The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 9, 1994 -11. "Wolverine hitters try to change winless ways in weekend tournament at home By TOM SEELEY Daily Sports writer Playing one of the biggest opponents of the year in the midst of a four game losing streak has to be one of the worst cases of timing imaginable. Or is it? 0 That is precisely the situation the Michigan women's volleyball team faces tonight at 8 p.m. when they host in-state rival Michigan State in the first round of the Kaepa Volleyball Challenge at Cliff Keen Arena. A loss in tonight's match against the Spartans could drive the Wolverines (0- 4) deeper into the hole they currently find themselves in. A victory, on the other hand, could signal a turnaround for the squad and provide them with the momentum they need to head in the right direction. A win could also boost the team's confidence before it enters difficult Big Ten play, when it will play the Spartans two more times. Despite the incentive of facing such a heated nemesis, Michigan coach Greg iovanazzi says that this alone is not why performing well in tonight's contest is 'mportant. "I think we're much more concerned with turning the corner and starting to play the kind of ball that we're capable of," he said. "But anytime Michigan plays Michigan State both teams tend to dig a little deeper to try to come up with something to better their rival." And as if tonight's game wasn't enough, the Wolverines face two more tough opponents tomorrow when they square off against Virginia at noon and Pitts- burgh at 8 p.m. in the final match of the day. With eight of its 16 players in their first year on the squad, the team has struggled to clear up the jitters which any athletes playing together for the first ime experience. "We have a team that's made up of very good individuals, and it's just been a struggle for them to get used to new systems and new teammates," Giovanazzi said. "I think that's why we see so many communication errors and possibly the number of unforced errors." These mistakes were evident in Michigan's last match - a four-game loss to Eastern Michigan. After tying the match at a game apiece, the Wolverines came to within a point of a third-game victory, but then appeared to come apart at the seams as the Eagles scored the next five points en route to a 16-14 triumph. Michigan never recovered from that lapse and allowed Eastern Michigan to roll 'To schedule two top 10 teams right off the bat shakes your confidence. We've been addressing confidence issues as much as possible, but when you go play Stanford and Florida and you get thumped, it's hard to look in the mirror and say, "Hey, I'm damn good."' - Greg Giovanazzi Michigan volleyball coach to a 15-9 fourth and final game victory. Michigan opened the season last weekend at the Florida Gator Invitational against very stiff competition. In the first two games of the tournament when they faced Stanford and Florida-ranked No. 1 and No.6 in the country, respectively - the Wolverines were blown out in three straight games each time. According to Giovanazzi, this season-opening performance set the stage for the second-guessing that seems to plague the team right now. "To schedule two top 10 teams right off the bat shakes your confidence," he said. "We've been addressing confidence issues as much as possible, but when you go play Stanford and Florida and you get thumped, it's hard to look in the mirror and say, 'Hey, I'm damn good."' One key player that missed the Florida trip was outside hitter/setter Berit Volstad. The freshman from Forde, Norway was sidelined with a hamstring injury, and this weekend will be her first action of the season. Before coming to Michigan, she was a member of the Norwegian National Team and is the Wolverines' first European player. While Giovanazzi would have preferred to avoid these early season setbacks, he enters this weekend's games with an open mind and a focus on what he feels the season is really all about. "We can't help but approach these first three pre-Big Ten weekends as finding out as much as we can before the conference schedule," he said, "because that's our goal - to try and win this conference." The Michigan volleyball has dropped its first four contests this year. The Wolverines play in the Kaepa Volleyball Challenge this weekend, beginning with Michigan State tomorrow. Spoiled U.S. Open onlookers begin to take Graf's greatness for granted The Baltimore Sun NEW YORK - Imagine being so good at tennis that no matter how well you play or how big your margin of victory, it is not news. You can breeze through matches at grand slam tournament like the U.S. Open. You can lose an average of only three games a match over 10 sets and five rounds, embarrass the likes of No. 10 seed Zina Garrison-Jackson, blow off quarterfinalist Amanda Coetzer and all anyone does is yawn. If this is happening to you, then your name is Steffi Graf. The only response to Graf's run to today's semifinal match against Jana Novotna has been that of business as usual. "Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Graf Triumphs Again," said the New York Times. Only when she admitted her admira- tion for Patrick Ewing and her love of the New York Knicks did the New York Post and Newsday find headline room forher victories with "Steffi Plays 'PAT' Hand" and "Steffi Routs Zina; Admits Love for Knicks." Only if she loses to Novotna and fails to make her 22nd appearance in a Grand Slam final will Graf be news. And if she doesn't lose, she will walk into the post-match interview and face the prospect of defending her great- ness. When she beat Coetzer 6-0, 6-2 in 55 minutes Wednesday, someone won- dered why she was in such a hurry. "I'm not really in a hurry," she said. "But I guess I've been playing well." Is she on cruise control? "You're shooting at me now," she said, smiling, sweeping her long blond hair away from her face. "Right now, I mean, I'm just feeling really happy about the way things are going, really, every match. I've been playing some good tennis. My serve is working very well, and the last two matches, my concentration was right on. Everything has just been working well." There is nothing, she said, that she could be doing better. She is perfect. And perfection has been the story of her career. At the age of 25, she has 15 Grand Slam titles, including the Australian Open this year. Overall, she has won $14.3 million, and another$1.2 million thisyear, while winning seven tournaments and run- ning her 1994 singles record to 56-4. Which brings us to this current, peculiar situation where Graf's win- ning brings mostly disinterest. Coming into this last Grand Slam of the season, she was news. She had lost at the French Open and Wimbledon. At Wimbledon, the loss was in the first round, making her the first defending champion there in the history of the tournament to lose a first-round match. "After four or five months where she had been perfect, almost, she was like human again," said Pam Shriver, What Graf's back strain would do to the women's draw was pondered at length before the Open began and speculation was that it would open this tournament to all comers. Everyone saw what back trouble can mean when former men's cham- pion Ivan Lendl was forced to retire and hobble off the court in his second- round match. But no one considered Graf's te- "Right now I'm just feeling really happy about the way things are going every match." Steffi Graf Tennis player nacity. When she heard the specula- tion, she literally laughed in its face. "I have such desire to win," she said. "My desire doesn't increase or decrease with wins or losses or with feeling good or bad. It is always there. I think you saw in Montreal, with my back like it was, I was still there. I wanted to be around. "And I think I have a pretty good chance to win here and that's what Iam trying to do." Once Graf started playing well, there was little mention of her back. Few found it amazing that she could per- form the way she has, with so much grace under pressure and with so much discomfort. "I'm going to the chiropractor ev- ery day almost," she said. "I'm getting ultrasound, mobilization, stretching, all kinds of treatment." The treatments take at least an hour and a half every day. On days of a match, like Friday, it takes longer. "I have to stretch very long before the matches," she said. "I stretch about two hours." She stretches two hours to be able to play so fine that she can be on and off Stadium Court in less than an hour and have herperformances taken forgranted. "It doesn't bother me that everyone seems to not give me any credit for making it look easy," she said. "I would { prefer to be pushed a little bit, but I will take everything I can get x .* t 4 t t , , For the best in Michigan sports coverage read the Michigan Daily every day. Hey, it's free and now in color. C-T . C.Ge a PERVEDe Get 1v OLORED W k ; r w after the rrench ana w imbedonlosses. And then Graf developed back trouble. It started in San Diego and became almostunbearable in Montreal, in her final warm-up for the Open. AP PHOTO Suddenly, she was even more hu- A bad back hasn't kept Steffi Graf from making a run at another U.S. Open title. man. . . . . ................................ . . .4* ... . . . . . . . . . uaro1 ~ plf .v. .w :