01 Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Sports Tuesday - January 21, 1992 Michigan Sports Calendar A compilation of Michigan sporting events for the upcoming week. Any club sports wishing to be put on the calendar should drop off their schedulestatthe Daily at 420 Maynard. Tuesday, January 21 Wrestling vs. Michigan State, 7:30 p.m., Keen Arena Men's Basketball at Indiana, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN), Bloomington Wednesday, January 22 No events scheduled Thursday, January 23 No events scheduled Friday, January 24 Ice Hockey at Ohio State, 7:30 p.m., Columbus Women's Basketball vs. Minnesota, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena Men's Swimming & Diving vs. Michigan State, 7 p.m., Canham Natatorium Saturday, January 25 Ice Hockey vs. Ohio State, 7:30 p.m.,-Yost Arena Men's Basketball vs. Wisconsin, 1 p.m., Crisler Arena Men's Gymnastics at Illinois, 7 p.m., Champaign Men's Track & Field vs. Ohio State, Michigan State & Penn State, All Day, Indoor Track Building Women's Track & Field vs. Toledo & Kent, All Day, Indoor Track Building Women's Swimming & Diving at Ohio State, 2 p.m., Columbus Wrestling at Northwestern, 7:30 p.m., Evanston Sunday, January 26 Women's Basketball vs. Iowa, noon, Crisler Arena Women's Gymnastics at Ohio State, 2 p.m., Columbusr te.ms...:th::..u.t..:f:r:d:th:::":::::;.:.. ..:::::: tI~ I, Due be. NC-hrot~ 1043 2 ' 2 ~ ~ ~ ~ . 3ACA etQeo~Sae 78 8. CoPetu etMai. 77-5 53 9. ~a arna ostto ubu~m8 ~~ 102 10, VentCASba.E etwy & ~ 1 NATIONAL COLLEGIATE SPORTSWRITERS'POLL ITea~m Points Record 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Duke UCLA Oklahoma State Indiana Connecticut Ohio State Kansas Arkansas Kentucky Arizona North Carolina M issou ri Michigan State Alabama Syracuse Michigan Georgia Tech Oklahoma St. John's Tulane NC-Charlotte Louisville Seton Hall Stanford UTEP 473 455 440 406 385 381 376 310 306 291 282 252 219 218 201 190 176 152 135 91 76 64 34 33 31 12-0 12-0 16-0 13-2 13-1 10-2 13-1 15-3 14-2 11-3 13-2 12-2 12-2 14-3 13-1 10-3 13-4 11-2 10-4 13-1 11-2 10-3 9-5 11-1 14-1 " i Michigan Individual Entreprenneurial Project Presents The Ninth Annual PRYOR AWARD $3,500 Awarded To The Best Business Proposal Written By U-M Students (Confidentiality is ensured) Proposals are due 5:00 p.m., March 20,1992. INFORMATION MEETING: Thursday, January 23, 1992 4:00-5:00 p.m. Room 1210 U-M Business School (Corner of Tappan & Monroe Streets) All Students Welcome Information Packet: Call 936-1525 (office hours). Available Monday, January 20,1992 Questions???: Call 434-1292 CARDINAL Continued from page 1 swimmers ever. They are the No. 1 team and swam like No. 1." The Cardinal jumped out to an early lead with impressive victories. In the 400-meter medley relay, the team of captain Jeff Rouse, Tyler Mayfield, Brad Budney and Brian Retterer broke the first of several Canham Natatorium records with a winning time of 3:49.33. Coupled with a Chris Baskett victory and a Alex Kostich second- place finish in the 800M freestyle, Stanford jumped out to a 28-8 lead. This event was also significant be- cause illness started to affect Michigan's Brian Gunn. He only managed a third-place finish in the 200M butterfly and dropped to last place in the 400M freestyle. "Gunn was really sick," Ur- banchek said. "He was physically not sound to be swimming, and I should have pulled him after the first event." The divers for Michigan were es- pecially impressive, sweeping the top three places in both the 1-meter and 3-meter diving events, enabling the Wolverines to keep the meet close for a short period of time. In the next event, Rodney Van Tassell scored the first of his two victories, taking the 200M freestyle with a pool-record time of 1:53.78. The triumph closed the scoring gap to 40-34 and seemed to revive the Michigan team's spirit. The biggest surprise of the day came in the 50M freestyle as Stan- ford's Eric Maurer defeated Michi- gan's Gustavo Borges with a time of :23.47. Borges closed fast to finish in :23.54. "It was the biggest upset of the meet," Stanford head coach Skip Kenney said. "We felt going in to the meet Michigan could win all of the freestyle events. The 50 free was the highlight for us." Maurer, swimming in front of his parents, surprised himself by setting a lifetime best in the event. "The meet was still pretty tight, and I knew Michigan was looking toward Borges for a victory," Mau- rer said. "I just tried to get up and have a quick start. It's special to fi- nally defeat Michigan." The 200M butterfly featured a matchup between two of the event's top swimmers in the Cardinal's Ray Carey and the Wolverines' Brian Gunn. However, Carey took the event handily in 2:04.43, with Michigan's Eric Bailey taking sec- ond and Gunn fading to third. Borges showed why he is the 1991 Pan-Am Games 100M freestyle champion, storming back to blow away the field with a time of :51.05 in that event. The closest competitor, Stanford's Kevin Hen- derson, was more than two seconds behind. Borges felt going into both of his races that he needed to win for Michigan to be competitive in the dual meet. However, he was not up- set with his performance in either the 50M or 100M freestyle events. "I was happy with my time in both of the events," Borges said. "I had just come back from nationals in Brazil and was just trying to swim fast." Cardinal sophomore Retterer, expected to challenge for the top spot in the event, was held out of the event due to an elbow injury. This enabled Rouse, the world- record holder in 100M backstroke, to capture the 200 meter event in a pool record 2:02.92. Michigan's top backstroker, Steve Bigelow, could only manage a third place finish in 2:03.48. Michigan rookie Steve West came up with a swim that Kenney labeled as "just awesome" in the 200M breaststroke. Even Urbanchek labeled West's performance as "the best one-on-one race of the day." West, who was in fourth place halfway through the race, finished with a strong kick enabling him to overtake Stanford's all-American Mayfield and win in 2:24.07, to Mayfield's 2:24.40. "I anticipated on Tyler Mayfield being out ahead because I have swam against him before," West said. "I thought that they (the other Stan- ford swimmers) would be faster than they were." The Cardinal completed their domination of the day, breaking yet another pool record in the 400M freestyle relay, with a blazing 3:27.99. Michigan's A Team of Van Tassell, Noel Strauss, Dan Abruzzi, and Borges, took second in 3:30.97. Kenney was pleased with his team's performance in the dual meet. "This was exactly what we wanted and needed," Kenney said. "Our freshmen class came through and a big win like this gives us prac- tice swimming well inside on the road." Urbanchek seemed to look at the positive aspects of the meet. "It was a tune-upfor ausover Olympic dis- tances," -Urbanchek said. "Also, it hurt not having our redshirts to compete against them." "It would have been a different meet with the redshirts," Kenney agreed. Land5* Paris $515* Madrid $565* Munich $515* Zurich $565* *Fares are roundtrip from Detroit. Lcw season fares must depart. by March 31 Fares do not include taxes. Restrictions apply. Councd Tra 1220 S. University Avenue STE208 Ann Arbor, MI 48104 313-998-0200 - .q rn.-"i. . i, * Sportsusa Senior Editor Theodore Cox Night Editors Josh Dubow Ryan Herrington Jeff Williams Asst. Night Editors Adam Miller Tim Spolar Ken Sugiura Trainee Greg Richardson Strcri :Answer The Minnesota Vikings and the Denver Broncos lost two consecutive Super Bowls. Then get in on the ground floor in our undergraduate officer commissioning program. You could start planning on a career like the men in this ad have. And also have some great advantages like: Earning $100 a month during the school year 0 Juniors earn more than $2,200 during one ten-week summer session You can take free civilian flying lessons You're commissioned upon graduation If you're looking to move up quickly, look into the Marine Corps undergraduate officer commission- ing program. You could_ O m ove start off making more than $22 000 a year 4 4 0 0 77 llfiew T1e Pniud. 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