The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 23, 1992 - Page 3 q&A, 44 *coaO/ T77 r e Taylor The 1994 Olympic hockey coach discusses his career John Niyo LL' RAMM Tim Taylor has been the head coach of Yale hockey since 1976. He captained the 1963 ECAC champion Harvard Crimson and remained there as an assistant for seven years before moving to New Haven. Tay- lor's 1985-86 Bulldogs were the winningest team in Yale history. In 1986-87 he earned ECAC Coach of the Year honors after taking a re- building Eli squad to the ECAC semifinals. While at Yale, Taylor has been active in USA Hockey. He was as- sistant general manager and assistant coach of the 1984 Olympic team. He coached four World Championship squads and the 1991 second-place Canada Cup team. In the summer of 1992, Taylor was named head coach of the 1994 U.S. Olympic team. Daily Hockey Writer Brett Forrest spoke with Taylor * recently about his experiences in amateur hockey. Daily: Has coaching the U.S. team in the World Championships been a worthwhile experience for you? Taylor: Obviously it's been a great international experience. It has given me an opportunity to work with the best players in our country, who participate in the National Hockey League. It has also given me the chance to coach at the elite world level, which to me, is the most enjoyable level of hockey to coach. It's a refreshing style, it's very challenging, there is a very high skill level. All the oppo- nents are extremely well prepared. I have truly enjoyed the whole inter- national experience. D: What are your feelings toward the Canada Cup tournament? Was it difficult to step in and take over as head coach when Bob Johnson be- came ill in 1991? T: The Canada Cup truly repre- sents the best players in the world going at each other representing their own countries. The only down side to the Canada Cup is the time of * year that it is played. -Being played in August and September, sometimes you find athletes and teams that maybe aren't prepared to the fullest. As far as our specific situation With the United States, with Bob Johnson's illness at that time and subsequent death, it was a very emo- tional time. He was a man who was very near and dear to all of us who were involved with the program. I give my utmost respect to the ath- letes because they performed very well under very difficult circum- stances. D: Was there a difference be- tween coaching professional players and Division I college players? T: Coaching is coaching. As long as the athletes and coaching staff are on the same page and are motivated toward the same degree, coaching the pros is an absolute pleasure. They are just that - they are profes- sionals. They know how to train. They know how to prepare them- selves. They know the game. They pick things up very quickly. They are very responsive. I think over the years there have been a lot of negative things written about the professional hockey player and his coachability. I think nothing is farther from the truth. For the most part, pros are very coachable. D: How satisfying is it for you to finally get the Olympic head coach- ing job after having been involved in USA Hockey for years? T: I am, needless to say, very excited and really looking forward to (David Roberts and Pat Neaton) are both very strong candidates. They are in our elite athlete pool. If we go with a group of amateurs and college players, basically, those kids will be very much in contention. the challenge. I have been involved in the world class level of USA Hockey for a number of years and to get the opportunity to coach the U.S. team in the Olympics is a thrill of a lifetime. D: Do you have any immediate plans for the team? T: The first thing we have to do is resolve this whole situation sur- rounding the Dream Team - whether or not we are going to be using the NHL, whether or not the NHL is going to cease operation, thus allowing their players to partic- ipate in the Olympics. D: What is your opinion on that matter? T: I think it would be very excit- ing either way. I think there are a lot of pros and cons to both sides of that issue. Philosophically, I may be op- posed to it. In a practical sense, everyone has to respect the fact that yes, indeed, our very best hockey players are playing in the National Hockey League. If we, as a country, are ob- ligated to put our best players on the ice in the Olympics, it is difficult to do that without the cooperation of the NHL. D: Do you think the short amount of time between the Olympics - only two years - will be a factor? T: It could be. It could work to our advantage. On the down side, it gives us less time to plan the logis- tics of any kind of pre-Olympic training, any tour, or any schedule. But in reality, those things are not planned four years in advance. Maybe they should be, but tradition- ally they're not. On the up side, perhaps there are more people familiar with what has to be done in order for us to be suc- cessful. Memories of a fairly suc- cessful campaign in '92 in Al- bertville are fresh on the minds of a lot of people that are involved in hockey in our country. Perhaps it will be a plus that way. D: What can you say of the Olympic prospects of two Michigan players who are at the perfect age to play on the '94 squad - David Roberts and Pat Neaton? T: They are both very strong candidates. They are in our elite athlete pool. If we go with a group of amateurs and college players, ba- sically, those kids will be very much in contention. D: The final four teams in the NCAA Tournament last year were all from the Midwest. Why has the recent rise of the Midwest in college hockey occurred? T: I think these are cyclical things. I don't think there is any ex- planation as to why one area of the country should be stronger than an- other in terms of their collegiate hockey product. I don't know what's going to go on this year. I know Maine once again is ranked as one of the top teams in the country. Clarkson in the ECAC is favored to be one of the top teams in the country. There are some very good teams out here in the East. Sure, Michigan and Lake Supe- rior come out of the Central League as very highly-regarded teams. As the season unfolds there will be a lot of good teams in the WCHA. I don't think there is any reason to think one region is going to have a lock on the quality of hockey at the collegiate level. D: What is it about the Yale ex- perience that has kept you from pur- suing a professional coaching ca- reer? T: I could answer that question in a two-pronged response. I enjoy working at Yale. It's a great envi- ronment. It's a university which keeps things in proper perspective between athletics and academics. There are a lot of very high quality people to work with and to work around. The quality of the student athlete we get here is extremely high and they're extremely coachable. The other thing about working at Yale is that the school has given me every opportunity to pursue some of these interests I have coaching at the international level and with USA Hockey. I thank Yale for that. Per- haps I would not have had that many opportunities had I been somewhere else or had I been in pro hockey. D: Do you find it a tremendous disadvantage in recruiting not being able to offer athletic scholarships to players? T: There is no doubt we have some hurdles to overcome, but there are some real plusses, too, that we can sell. The fact that we don't have athletic scholarships in this day and age, in this economic climate is a difficult barrier when you do get out there recruiting. The prestige of the school and the quality and value of the Yale ed- ucation is something you can sell. Yes, it makes it more difficult, but not impossible. OSU-Michigan series dominated by coaches COLUMBUS - It wasn't exactly Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler walking off the field Saturday, as Michigan and Ohio State battled to a tie in the "snake pit" in Columbus. But fittingly, in a series that was made what it is by two controversial coaches, this latest chapter will be remembered for the bosses who were patrolling the two sidelines and their separate controversies that are following them around like shadows. On one sideline, the one with all the maize and blue, you had Gary Moeller baffling Michigan fans with his play-calling for the second week in a row. Mired in poor field position and afraid to throw the ball - especially after an early interception by Elvis Grbac - what could have been a last-minute drive for a score turned into a textbook example of how to run out the clock. Was he playing not to lose? "When the ball was on my 9-yard line, I was playing not to lose, I'll tell you that," Moeller shot back at reporters after the game. Moeller's relatively placid ride as Michigan head coach is hitting some turbulence of late - angry fans, impatient media. Three ties in one season will do that to a relationship. But compared to John Cooper, Moeller's world is still Utopia. Cooper, of course, is the favorite chew toy of the rabid media and frothing fans down in Columbus, a town which doesn't take losing football games very well. Especially when the other team is Michigan. Cooper has yet to beat Michigan in five tries since taking k over as OSU's head coach after Earle Bruce was fired. "You want to gamble, guys, but you gamble with my chips," Cooper said, as he tried to explain to reporters why he didn't attempt a two-point conversion late in the game. Cooper, apparently, is determined not to repeat history. He was blasted in 1990 when, with the score tied, 13-13, a failed fourth- Cooper down play by the Buckeyes late in the game led to J.D. Carlson's game-winning field goal. "We went for it down here a couple of years ago and lost the game," Cooper said. "I did it last time, I wasn't going to do it again." That is the sort of mentality that has invaded the strategical mind of Ohio State's football coach. I'm not going to screw up big anymore. A pretty awkward way to have to lead a football team. A bad pass becomes poor play-calling. A fumble becomes improper preparation. It's strange the way a scapegoat becomes the outlet for everyone's frustrations. The constant pelting of questions and all the second-guessing has taken a coach - a coach who might very well be a "bad" coach - and turned him into a rather pitiful sight. He dreads his two-hour call-in show that airs every Wednesday night from 7-9 p.m. And he dreads the postgame press conferences every Saturday. "I'm not getting into that. I'm not going to answer that question," Cooper said Saturday, when asked about how the tie might affect his job status. "I don't have any role in that decision. You're going to have to ask someone who makes those decisions - either the board of trustees or (OSU president) Dr. (Gordon) Gee or possibly even the local press, the way they wrote this week." Gee told a swarm of reporters after the game that Cooper's job is safe. "There is no opening at Ohio State, and we should not speculate about it," Gee said. Funny, as recently as Friday he seemed to be saying otherwise. Gee commented that a 9-2 record would be a respectable sign of improvement over last year's 8-3 finish, thus requiring a victory for his coaching survival. And Thursday, The Columbus Dispatch reported that Ohio State was prepared to pay the $342,000 necessary to buy out Cooper's See NIYO, Page 4 a !I *Women swimmers split weekend meets Iby Wendy Law Lions and Tigers ... and Wol- verines, oh well. The Michigan wo- men's swimming and diving team (3-2 Big Ten, 3-4 overall) defeated the Princeton Tigers by a score of 219-80 Friday, however Big Ten rival Penn State defeated the Wolve- s rines 155-144 in the triangular meet. Michigan dominated both Penn State and Princeton in several events. Senior co-captain Mindy Gehrs won both the 200-yard butter- fly (2:04.23) and the 200-yard indivi- dual medley (2:05.64). Other double-event winners for the Wolverines were sophomore Lara Hooiveld and senior Kirsten Silvester. Hooiveld took the 100- and 200-yard breaststroke with times of 1:03.92 and 2:21.20. Silvester won the 500-yard freestyle (5:00.07) and the 1000-yard freestyle (10:05.03). Gehrs and Hooiveld, together with freshman Beth Jackson and junior Kathy Deibler, also took the 400-yard medley relay with a time of 3:52.21. Two Michigan divers also won their individual events. Senior co- captain Margie Stoll took the 1- meter event with a score of 263.80. Freshman Carrie Zarse took the 3- meter event with her 287.50 per- formance. Michigan coach Jim Richardson got strong performances from Jack- son, Deibler, and junior Amy Bohnert. Jackson finished second and 1 third against Princeton and Penn State, respectively, with a time of Deibler excelled in the 200-yard freestyle with a time of 1:52.04, placing second only to Penn State. Bohnert finished second (against Princeton) and fifth (against Penn State) in the 200-yard backstroke with 2:08.22. Despite the strong performances by some of the individual Wolverine swimmers, Richardson was disappointed with Michigan's failure to beat Penn State. "I was pleased with the meet," Richardson said. "We swam a good meet. We had a couple of people who had outstanding swims. Mindy Gehrs - all of her swims were excellent. Lara Hooiveld had a very, very good 100 breaststroke and what I consider to be a very good 200 breaststroke. Amy Bohnert in 200 back was excellent. Beth Jackson's 200 IM was excellent. "The rest of the swims were competed well. But we were disappointed with the outcome of the meet. We wanted to win the meet." Contributing to Penn State's victory was the fact that the Nittany 'We competed well. But we were disappointed with the outcome of the meet.' - Jim Richardson Lions shaved and tapered for the meet. "The real difference in the meet, in my mind, were Penn State's No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4 swimmers being shaved and tapered," Richardson said. "They were able to make significant drops in time. And I think that was what really affected the outcome of the meet, more than how our No. I people swam and how their No. 1 people swam because there were no NCAA cuts in the meet. That's something when we try to rest, we want to see how close to cuts we can get. We expect to be fairly close." The Wolverines now turn their thoughts to the Speedo Collegiate Cup meet which is being held Dec. 3-5 at Canham Natatorium. "We're going to do a kind of mixed bag for the Speedo meet," Richardson said. "We've got some people who are going to taper for two weeks, some people who are going to taper for three days, and some people who are going to taper for one day. That's based on what they did this summer, how they've looked this fall, what they feel they need to be doing at this point, and what the coaching staff feels they need to be doing at this point. So that's what we are going to do for the Speedo Cup." MEIJER we have pretty solid," he added. "We I a job for you ! PART-TIME JOB OPPORTUNITIES Want to work in a friendly, fast paced atmosphere? Look no further than MEIJER! IMMEDIATE INTERVIEWS See Greeter for more details. Take the Plunge Try Color! t i DEPARTMENT OF RECREATIONAL SPORTS >;. INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM WANTED!! 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