SPORTSMonday Trivia What are the only three bowl games Michigan is undefeated in? (Answer, page,2) aI Inside SPORTSMonday 'M' Sports Calender 2 AP Football Top 25 2 Bowl Griddes! 2 Q&A 3 The R.H. Factor 3 Football 4-5 Men's Basketball 6 Hockey 7 Swimming 8 Wolverines buck Broncos for series sweep Knuble, Wiseman lead scoring parade as 'M' fights off rugged Western play By ANTOINE PITTS DAILY HOCKEY WRITER KALAMAZOO-The gentlemen working the penalty box doors deserved overtime pay for all the extra work they had this weekend. Michigan and Western Michigan kept these men busy with a deluge of penalties--31, between the two teams Friday, and 33 more Saturday. Power- play units and penalty-killing units decided the games. And the Wolver- ines' special-teams proved to be better. Michigan (9-0-1 CCHA, 12-1-1 overall) defeated Western Michigan (5-6-1, 7-6-2), 6-1, Friday at Yost Ice Arena and 6-3, Saturday in Kalamazoo to sweep the weekend and season se- ries from the Broncos. "Our penalty killing did a good job," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Our power play did a good job, and overall it was a good team effort. "It's a tough rink to play in. To come in here and beat them is a tribute to a good, young team." The Wolverines capitalized on the power play while the Broncos could not. In Saturday's game Michigan scored its first three goals with the man advantage. Mike Knuble, Brendan Morrison and David Oliver each scored to give the Wolverines a 3-0 lead midway through the second period. Meanwhile, the Michigan penalty killers held West- ern in check. "The whole game turned into a spe- cial teams affair," Western Michigan coach Bill Wilkinson said. "We had 12 power plays and they had 12 power plays. They're 4-for-12, we're 1-for- 12. That's the difference in the game." After the Wolverines took a 4-1 lead on Oliver's second goal of the game, and 12th of the year, the Broncos finally got something going on their special teams. A mad scramble in front of the net, in which goaltender Steve Shields was run into by his own teammate, resulted in a Western goal credited to-Jeremy Brown. However, there were questions as to whether or not the puck actually went into the net. "The goal wasn't in that they called," Berenson said. "The goal judge never turned the light on. He can see it better than the referees." Knuble's second goal of the game, and 12th of the year-once again on a power-play opportunity - gave the Wolverines a three-goal cushion again. However, Derek Innanen gave the Broncos a chance, scoring with 3:24 remaining. Kevin Hilton scored in the empty net with just under a minute left in the contest. Wilkinson had pulled his goaltender, Mike Renfrew, for an extra attacker. "Overall, I think it was a great team effort," said Michigan captain Brian Wiseman, who notched a playmaker See HOCKEY, Page 7 MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Although he did not score on this attempt, forward Brendan Morrison managed to slip one past Western netminder Mike Renfrew in Michigan's victory in Kalamzaoo. The Wolverines swept the season series from the Broncos, 3-0. Swimmers break r cords at U .S. O penf, Y CX5Y\2 > 2k t F F4. > ' *". at + ' r By BRE JOHNSON DAILY SPORTS WRITER Double winner. This became the theme to the men's portion of the U.S. Open swimming meet held at Canham Natatorium this past weekend. In fact, of the 13 men's individual events, only seven different swimmers were victorious, with six two-time champions. Former Michigan swimmer Eric Namesnik, now swimming with Club Wolverine, led the group. Namesnik came into the meet unrested and unshaved, but this did not stop him from setting new American and U.S. Open records in the 400-meter short- course individual medley (IM) Friday night. His time of 4:14.25 narrowly edged Jeff Kostoff's seven year old record of 4:14.29. The record was something Namesnik was striving for following his morning swim. "The first goal I had was that I wanted to equal my long course times," Namesnik said. "I didn't know what the record was until (Friday morning). I saw that it was 4:14.2, and I thought I had a chance to do that. I went pretty hard in the morning. So, I just tried to do the same thing (Friday night). At night-time, you have nothing to lose. I don't know what my splits were, but I made up most of the time on the freestyle leg. I got lucky." Saturday, Namesnik added hisname to the growing double winner list as he won the 200-meter butterfly. He touched out SouthernCalifornia's Mike Merrell by one-tenth of a second. "I wanted to go out and give every- See U.S. OPEN, Page 8 'M' makes it four in a * row to start season JONATHAN LURIE/Daily By BRETT FORREST DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Saturday's 97-86 Michigan victory over Tennessee-Chattanooga at Crisler Arena marked the first time the Mocca- sins (2-1) had ever seen the Wolverines (4-0) face to face. It was also the first time Michigan had ever seen freshman Bobby Crawford take a game into his own hands. The Wolverine guard scored 22 points in just 26 minutes of playing time, hitting a plethora of key buckets down the stretch. He and teammate Juwan Howard tied for the game-high in scoring. "I thought we saw an emergence of Bobby Crawfordtoday, and that pleases me," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "He sparked us defensively in the first half with effort and a couple of steals. And he stepped up and made some important three-pointers for us in the second half." Crawford finished with five three- pointers in seven attempts. The team, as a whole, shot 50 percent (11-of-22) from beyond the arc. "I think it shows the coaches I can hit the open jump shots," Crawford said. Twice in the second half, Crawford canned threes after Tennessee-Chatta- nooga closed to within five points of Michigan. His final triple at 5:02, ning a 8-2 run that effectively put away the game. "Crawford killed us, especially in the stretch where we made a nice run," UTC coach Mark McCarthy said. "He answered with some really big threes." The first half of the contest was a disjointed affair, lacking flow and con- sistency. Michigan was sluggish com- ing out of the locker room, missing early shots and falling behind Tennes- see-Chattanooga, 7-0 within the first 1:45. The Wolverines' half-court defense failed them for most of the first stanza and much of the second. The opposi- tion was allowed countless uncontested layups and outside jumpers. Tennessee-Chattanoogajunior for- ward Brandon Born had 13 of his team- high 20 points in the first half via two dunks and three three-pointers. "For the first time in four games, I thought that we did not deliver a solid half-court defense," Fisher said. "They really spread the floor to create oppor- tunities to dribble-drive. "I thought that we would do a better job getting to the midline, taking away dribble-drives. But they did a good job of exploiting that against us." However, the Mocs defensive prow- ess was rivaling that of the Wolverines. Michigan shot 56 percent from the floor and 67 percent from three-point Former Michigan swimmer Eric Namesnik captured the 400-meter IM and 200-meter butterfly titles at the 1993 U.S. Open. naGrand Marshall By MELANIE SCHUMAN DAILY SPORTS WRITER its all in the smile. Notwithstanding frustration, disappointment and inconsistency, sophomore Wendy Marshall has kept that winning smile to break free from her sister Tami's shadow and propel herself to be one of the premier college gymnasts nationwide. At the age of six, Wendy decided to be like her sister just as she continues to do so now. However, their mirrored childhood soon became too similar, and she decided to move to a different gym and make a fresh start. Her ninth grade club at Deer Park Gym is where her career sprouted. "I feel so bad for her, because when she was younger, she was always 'Tami's sister.' I think it got to her a lot more than me," Tami, 22, said. "She has blossomed. It was a turning point going to a different club." Senior aar Wendv won the al- Sophomore gymnast keeps her smile despite struggles regional competition in which she qualified. A level above any other athlete at her gym, Wendy had always traveled solely with her coach and never really felt part of a team until coming to Michigan. "It was the greatest feeling (to be at nationals) with a whole team I didn't know," Marshall said: "That's one of the best things here at Michigan. Our team is a team. You go to meets and see other teams, and they're just out for themselves. For our team to win is the greatest feeling." But don't assume for one minute that these strong-minded, determined and individualistic qualities packed into the 4-foot-11 sophomore were creating an Olympic champion or even another Tami Marshall. At age nine, Tami, an Olympic hopeful, was a competing against Olympic stars like Mary Lou Retton. But Wendy had aspirations of her own, and gymnastics wasn't the only thing keeping her busy. Her goal was rn