'M' water polo spends 2.. rare weekend at home r . The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - October 14, 1991 - Page 5 PSU overwhelms consistent golfers by Tim Spolar Daily Sports Writer Michigan is not renowned for having hospitable waters this time of year. Luckily for the Wol- verines, Canham Natatorium treat- ed them like the big fish in the pond. The Michigan men's water polo team made the most of its first home-pool advantage in 12 years by winning the Wolverine Invitational in convincing fashion. No game was affected more by the partisan Michigan crowd of nearly 300 than Friday's 14-9 victory over Michigan State. "The game was really close at halftime," Michigan coach Scott Russell said. "We came out in the second half and the crowd really fired us up. It's a tremendous dif- ference from playing on the road." The Wolverines continued their romp with victories of 16-3 over Indiana, 8-7 over Northwestern, and 12-6 over Purdue Saturday. The Northwestern match, Michigan's closest of the tourna- ment, provided the Wolverines with a chance to avenge their one- point loss to the Wildcats in last weekend's tournament in Madison. Michigan did not squander the op- portunity, despite narrowly avoid- ing a tying goal at the end of regualtion. "The game was really close," Russell said. "(Northwestern) got a breakaway on us with almost no time left, but (senior goalkeeper) Mike Winkelman came through for us." Michigan capped its triumphant homecoming with an 11-6 victory over Ohio State. The home-pool advantage ex- tended beyond the support of the home crowd. The pool in Canham Natatorium is relatively large, as far aswater polo venues are con- cerned, and the Wolverines com- bined this with superb condition- ing to wear down their opponents throughout the tournament. The Wolverines were led in scoring by senior Steve Kulp and junior Paul Murray, each of whom netted 13 goals over the weekend. Senior Paul Harada tallied nine scores, while junior co-captain Aaron Frame chipped in with eight. "We need to get more of our players involved (in the offense)," Russell said. "Steve Kulp is scor- ing really well for us right now, and we need to keep that going. But he's our hole-set, and like a center in basketball, you usually go to him in a half-court offensive set- ting. We need to focus on involving some of the players who will be effective in scoring transition by Dan Linna Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's golf team has been battling consistency problems all year. This weekend, Michigan played very consistently. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, though they played consistently mediocre. The Wolverines 980 (329-327- 324) earned them a distant third among 10 teams behind Longwood's 963 (312-322-329) and champion Penn State's 930 (309-302-319) in the Lady Lion Fall Invitational. "I think we will finish way up on top somewhere," Wolverine coach Sue LeClair said going into the tournament, "at least in the top three." While the Wolverines did indeed finish in the top three, they did not come close to posting the team scores they have come to expect from themselves. Kristin Beilstein's 238 (83-78- 77) paced the Wolverines as she fin- ished eighth in the individual stand- ings. Jennnifer Zimmerman totalled 246 (79-83-84) as she and Beilstein were the only Michigan golfers to break the magical 80-stroke plateau. Tricia Good's 246 (82-83-81) and Maura Hawkins' 254 (85-85-84) garnered them the thirteenth and twenty-eighth positions, respec- tively. The Wolverines' leaders at the season's start, Erica Zonder (85-87- 82) and Wendy Bigler (85-83-86), both also shot 254, their worst scores of the year. In a test to its season of inconsis- tent play, Michigan defeated the same Nittany Lions by 19 strokes two weeks ago. "I was surprised," Penn State Assistant coach Denice St. Pierre said. "Michigan didn't play terrible, but they didn't play up to my expec- tations. They have a strong team but these thing just happen." Earlier in the season, the Wol- verines also found it difficult to string together three consistent rounds in one tournament. This was most apparent at the Spartan Invi- tation three weeks ago. After shooting a team-record 304 in round one to put them in first place, the Wolverines came back with a 316 and a 325 to drop to fourth and then finish in ninth place. Michigan vowed it wouldn't happen again and went to the Lady Northern and claimed sixth place among an extremely tough field while shooting a 941 (318-309-314). However, the Wolverines' con- sistent play this weekend didn't earn them such a favorable finish. DOUG KANTER/Daily The Michigan men's water polo team won this weekend's Wolverine Invitational. points for us to expand our offen- sive capabilities." Yet again, the Michigan defense was well-disciplined and efficient. "Our defense is tremendous right now," Russell said. "Dan Varner and Jeff Prince anchored the defense and we're solid all around. Right now, there is no team in the Big Ten with an offense that scares us." As an added bonus, water polo fans were treated to two unex- pected women's matches. North- western's women's squad also made the trip from Evanston, but fell to the Wolverine team, 15-2 and 13-2. - J Women 's5 cross country comes awal by Kim DeSempelaere Daily Sports Writer Winning seems to be the name of the game for the Michigan women's cross. country team, which brought home another victory Friday at the State of Michigan Intercollegiate Championships. The triumph ex- tends the Wolverines' record to 4-1. Three Michigan runners placed in the meet's top 10. Junior Amy Buchholz placed second with rook- ies Karen Harvey and Kelly Chard placing fifth and ninth, respectively. Also running in top form were sophomore Chris Szabo, who fin- ished in tenth place and redshirt sophomore Jessica Kluge, who crossed the line in eleventh place. "We ran pretty well," Michigan coach Sue Foster said. "But some people were a little flat from fa- tigue. We ran a really hard practice last Wednesday and not everyone had completely recovered." Overall Foster was pleased with the team's performance. "Buchholz ran a great race. She was really tough," Foster said. "Harvey is bouncing back really well from her illness and you can really see improvement in her per- formance." Men harriers by Bruce Inosencio Daily Sports Writer Friday's State of Michigan In- tercollegiate Championships meet proved to be a success for the men's cross country team. Although the Wolverines expe- rienced defeat for the first time this season - finishing behind Eastern Michigan - the team met its objectives. Michigan did not run its top five runners in order to give them a break from competition. With the usual leaders out of the race, Rob Lee led the way for the Wolverines with a third-place finish. Lee finished the 8,000-meter run in 25:20. Michigan, currently ranked 13th nationally, heads to Penn State next weekend for the, Mini-Nationals meet. The team's major competition will be fifth-ranked North Carolina State, Texas, Nebraska, and Penn State. run to succes "I felt good during the race, and I ran with the eventual winner for the first four miles," Lee said. The strong run for Lee could be a factor in future Blue successes this season. "I wanted to give our top five a rest to see what the rest of the team could do," Michigan coach Ron Warhurst said. The overall third-place finish should help Lee prepare for the Big Ten Championships. "I needed the run to build my confidence for the Big Ten meet," Lee said, "and also for this Friday's meet at Eastern (in the Central Col- legiate Championships)." y victorious "The Penn State meet will be very important," senior Carrie Yates said. "The results of the race could influence our national rat- ing." sful weekend "We're bringing everyone out to next weekend's meet at Eastern," Warhurst said. Looking to avenge the loss to Eastern may seem likely at this point of the season, but that isn't the Wolverines' primary aim. "Our main concern is the Big Ten Championships and after that we'll worry about the NCAA District meet," Warhurst said. " Budget airfares anywhere. " International student fares. " Railpasses issued here. " Intemat'l Identity cards. " Worldwide adventure tours. " Travel gear and guide books. " Expert travel advice. Counwlrw 1220 S. University Avenue STE 208 An Atbor,MI 48104 313-998-0200 Buchholz Women's soccer by Tim Rardin Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's soccer team upped its season record to 14- 0-2 with a pair of victories last weekend. The Wolverines outscored their Big Ten foes by a combined 14- 2, with a 6-1 victory over Purdue Saturday and an 8-1 victory against Northwestern yesterday. Michigan scored first against the Boilermakers with an unassisted goal from Shannon Loper. Lisa Ashton played a part in the team's next two scores with a goal of her own and an assist to Karen Jones for the -team's third goal. Heather Marshall added the Wolverines' fourth tally to end the half. Purdue scored its lone goal in the second half, but Michigan answered quickly with unassisted goals from Molly Douma and Alicia Stewart. Chrissy Rice and Anne Hollar shared goalkeeping duties. Despite the five-goal margin of victory, Michigan coach Phil Joyaux didn't think his squad played that well. "We usually try to play four games a week, but during midterms, we like to keep it to about two games," he said. "We've gotten used to playing a lot of games and so when we don't, we get out of synch." Michigan's scoring attack con- tinued yesterday with eight goals against Northwestern. Lisa Ashton struck early off an assist from Heather Marshall for the first goal and assisted Jenny Steinhebel on the Wolverines' next two scores. Alicia Stewart rounded out the first-half scoring with Lori Green assisting. The Wildcats added their only goal just before halftime. Steinhebel added her third goal of the game to start the second half. The final three goals came from stays unbeaten many players were able to see ac- tion. "We got a lot of people in today. We even had forwards playing de- fense and defenders playing off- ense," Carrie Taylor said. Including last season, Michigan now holds a 17-game unbeaten streak, the longest in its history. The Wolverines will look to make it 18 against Sienna Heights tomorrow. O .EL C P'"F-I - i-. - - MULTI COLOR SPECIALISTS ; ARTIST ON STAFF - RUSH ORDERS - NEAR U OF M CAMPUS 1217PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665177. _*iO FF with this ad. CHEAPER THAN FOOD - VOTED MICHIGAN DAILY'S ' BEST BURGER IN TOWN!!! .*WE'RE OPEN AGAIN* . Open Mon-Sat: 11-8 551 S. Division (Near South & West Quad at Packard & Division) -h.0!A-,.j 6 J L~ i hi,'AlJer jj ;A IM Fraternity 1. IAM 2. DE 3 8X 4. ATA 361.5 344 337.5 334 11. IAE 12. ZBT 13. BeE 14. (DK1 15. AEI 16. TKE 17 A Ad Top 20 294.8 285.7 I 280 255.3 241 237.8 6 9R7 R Last Three Events TRACK PTS. 1. EVANS 100 2. IADE 97 3. 8X 92.5 ATA 92.5 5. ATh 89 CROSS COUNTRY PTS. 1. ex 100 2. FIJI 97 3. ATQ 94 4. ATA 91 5. EN 87.5 AID87.5 5. EVANS 6. EN 7 A TO' 332.5 326.5 I~R I