Wrestling vs. Iowa State Friday, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Basketball vs. Illinois Saturday, Crisler Arena SOLD OUT Tie Michigan Daily Wednesday, February 6, 1985 Page 7 Darden aiming to repeat o By SCOTT G. MILLER .Bob Darden would be a good subject for an American Express card com- mercial. Despite being one of Michigan's greatest gymnasts ever, few people would be able to recognize him. 'Darden became only the second gymnastics coach since the sport's in- ception in 1947 when the legendary Newt Loken retired after the 1983 season. Loken had amassed an amazing coaching record over his 36- year tenure that included 12 Big Ten titles, two National Championships, 71 individual conference titles, and 22 in- dividual NCAA champions. To succeed } Loken would be a difficult task for anyone, but Darden tries not to let the pressure bother him. "NEWT WAS a great tutor in dbaching and in life in general," said Darden. "Nobody could follow in his footsteps. I have to blaze my own trail. The pressure to do well cannot just v Z come from past greatness." Darden became involved with gym- nastics by accident. In high school his two older brothers competed in football and wrestling. Wanting to follow in their footsteps, Darden started his high school athletic career on the gridiron. "The people around me began to grow much faster than I was," recalled Darden. "So I quickly decided that I had to find another sport." He tried gymnastics and found that it accommodated his size much better than football. Today most gymnasts start when they are eight years old, and it is very difficult to begin in high school. The late start by today's stan- dards did not bother Darden. By his senior year in 1972, he was offered a gymnastics scholarship to Michigan. "I WAS originally recruited as an all- around gymnast," Darden said. "But there always seemed to be better all- arounders a little ahead of me. So I decided to specialize in my best event, the high bar." He certainly did specialize on the high bar. Darden won three Big Ten high bar titles, and as a senior finished second in the NCAA championships. "The highlight of my career was becoming an All-American my senior year. It was the culmination of many years of hard work and effort. I also en- joyed being on two Big Ten champion- ship teams in 1973 and 1975," commen- ted Darden. BEFORE Darden became head coach, he served under Loken for seven years while pursuing a graduate degree in business administration from Eastern Michigan University. "I do not have any real coaching highlight that stands out," he said. "Just being named coach of Michigan has overshadowed everything else. It is great to coach at Michigan." The reason Darden coaches is the same his athletes compete-enjoyment past g and the chance to excel. There are no dreams of future multi-million dollar professional contracts after the com- pletion of college gymnastics careers. THE GOAL of our program is to produce a well-rounded team and well-rounded student athletes," said Darden. Like any other coach, Darden's basic strategy is for his athletes to improve on a daily basis. "I want every day to be better for each of the gymnasts," said Darden. "Our team goal is to post a higher total point score each meet. Since we have been improving steadily this season, it will be tougher to post higher scores as the season progresses especially towards the Big Ten championships." DARDEN IS respected by other coaches and his team members. "Bob is a fair and a good coach, even though he ex- pects a lot from his team," said Michigan womens gymnastics coach Dana Kempthorn. "He has a positive attitude with his gymnasts that really pays off during meets." "Coach Darden is easy to get along with, does a good job in trying to motivate our team and has exercised great patience with us as we have gained experience," said gymnast Craig Ehle. Ehle's teammate Mitch Rose said, "Darden has set hard goals for the lories team to meet, and he is working hard to obtain those goals." DESPITE having only three scholar- ships to offer, the fewest in the Big Ten, Darden has built a cohesive unit from a diverse cross-section of talent. The Michigan team consists of recruits from the U.S. junior national team, in- dividuals who tried out for the junior national team, a member of the South African national team and walk-ons. Last season the tumblers finished fif- th in the Big Ten, and the top four Big Ten teams went to the national finals. This season the gymnasts have not won a meet, but they have performed ad- mirably considering the team's youth and collegiate inexperience. "We started the season off by scoring 248 which is poor by major college standards," said Darden. "Now we are pushing to score in the mid 260's." The tumblers have only one senior, team captain Stu Downing, and the remainder of the team has sophomore or freshman eligibility. The all-around squad, including sophomores Gavin Meyerowitz and Mitch Rose, and freshmen Craig Ehle and Nick Lan- phier provide a solid nucleus for years to come. If the youth continues to improve, the tumblers and their coach may gain the respect and recognition they deserve. 'I have to blaze my own trail. The pressure to do well cannot just come from past greatness.' -Bob Darden Ex-Spartan Rogers rumored to run Lions 'PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Arizona State University's head football coach, Darryl Rogers, "has been offered and will accept" the coaching job with the Detroit Lions of the National Football League, the Phoenix Gazette said in its late Tuesday editions. Quoting only "a source close to the Sun Devils' program," the afternoon uewspaper also said that move could 4pmage a planned major Arizona State recruiting effort. NO LIONS' spokesman was available for comment immediately in Detroit. The Gazette said Rogers was on a recruiting trip to California. It also said it had a report from Detroit that Rogers would fly to Detroit today to talk with the Lions. Rogers denied he was a candidate for the post last week. ROGERS HAS been under fire for a 5- 6 season with a young team. He came to Arizona State in 1980 from Michigan State and posted seasons of 7-4, 9-1, 10-2 and 6-4-1. K night defends Giomis dismissal Indiana coach sets own grading scale 2ff .1 .*...*a m esss ss . *.*m*..**..*. ** * .. . . . . . . - .....,..:. .,.}.: . :....w.......... True 81 F for me that hasn't been on the bench?" he said. "See, I put Quinn Buckner on the bench once for two games when he was a senior. Now this isn't a sophomore we're talking about, but a senior who had been my captain for three years, been an All-Big Ten player two years, All-American one year. And he spends two games on the bench. "I think, hopefully, what it does is give a player an opportunity to concen- trate on play and to really examine himself and see just what we are talking about. And being the kind of guy I think Steve is, he has got to learn something from any basketball ex- perience he has." Knight pointed out that he had made a similar lineup change against Michigan State last year without the same criticism. In that game,.Knight started senior guard Chuck Franz and then-freshmen Alford, Thomas, Morly Simmons and Todd Meier. However he did play Uwe Blab, Dan Dakich, Courtney Witte and Stew Robinson in the 70-62 overtime victory. By DouglasB. Levy BLOOMINGTON, (AP) - Cutting classes was the reason Coach Bob Knight booted Mike Giomi off the In- diana basketball team, and Knight says Giomi wasn't the only Hoosier player given an academic ultimatum last summer. "Daryl Thomas was told that if he cut What the world needs now. . r m A i tir Zt7; rrnrmgw " .jI VUUG r11 UnoneU2IU ('o nLdU 1114UU r N A WORLD consumed with hatred and tortured by senseless acts of [ violence, my word for today is LOVE. My years in Ann Arbor, as a student at Michigan, have been special. Here is a brief list of people, places, memories and ideals that I love: eDale Bahr, Michigan's wrestling coach. E Michigan Stadium filled to capacity. " Michel Oxenberg, professor of political science. " Krazy Jim's Blimpy Burgers. " Bo Schembechler. " Wrigley Field. " Willie Stargell. " Centre Court Wimbledon. " Bud Middaugh, a phenomenal baseball coach. " Joe McFarland, 134-pound Wolverine wrestler. " Yost Ice Arena. " Deng Xiaoping. " The Arb. " Barry Larkin. " John McEnroe. " Michigan beating Illinois at anyth ng. " U-M's History Department. " Antoine Joubert's leadership. " Sigma Alpha Mu. " The Pittsburgh Pirates. " My mom, dad and even my sister Sue. " Sidney Fine, professor of history. " White Castle after 3:30 a.m. * Joe Wells, Michigan's assistant wrestling coach. " Howard Cosell, anywhere, anytime, any issue. * The Rose Bowl, especially when the Wolverines play in it. * Michigan beating Ohio State at anything. " Debbie Dioguardi, an amazing sales manager. * Jerry Hanlon, his football players love the man. * Butch Wade and his ferocious rebounding. " Sports fans from Chicago. * The National Invitation Tournament. " Red Berenson and the future of Michigan hockey. " The eight residents at 1020 Oakland Street. " Buzz Alexander, Professor of English. " Phyllis Ocker, Women's Athletic Director " Bruce Madej, Michigan's Sports Information Director. " The IM Building. " The State of Israel. " The memory of Bob Ufer " The Beatles. * The Michigan Marching Band. " Tom Watson. " Reading Sports Illustrated. " Eric Turner for making three lean years bearable. " Gary Grant, the best freshman hoopster in the world. " Anthony Carter freaking out defensive backfields. " The Big Ten Conference. " Walter Payton's class. " Roberto Clemente. " Muhammad Ali because he WAS the greatest. " Ray L. Fisher Stadium. " John Fisher, an awesome young wrestler. " Jamie Morris for coming to Michigan over Syracuse. " Roy Tarpley and his lifelong ambition to be a point guard. " Hill Auditorium. " Hail tothe Victors., o Bill Frieder " Mike Leach, NCAA singles champion in 1982. " The Mazer family. " Eric Berman, LSA-SG President 1983-84. " Zingerman's 61 summer but rejoined the team as a walk-on, contingent on steady class at- tendance. Knight wouldn't discuss other id- nividual cases, but he told the In- dianapolis News in a telephone inter- view, "I expect each kid to do as well as he can academically. And if, in the in- dividual case of a kid that he is not doing as well as he can, and I check into it and if class attendance has been negligent, then class attendance becomes a prerequisite for that kid. "If he's not been going to tutoring sessions, then going to tutoring sessions becomes a prerequisite for that kid. If the kid has a tutoring session scheduled, I expect him to attend it. "IF THE KID is in some kind of lec- ture class and he's getting an A or B in it and he doesn't have perfect class at- tendance, I don't get all hung up about that if he's able to do the reading or whatever has to be done. "But when a kid has problems, if anytime a kid does and when we check the reasons for it, then I'll make whatever decisions that have to be done based on the individual kid." Knight said he talked with Giomi and offered to help him find another school. Giomi is enrolled at Indiana, but rumors are he has four schools under consideration. He would have only one remaining season of eligibility. KNIGHT ALSO reiterated his belief that the recent benching Steve Alford and three other starters against Illinois was not that drastic. "What starting player has ever played Michigan Basketball Statistics G-S FG-FGA Pct FT-FTA Pct REB-AvG A Pts Avg Tarpley ........................... Joubert ........................... Grant ............................. Rellford ...... ................. Wade.............................. Rockymore........................ Henderson ................... Thompson ......................... Stoyko ............................ Gibas ............................. DeGlopper ........................ 19-19 18-18 19-19 19-19 19-19 17-0 18-0 19-1 15-0 7-0 4-0 141-267 107-224 114-199 78-104 57-115 44-82 38-85 34-65 4-10 1-6 0-1 .528 .478 .573 .557 .496 .537 .447 .523 .400 .167 .000 77-101 53-72 37-44 51-4 27-50 27-37 22-33 23-29 6-10 0-0 0-0 .762 .736 .841 .797 .540 .730 .667 .793 .600 .000 .000 189-9.9 54-3.0 56-2.9 73-3.8 148-7.8 30-1.8 78-4.3 28-1.5 10-0.7 1-0.1 0-0.0 34 359 18.9 105 267 14.8 93 265 13.9 4 207 10.9 11 141 7.4 26 115 6.8 10 98 5.4 40 91 4.8 2 14 0.9 1 2 0.3 0 0 0.0 MICHIGAN ....................... 19 618-1194 .518 323-440 .734 723-38.1 326 155982.1 OPPONENTS ..................... 19 559-1128 .496 232-311 .746 558-29.4 258135071.1 BIG TEN STATISTICS Scoring Leaders Giomi ... couldn't make the grade classes in summer school he would lose his scholarship," Knight said of his 6- foot-7 sophomore forward, who is recuperating from a knee injury. "Daryl Thomas is still here." GIOMI, WHO started 11 games for the Hoosiers this season, was dismissed last Wednesday for not attending some classes. He had lost his scholarship last Vincent, MSU........... Stokes, Iowa .............. Roth, Wis.................. Skiles, MSU ............... Blab, Ind ............... TARPLEY, MICH....... Alford, Ind................. Davis, Minn............... JOUBERT, MICH....... G 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 9 9 FG FT 77 45 76 33 68 45 74 31 75 25 60 40 55 28 66 20 61 21 Pts 199 185 181 179 175 160 138 152 143 136 Avg 22.1 20.6 20.1 19.9 19.4 17.8 17.2 16.9 15.9 15.1 Avg 9.6 9.5 9.3 8.9 7.8 7.7 Wright, Iowa .................. 9 Montgomery, Ill............... 8 Bullock, Purdue ............... 9 Winters, Ill.................... 9 67 59 64 62 Field Goal Percentage G FG FGA Pct Blab, Ind...................... 9 75 118 .636 Bullock, Purdue ............... 9 54 96 .563 Roth, Wis...................... 9 63 122 .557 Shasky, Minn.................. 9 50 91 .549 GRANT, MICH................ 9 52 97 .536 7.4 7.4 7.1 7.1 Olsen, Wis..............9 62 12 Rebounding Leaders G Sellers, OSU ................ Johnson, MSU ................. Stokes, Iowa ................ TARPLEY, MICH............. Payne, Iowa............... WADE, MICH .............. 9 8 9 9 8 9 Reb 86 76 84 80 62 69 Free Throw Percentage G FT Alford, Ind..................... 8 28 Stokes, OSU ................... 9 24 Vincent, MSU ................. 9 45 Shasky, Minn ...............9 35 Sellers, OSU................9 30 FTA Pct 29 .966 28 .857 54 .833 43 .814 37 .811 PilI3E PREMIERES TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1985 a weekly feature every Tuesday in The Michigan Daily EVEN STRAIGHT A'S CAN'T HELP IF YOU FLUNK TUITION. Today, the toughest thing about going to college is finding the money to pay for it. But Army ROTC can help -two ways! First, you can apply for an Army ROTC scholarship. It covers tuition, books, and supplies, and pays you F up to $1,000 each school year it's in effect. But even if you're not a scholarship recipient ROTC can still help with financial assis- tance-up to $1,000 a year for your last two years in - 7 the program. For more information, contact your Professor of Military Science AR M C. BE BE ALLYOU CAM BE.,&" ' 1- 3