Field Hockey vs. Ohio State Tomorrow, 6:30 p.m. Oosterbaan Field House SPORTS Volleyball vs. Penn State Tomorrow, 7:30 p.m. University Park Pa i " * . " k' The Michigan Daily Thursday, October 10, 1991 5M' spikers give MSU blues Wolverines capitalize on frosh Aimee Smith's nine kills age 9 Wooster bysAdam Miller Daily Sports Writer At yesterday's "State Pride" Michigan volleyball match against Michigan State, which the Wolverines won, 12-15, 5-7, 15-17, 15=4, 15-8, the word for the night wats 'out.' " First, as in side-outs. Posses- sion changed hands over 100 times, extending the match to 1:55 in a sweltering Keen Arena. Or, as in time-out. Michigan State coach Ginger Mayson used any Ind every opportunity to stop play, *nd her stratagem paid off. The &partans won all but two of the points following their time-outs. And finally, "yer out." In gamde five, which was played in "rlly scoring," where points are awarded on every point, a State ball handling error at the net finished the resurgent Spartans. "I don't know if it's supposed to be as tough as we made it," ichigan coach Peggy Bradley- Poppes said. "But every time you play Michigan State, you can throw everything out the door. This is the best I've seen them play." A combination of factors al- lowed Michigan State (0-5 in the Big Ten, 2-13 overall) to jump to an early lead. First was the Spartans' blocking strategy. As Michigan (3- 2,15-4) set up a return, State sent three or four blockers to the net, forming a wall and challenging the Michigan hitters to hit long. "You never know what to ex- pect," said middle blocker Michelle Horrigan. The sophomore led both teams with 24 kills, despite a nag- ging case of shin splints which forced her to rest intermittently. Michigan State's unique game plan created another problem - an un- easiness among the Michigan play- ers on the court. "We did start a bit hesitantly," Horrigan admitted. Horrigan and the potent Wolverine offense looked ready to take over in the second game. After the Wolverines fell behind 1-3, Horrigan's ace sparked the Maize and Blue on a 14-4 run, evening the match score at one game apiece. Things looked grim for the home team when State came from down 7- 2 and 10-7 to take the third game, 17-15. But in actuality, this was the end of State's fun for the evening. The Wolverines allowed just 12 scores in the final two games "If you play with a lot of emo- tion, good things are going to hap- pen for you," junior setter Tarnisha Thompson said. The Wolverines played the last game with their characteristic "reckless abandon." After taking the fourth game 15-4, Michigan jumped out to an 13-4 lead, led by frosh middle blocker Smith's two kills and a block. The Wolverines cruised to the victory from there. Michigan State turned in a far stronger performance than most ex- pected, and most would say that. they had nothing of which to be ashamed. Middle blocker Aimee Smith digs the ball earlier this season. It took five games for the Wolverines to finish off the Spartans last night. T SO-GEE i sPg N IES Dangers mar a - - - Buckeyes scheduled sor Champaign chop by Rich Mitvalsky While Michigan travels to East Lansing this weekend to avenge last 'son's upset loss at the hands of negligent officiating, the remainder of t conference's matchups should provide some excitement. Ohio State (1-0 in the Big Ten, 4-0 overall) at Illinois (1-0, 3-1) Florida State, the Atlanta Braves, the Kansas City Chiefs, and now the Fighting Illini. That damn tomahawk chop is spreading like wildfire, and although Michigan fans hold their version of "the chop" close to heart, the original has brought about quite a bit of success. Jason Verduzco, di- recting the conference's most potent offense, should improve upon a lackluster 173-yard passing performance against Minnesota. Ohio State, fresh off of a victory over Wisconsin, has played inspired football in the absence of pre-season Heisman hopeful Robert Smith. 1owever, a stiff Illini defense - along with "the chop" - should give scrutinized coach John Cooper and the Buckeyes a splitting headache on Weir first road trip of the year. Illinois 41, Ohio State 28. Iowa (0-1, 3-1) at Wisconsin (0-1, 3-1) )4 After starting their seasons undefeated against cream-puff opponents, b;th of these teams suffered similar fates last Saturday. Iowa spent an $tire second half on its rump as Michigan frosh Jesse Johnson ran ram- pant through the Hawkeye secondary. Wisconsin's offense mustered only 28 yards rushing last weekend and complimented its only score of the first three quarters with two late -tpuchdowns against Ohio State reserves. However, Iowa has studied ,Wisconsin game films for nine months now in preparation for this gplossal confrontation. Sound familiar? Well, this week the Hawks will ,rash former Iowa assistant Barry Alvarez's Badgers. Iowa 49, ,)Yisconsin 14. Northwestern (0-1, 1-3) at Indiana (1-0, 2-2-1) There are many positives in the Wildcat (not Mildcat) camp: the of- fensive explosion two weeks ago in a 41-14 romp past perennial national contender Wake Forest, and, of course, the poor play of conference rival Michigan State. Indiana, after cleanly disposing of Michigan State, is certainly look- ing ahead toward its contest next weekend here in Ann Arbor. However, eight returning starters on a much-improved defense will make sure Northwestern remains stagnant for one more week. Indiana 37, Northwestern 17. Purdue (1-0, 2-2) at Minnesota (0-1, 1-3) Quite frankly, this game has all the appeal of driving slowly through my home state of Iowa. Neither of these teams will affect the Rose Bowl picture, or any bowl picture for that matter. Purdue junior quar- terback Eric Hunter, as a first-year player, was thought to possess the talent to return the Boilermakers to their once lofty heights. He has shown no such ability. How can I choose a winner in this evenly matched but asinine contest? Simple, resort to the name of the quarterback. Marquel Fleetwood, the flashy-named Gopher QB will outduel Hunter. Minnesota 27, Purdue 17. THE GAME: MICHIGAN DAILY AT MICHIGAN STATE NEWS: A raging Daily staff looks to take the field in East Lansing Friday evening at 5:30, attempting to end the State News winning streak of God knows how many games. Seven touchdowns by ones decides the victor, and Michigan will win this one on an option pitch-out to Ted "Bundy" Cox for a most excellent 60-yard touchdown scamper. Michigan Daily 7, Michigan State News 5. by Andy Stabile Daily Sports Writer "This river can bite you," Jeff said. My housemate, Jeff, is a whitewater guide in Watertown, New York. Last week he talked me into making one last run down the Black River with him. With all the fun and excitement I counted on, I didn't expect a brush with danger. After being welcomed to Adirondack River Outfitters, our safety guide spiced up the safety talk by lightheartedly ribbing the customers. He told south- paws they needed lefthanded paddles and convinced some others their helmets were on backwards. "Have fun, listen to your guide and stay safe," he said. He finished his talk by introducing each crew to its river guide. Only then did I learn my roommate had a separate identity. On the river, Jeff became "The Boy Wonder". He, along with the likes of other personas Jeff the Chef, Psycho, Manchild, and Fred, comprised the guides that lead each raft down the Black. Boy Wonder lead us through a perfect run on the first day. During the trip, he taught me about the physics of the river and situations the flowing water can present. Because of the clean run, we didn't con- front any of the possible danger points. All I remem- ber is water in my face and screams of exhilaration. Enter day two. That day I made my run with Psycho at the helm. He hit everything we missed the day be- fore. An exhilarating run, but the river was hungry. On a rapid known as Knife's Edge our boat came run of the rapids over the drop too far to the left on a right turn. As hard as we paddled, we couldn't make the hard right re- quired. Psycho yelled, "High side right!" three times before the current slammed us into the wall. This command told the crew to get to the right side of the boat. When we hit the wall, the current pulled the bot- tom half of the boat under water, and one lagging crew member with it. "We got a swimmer!" Psycho yelled. Jeff's talk reminded me that Knife's Edge is so named because the wall is undercut from the flowing water; basically it's the top of an underwater cave. Getting trapped under the cave is dangerous; under the cave and the boat could be fatal. We struggled to free our raft from the Knife's Edge, and other raft guides looked for the swimmer. And kept looking. Twenty seconds later he popped up about 100 feet down river. Gasping as he broke the surface, he caught a rope and was pulled into another raft. He was safe, but we were not totally out of trouble. It took a few minutes before we could raise the buried side of the raft against the rushing whitewater. At any time, had another crewman slid down from the high side of the raft, the current would have sucked him or her under the boat as well. Finally we pushed off. The water splashing up against us was 57 degrees that day. Psycho, who didn't wear a wet suit, had sweat beading on his forehead. "We almost lost one," he said. The river took a bite, but its prey got away. walks by' 'M in 2=-i vict ory by Shawn DuFresne WOOSTER, Ohio - The Michi- gan men's soccer club lost a hear- breaker yesterday to Wooster, 2-1.' Although the first half ws scoreless, both teams had excellent opportunities to score."j1 Wooster forward K.C. St. Jonhn got a breakaway fifteen minute into the first half, but Michigdn" goalkeeper Marc Kuiper made t,e save. St. John later had another chance to tally, but his shot struck the crossbar and bounced out. Michigan's Kelley Kuehne afio had a chance to break the deadloik but his effort was swallowed upy Fighting Scot goalkeeper Drew Nelson. At halftime, Michigan coach Aaron Smith told his club to concentrate on controlling the pace. "We had to stop dribbling the. ball, and instead pass it up and get rid of it," Smith said. Michigan forward Guy Metzger responded seven minutes into tl second half when he worked his way through two defenders and chipped the ball in, giving the Wolverines a 1-0 lead. Wooster forward Chris Bond knotted the score ten minutes later when he headed the ball into the net: after receiving a pass from Mphatso Namwali. Michigan forward Jaan Douma had a chance to put the Wolverines back in the lead, but his attempt sailed high of the net. With six minutes left in, the game, Wooster used its secret weapon again - its head. Alan Banda crossed the ball to teammate Eric Bell, who directed the ball past Kuiper to give the Fighting Scots the lead, 2-1. "The last five minutes we played very intense. That's how we haveo; play the whole game," Smith said. "I was very happy with Metzger's performance and Marc Kuiper, who made a lot of saves and kept us in the game." "We dominated the game, but we just couldn't put the ball away," Michigan's Tim Puckett said. "We got real in to the game when we got behind, but it was too late." "Our intensity level kept fluc- tuating," Wolverine Dick Hillary said. "We have to work on keeping a high intensity level for all 90 minutes." Blue lacrosse withstands Oberlin rally by Bruce Inosencio The men's lacrosse team handily defeated Oberlin, 10-7, at Palmer Field Sunday. The matchup found the Wolverines pitted against a tra- ditionally strong Oberlin squad. Oberlin's lacrosse organization is a varsity sport. When a club team like Michigan beats a varsity foe, the victory is that much better. But the triumph was not as sweet as it could have been. Oberlin traveled with only 13 players, all of whom were running ragged by the final horn. Michigan led at the half, 9-2, and proceeded to pull its starting mid- fielders, attackmen, and defensemen. While the score suggests that the Wolverines let Oberlin back into the game, Michigan was always in control. A lopsided contest like Sunday's gave the Blue a few opportunities to experiment. Each of Michigan's 50 players saw action in the contest. Goalie Pete McPartlin, who played only during the first half, felt that it was good for the younger players to get a chance to contribute. "It was great that we had the opportunity to fit everyone in," McPartlin said. "But it's too bad we let them get close near the end." I 1I I: " r _ _ _ _