Page 6- The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - October 5, 1992 Spikers hold off Wisconsin in five games by Rich Mitvalsky Daily Sports Writer In its second five-game match of the three-match-old Big Ten season, the Michigan women's volleyball team recovered from a lapse in con- centration to thwart a furious Wisconsin comeback and win in Madison Saturday. The Wolverines took the first two games of the match, 15-11 and 15-9, and Qeemed to be on the verge of collecting a straight game sweep of the Badgers. "We went into the match for the first time since I have been at Michigan thinking that we could beat Wisconsin," senior Hayley Lorenzen said. "Before the match, we talked about it a lot in the locker room. We were pretty excited about it." The Badgers, not complacent with their play in the first two games, gained momentum in the third game and conquered the Wolverines, 15-5. "I think more than anything we lost our focus and concentration," Lorenzen said. "We weren't over- confident but we just didn't play with the same level of confidence we did in the first two games." Michigan's lack of confidence and focus persisted in the fourth set, as the Badgers evened the score at two games apiece, with a tightly contested 15-13 victory. "Definitely in the third and fourth games we stopped executing those things which we were able to do in the first two," junior Fiona Davidson said. "Our serving was tough and we also blocked well, but in the third and fourth games, they broke down." The Badgers unexpectedly saw a completely rejuvenated Wolverine squad take the floor in the fifth game, however. Michigan returned to it's powerful serving game, tai- lored especially for the weak Badger backcourt. "They had one good setter, but we felt that if we could serve tough, we could make it difficult for her to get the ball to her best hitters up front," Davidson said. Combining well placed serves with renewed intensity up front, Michigan held off the pesky Badgers, 15-11 in the fifth, before a crowd of nearly 2,200. "At the end of the third and fourth games, the crowd started to get into it, but they were silent as soon as we did something positive," Davidson added. Individually, senior standout Tarnisha Thompson starred, break- ing the Michigan career assist record, formerly held by 1987 grad- uate Lisa Vahi. Coming into the contest, Thompson needed only 29 assists to surpass Vahi's mark, but recorded a total of 53. Leading the Wolverines in kills was senior Michelle Horrigan with 19. Junior Joanna Collias collected a game-high 22 digs, which compli- mented her 14 kills. Michigan upped it's record to 12- 3 overall, and 3-0 in conference play. While the team is comprised of plentiful talent for the 1992-93 cam- paign, Lorenzen attributes much of the team's success to first-year head coach Greg Giovanazzi. "We haven't started 3-0 since I have been here. This year he has taught us we can come back from being two sets down in a match. He has really increased our confidence level, and that is why we have played so well. When we are down, 'We went into the match for the first time since I have been at Michigan thinking that we could beat Wisconsin.' - Hayley Lorenzen he tries to keep us calm and tell us what we need to improve on, instead of being negative. "I think our schedule has been an advantage for us, because we have built up to better teams throughout the season. We have been able to build our game up along the way and now we have a chance to win some big games against Ohio State and Penn State." Presently, Michigan is ranked seventh in a region which includes perennial powerhouses Ohio State, Penn State, and Illinois. Up next for the Wolverines are both the Buckeyes in Columbus, and the Nittany Lions in State College. At the season's end, the top eight teams from the region qualify for the na- tional championships. Softball sweeps Irish in exhibtion by Jesse Brouhard Notre Dame just could not tie thi game, even though it probably' wanted to. The Michigan softball team broke a 1-1 deadlock in a sixth- inning tiebreaker yesterday morning to beat Notre Dame, 2-1, and comK' plete a two-game sweep at Alumni Field. Michigan scored its first run, when senior Patti Benedict led off. with a triple over the center fielder's head. Sophomore cleanup hitter Michelle Silver immediately fol-. lowed the blast with a RBI single to put the Wolverines ahead 1-0. Notre Dame struck back in the fifth with a leadoff double followed by an RBI single to tie the game until the sixth. In the tiebreaker format both" teams start with a runner on second base in order to promote quick scor- ing. The Irish immediately shot' themselves in the foot when a wild' pitch put the go ahead run 60 feet' away from home plate. Benedict- then cashed in on the opportunity with a deep sacrifice fly putting the Wolverines ahead. Notre Dame was unable to score their runner from third with one out thus giving Michigan the victory. Michigan softball coach Carol Hutchins had nothing but praise for 0 captain Patti Benedict who comple- mented her offensive contributions with clutch play in left field. "Patti Benedict came to play,. Hutchins said. "She showed today,, that she is an all-around player." In the first game, Silver provided all the offense the Wolverines would need by blasting a grand slam over the fence, with winds gusting di rectly into the diamond. Benedict and Silver combined for eight of the nine Wolverine RBIs. One of the major adjustments to, be made this year is to the new NCAA softball. The revised ball is lighter and harder making it more- lively off the bat. It is also abnormal in that it is chartreuse so as not to blend in with the hurler's white pants. Not everyone is convincedi that the change is for the better. "It takes awhile to adjust to the new ball," Hutchins commented. "I'm afraid that people will get hurt due to the liveliness of the balloff the bat." MOLLY SIEVENSUally The Michigan women's volleyball team defeated Wisconsin, 3-2, Saturday in Madison. Joanna Collias, seen here in action against Indiana earlier this season, helped lead the Wolverines to victory with 22 digs and 14 kills. The Wolverines are undefeated in thier first four conference games under new coach Greg Giovanazzi. LINDROS Continued from page 3 All that changed the morning of June 30, 1992 when arbitrator Larry Bertuzzi approved the trade of Eric Lindros from the Quebec Nordiques to the Philadelphia Flyers in ex- change for the paltry sum of Ron Hextall, Mike Ricci, Steve Duschene, Kerry Huffman, Petr Forsberg, the Flyers' 1993 first- round draft pick and $15 million. Bertuzzi said his decision was, "black and white and orange." Lindros, 19, was the most-highly touted junior hockey prospect since Mario Lemieux. He was drafted No. 1 overall by Quebec in the 1991 entry draft but did not sign with the team. He sat out the 1991-92 NHL season to force the Nordiques to make a trade. A 6-foot-5, 225-pound talented goal-scorer, Lindros is as much of a franchise player as there ever was. His rare combination of physical play and scoring touch should make him a dominant figure in his new league. "There hasn't been a player who moves and hits like him in a long time," Flyers general manager Russ Farwell said. "He injured players from Sweden and Czechoslovakia with body checks and no more. Little kids across the country are go- ing to want to hit again. Just like Gretzky and Lemieux made kids want to pivot, he might make kids want to run over people again." Pierre Page, general manager of the Nordiques, was disappointed in not being able to sign Lindros but still concurred with Farwell. "Where do you find a 6-5 guy with hockey sense and a mean streak? He does things that others can't do," he said. The Flyers then had to sign Lindros to a contract. This did not prove to be problematic. Lindros, who said he had turned down a 10- year, $55 million contract from Quebec, signed quickly with the Flyers. The six-year contract is worth $3 million per season with a $3 million signing bonus spread out evenly over the term of the pact. This $3.5 million sum makes Lindros, at 19, the highest-paid player in the NHL without ever having played one game - talk about pressure. Bob Clarke, Hall of Famer and senior vice president of the Flyers, was probably the happiest of all ex- ecutives when the trade was final- ized. For over 20 years, he has epit- omized what the Flyers would most like to be. Clarke, a player who signed his first Flyers contract "on the trunk of a car," knows about pressure and has faith in Lindros. "There's going to be way more pressure on him than any other player," Clarke said. "(Wayne) Gretzky and (Mario) Lemieux didn't have the pressure this kid's going to have coming in, but I think this kid has been under tremendous pressure his whole career - ever since he was 14, 15, 16 years old. He's been able to handle it all the way along. "The expectations on him have always been high, and he's always responded. He was one of the best One would be hard-pressed to find a Philadelphia native who is not in favor of the trade. The Flyers were a desperate team four months ago. Certainly, the team gave up many of their key players. However, 'There hasn't been a player who moves and hits like him in a long time. Just like Gretzky and Lemieux made kids want to pivot, he might make kids want to run over people again.' - Russ Farwell Flyers general manager a large question mark currently re- sides in the goal crease. Also, this band of players is nol yet a team. Few of them have played together for any length of time. Leaders will rise to the forefront in due time, but teammates are still get- ting acquainted. Coach Bill Dineen has even said he may not choose a captain for the 1992-93 tilt. Certainly, this year's Flyers team will be more intoxicating than those of the past few seasons. The team it- self may not be as talented as squads of years past, but it will have those all-important intangibles within their grasp - youth, anticipation, optimism and excitement. With the acquisition of Lindros, the Flyers franchise is starting anew} wiping the slate clean. At this point, it is too soon to tell if Eric Lindros 1 the chosen warrior to lead Philadelphia to hockey valhalla. He does, however, have ex- ceedingly broad shoulders. If these shoulders are stacked with the right collection of players, Lindros just might be able to bull his team to the pinnacle of his profession. Perhaps, even, the franchise's vaunted creed of altruism will again mean more players on the Canada Cup team as a 19-year-old, and you have to be mentally tough to play for that team. The people here are going to love him." Lindros has his eyes wide open, and if he has wild expectations for himself, he is not telling anyone. "It's not a matter of me going out and scoring 50 goals or scoring 100 points," Lindros said. "I'll go out and do the best job I can. "I think if we can improve by 15 points, that's a great start. If we can do even better than that and get into the playoffs and go a little ways and eventually keep building and build- ing, we can go a long way. As long as the team keeps going, that's what's important." they now have a marquee name and what will surely be a top-drawing team. The Spectrum II, the organization's new 21,000-seat stadium, is currently under construction as well. Lindros, thus, has become a key figure in the Flyers' general popularity and finan- cial prosperity in the new era of the NHL. One cannot expect the Flyers to become champions directly. Philadelphia's team was not a great one before the trade, and now that the franchise has given up four proven NHL players for just one in return, it is evident that time is the key for the Flyers. The defense is, at once, porous and inexperienced and U MO Jonathon B Pub Presents: IN NIGHT KARAOKE than mere words can. Eric Lindros, for one, is salivat- ing over the prospect of finally be- ginning his professional hockey ca- reer. It has been a long journey in getting to this point. If Lindros haA his druthers, he and his Flyers wilt imbibe from Lord Stanley's Cup before his sojourn is complete. 0 L-. - L: 0 FOOTBALL NIGHT Featuring: I hnttc 0r1 . Come be the star you'd love to be! I