The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 24, 1990 - Page 9 What football the most total career? player points scored in his -1110u yuuya SV I 'M' Sports Calendar Griddesw Top Ten List Q&A Gillagain Michigan Sports Roundup Center of Champions 'M' Football 1 10 10 10 11 11 12 13 14-15 (For the answer, turn to the bottom of page 10) {y *Hobbled spikers drop two by Sarah Osburn Daily Sports Writer Losing the first two Big Ten games was not the way the Mich- igan volleyball team had hoped to start the season. On Friday night, the Wolverines( 0-2 Big Ten, 1-9 overall) lost to Northwestern (1-0, 6- 5) in five games, and on Saturday they lost to Wisconsin(1-0, 11-4) in three. "Everybody we talk to, parents and opposing coaches, tell us how much we have improved," Michigan assistant coach Jim Smoot said. "It's hard to believe when you are still losing, but I think that we are starting to believe that we can beat some of these teams." The Wolverines won game two, 15-6, and game four, 15-11, in the series against Northwestern. Julia Sturm, senior middle blocker, and Hayley Lorenzen, sophomore outside hitter, were the team's- stand-out players. "There are times when the team as a unit has played well, and there are times when an individual has played really well," Smoot said. "I'd like to see us put it all together." The Wolverines were swept by Wisconsin: 15-2, 15-11, 15-7. 0Wisconsin is ranked 17th in the nation and third in the Big Ten. "We have moments of brilliance, and then we have moments when we lose focus of what we are doing," Smoot said. "We need to get so we can do it all the time, then we will be okay." The team has been plagued by injuries this season. The starting six players have never been on the court at the same time. Tarnisha Thomp- son, though she saw her first action this weekend, is still slowed by the ankle she sprained a week before the first match. Sophomore Michelle Horrigan didn't travel because of severe shin splints. To prepare for this weekend's games against Indiana and Ohio State, Smoot says the team will * work on varying its offensive attack. "Our offense is too predictable. We are going to try to get a little more of a varied attack," he said. Vaughn, Blue rip UCLA, 38-15 by Ryan Schreiber Daily Football Writer If the first play from scrimmage is any indication of a game, Jon Vaughn certainly set the tone. The sophomore tailback cut back to his right, slashing in his distinguishable fashion, and scampered for 43 yards. "I was talking with (Jarrod) Bunch before the game and we just thought, 'Let's just break the first play,"' Vaughn said. Vaughn continued to enjoy a perfect afternoon, churning out 288 yards and three touchdowns, establishing himself as a true Heisman trophy candidate, and leading Michigan to a 38-15 victory over UCLA. But Vaughn was not about to give himself any credit, deferring all of the acclaim to his gargantuan offensive line. "I think you could pick anybody out of the stands and they could have run as well as I did," he said, "because the offensive line was blocking great for me." While that may remain in dispute, everyone had their own definition for the success of the Michigan tailback. "I think it's 60 percent offensive line and 40 percent Jon Vaughn," said quarterback Elvis Grbac. "Our offensive line has guys that have been there through a lot of games and they've been playing well #nd we expected that from them. "Vaughn has a knack just. of filling the holes, but, of course, our offensive line creates big holes for him. When he sees a bit of daylight, he breaks. He's got strong legs and he just opens his eyes really well when he goes through the hole and that's what makes him a really good back," Grbac added. "Right now it's about 95 percent line and about five percent me," Vaughn said, "because if nobody is in your way, you can run. I just want to run where nobody is at and See UCLA, Page 14 JOSE JUAREZ/DaiIy Michigan running back Jon Vaughn fends off UCLA free safety Eric Turner on his way to a big gain in the third quarter. For the day, Vaughn rushed for 288 yards on 32 carries for the second-highest, single-game total in the history of Michigan football. Wolverine tailback puts the 'H' Gary Moeller, while impressed with Jon Vaughn's 201-yard effort against Notre Dame, had this to say at last Tuesday's teleconference: "If he keeps getting 200 yards a game then I'd be very, very pleased if I could get 2400 yards out of him." Vaughn, only a sophomore and obviously trying to please the coach, happily obliged Saturday by running, and running, and running, for 288 yards. 2 88 yards. That's enough to change the motto for Michigan's running game from 'three yards and a cloud of dust' to 'thirty yards and an APB.' It's longer than a walk to the Frieze building - from anywhere on campus. E ic Lmont 288 yards is 69 yards more than any player has ever rushed against the Bruins. The old record was held by a guy named Marcus Allen. What? You say that Vaughn's 63-yard, change direction and break-it-up-the middle-of-the-field touchdown run reminds you of Allen's similar sprint in Super Bowl XVIII? And didn't Allen once rush for roughly 2400 yards in a season? And didn't he win something that begins with the letter 'h'? Shhh. Can't say that word too loudly, though, because this is Michigan, man. It's absolutely blasphemous to single out a player for his individual achievement. There is no 'I' in 'team,' remember? Which leads to the question: Are Vaughn's recent exploits due solely to his talent or the talent of the offensive line? Vaughn or the offensive line. The offensive line or Vaughn. Reporters put the question to the players Saturday. "I'd say it's 60 (%) offensive line, 40 (%) Jon Vaughn," quarterback Elvis Grbac said. in Vaughn "I think right now it's 95% line and 5% me," Vaughn said. "I think Jon gives a little too much credit to us," right tackle Greg Skrepenak said. "We could give him 10% maybe." But don't leave out Moeller. I mean, he deserves at least 19% of the credit for the way he mixes up the offense. And, the University gets 12% because they get 12% of everything. And, well, let's just say it's impossible to scientifically calibrate who is responsible for Vaughn's 245 yard average per game rushing so far. Anywhere else in the country, all the credit would automatically go to the tailback. But, as UCLA coach Terry Donahue admitted after the game, Michigan's offensive line is "unusual." "They were as big, as dominating, as any offensive line I can remember," he said. "They were absolutely massive." When Michigan's line really gets moving and starts to turn seams into holes into chasms, you See LEMONT, Page 14 v # by Matt Rennie Daily Sports Writer Last December, whenrformer Michigan athletic director and football coach Bo Schembechler retired, the earth appeared to move in Ann Arbor. Life as we knew it was changed forever.. One month ago, Michigan women's athletic director Phyllis Ocker announced her retirement, but this event was not followed by nearly as much fanfare. In fact, the typical reaction, if there was one at all, was "Phyllis Who?" What is the reason for this discrepancy? All right, Bo was a legend, the quintessential Michigan man, but did he have anything to do with the founding of men's athletics at the university? Ocker played an essential role in the initial forming of the women's program. Did Bo ever coach a player who never played football in high school? The first field hockey teams that Ocker coached were full of first-time competitors. Finally, did Bo ever have anyone tell him that his players had no business engaging in hard competition? Ocker did, and she still experiences some of these social prejudices today. Still, no one really knows who Ocker is or what she did for the 2Mirhan tlti a r,. _ "t- IN THE SHADOWS In anonymity, Phyllis Ocker leaves behind the women's sports program she founded university in 1961 as an assistant professor of physical education, there was no such thing as women's athletics. The only opportunity for women to compete was through intramurals and some club teams. Reforms began throughout the country at the beginning of the 70's to establish women's athletics as varsity sports. At Michigan, the Burns Committee pushed for these changes. Ocker, as a member of this committee, remembers the reception her group received. "This was a very new thing for everyone," Ocker said. "The things going on at Michigan were the same things going on all over the country. "There were a lot of people who felt that young women should not be competing hard on the athletic field." The seed for women's sports had not fallen on fertile ground. Even after the university approved the Burns Committee's suggestion that a women's athletic program be implemented, the athletic department did not really know how to handle the situation. Then-athletic director Don Canham was building a powerful sports empire on the corner of State and Hoover, and the addition of the women's program seemed to impede the overall success of Michigan athletics. Consequently, women's sports often went ignored during their embryonic stage. "I can imagine how (Canham) Barrowman garners Swimmer-of-Year title by John Niyo Daily Sports Writer Mike Barrowman is the best swimmer in the nation. Again. For the second straight year, the tenaciously competitive Barrowman was named U.S. Swimmer of the Year, while his fellow teammate, Wolverine junior Eric Namesnik, finished second in the voting. This most recent award comes just two weeks after Michigan men's swimming coach, Jon Urbanchek, received similar recognition, being named the national Coach of the Year for guiding Michigan to a Big Ten Championship and a fourth- place finish in the NCAA tournament last spring. "It's been enjoyable, to say the least," assistant coach Mark Noetzl said. "Being a swimmer here myself from 1980-84, I've seen Michigan come along way. These awards certainly say a lot about Michigan swimming." The award says even more about Mike Barrowman, who is making'=a habit of breaking records these days. He started his string of record- shattering performances last August, when he lowered the world mark in the 200-meter breaststroke, Barrowman's best event. Then, in See Barrowman, Page 11 <'-N ON I. . ..' 11