Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, March 9, 1993 Moe firing first of many changes for Katz's 76ers PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The end of Doug Moe's 56-game career as the Philadelphia 76ers' coach may signal the beginning of several changes, team owner Harold Katz said yesterday. The 76ers fired Moe Sunday night, one day after the team's second 56-point loss in a 19-37 season. The 76ers, who lost 17 of their final 21 games under Moe, played at Minnesota last night under new coach Fred Carter. At a news conference, Katz talked of trades, free agents and rebuilding the team. "We have only five guaranteed contracts for next year, so there are going to be changes," he said. "I believe that we'll make at least four, five, six changes." But he held out the possibility of keeping things the same if Carter and the players do a better job. "If we play hard, we start to win, we demonstrate that there is a nucleus here, then we'll react to that," Katz said. Carter had been an assistant since 1987 and a 76ers player for six years. Jim Lynam, who coached the 76ers for five years, had picked Moe as his successor when he was promoted to general manager. Lynam flew to Minneapolis Sunday to fire Moe. Saturday's humiliating 149-93 loss at Seattle was the clincher in firing Moe, Katz said. "I didn't. know it was coming," Moe said. "I look at it from the standpoint things always work out for the best. They did what they felt they had to do ..." This was the first season for the 76ers after trading Charles Barkley to the Phoenix Suns for Hornacek, center Andrew Lang and forward Tim Perry. The team also drafted forward Clarence Weatherspoon. Moe, the NBA Coach of the Year in 1987-88 with Denver, was hired in May and had 2 1/2 years left on his contract, worth a reported $700,000 per year. AP PHOTO And the winner is ... Speed skater Bonnie Blair won the Sullivan Award, which is given annually to the outstanding amateur athlete of the year. Blair's sister, Angela Blair-Allen, and her mother, Eleanor, accepted the award for her. SWIMMING NOTEBOOK Records fall at men's championship meet by Brett Johnson Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS- The Big Ten championship meet this weekend in Indianapolis was full of record-setting performances. Eleven Big Ten conference meet records and seven conference records were broken during the meet. Conference records included Iowa's 200-yard freestyle relay (1:18.95), Michigan's 400-yard medley (3:13.30), 200 medley (1:28.99), 800 free (6:26.30) and 400 free (2:55.94). Ohio State's Bill Weaver in the 100- yard backstroke (48.21), and Michigan's Royce Sharp in the 200 backstroke (1:42.72) set individual records. "Our medley relay was just outstanding," Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek said. "(It was an) outstanding lead-off from Royce Sharp and all the splits were very solid." The meet records included all of the above and Michigan's Marcel Wouda's 500-yard freestyle (4:17.99) and 400-yard individual medley (3:44.61), Sharp's 200 IM (1:46.82) and Eric Wunderlich's 100 and 200- yard breaststrokes (54.19, 1:55.87). "I wanted to go 1:56.00 low and I went 1:55 high," Wunderlich said of his 200 breaststroke. "It was a good swim. I didn't expect to go quite that fast after my 100 was kind of slow. I think I wanted it a little more than I wanted the 100." NCAA BOUND: Swimmers must qualify for the NCAA championship meet directly in at least one event and are allowed to swim the events in which they have reached consideration times. The following Michigan swimmers have qualified for the NCAAs in late March: Sharp in the 200 IM, 400 IM and the 200 back, Wouda in the 400 IM, 500 freestyle and 1650 freestyle, Wunderlich in the 100 and 200 backstroke, Gustavo Borges in the 50, 100, and 200 freestyles, Tom Hay in the 100 and 200-yard butterfly (consideration times) by way of the relays, Brian Gunn in the 100 (con.), 200-yard butterflys and 500 freestyle, Eric Namesnik in the 400 IM, 200 IM (con.) and 200 butterfly (con.), Rodney Van Tassell in the 100 (con.), 200 and 500 (con.) freestyle and Brice Kopas in the 1650 freestyle and 400 IM (con.). All five of the relays earned at least consideration times, and the team will be able to swim them at nationals. CONFERENCE'S BEST: Seven members of the Wolverines made the 1993 All-Big Ten conference team at the weekend meet. The members were Borges, Gunn, Hay, Sharp, Van Tassell, Wouda and Wunderlich. WAIT AND SEE: Other Wolverine swimmers have met the considera- tion times and may be invited to the NCAA championships. They include Steve Duttenhoffer (400 IM, 200 butterfly), Steve West (100 and 200 breaststroke), Shuichi Matsumoto (400 IM) and Tom Blake (200, 500, 1650 freestyle). AWARD WINNERS: The Wolverines swept Big Ten Swimmer, Freshman and Coach of the Year awards. Wouda was the second Michigan swimmer to be named Swimmer of the Year. The other was Brent Lang. Sharp was the third Michigan Freshman of the Year and second in a row. Last year Borges won the award and in 1988 (the first year for the award) Scott Ryan won. Urbanchek won his fourth Coach of the Year award since its inception in 1987. " Men spikers wm one, drop three on weekend by Erin Himstedt Daily Sports Writer ANGOLA, Ind. - Throughout a frustrating weekend on the road, the Michigan men's, volleyball team proved that talent doesn't necessarily decide who wins a ball game. Competing in a head-to-head match against the Tri-State University Thunder on Friday, and in a quad match versus Tri-State, Earlham College and an Indiana club team on Saturday, the Wolverines were able to defeat only the weak Earlham team. The spikers fell 3-1 in both matches against the Thunder. Unlike Michigan, Tri-State's vol- leyball program has varsity status. Its expenses are thus subsidized by the university, and the team practices daily. Although Tri-State's program is only in its second year, there were obvious differences between varsity and club performances this weekend. "I don't think they're any more talented, but you can tell they prac- tice more. Their fundamentals are better," graduate student Dave Fleming said. "When you only prac- tice twice a week, it's impossible to get consistency in your fundamen- tals, (but) if we practiced five times a week we'd toast them." Certain Tri-State spikers were more motivated than usual. Former Michigan co-captain Rico Latham now starts for the Thunder, and this weekend was the swan song for three of the team's starters. These factors, combined with the home court advantage, provided Tri-State with an emotional edge that helped defeat the Wolverines. Defense was a crucial factor in the Tri-State/Michigan matches. With middles Chad Stielstra and Todd Collins providing solid hits and blocks, the Wolverines' defen- sive play was its Achilles heel. Despite the fact that the Thunder were much shorter than Michigan, the Wolverines were not able to dig their offense. "They destroyed us defensively. Defense is their greatest strength and our greatest weakness," junior Mike Rubin said. "We came in intending to take advantage of our height advantage and hopefully dominate at the net, but we weren't there mentally," Michigan coach Pam Griffin said. Michigan's mental game was its other great weakness as personal mistakes often led to team slumps. "Emotionally, we're a roller coaster," Fleming said. "We could kill five straight, and then we could- n't hit the ball. It's very frustrating." "It all starts with the fact that we weren't aggressive enough. We just didn't come to play. The emotions are up and down," Griffin said. "Communication fails when the play is going badly, and when competi- tion gets tough they need to play more aggressive, not tentative be- cause they don't want to be the one to mess up." TRAVEL SMARTClassifieds FROM CHICAGO I--read them Daily Roundtrip One Way __""" __ __ __ ___ Women's lacrosse trounces Ohio State in 18-0 shutout U t by Rich Mitvalsky Daily Sports Writer If there is a tradition of fiercely-contested matchups between Michigan and Ohio State, then the Michigan women's lacrosse team's 18-0 victory over the Buckeyes Saturday evening cer- tainly broke from tradition. Paced by a relentless scoring attack in which seven different Wolverines contributed with goals, and by Michigan junior goalie Nika Skvir's diligent tending of the Wolverine goal, Michigan dominated for the entire 60 minutes of play. After only two minutes of action, Wolverine sophomore attackers Karen Ross - who led all scorers with five goals - and Suzy Pettit recorded scores. The quick attack inspired Michigan's insurmountable 11-0 halftime lead. "Last year we almost lost to them in a very close match, so I am very surprised," Skvir said at the half. "But we didn't realize that they grad- uated so many players last year." In the first half, the Buckeyes attempted only five shots on goal, while the Wolverines domi- nated play at the other end of the field. While Wolverine defenders stood inactive on their end, Ross, Pettit and senior Jackie Sokolow inundated the Buckeye goal with shots, accounting for eight of Michigan's first half goals. "We're very used to running on the field, and not really setting up the offense," Ross said. "But we don't usually score this much in a game. The field was shorter tonight, and I think that ac- counts for the higher scoring." In the second half, the Wolverines slowed their running attack and employed a strategic ap- proach on the offensive end. Instead of the run-n- gun style dictated in the first half, Michigan at- tackers backed off the Buckeye goal and selected their shots based on set plays. "Hannah (Michigan head coach Hannah Reeves) has been really encouraging us to slow it down and set it up, and try and run some of our plays which we have," Ross said. "We try to get the ball in the middle, make cleaner passes, and get more people involved in the offense." Additional Michigan scores were registered by frosh Kate deRosayro, senior Erica Anderson-who scored twice, junior Sarah Stackpoole and senior Kerry Walker. Skvir, who preserved the shutout in the sec- ond half despite several late Ohio State attempts, remained modest in her appraisal of her personal achievement. "They weren't really a strong team, so it was- n't that great of an accomplishment," Skvir said. "They didn't have nearly as many shots on goal compared to other teams, but that's because our defense did a really good job of keeping them out of our area." The win marked Michigan's first contest since traveling to California over spring break. The Wolverines had four games slated for the trip, winning their first of the year against Claremont, 14-12 in overtime. "Considering the fact that we played without any subs, and that we were without our coach, we played pretty well for the first games of the year," Skvir commented. Up next for Michigan is a highly talented Dayton squad, which represents - using last year as a measuring stick - a serious problem. "Last year we lost to them, and they were a really good team," Skvir said. "But we also thought that Ohio State was as good of a team as they were the previous year. This game really surprised us, so we really can't be too sure about Dayton." *I HI FI STUDIO 215S . Ashley DOWN ON LIJBERTY 1/2 BLOCK, N ON ASHLEY 769-0342 BASEBALL Continued from page 9 Simmons leadoff homer. Weaver then scored on Niemiec's infield grounder. After Iowa State took the lead on a homer in the top of the eighth, Michigan scored twice with two outs in the bottom half, once on an error, to take the lead for good, 4-3. Chris Newton earned the win in relief (1- 0), and Todd Marion notched his first save of the year. The Wolverines had no time to celebrate. An hour later they played another game against the Sooners and were up to their same tricks again. A five-run fifth blew the game open as Oklahoma went on to win, 9-2. For the second time that day, the Wolverine batters could muster just five hits. Five were enough to defeat Iowa State, but not Oklahoma. "We knew going into the season that we might be roughed up a little in the early going," senior second baseman Scott Timmerman said. "Playing these tough teams is going to help us in our upcoming Big Ten schedule." In Sunday's finale, the Wolver- ines jumped out to a quick 4-0 lead on a Niemiec sacrifice fly, a two-run single by Matt Copp and a Sim- mons run-scoring single. However, once again Michigan gave up a big inning. Starter Eric Heintschel (0-2) lasted just an inning and a third as the Sooners struck for eight runs in the second and five more in the third. Michigan's 1-3 weekend left coach Bill Freehan looking for a way to improve his team. "We've got a lot of work to do," Freehan said. "I think we identified some areas that we need to continue to improve to be ready to be compet- itive in the Big Ten. "There have been some positive performances," he continued, "but all in all, we're 3-10 and that's not ac- ceptable." GARGOYE IS TODAY IN THE HERE.... FISH BOWL "Blasting Twins Into Space." Sounds1 "Fun," no? "Fun" it is. It is "Fun." ItJ is also the title of the March 1993 issue of Gargoyle Magazine, and the staff has squirreled away THOUSANDS of copies of it in all the little nooks and crannies of the your residence halls and libraries...places where you shouldn't be TOO afraid to poke your nose if you are DCC WAREHOUSE OUTLET C 0 M P U T E R S P E C IA L 0 Previously Leased Equipment Buy Both And Save! Apple Mac Iex and LaserWriter IINTX r- , I I