Women's Tennis vs. Western Michigan Saturday, 12 p.m. Track and Tennis Building SPORTS Women's Tennis vs. Eastern Michigan Sunday, 2 p.m. Track and Tennis Building The Michigan Daily Friday, March 17, 1989 Page 10 March Stanford upset, Sooners escape BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Siena, after nine games in empty and quiet arenas, made the most noise in the NCAA tournament yesterday. The Saints beat 13th-ranked Stanford 80-78 in the East Regional as Marc Brown capped a 32-point performance by making two free throws with three seconds left. "We were going to play this game like it was our national championship game," Siena coach Mike Deane said. "I think we may act like that tonight, then get ready fbr Minnesota tomorrow."$ Siena joined Arkansas-little Rock ' and Cleveland State as the only 14th seeds to win in the tournament since the bracket expanded to 64 in 1985. Oklahom THE SAINTS had been playing Major G behind closed doors because of a in Nashvi .measles outbreak on its campus in A 75-F Loudonville, N.Y. at the buz Siena, 25-4, took a 61-45 lead "Siena ,with 12:10 to go after a 24-4 run. amon $tanford, 26-7, came back with 13 amount o ptraight points and extended the run MikenMo to 21-5, tying the score at 66 on Todd Lichti's dunk with 6:36 left. some run The Saints led 78-76 with 54 sustain a seconds left when Brown missed the would h front end of a one-on-one. He missed wocking again 20 seconds later and Stanford's shocking t i Ada Keefe a fouled othefrtmt rebound. squeakedl t71.Oka Keefe, who scored 20 points, likla made both shots, tying the score at likelyop 78. Brown then was fouled driving to can get th the baseline with three seconds left In other and this time he made both free RobertI throws.Louisvill Madness opens in a flurry Ong., views -he sporiniews - t Sporting views rtsinnNwCApCamspusdiveshead Oti WS patn first into C AIX pools" ,1110 1 mrth* tvees -Ixw rtinl BY ANDREW GOTTESMAN OK, hotshot, how'd your first round picks do yesterday? For the thousands of you who have been struggling to complete NCAA tournament pool entry forms over the last week, you may be feeling pretty good or pretty lousy right now. And it seems like just about everyone around here is in one pool or another. Maybe if LSU beats Indiana, you've been thinking...Hmmm, then I could pencil in a rematch between Seton Hall and Arizona...No, that might be sending too many No. 1 seeds to the Final Four. It never happens that way. And you've been grappling over LaSalle.versus Louisiana Tech. "Why do I care who wins this damn game," I heard you all saying. "The winner's gonna get squashed by Oklahoma anyway." But gosh, wouldn't it just stink if that one little game decided who won your pool? YOU ARE NOT alone in your confusion, however. The whole truth, in fact, is that it seems like literally millions of other college basketball fans have been blinded this week by the sight of dozens of draw sheets dancing before their eyes. Maybe some people even have had nightmares about it: "Jeez, what if Pittsburgh upsets Illinois in the second round," I hear a neighbor shriek in the middle of the night. "God, then I'd lose all those points for putting the Illini all the way through to the final. I'd never win then." There must be even more NCAA basketball pools than Super Bowl pools. It's the kind of thing that people all over the University can rally around. I've seen pools within dormitory halls, housing com- plexes, office buildings and fraternities. Actually, I'm beginning to believe the whole thing is luck, anyway. I'd like to address those poolers who speculate endlessly, study the statistics, ponder the metaphysics of the matter and generally go overboard. Do you really think you have any chance of winning? NO MATTER how much you plan, doesn't it always seem like the pool is won by some guesser who doesn't know a baseline from a tanline or a betting pool from a swimming pool? Someone who has been stranded on Gilligan's Island for 20 years would have as good a shot as the rest of us. And then there are those fans who watched the betting odds assigned in Las Vegas. Willing to take a chance on Loyola-Marymount? Well, just put a dollar down and you stand to get rich quick at 150-1 odds. I wonder if the tournament was played 150 times, would Loyola really win once? Some basketball fans like to enter a pool twice or enter two different ones. That way they can hedge their bets by picking Michigan to beat North Carolina in one and N.C. to beat Michigan in the other. I'm against this - we're really fans, not gamblers, aren't we? Other pools require you to be a math major to enter. They designate certain point awards for each team correctly picked in each round. The awards in- crease with the later rounds. Some pools even grant more points to a person who picks an underdog to beat a higher seed. WHAT'S NEXT? Will the winners be determined by who correctly picks the logarithm of the average height of the starting five of the winning team? Probably not, but I don't feel bad for those tradition- alists whose pool consists of merely picking the final four teams. Finally, after all the strategy, confusion, and heartache, two or three lucky people, skillful in their minds, will emerge as frontrunners. They will, in any good pool, have seen their names near the top of a daily score sheet posted in the apartment or office. Maybe we could run a University-wide pool and keep a leader board posted in the Diag. Everybody who walks: through seems to have a tournament pairings sheet in their knapsack, anyway. "Who's going to win," is heard more often now than, "When's your next test." It's a good switch, I think. Good luck, but don't get frustrated when the, thousands of draw sheets you will see over the next three weeks show Princeton, or some similar shlep, knocking off your favorites and making their way to the Final Four. Okay, maybe not. But you never know. a 0 Associated Press ma's Terrence Mullins (24) drives on East Tennessee State's reer (12) during their first-round Southeast regional game ville yesterday. Oklahoma eked out a victory, 72-71. FOOTER by Terry Taylor zer hit the backboard. played with a tremendous of emotion, a tremendous of poise," Stanford coach ntgomery said. "We made ns, but we could never run." Oklahoma avoided what ave been an even more upset. The Sooners, seeded he Southeast region, barely by East Tennessee State 72- homa would be Michigan's ponent if the Wolverines rough the first three rounds. r games No. 1 Arizona beat Morris 94-60, No. 12 e beat Arkansas-Little Rock 76-71, Louisiana Tech beat LaSalle 83-74, Arkansas beat Loyola Marymount 120-101, Virginia beat Providence 100-97, West Virginia beat Tennessee 84-68 and Clemson beat St. Mary's of California 83-70. THE BIG TEN registered two wins in two tries as Minnesota beat Kansas State 86-78, and No. 3 Illinois got by McNeese State 77-71. In late games, Ball State was playing Pittsburgh, DePaul was playing Memphis State, Duke was playing South Carolina State, Florida State was playing Middle Tennessee State and UNLV was playing Idaho. t 1 k x i 1 :X I - -- - Ii a w. 'Q u Q4 VMWkUWISiIAlIWA 1 im IN I I I The Lifted Sail: Dante and the Song of Easter Professor Ralph Williams of the English Department Palma Sund March 7 p.n at thi Cantert Hous 218 N. Di (at Cathe iI ay 19 bury se i vision lrine) I CAREER PATHWAYS: A Feminist Perspective. A panel discussion for all students interested in Women's Studies and career opportunities. Included in the panel will be a business consultant, a lawyer, a health administrator and a psychologist. Refreshments will be served. Monday, March 20,3:30-5:30. Michigan Union, Anderson Room. Xavier Continued from Page 1 "We realize that we are against great odds," said Gillen, who is rumored to be one of the early candidates for the Michigan job. "But if we didn't think we could win, we wouldn't get on the plane." The last time that these two teams met was in 1984 in the National Invitation Tournament. Will that Michigan 63-62 victory in Crisler Arena inspire the Musketeers on to triumph? "I don't think there is a revenge factor involved," Gillen said. "We are just playing one of the top programs in the country. That should be enough motivation for us." But it is not known whether this "top program" is in adstate of disarray after its coach's departure. While no one knows how each individ-ual will react, senior co- captain Mark Hughes felt that the team wouldcome together. "We want everyone to concentrate on Xavier," Hughes said yesterday before the team's plane to Atlanta q q 6 Michigan interim coach Steve Fisher , shown here running yes- terday's practice, will be at the helm when the Wolverines take on Xavier today at 12:07 p.m. left. "A lot of people think we might fold in the first game. But we had a good practice and I think we'll be really focused." I I i :i s LJI-NVW*ln-OY, IIX+-Igl+Sn I °] IaICHGDMA$.d gambling, games, and a good time )i~;~fj jI i1 RESTAURANT "24 YEARS EXPERIENCE" CH EF JAN TOP GOLD MEDAL WINNER JUDGES SPECIAL AWARD SPONSORED BY MICHIGAN RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION MICHIGAN CHEFS DE CUISINE ASSOCIATION THE COMEDY COMPANY presents... 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