The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 4, 1991 - Page 3 l &ff ESP/V spo tscaste C iwis L ewm a r Berman The -charismatic host looks Jeff Sheran back, back, back on his career Chris Berman's fame was born with the conception of ESPN in 1979. Since then, Berman and the network have grown in stature and celebrity together. He has become known for his odd sense of humor and his multitude of nicknames, as well as his broadcasting skills. He will be speaking this Tuesday at 5 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium. Re- cently, Daily Sports Writer Adam Lutz "of luck" had a chance to talk with Berman. Daily: You are very boisterous and enthusiastic on the air. Is this just part of your act, or is this your true personality? Berman: I know it's a scary thought but I'm just being myself on the air. I get real excited about sports and I am just following my insticts. D: Who had the biggest impact on you as a broadcaster? 0 B: I was influenced most by Jack Whitaker.. This is very surprising, I know, since he is nothing like me. However, what I admire most about Jack is that no one uses the English language better than he does. D: You're probably best known for your crazy nicknames. How did these come about? B: At Brown University, my buddies and I were hanging out sip- ping my favorite drink, talking baseball, and throwing out nick- Aames. Five years later at ESPN, I was doing my first baseball game in 1980 and a nickname slipped out by accident. I swear. I never planned this, but it seems as if we have cre- ated a monster. My friend and part- ner in the booth, Jerry "Rolls" Reuss said it best: "It's a game ev- eryone can play." D: What are the favorite nick- names you've created? B: Bert "Be home" Blyleven and John "Let it be" Lowenstein. D: You have dealt with hundreds of sports personalities. Who are some of your favorites? B: There are hundreds of them, but the two that stand out are George Brett and Jim Kelly, because they are little boys inside just like me. .These two guys would follow thier respective sports whether they played it or not; they are great fans of the game. D: What was the most difficult moment you have encountered in the studio? B: Last year, Robin Roberts and I were hosting Sport Sunday and the whole building had a power failure. The video blacked out, but the audio stayed on. The producer told me to continue speaking and for the next five minutes, I was doing radio. I was told I have a great face for ra- dio. D: What do you enjoy covering most? B: I have fun doing all sports, yet I think I am best at football analysis in the studio. However, there is no replacement for doing play-by-play at the ballpark. D: A few years ago there were rumors of you going over to NBC. What was the situation with that? B: Well, they were not rumors; they were facts. NBC offered me more money for less work and I turned it down. ESPN is where my heart is. They gave me the opportu- nity and a hell of a chance. I have made my mark here and I can't see myself leaving and throwing it all away. Besides, we report on national athletes fixing games to cover point spreads, I think there is too much money in the pros for that to hap- pen. D: What teams did you root for as a child, and what team did you dream of playing for? B: Growing up in Greenwich, Conn., I rooted for the San Francisco Giants and the Boston Red Sox, the New York Jets, the Toronto Maple Leafs, and the Chicago Bulls; hon- estly, I did. It's funny, looking at these teams, they all have one thing 'I was doing my first baseball game in 1980 and a nickname slipped out by accident. I swear. I never planned this, but it seems as if we have created a monster' sports seven days a week, and not just on weekends like the networks. D: What is your feeling on the use of instant replay? B: It will never be used in all sports, esspecially baseball. I am not a fan of it, but I have to admit, it does work. I would rather see hu- man judgement make the decisions, and let the officials do their job. D: There has been talk of legaliz- ing gambling. Do you think this would lead to point-fixing and other wrongdoings? B: I think legalizing gambling is much too dangerous. In terms of in common: They were all very good teams at one time, but they never won it all, excpt the Jets, of course. I would play for the San Francisco Giants if I could play for any team. D: The player getting all the hype right now in these parts is Desmond Howard. What is your scouting report of him? B: Desmond Howard should win the Heisman Trophy Award. I am not sure if he will make an impact in the NFL. However, if there is a way for him to make an impact, he will figure it out. He is a very smart player. Stymied stickers drop match in OT, 3-2 by Tim Spolar Daily Sports Writer The Michigan field hockey team looked to avenge its 2-1 Oct. 5 loss to Ohio State in its final home game yesterday morning. Despite a strong effort, the Wolverines came up short, losing, 3-2, in overtime. The loss, which dropped the Wolverines to 2-6 in the MCFHC and 7-9 overall, gave the Buckeyes a sweep of the season series between the schools. However, both games were extremely close, as evidenced by the single-goal margins of vic- tory. In yesterday's match at Ooster- baan Field House, neither team en- joyed a decided advantage in the first half. Play was confined mostly to mid-field skirmishes, with occa- sional offensive outbreaks which re- sulted in a 2-1 Buckeye lead at half- time. Forward Kristin Shaiper, a se- nior co-captain, notched the lone Wolverine goal of the period, her first of the season. However, the teams suffered from a feast or famine scenario of- fensively in the second half and overtime. After a few isolated scor- ing opportunities went unconverted by each side in the first fifteen min- utes of the second half, Michigan took control of the game. For a ten-minute span, the Wolverines put constant pressure on Ohio State's defenders and goalie Sue Wilson. After missing three penalty corner opportunities, junior forward Katie Vignevic finally put home a rebound, tying the game at two. "In the beginning of the game they were beating us to the the ball," junior forward and co-captain Katie Thomas said. "But I think we amended that. We started to dom- inate a little bit in the first half and for a good part of the second half. When we were dominating, they were clearly frustrated." However, Ohio State regrouped and returned the favor by holding 5-0 Michigan must improve for final 4.0 Midterms have passed, and grades arc being assigned. Five games into its Big Ten football season, Michigan football is receiving its report card. The problem, if it can be called a problem, is that the Wolverines are 5-0 in the Big Ten, and 7-1 overall. They're ranked fourth in the nation. They're virtually Rose Bowl-bound. And if Miami beats Florida State and Florida beats Miami... well, we get the idea. This makes grading Michigan a difficult task. By virtue of its record, it deserves high marks all around, and anything less would be purely aca- demic, not to mention cynical. But, as Wolverine coach Gary Moeller asserts repeatedly, Michigan needs to do more than just win - it needs to improve while it wins. Hence, such evaluation is worthwhile. And now, on to the offense... Quarterback: Elvis Grbac has dazzled on some occasions, and fizzled on others, in each game proving that he alone controls the Wolverines' offensive fortune. Moeller lauds Grbac's accuracy, and says his ability to read defenses has improved steadily. In addition, his precision at throwing the endzone fade earns him extra credit. But sometimes it seems that, as much as Grbac finds Desmond Howard downfield, he doesn't find him enough. Howard makes Grbac look good; but he also makes Grbac look poor by getting too open. We're occasionally left wondering how Grbac failed to hit him. But overall, Grbac is on much more than he's off. Grade: A- Running backs: Ironic that Moeller's biggest concern before the ' season was depth at tailback, isn't it? Now he's got three. Though sometimes overshadowed by Howard, Ricky Powers has proven his worth with performances like the Notre Dame game, when he killed more than six minutes in the fourth quarter to secure the victory. But, as he admits, he must time his cuts better and become more patient with the holes. Then there's Jesse Johnson, who exploded onto Michigan's offensive scheme like he explodes through the line of scrimmage. And Tyrone Wheatley, another welcome newcomer. Though reputed as a sprinter, Wheatley has yet to break into the open field and showcase his record sTeed. Burnie Legette is this season's most improved player. He blocks as well as any fullback in the conference, and rushes well when given the ball. Now that Legette is injured, his substitute, Greg McThomas, has blocked admirably. Michigan averages 230 yards per game on the ground, but should aver- age more, as Moeller maintains. As with Grbac, the running game is ex- cellent but seems as if it could be even better. Grade: A- Receivers: Desmond Howard singlehandedly earns this corps an A+. It's amazing that he can dominate so consistently. His exploitation of opposing defenses spreads them wide open for everyone else to exploit as well. And, he can block with the best. But credit Yale VanDyne, who has stepped into the starting flanker spot and done a first-rate job as Michigan's second receiver. Grade: A+ Offensive Line: They're big, but their size makes for big expecta- tions. Greg Skrepenak has played well, but hasn't been the omnipresent force on the line people thought he'd be. Matt Elliott has shined, but in- juries have forced him to shuffle between guard and center. The pass blocking has been sharp, but the run blocking should be sharper. We can't have many complaints, but we can expect more. Grade: B+ Defensive Line: Though tight against the run, this unit has struggled with its pass rush. Mike Evans has emerged from anonymity on the line, while Chris Hutchinson has been perennially solid, and Tony Henderson and Buster Stanley have improved at middle guard. They excelled against Purdue; now they must prove whether they can excel against a better team. Grade: B Linebackers: On the inside, the linebacking has been stellar. Erick Anderson deserves the Butkus Award simply because no other linebacker could possibly play much better than he has played. In addition, Steve Morrison and Marcus Walker complement Anderson more than adequately. Though most depleted by injuries, this is the strongest part of the defense. They get an A- by themselves. The outside linebackers have been erratic. Early in the season, they were neither effective on the pass rush nor on defending the short pass. Brian Townsend has led the revival of this squad with solid, if not extraordinary, performances of late. Grade: B+ Secondary: Though the defensive backs hit hard, they always seem to allow the reception first. They'll contain the opponent for two downs and set up third and long, but will too often make a mistake in this situation. They rarely let up the ball go past them, but get burned in front of their eyes. However, this unit is comprised of 10 eager and increasingly able bod- ies. They have the most room for improvement, but have begun to close the gap in recent games. Grade: B- Special Teams: J.D. Carlson has squandered his opportunity to be the conference's best placekicker. However, he never misses extra points, a quality teams nationwide have lacked. Eddie Azcona manages to get the job done on punts. The Howard-led return teams are fearsome. Grade: B Overall Grade: B+/A- Garcia wins MICHIGAN New York MEN'S CLUB Marathon BASKETBALL NEW YORK (AP) - Salvador ORGANIZATIONAL Garcia, a sergeant in the Mexican army, led a stunning 1-2 Mexican MEETING finish in the New York City Marathon yesterday, while brash Liz TUESDAY: McColgan of Scotland ran the fastest race by a first-time women's marathoner. 8 P.M. Garcia, 31, the runner-up in last MICHIGAN UNION year's race, broke away between theLO B 17th and 18th miles with a blister- LOB ing mile time of 4 minutes, 26 sec- onds. CALL 668-3154 He finished in an unofficial 2:09:28, the fastest of his career, in earning the $20,000 first prize and a new Mercedes Benz sports sedan. He r also earned a $35,000 bonus for breaking 2:10:00.DISCOUNT Andres Espinoza, 28, who never a . Senior speedster Kristin Shaiper leads the Wolverine defense in attacking Ohio State during one of the Buckeyes' numerous penalty corner opportunities yesterday. OSU won in overtime, 3-2. play in the Wolverine defensive zone for the remainder of regulation play. The Buckeyes drew four penalty corners in the final five minutes, and appeared to score on one with two minutes remaining. But a controversial moving-ball call by the referee negated what verines were unable to mount a counterattack through the remain- der of overtime. "They came back in overtime and pretty much dominated the whole way," Thomas said. "We never got through (offensively)." Penalty corners were again the 'They came back in overtime and pretty much dominated. We never got through offensively' - Katie Thomas Michigan co-captain stretches that the Wolverines dom- inated, they passed the ball amongst themselves quickly and accurately. However, throughout the rest of the game, they depended on individual efforts to move the ball downfield, a tactic which proved less than suc- cessful. "We need to work on quicker passing," Thomas said. "We got caught in possession a lot. We need to pass the ball off and keep it wide." "We really need to pass more," Vignevic concurred. "We were holding the ball (individually) too much. If we were quicker with our passing, we could use our superior team speed to our advantage." The loss eliminated the Wolver- ines' chances of finishing in the up- per half of the conference. With two conference matches remaining, the Wolverines are three games behind the third-place Buckeyes. would have been the game-winning the goal. Ohio State continued to draw penalty corner chances through its aggressive play in the overtime period. The Buckeyes' Danielle Dayton finally scored the game winner off a penalty corner, her second of the match, four minutes into the extra period. The Wol- key to the game's scoring. All of the Buckeyes' goals came on corners, as did Shaiper's first-half goal for the Wolverines. Ohio State held an 11-7 advantage in penalty corner oppor- tunities, including the final seven of the game. Michigan's offensive shortcom- ings were attributable to a lack of team ball movement. During the " Spikers top Hoosiers, fall to Buckeyes again by Ken Davidoff Daily Sports Writer Comedian Steven Wright once ;lamented, "I'm having deja vu and ,amnesia at the same time." The Michigan women's volleyball team experienced neither this weekend, although it did encounter similar results from only a few weeks ago. outside hitter Aimee Smith said. We crushed Indiana this time, and we got to put some other players in. We fought a lot harder against Ohio State. We can upset anyone on any given day." "We've made huge amounts of progress since the last time," mid- dle blocker Fiona Davidson added. Thompson contributed 37 assists. "We had a lack of discipline," Davidson said. "We were too fo- cused on individual discipline; we should have focused across the net and fought the opponent." The Indiana match was a much more nleasant exnerience for the really flowed." There were mixed emotions from the Wolverine players on the weekend as a whole. "I thought it was pretty tive," Smith said. "We bummed out about the Ohio posi- were State match hut we had a great win