*I Women's Swimming vs. Michigan State Sunday, 2 p.m. Canham Natatorium he Michigan Daily SPORTS Gymnastics vs. Ohio State Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena Friday, January 27, 1989 P Page 10 0 Adam Benson Hedging -,i Steve Blonder Bud cools Tempie cheer with benching of star Imagine Bo Schembechier playing Mark Messner only in run situations, or Bill Frieder using Glen Rice off the bench for additional scoring punch. Unthinkable? Well, women's basketball coach Bud VanDeWege's startling benching of guard Tempie Brown produced a similar shock wave. Before this season, there were not enough accolades for Brown, a pre- season All-Big Ten selection and one of the team's tri-captains. In this weekend's matchup with Michigan State, Brown will not start for the fourth straight time. This change may be more than just lighting a fire under a slumping player. Last weekend, she played only 14 minutes against Northwestern and 18 minutes against Wisconsin. Michigan lost both games. In replacing Brown, VanDeWege uses one of two first-year players, Char Durand or Leah Wooldridge. COACH. bring back Tempie Brown. Please. If any one player on this team can bring you wins, bring you fans, and bring you tournament bids, it is Brown. She is the foundation of what can be a superpower program. When this season began, Brown spoke about this team and herself with great certainty, and why shouldn't she? Last season, Brown averaged 14.8 points per game and was the Big Ten's seventh leading scorer. Brown's leadership continued off the court as well. One of the most spirited players on the team, Brown radiates star quality. It may as well be written in neon on her uniform. Just her presence creates distractions to opponents, allowing other players to show off their talents. But in January 1989, more than Brown's offensive totals have been quieted. She exhibits the debilitating effects of the slump that has benched her in her reponses maybe even more than in her play. SHE WON'T be an All-Big Ten selection when this season is over, and her team will most likely be in the second half of the conference standings - again. "It hurts. I'm upset, but I'm not upset at anyone but myself," said Brown about her lack of playing time. "I'm not producing the way I should. I'm not being the factor that this team needs and that's what is frustrating to me." While Durand and Wooldridge have both played well in place of Brown, opposing coaches are openly wondering why VanDeWege moved Brown to the bench.-After last weekend's losses, one Big Ten coach asked if Tempie had been hurt or had been in some kind of trouble. This coach could not understand how Brown could be sat down. It has been rumored that one opposing Big Ten team told its team's star player that she would lose the individual battle with Brown when this team played Michigan..Upon finding out that Brown had been benched, the coach told the player to relax. The word from VanDeWege is that Tempie has been inconsistent, particularly on defense. Brown and her teammates do not question her demotion or VanDeWege's judgment, but players are just as certain that a torrid-shooting Tempie makes Michigan a more competitive team. The players are conscious of her absence and they miss her leadership and her dependability. In the Wisconsin loss, Michigan shot 33 percent from the field. Tempie Brown can shoot 33 percent with the arena lights turned out. If Michigan hopes to be competitive in the Big Ten, it has to be with Tempie Brown in the lineup. Brown's defense is not bad enough so that she has to be benched. That is not enough of a reason to bench this team's best player. Imagine again. This time the Michigan women's basketball team is playing national power Iowa in Crisler Arena. Michigan trails the Hawkeyes by one, three seconds left, the ball is inbounded to ... Brown? Well ... Bud? Michigan coach Bill Frieder isn't fretting over Crisler Arena fans' furor. Cold sreaKs collide in WTTest LI BY STEVE BLONDER Two teams in the midst of losing streaks will collide Sunday in West Lafayette, and something will have to give. Michigan, favored by many to compete for the Big Ten title, has lost three of its last four games and needs a victory to keep its faint title hopes alive. Defending Big Ten champion Purdue has gotten off to a rocky start, sporting a 2-4 record in conference play. The Boilermakers have lost three in a row. "The Purdue game is crucial," Michigan coach Bill Frieder said. "Somehow we need to find a way to win it. We're gonna beat Purdue no matter what." Purdue returns two strong inside players in Steve Scheffler and Melvin McCants, who was recruited heavily by Michigan. The two are averaging a combined 27 points per game. "Those guys are physical, and we have problems with physical players," Frieder said. "We've got to contain Scheffler and McCants inside, and we can't let their three-point shooters get away from us." afayette Junior guard Tony Jones, who connected on six of 12 three-pointers Wednesday night in a loss to Michigan State, is the only other Boilermaker averaging double figures. Part of Michigan's battle is a mental one. For the past two games, the Wolverines have let their opponents dictate tempo, and Michigan has been unable to unleash its potent running game. "We have to take control of the game, and be the aggressor. We can't let them dictate everything," Frieder said. Frieder said he won't name a starting line- up before tomorrow, as he is still searching for the right combination. He said Mark Hughes could expect to see considerable playing time, and that Demetrius Calip and Kirk Taylor could be a part of the game, rather than watching from the bench. "We have to go with Taylor and Calip more. We need to give Rumeal Robinson more rest," Frieder said. "We can't expect him to do all of the things we want of him offensively and guard the other team's best player for 40 minutes." Fans fired up to see Frieder flee Crisler Arena crowds have been telling Bill Frieder to throw his trademark towel in some other town. These fans, who proudly carry "Fire Frieder" and "We hate Bobby Knight, but at least he can coach signs, have expanded their vocal chords recently, booing Frieder at every occasion. Monday, the crowd jeered Frieder louder than archnemesis Bob Knight. Some campus-area apartments now have "Firs Frieder" signs hanging in the windows. TO FRIED ER, the reason Michigan has only one win against a Top 20 team since November isn't his coaching, but rather a leadership void on his team. "Also, this team lacks mental toughness and concentration. We preach it to our kids all of the time," Frieder said Thursday. All Frieder can make for this year's squad is excuses. With five potential NBA first-round draft choices on the roster, the Wolverines should be sitting pretty atop the Big Ten. Are they? No. They seem t be stuck somewhere near the middle of the pack. DISCIPLINE, or rather a lack thereof, separates Michigan from teams enjoying success. How many of Denny Crum's Louisville players have been suspended this year for alcohol use, or not finishing their assignments when the boss ordered? How many of John Thompson's players can't remember to play their position when an opposing defense plays with intensity? But Michigan? Three Wolverine guards found themselves sitting out a few games with suspensions, as Frieder tried to emulate Knight. Terry Mills drifts farther away from the basket when teams play defense on him with intensity. The rest of the Michigan frontline disappears totally. THE TEAM plays like it doesn't know which way to turn. "There is no question we've been beating ourselves," Frieder said. "We are not finding ways to win these games, but rather we're finding ways to lose them. Maybe it's something with the players." Maybe, but maybe not. Michael Dukakis hit Michigan's problem right qn the head during his ill-fated campaign when he said, "A fish rots from the head down." Great teams reflect the personality of the coach, and right now, Michigan reflects a dead fish. Michigan State's 1979 championship team was a group of down-to-earth guys who just worked harder than everyone else. And they had a little Magic. Knight's 1987 Indiana squad played with discipline and as if bringing a national championship trophy to Bloomington was the only goal. FRIEDER works as hard as any of his contem- poraries. Other coaches continually praise his work ethic. Thursday, though, Frieder told a small group of reporters that his team needs to play harder. Apparently they have yet to follow the example set by their coach. Some pre-season expectations called for Michigan to become the third Big Ten team to win a national championship this decade. Judging from recent perfor- mances, those expectations will remain unfulfilled. If you ask Frieder, he will tell you those expectations were misguided - that his team shouldn't be considered one of the top two or three teams in the nation. But the fans see something different. They see a wealth of talent not being developed. Or substitution patterns that seem illogical at best. Observers see a team blessed with tremendous size, a team that can't seem to get the ball inside. FRIEDER, however, remains confused. "I don't know what this crowd wants. I have gone 74-7 at Crisler over the last five years. We've brought a lot of good basketball here." A lot of teams, though, can win games at home. A great team is one that can also win on the road. The Michigan coach is not yet ready to throw in the towel on this season, because "one way or another we're gonna be in the NCAA tournament." And Frieder refuses to give in to the fans. "Tell those people I ain't gonna get fired and I ain't gonna quit. They can leave if they don't like it." They don't like it, but I don't see them leaving. M' women's basketball team needs a victory &}k T-SHIRT PRINTING COTTON HANES BEEFY-T & HEV. WT SWEATS 1002 PONTIAC TR. k 994-136. Tigers re-sign Pettis, Murphy DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers signed center fielder Gary Pettis to a one-year contract for a reported $440,000 on Thursday, a day after signing another Gold Glove outfielder, Dwayne Murphy. Both veterans had filed for arbitration. Pettis sought $475,000 while Detroit offered $400,000, the amount he received in 1988, Tigers spokesperson Greg Shea said. Murphy, 33, signed a one-year contract Wednesday for $400,000, a $25,000 increase from 1988. BY LORY KNAPP The Michigan women's basketball team needs a win. Currently winless in six Big Ten contests, the Wolverines hope for a victory this weekend when they travel to East Lansing to play Michigan State. Perhaps playing the state rival Spartans will be just the impetus needed to lift the Wolverines out of their slump, which has included a 35.3 shooting percentage while averaging the most turnovers in the Big Ten. "Anytime Michigan and Michigan State meet, both teams are coming to play," said Michigan State head coach Karen Langeland. "This game will be close, just like the last 28 times we've played each other." While the team is struggling, so too are the individuals. Guard Tempie Brown, who has not played well since Christmas, will not start against State. "Tempie is in an awful slump," said head coach Bud VanDeWege, "but she certainly will return to form." Sophomore guard Carol Szczechowski has not played well of late either. In her last two games, against Northwestern and Wisconsin, Szczechowski has combined for only two points and four rebounds including a scoreless Wisconsin game. "(Szczechowski) is struggling, plain and simple," VanDeWege said. "Her confidence is shaken, just like the teams'." Langeland added: "They (Michigan) are a better team than their 0-6 record indicates. They happen to be in a very tough division." Michigan State, who finished fourth in the Big Ten last season, (12-6, 16-12), is also having a rough time this season - currently 3-2 in the Big Ten. "They (the Spartans) are not enjoying the same level of success as last year, but they are still an upper division team," VanDeWege said. Leading State's scoring attack is sophomore guard Eileen Shea, who is averaging 12 points per game. Shea is also leading the the division in free-throw percentage. I 763 110 AUDITION S All T ale nt WelIc ome Comedy, Drama, Musical, Dance JAN. 29 r. t 0 0 THE CAMPUS WIDE TALENT CONT lanuary is Asian American Awareness 9Mionti You are cordially invited to the Fourth Annual SI AMEICANSU'DEN - FACUZ1y-STAfF§TF CEPTION Friday, January 27, 1989 4:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union EST up sheet Times to be scheduled on sign outside the office.