Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 26, 1986 Harbaugh heads All-Big, Ten team CHICAGO (AP) - Quarterback Jim Harbaugh of Michigan and Chris Carter and Chris Spielmanof Ohio State were unanimous selections on the 1986 Associated Press All-Big Ten football team announced yesterday. Other Michigan players named to the first team were offensive tackle John Elliott, guard Mark Hammerstein, defensive lineman Mark Messner, and linebacker Andy Moeller. Ohio State and Michigan, who shared first place with 7-1 records, dominated the team. Ohio State landed seven players on the first team and Michigan had five. Iowa was next with four. Wisconsin and and Michigan State had two each. Minnesota, Northwestern, Indiana, and Purdue had one each. Illinois was shutout. MICHIGAN had just two players on the second team - running back Jamie Morris and defensive back Garland Rivers. Nine Wolverines received hon'orable mention honors, including wide receivers Ken Higgins, Paul Jokisch, and John . Kolesar. Center John Vitale, guard Michael Dames, and running back Gerald White were honorable mention on offense. Linebacker Billy Harris, defensive back Tony Gant, and punter Monte Robbins were honorable mention on defense. HARBAUGH, Carter, and Spielman were named on the first team of the 17 ballots cast by a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters covering the Big Tcn. Two players on the first team offense are repeaters from last year, AP Football Poll AP ALL-BIG TEN TEAMS 4 IFHIRO UEAM OFFENSE Wide Receivers - Cris Carter, Ohio State; Andre Rison, Michigan State Tight End - Ed Taggert, Ohio State Tackles - John Elliott, MICHIGAN; Dave Croston, Iowa Guards - Mark Hammerstein, MICHIGAN; Jeff Uhlenhake, Ohio State Center - Bob Maggs, Ohio State Quarterback - Jim Harbaugh, MICHIGAN Running Backs - Darrell Thompson, Minnesota; Rick Bayless, Iowa Kicker - John Duvic, Northwestern DEFENSE Linemen-Outside Linebackers - Van Waiters, Indiana; Eric Kumerow, Ohio State; Dave Haight, Iowa; Mark Messner, MICHIGAN; Jeff Drost, Iowa Linebackers - Chris Spielman, Ohio State; Andy Moeller, MICHIGAN; Michael Reid, Wisconsin Defensive Backs - Rod Woodson, Purdue; Nate Odomes, Wisconsin; Sonny Gordon, Ohio State Punter - Greg Montgomery, Michigan State OFFENSE Wide Receivers - Mark Ingram, Michigan State; Stephen Pierce, Illinois Tight End - Rich Borresen, Northwestern Tackles - Bob Riley, Indiana; Jim Hobbins, Minnesota Guards - Troy Wolcrow, Minnesota; Scott Kehoe, Illinois Center - Ray Hitchcock, Minnesota Quarterback - Jim Karsatos, Ohio State Running Backs - Jamie Morris, MICHIGAN; Larry Emery, Wisconsin Kicker - Rob Houghtlin, Iowa DEFENSE Linemen-Outside Linebackers - Bob Dirkes, Northwestern; John Budde, Michigan State; Kevin Holley, Purdue; Mark Nichols, Michigan State; Darryl Lee, Ohio State Linebackers - Fred Strickland, Purdue; Bruce Holmes, Minnesota; Shane Bullough, Michigan State Defensive Backs - Garland Rivers, MICHIGAN; Leonard Bell, Indiana; Alex Green, Indiana Punter - Tom Tupa, Ohio State { OFFENSE Wide Receivers - Ken Higgins, MICHIGAN; Paul Jokisch, MICHIGAN; John Kolesar, MICHIGAN Guard - Michael Dames, MICHIGAN Running Back - Gerald White, MICHIGAN DEFENSE Linemen-Outside Linebackers - Billy Harris, MICHIGAN; Dieter Heren, MICHIGAN Defensive Back - Tony Gant, MICHIGAN Punter - Monte Robbins, MICHIGAN 4 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Michigan junior tailback Jamie Morris, who looks for a hole against Min- nesota earlier this year, was named second-team All-Big Ten by the Recor 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Miami(54) 10-0-0 Penn St. (4) 11-0-0 Oklahoma 10-1-0 MICHIGAN 10-1-0 LSU 8-2-0 Nebraska 9-2-0 Alabama 9-2-0 Arizona St. 9-1-1 Arkansas 8-2-0 Ohio State 9-3.0 Arizona 8-2-0 Washington 8-2-1 Auburn 8-2.0 UCLA 7-3-1 Baylor 8-3-0 So. California 7-3-0 Georgia 7-3-0 N. Carolina St. 8-2-1 Iowa 8-3.0 rd M i I Y I Pts. 1,156 1,090 1,056 878 862 834 763 723 625 606 589 568 416 346 315 168 153 66 Associated Press. and both are from Ohio State - Carter, and center Bob Maggs. THERE were five repeaters on the defensive unit, including Messner, Spielman, defensive lineman Jeff Drost of Iowa, defensive back Rod Woodson of Purdue, and punter Greg Montgomery of Michigan State. Joining Harbaugh in the first team backfield were freshman Darrell Thompson of Minnesota and senior Rick Bayless of Iowa, who finished first and second in the conference in rushing. Thompson finished with 1,240 yards and Bayless had 1,040. Thompson missed being a unanimous selection by two points. A player received two points for a first-team vote and one point for the second team. Other first team players on offense were wide receiver Andre Rison of Michigan State; Maggs and tight end Ed Taggart of OSU; tackle Dave Croston of Iowa; guard Jeff Uhlenhake of Ohio State; and kicker John Duvic of Northwestern. Other first team defensive players included defensive lineman Eric Kumerow and defensive back Sonny Gordon of Ohio State, linebacker Michael Reid and defensive back Nate Odomes of Wisconsin, and defensive lineman Dave Haight of Iowa. Michigan State running back Lorenzo White, a pre-season candidate for the Heisman Trophy, was honorable mention. By WALTER KOPF It was supposed to be a grudge match. It was supposed go to five gruelling games. Michigan's women's volleyball team obviously never got wind of this. It took the Wolverines less than an hour to dispose of the listless Hurons from Eastern Michigan University. The 15-6, 15-3, 15-4, killing was the third straight win for the young Wolverines. "The momentum just carried over from last weekend," said senior Jayne Hickman of the team's sweep of Wisconsin and Northwestern. Hickman was happy with the win, as it was her last home game as a Wolverine. "I'm sad it's over, but I think it was a good note to end on." THE HURONS took a 4-1 lead in the first game. It turned out to be their only lead in the match. The game looked like it would be a battle as Michigan struggled back to 6-6. Then the Wolverines caught fire. Outstanding front-line play from Marie Ann Davidson and Carla Hunter blocked several EMU shots. Michigan took the next nine points for the first game, and rolled to a 15-3, second-game win. The third game was a repeat of the first two, with the Wolverines building a wall at the net around the Hurons. Smooth team effort and constant spikes devastated the 17-12 Hurons. "We always get really fired to play them," said Davidson who fittingly spiked home the match- winning point. The Wolverines must now prepare for their last two games against Purdue and Illinois this WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 weekend. "Purdue has been struggling the second half of season," said Michigan coach Joyce Davis. "Some of their key players are injured, but you can't give them opportunities. They're very tall, but that also makes them a bit slower." The Wolverines finish their season with Big Ten leader Illinois. Illinois is undefeated in conference play and ranked in the top ten in the country. BLUE BREEZES IN STRAIGHT SETS: Spikers smash Hurons "It would be the coup of the season if we beat Illinois," Davis said. The young Wolverine team has had quite a successful season according to Davis. "We had ten goals in mind when the season began - and we accomplished eight of them," the first-year coach said. "The two unfulfilled goals were finishing in the top half of the conference and winning 75 percent , of their non-conference games." 4 4 Pat on the back Associated Press The Islanders' Pat LaFontaine checks Pittsburgh's Bob Errey during New York's 5-1 win last night. LaFontaine, a Waterford, Mich., native, scored a goal and added two assists in the Patrick division battle. 4 '. 1 .A." What's Happening Recreational Sports k THANKSGIVING WEEK-END HOURS CCRB NCRB 7 am-7 pm IMSB 11 am-5 pm Nov. 26 7 am-7 pm ... . . j I