Theodore Cox Ted's Excellent Adventure overines still rank with elite despite loss PASADENA, Calif. - How quickly things change in the world of sports. A week before the Rose Bowl, the Wolverines were all smiles as they stepped off the plane in California. They had won the Big Ten. They were ranked No. 4 in the country, and they even had a chance for a national championship. But the day after Michigan lost, 34-14, to Washington, all was quiet at the team's hotel. Michigan coach Gary Moeller entered the press conference that morning very calmly, yet one could tell the previous game was still running through his mind. The media that day had been reduced to 10 of the Michi- gan beat writers, a far cry from the hundreds who asked questions two days earlier. Moeller sat stiffly in his chair, sipping coffee and staring at the floor. The game still rewinding in his thoughts. "I don't know what it was," he said. "We're better than what we played yesterday." The questions he was asked kept the problems with his squad in focus. * "Do you have to reappraise your quarterback position?" "Is Elvis Grbac tough enough mentally?" "Are you going to have to recruit smaller, faster players and bulk them up?" "It seems strange you only threw to Desmond Howard once in the sec- ond half." "No one works harder than you. You've got all the resources. Does it distress you that with all you've got going for you, Washington was sim- ply better than you? Is it possible to get to that level?" "If Washington was double-covering Howard at times, why weren't you able to run the ball more effectively?" "That's a good question," Moeller replied, searching for an answer. "That's a good question." Even seemingly easy questions seemed to sting. "Despite the loss, is it still fun to be here?" asked a reporter. "Honestly, not today and not after that game," Moeller responded. A little over a week ago these Wolverines were considered one of the best teams in Michigan history. Suddenly, the media and fans are ready to dismantle the whole squad and start over. Even Michigan offensive tackle Greg Skrepenak, who a few days earlier called the Michigan program the best in the country, questioned his team. "It's time that Michigan has to get it up a little bit, focus a little more, @practice harder, do what it has to do to beat those teams (Florida State and Washington)," the Wolverine co-captain said. "My class won four Big Ten championships. What else is there to do but win everything?" See ADVENTURE, Page 12 The Michigan Daily- Thursday, January 9, 1992 - Page 11 41NCAA strengthens : entrance standards by Theodore Cox Daily Sports Editor ANAHEIM, Calif. - The de- bate over academic standards for athletic recruits raged during the 86th annual NCAA convention yesterday morning. A proposal requiring a recruit to receive a minimum 2.500 core curriculum grade point average in addition to a minimum score of 700 on the SAT or 17 on the ACT caused the stir. After over an hour of discussion, the proposal was easily passed by the university presidents and athletic directors represented. The amendment doesn't go into effect until Aug. 1, 1995. Until then, the recruit needs only a 2.0 GPA combined with a 700 SAT score or an 18 ACT score. The new proposal also has a sliding scale in which a GPA be- low 2.5 can be offset by an SAT score higher than 700 or an ACT score higher than 17. Although the proposal passed, there were several who ques- tioned why raising the GPA was necessary. "A 2.5 GPA is not necessarily going to make a good athlete do any better," Grambling State fac- ulty representative E.M. Jones said. "Why isn't it going to make him or her do any better? Because of all the requirements that are heaped on him or her once that student-athlete reaches that insti- tution. Once the student-athlete gets there, make sure that you have the proper support. "The institutions just don't want to be accountable. We want to say to them, 'You've got to do this to get in.' But what do we do with them when they do get in?" Others felt the proposal was discriminatory. Delaware State College representative William B. DeLauder pointed to an NCAA study that claimed 70 percent of Black student-athletes would be ineligible under the new require- ments compared to 18 percent of the white student-athletes. He also cited data that found Blacks with low SATs graduate five times more than whites with comparable SATs. "I find it incredible to believe that given the national decline in See NCAA, Page 12 .+ x - MULTI COLOR SPECIALISTS - ARTIST ON STAFF - RUSH ORDERS - NEAR U OF M CAMPUS 1217 PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665-17 m I / mm PE E all -l Desmond Howard and the rest of the Wolverine offense were ineffective in the Rose Bowl. But they still belong among theelite. SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION .:FREE FOR STUDENTS WHO NEED iMONEY FOR COLLEGES " Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of * Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income.; * We have a data bank of over 200.000 listings of scholarships. fellowships, grants., and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding.' " " Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests. career " plans, family heritage and place of residence. " " There s money available for students who have been newspaper carriers. grocery , " clerks, cheerleaders. non-smokers... etc. . Results GUARANTEED. 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