SPORTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, March 3, 1983 Page7 Sj--Big Ten championships - Canham ponders how to improve officiating 'M' tankers to contend By MIKE REDSTONE The Michigan men's swim team has several things going for it at the Big Ten Championships starting today in Indianapolis. These advantages include an undefeated dual meet record and a regular-season win over perennial Big Ten powerhouse Indiana. THE ONLY QUESTION yet to be answered is whether the Wolverines have enough depth to win their first Big Ten Championship since 1960. "Indiana has the most balance and depth in the conference," said Michigan head coach Jon Urbanchek. "They have 16 swimmers who are all capable of scoring points." While Michigan will also get its first look at the defending Big Ten cham- pion Iowa squad at the meet, Urbanchek still believes Indiana is the team to beat, because the Hawkeye's main strength lies only in two or three in- dividual stars. MICHIGAN captain Bruce Gemmell will be the only team member retur- ning to defend a Big Ten individual title. Gemmell won the 400 In- dividual Medley last year at Big Ten's, and is once again holding the best time in the conference for that event going into the meet. The Michigan divers will also be facing a tough test. Bruce Kimbell will be trying to avenge his early season loss to Ohio State's Doug Shaffer and win his fir- st Big Ten diving crown. .. Other Wolverine divers, Kent U Ferguson (fifth-place winner at the Big Tens last year) and freshman Mike Gruber will also be in the run- ning for top finishes at the meet. Gemm ellURBANCHEK was cautiously op- timistic for the meet before the team ..defending champion lfonTeday left on Tuesday. "We have proven this season that our top man in every event is very strong," he said "but we will need some surprises from our other swimmers to pull out an overall victory." These other swimmers expected to help Michigan's chances include Lance Shroeder, top seed in the 200 meter butterfly, and Kirstan Vandersluis in the freestyle sprint events. Michigan's 400 meter freestyle relay team, com- prised of Gemmell, Vandersluis, Mark Noetzel, and Benoit Clement, is also top seeded. The meet will run until Saturday in Indiana's new natatorium with preliminaries beginning at 12:30 P.M., and finals at 7:30 P.M. each day. Four to tumble for title By PAUL RESNICK The Big Ten gymnastics championships, to be held Friday and Saturday in Iowa City, will feature a four-team race for the championship among Ohio State, Illinois, Iowa and Minnesota. Earlier in the season, after defeating Iowa, it seemed as if Michigan might become a fifth contender for the title, but any such hopes were dashed when all-arounders Dino Manus and Gavin Meyerowitz sustained injuries in suc- cessive weeks. MEYEROWITZ STILL has a cast on his knee and will be out for the rest of the season, while Manus, recovering from a shoulder injury, has not prac- ticed for three and a half weeks. It was not until Tuesday that the trainer allowed Manus to resume full workouts. Ohio State, the favorite to capture the team crown, boasts the best average score in the conference, 275.98, and two of the top three all-arounders in Noah Riskin (55.76) and Jay Foster (55.47). Illinois is close behind the Buckeyes with a team average of 274:77 and has the top performer on pommel horse, Kevin Oltendorf (9.77), and high bar, Charles Lakes (9.81). / IOWA HAS the home-apparatus advantage and should therefore be aY contender, according to Michigan. coach Newt Loken. Minnesota has only the fourth highest team average (270.70), but has won five ofe the last six Big Ten titles and could wue Although, Michigan did score overI 272, before the injuries struck, Loken is now hoping the Wolverines Ketin McKee can finish "in the middle of the pack, Flor exercise leader maybe fifth." Individuals, however, may bring as many as four event titles back to Ann Arbor. Kevin McKee (9.66) has a clear edge in floor exercise over Hawkeye Stuart Breitenstine (9.60) and Buckeye Brian Baley (9.58). RICK KAUFMANN, with a 9.65 average, trails Wisconsin's Russ Johnson by just two hundredths of a point on still rings. Milan Stanovich has the best vaulting average in the conference, 9.71, trailed by Spartan Pete Johnson's 9.63. Hopes for the fourth individual title are shakier as they rest on the newly healed shoulder of Manus who has the top parallel bar average, 9.48. "It's questionable as to the level of competition," said Loken of Manus, "But he wants to be in. We're not expecting miracles." By RON POLLACK The officiating at Michigan basket- ball games this season has frequently caused fans to howl their considerable disapproval. Their anger has been ven- ted in various forms, ranging from loud booing to obscene chants. At Tuesday's Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics meeting, Michigan athletic director Don Canham expressed his concern about both basketball and football officiating, albeit in a more civil manner than Crisler Arena partisans. "I DON'T KNOW what to say about the officiating," said Canham. "I don't know what the Big Ten can do." Fans are not the only ones to voice their disapproval of the officiating this season, either. Earlier in the year, In- diana head coach Bobby Knight loudly complained about the officials after his team had defeated Northwestern in Evanston. "Knight was reprimanded for his complaints about the officials and he's not the only coach to complain," said Canham. CANHAM INDICATED- his exasperation about the matter when he said, "What more can the Big Ten do to get officials? The conference goes out and tries to get the best officials possible. The athletic director added, however, that complaints about officiating are not unique to just the Big Ten. "Every conference has the same problem," said Canham. "I've heard (North Carolina basketball coach) Dean Smith complain. Officiating is so damn subjective." Turning slightly optimistic, Canham said, "There is a (conference) liason committee which will do a better job of watching over officials in football and basketball." F---- m --m m -mm-m-m-m m m=mi m m - I FLIPPER McGEE'S I *TOKENS/for & 2 with Student I.D. 1217 S. University 1 1 --- mmmm mminmm=m mmm Ia TONIGHT'S BEER NIGHT AT UNO'S Ofthe By JEFF BERGIDA "I was always the pitcher in high school. Koufax never pitched." One would think that the man who spoke these words, Fred Wilpon, president of the New York Mets, might have become known in the baseball world as a player rather than an executive. However, the ace pitcher on e Lafayette High School (Brooklyn, Y.) team, that included Hall-of- Famer Sandy Koufax, suffered a torn rotator cuff during his sophomore year at Michigan and ended up in the business world. WILPON WAS contacted by a num- ber of major league teams after graduating from Lafayette, a school which has produced a number of iound and behind the desk and some other schools but I was anxious to go to Michigan because of Coach (Ray) Fisher. He was one of the finest men and baseball coaches that there ever was.'" After a successful year with the Wolverines' freshman nine, Wilpon made the varsity pitching staff in 1956 and although he did not see game ac- tion, Coach Fisher awarded him with a letter as a reserve award. DURING THE '56 season, Wilpon suf- fered the injury which has become in- famous for affecting the careers of such stars as Butch Hobson, Larry Hisle, Wayne Garland and Steve Busby. "I was never really effective after the rotator cuff," said Wilpon. "I never really threw the same way.'' Upon graduation in 1958 with a degree in speech and communications and a definite interest in business, Wilpon went into real estate and founded Sterling Equities, one of the largest of- fice, residential and recreational development firms in the nation. How does a successful executive make the move into sports ownership? WHEN THE Payson family put the Mets up for sale in 1980, Wilpon jumped at the chance to become part of the syndicate headed by publisher Nelson Doubleday which wanted to purchase the club. "I love the game and I knew the Mets would be a good investment," explained Wilpon. Doubleday and Wilpon leave the baseball operations to general manager Frank Cashen and his staff ("The buck stops at Frank's desk"). But the Michigan grad stays on top of things and has some opinions of his club, which has been mired in the bottom half of the National League's Eastern division since 1974. The Mets have been maligned for signing George Foster to a $10 million contract and seeing him have his least productive season as a regular as well as for patching up their pitching staff with 38-year-old Tom Seaver and 36- year-old Mike Torrez. Wilpon answers the critics: "IT WAS very important that we acquire some veteran pitching. Seaver, a guy who used to be the franchise, will help at the gate and is going to help our young pitchers. George Foster found New York just a little overwhelming last year. He's in perfect physical shape and we're expecting a tur- naround for him this year. I'm convin- ced that (manager George) Bamberger is on the right track." Wilpon has very favorable feelings towards his alma mater, where his daughter was recently granted ad- mission, and wanted to make it clear that his injury on the field did not put a damper on his view of his limited career. "Baseball at Michigan was very im- portant to me. I was treated totally as a gentleman even when I was hurt," said Wilpon. The man who pitched over Sandy Koufax is not disappointed withi the way things turned out. 7 su / QUART I QUART BEER AFTER 9 PM. 4 ON[E/.I. professional ballplayers over the years. In 1954, it was a rarity for a potential major leaguer to enter college but Wilpon did not hesitate to enroll at Michigan. "My parents and I decided that I would first go to college," said the chief executive officer of the Mets. "I was accepted by Duke, Michigan, Columbia PIZZA BY THE SLICE-$1 .00 DAILY 11:30-2 a.m. FROZEN AND CARRY- 1321 S. UNIVERSITY OUT AVAILABLE ANN ARBOR 769-1894 restaurant and bar Virginia rips Wake Forest GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Ralph Sampson scored 28 points as No. 2- anked Virginia cruised to a 107-74 tlantic coast Conference basketball victory over Wake Forest last night. The victory boosted the Cavaliers' ACC mark to 11-2 and 24-3 overall. Wake Forest raced out to a 20-13 lead in the first seven minutes, but Virginia rallied and tied it bn a Ricky Stokes' jumper with 11:39 remaining in the opening half. The score was tied twice more before the Cavaliers slowly pulled away and ventually opened a 46-32 edge on a Sampson dunk with 3:28 left. North Carolina 85, Georgia Tech 73 ATLANTA (AP) - Michael Jordan scored 24 points, 15 in the second half, as eighth-ranked North Carolina downed Georgia Tech 85-73 in an Atlan- tic Coast Conference basketball game last night. Jordan had two baskets, one a slam dunk, during an 11-0 Carolina spurt that stretched a 42-36 advantage to a 53-36 with 11:28 left in the game. Tech never threatened thereafter as the Tar Heels eventually rolled up a 23- point lead, their biggest of the game, which they hold on five occasions. -THE VICTORY lifted North Carolina to 24-6 for the season and 11-2 in the ACC. Tech fell to 12-14 and 4-10. Sam Perkins added 16 points for Nor- th Carolina.' Wilpon ... Mets owner - 5 INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A representative will be on the campus THURSDAY MARCH 10, 1983 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT *LEARN TO WRITE WITH YOUR ELBOWS. Professor Peter Elbow, a nationally acclaimed teacher of writing, has helped thousands of students learn to write more easily and effectively. Whether you're tackling a term paper or composing a poem, his invaluable books will help you, too. 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