C SPORTS Sticking to it: Potential stars practice all the right moves at Smith College sports co A Bigger Game Than You Know College women go world class in field hockey ey is the steak tartare of sports: not much to look at, but once you're hooked, it's hard to give up. "It's exciting and fast-mov- ing," says the five-foot senior. "It's a finesse game." Perhaps. But it can be brutally physical as well, and it is surely a test of endurance. The game is played in two 35-minute halves with no timeouts and very limited substitutions, meaning the 11 players on each side often run up and down the field the entire game. "You can't play field hockey very well if you're car- rying a few extra pounds," says Judith Davidson, who last year coached the Iowa Hawkeyes to the NCAA crown. Still, even at the top U.S. field-hockey schools, the game MICHAEL ZIDE has failed to attract much stu- mp dent interest. "We're almost nonexistent because the rate of fans is so small," says Iowa's Bernadette Demers, bemoaning the typical spectator crowd of 200. Some players blame the sport's lack of support on its low-scoring nature (recent NCAA rule changes have sped things up a bit in college competition). Simple unfamiliarity is the more likely cul- prit-after all, field hockey is no more low scoring than soccer or ice hockey, the games it most resembles. But just as once obscure sports like vol- leyball and water polo managed to win over American fans, field hockey could be on the verge of making it big. Certainly the players are doing their part: on the strength of a silver-medal performance in the Pan American Games in August, the U.S. national team-culled from the best college players in the country-has proba- bly guaranteed itself a spot among only eight teams that will be invited to the 1988 Olympics. Maybe now sports-hungry America will finally stop thinking of wom- en's field hockey as that silly-looking game played in kilts. GEORGE HACKETT with BRAD ZIMANEK n Iowa City, KATE ROBINS in Storrs, Conn., and NANCY KLINGENER in Amherst, Mass. AT 7 AruAUAVNTIPrvesrvu 1P(10_PAnuv ention field hockey and most people conjure up visions of blue-eyed prep- school girls whacking away at each other's shins with funny-looking hooked sticks. True, up until the mid-'70s the sport-in this country, anyway-was little more than a convenient way for East Coast phys-ed teachers to keep the girls busy on autumn afternoons. But consider this: de- spite indifference within the United States, the game ranks just below soccer as the most popular team sport in the world. And in such macho places as Australia, West Germany, Pakistan and India, the game is } played more by men than women. So why is it that in the United States, field hockey gets no respect? Forget about the men's game-even though it's been an Olympic sport since 1908-it's easier to get an American college male to join the tiddly- winks squad. Recently, however, things have been looking up on the women's side. Over the last decade colleges across the country have produced players of world class. Just four years after women's field hockey was elevated to Olympic status in 1980, the U.S. women's team surprised the world-and certainly their own country- by grabbing a bronze medal at Los Angeles. The Americans hope to do even better next year in Seoul. Amateur athletes in America are accus- tomed to austere conditions, but the U.S. Beyond preppy: Iowa's NCAA champs college players fighting for a spot on the Olympic team bring a new meaning to striv- ing on a shoestring. Though schools such as the universities of Massachusetts, Iowa and Connecticut recruit women players with footballlike scholarship programs, the sim- ilarity to more popular campus sports ends there. The UMass team, ranked number five nationally last year, usually travels in vans instead of buses and returns from long trips the same night to avoid hotel costs. At the University of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif., the field-hockey team virtually sup- ports itself by holding raffles and selling souvenir sunshades. The team considered it a windfall when the volleyball team donat- ed some old uniforms. What the players lack in perks, however, they make up for in determination-and enjoyment. To hear such Olympic hopefuls as UConn's Tracey Fuchs tell it, field hock-