0 Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 14, 1984 OLYMPIC UPDATE Skier yanks first U.S. gold medal 6'- F full court PRESS (From the Associated Press) SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia - Unheralded Debbie Armstrong, a bub- bly 20-year-old relatively new to inter- national competition, gave the medal- hungry United States team its first gold medal of the XIV Winter Olympics yesterday as she outdueled teammate Christin Cooper in the women's giant slalom. Armstrong, who had never finished higher than third place in any World Cup race, passed Cooper on the second run to give the United States its first Alpine gold medal in 12 years and its first in the giant slalom in 30 years. AMERICAN TAMARA McKinney, eighth after the first run, clocked the fastest second run, a 1:11.72, but finished out of the medal race in fourth place with a combined time of 2:21.83. The 1-2-4 placing of Armstrong, Cooper and McKinney was the best showing by an American team in any Olympic Alpine event. Hockey USA 7, Austria 3 Center Pat LaFontaine scored three goals as the United States hockey team, already eliminated from medal com- petition, defeated Austria 7-3 last night YOU CAN LEARN BOTH! FINALLY! A SPEED READING PROGRAM THAT CUTS YOUR READING TIME WITHOUT SACRIFICING COMPREHENSION OR RECALL! FAST AND SMART . .. ISN'T THAT HOW YOU WANT TO READ? J BREAKTHROUGH RAPID READING ti. Call Days, Evenings or Weekends tor Details 6H (313) 662-3149 EDUCATIONAL 211 East Huron Street CN TER ' ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 STALK OUR SM ELVES And discover the pleasure of tracking down that out-of -print title in literature or the arts, science or history, a childhood favorite or a rediscovered classic. L Ironb pr 1s* -reasonable Prices* for its first victory in the Olympic hockey tournament. LaFontaine opened the scoring 12:04 into the game. David Jensen gave the Americans a 2-0 lead 1:08 later. Austria, 0-4, rallied to tie the game on goals by Johann Fritz, at 18:32 of the first period, and Eddy Lebler, 3:54 into the second period. But the United States, now 1-2-1, took a 4-2 lead on LaFontaine's second goal of the night at 3:42 and Jensen's second just 11 seconds later. The Austrians cut the deficit to one on a goal by Richard Cunningham, but the United States broke it open on LaFon- taine's third and single goals by Thomas Hirsch and Scott Fusco. Soviet Union 6, West Germany 1 at the Winter Olympics with an 8-1 rout of Norway. By the time Gagner began his scoring, the Canadians had a 3-0 lead on first period goals by Russ Courtnall and Darren Lowe and a second-period score by Pat Flatley. Czechoslovakia 7, Finland 2 Frantisek Cernik scored twice in the first period last night _to lead Czechoslovakia to a 7-2 Olympic hockey victory over Finland that assured a spot in the medals round for the Czechs. Figure skating Scott Hamilton, America's main man for a figure skating gold medal, traced the best figure eights in compulsories yesterday to take the competion lead. "Yahooo. I've been second all the time, always second, second, second," Hamilton crowed after winning all three compulsory figures - something he has never done in international com- petition. "I guess it sets me up pretty good." Cross country skiing Gunde Svan of Sweden skied to a gold medal yesterday when he outlegged two Finns in the men's 15- kilometer cross country race. Svan, 22, skied the sunsplashed cour- se in 41 minutes, 25.6 seconds in out- dueling Finland's Aki Karvonen and Harri Kirvesniemi. Karvonen won the silver medal with a time of 41:34.9 and Kirvesniemi the bronze in 41 :45.6. Dan Simoneau of Eugene, Ore., was the top American, finishing in 18th in 43:03.4. A _ - __ Cage rs' play smolders .. .. until enthusiasm flares By RANDY BERGER W HILE WATCHING Michigan's 71-61 triumph over Michigan State last Saturday it became clear to me why the team struggled through the first half of the Big Ten season. No, it wasn't because of Leslie Rockymore's horrendous shooting, although he has given a new definition to his nickname, ethe Rock,' for the countless bricks he's thrown up. Nor was it because of the team's inex- perience. That alibi is hardly justified when you look at first place Illinois which starts three sophomores. The problem with the Wolverines didn't have to do with talent or experien- ce but with lack of intensity. I honestly believe that the reason Michigan lost the close games at Purdue and Illinois was because they didn't want them as much. The team seemed to lack any motivation or emotion. There were no high fives, no diving after loose balls, things, you see in teams that can pull off wings in the last seconds. Not with talent alone It's been proven that you don't need great talent to win in the Big Ten this year. With the exception of Efrem Winters and Steve Alford, neither Illinois, Purdue nor Indiana have any pro prospects. The most important thing you need in order to obtain success in the this league is players who beleive they can win and will do anything within their capabilities to win. But just as I was about to label the Michigan players as a bunch of comatose underachievers, they finally showed some spark last Saturday. I mean players were actually slapping each other on the back and playing with fire in their eyes. Another barometer for measuring intensity is free throws and the team finaly made them, hitting 21 of 25 against the Spartans. Responsiblity for lack of motivation in the past has to fall partly on coach Bill Frieder's shoulders. After all, it's up to the coach to make sure his team is ready and motivated to play. While no one questions Frieder's basketball knowledge, his motivation skills are suspect. Frieder is not a screaming, wild maniac like Bobby Knight. Well, that was until last week when Frieder kicked his team out of prac- tice. "He was upset that we weren't practicing like he thought we could," said forward Richard Rellford. "We came back the next day and everybody was enthused and we then had two great days of practice." And last Saturday it was evident that Frieder's butt-kicking payed off as the team, especially Rellford, played with some gusto. Rellford resurges Rellford is sort of a microcosm of the team's problem. He has all the tools to be a great player - a good touch; agility and quickness - but lacks aggressiveness. That problem can be solved by pushing the player in prac- tice until he gets mad. Well, Rellford got mad Saturday against State. Just ask Scott Skiles who saw his fastbreak layup smashed into the third row by the flying Floridian. Rellford also hit five of six from the field, including a spectacular reverse dunk to end the game, and was a perfect two for two from the line. Rellford's metamorphosis into a more aggressive player is proof of what the team needs to win in the Big Ten. If the Wolverines can show the spark and fire that enabled them to beat State, they'll definitely improve in the Big Ten race and reach the NCAA tournament. However, Frieder has to stoke the fire, or the Wolverines are liable to get burned. Klwiris . . ....... ........................ v : .v.. .v :t: :.v............... . . v. t. :.:. w.::v,. ... av.....: .... .." ... . .:?..... ......A........................................v. ... . ... . . . .. ............. . ................".....................................v.:.........Ahl ...: ................. v . .. 4. n..................a..............................................................................r\........r.........f...}.................... .............................. ....................... . F...: .. . .........r............. }.:.:.:v:.. . . . . . . ...... . .:v:. .... 1000s of used PaPerbacks at 1/2 original cover price r WESTSIDE BOOKSHOP 113 W. Liberty 0.[, p. 1481 bring in this ad for 10% discount *good through Feb 29 Chocolates Give the gift of good taste. KILWIN'S CHOCOLATES 107 E. LIBERTY (313) 769-7759 Spartans sneak by Iloopsters By STEVE WISE ' Orethia Lilly's layup had cut the Spartan lead to just two, 68-66, with 26 seconds left on the clock. With a little more than 10 seconds remaining, Wolverine guard Lori Gnatkowski put Michigan State's Kris Emerson on the line shooting one and one.> Emerson missed and Gnatkowski grabbed the rebound along with an opportunity to make up for the foul and tie the game. AN OFF-BALANCE Gnatkowski didn't make the shot; the Wolverines didn't pull off an upset; and Michigan, now 0- 10 in the Big Ten and 2-16 overall, didn't break it's 10-game losing streak. The win Sunday extended the Spartan's streak in the op- posite direction, with the last two of MSU's five straight wins coming at Wolverine expense. In all fairness, though, the Wolverines improved significantly from last week's 76-63 loss to the Spartans. Michigan kept the game close throughout, making up ten and eight point deficits in the second half. "WE STARTED UP quickly and kept it going," said Wolverine forward Wendy Bradetich, whose 20 points tied her for leading scorer. "That's something we didn't do much in the past." 41 .: ,. ..n. .. ,.,... .. .. ......-................... ... ........ a....... ........v. ....... ....-..-....................................n.......... .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .....,..-................. ... :f.i n:. MSU chews two Blue crews 0 By SUSAN WARNER Despite Michigan women's gymnastic coach Sheri Hyatt's claim that her team came "nowhere close to its poten- tial," the Wolverines did well against highly regarded Michigan State in East Lansing on Sunday, but lost 175.70- 171.70. Michigan State's depth makes them a very strong team. Five MSU women took four firsts and five seconds. Said Hyatt, "MSU looks good. They're probably one of the top two teams in the nation." BUT THE WOLVERINES' own per- formance also "looked good". Dayna Samuelson took second on the vault with an 8.9, freshman Heidi Cohen placed third on the balance beam and sixth in the floor exercise and Kathy Beckwith took fourth in both the uneven parallel bars and the floor exercise. Beckwith also won the balance beam with 9.0 and she captured second place in the all-around with a total score of 35.40, trailing the first-place Linda Schmauder of MSU by only .25 points. High school All-America Caren Deaver gave another great performance for the Michigan tumblers. She had an in- credible floor routine that gave her a personal best of 8.75. Though happy with her teams second- highest overall score of the season, Hyatt said the team still needed to im- prove. The coach felt the team lost two- and-a-half points because of its unusually poor performance on the uneven parallel bars. Also, the Wolverines were trying new moves on the vault and floor exercise, which resulted in lower scores than usual. Men too The Michigan men's gymnastics team lost in a close meet to Michigan State, Sunday. The Spartans had a total of 264.25 points while Michigan finished with 262.85. Senior Merrick Horn led Michigan in several events with Gavin Meyerowitz and Brock Orwig also giving im- pressive performances. Horn brought in three first places with a 9.50 on the floor exercise, a 9.15 on the parallel bars and in the all-around competition he tallied a 54.30. In the vault, the only area that gave him difficulty, Horn finished fourth with a 9.10. MICHIGAN STATE'S experience proved to be a little too tough for the youthful Wolverine squad. Spartan senior Bruce Traver displayed his team-leading talent, winning in the pommel horse with an outstanding 9.8. Meyerowitz found it impossible to match Traver, settling for second place on that event with a 9.15. Meyerowitz also finished second behind teammate Horn in the all-around event, scoring 53.8 high bar routine. 4 o'r Woodstok ame will Speak, o CNANG-r&;'NOBoD( FOR. PRESIDT 4r- "'SURVIVAL wt1rt A SNSE o0F HUMCJ( ' go -'SUSAN BROSER Profile of a wolverine before 9 a.m.... We can't guarantee a stop to early classes, but life is easier at University Towers. Only 5 minutes from the diag, your classes, favorite restaurants, shopping and recreation, a true blue wolverine can afford a little extra sleep. Take advantage of the best location on campus! Our rent is vrv reasonable: m u N III.I MuINOR m I