Page 8- The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - September 23,1991 SHERAN Continued from page 3 tire institution that is American Gladiators. I had my own thoughts. ' "This looks like the Presidential Physical Fitness Test they give you in ninth grade," I mused. Nevertheless, I sat back and lis- tened to the tour's authoritative or- ganizer, Julius Bryant, inform the competitors of each event. The first challenge was a one- minute push-up test; males had to perform 55 push-ups on their fin- gertips, while females had to finish 35 on their palms. Next, they faced a 40-yard dash on the terrible cement running sur- face. Qualifying times were 5.25 seconds for males and 6.25 for fe- males. The third event was a "suicide ladder" challenge; athletes had to run to a line, run back, then run back and forth to two successively fur- ther lines, in no more than 15.5 sec- onds for men, 17.5 for women. The final athletic event was Powerball, where two competitors 'I did 35 fingertip push-ups in the first 30 seconds, after which my fingers gave out and I was disqualified' of similar builds would square off on offense and defense, each for 30 seconds. To advance, they had to place at least one of two volley- balls into a garbage can, the only ob- stacles being their counterparts. Competitors who advanced past Powerball would then undergo an interview by Bryant, who would se- lect 12 athletes - four men, four women, and two alternates of each gender. The winners would compete against the Gladiators in a live show at the Palace Oct. 26. "Only the best will survive," he proclaimed menacingly. Well, I'm not the best, and I sur- vived. Not in the sense Bryant meant; I didn't qualify past the push-ups. But I performed all the events, and walked away smiling. I did 35 fingertip push-ups in the first 30 seconds, after which my fin- gers gave out and I was disqualified. The ensuing 40-yard dash was the only event in which I qualified, sprinting the distance in 5.25 sec- onds. After that, I produced a dismal time on the suicide ladders, sliding back and forth for much of the 19.2 seconds. Then came Powerball, where I competed against another non-par- ticipant. He scored once and stopped me both times. However, those who succeeded in all the events were quite impressive. One competitor to advance to the in- terview table was Kevin Waite, a formidable 24-year-old athlete. "I came here to gauge my ath- letic ability," said Waite, who plans to attend the World League foot- ball combines next spring as an out- side linebacker. "Besides, I had noth- ing better to do on a Sunday; I didn't feel like watching football. And the prize money wouldn't hurt. I got a baby on the way, and that would buy a couple of packs of Pampers." Myles McHaney, a former de- fensive end at Central Michigan, also reached the interview stage. McHaney seemed to have a valid assessment of the competition. "They want a weekend warrior, a ca- reer person who works out and is in Golfers open season swinging in Iowa City by Jim Foss Daily Sports Writer At a time when the everyday duffer hopes to sneak in one more round before Jack Frost nips the cord of life that provides for lush fairways and verdant greens, the Michigan men's golf team is just beginning its season. The Northern Intercollegiate Golf Tournament at Finkbine Golf Course in Iowa City marks the be- ginning of the fall schedule for the Wolverines. The University of Iowa hosts the tournament. Thirty-six holes of the 54-hole tournament will be played today, with the remaining 18 holes to be played tomorrow. The tournament field includes many Big Ten foes that Michigan will see throughout the season. Michigan coach Jim Carras feels the Wolverines have a chance to be very competitive at Iowa City. He hopes that the team can get off to a good start and use this as a barome- ter to gauge the season. A good start could set the tone for a very promis- ing year. "Although this is our first tournament of the year, I have very high expectations," Carras said. "I think we can do well in a fairly strong field, with many Big Ten1 schools." Last year's youthful Michigan squad took its lumps during the season. Carras expects this year's team to have learned from last year's struggles and to benefit from the added experience. Carras hopes they can parlay their experiences into a successful season. "We have a solid base from last' year," Carras said. "We are becom- ing a veteran team now." The team selects its members for upcoming tournaments through in- ter-squad playoffs each week known as "qualifiers." Carras does this to insure that he will select the golfers on the team that are cur- rently playing the best golf. "Right now most of our prac- tices have been the qualifiers, which we are still going through," he said. Michigan typically takes five members to compete in each tour- nament. At the tournament, the top four players in each round count in the team scoring for that particular round. Dean Kobane, Anthony Dietz, Denny Sikkila, James Carson, and Bob Henighan will be playing for the Wolverines in this tournament. Competitors flocked to The Palace of Auburn Hills this past weekend as the American Gladiators tour rolled into Detroit. good shape," he said. "It's exciting to be here, even if it is a little hokey." It was pretty hokey. I approached Bryant to see if he took himself as seriously as Nitro, or some of the overzealous competitors. He didn't. He's an actor himself, as well as a singer/musician/dancer/swimmer. He runs the 100-venue tour, select- ing each amateur contender from the set of events he designed. The results have been over- whelming. "We have more blue- collar and white-collar people who make it to our show than military or body-builders, or anyone else," Bryant said. "We have auto workers, pre-med students, you name it." And sportswriters. Sure, I didn't make it, and I still find American Gladiators a bit inane, but I had fun. I might even start setting my VCR for the show. Not. Laimbeer disputes Olympic selections McMurtry TD lifts Patriots to second victory Associated Press Patriots 24, Oilers 20 Greg McMurtry's 34-yard touchdown on a pass from Hugh Millen with 6 seconds left gave the Patriots a 24-20 upset over the pre- viously unbeaten Houston Oilers. The Patriots had scored just one touchdown in their first three games and quarterback Tommy Hodson was benched for Hugh Millen. McMurtry had just one catch in those games. But the Patriots led 17-6 after three quarters. Then Warren Moon threw two touchdowns to Curtis Duncan to put Houston ahead 20-17 with 1:52 remaining. New England, 2-2, drove 83 yards. The winner came as Mc- Murtry caught Millen's pass up the middle at the 22, put a move on Mike Dumas at the 15, angled to the right and raced into the corner of the end zone. 49ers 27, Rams 10 Jerry Rice broke loose for one of his patented long .touchdown catch- and-run plays, going 62 yards and breaking three tackles. That gave San Francisco a 20-10 lead and Harry Sydney's 25-yard touchdown run with 3:16 remaining clinched it. The 49ers kept Jim Everett as the league's only starting quarterback without a touchdown pass. Bills 17, Buccaneers 10 For the second straight week, the Bills needed a late drive to remain unbeaten. They produced 421 yards of offense, the final 76 coming on the decisive drive. Jim Kelly's 29- yard touchdown pass to Keith McK- eller won it. Kelly completed 20 of 35 passes for 322 yards. Buffalo wasn't safe until Chris Chandler's final pass from the Buf- falo 8 fell incomplete in the end zone. Broncos 27, Chargers 19 At Denver, Gaston Green broke loose for 63- and 20-yard scores in the fourth quarter. Green carried 24 times for 127 yards and scored three times. AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) - Detroit Pistons center Bill Laimbeer calls the selection process for the 1992 U.S. Olympic basket- ball team unfair, saying he'd like a chance to try out for the team. USA Basketball announced Saturday the selection of 10 Na- tional Basketball Association play- ers to the team. Patrick Ewing, David Robinson, Karl Malone, Larry Bird, Charles Barkley, Scottie Pippen, Chris Mullin, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, and John Stockton received the honor. Two more players, probably from the college ranks, remain to be named. "I disagree with the way it's be- ing done," said Laimbeer, 34. "It leaves a bad taste in a lot of people's mouths." Laimbeer said he was considering legal action against U.S. Olympic officials. This is the first year professional players have been allowed one Olympic basketballnsquads. In the past, Olympic teams have been se- lected through tryouts of college players. Laimbeer denied he was acting to support Pistons teammate Isiah Thomas, who was passed up for the team. Pistons general manager Jack McCloskey quit the Olympic selec- tion committee to protest its rejec- tion of Thomas. Pistons coach Chuck Daly will coach the Olympians, marking the first time a non-collegiate coach has been used. 0