The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 26, 1989 - Page 11 Family Ties Mallory stars in reunion episode dally File Photo Michigan field hockey All-American Sharon Cantor is eyeing a spot on the 1992 Olympic team. Cantor enters the last three games of her collegiate career when the Wolverines take on Ohio State this Saturday. Cantor spells trouble for 'M' foes by Adam Benson Daily Football Writer Curt Mallory's dad is going to come see his son play football for Michigan this week for the first time. You would think that Curt would be excited to greet his father before the Homecoming game and that he would hoping to be a part of a big play, one that would make good ol Dad proud. However, Curt's dad, Indiana coach Bill Mallory, might not be so eager to see his son perform too well. For the Hoosier coach knows that a loss to the Wolverines could knock his team out of the Big Ten title race. The mixed feelings go both ways. "It's an odd situation," said Curt who will be playing on the kickoff team Saturday. "This is one week I'm not looking forward to. This is a big game for my father and his team, and of course its a big game for me." THE PRESSURE continues to grow throughout the week, with Curt going through days filled with taunting from his teammates. "Normally on the end of a work- out sheet it will say something like 'Beat the Hawkeyes,"' Mallory said. "Today, it said 'don't trust Curt Mallory this week.' But it's all out of fun, I know they're just kidding around." But Michigan coach Bo Schem- bechler warned that "if we kick off, there's going to be steam coming out of his ears." Defensive tackle Chris Hutch- inson, Mallory's roommate, added: "It's kind of funny to see him. He is so intense for Indiana week, even last year. He didn't even play, he was just going crazy. He talked to his dad on Sunday and said afterwards 'Well, that's the last time I talk to my dad for a while.' He's just getting real jacked up, like always." To go a week without calling home to Bloomington will be different for the sophomore line- backer, who keeps his folks up to Bill, after sons Mike and Doug came to Michigan to play football for Schembechler. "I doubt he has any problems with it," Curt said of his father's attitude towards facing his children. "More or less, its just like any other game, except for you look across the field and see him. It's going to be a little bit different. I'm sure its just like any other game for him, and it should be like that for me." Said the Hoosier coach: "It's all the same. When you line up, you are so involved with that, you don't think about that. But I'm pleased he's there. He is playing under a great coach, great staff and a great program. I'm very proud that he is a part of it, as I was the other two." The successful Michigan football careers of older brothers Mike and Doug had must have helped sway Curt away from the nest in Bloomington. "It came down to there and Michigan," Curt said. "Growing up, I wanted to play for my dad. Then when I came down to it, I saw the things my brothers went through and I thought maybe it was time to get away. That's what it really came down to." The only unattractive element that accompanied attending Michigan would be that one weekend every fall when dad comes up. Yet Curt prepared for the matchup well before he crossed the state line into enemy territory. "When I chose to come here, I knew that there was going to be a time when I'd have to go against him," Curt said. "It was one of those things I had to accept when I did come here. "I'm glad I'm here, I have no regrets, but this is a big week for me. I hope I do well, I'd like to do well in front of my father." by Jamie Burgess Daily Sports Writer Some of the finest athletes in the nation are among us, everyday, in class and around campus. And often " times they are unmistakable-when the guy in the next seat casts a shadow on your side of the room, chances are he plays ball for Michigan. But others you would hardly recognize if you saw them. No one at the MUG seemed to identify the dining biology major from Cheshire, Connecticut as an All- American athlete. But Sharon Cantor, Michigan field hockey midfielder and Olympic Sports Festival partic- ipant, doesn't seem to mind. In fact, Cantor is quite laid-back for a big-time col- lege athlete. "I was born in New Jersey-in Wayne, I "4 think. Patterson or Wayne, I always forget. Whichever one has the hospital." Teammate Judy Burinskas, who was definitely born in Omaha, is not surprised. "I wouldn't call her an airhead," she said of her roommate, "but she is more intuitive than anything else. And she can't spell." DESPITE her nonchalance, Cantor is typical of the self-motivated student-athlete. "My goal is to make the Olympics. I'd also like to work with athletes, either in medicine or designing knee braces." Or making shoes. Shoes? "I was always trying to find the right turf shoe," she explained of her early playing days. "Nothing ever worked. I'd search forever trying to find a good shoe. So I want to design one." Be it as a sports physician or a cobbler for Converse, Cantor realizes that she'll have to make her way without the aid of a stick and shinguards. While certain athletes can look forward to professional careers, field hockey provides little more than leisure, even to a player of Cantor's caliber. "I'm going to try out in December (for the U.S. Reserve Team), but if I get cut, that's pretty much it." Don't count her out, though, despite the compe- tition. Her teammates have confidence in her. "She's definitely driven from inside," said midfield companion Josee Charvet. "And she's exceptionally intense in everything. Except spelling." It seems curious that a field hockey player would leave the seaboard where her sport has such a following. But Cantor's choice to go West is indicative of her well-rounded outlook on life. "I wanted a combination of a good school and to play field hockey with a competitive schedule, and Michigan was the best combination for me." But what about fans? A typical home game at Tartan Turf draws only a handful of people, and many of those are roommates and relatives. Yet ego and exposure don't seem to be part of her down-to-earth game plan. Mallory date on life at Michigan, except for those discussions in the football locker rooms. "I talk to my parents quite a bit, but it's more about other things, like school and stuff," Curt said. "I'll probably talk to him (Bill) one more time, wish him good luck, he'll wish me good luck, and then it will just be 'how's school?' It will be a little bit shorter than usual, I guess." BUT CURT doesn't expect his father to find the experience unusual. In fact, facing a son in a Wolverine uniform has become the norm for --Read Jim Poniewozik Every £lOEiVBCOiV i'IGA m