Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 5, 1986 Men tumblers go west for three meets 4 By GREG MOLZON .While most Michigan students were able to find some free time and relaxation over spring break, the men's gymnastics team had no such luck as it practiced all week and com- peted in three meets. Don't feel too sorry for the team, though, since it was able to spend the week in Califor- nia and Colorado and did very well in competition. The Wolverines finished the week Saturday in Colorado Springs with a meet against Air Force, and came away with their best score of the year, shines in win at Air Force the all-around competition with a score of 54.55. Meyerowitz was closely followed by teammates Brock Orwig (53.75) and Mitch Rose (52.05), who took second and third in the all- around, giving Michigan a clean sweep. Other standouts in the meet were Greg Nelson, with a first place on the floor exercise and Steve Yuan, who finished second on the pommel horse. Although the week ended with an outstanding effort for the Michigan squad, it didn't start off too well. The Wolverines should have known they were in for trouble when their plane from Detroit was delayed two hours, they missed a connecting flight in Denver, and arrived in Berkeley at 4 a.m. EST. THEIR TROUBLES continued the next day with their meet at Cal- Berkeley, where the western judges had a slightly different scoring stan- dard Darden said. "Because of that, we were down a few tenths in our overall score.'' However, the gymnasts were able to adjust and finished second out of four teams, with a team score of 261.6, losing only to Cal-Berkeley's excellent 270.7. Nelson garnered the team's only first-place finish in the floor exercise and also added a third on the horizon- tal bar. Scott Moore received a second on the vault and Meyerowitz added a second on the pommel horse. Meyerowitz also placed second in the all-around. TWO DAYS later, the Wolverines competed in the Stanford Invitational and came in third place, behind Stan- ford and Cal-Berkeley. Although Michigan had a good team score of 264.5, it couldn't compete with the Stanford and Berkeley scores of 281.5 and 273.4. Darden termed these scores "excellent" and "great" and said that they were national contending totals. "It was a real tough meet. We went up against two very strong teams," said Darden. The competition kept most Wolverines out of the placing, except for Orwig and Nelson, who took third and fourth in the floor exercise. The Wolverines must now prepare for the Bronco Invitational this weekend at Western Michigan and striving to peak at the Big Ten Cham- pionships in two weeks. its second straight meet last week, defeating the University of California Santa Barbara 171.5 to 170.6 Leading the attack for the Wolverines was Amy Meyer who finished first on the balance beam and first in the all-around. "Amy pulled some very consistent routines for us," said coach Dana Kempthorn. "She is a confident per- former and she has good mental steady Heidi Cohen who took second place in the all-around with a 34.7. "Heidi has been very consistent for us all year long," said Kempthorn. Freshman Joan Lybrook also had a good meet, finishing second on the floor exercise and third on the vault. Overall, Kempthorn said she was pleased. "I was very happy with their performances. There was a lot of teamwork. The team score did not even reveal how well we did, because the judges were very critical." Kempthorn has another reason to be pleased after a solid performance by Janne Klepek who, coming off of an injury, took first place on the parallel bars. "Janne is getting bet- ter, her injury is heeling," said Kem- pthorn. I I Women win second straight preparation." The women's gymnastics team won FOLLOWING UP Meyer was the --DOUGLAS VOLAN O~rwig ... second all-around 267.2. Coach Bob Darden was ob- viously pleased with the victory and said, "We did real well. It was our best (meet) of the year." THE MICHIGAN gymnasts took first place in every event and were led by senior Gavin Meyerowitz, who won UPI Top Twenty 1. Duke (39)...............599 2. Kansas (1).............544 3. North Carolina ............467 4. Kentucky .................452 5. St. John's .................363 6. Georgia Tech ..............362 7. MICHIGAN ...............288 8. Syracuse ..................276 9. Bradley ...................255 10. Memphis State ...........203 11. UNLV ....................175 12. Louisville ................167 13. Notre Dame ..............164 14. Indiana ..................129 15. Georgetown .............. 88 16. Oklahoma ................ 64 17. UTEP ...... ..........39 18. Michigan State........... 36 19. Illinois ................... 27 20. Pepperdine ............... 19 i LAIMBEER GRABS 21 REBOUNDS Isiah, Pistons rip Nets PONTIAC (AP) - Isiah Thomas; tossed in 28 points and Kelly Tripucka scored 13 of his 25 points in the decisive third quarter last night to lead the Detroit Pistons to a 120-103 NBA victory over the New Jersey Nets. The triumph ran Detroit's club- record home winning streak to 15 games and lifted the Pistons to their 11th victory in 12 games. New Jersey trailed by just six poin- ts at halftime, but Thomas scored six points and Tripucka four in the first 1:36 of the third quarter to extend the lead to 63-47. The Pistons continued to increase the margin, which reached 23 points with 1:10 remaining, before settling for an 89-71 lead. The Pistons, buoyed by a 68 per cent to 30 percent first-quarter shooting edge and a combined 26 points from Thomas and Tripucka, opened a 36-20 lead early in the second quarter and looked like they would finish the Nets early. But New Jersey rallied, outscoring Detroit 21-13 over the next eight minutes to trim the margin to 49-41 with 2:36 left before halftime. Another late burst reduced the margin to 53-47 at intermission. Otis Birdsong keyed the second-quarter spurt, scoring nine points. New Jersey was led by Mike Gmin- ski's 20 points. Birdsong and Buck Williams added 19 and 17 points, respectively. Vinnie Johnson added 18 points and Bill Laimbeer had 21 rebounds for Detroit. Thomas handed out 12 assists. I . i Coles must smoke to catch on with Tigers Thomas ... grins at 28 pts. Joe Dumars had the hot hand form the field, hitting five of seven shots for 11 Piston points. Tripucka had the eye from the line, though, connecting on all seven bids from the charity stripe. LAKELAND, Fla. (UPI) - Darnell Coles will have the rest of spring training to prove whether third base belongs to him - or whether it doesn't. Detroit Tigers' manager Sparky Anderson made that clear yesterday when he announced Coles would play every inning of every spring game. "I'M GOING to play Coles every day," Anderson said in revealing the lineup that will face the Chicago White Sox on Thursday in the first exhibition game of the spring. "Darnell Coles will be the busiest player in camp," Anderson said. Where does that leave incumbent Tom Brookens? "Brookens will play at short, second and in the outfield." Dave Collins will lead off for Ander- son and be the designated hitter while second baseman Lou Whitaker will start getting used to the No. 2 spot in- the batting order. He has led off the past several seasons. RIGHT FIELDER Kirk Gibson will bat third followed by catcher Lance Parrish, first baseman Darrell Evans, left fielder Larry Herndon, center fielder Chet Lemon, Coles and shortstop Doug Baker. Baker is playing in place of regular Alan Trammell, who insists his arm is all right but who won't play many exhibition games as a precaution. Jack Morris and Frank Tanana will pitch three innings each in Detroit's first home exhibition with assorted pitchers finishing up. Willie Hernan- dez may work the ninth. GONE ARE such experiments as last year's abortive switch of Whitaker to third to make room for Chris Pittaro, now with Minnesota. Seeing whether Herndon can come back from two sub-par years and whether Coles can handle third are Anderson's big projects now. "I know what Brookens can do," Anderson said. "I don't have to see it down here. Besides, I want to see Brookens some at short because I don't plan on playing Trammell there much in the early (spring) going. "What Coles does in spring training decides whether he stays or goes," Anderson said. "I want to know that what I see from Coles is what I will get during the season. "I WON'T know what that is unless I see him every day," the manager said. "I don't want him sitting out a game when suddenly there's a pitcher I wanted him to face pitching for the other team. "I want to see him against all.kinds of pitching," Anderson said. "I need to know everything about him I can." Coles had three stints with Seattle, one in the fall, one where he had the job won until he suffered a hand in- jury and last spring where he hit .350 but still lost out to Jim Presley, who hit .351 with morepower. 4 A MEMIM Did you know that the U Club is more than just a place to go for Happy Hour and nightly entertainment? Your club offers wait service, bar service, and a reasonably priced menu at Lunch, 11:30 -1:30 Monday through Friday Our new menu features specialty burgers, hot sandwiches and an all-you-can-eat soup and salad buffet. FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES CONSIDER THE BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEGREE PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION ARE: 1. Junior status - 55 transferable credit hours by Fall Term 1986 2. English: English Composition (one term) 3. Principles of Economics (micro and macro) 4. Mathematics: Calculus (one term) 5. Principles of Accounting: (one term) APPLICATION PREFERENCE DATE: BY MARCH 15, 1986 Applications can be picked up in The School of Business, The Office of Admissions and Student Services - Room 158. 0' Come see for yourself. 10% off to all students with proper ID March 10- March 14 Associated Press' Detroit Pistons guard Joe Dumars (4) drives to the basket as Mike Gmin- ski (42) of the New Jersey Nets plays tight defense in last night's game at the Silverdome. Special Student / Youth Fares to SCANDINAVIA On Scheduled Airlines! The inexpensive way to get to Scandinavia and other destinations in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 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