Men's Basketball vs. Tennessee-Chattanooga Tomorrow, 1 p.m. Crisler Arena SI Women's and Men's Swimming . hosting U.S. Open Today and Tommorrow, 10 a.mJ6 p.m. (TNT) Canham Natatorium 'M' sets two records in first night of U.S. Open By CHARLIE BREITROSE, MARC DILLER and BRETT JOHNSON DAILY SPORTS WRITERS Even though the Michigan men's and women's swim teams did not make any special preparations for last night's U.S. Open Swimming Championships, the Wolverines per- formed well, posting two American short-course meter records. MichiganjuniorAleciaHumphrey broke the American 200-meter back- stroke short-course record in the morning's preliminary with her time of 2:09.56. Humphrey was two-tenths of a second short of qualifying for the NCAAs in March. The old American short-course meet record time was 2:11.02 set by Linda Jezek in 1978. Humphrey's time wasn't as good in the finals, but she still posted a strong first-place time of 2:09.92. "I knew about the short-course meter record time before tonight," Humphrey said. "Nobody has swam the short course (in meters) for so long in this country, so as a goal, I was shooting for the American record." "I was really pleased with her race this morning," Michigan coach Jim Richardson said. "She was a little W anxious tonight, but both swims were solid." Michigan sophomore Beth Jack- son also fared well in the consolation final. Jackson finished first with a time of 2:15.75 in the 200 backstroke. In addition to Humphrey's record, Royce Sharp set an American record of his own as he placed second to Turkish native Derya Buyukunchu in the 200 backstroke. Sharp's time of 1:59.10 was not quite good enough to beat Buyukunchu, but it did eclipse former Stanford swimmer Rick Carey's 11-year-old record. "I swam a lot better than this morn- ing," Sharp said. "I was looking around a lot this morning trying to figure out where everybody was. To- night, I just figured I'd get in my lane and swim." Freshman Tom Dolan, however, notched the first Michigan victory of the night. The Arlington, Va., native's time, 3:51.72, nipped North York A.C.'s Turlough O'Hare by a tenth of a second in the 400 freestyle. "I was really happy with the win," Dolan said. "I wasn't real sure how well I'd do, but I felt real good and I See U.S. OPEN, Page 15@0 MARY KOUKHAB/Daily Michigan's Steve West competes in the 100-meter breaststroke last night at the U.S Swim Open at Canham Natatorium. West finished fifth. BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK Fab Four's statistics continue to soar By TIM RARDIN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER As expected, the Fab Four of Juwan Howard, Ray Jackson, Jimmy King and Jalen Rose have been carrying the Michigan basketball team thus far. Through the first three games, the foursome has accounted for 86 percent of the scoring; 84 percent of the rebounding and 70 percent of the minutes for the Wolverines. Non-starters have tallied just 14 points and 23 rebounds in a combined 97 minutes of playing time. In addition, the four juniors have each stepped up their statistical presence to make up for the loss of Chris Webber and the four seniors. So far, Rose is nine points and 2.5 rebounds better a game than last season, Howard is up seven points and four boards, Jackson has added two points and three rebounds to his average and King has improved his scoring from 10.8 to 14.3 a game. To save you some quick math, the Fab Four have added about 22 points and nine rebounds to its collective average of a year ago. EFFICIENT FIFE: Sophomore guard Dugan Fife has been mister efficiency in his three games as a starter for the Wolverines, by doing just what Fisher and his staff need him to do. With the Fab Four carrying much of the load, Fife has basically been called to run the offense, protect the ball and hit the open jumper when it's there. Thus far, theClarkston, Mich., native has averaged 6.7 points a game while shooting 55 percent from the field - including an impressive 4-for-$ clip from three- point range - in 27 minutes a ballgame. And while the team has averaged 20 turnovers a game, Fife has lost the ball just five times - the fewest among the starters - and has dished out seven assists. OH CAPTAINS MY CAPTAINS: After rotating captains for every game last season, Michigan coach Steve Fisher decided to go with full-time team captains this year. The day before the Tip-Off Classic against Georgia Tech, Nov. 26, Fisher announced that senior Jason Bossard and Howard will be the Wolverine co-captains for the 1993-94 season. ROSE-Y NUMBERS: Not only did Rose return this season as the leading returning scorer for the Michigan basketball team, but he came back as the top point-producer among juniors in Division I college basketball with 1,152 points. Rose topped Texas' Terrence Rencher (1,144), Syracuse's Lawrence Moten (1,101), Florida State's Bob Sura (1,056) and Michigan State's Shawn Respert (1,037). In addition, Rose's 28 points against Tulane Wednesday moved him past his former teammate, Chris Webber (1,218), into sole control of 19th place in career scoring at Michigan. Rose now has 1,225 points in his career. See HOOPS, Page 16 Chinese Cuisine Men cagers' homestand continues with Mocs By CHAD A. SAFRAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Following a big win, a team is filled with joy, but then it goes into the locker room and sees the sched- ule. Suddenly, the happiness subsides as reality is thrust in the squad's col- lective face. This is the daunting situation that Tennessee-Chattanooga walks into when it comes to Crisler Arena for tomorrow's 1 p.m. matchup with No. 5 Michigan. Led by shooting guard Chad Copeland's 19 points, the Moccasins (2-0) come into Ann Arbor having knocked off Alabama Wednesday, 67- 57. It was the Crimson Tide's first loss in a home opener in 32 years. UTC harassed Alabama into 18 turnovers and held the Crimson Tide to just 30 percent from the field with its zone defense. "They play a little more zone than they have in the past," Michigan as- sistant coach Jay Smith said. "They really like to contain you, which a zone is supposed to do, and control the tempo." While UTC coach MackMcCarthy was partially satisfied with the vic- tory, he knows his club is in an alto- gether different situation when it meets the Wolverines (3-0) for the first time ever. "We played good defense but we are nowhere close to being a good offensive team," said McCarthy, last year's Southern Conference coach of the year and the all-time winningest coach in school history. "It was a big win but we came back to earth after reading the schedule." The Mocs did win a school-record 26 games last season and made an appearance in the NCAA tournament before bowing out to Wake Forest in the first round. However, they lost three starters including conference most valuable player Tim Brooks (16.5 ppg) and 6-foot-8 forward Daymond Woods, the team's leading rebounder (6.8 rpg). McCarthy will look to his two returning starters, Gary Robb and Brandon Born; to put points on the board. Robb, a 6-foot-5, 205-pound senior guard/forward, averaged 14.2 points a game a year ago and was selected as the leading candidate for Southern Conference MVP in the pre- season by the media. At 6-foot-7, Born is the team's best shooter. Last year, he knocked down 54 percent of his shots, includ- ing 44 percent from three-point range. In the Mocs two games this year, Born has been virtually unstoppable from the outside, nailing 72 percent of his attempts (13-of-18). A lack of experience and size for the Mocs gives Michigan a distinct advantage though. UTC has five newcomers on its active roster (John Oliver and Hiram Thomas are being redshirted), includ- ing four junior college transfers. One of those juniors, starting center Roger Smith - the Moccasins tallest player at 6 feet 10 - has only played com- petitive basketball for two years. Michigan coach Steve Fisher will most surely exploit that weakness with Juwan Howard. The junior center is averaging 11.3 rebounds a game while shooting a very respectable 55 per- cent from the field. Most of his bas- kets have come in the paint. "We always look for Juwan," Smith said. "He's a mainstay." Howard is not the only one who has been making baskets as if the cylinder were the size of Lake Michi- gan. Jimmy King has connected on 16-of-27 and Jalen Rose is hitting 58 percent of his shots. But it is the Michigan defense that has been the key in the three victories. The Wolverines have totaled 35 steals and have held their opponents to a mere 43 percent from the field. "What has been impressive when@ I've seen them on TV is that there is more consistency on defense," McCarthy said. "This year they are playing defense on every possession." Although the Wolverines have scored at least 80 points every game so far, little scoring punch has come from the bench. That is an illness the Michi- gan coaching staff is seeking to cure. "You want to build confidence," Smith said. "Thereare still somemm- utes to be distributed. They've been working hard in practice and we've got to get them in more." UGULAS KANTDily Dugan Fife, in his role as Michigan's fifth starter, is averaging 6.7 ppg. Grapplers hope to strike it rich in Las Vegas Classic ; ..ii Beef Chow Fun............................$7.95 (Wide rice noodles stir-fried with sliced beef and vegetables) By RYAN WHITE DAILY SPORTS WRITER The Michigan wrestling team is looking to step up to the table and spin the wrestling roulette wheel this week- end at the Las Vegas Classic. The No. 10 Wolverines will be competing in the tournament today an ,~rrnr. A n ,an it i rn,,ar ber somewhere between one and five. "I'd be happy with a top-five fin- ish in the tournament, and that would keep us in the top ten in the country," Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. "If the kids perform well we can finish in the top five, at three or four." This weekend also presents an onnortunitv for team members to im- "The top four or six (in each weight class) will probably be ranked in the top ten nationally," Bahr said. The tournament - which Michi- gan finished eighth at last year - represents the first time this season team scores will be kept. Bahr sees it as a preview of a more important tournament that will take place in March. "It's an early season, NCAA-type tournament," he said. "They'll be run- ning eight mats and 40 teams will be there.' Among the field will be some of Phd6Dat Bidt.................................$5.95 (House beef noodle soup) I I . W'