Page 8-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- February 17,1992 8 R#S yx a ;, zx yRecord setting performances -R-Sty--F Women gymnasts break team-scoring mark in both meets by Andy Stabile and Joshua Marlow Luck may have had a hand in the Michigan women's gymnastics team's five victories this weekend, but, luck aside, the Wolverines still performed well enough to set and then break their team-scoring record. Friday night, No. 23 Michigan (3-0 Big Ten, 10-0 overall) defeated No. 26 Louisiana State, No. 33 Northern Illinois and Indiana University (Penn.) LSU was ex- pected to challenge Michigan, but due to injuries, the Tigers arrived with just six gymnasts. The Wolverines gainedl89.25 points to break the record of 188.6 that they had set two weeks earlier against Iowa. LSU scored 185.25, Northern Illinois 185.20, and IUP 182.40. The record bolstered Michigan's confidence, because coach Bev Fry held back star frosh Beth Wymer from the all-around to rest her for Sunday's meet. Wymer has won the all-around in every meet this season, but Friday, she competed only on the uneven bars. "Everybody did a great job to- day," junior Ali Winski said. "We proved we could do well in the all- around. Even without Beth, we set the record." It was Winski who filled the void created by Wymer's absence, win- ning the all-around with a personal- best 38.15, the first time she has broken a 38.00 during her stay at Michigan. After Friday's record-setting per- formance, Wolverine assistant coach Dave Kuzara felt confident going into the weekend's second competi- tion. Sunday, No. 10 Missouri would join LSU in competition against the Wolverines. "We were good today," Kuzara said. "But we will be even better on Sunday. We will consistently get better the rest of the way. We're tough. We will win on Sunday." Just as promised, Michigan de- livered Sunday, breaking its two day-old record by scoring 189.40 to up the team's undefeated record to 10-0. Missouri finished with 188.2 while LSU tallied 185.25. While it was injuries that held back LSU, fog may have been Missouri's undoing. The team was forced to wait through most of Saturday night, as zero-visibility kept the Tigers from taking off until 6 a.m. Sunday. The long night was evident im- mediately, as five Missouri gym- nasts fell from the uneven bars, the team's first event. "Travel problems probably had something to do with our perfor- mance in the meet," Missouri assis- tant coach Kris Buchheister said. "But after our disaster on the bars, we came back pretty well." Although Michigan broke its team record, the Wolverines looked as if they might have been the team that had the long night. While most of Friday's routines were completed cleanly, many of Sunday's were not. However, it had little affect on their score, because only on the vault did more than one Michigan gymnast take a fall. "We made some mistakes," Fry said. "But you only count five of the six routines. We had a little more, energy because we were at home and that might have given us the lit- tle cushion we needed." Kelly Carfora of Michigan performs on the balance beam on her way to achieving a score of 9.60. The Wolverines garnered 189.4 points on their way to victory over LSU and Missouri. 0 0 01 I