The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - September 14, 1992 - Page 3 HokyHowe Hockey legend Gordie Howe talks about professional hockey today John Niyo Plain and simple, Gordie Howe is one of the greatest athletes to play any game anytime anywhere. Howe's professional hockey career, which began in Detroit in 1946 and ended in Hartford in 1980, is possibly the most prolific in professional sports history. He played 25 seasons for the Red Wings, many as a member of the fgmous Production Line along with Ted Lindsay and Sid Abel. He came * out of retirement in the mid-1970's to play with his sons Mark and Marty for the Houston Aeros of the World Hockey Association. Howe then played his final NHL season, at age 50, in 1979-80 with the Hartford Whalers. In his 26 NHL seasons, Howe played 1767 regular season games, scored 801 goals and 1049 assists for 1850 points and 1685 penalty minutes. In 157 playoff games, he scored 68 goals and 92 assists for 160 playoff points and 220 penalty Minutes. Howe won the Hart and the Art Ross Trophies six times and the Lester Patrick Award once. He was a first team All-Star 12 times and a second team All-Star nine times. Gordie Howe still holds many NHL records, among them are - most career seasons, games, goals, most years in playoffs (20), most All- Star team selections (21) and most consecutive All-Star team selections (15). One of hockey's toughest players, he also holds the record for most career All-Star game penalty minutes (25). Howe is one of the few men to win both the NHL's Stanley Cup and the WHA's Avco Cup as well. Daily Sports Writer Brett Forrest caught up with Howe recently and spoke about hockey past and present. Daily: What do you think of the current ownership in Detroit? Are they headed in the right direction? Howe:. They. are much better oh yes, definitely. They have a brand new building and are filling the ehouse every nightL D: What are Mark's feelings concerning his becoming a Red Wing? VOLLEYBALL Continued from page 1 did an outstanding job blocking. We 0were unable to rally back, especially after the close third game,"~ Giovanazzi said. The Wolverines suffered their first setback of the season on Friday night when UC-Santa Barbara domi- nated both sides of the ball for a 15- 4, 15-8, 15-4 triumph. The Lady Gauchos, one of the top-ten teams in H: Well, he enjoyed Philadelphia. He enjoyed it a lot. But when they trade you, it's a business transaction and when you move, it's a business transaction. From a busi- ness standpoint, he is much better off going there and he also gets a chance at being with a contender. D: What direction would you choose, college or major junior, if you were a teenager today? general public? H: Mrs. Howe thought that as long as we had the capability to further educate the kids, then we should do that. We wanted to leave a legacy. That's why we did the films. I don't know if we will ever get money back from that. Those were very expensive to make. But at least we feel good that if somebody is watching that, they can improve They could get rid of a lot of fighting if they did away with the last two guys on the bench. They do about 80 percent of the fighting. But I don't see how they can get rid of it totally. Some people like it. I think it should be broken up immediately, though. All you have to do is put stiffer fines and rules in there and I think that would eliminate it. I don't think people pay to see 20 minutes of nothing. Fighting takes up a heck of a lot of hockey now - needless fighting, stupid fighting. I think when the whistle blows, the players should stop. D: Why did you come out of retirement to play for Houston of the WHA? H: To play with the kids. We were champions too. I still had hockey in me. Never die when the music is still in you. I always wanted to play with the boys and I had an opportunity to do that. It was great. It was the best time of my life. D : How difficult was it, physically, for you to play in the NHL at age 50 in 1980? H : Not that difficult. The traveling was easier. Our closest rival in Houston was 1500 miles. Talk about travel, we were all over the place. Every time we took off, it was three and a half hour flight. D: How did you find travel in the 40's and 50's when teams had to ride trains to get from game to game? H: That was good, that was totally great. It brought the team together. You were all in one car. Our conversation was all hockey. We played cards together. We ate together. We had our own sleeping cars. It really brought the team to- gether. D: What is your opinion of Eric Lindros? H: If you meet him, he's a great kid. I think he's very marketable. If you've been around him, he's like a- magnet. I think he'll be great for the NHL. Namesnik's medal feels good as gold How I Spent My Summer Vacation, by Eric Namesnik. It would be considerably more interesting than something any grade- schooler could come up with, at least in content. He certainly has sone stories to tell. A whirlwind summer came to an official close last week for Michigan swimmer Eric Namesnik as he went back to class and went back to being a college student again. Last year at this time, Namesnik was just beginning training for the most important race of his life, one that required him to put the textbooks on the shelves for a year. He took a redshirt season and began concentrating solely on swimming - to the point where more than half of his waking hours were devoted to one goal: The Olympics. He put all his eggs in one basket, so to speak, but came away with no regrets in the end. "There was a lot of incentive not to do it," said Namesnik, who is the American record holder in the 400-meter individual medley. "Nothing was for sure. I had no guarantees." None, that is, until he had actually made the U.S. team, earning a spot by finishing first at the Olympic Trials in Indianapolis on March 2. "That was a big load off my back," he said. "Up until that point I had some mixed feelings. I thought maybe I could just take one semester off, instead of two. But it's a once in a lifetime chance and you don't want to take any chances. And anyway, once you've decided ..." Once you've decided, you just bear down. Swimmers toil year-round- clinging to that mentality, and Eric Namesnik is no different. He bore See NIYO, Page 6 .N m*a\N"m'N> \ \ .~ ~ N N N A .\\. n .\N(.N .N, .4 ~ NN N t °N 9 x pk M , 3 5 } S Former Detroit Red Wing great Gordie Howe skates along side the Philadelphia Flyers' Eric Lindros at a hockey camp this summer. H: I never even played junior - and I definitely didn't play college. I was professional when I was 17, I was still in high school. I would do the same thing. That's why I believe so much in the fact that you should give yourself a choice and a chance. You should give your books 100% when you are on them and give your sports 100% when you are playing them. Then there will come a time when you can make a proper deci- sion as to which path to take. Murray (Howe's third son) did that and he is now a doctor. The last year he played junior hockey was with Wayne Gretzky in Toronto. D : What makes you want to conduct hockey camps for young players, make instructional video tapes and be so accessible to the themselves. D: With the so-called new age of the NHL upon us, what direction do you thinknshould be taken with issues such as taking fighting out of the game and procuring a network television contract in the United States? H: I wish I knew, I'd be a genius. In order to get accessibility into the networks, you pretty much have to be a national sport. It is not covered in the southern part of the U.S. They're putting a team in Tampa. I don't know how they pick teams. Maybe that's what they're trying to do - build a national sport of it by covering all geographical areas. I don't know how they are going to get national coverage in the U.S. FILE PHOTO/Daily Michigan swimmer Eric Namesnik won a silver medal in the 400-meter individual medley at the 1992 Summer Olympics. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SOFTBALL TRYOUTS Wednesday, Sept. 16, 3:00 pm Varsity Softball Diamond For more information, please call Carol Hutchins at 747-1269 the nation, hammered 34 kills of 80 attempts for a .250 hitting efficiency. In comparison, the Wolverines put down only 25 kills out of 103 attempts, while erring on 27. The result was a -.019 hitting efficiency. Although Michigan came up short Friday night and Saturday, the tournament began well Friday after-, noon when the Wolverines topped San Diego, 15-11, 15-8, 10-15, 15-9. Horrigan and Collias combined for 41 kills in leading the Wolverines to victory. Giovanazzi said he was very pleased with his team's play. "This is a very good win for us, beating a West Coast team on their coast," he said. "I feel good about the match we played." Michigan will continue its pre- conference action this weekend when it travels to Lexington, Ky., for the four-team Conference Challenge Tournament hosted by Kentucky. m Eu 'I Team W L T Pct. Ohio State 2 0 0 1.000 Illinois 2 0 0 1.000 Indiana 1 0 0 1.000 Purdue 1 0 0 1.000 Michigan 0 0 1 .500 Iowa 1 2 0 .333 Minnesota 0 1 0 .000 Wisconsin 0 1 0 .000 Michigan State 0 1 0 .000 Northwestern 0 2 0 .000 SELECTED MATCHUPS NEXT WEEK Oklahoma State at Michgan Notre Dame at Michigan State Illinois at Houston Ohio State at Syracuse Indiana at Kentucky ..4....." .. . 1 r i:;.i., 1 ..:.". :i :: .:.r.:aW:.W::.. "....:.. J. .....4....R. ..'... ...4 .... .. :. :':" 'i": lJ:: :":'.:':'::"i".. ~. " ... " .. .. .. .. is f. i:" :". ::. :: ::: . '.ti': 'i'fiti ti :: R.O.C.K. student group WEDNESDAY 9:00 pm fun, food provocative discussions stimulating community 1236 Washtenaw Campus Chapel Ct. 663-7990/668-7421 you are cordialL invited to attend the 1992 University of Mic an !2 wu'Wafenberg Lecture, 'Southr Africa in Transition: Past and Present Influences byy 'Te Honorabe .e4en Suzman Former South African Parfnamentarian Weineday, September 16, 1992 8:00 p.m. Lec tun 9(aiZ Main~f or UckfiamBuifaing MTiis ctur is open to the pubc. No admission wiibe cfarged) Throughout Helen Suzman's thirty-six years in Parliament she worked consistently, and often alone. to instigate change in South Africa's apartheid system. Despite the mockery and often outright hostility of her peers. she persevered in her attacks on all the discriminatory legislation that was passed. She concentrated on such issues as detentons without trial, human rights and the prison system. Even when unable to effect change. Sunman was often able to force the government to make public details or its application and enforcement of laws. (one block south of CCRB at Geddes and Washtenaw) (5; dftcva)41 DEPARTMENT OF RECREATIONAL SPORTS ; , THE MICHIGAN DAILY INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM WANTED !!! Soccer Officials