IN.....L llU& - In'r nu uu ^n 1 UJ ' I T iE ITI~II'i:T1, UcV~i-. Till l F- I;I1 10" wf)VlI us IIfulbuoy, 19VYG Il, 1CFOA+ p p _ qw- -w- °f lw l- w w w IM Blue begins tough non-conference slate at Maui Invitational J Hawkeyes look to By PAUL BARGER The Maui Invitational has come up with an impressive field for this year's tournament. Michigan joins Big Ten rival Indiana, Maryland, Tulane, Arizona State, and others in what promises to be one of the most in- triguing preseason tournaments in a long time. "It will give us a chance to get to snow each other and get that team tmosphere," Michigan senior Ray Jackson said. "It will also give us a zhance to play together against some great competition before the Big Ten season starts." Michigan's first-round opponent is Tulane. The Green Wave came to Ann Arbor last year and walked out with a 84-69 loss. If the Wolverines can get by the Wave they will face the winner of the Arizona State-Texas A&M contest. The Sun Devils are coached by former Michigan head man Bill Frieder, who left Michigan oefore the 1989 NCAA tournament. If the Wolverines advance to the finals they will likely face either Indi- ana or Maryland. Both teams are ranked in the top 10 and are looking for revenge against Michigan. The Wolverines knocked off the -. Terrapins in the sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament, but this year expecta- tions are high in College Park. Preseason All-American and na- tional player of the year candidate Joe Smith leads an impressive core of young players that will only get better with time. Included in this group are power forward Keith Booth and small forward Exree Hipp. Indiana and Michigan are old foes who will meet twice in conference play later in the season. The Wolver- ines pounded the Hoosiers the last time the teams met to the delight of the home crowd. The Maui Invitational will be played the three days leading up to Thanksgiving and will be televised by ESPN. The Michigan-Tulane game will be aired at 12:30 a.m. EDT, Tues- day Nov. 22. Michigan's pre-conference sched- ule also includes battles with highly rated Arizona and two-time defending Ivy League champion Pennsylvania. "I'm like the kids, I like to play good people where there is an excite- ment in the arena when you walk in," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "I like that a lot. But the most important thing is I want to make sure we win." Dr. Tom Davis knew he was get- ting something good when he landed 6-foot-7 Jess Settles out of Winfield, Iowa. What he did not know Iowa was that he was 5-13, 11-16 getting the next great Hawkeye player. "Jess was a surprise," Davis said. "We om: January thought he was Away: March 5 going to be good, but he went be- yond that. Hejust stepped to the front." As a rookie Settles was the con- sensus choice as Big Ten Freshman of the Year. He averaged 15.3 points and 7.5 rebounds per game, leading the league on the offensive glass. Add this to the fact I much of last year's pi ing because of shin Hawkeyes have a pl potential. Junior forward Ken3 eraged 12.3 ppg last fifth in the league wit rebounds per game. M outstanding defender,: in the conference with games. The Hawkeyes he can develop into a player. Senior Jim Bartels nal season in Iowa C expectations. The se pointers last year and 5.5 rpg. Bartels will sophomore Chris played in 27 games a THE TIMBERI Sophomore Jess Settles will try to lead the Hawkeyes back to credibility after a poor showing in 1993-94. Settles was Iowa's bright spot, winning the honor of Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Big Ten titles a distant memory for Buckeyes Most coaches in the Big Ten expect their teams to rise and fall as it moves from one season to an next. However, the process might have been just a little too dramatic for Ohio State coach Randy Ayers. In 1991, his Buckeyes became the firstBig Ten team since 1985-86 to win outright back-to-back titles, only to collapse this season into a probable whio SMate 6-12,13-16 Hom: February 8 basementdweller team. The circum- stances behind that collapse are well-chronicled The NCAA nailed the Ohio State program for 17 recruiting vio- lations, and sus- pended the Eaker. Simpson may be reinstated at some point this season. He was the 1992-93 Big Ten Freshman of the Year, and scored 11.2 points per game last season. Macon flunked out of school following his suspen- sion. Throw in the graduation of Lawrence Funderburke and Jamie Skelton, and the transfers of Nate Wilbourne and Derek Anderson, and the Buckeyes are truly decimated. Ayres has only eight scholarship players, and Dudley - last season's co-captain - will remain with the football team until that season ends. Is there any good news abound? Maybe the fact that Ayers will have more than an ample chance to test his younger talent. Ayers has taken a par- ticular liking to freshman guard Carlos Davis, who will get considerable time in the backcourt. "For his age, he is a very strong player," Ayers said. "A young man that comes in with some athletic ability and some strength has a chance to make an immediate impact." -Scott Burton At the Timberland Shop, you'll find a compl clothing and accessories. Timberland. TI We have the largest inventory of Timberland w in the state. Stop in and see our great *PP*Nt4G CREAK '95 EfM $399 8 Days/7Nites Air, Hotel & More From Detroit FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: 1SIMhCM! HEATHER AT 913-2007 COREY OR BOB AT BIANCHI-ROSSI TOURS 1-800-8754525 -rS PARTIES EVERV ITE'! OPEN BAR FROM TOUrs 10:30PM-3:00AM AT THE BEST CLOYS IN THE WORLD!!! school's athletic department for one year. 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