The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday- February 17, 1992 -Page3 Summitt Basketball coach Pat Summit talks about her Jeff Sheran career and the state of the women's game Since becoming head women's basketball coach at the University of Tennessee, Pat Summitt has epit- omized the word success. Arguably the best college basketball coach ever - male or female - Summitt has won 461 games as of Saturday, making her the third winningest ac- tive coach in the women's game. She has coached her teams to four Southeastern Conference titles and 11 Final Four appearances, winning three NCAA championships (1987, 1989 and 1991). She also guided the 1984 women's Olympic team to a gold medal in Los Angeles and has complied a 63-4 international record. In a career in which she also won a silver medal in the 1976 Olympics as a player, Summitt has achieved almost every possible ac- colade in the women's game. Daily Basketball Writer Ryan Herrington spoke with her recently about her career and the state of women's basketball. Daily: When you started coach- ing at the University of Tennessee, at the age of 22, did you ever imagine the success that you would have? Summitt: No, not in my wildest dreams. Obviously, I knew that the program only, had one way to go, and that was up. I guess I just antici- pated a lot of hard work and was hopeful that we could enjoy some success. I never imagined it would come to this degree. 'I think the skill level is much improved, therefore how the game is played on a national scale is much more competitive. I think just in terms of watching the athletes, they're better. So I think we have a better game today then we had 10 years ago from a spectators standpoint.' D: What was it like for you to come right out of college, having played at the University of Tennessee-Martin the year before, and be given control of your own basketball program? S: It was scary. Certainly, I was- n't prepared. I think that more than anything it was a real challenge for me and a situation where I felt like I had to go in and just do the best that I could do. I knew I would learn a lot, and I knew that I'd make mis- takes. I just wanted to learn from them. D: You have had an incredibly successful career as both a player and coach. What has been the most special moment for you in the game CHAMPS Continued from page 1 backstroke, Humphrey established a new conference and meet record of :55.33 and reset it in the finals, dropping her time to :55.28. Anderson swam to a fifth-place fin- ish (57.22), while another rookie, Jen Almeida, finished tied for sev- enth (57.69). Michigan's 800-freestyle relay team of Silvester, Williamson, McCracken, and Swix out-touched last year's champions from Ohio State, finishing in 7:20.84. Swix, who anchored the relay, swam from behind and clinched the victory on the final length to complete Friday. "I wanted to swim a smart race, and this is my favorite relay," said Swix. "They beat us at the dual meet in this race." Creighton added to the of basketball? S: Well, I don't think I can re- ally single out one moment. I think that being a part of a medal winning team as a player, being a part of the staff when our team won the gold in '84 and all three national champi- onships are special. They're also a lot of highs in terms of winning big games and hav- ing big moments. But there's been a lot of great moments in my coach- ing profession, a lot of big wins, a lot of exciting trips and just a lot of fun things. Certainly when you reach the top, that's a real special moment. D: You've had three-quarters of your players make the Final Four at least once in their career. What do you think has made your program so successful? S: Talent. It's really the players and to year in and year out consis- tently have very talented teams. It's important to recruit the type of in- dividuals that are goal-oriented, and that really want to be successful. I just think it really goes back to the players. D: What do you think is the most important ingredient in a pro- gram then? Would it be the players? S: Well, the people really. I think you have to have the people and the resources. Now, you have to have the resources first to get the people. But I think you win with talent, you win with people, people of high character and winners and a strong staff. D: What do you expect from your players during the season? What type of effort? S: Well, I guess to play in this program there's a standard or a level of expectation that I think is very demanding, from the staff, from the fans, from the media. I just think that we more or less have created an environment here where people have expected a real high standard night in and night out. D: You hold many positions at Tennessee besides just being the women's coach, among them being the position of associate athletic di- rector. There was a similar situation at the University of Michigan where Peggy Bradley-Doppes held both the job of women's volleyball coach and was an administrator. She chose to drop the coaching and con- centrate more on her work in the athletic department. Do you find it difficult to manage your time and have you ever thought about drop- ping one of the jobs to concentrate on the other? S: No. My administrative duties are obviously limited during the season. Certainly, I think Tennessee recognizes that coaching is my top responsibility. It really hasn't been a problem for me. D: How about the extra respon- sibility of now having a son (one and a half year old Tyler)? How has that affected your coaching, if. it has? S: I would say that on the court it has had absolutely no affect at all. I think maybe off the court it has given me a little better understand- ing of people in general. For me at home, he's been a very positive out- let, something that's brought more balance into my life. Rather than coming home and turning on film of last night's game, we watch Sesame Street. D: In regards to women's bas- ketball, how have you seen the game evolving over the past decade? S: Well, I think the skill level is much improved, therefore how the game is played on a national scale is 'I think it would only be realistic to say that we still have a lot of promoting to do, and we still are selling our game. I think at the same time we can be excited about the changes that are taking place and the potential for future growth.' much more competitive. I think just in terms of watching the athletes, they're better. So I think we have a better game today then we had 10 years ago from a spectators stand- point. I think coaching is better. I think that because of the media coverage and television coverage, fan support has grown tremendously, yet I think we still have to market our product on a game-to-game basis. I think it's real important to do that within your own university and your own community. D: While the SEC-Big Ten chal- lenge has provided greater exposure for women's basketball on a na- tional level, some still argue that it will never grab the attention of the American public like the men's game. Do you feel that it's going to take more promotion by the coaches or the universities for that matter to get the game more accepted? S: With coaching, and particu- larly with women's athletics, there's a lot of promotion that has to go on. There's a lot of educating that needs to be done and a lot of contacts need to be made. An oppor- tunity to speak to civic groups and get active and be a part of the com- munity I think is important, if you are wanting to promote your pro- gram. I think that certainly we can't go out and think that everyone's going to go and jump on our bandwagon or we're going to turn people away and have sellout crowds. I think that the men didn't start out having that, and I'm certain they didn't expect to have it without working for it. I think that it took them years to es- tablish their own sport, to establish the media support, the fan support and we're still years behind them. So I think it would only be realistic to say. that we still have a lot of promoting to do, and we still are selling our game. I think at the same time we can be excited about the changes that are taking place and the potential for future growth. D: Where do you then envision the game moving into the 1990s? S: I'd like to think that it would get better - that we would see if ore new kids on the block so to speak - new teams that have uni- versities that have made a financial commitment to their respective programs and therefore nationally, it just becomes more competitive. I would like to also see more televi- sion exposure and therefore, more excitement. D: While there have been a few female assistant coaches in men's basketball programs in recent years, there have not been any female head coaches. Do you feel this might hap- pen in the future? S: I won't say never, because you never say never, but I don't envision it happening within the next 10 years in Division I. I could be wrong and I won't say it could never hap- pen. I think somewhere 15 or 20 years from now it might happen. D: How about yourself, have you ever thought of coaching a men's team? S: Only briefly. I think that the time, energy and effort that I de- voted to the game early in my career, and I've been able to sustain over an 18-year period is not something that I think I would want to do again. I think it would take that and more to be successful in a men's program be- cause of what you would have to overcome being a female, and going out and recruiting to convince an 18- year-old male that he needs to be coached by a woman. D: You've achieved a lot in your career. Is there anything left that you still wish to accomplish? S: Obviously, I'd like to win more championships. I wouldn't stay in the business if I didn't have the motivation to want to be the best. I want to continue to feel that our program and our staff is making a difference for women. D: Have you ever thought about when you might step down from coaching? S: I thought about it in '84 after the Olympics, but we hadn't won a championship here, and I think it was probably the stress and the time commitment that I had made really for two years (coaching the Pan Am and Olympic teams). Since then, re- tirement hasn't been a serious thought on my mind. NFL prospects spend a: weekend at the market Erick Anderson was preparing for the big time. Like hundreds of other wide-eyed, ambitious athletes, he journeyed to Indianapolis last week, to the Hoosier Dome, ready for the feverish pace of professional football. These were the NFL Combines, where coaches and scouts evaluated the best college football had to offer. Three days of observing, testing, and judging these aspiring gladiators. A grueling, frantic weekend. Not really. "The hardest part was waiting around," said Anderson, Michigan's standout inside linebacker. "We did nothing more than we did something: They tested how well you reacted mentally to different situations - a lo of pressure and stress." Brian Townsend, who played outside linebacker with Anderson, also participated in the event. He, too, came away with an opinion about the process. "From a coach's standpoint, they want to see what kind of person you are in addition to what kind of player you are," Townsend said. "From a player's standpoint, it's more or less like a meat market. You know, before the cattle can go through the gates, you've got to check them out." In the history of depersonification of football players, a.k.a. stallions,a crazed dogs, hogs, oxen, etc., the Combines goes to the furthest ex- treme. Rather than be called a farm animal, the players are actually r treated like livestock. Scouts and coaches will walk up to a player and spontaneously grab his limbs to evaluate his muscle tis- sue. Doctors research a player's en- tire history of injury to guarantee ' that a team will be receiving a healthy piece of meat. Herds of athletes are paraded through a market square, only to be auctioned off to the highest bidder in the April draft. But for Anderson, Townsend, and all the other NFL hopefuls, the Combines is a necessary inconve- nience. "I couldn't do anything but help Anderson myself," Townsend said. "On Sun- day, the Chiefs and the Raiders asked me to fill out a form. Those were two teams that didn't know much about me, and I did something to make them ask me to fill out a form." And excelling at the Combines can be a tremendous confidence boost, not to mention a career boost. "I feel very confident about how I did," Anderson said. "I heard nothing but good things from scouts and coaches." Anderson has been projected as a fourth, fifth, or sixth-round pick. He's not worried when he goes in the draft, or to what team. He only wants to play football. "Just get me in a camp," he said. "Once I get there, that's when it counts. "It really doesn't matter where I get drafted. No matter how a team did, they have great players. I'd love to go to a team that won, but I also like the challenge of a turnaround." Anderson did exceptionally well at the first event - the medical exami- nation. "I never missed a game because of injury - I never missed a game pe- riod," he said. "I don't know if they actually believed me when I told them that." Then came the physical competition. Anderson, who weighed in at 241 pounds, ran the 40-yard dash in 4.88 seconds. "I wasn't the fastest linebacker, but my time was better than most," he said. "I was right up there in the quickness tests - the shuttles, the short dashes. And when was the last time a middle linebacker had to run 40 yards?" As the 1991 Butkus Award winner, Anderson was recognized as the na- tion's top linebacker. He especially noticed the award's prestige at the Combines. "When I won it, I didn't realize what went with the Butkus Award," Anderson said. "Other players surprised me by knowing who I was. People see you and recognize you. I would walk to my room from breakfast, and players I didn't recognize would say 'What's up, Erick?"' Townsend came in with much less fanfare. Much less pressure, too. "It makes teams wonder when I've only started for a year, and each game I got better and better," he said. "Teams give me the benefit of the doubt sometimes and think, 'What if this guy had started for two years?"' Anderson thinks Townsend took advantage of the opportunity to turn some heads, both at the Combines and during the season. "Brian did really well," he said. "That's one of the greatest stories this year. Throw out the Heisman and the Butkus. He was our best outside linebacker, and he proved a lot to everyone, including himself." And whether drafted or not, Townsend said he's poised for a shot at the NFL. See SHERAN, Page4 THE DEFENDERTM Ultra Compact Personal Alarm! Loud 115 decibel dual tone, high intensity siren Wolverine championship total Saturday evening, destroying the field in the 1650-yard freestyle (16:27.93). Swix (16:47.85) and Barnes (16.57.04) finished third and eighth. While Creighton just missed the national cut, she was still elated with her performance. "I'm psyched about my swim, and I think I will still make nation- als," she said. "We're really on at this meet, and so many people are doing so well." Humphrey smashed the confer- ence and meet 200-yard backstroke record in prelims. She lowered her mark in the finals, finishing in 1:56.53, a full three seconds under teammate Lisa Anderson's former record. Anderson finished second, in 2:00.10. "It's unreal how much I have dropped this weekend," Humphrey said. "I'm still in total shock. I just wanted to break two minutes." Gehrs rushed back with her third conference crown of the meet, taking the 200-yard butterfly in 1:59.52. Gehrs' time, although off record pace, again qualified her for nation- als. Hooiveld followed up her first breaststroke record with another in the 200. Seeded third in the finals, Hooiveld caught and passed the leaders in the second half of the race, touching in 2:14.37 to beat former Wolverine Ann Colloton's meet record. In a surprise finish, sopho- more Stephanie Munson took third, while Higgins finished sixth. "This morning, I went out too fast for my fitness level, but tonight I took it out much easier (in the first half)," Hooiveld said. "I'm happy with my times, and to win is an extra bonus." Wolverines also scored well off the diving board. In the three-meter diving competition, senior diver Lisa Cribari and frosh Cinnamon Woods placed second and fifth respectively. "Going into finals, I was fourth, so I had to hit all of my dives," said Cribari. "We get better the higher we go, and on the platform we have a chance to do very well," Cribari pre- dicted. Holding true to Cribari's words, Michigan's divers ruled on the plat- form. Led by senior Julie Greyer, the Wolverines claimed the second through fifth as well as eighth place. "Karen Sinclair and Lisa Cribari did a great job," said diving coach Dick Kimball. "I can't say enough about everyone's performances." "I honestly didn't expect the margin of victory to be so large. So many people have come out and swam so well," Big Ten Coach of the Year Jim Richardson said. PERSONAL PROTECTION Travel safely anywhere! DEFENDER'S compact, lightweight design allows for hidden use. Simply clip to belt or pocket and activate siren when danger threatens. PROTECT HANDBAG OR WALLET DEFENDER MODEL 908 BATTERY INCLUDED: E U~ P .' F ITOSHIBA1 Protect your valuables! Easily attaches to handbag or wallet. When bag or wallet is grabbed, ' wrist strap detaches from unit, sounding the siren. 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