Page 8- The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - September 16, 1991 RECRUITS Continued from page 1 Read was also similar to Crowe in her impression of the Wolverines. "I just had a great feeling about the coach, the team, and the reputation of the school in general," Read said. Despite the strain of choosing a school, Read considers her overall recruiting experience to have been a good one. Some athletes are fortunate enough not to undergo any negative aspects of recruiting. Setter-middle blocker Julie Scherer of Los Altos, Cal., was approached by about 25 schools after standing out on the Bay Club Junior Team. One would think that the more suitors, the more chance there is of unethical doings. However, according to Scherer, this was not the case. "Everyone was considerate and respected my privacy," Scherer said. "It was a fine experience; I had no problems. Of course, it's different for every person." Coach Bradley-Doppes was persuasive enough to enlist not one but two natives of the Golden State. Middle blocker Aimee Smith was talented enough to turn the heads of more than 50 institutions. She eventually narrowed her decision down to Notre Dame, the University of Oregon and Michigan, and it was an aggregation of components that geared her toward Ann Arbor. "The academics, coaching, players and support were all excellent here," she said. However, she too encountered some drawbacks. "I received some nasty calls at 11 at night," Smith noted. "And some West Coast schools called at almost midnight." Michigan, having the advantage of a three-hour time difference, was not one of the perpetrators. Much like the recruits, the coaches also express a range of emotions about the procedure. Bradley-Doppes, who is entering her second and final year as chief of Michigan's volleyball squad, has seen it all in her 12 years as a collegiate head coach. Her teams have played in the NCAA tournament, and she has received Coach of the Year honors from both the Mid-American and the Atlantic Coast Conferences. Yet Tigers lose to Brewers; ' Jays stay in front by 5 1/2 MILWAUKEE (AP) - Cecil Fielder hit the longest home run. But Dante Bichette hit the one that mattered most. Fielder put Detroit ahead with his major league-leading 42nd home run, but Bichette's tie-breaking, two-run shot in the sixth inning led the Milwaukee Brewers over the Tigers 5-3 yesterday. A day after Fielder hit a 520- foot home run that was believed to be the first ball to clear County Stadium, he connected again in the second inning for a 420-foot drive. Detroit stayed 5 1/2 games behind AL East-leading Toronto. Bichette's homer came after Greg Vaughn's double and put Milwaukee ahead, 3-1, in the sixth. "The thing I'm trying to do is make contact. I said, 'Just see the ball and make contact.' And I got some air in it," said Bichette, who has been on the bench recently. Doug Henry relieved with two on and two outs. He gave up Travis Fryman's RBI single before closing for his seventh save. "Early I wasn't spotting any- thing very well. Then it started to click," Wegman said. "It was one of those games where you battle emo- tions early in the game. But I was able to relax and take advantage of some good pitches late in the game." Frank Tanana (11-11) is 0-3 in his last four starts. He gave up five hits and three runs in six innings, with four walks and one strikeout. "Vaughn did a good piece of hit- ting with the double down the line," Tanana said. "Then I got one (a fastball) in on Bichette and he was strong enough to take it out of the yard." S The Brewers made it 5-1 in the seventh against relievers Kevin Ritz and David Haas. Two walks set up Robin Yount's RBI single and Vaughn's sacrifice fly. Detroit scored in the eighth on Lou Whitaker's RBI grounder. Fielder rockets first home run out of County Stadium confines Outside hitter Robyn Read (left) is blocked in practice while teammate Fiona Davidson (middle) looks on. Read is a member of the strong rookie class recruited by volleyball coach Peggy Bradley-Doppes. she explains that no indiscretions occur when volleyball stars are pursued. "I may sound Pollyanna-ish, but I've never encountered anything unethical," Bradley- Doppes stated. "It's competitive, but it's not dirty. It's a dogfight, but it's not unethical yet. If it (illegal doings) does occur, I don't know about it." Bradley-Doppes depends heavily upon outside club teams to scout her prospects. She utilizes networking and scouting services and spends four weeks on the road every year just to attend all the major club tournaments. The largest of all is the Davis Cup, which invites 400 teams from almost all of the 50 states to participate in a week-long volleyball-fest. This past year, Aimee Smith's team won the tourney. Unlike some coaches who place the brunt of the recruiting on their assistants, Bradley-Doppes prefers to do much of it herself. "I've always wanted to become involved in my team's recruiting," she said. "I want to know the athlete myself." As she enters her final year as head coach, Bradley-Doppes, who is also the Michigan Associate Athletic Director, has mixed feelings about her departure from the recruiting game and volleyball in general. "I've enjoyed the process, but not the travel or time," she explained. "I've had so much fun, it's hard to walk away. But it is time to go." It seems as though recruiting has been accepted as a necessary evil no matter what the sport. And although it can go on in a legal fashion, it still pressures everyone involved. Once the process is finished, though, the players can reap the benefits of making it through this period. And for Coach Bradley-Doppes and her final recruiting class, that is all that matters in the end. MILWAUKEE (AP) - The re- verberations of the shot that went out of Milwaukee County Stadium - a mammoth 520-foot home run by Detroit's Cecil Fielder - still were being heard yesterday. Fielder's major league leading 41st home run Saturday night was the first in Brewers history to clear the bleachers at the stadium. Fielder homered again yesterday. Brewers president Bud Selig said he recalled Joe Adcock of the Milwaukee Braves hitting one over temporary bleachers and out in the VOLLEYBALL Continued from page 1 Lorenzen led the Wolverine attack with 14 kills, and sophomore mid- dle blocker Flona Davidson fol- lowed with 13. Michigan's first-year class was once again an important factor in the team's success. Frosh middle blocker Aimee Smith, who had ap- peared in every game going into the tournament, continued her streak throughout and killed 15 in the pro- cess. Fellow frosh Julie Scherer had four assists in backing up Thompson. LaShawnda Crowe and Robin Read also saw extensive court time. Michigan returns to action Friday, hosting the University of Michigan Volleyball Classic at Keen Arena. mid-1950s. Orlando Cepeda hit one all the way out against the Braves on June 4, 1959, but the bleachers were not as high at that time as they are now. Before Sunday's game the Brewers PR department took a pic- ture of Fielder, bat-in-hand, stand- ing in the outfield with the score- board in back of him with a message regarding his huge homer. Fielder was about the only one not impressed with the big blow. "I don't get off hitting long balls. It's just another home run," he said Sunday. "That's about it." Brewers players and fans sensed the historic importance of it and Mario Ziino, the club's director of publications, said a "surveyor will be brought in (Monday) to get an accurate measurement." Ziino said the 520-foot mea- surement is an estimate because the ball was found up against a trash container in the areabehind the bleachers. The ball went out at about the 362-foot mark, over the many rows of bleachers and also a short fence atop them. VI CHIGAN WtAILY fl PORTS Needs writers 764-055 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 Don't let this happen to you. Sign up now for an interview with the National Security Agency. We're looking for Spring '91 and Fall '91 graduates interested in full-time employment. It could be the opportunity you've been looking for. Security for the U.S. Government. It's an important, exciting mission that lends itself to some unique job opportunities. So don't miss outt National on what could be the