The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- September 30, 1991- Page.7 Women kickers B 0 win one, tie two After travelling to Milwaukee for a trio of games, the women's sbccer team continues to be unbeat- able. It may not win all the time, *but it's unbeatable. The team ran its record to 11-0-2 by tying Marquette and Illinois and eating Minnesota. The Marquette game ended in a scoreless tie, with Crissy Rice guarding the Wolverine goal. Illinois appeared to have fate on its side in its 1-1 draw with Michi- gan. Five of the Wolverines' 25 shots on goal hit the crossbar. #Molly Douma scored the lone Michigan goal unassisted. The Wolverines burst out of their offensive drought in their fi- nal game, pummeling Minnesota, 4- 0. Heather Marshall converted first off a pass from Karen Jones, and Michelle McQuaid made it 2-0 be- fore halftime, with Douma assist- ing. Michigan continued the barrage *in the second half, padding its lead with a pair of Alicia Stewart goals, assisted by Douma and Marshall, re- spectively. "In the first two games, we were kind of overconfident," sophomore stopper Carrie Taylor said. "We wanted Minnesota more than the other games. They got invited to club championships last year, and we got overlooked." -from staff reports Griddes Congratulations to last week's Griddes winner, Andy Grins- felder, who picked 19 correct games. Drop your picks off to the ,Michigan Daily, upstairs at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard, by Friday at 5 p.m. to win a $10 gift certificate to O'Sullivan's Eatery and Pub. 1. Michigan at Iowa 2. Michigan State at Indiana 3. Wisconsin at Ohio State 4. Minnesota at Illinois 5. Purdue at Northwestern 6. Syracuse at Florida State 7. Oklahoma State at Miami 8. Arizona at Washington 9. Oklahoma at Iowa State 10. Clemson at Georgia 11. Notre Dame at Stanford 12. Penn State at Temple 13. Baylor at Houston 14. Southern Miss. at Auburn 15. Florida at LSU 16. Maryland at Pittsburgh 17. Georgia Tech at N.C. State 18. California at UCLA 19. Tenn.-Chat. at Alabama 20. William & Mary at UNC TIEBREAKER SCORE: MICHIGAN _ IOWA NAME:______ PHONE: Richardson named CSCAA president from staff reports The College Swimming Coaches Association of America has an- nounced Michigan women's swim- ming coach Jim Richardson as its new president. The announcement was made by outgoing president Glenn Patton, the men's coach of the Iowa Hawkeyes, at the organiza- tion's annual meeting in Chicago. Improvement has highlighted Richardson's six years at Michigan. After guiding the Wolverines to a fifth-place finish in his first season in 1986, Richardson has since led his team to five consecutive conference titles. In addition, those teams have captured five straight top-15 fin- ishes at NCAA Championships. Among Richardson's swimmers have been 12 NCAA all-Americans, including 1989 200-yard breast- stroke champion Ann Colloton, who became the first Michigan swimmer and the second in Big Ten history to win an NCAA title. Richardson also coached 20 NCAA honorable mention all-Americans and 18 Big Ten Champions. The 1987 and 1989 Big Ten Swimming Coach of the Year, Richardson postsa 47-9 overall record and a 29-3 conference mark in his years with the Wolverines. An ardent believer in the student-ath- lete, Richardson coached a 1990-91 squad which achieved a team grade point average above a 3.0 and was one of several to receive the all-aca- demic team award from the CSCAA. Richardson received an under- graduate degree in 1971 from Wake Forest before taking graduate classes at North Carolina-Greens- boro. He began his collegiate coach- ing career at Iowa, serving as an as- sistant coach for four seasons, be- fore coming to Michigan. Richard- AP Photo Detroit safety Bennie Blades (36) arrives on the scene a moment too late during the Lions' fourth straight win, a 31-3 victory over Tampa Bay. 4-1 Lions roar past Tampa Bay, 31-3 Richardson son is a past president of the Big Ten Women's Swimming Coaches (1987-89) and has also sat on the CSCAA's Board of Directors as the Division I women's representative. The CSCAA is thre oldest pro- fessional coaching organization de- voted to swimming in the United States. It is comprised of approxi- mately 550 members who are drawn from swimming and diving coaches of Divisions I, II, and III institu- tions and junior colleges across the country. In his role as president, Richard- son will be responsible for direct- ing the CSCAA's efforts in pro- moting college swimming. In par- ticular, he will work with the NCAA council, the NCAA Presi- dents Commission and college ad- ministrators throughout the nation to insure that swimming remains a viable sport on the collegiate level. PONTIAC (AP) - Barry Sanders is feeling better each week, and the Detroit Lions are playing like it. Sanders scored three touchdowns for the first time in his career Sunday as Detroit won its fourth straight game, 31-3 over Tampa Bay. It is the Lions' best start since open- ing the 1980 season 4-0. The Buccaneers had held oppo- nents to an average of 17 points in their first four games, all losses. Sunday they gave up two touch- downs in the first 10:14 and never were in it, falling to 0-5. Sanders had his third straight 100-yard plus rushing performance, finishing with 160 on 27 carries. His touchdowns covered seven, one and 69 yards - the longest of his career. Quarterback Rodney Peete, solid if unspectacular, missed two days of practice, healing from rib and hip in- juries. Peete threw for one touch- down and was intercepted once while completing 15 of 22 passes for 159 yards. He called it a day after Sanders' last TD at 5:54. Detroit's stellar defense made both look good, recovering two fumbles and grabbing two intercep- tions. Chris Chandler, making his firstt start since last November, found the' only way he could move the Bucs was with his feet. His 56 yards on six carries came with a pounding. A minor concussion forced him from the game late in the third quarter. Chandler was named by coach Richard Williamson to replace Vinny Testaverde after leading Tampa in the second half to a near upset of undefeated Buffalo last week. Against the Lions, he was only 10-for-26 for 64 yards. He was sacked once, intercepted once and hassled constantly. Testaverde did no better. He completed his first four passes, then misfired three straight, the last one nearly intercepted but dropped by former University of Miami team- mate Bennie Blades. He finished seven of 13 for 54 yards with one in- terception. 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