Page 19- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 5, 1986 'Twerp' turns terri at t .S. FLUSHING MEADOW, N.Y. I still remember that little D 1 1 & twerp, Aaron Krickstein, from Ph IIIIIIn I t U my days on the Western Tennis Association junior tournament B Phil \issel circuit. r For years he humiliated us older guys because he always 4-6, to Karel Novacek of When the fifth set rolled plavp a in the higher age groups - Czechoslovakia. In the third, he around, word got out around the an on. Everyone was jealous was down 3-0 in the tiebreaker. grounds and the crowd poured into as i of the kid. Miraculously, Krickstein came the stadium to watch their boy 1r ~',after my trip to the U.S. back to win the tiebreaker, the set, Annacone. They made a good Oper ennis Championships at and the match. The last sets were decision. Flushing Meadow, N.Y., I realize 6-1, 6-3. The difference, It turned out to be the best single that the "little twerp" has finally according to Bolletierri, was the set of tennis I've seen in years. become a true world-class player. return of serve. The momentum went back and Yeah, I know he's been on the While Krickstein performed forth until the tiebreaker. circuit for over two years, but it's the miracle on the back courts, Krickstein then took a 5-2 lead different now - he wins the big Paul Annacone took the spotlight with Annacone to serve. The New ones. And admittedly, it is fun to by downing John McEnroe in four Yorker needed to win his next two watch him. sets on the stadium court. service points, but Krickstein's Krickstein, a Grosse Pointe Annacone, a New Yorker, forehand return ended those native, made splashes at the pro became an instant hero, but hopes. The final score was 7-3. level at the tender age of 16 everyone 'forgot he had to play Krickstein's momentum (nobody his own age could give Krickstein in the next round. lasted through the next round as him a match). Then, like many The Michigan boy again he took veteran Mel Purcell in of - tennis mentor Nick looked awful for the first two sets straight sets. Earlier this week, Bolletierri's "wonder kids," he against the home-town favorite. though, France's superstar Henri seemed to burn out before he could In the third, Krickstein took Leconte sidelined Krickstein 6-3, drink his first legal beer. charge of the match with his 7-5, 6-4. But that's okay. Aaron But all that changed last week booming forehand. If they took had a good tournament. He in New York. stats in tennis, I'm sure they proved he can still be a superstar. In his first match, Krickstein would show him making about 90 Anyway, he will still be a little looked like he would continue his percent of his forehands at that twerp to me. slump losing the first two sets, 5-7, point. It was incredible. Krickstein wasn't the only 'M' WINS NOTRE DAME TOURNEY Lady linksters take first player I watched in New York. Here are some other observations: " Ifyou think John McEnroe acts up too much, you've never seen Michigan's own Mike, Leach. The former Wolverine netter, an NCAA champ in 1982, made a fool out of himself at the Open in his first round loss to Christo Steyn of South Africa. Leach cried about almost every close line call against him. He really had a fit when the umpire stopped play because a piece of paper blew on the court. He didn't get mad at the umpire, he yelled at the ball person who let the paper blow on the court. At that point, a spectator asked me, in a negative voice, if I knew Leach (I was wearing my Michigan hat). I said no. How embarrassing, but I know how he feels, I used to act like that on the court when I was 14 years old. " I know I'm really going out on a limb, but nobody will beat Ivan Lendl or Martina Navratilova. They are both too tough. Look for Boris Becker to give Lendl a hard time in the final, but the hard courts belong to the big Czech. Chris Evert-Lloyd is the best Open baseliner in the business, but Navratilova is the best serve-and- volleyer in the business. A good serve-and-volley game will beat the good baseline game on hard courts every time. * Saline native Lisa Bonder was up to par in the tournament winning her first two rounds. But the amazing thing about her was that she just didn't move her feet. She was one of the slowest players I saw in the tournament. She wins with her good shot selection. By BARB McQUADE . Noel Brisson sparked the womnen's golf team to a first-place finish at the Notre Dame tournament last week as the top individual performer in the nine- team field. Brisson had rounds of 79 and 75 for a 154 final score on the par- 71 course August 30 and 31. The sophomore took home a medal as the tournament's top finisher. MICHIGAN finished with 627 strokes to edge Purdue. The Boilermakers were five shots back at 633 for second place on the university course in South Bend, Ind. Jan Idomir captured third place overall for the Wolverines. The senior from East Lansing had tied for second with Purdue's Mary Meo at 156 for 36 holes, but lost by a stroke in a sudden-death playoff. "There were no surprises really," said Michigan head coach Sue LeClair. "We played well. It's good solid-type AKE THAT dominating. Wolverines had three of the six finishers, as Lisa DiMatteo ied for fourth place with a pair from Purdue. The Michigan selior posted 78-80-158 along with Boilermakers Jeanine Wiernik and Mary Zehr. The Fighting Irish, which entered two teams, showed it was no small potatoes. Its Blue squad finished third at 672 while the Gold came in seventh. Idomir, who shot a 78 for the first 18 holes, repeated her score in the second round. Tied at 156, she and Meo went head-to-head in a playoff. But Idomir's bogey on the par-4 sudden-death hole wasn't enough, as Meo parred to nab second place. THE TOURNAMENT victory came as no surprise to LeClair, who heads what she terms a "well- balanced" team. "We don't have a big jump between scores," the fifth-year head coach said. "There are only two or three shots between any of them." Isodir and DiMatteo were within four strokes of Brisson's 154. Terri Mage was one shot behind DiMatteo at 159 and Donna Greenbury finished at 162. The Wolverines have been practicing as a team since August 24, just a week before the tournament, but their games should be up to par. Daily Photo by SCOTT UTUCHY Grosse Pointe native Aaron Krickstein made a splash in the U.S. Open, but Ivan Lendl (above) is the man to beat. COOKIES Welcomes you to U-M! S BUY2 COOKIES, GET 1 FREE! j "Voted the best cookies in Ann Arbor" COUPON MUST BE PRESENTED WITH PURCHASE OFFER VALID THROUGH SEPTEMBER 15, 1986