The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 18, 1991 - Page 3 Carril The underdog coach discusses NCAA sports in the Ivy League Jeff Sheran Over the years, Princeton bas- ketball coach Pete Carril has gained a reputation as one of college basketball's best coaches. le has repeatedly led Princeton to conquests over more talented teams. Daily Sports Writer Ken Sugiura recently spoke with Carril about college basketball. Daily: In your career at Prince- ton, you have pulled off several upsets, including victories over North Carolina, Indiana, Duke, and Michigan. Is there a secret to the success of your team? Carril: I wouldn't say so. It's the same thing that everybody else does. You've just got to work hard, play very hard and smart, and try to play up to your strengths and sort of hide your weaknesses.. D: In recent years, especially around NCAA Tournament time, your team has gained a following as everybody's favorite underdog. Why do you think this has happened? C: Well, because we are the un- derdog. It's a natural phenomenon for this country down through the years to root for the underdog. D: Dick Vitale, among others, has named you "The Professor of Hoops." Do you feel deserving of this title? C: Well, I don't think so, but that's all right. See, I don't have a beard, and I don't have a mustache. That's how you get to be a profes- sor, right? D: Thus far during your tenure at Princeton, you have been offered jobs at more glamorous college pro- grams, as well as positions in the NBA. What has kept you at Princeton? C: Well, I think it gives me a chance to live the way I want to live. The goals I set out for my life when I was younger pretty much correspond to the way I'm living now, and that's what I want. D: What sorts of goals are those? C: I want to be a happy person and to get involved in teaching. In this case, I would say teaching bas- ketball. I'd rather not be involved in the glamour and the publicity and all the hoopla that goes with big time sports, I guess I'd soon stay out of that. Which is not to say that it's wrong; it doesn't mean it's wrong. I wouldn't be comfortable there. Some people enjoy that, and that's fine. D: In 1979, Penn went to the Final Four. Do you think that your team, or any other Ivy League school, can ever get back? C: I think it's going to be hard to do that. If you recall, two teams from the Ivy League, had been to the Final Four before, Princeton and Penn. At that time, you used to stay within your region. You had an Eastern region, a Southeast, a Midwest, and a Far West. Now, our league is rated not among the powers. So we're going to get a 16th seed, or a 13th seed, al- though last year, we had as high as the eighth seed. So you're always going to play one of the best teams around. And that didn't always exist. So I think it's harder now, it was always hard for the Ivy League, but 'I'd rather not be involved in the glamour and the publicity and all the hoopla that goes with big time sports... I wouldn't be comfortable there' it's now even harder. You don't give athletic scholarships and your aid is based on individual need. Just take a look at what happened to Big Ten football, because there was a series of years there when they were based on need, and they went out and played in the Rose Bowl, and got killed every year. So you just do a little historical research there, you see what effect that has. D: The coach of that Penn team was current Pistons coach Chuck Daly. He eventually left partly be- cause he didn't want to deal with the difficulty of recruiting. Has this been similarly difficult for you? C: It's hard to talk to a kid. We just lost one the other day whose fi- nancial aid was not very good, and so he took a scholarship. You lose 'em every year. Then you have to go around looking for grades. You don't get over 500 min- imum (SAT verbal score), you can't come. We haven't taken too many guys with 500 minimum verbal. My lowest guy is around 1180 total. D: Last season your team was nationally-ranked all season long, despite the fact that none of your players are on scholarship. How do you think you would do if you didn't have the added strains on your recruiting by being at an Ivy League school? C: I think you'd do okay. Talent is very, very important and I think we'd do alright. I wouldn't do any better than the coaches who have the talent now. As a matter of fact, there are hardly any bad coaches in the United States today. I can't think of a single one. When I first started, there were always a couple of guys who didn't belong. But now, schools are getting great coaches. There are no bad coaches around that I know of. So, I wouldn't do anything to improve on what anybody else was doing. I would just do okay. 'M' fans should learn to appreciate success I think the t-shirts said it all. You know, the ones that people flocked to buy a few years ago - the ones that read "Michigan: 1989 NCAA Basketball Champions" on one side and "As if that weren't enough... Michigan: 1989 Rose Bowl Champions." That was my first year at Michigan, my first exposure to big-time collegiate athletics. Considering the ultimate goal of the collegiate experience, I think Michigan's athletic dominance did a poor job of preparing me for real life. I left Ann Arbor that summer thinking this would happen every year. That every New Year's, I'd be watching Michigan win the Rose Bowl. That every March, I'd be watching Michigan in the Final Four. That every winter, the swimming teams would win the Big Ten. Business as usual. People wonder why students here are so elitist. We might not be if our athletic teams didn't win so much. Browsing at campus stores in Champaign, I found that Illinois students place special emphasis on beating Michigan, as evidenced by the bumper stickers, keychains, and shirts that defamed our institution. And Illinois isn't alone. Other schools throughout the Midwest all claim Michigan, which has probably beaten them for much of their history in Division I, as one of their archrivals. However, with the exception of Michigan State and Ohio State, no Big Ten school has a true footabll rivalry with Michigan. Even Minnesota, with the contrived jug competition, doesn't incite the Wolverines the way a trip to East Lansing or Columbus does. But Michigan doesn't acknowledge these schools as rivals. This probably incites them further, like a child who cries when ignored. Only last year, when the Wolverines lost to Michigan State and Iowa, did the concept of a Big Ten loss hit home. You see, until Oct. 13 of my junior year, I had never seen Michigan lose a Big Ten game. Michigan went to the Gator Bowl, the pinnacle for some, but the left- overs for us. It didn't seem right. But the Wolverines compiled 715 total yards of offense in a 35-3 thrashing of Ole Miss, while Washington crushed Iowa in the Rose Bowl. It reminded the nation that Pasadena is Michigan's town. Now that the Wolverines have earned a Rose Bowl bid, Michigan has restored its hegemony over the Big Ten. Next season, when nobody on the Wolverines will have any memory of not winning the conference title, the question will be, "Who's gonna finish second in the Big Ten?" Standing on the field at the end of Saturday's victory, I watched the team celebrate - it was triumphant, but not particularly climactic. Maybe it was winning on the road. Maybe it was because this team is not the vocal group of years past. Maybe it was because it hasn't yet achieved all of its goals. Maybe it was business as usual. But for our sake, let's remember it can't happen every year. Every time we win the Rose Bowl, win the basketball championship, win the swim- ming tiles, it means another Big Ten team doesn't. When one school beats out nine others year after year, they'll all be aiming for that school. I guess the satisfaction of being a Michigan student comes from watching them try and fail. Hail to the victors. E CHIGAN I ILY Women swi by Rich Mitvalskyr Daily Sports Writer This weekend at Northwestern and Wisconsin, the Michigan1 women's swimming team revealed some of the conference's top indi- vidual swimmers, as well as a mass of team depth, crushing Northwest- em, 193-106, and Wisconsin, 157-87. Against the Wildcats, junior transfer Kirsten Silvester led Mich-; igan, winning the 200 and 400-meter freestyles; the 200-meter back-; stroke, and the 200-meter medley relay "I'm very happy with my times immers' de] right now," Silvester said. "I'm al- ready going my tap-red times, and we are working really hard in prac- tice." Alecia Humphrey, a first-year swimmer, grabbed victories in the 100 and 200-meter backstrokes, the 200-meter individual medley, and also in the 200 medley relay. "I'm really happy with my swims," Humphrey said. "They are my best untapered times here, and all the freshmen are swimming well." Sophomore Karen Barnes starred for Michigan against Wisconsin, pth keys ea swimming to victories in the 400 and 800-meter freestyles, as did Humphrey again in the 200 back- stroke and 200 I.M., and the 400 medley relay. Most noticeable, though, was the especially large number of Wolverines finishing in the second, third, and fourth positions. "While we don't have as many top-level swimmers on this team," head coach Jim Richardson said, "we haven't had a team with this kind of depth here at Michigan. Our second, Gophers onds, respectively. In addition, he and fellow teammates Van Tassell, Kevin Glass, and Hay claimed vic- tory in the 400-meter freestyle re- lay with a time of 3:35.27. "I was happy with my times. I thought I would be slower," Borges said. "It was a relatively good meet for us and it gave us a chance to see where we were at." Brian Gunn, who finished second in the 400 and 800- meter freestyle and the200-meter butterfly felt the meet proved that the Wolverines are as strong as ever. sy victories third, and fourth swimmers in each event are very good." Michigan, now 2-0, improved its series records to 6-2 and 13-2 over Northwestern and Wisconsin, re- spectively. Yet, Richardson stresses the fact that the Wolverines have room for improvement as a team, as well as on the individual level. "What this team needs to do is prove it's capable of being aggres- sive," Richardson said. "We are not the same kind of team we've had in the past." Men tankers burn Badgers, by Chad Safran Daily Sports Writer The weather outside may have been cold, but the men's swimming team heated up the indoor pool Sat- urday in Madison with overwhelm- ing victories. The Wolverines smashed Wisconsin, 165-77, and crushed previously undefeated Min- nesota, 160-92. With five first-place and four second-place finishes, the men upped their record to 3-0 overall and 2-0 in the Big Ten. Steve Bigelow proved why he is the defending conference champion in the 200-meter backstroke, swim- ming to victory in 2:08.57. Newcomer Steve West made quite an impression in his first con- ference meet for Michigan. A rookie from Huntington Beach, Calif., West triumphed in the 200-meter breaststroke with a time of 2:25.43 and helped Bigelow, Tom Hay, and Rodney Van Tassell win the 400- meter medley relay in 3:54.60. Gustavo Borges, a rookie from Brazil, captured the top spot in the 50 and 100-meter freestyle events with times of 23.50 and 53.26 see- Career Opportunities at Morgan Interviews for t niversitr of Michigan seniors interested in Corporate Finance will be held in Chicago on rida.1 iiJanuary 3. 1992 Please submit a cover letter and resurne b4 0"ovember 22 lo: Laura .J. Clark Vice President 1.P 1lorgan & Co. Incorporated Ve w lork. .T 102 60 i. XIorpm is an eq a I opportnnilv emplorer 0 0.-.0-0 . :... -... - 1-R .- .. . PRESENTS: .. This holiday season, make sure you get what you ask for. Let SPIRIT help by sending home, free of charge, a holiday wish list containing what you've always wanted, but never actually received. ti0 Getexactlywhat ou want rom -" .0 SPIRIT at a 10% DISCOUNT. DESCRIPTION [nEM& # PRICE 1 :- . 3 .... . .w .. r *Come into University Spirit *We will then send the list to the Etc. and select those items you've address you stated. "" .. always wanted. *The recipient of the list can pick i