 season with theBlue-White
exhibition game this Thursday October
7, 7:30 at Yost Arena. Tickets are
available at the gate and at the Athletic
Ticket office.
AP Top Twenty

Club Sports Roundup
RUGBY
Michigan's 'A' Rugby Club suffered its first blemish on a previously un-
tarnished record this past Saturday when it fell to The Detroit Rugby Foot-
ball Club, 20-11.
John Hartman scored early to give the Wolverines a 4-0 lead, but the
ruggers couldn't hold off Detroit in the second half. Hartman scored again
late in the game, but it was to no avail. The 'A' team's record fell to 2-1.
The 'B' squad fared much better against the Detroiters, pulling out a 13-8
victory. Brian VanDeusen and Paul LeBlanc each crossed the goal for
Michigan, and Mark Hoch added a field goal and a conversion to pace the
Blue attack.
Also victorious was the Michigan 'C' squad, which defeated the Midland
'A' Rugby Club, 8-3. After falling behind 3-0 in the first half, the Wolverines
used a staunch defense to hold off the Midlanders' charges while taking con-
trol of the game themselves. The second half proved fruitful for this inex-
perienced squad, as they shut Midland down completely and took the lead.
This weekend, the three teams travel to Columbus to tangle with the Sciota
Valley Rugby Club, described by 'A' team member Greg Rose as "one of the
premier sides in the Midwest."
WATER POLO
Loyola, Illinois was the site . of this past weekend's Loyola Invitational
Water Polo Tournament, which featured eight teams from around the Mid-
west,including Michigan. The Wolverines salvaged a fourth-place finish in
the tourney, defeating Purdue 15-7. Natt Buzzard scored four times for
Michigan. Iowa St. was next in the tournament for the Polomen, and the
Cyclones drubbed Michigan, 16-6.
The Wolverines missed a chance to redeem themselves when they next
took on Notre Dame. After spotting the Irish a 5-1 first-quarter lead,
Michigan fought back furiously. Chris Keehan led the attack with four goals,
but the team fell just short in the end, 12-11.
SAILING
This past weekend's sparkling weather allowed the Cary-Price Memorial
Regatta to be held at Michigan's Baseline Lake in Dexter. Michigan's
Sailing Club was the overall regatta winner, defeating Ohio Wesleyan by five
points, and easily outdistancing Miami of Ohio.
Scott Ferguson and Joanne Kune took the honors in the 'A' division, with 36
points. In the 'B' division, Michigan was also victorious, this time using fine
sailing by Doug and Ellen Wefer, along with Greg Danilelo and Beth Barten
to gain a five-point victory.
The Davis Trophy is at stake this weekend when the Sailors travel to Iowa
City to participate in another key qualifier for the Sugar Bowl Festival. The
women's team is scheduled to compete this weekend in New Haven in the
Northeast Women's Championships.
SOCCER
Michigan's undergraduate soccer club ground out a 2-0 victory over the
graduate club this past Saturday in the two teams' first meeting of the
season.
The first period was scoreless, as both teams were unable to capitalize
upon numerous opportunities. The undergrads took the lead 15 minutes into
the second half when Bruce Davidson converted a penalty kick which was
awarded after a pushing foul in the penalty area. The second goal came as a
result of a graduate miscue, when they inadvertently put the ball into their
goal.
Graduate captain Mike Backfield cited poor officiating as the major
reason for his team's loss. "That penalty call was totally unwarranted," he
said.
The two teams meet again at the end of the season, and the graduates said
they will have the necessary experience to win then.
Both squads take on Wayne St. this week, with the graduates hosting the
Tartars on Saturday at Elbel, and the undergrads travelling to Wayne St. on
Wednesday.
The Club Sports Roundup relates briefly the activities of Michigan
club sports during the previous week. This week's information was
compiled by Daily sports writer Mike Bradley.

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1. Washington (28)......
2. Pitt (15)..............
3. Penn State (9)........
4. Alabama (3).........
5. Georgia (1) ............
6. So. Methodist ..........
7. Nebraska .............
8. UCLA (1) .............
9. Arkansas............
10. Notre Dame........
11. Arizona State........
12. North Carolina......
13. Texas..............
14. Florida .............
15. Southern Cal........
16. West Virginia.......
17. Miami, Fla............
18. LSU ...............
19. Boston College......
20. Illinois ................

4-0-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
3-1-0
4-0-0
4-0-0
3-0-0
5-0-0
3-1-0
3-0-0
3-1-0
3-1-0
3-1-0
4-1-0
3-0-0
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1,082
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958
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GRIDDE PICKS I
If the American league play-offs go to
a fourth game in Milwaukee on Satur-
day, the Brewers are guaranteed to win
that crucial game. This is because
California superstars Reggie Jackson
and Rod Carew will be listening to
Griddes games on their Sony Walk-
mans during the game instead of con-
centrating on their ball-playing.
Jackson has even been known to be
hit on the head by fly balls while
celebrating a score by his favorite
Griddes team, The Rock. And you
thought he was just inept.
Try to beat the stars and win a small
one-item pizza at Bob's Pizza. Bring
your picks, including the score of th
Michigan game, to the Daily offices a
420 Maynard by midnight Friday. In-
clude your name, address and phone
number.
1. Michigan State at MICHIGAN
2. Wisconsin at Ohio State
3. Purdue at Illinois
4. Minnesota at Northwestern
5. Iowa at Indiana
6. California at Washington
7. Penn State at Alabama
8. Stanford at Arizona State

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