Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Thursday, March 25, 1993 GYMNASTICS NOTEBOOK Long lines plague Big Ten meet by Thom Holden and Mike Rancilio Daily Sports Writers Women's gymnastics enthusiasts witnessed excel- lent competition both on and off the floor during Sa- turday night's Big Ten championships. Beth Wymer came away with the conference all-around title, and some lucky spectators came away with a hot dog. An underprepared, understaffed Crisler Arena crew met the hordes of fans by directing the assembled mass one by one through the service entrance. Each pass or ticket was checked by a man with an uncanny resem- blance to Karl Malden's grandfather after he inquired into the ancestral background of each would-be spec- tator. The process resembled that of prospective admission into a New York nightclub. Everything seemed to hinge on who you were, who you knew, or who you paid. Of course, it was sleeting. Of course it was cold. And of course the meet already started before fans took their seats. That was a result of one factor: concession stand gridlock. This free-for-all was nearly as time-consuming as the battle for admittance. There were two employees hustling dogs and Cokes: a 15-year-old high school girl and her younger brother. Petey was on the grill and Shari was on the phone, and in between shots of hair spray a lucky patron could receive a Ballpark wiener. Hopefully the next tournament Michigan hosts, offi- cials will prepare a little better for the expected showing of an event. The 4,500 people present at the champi- onship could have used a few'more employees to sling grub. RECORDS ROOM: Sophomore All-American Wymer capped off a successful evening by breaking three Michigan records. Saturday night, she broke the records on the uneven bars (9.975), the balance beam (9.925) and the all-around (39.45) en route to the Big Ten individual title for the second straight year. "My ultimate goal is to have 10s up there (on the record board at the Sports Coliseum) so that they can never come down." Wymer said. COACH'S CORNER: Michigan coach Bev Plocki received the Big Ten Coach -of-the-Year award for the second year in a row. The format for selecting this year's winner was changed from previous years, when the Big Ten team champion's coach was awarded the title. This year, the conference coaches voted for the honor. "This year's award was extra special to me because it was by a vote of my colleagues," Plocki said. Penn State's Allison Barber benefited from this new format by taking home the Big Ten Gymnast-of- the-Year award. Wymer won the award last year, and was the top scorer this year at the championship, but voters passed her up for the award this year. Despite the result, Plocki is happy with the new system. "The (new voting system) is fairer than the one used last year," Plocki said. "Allison Barber is a great gym- nast and a great choice for Gymnast of the Year." MOLLY STEVENS/Daily Michigan sophomore Beth Wymer captured the Big Ten all-around title for the second consecutive year Saturday. 'REACTION Continued from page 8 Department to examine the recruit- ing trends of its other varsity sports. "Does Michigan get its swimmers from the high schools or from private clubs?" he asked. UniversifyActivities Center Peter Kormann, Ohio State gym- niver flynastics coach, questioned the an- nouncement based on the fact that Jack Weidenbach, Michigan's out- going athletic director, made a deci- sion that will not go into effect until a new athletic director is appointed. Kormann asked, "Does the Uni- versity of Michigan let all their old Be a part of the organization that brought athletic directors make their de- Soul Asylum, Spike Lee, Tim Allen, Girbaud, visions?" and Edwin Meese to the University of Michigan. SOFTBALL Be a Committee Chairperson for the largest student-run organization on campus, the Continued from page 8 g p ting average. University Activities Center. Applications are Consolation runners-up a year now available at 2105 Michigan Union and are ago, the Wolverines expect an even due April 5 at noon. Call 763-1107 for more info, better outcome this time around, even with four other Top 20 teams (Cal State-Sacramento, Iowa, New Mexico and Utah State) in atten- dance. SPORTING VIEWS I REWARD YO URSEL F! Join GM's Graduation Celebration! '' '% .. ' r %..:; . yoy> r5 Will NFL owners succeed. where baseball's fa? by Michael Rosenberg Daily Sports Writer Now that free agency has arrived in football, we can only hope that NFL owners recognize the mistakes of major league baseball owners and that sport's free agency debacle. Baseball owners have a habit of signing players before seeing if the players can do minor, unimportant things, such as hit. Baseball owners sign players for publicity. For example, if a baseball owner is exposed for having a poor record in hiring minorities, he or she will react by signing a backup shortstop to a three-year, $17 billion contract (guaranteed, of course). I can already see football owners doing the same thing. I can see the Fal- cons signing Marcus Dupree and proclaiming Atlanta, "The land of DuPree and the home of the Braves." I can see teams scrambling to sign flamboyant personalities like Tony Mandarich, a lineman who plays softly but carries a big shtik. I can see the Raiders signing Jay Schroeder and ... Now. Football owners do not have a history of this kind of thing. But for every good thing they do, they throw something bad in as well. For every Super Bowl, there is a Bud Bowl. For every brilliant television innovation, like Monday Night Football, there is a television disaster, like Dan Dierdorf. For every NFC, there is an AFC. The major problem the NFL owners have is that they are owners. Own- ers have this weird thing about them: they love to spend money and com- plain about it later. The owners will realize their mistakes, and then go re- peat them. A similar phenomenon occurs during Congressional elections. "What an idiot this guy is!" the voters scream. "Let's vote for him again!" If you look up the word "owner" in the dictionary, you are more ener- getic than I am. I don't know if NFL owners will make the same mistakes that the base- ball people made. They were smart enough to institute a salary cap. But I read the newspaper in class today, and I saw that the Chicago Bears gave quarterback Jim Harbaugh a four-year, $13 million contract. There are at least 15 better quarterbacks in the league than Jim Harbaugh. That makes him an average signal-caller. Is an average quarterback worth $3 million a year? 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