The Mich higan Daily -- Friday, September 23, 1994 - 13 'M' looks to tally two wins By NICHOLAS J. COTSONIKA For the Daily The Michigan women's soccer team plays two games this weekend, but their biggest opponent won't be Minnesota or Valparaiso. It will be fatigue. "We're playing three games in five days, so we're going to be tired," Michigan coach Debbie Belkin said. "Wejust have to play our game. We've got a big weekend." Despite the grind, the Wolverines (0-2 Big Ten, 3-2-1 overall) are learn- ing every day. They are coming off their best offensive performance of the season, a 4-0 thrashing of Tiffin University. Michigan now knows exactly what it needs to do to win - play more aggressively in front of the net. "Our main point is finishing," de- fender Carrie Povilaitis said. "We haven't done that well this season, but we did last game. Kim Phillips and Betsy Axley worked great together and put the ball in the net. If we do that, we should do well." The Wolverines will look to work on their finishing when they face Minnesota today at Elbel Field. But it will be a challenge, because Minne- sota is an established program. "This will be our hardest game yet," Michigan midfielder Debbie Flaherty said. "They're a Big Ten team, and we have to be ready and have to play our game if we want to win." Povilaitis defined "Michigan's game" as one in which the Wolver- ines take charge. "They have some speed, so we have to play aggressive," Povilaitis said. "We have to win the 50-50 balls, and we have to control the balls in the air. Offense is important, but we have to stop them and play well defen- sively." The Golden Gophers (2-1-2) boast a prolific scoring attack. Team scor- ing leaderJenniferMcElmury anchors Minnesota in the midfield, and for- wards Gretchen Brandt and Jennifer Walek swarm the net. Although this is the first meeting between the clubs, Minnesota coach Sue Montagne is sure that the Wol- verines will be tough. "I have no idea what to expect out of them, other than a good game," Montagne said. "I know Debbie (Belkin) is going to put a good team on the field. We've got to be ready to play." Valparaiso will have to be ready to play as well when it meets Michi- gan on Sunday, also at Elbel Field. Valparaiso hasn't won any of their first seven games, but has played a difficult schedule. "They haven't done well, but they've been playing some of the best teams in the country," Belkin said. "They won't be as tough as Minne- sota, but they'll be ready to play. Like I said, they will be our third game in five days, so we'll be tired." If the Wolverines win two this weekend, they can rest easy. They don't play again until Sept. 30. The Michigan women's soccer team hopes to avoid fatigue this weekend against Minnesota and DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily Valparaiso. F- - - . Spikers begin conference season at Northwestern ... By RODERICK BEARD Daily Sports Writer Recovering from injuries and an impressive 2-1 record last weekend, the women's volleyball team prepares to open the grueling Big Ten season this weekend. Michigan, coming off victories over Kansas and host Virginia Tech, and a loss to William & Mary at the Comfort Inn HokieClassic, improved its record to 4-6 for the season. The conference season begins at North- western tonight at 8:30 p.m. EDT and continues Saturday at Wisconsin at 8 p.m. EDT. "We want to be steady," coach Greg Giovanazzi said. "We'll try to be better than we were in the VirginiaTechmatch and improve after every match." This weekend will mark the return of injured veterans Aimee Smith, Suzy O'Donnell, and Shareen Luze, who didn't make the trip to Virginia for last week's tournament. All three will play tonight, but the extent of their play is still in question. Giovanazzi said that the three practiced yesterday and looked good, but Kristin Ruschiensky is still hurt and will not make the trip. Northwestern (9-3) should be ready for the Wolverines. The Wild- cats, in their first year under head coach Margie Fitzpatrick, are riding an eight-match winning streak, their longest since 1987, when they won nine in a row. During the streak, Northwestern has won two tourna- ment championships, including the Rice University Tournament and the Wildcat Fall Invitational last week- end. At the Rice tournament, North- western easily defeated the same William & Mary team that Michigan lost to last weekend. "There is a lot of excitement when there is a new coach because it gives the program a lift," Giovanazzi said. "It will be interesting to see if they can sustain that high level of play against Big Ten opponents. Northwestern is a veteran team, even though they are picked to finish low in the Big Ten every year." The Wildcats will be led by Alison Krumbein and Molly Maloney. Krumbein, who had 17 kills and 14 digs in Northwestern's victory over Illinois-Chicago Wednesday, raised her average to 4.22 kills per game. Maloney added nine kills and 14 digs, making her average 3.83 kills per game. The Wolverines face tough com- petition in Wisconsin (10-2), the 25th- ranked team in the country. The Bad- gers began the season with 10 con- secutive victories and three tourna- ment championships before losing twice last weekend to No. 4 UCLA and No.5Fl.r;d a;t the 'Minmn T T A Volleyball Cup in Illinois. The two consecutive losses will not make Wisconsin any hungrier for a victory, though. "You have to be hungry against everyone in the Big Ten," Wisconsin coach John Cook said. "All Big Ten matches are big." Last year, the Badgers finished 19-11 overall and reached the sec- ond round of the NCAA tourna- ment. In conference play, Wiscon- sin was fifth in the Big Ten with an 11-9 record. The teams split their two meetings last year, with the home team winning each match. That could spell defeat for the Wol- verines, as the Badgers have a 12- match winning streak at Wisconsin Field House, dating back to last year's victory over Michigan. Saturday's match will feature two 1992 Olympic volleyball coaches. Cook was an assistant with the men's team; Giovanazzi served as first as- sistant with the U.S. women's team. Cook doesn't think that the coaches play such a crucial role in the out- come, though. "Coach [Giovanazzi] and I aren't out there on the court playing," Cook said. YOU CAN TALK THE GAME, BUT CAN YOU COVER THE GAME? DAILY SPORTS. WE COVER THE GAMES. THE SPORTING VIEWS: ase bal is alive and thrvn 0. in Norway BY WILL McCAHILL Daily Sports Writer BEKKESTUA, Norway - Not exactly a field of dreams, but in a fall without baseball, it's certainly better than nothing. Excuse me, that's a fall without baseball in America. But on a rainy, cold, windy morning in this suburb of Oslo, there's baseball. Baseball in its purest form, the kind played by nine- and 10-year-old kids. Little League baseball, half a world away from the home of the brave and the first cancelled World Series since 1904. The kids come from a rainbow coalition of countries, from countries with great baseball traditions, like the United States and Japan, to countries where the only time you get wood hitting a ball is when the soccer ball hits the goalpost, like Norway. They come from places near, like Jar or Haslum, the next towns over, and from places far, like Drobak, a couple hours away down the fjord. We're not talking about a couple of teams' worth of pint-sized pitchers and catchers here, either. On this day more than 100 would-be Little Leaguers (that's Lille Ligamedlemmers in local parlance) gathered at the British Inter- national School of Oslo for three cold, windy hours of throwing, catching, running and hitting. * Organized by the Little League Association of Norway, these Saturday free-for-ails are more like training camps than anything else. Since daylight dissipates awfully fast as winter sets in, there's not really time to have league competition in the fall. Spring is the time for that. Right now, it's just the basics, a time for the kids to get some of the fundamentals down, and to get outside and blow off some steam before the cold and dark confines them to the gymnasium. After a couple hours of drills - grounders and fly balls hit by the overwhelmed, outnumbered volunteer coaches - the kids are arbitrarily divided up into teams, and then there's baseball, after a fashion, for a couple more hours. I overheard this exchange between a nine-year-old boy and a 21-year-old volunteer coach: "Do you play in the majors leagues?" "Yeah." "Who do you play for?" See NORWAY, Page 15 POP QUIZ K> Gle 7k, - Celebrities, j ani lit" c $* a 30mM4 $2.00 Pitchers All taps Monday Night Football $2.00 Pitchers All taps $3.00 Pitchers All taps Ladies Nite $3.00 Pitchers All taps FRI. Open at 3 FREE PIZZA 3-5 Pitchers all day & night All taps Open at 11 all day & night All taps _ _ ___ __.j & Let's Talk Trash This Big T is made from the soda bottles recycled by you and your neighbors. PCR Synchilla reduces landfill waste and uses less energy and natural resources to make than virgin polyester. It dries quickly Y and is easy to care for. 1. Air Jordans Air Edge Crosstrainer 2. Reverse Weave Cotton Sweat Shirts 3. Bravo Blade GLX ATB A. Sport Specialties & New Era Headwear of the Pro's B. C. Voted #1 Sports Store By The Michigan Daily ° "A j- LL$vtE! nub w.7 LJJ