The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - December 3, 1990- Page 7 GILL AGAIN Continued from page 3 was hurt. Tripp never liked for any- one to help him, even when he was little. I went down on the field and I *w him, and that his eyes were moist. I think he was feeling for the team as much as for himself." While checking in with his office back home three or four times a day, Mr. Welborne and his wife Gloria have been able to spend the hard times of the past few weeks with their son. "I love having them here," Tripp admits. "I wish they hadn't en up here so long because that ould mean I hadn't been hurt in the first place. It'd been tough coming through if I didn't have the support of my family." The toughest thing may have been watching a television set in Ann Arbor with images of his teammates playing without him in Columbus. "I never want to do that again," says. "When you're playing, you can help, but when you're at home, there was nothing I could do. I was just kind of frantic." And when J.D. Carlson sent Michigan to the Gator Bowl, "I al- most hurt my other knee. Me and my ma jumped in the air and she grabbed me and was hugging me. She broke her glasses." So there have been smiles and Sughs in these hard times. But the visitors will soon stop knocking. The Gator Bowl and following surgery will only be a memory. And then the hard part will come. A time where only Tripp and a machine can chart a path for the future. A lonely BOBCATS *ontinued from page 1 The game will now be played Tuesday in Anderson Arena at Bowling Green. BnTeam Doctor Robert Anderson and trainer Sue Peel have been moni- toring the team in hopes of nursing it .back to playing condition as soon as possible. VanDeWege claims the Ohio University game is a non-fac- nor in the team's illness. "I'm really Wopeful it's just a 24-hour thing," he said. "You don't know if it's some- thing we ate or what. "We had one player who was sick in the locker room after the game. Forty-five minutes later two players got sick... and by the time everyone made it home, 11 out of 12 people were sick." time. A time of pain. As of now, Welborne will wait to wonder about the future of an NFL career. He has an insurance pol- icy which will pay him grandly if he never wears a pro uniform. "I have no plans of using it," he says firmly. "I'm sure I'll still have something to offer somebody. I don't know if it's going to be this year or next year. I'm not trying to rush into anything." Finally, Tripp imparts a few last words of wisdom. Smile, he says, a lot of people would like to be in your shoes. Don't ever turn down a person's request for an autograph. Show that you're real. And, "Sometimes when you're not happy, you have to smile anyway." Is that what you've been doing the past weeks, he's asked. "I enjoy smiling. I can't help it." 'As if on cue, a nurse walks in. Would it be okay, she wonders, if a small child from Mott's Hospital was brought over to meet you? The patient is paralyzed from the neck down. Tripp smiles. "Sure, bring him in," he says. One way or the othe, life won't trip up Tripp Welborne. Andy Gottesman 1Gotta Love It Yuck!. Sloppy play taints Blue victory Saturday's men's basketball game between Michigan and Utah was, at best, like rolling around in a mound of really oniony guacamole. At worst, it was like watching a movie about some maniac who mutilates 15-year- old teenagers at summer camp. The teams combined for 41 turnovers (20 for Michigan and 21 for Utah) and 51 fouls (25 and 26). Three players fouled out. Luckily for the Wolverines, Utah couldn't hit a thing when it did man- age to get a shot off. The Runnin' Utes were, get this, 34 percent from the field, 21 percent from three-point land, and 59 perceit from the free throw line. Phil Dixon was 1-of-9 from the field and 1-of-5 for three pointers. M'Kay McGrath contributed by going 2-for-8 at the charity stripe. After McGrath missed his first six free throws, even the Michigan crowd was rooting for him to hit the seventh, which he did. "It's one of those games that you can hardly wait to go back and look at the film to see if it was really the horror show it appears to be right now," Utah coach Rick Majerus said. "It was just an ugly game." In the first half, Utah scored the first seven points. However, they had trouble finding ways to get the ball past halfcourt thereafter. One trip up- court would end in a pass thrown to a spectator; another pass would land in the hands of a Michigan player. The Utes scored 14 points during the remaining 17:28 of the half. "Our guards don't have a concept yet of how to play offensively," Majerus said. "You've got to be smarter." But Michigan certainly had its share of idiotic mistakes. Eric Riley turned the ball over five times in the first half alone. Rookie Sam Mitchell sent a post pass flying directly into the hands of a Utah player. Now ev- erybody on the court is wearing shorts and a tank-top, but come on, red is a little brighter than white. "Eric looked like he had grease on his hands, especially in the first half," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "Even though I'll agree it wasn't pretty, they played hard and I'm pleased with that." Well, let's just see how pleased Coach is when the Wolverines play like they did Saturday and lose to Indiana or Michigan State by about 60. a - Ifl I 'H.JLLVIJ Michigan's Kirk Taylor makes a lay-up for two of his 13 points in Saturday's victory over Utah. 'M' copes with lack of size by Theodore Cox and Jeff Sheran Daily Basketball Writers If anybody is over 6-foot-5, please contact coach Steve Fisher. He is desperate for warm bodies. Michigan found out last week that transfer Chip Armer and walk- on Freddie Hunter have not yet cleared eligibility requirements. They will be out until January. Armer has junior standing, but his credits from his previous enroll- ment at West Point did not transfer to Michigan. Hunter is a fourth-year junior, but because he had matricu- lated as a part-time student several semesters, his athletic eligibility has yet to be established by the Big Ten. The Big Ten will hold a confer- ence January 6. At that time, Hunter and Armer are expected to be certified as eligible for the rest of the season. In addition, 6-foot-7 James Voskuil underwent foot surgery Friday and will be sidelined until at least mid-January. Adding injury to injury, 6-foot-9 Rich McIver sat out Saturday's 81- 65 victory over Utah because of root canal work. The true frosh should not miss any more action, but Fisher felt quite a scare Saturday. With 6:21 remaining, power for- ward Chris Seter fouled out of the game. Fisher replaced him with Sam Mitchell, who had four fouls at the time. Mitchell then fouled out at 4:01, leaving Fisher one frontcourt player, center Eric Riley. "I was more than nervous," Fisher said. "I'm glad we hung in as long as we did with Seter and Mitchell with so many fouls." However, Fisher said he would. have implemented the ball-control, four-guard offense at that point regardless of McIver's availability. Seter felt the effects of the dearth of bench size in his play. "We have to play more tentatively, and that's unfortunate," he said. "It's some- thing we should worry about." MICHIGAN (81) PlayerH TFG FT R A PFTP Tolbert 5-12 0-0 1 0 3 9 Seter 1-2 0-3 3 2 5 2 Riley 3-12 6-8 15 2 3 12 Calip 5-15 9-9 2 5 1 19 Talley 4-6 6-6 3 0 4 14 Taylor 5-9 3-4 7 1 3 13 Mitchell 2-4 0-0 3 2 5 4 Pelinka 5-6 0-0 2 1 1 8 Bossard 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 Totals 30-66 11-22 40 13 25 81 3-pt goals: 3-7 (Tolbert 1-3, Calip 0-2, Pelinka 2-2). FG%-.458, 3-pt. FG%-.429, FT%-.800, Blks: 10 (Riley 9, Taylor 1). Turnovers: 20. Steals: 3 (Calip 1, Talley 1, Taylor 1). CENTRAL MICHIGAN (65) Player FG FT R A PF TP McGrath 2-6 2-8 4 0 0 6 Grant 3-10 4-4 6 2 5 10 Watts 7-14 0-0 9 0 3 14 Tate 1-6 2-4 4 3 4 4 Wilson 5-15 7-9 10 1 4 16 Dixoon 2-14 0-0 5 2 2 3 Afeaki 2-3 0-0 1 0 2 4 Soto 3-6 1-2 0 1 3 6 Rydalch 1-8 0-0 2 0 3 2 Totals 26-82 16-27 ,48 9 26 65 3-point goals: 3-14 (Grant 0-2, Wilson 1-3, Dixon 1-5, Soto 1-2, Rydalch 0-2). FG%-.338, 3-pt. FG%-.214, FT%-.593. Blks: 2 (Grant 1, Afeaki 1). Turnovers: 21. Steals: 7 (McGrath 1, Watts 1, Wilson 2, Dixon 2, Soto 1). Halftime: Michigan, 32-21. Attendance: 11,201. ~h d~4 MichI an's Biffkenitock LUrpSt! -Service that brings you to your feet" Sandals, clogs, & shoes for all-weather comfort Repair Service 663-1644 209 N.4th Ave. (By Kerrytown) Mon-Sat 10-6 LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO CALL H( CALL ANN ARBOR REALTY. an We Offer You Campus: )ME? reaLy " Apartments -efficiencies -1-6 bedrooms " Houses -3, 4, 5, or 6 bedrooms * Special Accomodations for LARGE GROUPS *24 Hour Maintenance Listings available at the office or at the Off-Campus Housing Office _ --. r In the dark? We've got Hylights Daily Sports --I DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Mon-Fri 9-5 663-7444 616 Church St, (across from Rick's) .I J * -- -.- ~ *N I M N \/\ ,,x°