Page 10-The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 11, 1990 WHITE FOLLOWS COACH TO CREATE... A Homecoming at Michigan I by.HI RR+h u fo - Daily Sports Writer. Home is where the heart is. Except for Michigan volleyball player Chris White. For White, home is also where coach Peggy Bradley-Doppes is. When first-year head coach Bradley-Doppes arrived in Ann Arbor from the University of North Carolina this fall, she brought more than a stellar reputation. She swept sophomore middle blocker White away from Chapel Hill faster then former Michigan coach Joyce Davis left town. That was one of the best moves she has made as the Michigan coach. The only way for a coach to rebuild a program is to begin with players who will work hard. In White, Bradley-Doppes picked the right one. "Chris's discipline makes her the competitor that she is," Bradley-Doppes said. "She will be the first to admit that she may not be the quickest or the best jumper on the team, so she has to be disciplined, without exception. "Chris is a smart athlete who realizes her weaknesses, and is disciplined, so her strengths come through." White grew up in Chicago, but spent her senior year in high school at Rochester (MI.) Adams. She quickly piled up a plethora of big- time awards: Member of All-State Dream Team, and 1987 AAU All-America. Just as impressive is White's habit of winning volleyball games. In 1987, her AAU team won a national championship. Adams reached the state semi-finals in 1989, White's one and only year in Michigan. Such a resume has rarely been submitted by a Michigan volleyball player. And that is the main reason that she originally spurned the home team for the warm confines of a winning program. "I was considering Michigan, but I just didn't like the program last year," White said. "I just wanted to go away from home." And win. The Tar Heels, led by Bradley-Doppes, had won three straight conference championships, through White's senior year. The Wolverines only won a combined four Big Ten games in White's last two years of high school. But after a solid freshman season - in which White started for the ACC champion Tar Heels - things changed. Bradley-Doppes accepted an offer to become the volleyball coach at Michigan, and White was right on her heels. "She got the job and told me that I should be here too. I wanted to come back with her. I wanted to be able to come home," White said. "The (UNC) volleyball program was great, and I miss it, but I'm happy to be here." NCAA rules state that a f3 player must sit out a year upon transferring to another school unless the original school consents to allow a player to leave. North Carolina did in The adjustment to Ann Arborthas been extremely '~hfite smooth. White is well acclimated to the difficult academic life at Michigan because of the year she spent at rigorous North Carolina. But the action on the volleyball court has been an alarm clock on White's dream season in Chapel Hill. The Tar Heels were 16-0 in the ACC last year, while Michigan is currently 1-13. "We are so anxious to learn and to win. We just don't know how to vent our frustrations," White said. "What we need to do is turn that around to something positive." On the volleyball stairway, the same step that has been a step up for the Michigan program, is a step down for Bradley-Doppes and White. The Michigan players are slowly adapting to a new commitment to success which was nonexistent in the past. "She stresses different things about the game. It's an entirely different way of coaching," White said. Bradley-Doppes and White know each other well, which provides a smoother link between the new coaching staff and the players. "They (the players) have been asking me more questions than I've been asking them," White said. "It helps the team when I can provide feedback When she tries to get something across, she can look at me to help." On the young Wolverine squad, White has been forced to assume a different role than she did last year - that of experienced leader. She is the only player on the team who knows what it takes to win on the collegiate level. "Chris has seen that if you are disciplined with the fundamentals, it will pay off," Bradley- Doppes said. "She was baptized into high-power volleyball, where only the fruits of labor will pay off." As the Wolverines look to translate their vast improvement into wins, White tires of the team's perpetual stance of "wait 'till next year." "I'm as much responsible (for the losses) as anyone," she said. "This is a much bigger challenge than last year. Here I have more res- ponsibility, and more opportunity to contribute. "We have amazing resources, and the best coaches in the country, so it's time we use them. Making excuses and saying we're immature and inexperienced is just a cop-out. It has been a given that the future would show great improvement in the volleyball program - but we thought it would just be automatic. It's up to us to change it ourselves." Chris White's heart is now firmly in Ann Arbor. As far as the Michigan volleyball team, she hopes that a little heartbreak now will create true love in the future. MICHIGANSPORTS Baseball team to face alumni greats... by Eric Sklar Daily Sports Writer For most people, the only baseball games that are played in October are the League Championships and the World jeries. However, on Sunday afternoon at 1:30 p.m. at Ray Fisher Stadium, the Michigan baseball tea will face a squad of Wolverine alumni. The alumni team's roster will consist mostly of players who have had professional baseball experience. Current major league pitchers Jim Abbott (California Angels) and Steve Ontiveros (Philadelphia Phillies) are scheduled to play in the game, as well as former major leaguers Larry Sorensen and Steve Howe. "Our primary intent was to try to ask all of the guys in professional baseball to play," said current Michigan coach Bill Freehan, who played major league baseball for the Detroit Tigers. However, Freehan has run into a small problem. Former Wolverine standouts Barry Larkin, Chris Sabo, and Hal Morris comprise three-four of the Cincinnati Reds' starting infield and obviously will not be able to play this weekend as the Reds are busy in postseason play. "It should be fun," said Freehan, who will also be playing on the alumni team. "I'm hoping that the guys who come back have fun." Pitching coach/recruiting coordinator Ace Adams explains that one of the purposes of the game is "to enhance the relationships with alumni. We'd like to get more alumni involved in our program. "We want former players to feel at home here." The current Wolverine team will split the pitching duties between Russell Brock, Jason Pfaff, Dennis Konuszewski, Jeff Tanderys, and Tod Marion. Adams said that while the primary purpose of the exhibition g is not to evaluate his staff, he will take the opportunity to do so during the contest. "It won't be a major evaluation of skill, " agreed Freehan. "Playing the intersquad games are more meaningful to me." And even though the game will not be marked in the record books, the players and coaches still take the competition seriously. "We want to win," Adams said. The game will serve as a fundraiser for the baseball program, with tickets costing $5.00 each. 01 r --'^ . 6 ,.. ... 1 Color Printing Color Printing Color Printing Color Printing Big savings on color printing for all clubs, businesses, and organizations. ELVIS Continued from page 9 ball catchers in non-vocal ways. Every Tuesday and Thursday night from 6:00-7:30, Grbac would meet with his primary receivers - Desmond Howard, Derrick Alex- ander, and Yale VanDyne - as well as three backups. He'd toss ball after ball to them. Sometimes they'd practice on artificial turf. Other times grass. Situations were discus- sed. Practiced. Strides were made. Of course, Howard and Grbac did not have to introduce themselves to each other. They'd played together, both football and basketball, at St. Joseph High School. The experience paid off as Howard has proven to be Grbac's favorite receiver, totalling 330 reception yards and five touch- downs. "You just have a knack of where he's going to be," Grbac said. The improvement has come in more than just throwing the ball. "He's really matured over the year," offensive lineman Tom Dohring said. "He's a real leader - very boisterous in the huddle for a young guy. He's not afraid to say anything to a person like me, who's been there five years." The Willoughby Hills, Ohio native's performance last week against Wisconsin was impeccable, completing 15-of-20 passes for 154 yards, throwing for three touchdowns and no interceptions. The perform- ance made him the current career leader in completion percentage at Michigan with 62.6 percedt, surpassing Jim Harbaugh's 62.4. That places him on the top of the heap. A-1. Do we dare call him The King? Nah. Elvis will do just fine. Health Care Clinic of Ann Arbor 3012 Packard Road " 971-1970 10 m