The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 24, 1990 - Page 11 c c " l ea s 'ta s Ba ct i acrd ('lids Sabo M' Fans: Wake up! , .,.; f ' d" ff' t" t T . ririn andI( Sahf m mm m mm!w mm w 'MW1W TWO former 'M' players talk about life as Wolv The Cincinnati Reds .ave dom- inated the National League West this season, never relinquishing the top position of the division. Two layers that have solidified the Reds as anchors in the lineup hail from Michigan. With Chris Sabo at third base and Barry Larkin at shortstop, Cincinnati sports two of the best hitters in the league. Daily Sports Editor Ryan Schreiber caught up with the Reds in mid-June during a series with the Mets at Shea Stadium in New York, where he had the opportunity to talk to Sabo and Larkin about Michigan, the Reds, and their hitting success. Daily: Who offered you the most influence at Michigan while you 'were there? Larkin: (Former) Coach (Bud) Middaugh. Sabo: Bud. Bud Middaugh and (former assistant coach) Danny Hall. D: In what way? L: Well, he was the head coach, everything and anything that had to do with baseball. He was the teacher. He was the mentor at the time. S: In every way. They helped give advice in every aspect of baseball. D: Which player did you most want to be like when you were a SL: Oh boy, I didn't watch baseball as a kid. When I was in high school, I liked Ozzie Smith and Davey Concepcion. I wanted to play shortstop in the big leagues. S: I didn't want to be like anybody. I liked Al Kaline. I was a big Tiger fan. D: In 1983, arguably Michigan's best season ever, you played together or the only time. What kind of a elationship did you have on and off the field? L: Well, on the field, everybody was together. It was a team concept. But Chris was, at the time, kind of quiet and to himself, and I was young and to myself. We didn't say too much. I didn't say too much to anybody until I got comfortable. S: I didn't see Barry too much off the field. I was a couple of years older, so I had my friends and he had his friends as a freshman. On the field, it was good. He's a great player. (Our communication) was fine, not any more or less than other shortstops. D: How has this affected the way you play as teammates with the Reds? L: Well, you know, we had a lot of similar background, so we had a erines and in the majors lot of stuff to talk about when we both got here. S: It makes it easier for me. I don't think it makes it easier for him because I don't have as much range as he's got. D: When both of you had shortened seasons last year due to injuries, you were at the peak of your game when it came to hitting. How has this affected your play this season as far as attitude and as far as your desire to repeat what you did last season? L: I think last year was a boost of confidence for both of us. We're both confident this year and both swinging the bat pretty well. Chris has 17 or 18 home runs, or however many he has, and he's doing really well. And I've been getting my hits, so I think last year was a confidence booster. It's a learning experience, and you just have to take what happened the year before, learn from it and try to keep going. S: I don't know if it has any effect. It's just if you're healthy you you were. D: (To Sabo) You improved from a 30th round draft choice in 1980 by Montreal to a second round pick by the Reds in 1983. It obviously looks like a wise decision for you to have gone to college. How did you make this decision and what factors influenced you? S: I was hurt my senior year in high school and that's probably why I was drafted so low. I couldn't run because I pulled a groin muscle. That's probably why I was such a low pick. I was always going to go to college anyway. Get some kind of an education. D: What has been the biggest thrill or moment of your career so far? L: Playing in All-Star Games. Last year, I was in the All-Star Game but I hurt my elbow, so I really didn't get the chance to play in it. S: Playing in the big leagues. D: What is your favorite memory of Michigan baseball? I will try to say this without offending anyone that -wears maize and blue 24-hours a day and puts food coloring in their beer to turn it blue. I think Michigan fans suck. Sorry. You can tell me that Michigan has sold out a 100,000 seat stadium ever since Shakespeare wrote King Lear and for that reason, Michigan has some of the greatest fans in the world. Bull. We won't delve into the lack of support exhibited at all the minor sports. We'll just stick to the big three of football, men's basketball, and hockey. First football. Now, it's true that most students get season tickets. And it is a whole lot of fun, right? But honestly, who gives a damn about the game. As long as a person is able to walk home, remember a score that halfway resembles the one flashed on the Gill scoreboard so they can tell mom and dad the score if they call, then it is mission accomplished. As one person said, "it's one big social gathering. That's all it is." Which is exactly right. Now, I happen to like social gatherings. But when you go to a football game, a 00 team is expecting support. For the most part, people sit on their duff, or stand aimlessly around, unknown to what's going on down where it's green. Sure you'll cheer a touchdown or if Jon Vaughn breaks up the middle. That's about all you'll cheer for in addition to the fight song. The rest of the time, people are more concerned with where someone is sitting and how much is left in their flask. Again, there's nothing wrong with worrying about either of those problems, but make some noise. Geez. Over 100,000 people are sitting in one huge bowl, and my toilet makes more noise when I push the lever. You can watch the game, look for that person and worry about your flask all at the same time. You're Michigan students, seemingly able to do more than one thing at a time. Somehow, our more simple-brained friends at Michigan State or Notre Dame or any other school I can name know that a fun time at a football game includes making noise and watching the game. When Notre Dame comes in to Michigan Stadium, their small contingent makes more noise than the home: team's for the majority of the game. That is ridiculous. Notre Dame draws 6000 to a pep rally. Michigan gets 60. Enough on football. Now we go to basketball. Crisler Arena sold out dozens of times in the past. Yet sometimes I think I'm guarding Lenin's tomb instead of watching a basketball team. This team averaged less. than two losses at home each year. Now there is a student section, which improved the, situation slightly. But the rest of the arena is reading the latest AARP newsletter, and you can hear a. pacemaker tick. If you ever want to see what a real; basketball crowd is like, go to Iowa. Or Indiana. Of Michigan State. Or.... People make noise for an entire game, regardless of the score and it doesn't take a 100 home-team run to get them going. Then we come to hockey. As a season ticket holder last year, I can tell you how frustrating it is. Yost Ice Arena's acoustics aren't made for noise. Yet, it's as if; the hockey team is out there skating in a soundproof, dome. Best place to watch a hockey game? Bowling Green.; When you walk into that arena, which holds sound lile a ziploc bag, you get shivers up your back. It is loud.{ But it's not just because of acoustics; it's because fans are continuously making noise, chanting, singing, and rattling the opponents confidence. Find me a CCHA hockey player who says it is not difficult to play in Bowling Green because of the crowd and I will showv you a liar. So wake up. There's plenty more football games at home. And a whole season awaits basketball and hockey. Quit your snobby whining. Become a real fan, like the ones at other Big Ten institutions. POST SCRIPT: To all those who have called or written the Daily to ask about a true fan, Joe "The Brow" Diroff, thank you. He is still in the hospital. Send get well wishes to Joe Diroff, Room 4514, Sinai Hospital, 6767 West Outer Drive, Detroit 48235. P.S. II: Let's hear your opinions on what is wrong with Michigan fans or if there is anything wrong. Responses will be published in later editions. Write to "Fans," The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 'Bud Middaugh was good to me. I had a good time there and he taught me an awful lot. I think it's a shame what really happened, but I guess if you break the law you have to pay. And like I said, Bud did great things for me and I'm very happy I went to Michigan, and I wouldn't change the experience.' -Barry Larkin Cincinnati Reds shortstop .vavi. -READ SHERAN MY THOUGHTS- can play better and we're both healthy this year and we're doing alright. Last year we were hurt most of the year and it's hard to play when you're hurt. D: What was it like to play in the 1988 All-Star Game in front of the hometown fans in Cincinnati? L: It was enjoyable. It was my first All-Star Game and it was in my hometown.. I don't know if many guys get the chance to do that. I was playing with my home team. So, it was a good experience for me. S: It was fun. We had a great time, a real good time. D: (To Larkin) At every level of play, from college to the minors to now, you have posted blistering hitting numbers. Does Barry Larkin ever get cold, and if he does, how does he get out of a slump?. L: I do get cold. Hard work is the way you get out. You continue to go and try to approach it and be consistent, the same way every day. You try to do the same thing, then it's kind of easy to get back to where L: My favorite memory is going to the College World Series. That was the best time I had. S: Going to the College World Series and winning the Big Ten Championship. D: How do you feel about the Bud Middaugh situation at Michigan knowing he was charged with embezzlement, and eventually acquitted, and with the Michigan baseball program being placed on probation? L: Well, Bud Middaugh was good to me. I had a good time there and he taught me an awful lot. I think it's a shame what really happened, but I guess if you break the law you have to pay. And like I said, Bud did great things for me and I'm very happy I went to Michigan, and I wouldn't change the experience. S: Well, it's unfortunate that Bud got involved in a situation that obviously wasn't very good. But, the Michigan baseball program will bounce back. What do they have, one more year on probation? They'll be fine. Mike Barrowman maintained his status as the top men's swimmer in the nation by edging out teammate Eric Namesnik in the balloting. * BARROWMAN Continued from page 9 the NCAA's last spring, he destroyed the nine-year-old NCAA, American, and Open records in the 200-yard breaststroke by more than a second. Just this past summer, he bested himself, breaking his year-old 200 breaststroke standard at the Goodwill Games in Seattle. "Mike is truly a talented athlete That helps not only himself but others around him." Two of those have been Namesnik and another junior, Eric Wunderlich, who will join Barrowman and Lang at the World Championships this winter. "I've seen Eric stay in the water much longer than everyone else a lot in the last year," Noetzl said. "He has really come into his own. He Let's hear your opinion on 'M' Fans