I Page 8 -The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 9, 1988 'M' track team breaks records at tournament WOLVERINES BLAST GOPHERS AFTER LOSS TO CYCLONES M' Grapplers earn respect By KRISTIN MATTHEWS It was a day of personal bests. Both individual and school records were broken last weekend, as the women's track team jumped, sprinted, and hurdled its way through the Michigan State Invitational Relays at Jenison Fieldhouse in East Lansing. AMONG Michigan's star per- formers was junior Dana McKei- then, who placed in all three of her events. Although this is the first year in which the sprinter has at- tempted to hurdle, she took second place in the 55-meter hurdles with an 8.29 clocking. Only three women in Michigan's history have previously run a better time in this event. McKeithen, the team's number one sprinter, pentathlete, and now, hurdler, was called "the work horse of the day" by head coach James Henry. "She was a key motivating factor on the team. (The team) re- ally depends on her to excite them to excel," said Henry. McKeithen also finished second in the 200-meter dash (25.81) and fifth in the 55-meter dash (7.25). MICHIGAN'S Sonya Payne broke her own school record with a shot put throw of 49'11". Payne's effort landed her one-half inch away from the NCAA qualification standards. Junior Starry Hodge's toss of 43' 9 3/4" secured her fourth place in the event. Michigan's two mile relay team consisting of Chris Tyler, Chris Danks, Mindy Rowand, and Melissa Thompson, successfully paced their way to a first place finish with a time of 9:14.7. Strong second place finishes were captured by Rowand's collegiate best in the 5000 meters (16:35.5), and Mary Wyckoff's high jump of 5'5". Finishing third were Lisa De- Vries in the high jump (5'5"), Gillian Osborne in the 55-meter dash, with a personal record of 56.88 , and Julie Marchiano in the long jump (18'10"). Osborne also seized seventh place in the long jump with a 17'3 1/2" effort. Sophomore Jenni Saari grabbed fourth place for the Wolverines in the 3000-meter run (10:08.52), as did Alana Davis in the 55-meter hurdles, with her personal colle- giate best of 8.48. Sophomore sprinter Sophia Dubreuil took fifth place in the open 200-meters (26.35). By STEVEN COHEN At this time of year many people trek to Iowa for political purposes - candidates will make speeches, babies will be kissed, and hands will be shaken. T h e candidates' stay in Iowa offers many opportunities, and a successful showing can mean the presidency. The Michigan wrestling team's trip to Iowa this past weekend presented comparable opportunities. A victory over Iowa State would have given the surging Wolverines their fourth straight road win and their seventh straight dual meet win. The Wolverines couldn't pull it out, however, losing Saturday, to the fifth-ranked defending national champions,19- 15. The heavier weight classes came alive to lead 14th ranked Michigan to a 21-17 victory last Thursday night over tenth-ranked Minnesota, however. THE WOLVERINES have been anxious to prove that they are among the nation's best, and a victory over Iowa State would have meant instant acceptance into wrestling's elite. Despite the loss, Michigan established itself as a serious contender for both the Big Ten and NCAA titles. "I'm proud that we went against the defending national champs and intimidated them," said coach Dale Bahr. "The crowd was silent for much of the match. If we wrestled them again, I feel we would win the same matches we won, a n d probably would win some of the other matches. We know we're a top ten team." Strong early performances by Will Waters, John Fisher, Joe Panteleo, and Mike Amine helped the Wolverines take an early 15-8 lead over the Cyclones, which served to quiet the partisan crowd. Michigan's Dave Dameron lost a close 9-8 decision, at 126 pounds, to fourth-ranked Steve Knight. FISHER'S match with Jeff Gibbons was expected to be the premier match. Respectively, the two are ranked second and fourth nationally. Fisher avenged a previous defeat due to injury in beating Gibbons, 10-5. "I was glad because both of us were healthy. Neither one of us had an excuse. I did most of the attacking and got an early lead," Fisher said. The 150 and 177-pound matches embodied the Wolverines' determination. Sam Amine lost in a tough match to top-ranked Tim Kreeger, in what Kreeger thought would be an easy victory. "Kreeger went out there trying to be cocky because he knew Sam was LOOK for great gift ideas ... The Daily's Valentine's page, tomorrow. only a freshman. Sam tossed him on his back. From then on Kreeger knew he was in a match," Fisher said. MICHIGAN may have lost 177-pounder James Dye for the season when he injured his knee in his match against fourth-ranked Mike Van Arsdale. Dye's future will be determined today after a careful examination of his knee. The Wolverines showed their ability to come from behind, quiet the home crowd, and overcome questionable officiating during Thursday ' night's win over Minnesota. "This was the first time in the ten years I've been coaching here that we've won at Minnesota. The kids hung together and overcame obstacles.", said Michigan Coach Dale Bahr. IF THE Minnesota match was any indication, then the Wolverines are for real. Instead of relying on their first four wrestlers to establish an early commanding lead, the team was faced with the unenviable task of coming from behind. Minnesota's lead came from Waters' loss to Keith Nix and Dameron's loss to Jim Hamel. Waters was leading ninth ranked Nix 9-3, when he tried a risky maneuver which backfired. - Dameron lost his match because of a stalling penalty he received after the match. . John Fisher pinned his opponent, and Larry Gotcher tied at 142 pounds. Michigan's Sam Amine was the second victim of poor officiating, and lost his match 3-1. The match was decided by two penalty points for roughness taken away from Amine. THE INTERMISSION after Sam Amine's match offered Michigan the opportunity to contemplate their situation. They were down 14-8. "We went to the locker room and coach Bahr said we had two choices. He said we can either fall apart or pull it all together", said co-captain Joe Panteleo. The team pulled it all together. Panteleo won by major decision, Mike Amine tied the tough Rod Sande, and James Dye major decisioned his opponent, giving Michigan an advantage going into the final two matches. Jerry Curby, despite wrestling well, lost his match at 190 pounds. The heavyweight match was to be the deciding match. It was no contest as Bob Potokar crushed Jeff Balcom to capture the victory. If the Wolverines continues to wrestle well, the Big Ten title can be theirs. Iowa lost its aura of invincibility in their loss to Penn State on Saturday, their first loss at Carver Hawkeye Arena. Texas Doily Photo by ROBIN LOZNAK Michigan's Joe Pantaleo (top) pins Mark Laughlin of Michigan State in a match last month. Pantaleo won both his matcheslast weekend and is rank- ed third nationally in the 158-pound weight class. VALENTINE 1i4 j! FOR THE WHOLE FAMILYy u n " \ d BUY SOMEONE YOU LOVE A HEART IN THiE MICHIGAN DAILY.... ONLY $10 FOR A HEART OR $4 FOR A 2-LINE AD. LOOKFOR US IN THE FISHBOWL ON FEB. 8-10. FLY AWAY TO A FUN SPRING BREAK U .=-I- 763-1 107 THURSDAY FEBRUARY 11 10PM $3.00 TH CLI [ L ACADEMIC PROBATION E B gi dders busted AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Two University of Texas football players have been charged with assault in the campus attack of a 26-year-old woman. Anthony Griffin, 23, and Gerald Senegal, 22, were charged Friday by University of Texas police after they turned themselves in, Harry Eastman, the university's assistant chief of police, said Monday. The men, seniors who started for the Longhorns last season were re- leased from Travis County Jail on $750 bond each, he said. The players said that they did not assault theswoman, but that she at- tacked them. A hearing has not been set in the case, Eastman said. If convicted of the Class A misdemeanor, Griffin and Senegal face maximum pun- ishment of a $2,000 fine and up to a year in jail. They also could face disciplinary action by the univer- sity. The woman said she met Griffin, Senegal and a third man in a cam- pus-area restaurant and bar January 30, according to police. She said she rode to the campus with them. The four parked near Beauford H. I