Women's Volleyball at Eastern Michigan Tuesday, 7 p.m. SPORTS Women's Golf Lady Wolverine Invitational Today, UM Golf Course 1he Michigan Daily Sunday, October 21, 1984 Pagel bae Blue I By TOM KEANEY . Who says Michigan can't dominate a game ottensively? Certainly not the Ferris State Bulldogs. The Wolverines scoring attack, led by center Brad Jones with a hat trick sim- ply overwhelmed Ferris State last night at Yost Arena 9-2, completing the two game sweep over the visiting Bulldogs. THE FIRST period was all Michigan. The Wolverines owned the offensive zone, due to the strong forechecking by the defensemen, and the forward pep- pered Bulldog goaltender Norm Young as Michigan carried a 4-0 lead into the dressing room. "I thought the whole game was played in the first period," said head coach Red Berenson. "I knew we would have to play well in the first tonight because of the way they started so strong last night."-. The scoring began at just 2:50 of the first when left wing Paul Spring picked up a stray pass in the right slot and punched it through Young's legs. BUT MICHIGAN didn't let up. At 4:02 ombs Bulldo left wing Tom Stiles brought the puck in on a 2-1 break, drew Young out of the net, and fed a beautiful pass to a streaking Brad Jones who had no trouble blasting it into the open net for his first of the night. Michigan added a power-play goal by Chris Seychel with 7:00 left, and John Bjorkman fattened the Wolverine' lead. to 4-0 putting a Ray Dries rebound over the sprawling Young.. At this point Michigan was at its season's best, and the Maize and Blue faithful couldn't have been happier. THERE WAS no letting up, as the Wolverines came out just as strong in the second period. At :47 Stiles and Jones again hooked up for a goal as the junior from St. Paul left Jones with a slick drop pass and the 6-1 sophomore kranked slap-shot past the flat-footed Young for Jones' second. Ferris State senior Brad Hildestad finally put the Bulldogs on the board, capitalizing on a defensive lapse with a short handed goal at 3:50, but Michigan behind the strong goaltending of senior Jon Elliott was never in any danger. JONES COMPLETED the hat trick at 16:06 with yet another 2-1 feed from playmaker Tom Stiles, and the rest was gravy. Michigan finished out the scoring with goals by Frank Downing, John Bjorkman (his first) and a blistering slap-shot goal by Pat Goff from the left point, but the outcome had long been decided. Michigan had better skating and was hungry around the net," said Ferris State coach Dick Bertrand. "If they play this way in this rink the rest of the season, they'll be unbeatable." Credit Elliott for a fine game in goal and the entire Michigan defense which s,9-2 denied the Bulldogs any decent shots on the net. The offense, however was the real show last night, putting intense pressure on Young all night despite the droves of penalties called against the Wolverines. Chris Seychel was slapped with a ten- minute misconduct in the second stanza in a fight that sent Bulldog defenseman Jody Hennigar to the showers with a game misconduct. The second period alone saw 15 penalties including the two misconducts. Michigan goes up against conference rival Bowling Green this Friday at Yost and will travel to Bowling Green on Saturday night. TUESDAY LUNCH - FORUM October 23 - 12 Noon "WOMEN'S VOTE - 1984" Speaker: DR. MARJORIE LANSING Professor, Political Science, Eastern Michigan University AT THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER For additional information, 603 E. Madison St. please call 662-5529 Sponsored by: THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER CHURCH WOMEN UNITED IN ANN ARBOR Lunch - $1.00 Puppy Chow FIRST PERIOD Scoring:M-Spring (Kobylarz, Carlile) 2:50; 2. M-Jones (Stiles) 4:08; 3. M-Seychel (Downing, Carlile) 13:00: 4. M-Bjorkman (Dries, Lockwood) 17:55. Penalties: M-Jones (crosschecking) 4:32; M-Kobylarz (highsticking) 6:05; FSU-Seaver (holding) 6:30; FSU-Hildestad (crosschecking) 11:03; M-Bjorkman (roughing) 14:50. SECOND PERIOD Scoring:M-Jones (Stiles) :47; FSU-Hildestad (Craig) 3:10; M-Jones (Stiles) 16:06; FSU-Seaver (Caya) 16:53; M-Downing (McNab) 17:14. Penalties: FSU-Sparago (high sticking) 2:57; M-Spring (roughing) 5:28; FSU-Sparago (roughing) 5:28; FSU-Wendt (holding) 7:01; *M-Jones (roughing) 8:09; FSU-Schluter (roughing) 8:09; M-Seychel (roughing and ten min- ute misconduct) 10:29; FSU-Hennigar (roughing and game misconduct) 10:29; FSU-Wendt (inter- ference) 11:52; M-Carlile (tripping) 12:17; M-Nor- ton (roughing) 13:22; M-Neff (high sticking) 16:20; M-Kobylarz (roughing) 18:06. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: M-Bjorkman (Lorden, Lockwood) 1:26; M-P. Goff (Kobyiarz) 14:28. Penalties: FSU-Caya (interference) 7:44; M-Stiles (hooking) 8:36; FSU-Podger (high sticking) 2:24; FSU-Lowden (holding) 15:57; M-Bjorkman (tripping) 16:59. Michigan forward John Bjorkman shoots through Bulldog defenseman Brad Hildestad to score the Wolverines' fourth and final goal of the first period, in last night's action at Yost Arena. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: Gophers pound Wolverines, 3-2 tineiee St.. ISOUTMUFFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST Installed Byn NSTALLED Featuring... *FITS MANY *k AT. SMALL CARS PARTICIPATING One of the finest names DEALERS ; na;omtve;ws By SKIP GOODMAN Despite Friday night's thrashing at the hands of Wisconsin, Michigan's women's volleyball coach Barb Can- ning elected not to change her strategy going into last night's game against Minnesota at the CCRB. But it made no difference anyway with Michigan falling to the Gophers, 3-2. . "We are going to stick with the same lineup basically," said the, first-year coach. "We're using two setters, (An- drea Williams and Lisa Vahi) rather than one as we had been previously." 'CANNING'S strategy appeared to :a off as the Wolverines utilized f" newed consistency in their serving ,apd excellent front-line blocking to stall tie Gopher attack enroute to a convin- -ng 15-4 triumph in game one. i~chigan had a fierce battle in the second contest as both teams traded the momentum. The Wolverines prevailed in overtime, 17-15. The Gophers survived a late five- joint Michigan run to take game three -*om a'disorganized Wolverine squad. The spikers made numerous fundamen- -tal errors and let Minnesota build-up an jIlposing 11-4 lead. Sophomore Wendy :Confer's fine play at the net led the Michigan come-back effort as they -drew as close as 12-9. Minnesota :quickly rebounded to wrap it up, 15-9. SIn game four, Minnesota's balanced, -hard-.hitting attack stunned the W:bewildered Wolverines. Once again, -Michigan mounted a late comeback at- :tempt that fell short when a missed spike by junior Jenny Hickman took -the wind out of its sails, allowing Min- besota to coast home 15-8. The Gophers rapped up the match 4ith a 15-13 win in a hard-fought fifth game. Canning said that her young team suffered from drastic momentum Changes. Said Canning, "We can't change the momentum ourselves. When we falter, it really snowballs." Linksters in fourth A field of seven teams compete today in the final round of the Lady Wolverine Invitational starting at 10:15 a.m. at the university golf course. Coach Sue LeClair fields two teams in the tour- iament. The Blue team, consisting of the members of the traveling squad, and SCORES Iowa 26, Michigan 0 o to State 23, Michigan State 20 Wisconsin 20, Indiana 16 Illinois 34, Purdue 20 $*th Carolina 36, Notre Dame 32 h4)ssouri 61, Kansas State 21 North Carolina 28, North Carolina State 21 Clemson 54, Duke 21 Penn State 21, Syracuse 3 Georgia 62, Vanderbilt 35 Miami (Fla.) 27, Pittsburgh 7 S(uthern Mississippi 13, Mississippi 10 the Maize team, go up against teams from Bowling Green, Michigan State, Purdue, and two squads from Ferris State. Michigan State leads following yesterday's action with a 328 score. Bowling Green and Purdue trail the Spartans with marks of 339 and 345 respectively. The Wolverine Blue team is fourth at 351., Sandy Barron and Missy Bauer each had an 87 to lead Michigan scorers. "The scores were high today, but I ex- pected it because our course is tougher than other schools'," Coach LeClair said. "The course played long and the teams had trouble on the greens." GREG CHRISTOPHER Harriers fish second A strong overall team performance led the Michigan men's cross country squad to a second place finish in the Central Collegiates meet in Milwaukee. Five Wolverines placed within 40 seconds of one another and according to Head Coach Ron Warhurst, "that's a very good sign." Michigan's 95 points put them well behind Ohio University's 60, but it was good enough to place them well ahead of Big Ten rival Northwestern, once' touted as one of the nation's top 20 teams. "They (Northwestern) were ranked 17th and we were really happy to beat them, but they were overrated," Warhurst said. Dave Meyer was the top Michigan finisher placing seventh with a 25:16 time. Chris Brewster followed in 11th place. Rounding out the Wolverine pack were Bill Brady (17th), Bob Van- denberg (23rd), and Jim Schmidt (37th). The performance prepared the team for next week's Big Ten Championships at Purdue. Warhurst was obviously pleased with the effort. 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