Women's Gymnastics. Intrasquad meet Tomorrow, 7 p.m. Cliff Keen Arena Sl Men's Basketball vs. Duke Saturday,1 p.m. (CBS) Crisler Arena Men's Blue tumblers raid Keen Big Ten champs square off in intrasquad meet .gymnaStiCS opens at Penn State *By JOSH KARP DAILY SPORTS WRITER In its final year as a varsity sport, the Michigan men's gymnastics team will try to make it amemorable season. The team heads east to take part in the Penn State Invitational tomorrow night, competing against Pittsburgh, Kent State, Washington and the host Nittany Lions. Bob Darden, in his eleventh cam- paign as head coach, has all 18 letterwinners from last season return- ing, and said he expects his team to fare very well in the meet. "We're the favorite," Darden said. "We've shown that when we have our premiere team on the floor, we do very well. We have full expectations of do- ing very well in this competition." With a competitive team of 12 trav- *eling to the meet, Darden is looking for big results, especially from co-captain Rich Dopp, a junior who qualified for the NCAA Championships on high bar last year. "(Rich) has been putting in long,' hard hours," Darden said. "He will work close to the all around. He's re- ally going to impact the performance of the team on floor exercise and high *bar." Darden also said that Seth Rubin, a senior co-captain, can take the team to great heights. "Seth has been making a real strong showing in the preseason," he said. "We're really going to depend on him on four events, but he's really going to show the strength of his ability on pommel horse and high bar." Junior Brian Winkler, who took the national championship in the floor exercise his freshman year, missed most of last season with a sore back and competed in just two events. Winkler said his back is at "about 85 percent" now, and Darden said he expects only good things to come. "(Brian) is probably going to show *his return to his leadership capacities on several events, and be the meat of the team's scoring on the remaining events." Winkler said that the team can be victorious, but added that Penn State is no pushover. "We're going in with a lot of confi- dence," Winkler said. "If we hit (all of the routines), I think we can win it. "It's going to be hard competing at Penn State. They're always good at home." For the first time in three years, the gymnasts will compete prior to Janu- ary, and Darden said he expects it to be beneficial to the squad. "This year, not having the intrasquad, we decided to make it a full blown competition," Darden said. "From the way the team's been prepar- *ipg, we're about a month ahead of where we were last year. That's real good for us because it gives us an opportunity justto test-drive our confi- dence." However, the team will have atough time being top dog in Big Ten compe- tition. "In the Big Ten, there's a couple powerhouses, Ohio State and Minne- *sota, but once you get past that, it's anyone's game," Dopp said. Darden expressed more optimistic feelings for the season ahead. "We are going to have a real great year," he said. By TOM BAUSANO and MELANIE SCHUMAN DAILY SPORTS WRITERS Michigan women's gymnastics coach Bev Plocki might want to tele- phone Michael Jordan to get advice on how a team accomplishes the incred- ible feat of winning three consecutive championships. Then again, the two-time return- ing Big Ten champions have the gymnasts to continue their winning tradition. They seem to have their own formula for success, enough so that they are aiming to be one of the Super Six elite teams in the nation this year. "I think that all of my athletes are very committed and dedicated to the team," Plocki said. "It takes an enor- mous amount of dedication to handle the academics as well as athletics." Tomorrow at 7p.m., Michigan will kickoff its 1993-94 campaign with its annual Intrasquad meet at Cliff Keen Arena. In the last five seasons, the team has not only shocked its supporters but has discredited its critics by virtue of its undisputed success. Last season, the women won the Big Ten Champion- ship and placed ninth at the NCAA Finals. "The team is very together,"junior LiLi Leung said. "Spirit-wise, you can see that we are getting pumped up for the season. (The intrasquad is) a prac- tice meet for the freshmen to teach them how to act at meets. "It's very important to have a sup- port group around the event a team- mate is on in order to talk them through their routine." Not only the freshmen, but the whole team will have to increase the overall level of difficulty in its routines in order to adjust to a new set of scoring starilards. The United States Gymnastics Federation has developed a new point scoring system to be used at all levels of competition. The new standards were a reaction to the in- creased number of high scores be- ing awarded in recent competition that made it difficult to distinguish the abilities of gymnasts. "The (intrasquad) meet is an oppor- tunity to throw the higher skills in a meet where the scores don't count," captain Wendy Wilkinson said. "Ithelps us to realize where we are at in doing these new routines." "Most of the exercises will be set, but the floor will be a little watered down," Leung said. "Floor is the hard- est event to get your endurance up for and if you miss certain skills at the beginning of the season it will men- tally effect you later on in the season. It's better to add skills as the season moves on." Returning to a team full of talent are five All-Americans - Beth Wymer (uneven bars, balance beam and all-around), Kelly Carfora(vault), Wendy Marshall (vault), Diana Rineli (floor), and Tina Miranda (uneven bars). Additionally, former Big Ten all-around champion Wilkinson, and standout Debbie Berman are expected to perform well. "It's early right now," redshirt sophomore May May Leung sai:l. "We are not in tip-top shape, but we should be throwing our full routines. I'm excited to be competing in the same meet with my sister. "It's our third year here in college and we still have not been healthy at the same time. So this meet will be the first one together in a while." Tomorrow's exhibition will showcase all of the team's talent as they are divided into two teams and will compete against one an- other. The results will give the team an indication of the progress they've made thus far this year, and what needs to be done before intercollegiate competition begins in January. SHARON MUSHER/Daily Diana Rineli, a second-team All-American, performs a floor exercise. Future women's swimmnng Wolverines give preview at Open By BRETT JOHNSON DAILY SPORTS WRITER The future oftheMichigan women's swimming program appeared in Ann Arbor this weekend. At least part of it did. The U.S. Open meet at Canham Natatorium acted as the crystal ball, and the future that appeared was two of the Wolverines' top incoming fresh- men, Talor Bendel and Kim Johnson. Although neither showed their true capabilities due to the point in training that they are at, Michigan coach Jim Richardson said he was pleased to see them swimming at Canham. "Watching Kim, she rested for four days I think, you can see she was kind of warming up to the meet," Richardson said. "You can see she's a big time finals swimmer. Talor's in the middle of training right now. I think if you had seen Talor get some second swims, you would have seen the same type of performance. "She's aracer, and she knows when the money's on the table. Both of these swimmers are big time swimmers." Richardson said that merely attend- ing the meet at their future home pool will give the swimmers an added ad- vantage in next year's transition to college life. "I think the fact that Kim and Talor have come this year will make it easier for them as freshmen,"he said. "They'll have the feeling that they're comfortable here." Johnson, a senior atJ.J. Pearce High School in Richardson, Texas, swam well at the Open after only resting for four days. She finalled in the 100- meter freestyle where sheplaced eighth, won the consolation finals in both the 200 individual medley (IM) and 200 freestyle, and finished second in the consolation finals in the 50 freestyle. "I'm pleased with how I did," Johnson said. "This is really the first meet that I've had racing this season. I'm really pleased with my times and the way I feel in the water. I thought maybe I'd feel sluggish or out of shape. I rested for about three days, and I shaved. I'm glad I did because men- tally it helps me." The high school All-American said she has been interested in swimming at Michigan since she was a sophomore. Her high school coach, Fernando Canales, was an All-American swim- mer at Michigan from 1978-82 as well as an assistant coach. "We got some inside dope on Kim from Fernando Canales," Richardson said. "When he went to Richardson, he said 'I have a swimmer that will really fit what you do in your program,' and he was right on the mark. I think the thing that impressed me about her was that she has maturity beyond her age. She had the ability to know what she wanted and what were really the im- portant things. She doesn't get side tracked on the kind of showy things that 17 years old are prone to." Johnson should step in and imme- diately help the team, especially in the sprint freestyle and IM events. She is the Texas state record holder in the 100-yard freestyle and has set as oneof her goals this year to break the state record in the 200 IM. She won both events at the Texas high school state meet last year. "I want to win my events again," Johnson said. "Time wise, I want to try to break two minutes (in the 200 IM). That would break our state record. In the 100 free, I just want to better my time." "Kim's a great freestyler, she's a good IMer and she has a hidden talent in the fly," Richardson said. "She's going to step in right away in all the free relays and possibly the medleys as well." As for Bendel, she is in the middle of training right now and neither rested nor shaved for the meet, so Richardson obviously isn't putting anything into her performance. After all, she holds the Kentucky state high school record in the 100-yard butterfly, has been a YMCA national butterfly champion and won the 100-meter butterfly at the 1990 Olympic Festival. Like Johnson, she is also a high school All-American. "I don't use a meet like this to gauge," Richardson said. "People ask if you're happy - I've seen Talor swim since she was 13. I know what type of swimmer she is. She comes here and doesn't console final or final, that's irrelevant. That's where she is in her training. If she came in dead last we'd still want her because we know what type of swimmer she is." Richardson first noticed Bendel at the YMCA nationals when she was 13. Richardson has continued to watch Bendel as a member of the Anderson Barracudas, a club team in Cincinnati, Ohio, and as a high schooler at Beechwood High School in Edgewood, Ky. "I was real impressed with her as a 13 year old," Richardson said. "She swam a really tough event, the 200 fly, and she finalled and almost won the thing. That has to impress you right off the bat. Most 200 flyers can swim other events and can swim them well. "You feel when you have someone like that, they can contribute in a lot of different ways. In talking with her coach, we had a good understanding of Talor. I think she's a very competitive person. She's team-oriented, and I think this was the right choice for her." Bendel's choice came down to Northwestern and Michigan, although she also took a trip to Georgia. "It seemed like Ann Arbor was more of a college setting and I liked that," Bendel said. "At Northwestern, it seemed like the college wasputin the middle of the town. At Michigan, it seemed like the college was Ann Arbor." Like Johnson, Bendel should pro- vide immediate help in the butterfly, an area the Wolverines need help in. "Talor has an opportunity to step in right away in an area where we've had some weaknesses for the last three or four years,"Richardson said. "We think Talor has the ability to step in and do it not only at the end of the year but throughout the year as well. We won't find ourselves having to take a 400 IMer and have them swim the fly. "I think she will be a very solid performer for us in the 500 freestyle. She's obviously a very good 200 freestyler. She's a 1:49 in that. She's been :51 flat in the 100 free. She's got tremendous range as an athlete. The fact that she's got the range gives us a lot of things that we can do with her." Although the U.S. Open may not have been a total reflection of their abilities, the meet did allow the Wol- verine fans to peer into the crystal ball and look at the future of Michigan swimming. THURSDAY NO COVER AT NISTAURANt SPOEV "l A v Nop I Also Featuring: Any Taco Salad ... $3.89 Long Island Ice Teas.$1.50 Pitchers of Coors ight..$325 :1220 S. University Call 665-7777 for deliveries 1 .° ,;ATTENTION HOCKE PLYRS! I Take your pick: 1 'FREE Stick (with purchase of two) 1 -or- eFREE Skate Sharpening (with stic -or- '"STS k purchase) I XP. 1213193 I Stop by and see .a Jostens representative nlr - QIth .11 am to4n nim