A Page 10-Wednesday, November 10, 1982-The Michigan Daily BREWER SHORTSTOP OUTPOINTS MURRAY Club Sports SAILING The Michigan sailing team hosted the Area A eliminations last weekend on Base Line Lake. The sailors proved to be less-than-gracious hosts, however, as they completely dominated the event. Michigan took first place, seven points in front of second-place Notre Dame. The other five teams were never in contention for top honors. "It was an excellent regatta for us," said team captain Doug Wefer. "We were able to dominate the regatta, using our third- and fourth-string crews." Michigan boats took the top spots in both the A and B division races. The A boat had a crew of Dave Watt (skipper), Dianna Lowry, and Adam Rosen. The B crew consisted of Greg Danalich and Beth Borton. The victory qualified Michigan for the Timmie Angstan Regatta on Thanksgiving weekend at the Chicago Yacht Club. Cleveland State and Notre Dame also qualified. SOCCER How often does a goalie score the winning goal in a soccer match? Not very often, but it happened in the Graduate Soccer Club's 2-1 victory over Siena Heights College. Jay Weiss, who is normally the team's first-string goalie, was forced into front-line action because most of the starters were not available for the contest. The Wolverines nabbed an early lead when Paul Knight took a free-kick and chipped it over the defensive wall and into the net. Knight also had the assist on the game-winning goal.t Shortly after the first goal, the game was interrupted by a fight. After order had been restored, Siena Heights Roundup knotted the game with 15 minutes left to play in the first half. Weiss' game breaker came with 15 minutes remaining in the contest. "It was a wild game," said Captain Mike Backfield. "It was very physical out there. You know it's a strange game when your goalie gets the winning score and one of your players was playing his first game with the team." Saturday's victory was the graduate club's last game of the season. The undergraduate soccer club raised their season mark to 8-5 last Wednesday by defeating the Grand Cup Club 2-1. The Wolverines scored once in each half and con- trolled the contest from the beginning. Scoring for Michigan were Tom Park and Fatih Tezok. Grand Cups goal came late in the game when the out- come was no longer in doubt and Michigan had already put in their second and third stringers. Two weeks ago, the team dropped a match to Spring Arbor College by a 1-0 count. Spring Arbor is ranked six- th in the National Association of Inter-collegiate Athletics poll. "We played our hearts out against Spring A rbor," said captain Eric Freeburg, 'and it was a real tough loss. After that game, the club's moral has been really low. A lot of people have lost their enthusiasm and it was hard - to get up for our remaining games. The women's soccer club came back from a 1-0 deficit to defeat Ohio State 2-1 in Columbus. Goalie Carolyn Barns made some outstanding saves to preserve the'victory. The Club Sports Roundup relates briefly the ac- tivities of Michigan club sports during the previous week. This week's information was compiled by Daily sports writer Dan Price. Milwaukee's Yount named MVP Say - - - .' ,e "DISCOUNT EMUFFLERSM - AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST FROM AS LOW AS. Installed by Trained . *FITS MANY ~Specialists 9 SMALL CARS Installed *cAAT :::..":;'>=.tt;-.it;;iiPARTICIPATING DEALERS FOREIGN CARS Featuring CUSTOM DUALS ..r .HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS "One of the finest names CUSTOM PIPE BENDING BILLBOARD There will be a pep rally Friday night at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity for Saturday's Michigan Purdue football game. The rally, which begins at 7:30 p.m., is sponsored by the Martha Cook Student Organization, Beta Theta'Pi, and the University Activities Center. Head coach Bo Schembechler, tri- captains Anthony Carter, Robert Thompson, and Paul Girgash are ex- pected to speak. NEW YORK (API - Robin Yount of the Milwaukee Brewers, who capped his finest season by setting one World Series record and equalling another, was named Most Valuable Player of the American League by a large margin yesterday. Yount, a 27-year-old shortstop, received 385 points in balloting by a special panel of 28 members of the Baseball Writers Association of America, two from each AL city. Eddie Murray of the Baltimore Orioles was second in balloting with 228 points. YOUNT received all but one first- place vote. The other went to Reggie Jackson of the California Angels, who GRIDDE PICKS Did you ever wonder how Griddes got started? I knew you did. Once upon a time in a land far, far away, was a man who made pizzas. This man's name was Bob. It seems that this Bob made such incredibly good pizzas that everyone in the small village in which he lived wan, ted some. Every day. Every day for every meal. But since this was such a small town, Bob's ambitions outgrew his clientele, and so he moved to the land of the world's best beer drinkers - Ann Ar- bor. Bob rightly figured that students who drank so much beer needed something to soak up all those good suds - so he opened Pizza Bob's. And he needed a gimmick to set him apart from all those other pizza places, so he got in contact with those folks at the Michigan Daily and the Griddes com- petition was started. Besides, Bob had never won any competitions, and he figured he ought to be able to win a com- petition that he was sponsoring. But he never has. Show up Pizza Bob by bringing your picks to the Daily offices before midnight Friday for your chance at taking one more small one-item piza from the paws of big Bob. 1. Purdue at MICHIGAN 2. Ohio State at Northwestern 3. Illinois at Indiana 4. Minnesota at Michigan State 5. Wisconsin at Iowa 6. Georgia at Auburn 7. Penn State at Notre Dame 8. Washington at Arizona State 9. Clemson at Maryland 10. Missouri at Oklahoma 11. Stanford at UCLA 12. Virginia at North Carolina 13. Tulsa at New Mexico State 14. USC at Arizona 15. San Diego at Brigham Young 16. Mankato State at Nebraska-Omaha 17. North Dakota State at St. Cloud 18. Kutztown State at Layfayette 19. California State at Slippery Rock 20. Purdue Bowl Express at DAILY LIBELS finished sixth in balloting with 107 poin- ts. Third in the vote was Doug DeCinces of the Angels with 178 points, followed by Hal McRae of Kansas City with 175, Cecil Cooper of the Brewers with 152 and Jackson. In all, 33 players received mention on the ballot on which panel members were asked to vote for 10 players. Each first-place vote was worth 14 points, second place was worth nine points and on down the line to one point for 10th place. .In 1982, Yount coupled an improved offense with his most consistent season in the field to reach beyond the poten- tial that even his boosters had forecast when he broke into the major leagues in 1974, at age 18. BEFORE. THIS year, Yount's best season had been 1980 when he set career marks with a .293 average, 23 homers and 87 RBI. But he eclipsed that season in 1982 with a batting averae of .331, one point behind league leader Willie Wilson of Kansas City, who sat out the final game of the season to preserve his .332 average. Yount, whose bat cooled off during the American League playoff against California, was outstanding as the Brewers met St. Louis in the World Series. He hit .414 with one homer and 4 shared the team lead in RBI with Cooper by driving in six runs. in automotive parts YPSILANTI Off the Record By BOB WOJNO WSKI Last word on the Illini .. . .in a 'no-class' by themselves T HERE HAS BEEN perhaps too much and then again not enough said about the circumstances surrounding Michigan's 16-10 victory over Illinois last Saturday. More directly, too much has been said about the antics of the Illini and not enough has been said about the relative classlessness of those antics. First, some background. Last year, Michigan defeated Illinois, 70-21, and many felt that Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler had run up the score on the Illini. Observers reasoned that Bo harbored ill feelings toward the Illinois organization because of its wholesale recruitment of junior college players, its firing of Schembechler protege Gary Moeller, and the manner in which the Illini handled the Dave Wilson situation two years ago when the Big Ten declared Wilson, a junior college transfer, ineligible. Since that game a year ago, the Illinois coaching staff did little to temper the fans' cries for revenge and instead seized the opportunity to build a bloodbath rivalry with Michigan. Illinois head coach Mike White will deny that until he's maize and blue in the face but, after all, who authorized the word "Payback" to be flashed on the Memorial Stadium scoreboard throughout a week of practices? Who allowed a Wolverine football helmet to be filled with a vile-smelling substance and hung inside the Illinois locker room? When some of White's players, notably receiver Oliver Williams, spouted off about how the Illini would run up the score on Michigan this year, where was the coach to stifle them? It is very easy and perhaps desirable to dismiss the antics that Illinois engaged in prior to and during the game to fever-pitch emotional flames that had been fanned by inflammatory media coverage. But it would be more ac- curate to attribute the behavior to an Illinois team that suddenly this season became a prominent member of the Big Ten and got caught up in how prominent it would become. I do not wish to absolve Michigan of any wrong-doing, but clearly the Wolverines and the Illini engage in different forms of emotional hype when preparing for and then participating in a big game. And those differences can be traced to, and in fact are a reflection of, the varying personalities of the two coaches. Bo is arrogant. He is also stubborn. He is often belligerent. Some of his play-calling skills can be questioned. But a Schembechler-coached team has never, and would never, engage in the type of low-budget, no-class, and just plain stupid hijinks that the Fighting Illini engaged in prior to, during, and after last Saturday's game. White, who coaches and presumably leads the Illini, has never been ac- cused of being a stern disciplinarian. Nobody calls White arrogant. Nobody says he's particularly stubborn. Nobody says the Illinois football team has any class either. Two games at once I sat in the press box in Champaign and, when not mesmerized by the game being played on the field, was amused by the game being played off of it. It was a rough game-on the field-with a few personal fouls called and a few more that weren't. Illinois for the afternoon was whistled down for 93 yards worth of penalties, Michigan 40. When an Illinois player would make an exceptional play, he would make sure the entire audience knew, usually by jumping and thrusting a fist in the air. In pigskin jargon, that is known as show-boating. But the most disgusting display of classlessness occurred on the Illinois sidelines, where both players and coaches engaged in running conversations with Michigan players on the field. Almost, every Wolverine player who spoke after the game said that the observers on the Illinois sideline spent the entire game yelling at them, indeed even mocking them when they missed a tackle or blew a block. Mind you, this was not just behavior confined to the players, but the coaches also. And it was not just an isolated instance; nobody from either side would deny that it occurred. Michigan players after the game called it the most hostile atmosphere they had ever played in. More so than Ohio State, where they know what a true rivalry is. The Illinois players, meanwhile, had no tales of verbal abuse to tell. One guesses that they were not so abused. Instead, they said things like: "When you think of Michigan you think of great athletes; when you think of Illinois you think of great coaching." That gem brought to you by quarterback Tony Eason. The Michigan football program is far from pristine, but the point here is that the Illinois program is farther. And using classless methods to build superficial rivalries will not give the fans in Champaign anything to be proud of, anytime soon. 0 6 2606 Washtenaw Ave.......572-9177 (11/2 mile East of US 23) Individually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES VC DAILY AHD SAT.8-DP Copyright 01982 Meineke rE .'S COYSCORESA SECONDCH ANCE NBA Indiana 109, San Diego 95 AI NE New Jersey 84, New York 82 All Ladies Admitted Free .Ysadr4,.LoNHL 9. .. S N.Y. Islanders 4, St. L1 516 E. Liberty 994-5350 Rent a Car from Econo-Car OPEN 7ErEK DAYS A WEEK_ WE RENT TO 19 YR. 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