The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday- October 28, 1990 - Page 3 '& 4:Pkoe6 A 4 Mills 1988 bronze medalist talks of switch from Mike Gill gyrmna In the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, gymnast Phoebe . ills claimed the bronze edal on the balance beam. She became the first U.S. female gymnast to win an Olympic medal in a non-boycotted Olympics. in the spring of 1989, Mills retired from gymnastics and moved back from her raining site in Houston to er home in Northfield, 'llinois. Mills has since taken up competitive div- ing and this summer moved to Boca Raton, Florida to train. Daily Sports Writer Ken Sugiura caught up with Mills last week to discuss her new life out of the gym and in ,fze pool. Daily: You've been diving for a little over a year. How is that going? Mills: It's going well so far. Like you said, I've been doing it for about a year and since I've moved down to Florida, I've really learned a lot of new things that I think are def- initely going to help me. And I've started to dive some Ilatform now too, and basically ev- rything is going real well and I'm excited about it. D: Have you met any major diffi- culties yet? M: I guess the biggest difficulty I've had so far is I injured my thumb. I sprained a ligament a little bit. But I'm pretty much recovered from that and that's the only setback 've had so far. D: Obviously, college is the next step (Mills is a high school senior). Following that, the '92 Summer Games in Barcelona and the '96 Games in Atlanta are also future possibilities. . First, what schools are you con- sidering and second, what are your s tics to diving feelings about your chances of get- ting to the Olympics again? M: First of all, I'm looking for a college scholarship. The schools I sort of have in mind are Stanford, USC, and maybe Texas; I'm not quite sure yet what I'm going to do about that. As for the Olympics, I think that the '92 Olympics may not be in my reach as of yet. 'I'm getting to travel around the world to meet athletes from all over the world' I'm looking more towards '96, because that will give me more time to be involved in diving and to im- prove. D: This summer, you decided to leave home to rigorously pursue div- ing in Boca Raton, Florida. What made you decide to make such a big commitment? M:mWell, I went down to Boca Raton originally just for a two week camp. I wasn't really planning on getting serious, or at least this seri- ous. But I really enjoyed myself, and I liked the coaches that I was working with. I liked the atmosphere of div- ing, so I decided to stay through-out the entire camp. Then the coaches sort of sug- gested about me having potential and maybe possibly moving down here. I went back home after the camp and talked it over with my parents. I decided that this kind of oppor- tunity doesn't come to very many people, and I thought I might as well go ahead and try it, and go for it and see how much I could do. ally have anything to do with (the fact) that we're all in sports and ev- erything. That just sort of happened. I don't think my parents ever got together and (said) like, 'we're going to have everybody excel in sports.' But they exposed us to a lot of and of future plans different sports and we all took to them very naturally. We all decided what we wanted to do, what sport we liked the best, and just stuck with it. I think it's a neat thing. I get along with all of my broth- ers and sisters very well. It's difficult not being with them all the time, but I talk to them a lot on the phone and we really cherish the moments when we're all together. D: After you decided to stop competing in gymnastics, you had to come home to go to high school and had to make a transition to a dif- ferent lifestyle. What was that like? M: That was probably the biggest transition I've had to make, going from gymnastics, gymnastics, gymnastics to no gymnastics and school. I hadn't been in a full day of school for awhile because of my training, so that was a pretty big change. Learning that there are other things in life, and makinga lot of new friends, just going into a big school like that (New Trier High School), it's really a big change. But I think it was nice that I experienced that part of high school. 'It's a lot more of a relaxed atmosphere and I think that's one reason why I'm enjoying it so much' D: Ten years from now, where do you see yourself, and what do you see yourself doing? M: Ten years from now.... Hope- fully, I will be out of school by then, out of college. Either that or just finishing up graduate school and getting into the law business. I want to be a lawyer, so I guess that's where I see myself in ten years.... no serious sports. D: Both gymnastics and now div- ing have taken, and still take up much of your time and effort. Where does this drive come from? M: I think a lot of it comes from my family, my parents. They've al- ways helped my brothers and sisters and myself be very focused in what we do, That's just helped us learn how to be very disciplined, how to use our time wisely. And all of that helps when you're training in a sport like this. You have to learn how to be very focused and you have to take on a lot of responsibilities. Moving away from home is a pretty big responsibility that you learn at a young age, and (so is) be- ing disciplined with your training and your studying. So basically I think it stems from the way I've been brought up. D: As both sports require big sac- rifices, you have had to miss out on things the typical kid gets to do. Do you ever think about that? M: I think most kids miss out on a lot of things that I'm getting to do. And I don't really think of it too much as a sacrifice because I'm get- ting to travel around the world to meet athletes from all over the world. And diving isn't as time-consum- ing as gymnastics was. (With) gym- nastics I had to be in the gym all the time: (It was) eat, sleep gymnastics. (With) diving I can go to school, a full day of school. Right now, I just work out once a day; I'm going to start working out twice a day. It's a lot more of a relaxed atmos- phere and I think that's one reason why I'm enjoying it so much. D: Your sisters Hilary and Jessica and your brother Nathaniel have also made their mark in the sporting world, not to mention the exploits of your adopted brothers Whitaker and Lucas, leading Sports Illustrated to label your family "Team Mills." Tell me, what is it like being a part of this family? M: I've really loved being a part of such a big family. It doesn't re- Mo stars in his own game of Jeopardy This week's Jeopardy answer: I don't know. This week's Jeopardy question: Why be a college head football coach? Gary Moeller might answer the same way. After losses to Michigan State and Iowa, the man has begun to feel the heat. After all, he still needs 190 victories to match Bo Schembechler's Michigan win total. He'll sit and tell you that he doesn't feel the pressure, that he doesn't worry about what the press, alumni, fans, and students are saying about: him. But you can't be a human being and not feel a little sting in the heart when people become merciless when using your name. Frankly, the downplaying is probably all an act. Make no mistake, Gary Moeller has confidence in his ability, confidence in his players, confidence in the program he's instituting - but he's losing. And that's what hurts. People question losing and losing coaches. And that simple fact will take you off the top of so many people's Christmas card lists. Today, like every Monday, Moeller will appear at Weber's Inn. He'll speak to supporters who have thrown down a pile of money to hear, over lunch, the coach's thoughts on the previous game. He'll then move to a smaller room to answer journalists' questions while picking away at his own meal. He'll answer the same questions again for the radio microphones. Then he'll be herded off to answer the same questions three more times for each major television station in Detroit. The past two Mondays have not been Ruby Tuesdays. The questions have not been kind. But they're repeated over and over. That has to wear on you. The last two weeks, Moeller has picked at his food, barely eaten. He says food is too hard to stomach after such losses. He might be joking, but there's a hint of sincerity there too. Why be a head college football coach? Why not live a life of counseling high schoolers, or owning a hardware store, or working a 9 to 5 desk job? The answer: I don't know. Here are the benefits of being a head college football coach: 1. You get your name in the paper every day. , 2. You can read comments you made like, "Indiana's a fly-around team," or admire the poetic parallel structure of this recently-coined masterpiece: "Just don't throw it. Don't throw it. Don't throw it." 3. On game day, the cameras might give you the chance of getting caught picking your nose while on national TV. 4. And if you win all your games, everyone will love you. Now, here are the negatives: 1. Work Expectations. You cat football, you sleep football, some people might think you make love to football. You can do nothing else. After Michigan lost to Michigan State, Moeller grabbed a bite to eat with his family. Then he watched movies. At the office. Of the past game. No jukebox Saturday night there. Same thing every week. Every day. Every hour. "Do you remember your wife's name?" becomes a pertinent question. 2. Extra Expectations. Remember about getting on TV? After Michigan lost (the word seems to be popping up frequently today) to Notre Dame in the darkness of the night, Moeller and the team flew back to Detroit. From the airport in the wee hours of the morning, Moeller had to drive to Channel 2's studios to film "Michigan Replay"-so it could be sent out on satellite to other stations at 8:00 a.m. that morning. He drove home and soon began preparation for the upcoming week. The glamor of a college football coach: Film at 5:00 a.m. 3. Expectations. Pure Expectations. Michigan will not go to the Rose Bowl this year. It just doesn't happen every year. This season, Michigan's defense has been bruised and beaten by opponents. It also has been decimated by injuries. The Wolverines have not gotten the breaks. Two losses by a'point and a referee? That's tragic. It might seem soft, but Gary Moeller does not deserve all the blame that's been thrown his way in the past week. Why is everyone so worried about him? Sure, he's made mistakes. But the mistakes are not uncorrectable. The losses are not all his fault. And if anyone believes the inane words coming out of some peoples' mouths, that Michigan football is now dead because Bo is gone - they should transfer out of this school. This is not Ohio State. This is not Alabama. There is no cause for alarm just because Michigan is no longer No. 1. In the long run, Gary. Moeller's Michigan teams will enjoy great success. It's not fair to the man to criticize and mount more pressure on him. Just question his choice of careers. Lemont wins slam-dunk title for 2nd straight year Mike Lemont successfully defended his inter-fraternity slam- The day, however, belonged t dunk championship Saturday on the Lemont, who overcame some con- Diag in front of a crowd estimated to troversy in the final round to walk be between 75-100 people. away a two-time winner. Lemont, a member of Alpha In that final round, a tie-breaking Epsilon Pi fraternity, outjumped, dunkoff was ordered even though a outleaped and outslammed competi- ZBT dunker missed one of his tors representing roughly 15 campus dunks. Judges felt Lemont's straiglht fraternities. dunk to win wasn't worthy of'a "It's always tough to repeat," game-ending dunk. Lemont said. "But I felt good. I felt " Forced to dunk again with his springy." championship in the balance, Competitors were allowed two Lemont approached the 9 foot net opening-round dunks before judges from the right side, did a 180 degree of Sigma Alpha Mu, which turn in midair, and tomahawked the sponsored the event, pared the field ball through as he floated backwards down to the final round of four. by the net. Besides Lemont, Evans Scholars, "I just took off and created. I just Sigma Nu, Zeta Beta Tau also landed let it happen," Lemont said. in the final four. -from Staff Reports INM .Two more shutouts for rugby team Women finish season with five-game winning streak by Charlie Wolfe Chalk up two more blow-outs and a perfect ending to an outstand- ing season for the Michigan Women's rugby team. The team journeyed to Athens, hio Saturday where Ohio Univer- ty was hosting Michigan and Day- ton University. The Wolverines soundly thrashed both squads by a combined score of 60-0, culminating 4 five-game winning streak. The first contest featured a spir- ited rivalry between Dayton and Michigan. According to Michigan team president Erika Wolf, the Wolverines were especially inspired @ecause of a previous loss to their Opponent. "A year ago, in the spring, we lost to them," Wolf said. "We had a bunch of inexperienced rookies then, and they basically ran all over us." But this time the outcome was much different. Dayton entered the game undefeated, yet that did not stop the Wolverines. Michigan (6-2) won virtually every scrum-down and ardly let the Flyers touch the ball. "We just kind of came in and trounced them," Wolf said. Wolf led the way in the first game by scoring three tries, worth four points each. Lisa Brown, Emily Kohner, and Melanie Jimenez ac- counted for the other 12 points by running in tries of their own. The second game, however, did not possess the same intensity as the first one. The contest served more as a chance for all the Wolverines to partake in the scoring, instead of more serious competition, as Ohio was mainly composed of rookies. "Ohio was a more friendly game," Wolf said. "They were a fairly inexperienced team anyway." Lisa Brown won the scoring crown in the Ohio game, tallying three tries for Michigan. Wolf fol- lowed with two tries, while Allison Combs, Mena Colucci, and Sarah Keech each scored one. Colucci and Kohner both kicked two-point con- versions as well. In eight games this season, Michigan has outscored its oppo- nents 140-28, including six shut- outs. The team has taken special pride in its "brick wall" defense - tall and unyielding and hitting you just as hard. Captain K.C. Bemish offered a generous evaluation of her squad's performance this weekend. "I think we played outstanding," she said. "What I was most pleased with, though, was the fact that in the past, we'd play down to the level of poor teams. We didn't do that yesterday." Bemish had especially high praise for the rookies, who composed 12 of the 15 players who went on the trip. She noted the forwards had some very well executed scores, the de- fense was wonderful as it has been all season and it's the best rookie squad she's seen yet. "That (the season-ending victo- ries) really brought our whole season together this weekend," Bemish con- cluded. Blue water polo beats Michigan State, 11-5 by Ken Sugiura Daily Sports Writer Ann Arbor isn't quite Kansas, but the Michigan water polo team would certainly agree that "there's no place like home." As the club hosted its first home match in ten years, roughly 100 people witnessed the Wolverines (8- 11 overall, 3-4 in Big Ten) paste Michigan State 11-5- Saturday night. Playing a variety of positions, sophomore Paul Murray's four goals led a balanced attack which saw six different players tally scores for- Michigan. "It was a team effort. No one carried the team," senior co-captain Keith Cox said. Behind Michael Winkelman's goaltending, the Michigan defense dominated throughout, holding the Spartans scoreless for the entire first half. "Our defense was fairly solid," Murray said. Playing in Pioneer High School's pool instead of in Canham Natatorium provided an added chal- lenge for the Wolverines. The pool at Pioneer has both a deep and a shallow end, while Canham Natator- ium's is all deep. "It's a new game. You've got to worry about pushing off the bottom and getting called for it," Murray said. In addition, because the shallow end allowed the players to stand and rest, it negated theiWolverines' decided advantage in swimming talent and conditioning. The Big Ten Championships this weekend in Indianapolis provide the Wolverines with their next chal- lenge. The team expects to be seeded third behind the Wisconsin and Northwestern. Coach Scott Russell expects a wide-open tournament. D*O INIC [IjJ~ l th erfectplace for yourself: i - !I . . . . _ / 4 pace NOD HUM p UQOP COQ @PQQaa N WHOM ° W WO SOCIAL WORK DAY Thursday, Nov. 1, 1990 3-6 PM Amphitheatre, 4th Floor, Rackham Building Alumni, professors, and administrators will speak on career opportunities in social work fThan .0 Iun~io. nn ThA Tr~avpl Panel m