4 Women's Swimming vs. Iowa Friday, 7 p.m. Matt Mann Pool SPORTS __Tuesday,November 19, 1985 BLUE ROSY IF IOWA WILTS Women's Basketball vs. Holy Cross Monday, 7:30p.m. Crisler Arena The Michigan Daily Page 8 i Wolverines fancy Fiesta Blue Lines Vm (Continued from Page 1) pearance in that bowl. "IF THEY'RE available, we have a great deal of interest in them," said Tony Alba, a member of the bowl's selection committee. "They've played well enough that they could even lose (to Ohio State) and still be attractive. They will still be ranked around 10th or 11th." Oklahoma or Nebraska have been rumored to be the teams sought to play what the committee hopes will be Michigan. Brigham Young was also heard to be a possibility. Alba, however, could not name specific teams. "It's against NCAA rules to speculate, but I will say that we have a good chance of pairing two top ten teams," he said. The Fiesta Bowl, played in Arizona State's Sun Devil Stadium, has grown in popularity over the last few years. It has a $1.4 million payoff to be split by each university and its conference. The game will be televised on NBC this year as a lead-in to the Rose Bowl. MICHIGAN IS still being con- sidered by the Cotton Bowl and the Florida Citrus Bowl, but it's out of the Orange Bowl. Penn State repor- tedly said it would accept a bid to the Orange Bowl against the Big Eight Champ. But most of the Michigan staff is op- timistic about the Rose Bowl. "Our first priority is the Rose Bowl," Canham said. "We aren't planning anything else. At his weekly press luncheon, Schembechler said, "The writers know more about what's going on than I do because they already have us in the Fiesta. There's still hope we can represent the conference in the Rose Bowl. That's the prime objective right now." the 17th-year coach. Tailback Thomas Wilcher will practice this week and should be ready. Offensive guard Mike Husar, after playing well again- st Minnesota, is expected to start. On the negative side, Dieter Heren, the kick-blocking specialist, is "ex- tremely doubtful" since he is still suf- fering from strained knee ligaments. Flanker Erik Campbell is doubtful with a concussion. He spent Saturday night in a Minneapolis hospital for observation. Harbaugh nabs honors CHICAGO (UPI) - Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh and Wisconsin linebacker Michael Reid were named yesterday as Un- ited Press International's Big Ten player of the week for their weekend performances. Harbaugh was named Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week. He completed 13-of-18 passes for 243 yards and three touchdown passes as Michigan blasted Minnesota, 48- 7. Reid recovered three fumbles as Wisconsin upset Ohio State 12-7 and was named defensive player of the week for his efforts. UPI Top Twenty 1. Penn State (41) .. 10-0-0 2. Nebraska (1) .... 9-1-0 3. Oklahoma........7-1-0 4. Iowa ............ 9-1-0 5. Miami, Fla.......8-1-0 6. MICHIGAN ..... 8-1-1 7. Oklahoma State . 8-1-0 8. UCLA ........... 8-1-1 9. Auburn .......... 8-2-0 10. Air Force ......10-1-0 11. Ohio State........8-2-0 12. Florida State .... 8-2-0 13. Brigham Young . 9-2-0 14. Baylor .......... 8-2-0 15. Tennessee........6-1-2 16. Arkansas .........8-2-0 17. LSU ............. 6-1-1 18. Texas A&M.......7-2-0 19. Texas ........... 7-2-0 20. Arizona State .... 8-2-0 629 583 491 487 470 418 320 294 221 218 160 156 136 95 76 72 62 44 37 27 Harbaugh ... three TD passes IN ORDER for Michigan to go to ther Rose Bowl, Minnesota must beat Iowa in Iowa City - a tough task con- sidering how well Iowa has played at home and how badly Minnesota Croe COU played last Saturday. Michigan must, of course, beat Ohio State. By GREG MOLZON Schembechler spent the rest of the Chris Brewster placed fourth this luncheon talking about Saturday's past weekend in the NCAA Districts in collision with the Buckeyes. "It's just Bloomington as the only member of Michigan versus Ohio State," he said. the Michigan men's and women's "You look forward to it every year cross country teams to earn a spot in and now it's here." the NCAA Championships next Mon- The Wolverines are in good shape in day in Milwaukee. the njurdearengordeinto Brewster's time of 31:44 in the the injury department, according o 10,000 meters pleased Coach Ron 2 DAYS N / Nov. 12 and Nov. 20 8 V, x 11 20 lb. white, feedable originals and self-serve 2C NOT GOOD ON COURSE PACKS SELF SERVE COPIES 3 OTHER DAYS REGULAR COPIES1 a- 4C OTHER DAYS DOLLAR BILL COPYING 611 CHURCH 665-9200 OPEN 7-DAYS ieaded for Utry inals Warhurst. "Brewster ran very, very well," Warhurst noted. "He can make the top 15 with a good run in the NCAA's." FRESHMAN REDSHIRT John Scherer was the only other runner from the men's team to qualify for the Districts finishing a respectable 24th. The entire women's team had qualified for the Districts and it finished third out of 23 teams. But only the top two teams make it to the NCAA Championships and no in- dividual placed high enough to make it on her own. Sue Schroeder had the best chance to qualify for NCAA's, but a bad back hampered her performance. GRIDDE PICKS There are only four more days left in Griddes '85, so if you wish to chow down your choice of a full-tray Sicilian pizza, or Chicago stuff pizza, or whole sub sandwich courtesy of Pizza Express, get your picks in soon! As you well know, a Dooley's guest pass good for two accompanies this veritable potpourri of goodies. "THE WEEK" 1. Our THE GAME Ohio State at MICHIGAN 2. The oldest THE GAME Lafayette at Lehigh 3. First called THE GAME Cal at Stanford 4. Big Eight's THE GAME Nebraska at Oklahoma 5. Los Angeles's THE GAME UCLA at USC 6. Ivy League's THE GAME Harvard-at Yale 7. Illinois's THE GAME Illinois at Northwestern 8. Indiana's THE GAME Purdue at Indiana 9. Pennsylvania's THE GAME Penn State at Pitt 10. Washington's THE GAME Washington State at Washington 11. Arizona's THE GAME Arizona at Arizona State 12. Oregon's THE GAME Oregon State at Oregon 13. South Carolina's THE GAME Clemson at South Carolina 14. North Carolina's THE GAME Duke at North Carolina 15. Mississippi's THE GAME' Miss. State vs. Ole Miss at Jackson 16. Utah's THE GAME Utah at BYU 17. Michigan's Minor-League THE GAME Eastern Michigan at Western Michigan 18. Dairy Farming's THE GAME Michigan State at Wisconsin 19. Pig Farmer's THE GAME Minnesota at Iowa 20. Newspapers' THE GAME Ohio State Lanterns at DAILY LIBELS Power play comes alive... . . . Norton adds vigor By SCOTT G. MILLER T IS NOT surprising that Michigan is ranked fifth in power play efficiency in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. The team's play has been inconsistent this season, and the power play is no excep- tion. But this appears to be changing. In last weekend's split against Illinois-Chicago the power play exploded for five goals in 11 attempts. The week before, the Wolverines managed only three goals in 17 attempts versus Michigan State. Michigan could not even score on a two-minute two-man advantage. The improvement can be traced to Michigan head coach Red Beren- son's decision to move center Chris Seychel to the point and to put defen- seman Jeff Norton at forward during man-advantage situations. Norton and Seychel's production increased because of the change. Seychel had one goal and five assists on the weekend, and two of the assists came on the power play. Norton's four goals, three of which were scored on the power play, and one assist were good enough to earn him co- CCHA player-of-the-week honors. "I've been in a sophomore slump, and hopefully I am starting to break out of it," said Norton. "My plus-minus has been mostly minus for the last couple of weeks. This is a real boost for me." Norton's play was also uplifting for his teammates. "That was the best game I think I have evern seen Norton play in his life," said Seychel after Saturday's contest. "It was an outstanding performance." Despite his success at forward, Norton will not become a full-time winger. "I've been playing forward most of my life, and its nice to get back up there," said the sophomore. "But I like defense because it is a challenging position to play.' Though the power play has improved, the Wolverines will have to con- tinue working on it. Michigan failed to convert on two crucial attempts during the third period of Friday's loss. The missed opportunities give the team no reason to feel complacent. One of Michigan's failed power plays featured three Illinois-Chicago shots on net, and the puck remained in the Wolverine end for a minute and a half. It was a study in ineptitude. "We just got caught running around and that's the thing we have been concerned with in the past and it showed up," said defenseman Myles O'Connor. "Nobody seemed to want the puck. Nobody wanted to take con- trol out there." If someone seizes command consistently, the Wolverine power play could become a strength. "Overall the power play was a positive part of our game this weekend," said Berenson. "That is the best I have seen our power play look all year. Hopefully that will give us some confidence, and it will become a better part of our game." In other hockey developments: " Brad Jones' two goals and one assist kept him among the CCHA scoring leaders. Jones is currently in third place with 11 goals and 11 assists behind Bowling Green's Jamie Wansbrough and Paul Ysebaert. " Billy Powers was kept off the score sheet for the first time this season Friday night. Powers rebounded Saturday to tally three assists. " Quote of the week goes to Illinois-Chicago coach Val Belmonte for his statements on intensity: "I think the big thing for us and for any team whether it be a hockey, football, or basketball team is that you can't play college athletics without emotion. Certainly anybody that plays (against) Michigan football has to pump themselves up. If they don't get them- selves up to play Bo, they are going to lose. I think emotion in college athletics is tough to read. If I could, I would bottle it and sell it and become a millionaire. Bo and I would make tons of money." I" 6 - ADVERTISEMENT- i "Pat Sajak, king of the game shows and host of 'The Wheel of Fortune,' tooled up to the Ferndale White Castle in his white, stretch limousine to get an order of sliders. A native of Chicago, Sajak grew up on White Castles. And he's laid back enough to order them up on trips back east." -Detroit News, August 30, 1984 DECEMBER 5 r.": h ite astle ."o' " }",y.; {:tiff ALEXIAN BRUFHERS Cardlinal's McGee A Religious Community of Men in the... HEALTH CARE MINISTRY captures I NEW YORK (AP) - Batting cham- pion Willie McGee, the flashy center fielder of the National League cham- pion St. Louis Cardinals, was named the NL's Most Valuable Player by the Baseball Writers Association of Committed to Christ"... Through a life of fraternal love, prayer and service to the sick, poor, dying and unwanted. ADMINISTRATION NURSING m CLERICAL TECHNICAL PASTORAL CARE X-RAY. LABORATORY. ENGINEERING & MAINTENANCE MECHANICAL WORK s PUBLIC RELA- TIONS s PHARMACY i COMMUNITY HEALTH, ETC. '('VP America yesterday. McGee received 14 first place votes from a 24-writer panel, two from each* league city, and finished with 280 points. DAVE PARKER of the Cincinnati Reds, who led the league with 125 runs batted in, finished second with six fir- sts and 220 points. Pedro Guerrero of the NL West champion Los Angeles Dodgers was third with three firsts and 208 points and pitcher Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets, who Earn 8 Credits This Spring in NEW HAMPSHIRE THE NEW ENGLAND tttttAWITE rrnD Iki3CDkAATI/lnM---------- i