The Michigan Daily - Sports Tuesday - January 1Q - Page 3 * &y4," 7-etrwe" uioer" s 6askt6allcoad Pat Yzyrnritt John Niyo Summitt -- ri ii " 11 - Luck has little to do The coach discusses 'M' coach Trish Roberts, her Own success and the future of women's basketball with Williams story Since becoming head women's basketball coach at the University of Tennessee, Pat Summitt has epito- mized the word success. She has coached her teams to five Southeastern Conference titles and 11 Final Four appearances, winning three NCAA championships (1987, 1989, and 1991.) She also guided he 1984 women's Olympic team to a gold medal in Los Angeles. In a career in which she also has won a silver medal in the 1976 Olympics as a player, Summitt has achieved almost every possible accolade in the women's game. Daily Sports Writer Michael Rosenberg spoke to her recently about her career and the state of women's basketball. Daily: Michigan coach Trish Roberts played for you. Describe what she was like as a player. Summitt: Trish was certainly one of the greatest players I ever coached. She had great ball-handling skills, great instincts. She knew the game. I think she was a little bit ahead of her time. I think if Trish Roberts were playing today, we'd be reading about her and she would be an all-American. I think she was hurt by the fact that the women's game was not as well-known then as it is .oday. It was not as well-publicized. D: Do you think that that's im- proved greatly over the last fifteen years, or do you think the publicity is still progressing too slowly? S: I think it's improved a lot. I think that the television coverage has helped tremendously. I think we still have a ways to go. We don't have the history of the men's game, so it's going to take some time, but I think we're moving in the right direction. D: One of the greatest differences between women's basketball and men's basketball is that in the wom- en's game, there are a few programs - Tennessee, Louisiana Tech, Stanford, Virginia - that tend to dominate, whereas in the men's game there seems to be a lot more parity. Do you think that that gap in the women's game between the best and the rest is closing? S: I don't really think that the gap is too big. I think that there are a lot of good teams. I think the difference between the men and the women is in the Final Four. There are a num- ber of men's teams which can make the Final Four, but not as *many women's teams. The Final Four is where the publicity comes in, and because a few teams tend to make it there a lot, it seems as though there is a huge gap. But still, if you look at Duke or Indiana in the men's game,' they are at the top year after year. I think real good programs stay that way. D: Do you think that having that one great player means more for the women than it does for the men? S: Definitely. I think that having that one great player can make a team good, and it can make a good team great. I think that one great player can win you a lot of games. D: Do you think that women's coaches are still not respected by community. I think that we can hopefully get to the point where we are near where the men's game is now in terms of publicity and rev- enue. D: Don't you think that that's a bit of a catch-22, in that if you don't produce the revenue, you won't get the publicity, but until you get the publicity, you can't generate the revenue? S: That's'exactly what it is. What we have to do is show that we are deserving of the publicity, show that we can generate the revenue. As I say, I think that hopefully we can get to the point where we're like the men's game, which generates its own revenue and its own publicity. D: Men's athletic directors and basketball coaches are almost all men. But women's athletic directors and coaches are often men. Do you think that there is sexism involved in the selection process? S: No, I really don't think so. I think that the schools hire whoever 'Trish was certainly one of the greatest players I ever coached. She had great ball- handling skills, great instincts. She knew the game. I think if Trish Roberts were playing today, we'd be reading about her and she would be an all-American.' and I'm proud of what we have ac- complished here. D: What do you think of the Big Ten's new rule that 40% of all ath- letic expenditures must go towards women's sports? S: I think it's excellent. It shows that women are getting more and more respect as far as sports are concerned. D: Do you think other confer- ences will follow the Big Ten's lead? S: I certainly hope so. You can't expect things to happen overnight. We have to take things one step at a time. The Big Ten's rule was a big step. If other conferences adopt the rule it will be another big step. D: Where do you see the wom- en's game in 20 years? S: Hopefully, we'll be at the point where the men are now. I think that women's basketball in 20 years will be on television a lot more. Now we only have one or two games a month. But I can turn on the televi- sion almost every night and find a men's game. I think we'll be on TV more in the future. D: Do you think there will ever be a successful women's pro league in the U.S.? S: No. I don't think that's neces- sary. When I recruit players, I do it with their interests in mind. I want them to get an education and go on to something else. I don't think we really need a pro league. D: Do you think that the wom- en's game is as plagued by NCAA violations as the men's game? S: If it is, I am not aware of it. I think that most coaches, and cer- tainly the top ones, run clean pro- grams. D: Do you think that as the wom- en's game gets more popular, we'll have more cheating going on? S: I certainly hope not. I think that the thing we have to look at, more than the cheating, is the nega- tive recruiting that's going on. I think that some coaches revcruit against other schools instead of for their own. Monty Williams, a young man playing basketball despite a heart problem, crumpled to the court Saturday afternoon, midway through the second half of Michigan's 70-55 victory over Notre Dame. He lay there for several minutes - moving little, saying even less - surrounded by a trio of team trainers and physicians who were asking him a slew of questions to which he had one simple answer. "I just turned my ankle again," he said. A sprained ankle, the most common of sports injuries, it turned out, was what felled Williams, Notre Dame's only saving grace in a dismal season. Williams was helped off the floor and up the tunnel into the visitors' lockerroom. A severe sprain. That still was the prognosis after Skip Meyer, an assistant trainer, poked Williams' tender right ankle as he sat on a table in the corner of the lockerroom, scowling and fiddling with the buttons on his white shirt. Williams' teammates filed by him as they each got dressed and loaded up their gear for the trip back to South Bend. None of them stopped to say anything. No one asked Williams if he was alright. A quick glance, maybe, at Williams was all. That was all. A severe sprain, for Monty Williams and for those closest to him, is a blessing and a setback all at once. When he fell to the hardwood amid a swarm of opposing players under the basket Saturday, it was hard to fend off flashbacks to Hank Gathers' last game. Gathers, a star at Loyola Marymount a few years ago, had a heart problem. He tried to play anyway. And he died, in the middle of a game late in the season in 1990. A severe sprain? Thank God it was nothing more than that, right? "It hurts where it's supposed to hurt, Monty," the trainer told Williams as he wrapped the ankle. "You'll be all right." Two years ago, Monty Williams never could have imagined hearing those words. After a fabulous freshman season, Williams was told his career was over. Doctors had detected an abnormal sound in his heart during a routine team physical on Sept. 4, 1990. He was diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a thickened septum wall in the middle chamber of his heart. It is a condition that affects 1 in 2,000 Americans, and is a leading cause of "sudden death" among young people. Williams was that one, and basketball suddenly became a memory. "I was really angry," said Williams, who had led his Potomac (Md.) High School team to a Class AAA state title and was a McDonald's All- American back in 1989. "I couldn't believe it was happening to me." But it was, and he was left to pick up the pieces. Williams decided the team would be better off without him hanging around, so he made a complete break. He continued to play basketball every day, against doctor's orders, playing pick-up games 2-3 hours a day. That went on for two years until last September, when doctors at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Md., decided that Williams, since he had no symptoms and no family history of sudden death, could resume playing college basketball. He went through two days of extensive and grueling tests to be sure. And Saturday he stood, albeit on crutches, as captain of the Notre Dame basketball team and, as a 6-foot-8 senior, an NBA prospect. He leads the Irish in scoring (18.7 ppg) and rebounding (10.7 rpg). "It's really frustrating," Williams said, sounding nothing - and everything, really - like a person who has come as far as he has. "It was just one of those off days. Everybody has them." Williams, who was a 4.0 student in high school, talked quietly after the game. He verbally chastised himself for not being ready to play. "Injuries are a result of improper preparation," Williams said. "There's no excuse for that. You don't sprain the same ankle twice if you're prepared. I just wasn't physically ready to play today." Too hard on himself? For Monty Williams to get to where he is now it took a lot of self-imposed agony and criticism. He was very hard on himself, every day. Why quit now? "I feel like I let the team down," he said. "I'm sort of like their blanket - they look to me to make sure everything is all right." Which is why it was so hard for the Notre Dame players to look at Williams after the game in the lockerroom. It's why they all grabbed their duffel bags and a can or two of fruit juice before they walked, heads down, past their fallen leader. Williams was one of the last to leave Saturday. A student manager grabbed his bag for him, and Williams headed up the ramp to the team bus. The team chaplain, who travels with the team to each game, walked past him and patted him on the shoulder. "You'll be all right," the chaplain said, reiterating what he had heard in the lockerroom. Williams nodded. He will be all right. men's coaches, athletic directors, and university presidents and that, as a result, women's programs do not get enough money or publicity? S: I think that we don't produce the revenue like the men's programs do, and so we don't recieve the money that the men do. I think that as we continue to improve in that area and start producing revenue, the other things will follow. I think that the men's game right now is like a big business, and that we are like a small business. We're still trying to gain more acceptance in our own they feel is the best candidate for the job. The problem is that there aren't many women who have the experi- ence of the men, and because there are so many coaches out there, I think that the men, who are generally more experienced, get hired. I think that will change as our game grows. D: Would you ever consider coaching a men's team? S: I doubt it. I would listen to any offer that I received, but in the end. I think I would stay at Tennessee. I'm very happy where I am right now, SWIMMING Continued from page 1 lead was short-lived as Stanford placed first and third in the next event taking the lead for good. The divers made a tremendous impact at the meet. Tri-captain Eric Namesnik thought the divers kept 'the team in it. "The team needs to do a better job," Namesnik said. "The divers in the 200-yard breaststroke. While in his first collegiate meet, Marcel Wouda captured the 500 freestyle. "The win was in reach," Namesnik said. "It was not a differ- ence in depth, but they were able to do a better job, in the end, reaching the wall. They were able to race tougher." The stars for Stanford were Hudepohl and Derek Weatherford. Hudepohl won the 200-yard freestyle in pool record time (1:36.86) just missing the NCAA qualifying time of 1:36.77 and an- chored both the winning 400 freestyle and 400-yard medley relay teams. Weatherford just edged out Marcel Wouda in the 200-yard indi- vidual medley for the win and set a pool record (1:45.88) in his 200-yard backstroke triumph. Namesnik believed that Stanford proved that it was the best team at this time. On the other hand, he is also confident that the Wolverines will give the Cardinal a run for the NCAA title if the Wolverine swim- mers can believe in themselves. "Team wise, they are probably the best," Namesnik said. "They want to be number one and they showed us they are the team to beat. We have to keep that in mind in or- der to get to our goal (the national championship). "We are supposedly the second best team. We have to approach meets in that way. We need to pre- sent ourselves as one of the best. I don't know if we showed that (this weekend)." After the disappointing loss to Stanford, the Wolverines headed south to take on No. 6 California Saturday at Spieker Aquatics Complex. The Wolverines were able to rebound from the close loss to beat the Golden Bears 133-110. "We did a little better at Cal," Gunn said. "I felt I was racing better. I was more into the racing mode. The team also swam better. We shook off the jitters of swimming Stanford. We did better in the IM and breaststroke at Cal." The wins were easier to come by at Berkley. Borges once again won the 50 and 100 freestyle events. Wunderlich took the 200 breast- stroke, Namesnik won the 200 IM, and Wouda swam to victory in the 500 freestyle. The divers also continued their success sweeping both the one- and three-meter events. Lesser was pleased with the results. "The weekend went well," Lesser said. "It felt good despite the rain and temperature. We definitely have a strong team." Overall, the Wolverines still have some things to work on before the Big Ten and NCAA Championships in March. Gunn thinks the key to fu- ture success will come down to an improvement in the overall speed of the team. "We need a lot of speed," Gunn said. "Our short events need to be faster. We have to get our relays into shape because they're worth double points. Our 100 strokes have to get going. We were definitely lacking in the speed category." -Borges helped out a lot. It wouldn't have 'been as close without their perfor- mance." The Wolverines had some strong individual races, but the Cardinal was able to pull off the better team performance. Michigan sprint freestyler Gustavo Borges took both the 50- and the 100-yard freestyle events. Other Wolverines with indi- vidual wins were Namesnik in the 1000 freestyle and Eric Wunderlich J ::.:may L m m L I. 11