The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 27, 1995 3 Q & A:1992 GOLD MEDALIST MIKE BARROWMAN Barrowman Former Wolverine swimmer talks about the 1995 NCAA Champions RACHEL BACHMAN Bach's Score Michigan swimming has produced many Olympic-caliber athletes over the years, including current Wolver- ine GustavoBorges, 1992 silver med- alistfrom Brazil. Also in 1992, it produced the lat- est in a line of seven gold medalists - Mike Barrowman, who seta record in the 200-yard breastroke with a time of 1:53.77. This weekend in India- napolis, Daily Sports Writer Michelle Lee Thompson spoke with Barrowman about the 1995 NCAA Champion Wolverine team and marks Barrowman set in his own swimming days. Daily: What have you done since the 1992 Olympic Games? Barrowman: Well, I took a year off and went on a tour of the United States and did a series of swimming clinics to make some money. In 1992, 1 told the press and there was an article in the newspaper that I said, 'Oh, I don't know, I might try kayaking.' You know, just an off- hand thought. And then a year after that, I'd forgotten about it. In the middle of '93, th(U.S. Olympic Com- mittee calls up and says, 'Are you serious, would you like to give it a try?' And I said, 'Oh, I don't know,' and then I sort of got to thinking. Ended up going out to the middle of the country, and some things hap- pened. They called me back and I ended up going out to California to do kayaking. I've been doing that ever since, in tandem with the clinics and speeches and things like that. D: Well, you've been sitting here and watching Steve West. What do you think of Michigan breastrokers? They don't seem to be the highlight of the team. B: For 11 years now, Michigan has had a breastroker in the finals at NCAAs. When West graduates, I don't know what's going to happen - it's kind of a little scary. D: Did the two of you ever swim together? B: Yes. My senior year was his freshman year. D: As a lot of these guys graduate and swimming is not a professional sport, guys like Marcel Wouda and Gustavo Borges are going to be left without the same competition oppor- tunities they had in college. What are they going to do in the coming years, with respect to what you have done? B: I don't have any idea. You do make more money swimming than you do in kayaking, I do know that. I would imagine that being they're normal people, when they're finished with swimming, they're going to go out and get normal jobs and do well in life. They're swimmers in a sense and they're normal in a sense. They're normal in the sense that just like ev- erybody else, they need to sleep some- where. It's good in a sense - they'll probably get a job that they want and do well at it. They're good people. I'm sure that they'll take the route that everybody else has taken, eventually. Swimming will last a little while, through the Olympics at least. D: Speaking of the Olympics, which of Michigan's athletes will fare well in 1996? B: Tom Dolan's going to stand out. He's got his work cut out for him; he's got some tough competition out there in the world, that's for sure. But he's going to do it. He's a tough guy and I have confidence in him. Gustavo could be right in there in the hunt for the gold. He was close last time and I think he can do it. Other than that, I think you'll have to wait and see; I don't really know. D: Do you think Tom is gold- medal caliber? B: Certainly. Certainly. He's SPORTS INFORMATION proven that at the World Champion- ships. He has a really legitimate shot. Being the favorite is going to hurt. He knows he's got someone knocking on his door from Finland. But Tom Dolan's the type of per- son that if he's starting to get punched in a race, he's going to punch back twice as hard and he's going to come out of it ahead. D: What do you remember about the beginning of your swimming ca- reer? B: I had a lot of different steps up the ladder, I climbed pretty evenly. My other coach, Jozsef Nagy, met him in '86, and he really taught me an enormous amount of things, includ- ing the way of breastroke, which was a more efficient stroke that was nor- mal out there. Together, we kind of went a long way back. No real turning point, it was a pretty even process along the way, just meeting him. D: Was he your high school coach? B: He was my high school coach and then I go back to him on the off- time away from Michigan, so about 50 percent of the time was with him and 50 percent with Urbanchek. D: Urbanchek is especially known as a distance and individual medley coach. What did he contribute to your career as a breastroker? B: Jon is an anything-he-wants- to-be coach. He thinks he's the great- est IM coach in the world; I won't dispute that. But I also think he's a great coach in every other aspect in the world. He's proven that time and time again. He's had great breastrokers in the past 11 years. He's had four NCAA championships in breastroke, I think he's had eight or nine Big Ten championships in the 200 breastroke, five of so in the 100 breastroke. You can't tell me he's not a great breastroke coach. You gotta give him hands- down for being a great coach all- around. The biggest thing he gave me was just peace of mind to enjoy my life at Michigan, to enjoy swimming and kind of taking things in balance. That was probably the most important as- pect of Jon, because he's exactly the opposite of Nagy. Nagy was 'Go-go-go 'til you die and I don't care what else is happen- ing in your life,' and Urbanchek's kind of like, 'Hey, you're gonna do great, get out there, you need to swim hard but you have other things in life and I understand that.' And between the two of them I had the perfect balance, and I think Jon knew that, he's a smart guy. He could see that I needed that and he gave that to me. He'll watch the swimmers and see what they need. If someone needs pushing, he'll push them and if some needs help and kindness, he's giving them that too. He's a good coach to have like that. D: Are you still swimming? You've talked about kayaking, have you continued to swim? B: I swim eight laps at the clinics, that's enough. I did the goals that I wanted to do. I accomplished all the goals in swimming, there was noth- ing left. I did not want to be greedy and go back again. Once was enough. D: So who gets your vote for the 200 breastroke in the 1996 Olym- pics? I'd say Roja of Hungary is going to battle it out possibly with (former Wolverine Eric) Wunderlich, and then there's always a surprise turned out at the end, and I don't know who that'll be. But between those two, I'd say Roja's definitely got the experience and the willpower and the. work ethic behind him, but Wunderlich can al- ways pull stuff out of nowhere. Plus, Wunderlich's an enormously talented swimmer. We'll see. "NI' bowlers tri lng to earn a little respect While most fans were gearing up to watch the Oklahoma State- UMass game, one Michigan sports team was in training for national title. The athletes were at their Ann Arbor facility yesterday, perfecting their technique and trying to stay loose before the championships April 7-8 in Omaha, Neb. The place? Colonial Lanes on Industrial Boulevard. The squad? The Michigan bowling team. Seriously. Newspaper readers read ad nauseam about the plight of Michigan's minor sports: If their funds aren't getting cut, these teams' stands are turning up empty and local sportswriters are trampling them in their haste to get to kickoff on time. But most of these sports - gymnastics, field hockey, baseball - all command a certain level of respect (OK, except baseball). But not bowling. "The typical bowling image is a smoke-filled alley, beer-drinking, pot- bellied people," says Tony Baladad, team coordinator and men's team captain. "(People) don't see it as a competitive sport. "I don't go around bragging that I'm a bowler." There is no glamour in the sport. Yesterday, seven members of the team (there are 17 on the roster) battled wrist ailments and the noise of a second grade birthday party in the neighboring lanes to get through two-games. The sport made popular by the 80 million Americans who participate in it every year and made a joke by Homer Simpson is not doing well these days. According to Sports Illustrated, the amount the ABC network paid the PBA for tour rights shrank from $3.52 million for 24 tournaments to $700,000 for 14 tournaments in the '95 contract. A Saturday morning fixture since the 1950s, bowling on TV just isn't drawing a crowd anymore. What does this mean for Michigan's team? Not much, it seems. Because no matter how ESPN treats bowlers, the general population still sees them as the Rodney Dangerfield of sports. "I'm doing it for myself," Baladad says. "If they want to think I'm some sort of nerd for bowling, then fine." But he also dreams, as most athletes do, of widespread recognition. "One day I do hope to become a pro. But that's really difficult because the money's not really there." The main problem is that bowling isn't a show. Team member Michele Macoit says that when people shell out $500 for a scalped Bulls ticket, "They're paying to see Michael Jordan do these awesome things that they can't do. People pay for something to be in awe of." To the average sports fan, seeing a cumbersome black ball (with no stitches) rolled down a highly-waxed floor is not awesome. "It doesn't make (bowling) any less of a sport," she says, "just less entertaining." Which means you won't be hearing about the winners of bowling region seven and one of the 16 teams going to nationals. Fun? Accessibility? Participatory appeal? Who cares if bowling, the sport we hate to love, has all these things? Entertainment, as executives at NFL Films will tell you, is the name of the game. If sports business gurus can't sel(. 20,000 tickets to it and hawk T-shirts at it, it isn't a sporting event. Michigan bowlers aren't concerned with such things; they just want too compete. But with this sport, which sticks out among others like a Pacer in a parking lot of BMWs, sometimes they can't even do that. The Big Ten tournament, which host team Wisconsin passed to Illinois like a hot potato, was scheduled for late February. It was canceled due to lack of participation. RACHEL BACHMAN/Da*y ichigan bowling team, from left to right: Back row: Antwan Edson, Travit Raskey, Michael Weinstein, Tony Baladad. Front row: Kara Kobrzycki, Michele Macoit, Tony White. * Women netters handle weekend competition By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports writer The Wolverines came as close as they could to playing at a level of perfection this weekend. The Michigan women's tennis team dropped only two sets in as many meets this weekend against Michigan State and Penn State. Michi- gan (5-1 Big Ten, 9-5 overall) blanked the Spartans 9-0 on Friday and rolled to an 8-1 victory over the Nittany Lions on Saturday. In fact, the only sets that the Wolverines lost were in a three-set doubles match loss to Penn State. And that came after the Michigan tandem of Karin Khanuja and Sibyl Smith breezed to a 6-2 win in the first set. Granted, the Wolverines weren't facing their toughest competition of the season, as Michigan State and Penn State are familiar residents of the bottom part of the Big Ten stand- ings. But that didn't seem to bother the Michigan players. "The competition really wasn't that great," sophomore Sarah Cyganiak said. "But at the same time, everyone did step up and played a lot better." "After playing some of the top teams in the country the past four weekends our level of play seemed to improve from playing against those teams," Michigan senior co-captain Jaimie Fielding said. Not only were the match results decisive, but so were the set scores, as well. Against the Spartans, 13 of the 18 sets played were won by the Wol- verines by scores of 6-0 or 6-1. In the match with the Nittany Lions, such was the case in nine of the 19 sets played. Most notable was Michigan's Tara Graff in her match against Michigan State's Amy Durham. Graff, playing a lot like her professional namesake, won both sets of the match by the score of 6-0. "In my four years of playing here, I've never seen anyone finish off an opponent like (Graff) did," Fielding said. "She was done with her match in about 30 minutes. I was still playing the first set of my match when she was done." Cyganiak continued her strong play as of late. With victories of 6-1, 6-3 and 7-6, 6-3, the Wolverines No. I singles player has won five of her last six matches as she ran her per- sonal season record to 10-4, tops on the Michigan squad. Cyganiak and doubles partner, Sora Moon, won twice this week- end raising their record to 5-0 as a team. They have dropped only one set along the way to running up a perfect mark. But as quickly as the Wolverines disposed of their opponents this week- end, they will have to get ready to return to the tough level of competi- tion that they have faced throughout the season. Next weekend, Michigan travels down to Florida to take on Miami and South Florida. "The level of competition will be much better next weekend," Cyganiak said. "But we feel that we're defi- nitely ready for it." i Set your v ~ron SPRING! Ar 3 2' for your eyeglasses and eye exams ATTENTION; STUDENTS Want to earn college credits while away from campus this summer? 320 S. State * 9 Lower Level 662-1945 * Decker Drugs M 9 ' i i v ..t" a:}i :,.:";h;;ti C ?.7:} ti}':; }"}:{({}} 11\}::: "}^a""::ti:?'v ._... Don't let half your grade get you lill i