Lnide'Sprots Monday AP Top 25 10y College Top 20 10 'M' Sports Calendar 10 TopTen 10 Q&A. 11 Gill Again 11 * Griddes 12 Football Coverage 13 Ice Hockey 14 'M' Sports Roundup 15 The Michigan Daily ' C I fM : R M._Y :.. ..';r - -- -- ------i, .... Who was the winner of th first Cy Young award, in 1956? (For the answer, turn to the bottom of page 10) Page 9 Monday, October 22, 1990 Fisher to *wait on assistant hiring yTheodore Cox wily Basketball Writer It appears Michigan basketball coach Steve Fisher will not replace departed assistant coach Mike Boyd for some time. Fisher, who just finished fall recruiting, said last week that he has done little to find a replacement. "It might not happen until the spring," Fisher said. "It may happen Wfter the first of the year. I don't have any idea at the moment who we're going to have." Boyd became the head coach at Cleveland State on September 20th. He had been an assistant with the Wolverines for 11 years, and he was known for his tremendous recruiting abilities. Boyd also took with him Michigan graduate assistant Dave Paulsen. Paulsen will become an *ssistant coach for the Vikings. Troy Amaris will replace Paulsen as the new graduate assistant. "I almost hired Troy when I hired Dave, so he does fit nicely," Fisher said. Boyd signed with Cleveland State at an awkward time. It was in the See ASST., Page 12 .Tennis to gain new facilities by Matthew Dodge Daily Sports Writer The Michigan tennis program's 171" has arrived. For years, the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics has been revamping the facilities of almost every varsity sport - except tennis. But the netters' number has finally been called. The Board of Regents passed a resolution Friday designating the former Par Three Golf Course as a site for a new University Tennis *Center. The resolution gives the athletic department the ability to proceed with the planning of the complex. "I support the idea," Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said. "It is something we need, and should -have." If the plan is approved, the facilities will be funded entirely by eprivate grants. Athletic Director Jack Weidenbach estimates that the project would cost between $750,000 and $1,000,000. The new courts would be available to faculty, staff and students, as well as the men's and women's tennis teams. A dire need to improve the current tennis facilities has existed for a long time. As the athletic department slaps expensive buildings all over the athletic campus, the tennis resources have shrunk. For example, the Canham Natatorium was built atop the old site of six outdoor tennis courts. While the department funds other projects, such see Tennis. Pane 14 Icers ground Falcons by Jeni Durst Daily Hockey Writer After a Denny Felsner goal tied the score late in the second period, the physical play and bad feelings between Michigan and Bowling Green came to a head, leading to the ejection of Wolverine Chris Tamer. And out of the game along with Tamer went the playing ability of Bowling Green. Before Felsner's goal, the two teams fought bitterly to claim a scoring edge, each trading goals to capture and then relinquish the lead. Yet, the fight which ensued after Felsner's goal, and caused Tamer's disqualification, seemed to punch the air out of the Falcons. Bowling Green managed only one shot on goal in the rest of the second period and seven in the third. Their defense allowed Michigan to tally three more goals, two of which were breakaways, giving the Wolverines a 7-4 victory in their home opener. The trouble ensued when Bowling Green's Branden Shavchook two-handed Felsner roughly after the score. Within seconds four other players were involved in the skirmish next to the Bowling Green net. Two Wolverines, Felsner and frosh Aaron Ward and three Falcons, Shavchook, Llew Ncwana, and Jim Solly were penalized for roughing, with Tamer getting a five minute penalty for fighting and a disqualification that will keep him out of next Friday's matchup with Illinois-Chicago._ "I turned around after Denny scored and I saw everyone assembling," defenseman Ward said. "I saw one Bowling Green player (Shavchook) in the middle of the pile and the shoving started. One guy (Ncwana) just came jumping in real fast and went a little crazy. He started pulling at my helmet and I wasn't doing anything for the first 10 to 15 seconds, but he wanted to fight." Just over a minute later, with three skaters on each side, Mark Ouimet scored to give Michigan the lead for good. After a slight confrontation at center ice, Ouimet gained control of the puck, picked up speed, and took a quick forehand shot from the left side and into the net. It was Ouimet's second score of the game and only second on the season. "They're not the kind of team we can play with three-on-three or four-on-four," Bowling Green coach Jerry York said of the Wolverines. "They're top players stay out of the penalty box and that gives them an advantage." Ouimet's heralded line, comprised of himself, Felsner, and (David) Roberts, accounted for four of Michigan's seven goals and racked up a total of eight assists. The Wolverines' number one line showed its true colors Friday, which was absent the night before in the team's 8-3 first game loss Thursday. See ICERS, Page 14 JENNIFER DUNETZ/DaIly Michigan Forward Ted Kramer outhustles a Bowling Green defender to the puck in Friday evening's 7-4 victory. The Wolverines split the two game series with the Falcons. Au Revoir, Pasadena Ol! deflates Blue, i 24-23 i \ by David Hyman Daily Football Writer JOSE JUARE::I~a Michigan defensive back Dwayne Ware (8) scoops up a punt blocked by Dave Ritter and retuns it seven yards for a touchdown. The touchdown gave the Wolverines a 20-10 lead late in the third quarter. The Wolverines lost 24-23 as they could not hold on to another fourth quarter lead. Only conversion question now is Why. RV s The two-point conversion haunted Michigan for an entire week. And, yes, they brought back the horror for an encore. Just one short week ago, the Wolverines watched in gaping astonishment as a shove, a trip, a drop and a referee snuffed out the life from the No. 1 team in the country. This week, though, Michigan did it to them- selves, without the knowledge of only :06 sec- onds left and without the blatant, cold stare of in- justice. It took a bit longer for this one to sink in, but, inevitably, the whole game boiled down to one bad call that loomed larger than life. And no one lingered behind to blame except the Wolverines themselves. With the score 14-10 in the third quarter, Michigan took advantage of a poor snap to Iowa punter Jim Hujsak as David Ritter broke through the line and blocked the kick. Dwayne Ware scrambled for the ball as it bounded to the seven- yard line, grasped it in his arms, and dashed into the end zone for the score. The lead jumped to 20-10, and a J.D. Carlson point after touchdown would force Iowa to score two touchdowns to re- gain the lead. Ryan Then, the oddities began. Schreiber The Wolverines lined up in their typical extra-point forma- tion: the snapper, the holder and the kicker in position with the rest of the offensive line to the left. While everyone waited for the eight players to join the other three, Eric Traupe snapped the ball to Jarrod Bunch who tried to ram it in for two points. The Hawkeyes responded and stuffed Bunch well short of the goal, leaving over 105,000 people scratching their heads in bewilderment. "This is coaching," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "We tried it. It was covered prop- erly. We tried it anyway, but we couldn't get it in. It's my call." Okay. Fine. So it was a failed attempt. But why attempt it at all? The difference between an 11-point and a 12-point margin was, at the time, insignificant, and the miss left a 10-point differ- ence from which Iowa could easily recover. A touchdown and a field goal now resulted in a deadlock, and not a slim, one-point lead. Instead, Iowa went on to score two touch- downs to Michigan's one field goal, which left not only a one-point difference on the scoreboard, but another bitter taste in Moeller's mouth and a second Big Ten loss. Iowa coach Hayden Fry thought he had a suf- ficient reason for Michigan's inexplicable at- Most preseason polls picked the Michigan-Illinois game as the one to decide the Big Ten championship. These polls may have correctly picked one of the teams to play for the title, but the one team is not the Wolverines. After Iowa's 24-23 victory in Ann Arbor Saturday, the Hawkeyes (5-1, 3-0) are in excellent position to win their first conference title since 1985. Iowa travels to Illinois on November 3 in a game most likely to determine who will travel to Pasadena. The defeat marked the first time Michigan has lost two consecutive home games or Big Ten games in the same season in 23 years. The loss also marked theteam's first homecoming loss since 1967 and the Wolverines (3-3, 1-2) now sit tied for sixth place in the Big Ten with Northwestern and Michigan State. "I'm stunned," Michigan offen- sive guard Dean Dingman said. "Two weeks in a row? There's been nothing like it since I've been here." Wolverine safety Tripp Welborne agreed. "I'm not used to coming in here (press conference) two weeks in a row after losses." According to Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry, Iowa is sitting in the caboose, but is on the train for the conference title. But Fry was not too concerned with the conference race after the game. "Can you believe this? Two times in Michigan in the same year," he said. "I'm happier than if see IOWA, Page 13 '-I by David Schechter Daily Sports Writer Tarnisha Thompson loves her gym shoes. When she was growing up, Tarnisha's mother dressed her for school in a skirt and patent leather shoes. On the way to school, Tarnisha and her sister would walk around the corner until they were out of their mother's sight. When the coast was clear, they would open up their school bags, pull out their white gym shoes, and lace them up. "She'd look while I was changing my shoes. and then I would look and SETTING THE STAGE SETTER THOMPSON GROWS WITH MICHIGAN PROGRAM consistency and learning to deal with inconsistency. As of this weekend, the Wolverines have dropped 16 of their games this season and won only four. "I think people just need to give us a little time. We are a young team," Thompsonsaid. "Just give us a little time to establish ourselves, and maybe in a couple of years will . be like the rest, the football team, the basketball team - undefeated." And while an undefeated season may come eventually, Tarnisha has reasonable goals for the coming years. See SCHREIBER, Page 13 No misprint: Spikers sweep weekend trio by Matthew Dodge Daily Sports Writer It finally happened. Months of losing, embarrassment, excuses, and close-calls are over - at least for this week. The Michigan volleyball team won and won big in three weekend matches at Marquette. The Wolverines (4-16 overall) swept Oakland - University and Northern Michigan, and held off a stubborn Michigan Tech. How elated is head coach Peggy Bradley-Doppes? I