The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 10, 1992 - Page 11 Lions enter M' den for Pro Challenge Most Valuable Players Jalen Rose Chris Webber Most Improved Player Jimmy King Best Defensive Player Juwan Howard Ray Jackson Rebounding Award Chris Webber Leadership Freddie Hunter Hustle Freddie Hunter by Brett Forrest Daily Sports Writer The Detroit Lions will send a number of standouts to Crisler Arena tonight to face current Michigan ath- letes for what promises to be an in- teresting evening. This "Superstar Challenge" will not be a typical NFL contest. It will feature the stars competing in seven events - volleyball, relay races, three-point basketball shootouts, sit- ups, three-on-three touch football, five-on-five basketball and a slam dunk competition. Detroit Lions Barry Sanders, Jerry Ball, Lomas Brown, Willie Green and William White are sched- uled to appear. Michigan will counter with football players Ricky Powers, Elvis Grbac and Burnie Legette, basketball team members Chris Webber, Freddie Hunter, Kirk Taylor, Chip Armer and Trish Andrew, baseball outfielder Steve Buerkel and swimmers Lisa Anderson and Mindy Gehrs. This program, handled by Pro Challenge, has taken many Lions and other pro athletes into schools in Michigan and Ohio with a special itinerary. The program, which is primarily targeted at high-school age students, pits the pros against the top athletes from each school they visit in a number of Olympic-type events. Between events, the pros take the microphone to tackle some of the critical issues which confront youth each day. The competition begins at 7:30 p.m., and tickets are available for $2.00. All proceeds will go to Athletes in Action, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and Pro Challenge. Blue Jays tame Tigers again, 3=1 DETROIT (AP) - Juan Guzman matched his career high with 10 strikeouts and. Dave Winfield hit his first home run for Toronto, leading the Blue Jays over the Detroit Tigers 3-1 Thursday for a three-game sweep. Guzman, who was 10-3 last sea- son, allowed three hits in seven in- nings and walked four. Tim Henke pitched a one-hit eighth and Duane Ward pitched a perfect ninth for his second save. Walt Terrell, 12-14 in 1991, al- lowed all three runs and six hits in 8 1-3 innings. Detroit's Tony Phillips was ejec-ted in the ninth by home plate umpire Tim Welke for arguing. Kelly Gruber's two-out homer in the first put Toronto ahead. Detroit loaded the bases in the bottom of the inning with one out, but Guzman struck out Mickey Tettleton and Phillips. The Tigers then tied the score in the second when Mark Carreon led off with his first American League home run. Toronto took the lead in the sixth when Devon White walked, stole second was sacrificed to third by Roberto Alomar and scored on Kelly Gruber's sacrifice fly. Balance leads to lacrosse victory by Chad Safran Daily Sports Writer Balanced scoring has been a lem for Michigan lacrosse coach Bob DiGiovanni all season. Relying on one or two players has frequently slowed the Wolverine attack. On Wednesday night, the scales evened out as Michigan (11-7 overall) played one of its top games this sea- son in its 19-2 defeat of Northwood Institute, a first-year, division three varsity team. Of the 20 attack playprs who saw *action, sixteen scored points (goals or assists) and 13 of them had goals. Attackman Will Clyde, who was re- turning from bruised ribs that held him out of a weekend tournament, led the way for the Wolverines with a goal and seven assists. Midfielder Ranjiv Advani was the game's top goal scorer tallying three. Fellow midfielder Andy Tumpowsky added two goals and an assist, as did at- * tackman Doug Henke. "A lot of guys owe a lot of goals to (Clyde)," DiGiovanni said. "It is always easier to play when you have a good assist man like Will on your team. "The basics were there. We had some fun in the game. A lot of peo- ple got playing time." The Wolverines were coming off a weekend in which they managed to take three of their five games at the University of Pittsburgh Invitational tournament. On Saturday, Michigan defeated Carengie Mellon 6-1, followed by an 8-7 victory over the Hokies of Virginia Tech. The day's third game matched Michigan against Fordham. The Wolverines were up 7-3 before the Rams countered with five unanswered goals for an 8-7 come- back victory. "The Fordham game really hurt," DiGiovanni said. "We played or best lacrosse of the season for the first three quarters before we collapsed." The Wolverines defeated Carne- gie Mellon once again Sunday, 11-0. But they could not pull off a repeat performance against the Hokies, as Michigan fell 9-4. With Wednesday's victory, the Wolverines have captured eight of their last 10 games and are starting to gel. "We have really progressed this season," DiGiovanni said. "It has re- ally been two different seasons. For the first five games of the season I would have given us a D'. Now we're playing like an 'A' team." The team will have a week off from game action before it travels to Northwestern next weekend. In Evanston, the Wolverines will try to win their third consecutive Big Ten Club Lacrosse Championship. Mich- igan is looking at another title op- timistically, especially after sweep- ing to victory in the Eastern Division tourney two weeks ago. A wide-eyed Barry Sanders scans the field for oncoming defenders. He won't have to look far for competition at tonight's Superstar Challenge. 4L& E I E B University of Michigan Men's Glee Club Jerry Blackstone, Director [Dill DIr ac I 99 0 SPIRAL/VELO BINDING Under 1" Width, Over 1" @ $1.99 Dollar Bill Copying 611 Church Phone: 665-9200 Fax: 930-2800 DON'T SEND YOUR WINTER CLOTHES HOME- STORE THEM FOR THE SUMMER! GOLD BOND CLEANERS 332 Maynard 668-6335 - U COMPLETE TRAVEL RESOURCE CENTER INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL FRAME BACKPACKS FROM DANA, LOWE, NORTH FACE, GREGORY COMPLETE SELECTION OF BACKPACKING SUPPLIES " SLEEPING BAGS " TENTS " HIKING BOOTS " COMPLETE PATAGONIA LINE OF CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT 132nd Annual Spring Concert with Bob McGrath of Sesame Street and the 1967 Around-the-World Glee Club Sat. April 11, 1992 8PM - Hill Auditorium Tickets: $8, $6, $5, $3 Student * Available at Hill Auditorium Box Office 764-8350 For Credit Card Orders call 763-TKTS FREE SNEAK PREVIEW . ' S whocouidntcareiless. until he met a man who couldn't care more. 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