The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 13, 1986- Page 9 Five grapplers carry'M title hopes By PETE STEINERT P Michigan wrestling coach Dale Bahr has often contended since last November that the entire season revolves around the NCAA Championships. Now is the time to see if their rigorous con- ditioning and difficult regular season will pay dividends. The opportunity comes at the NCAA tournament which starts today in Iowa City and concludes on Saturday. THE 13th-RANKED Wolverines wrestled seven of the current top twenty teams in the country during the dual meet season which makes their 8-7 record misleading. "From the standpoint of our schedule, we've prepared ourselves for the NCAAs by hitting a lot of the good teams," said Bahr. "That doesn't necessarily correlate into a good season record, but it should correlate into a good performance in the NCAAs. "People remember you on how well you do in the NCAA tournament. We really got our sights on the INCAAs. It's the most important tournament of the year for us." MICHIGAN WILL be hard pressed to duplicate last year's fifth place finish with the absence of 134- pounder John Fisher. Nonetheless the Wolverines will take five standout wrestlers, all of whom Bahr feels have All-American potential. Here is a closer look at the five that made the trip to Iowa City: William Waters, 118 pounds - 26-12 this season, Waters placed third in Big Ten after finishing run- ner-up the previous year. He was named the out- standing freshman on 1983-84 squad. "Will has tremendous talent, but he's not always up," Bahr said. "When he goes out and wrestles the way he's capable of, he can go with anybody in the country.. . The more consistent and intense Will becomes, the tougher he is to beat." Doug Wyland, 126 - He is only the third freshman under Bahr to win 30 or more matches in a season (34-12). Wyland made the transition from 118 to 126 pounds early in the dual meet season where he has a record of 11-4. He placed fifth in the Big Ten. "If he goes out there with the attitude that he has everything to gain and nothing to lose, he could very well be up there in the top eight," Bahr said of Wyland. Kevin Hill, 177 - The senior captain's making his first appearance at the NCAAs with a 35-11-1 record and a third place finish in the Big Ten. He started the season at 167 pounds before switching to 177. "If I go out there and wrestle like I have throughout the year, I think I'll be fine," Hill said of his chances. "If I go out there and let the pressure get to me, then it's another story. I can't let that happen." Scott Rechsteiner, 190 - One of the most con- sistent wrestlers on the team, Rechsteiner is second on the team with 37 victories (10 losses) and leads the team in pins with 16. He placed second in the Big Ten for the third straight year. "My definite weakness is on the bottom, trying to get away, but I don't think there's anybody stronger than me. . . I just hope to do my best not only for myself but for the school," Rechsteiner said. Kirk Trost, heavyweight - Last year's NCAA heavyweight runner-up leads the team in wins (39- 6). He hasn't lost a match since Christmas and has the best chance to become Michigan's first NCAA champion since Mark.Churella in 1979. "Kirk is agile, strong, and has great techniques," Bahr said. "His only drawback would be to draw a 350-pounder that he'd have a difficult time scoring on." OFFICIAL RUCKER ENJOYS COMPETITION: Ref stays cool in By DAVE ARETHA Indiana's Assembly Hall is frantic. The Hoosiers trail Illinois, 68-67, with 20 seconds to go, but Indiana has the ball. Steve Alford passes inside to to Darryl Thomas. Thomas drives through the crowded lane. He goes up for the shot... "TWEEEEEEET!" The action stops. Assembly Hall goes quiet. All eyes are on the official; the call could go either way. "Offensive foul, number 24!" he screams. SUDDENLY it's Assembly Hell. The fans wail like tormented souls. Behemoth Hoosiers have fire in their eyes. A possessed Bob Knight plans wicked doings with a folding chair. All is directed at the official. The poor official. A well-intentioned soul, abused and tormented. He must feel like hell. "No, I don't believe so," said Big Ten official Tom Rucker. WHAT DO you mean, I don't believe so ? Seventeen-thousand Hoosiers want to wander over your face. "Fans? You don't give fans the time of day," said Rucker, a Birmingham, Michigan resident who has endured 14 years as a Big Ten official. "You don't Big Ten let it get to you. You have to have a thick skin to be in this business." Well, what about all the abuse after the game? Coaches and the press can attack officials without mercy. (There's three things wrong with of- ficials, Knight said earlier this year. "They don't understand basketball. They don't know what to look for. And they don't know what to do out there.") YET UNDER Big Ten rules, of- ficials can't talk back. They commit- ted to a vow of silence until the season is over. The double standard would seem to generate frustration. "No, absolutely not," said Rucker. "That's the nature of the profession. I always kid my friends and say, 'Hey, if they put my name in the paper, I just hope they spell it correctly."' No hellish nightmares at all? In 25 years of officiating? "LET ME think....No, I can't think of any," said Rucker. But you have to admit, the coaches are not always angels. "They know how far they can go," Rucker said. "Many times coaches say things out of frustration. But then you see them after the games and they can't even remember what they said." STATISTICS show that Big Ten of- ficials really do keep their cool, even in the most hellish of moments. Knight, for example, supposedly has officials under his thumb, yet over the last two seasons Indiana has just ten less fouls than its opponents (1165-1175). "Coaches may bring our attention to something," said Rucker, "but they don't help us determine whether a call is going to be made." The officials composure is com- mendable, especially since much of the criticism against them is unjust. "MOST OF the criticism comes from people who don't know much about basketball," said Tom Hammill, editor of Referee magazine. "Some criticism leveled against them may be just, but few are accurate. inferno "Officials do an excellent job overall. The majority are certainly qualified." Indeed, a typical Big Ten official has labored more than a decade in the high school, junior college, and small college ranks. Conference officials are expected to watch game films throughout the course of the year. And an official's performance is evaluated each game by a former official, who then files a written report to Bob Wor- tman, the supervisor of Big Ten of- ficials. Big Ten officials may be qualified, but that doesn't mean they're flawless. Perfect officiating is im- possible when there's ten energized athletes zipping around a crowded court. "IT'S NOT like football where everything is spread out," Hammill said. "There's more fast action - more continuous action. Officials probably make mistakes every game." The subjectiveness of the rules makes the officials job even more dif- ficult. "I can blow the whistle any time I want," said Rucker. "That's what distinguishes the top officials from the average ones. The top official knows when to blow the whistle. "THE KEY that officials try to use is this: When you blow the whistle, you blow it because one player has placed another player at a disadvan- tage within the intent and purpose of the rules. This means you have to have a working knowledge as to the intent of the rule. "The average fan, the average sports writer, the average commen- tator doesn't understand this." Misunderstanding. Written criticism. Verbal abuse. Ambiguous rules. Dizzy action. High pressure. It's enough to make a weaker soul grieve. But Rucker shrugs it off. "I've always been a competitor," Rucker said, comparing officiating to playing baseball and running track in high school. "I just love the com- petition. It's been a continuous positive experience for me." From staff reports Special to the Daily WINTER PARK, Fla. - It was a close call for the Wolverines yester- day, but they continued their roll through the Rollins Baseball Week Tournament. Michigan defeated South Carolina 6-4 to keep its tour- nament record a perfect 3-0. Outfielder Casey Close cracked a two out, two run homer in the bottom of the ninth to win the game. Close's thington, OH native started a rally with a single. He eventually scored when Eddie Woolwine hit into a fielder's choice to tie the contest. The Gamecocks scored all four of their runs in the top of the sixth off Wolverine starter Scott Kamieniecki. Greg Everson worked four innings in relief for his first win of the season. The victory raised Michigan's record to 5-2 on the season. South Carolina, ranked sixth preseason in the nation, falls to 10-4 and 1-2 in the Rollins tournament. The Wolverines face host Rollins tonight. CONSIDERING AN ABORTION? Complete Confidential Information Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (any time) Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Freshman 126-pounder Doug Wyland braces for an Ohio State opponent in action earlier in the season. Wyland and four Wolverine teammates will lead Michigan into the NCAA tournament this weekend. Batsmen beat 'Cocks, 64; Close leads Blue victor Close ... closing in on record last inning heroics completed his four One Rockefeller Plaza for four performance that included New York, N.Y. 10020 three runs scored and four runs batted Phone (212) 581-3040 in. The senior's two home runs place Mail this ad for Special him third on the Wolverine career Student/Teacher Tariff. home run list. 0 RENTAL Q2 LEASE 0l PURCHASE With Michigan trailing 4-3 in the bottom of the sixth inning, the Wor- A UAC Production of the Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Officials are often abused unmercifully in Big Ten arenas. However, much -of this abuse, according to Big Ten official Tom Rucker, comes from "people who don't know much about basketball." Join us at CREATING CAREERS: WORKING FOR SOCIAL CHANGE A Career Fair A chance to talk with people whose work is making a difference YOU'RE INVITED! ft i :C . iASC r AN EVENINI flF MUSIC 0 - SOLID GOLD - Radio 1290 PRESENTS T RTW ST & SHOUT 86 THE ROCK N' ROLL REVIVAL PARTY OF THE YEAR! AND COMEDY EAST QUAD MARCH 14 & 15 FRIDAY 7-10 rm 126 Panel Discussion and Goal Setting Exercises SATURDAY 10-6 East Quad rms 10-11:30 Art/Theatre 52-54 Education 124 Social Services 126 Science/Technology 164 11:30-1 LUNCH - Halfway Inn 11:45-12:45 Public Sector Job Search 81 p.m. Mendelssohn' Theatre, Michigan League THURSDAY, MARCH 13 8 p.m. - 12 midnight at the NECTARINE BALLROOM ERI(CHAMPNEtL A YFORMAN EThA NGILAN HEIN J AN*IHOMANN K ELLY Every mu E has his NbodyEs fol N-He didnt get stCeetwise Mixing a flNsh temper What was she hiding? His pl Td facade pree bhut o elxmre? until she met HlIM! reading urops! and Grdo's Gm! And where? rEnscealed inter calmr! ANTIIOPLEW ROCLeVEE CIARYNJLILING 1IIJTISCHLIN JIUE[ST~EN ERIL TTr 11 BOP & ROCK WITH WEDSEL'S EDSELS II FREE AnISINgIn h - - 1 I i 1