GMb EitrhIwn ?fltlt Evans, Okey andI Indiana forward Brian Evans, the on the all-conference first team b :Wootridge and Northwestern's Ge included Illinois' fKiwane Garris, v, Penn State's Matt Gaudio, Purdu the year, and Wisconsin forward' I Spikers look to avenge blowout loss 1 By Mark Snyder Daily Sports "Writer Revenge is sweet, but it is oftten difficult. Avenging a defeat serves as a great moti- vating factor for the Michigan men's volley- ball team, and this weekend the Wolverines will get their chance. The squad will face off against Michigan State this Friday night in East Lansing. The Spar~s trounced the Wolverines Jan. 17 at the CCRB, and the Wolverines are look- ing to show the Spartans how much the team has improved. "This is the big one," Michigan captain Jamie Reynolds said. "We want to get (the Spartans) back for the match right after winter break." Wolverines need Rodriguez, Reynolds to shine in Spii Michigan State dominated the Wolverines in the first match, winning in three sets while the Wolverines put up little fight. Thc Wolverines have taken a few weeks off, taking the time to heal their bumps and bruises. The healing process has been vital to the Wolverines this season with their numerous injuries. Andy Spitser, the team's most powerful hitter, remains sidelined with a broken thumb, and the team is hoping to have him back in the next couple of weeks. The lineup is definitely set without Spitser, and Reynolds thinks it is significantly im- proved due to the addition of Ernesto Rodriguez. Rodriguez, who recently joined the squad, is far more experienced than the rest of the players and greatly improves the team. "(Rodriguez) knows so much," Reynolds said. "He's kind of like a mentor to some of the other players even though he is younger than they are." In addition to Rodriguez and Reynolds, the team Michigan will field against Michigan State is a cohesiv Pothiraj, Ted Sko out the starters. Stilstra also ac with his coach's on the Wolverine He volunteered for the beginning ing himself. As a club sPc itself, and this is; raisers like the tc Feb. 3-4. i sw wi w mmmmm1A March 19, 1994 Michigan 84, Texas 79 4kand Fife lasso some Longhorns By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Editor Jimmy King is now struggling in his first season with the Toronto Raptors. Jalen Rose is getting by as a Denver Nugget, blossoming recently as more playing time comes his way. Ray Jack- son is a Grand Rapids Macker; he made the Continental Basketball Association All-Star game this year. Juwan Howard is the standout of the bunch. An NBA All-Star this season, it is his rock-solid play on which the Washington Bullets _____ hang their collective hat Tomor0trov night in and night out. They're scattered Michigan vs.1 across the continent, two When:-Approx countries and two Where: Brad!e leagues. They rarely see M ilwaukee. each other now - TV: CB', Char friends separated by dis- Last meeting: tance, by jobs that have Michigan 84, drawn them apart. But one night two years ago -March 19, U 1994 to be exact -theyUA were all Wolverines. They were fourth-fifths of the simultaneouslyt famous and infamous Fab Five. And they were the team everybody wanted to beat. On this particular night, Texas was the "everybody" with a yen to knock off the third-seeded Wolverines. The No. 6 seed Longhorns had beaten Western Kentucky to earn the right to challenge the two-time defending regional cham- pions, who had snuck by Pepperdine in the first round, 78-74. Beating the tour- ney-tested Wolverines, though, was a task the blazing-fast Longhorns just couldn't master: After an end-to-end battle, they succumbed 84-79. Texas against Michigan ... sounds familiar ... the Wolverines take on the Longhorns again this season. The No. 7 and No. 10 seeds will rumble at ap- proximately 10:30 p.m. tomorrow in the first round,. of the NCAA tourna- ment. If the lessons of history hold any clues, this one could be a doozie. In Te IX The last one certainly was. If there were any doubts that Howard was ready for the NBA -to which he bolted less than a month after the season - they disappeared that March night. Howard was omnipotent. He was, quite frankly, the only reason Michigan survived to play Maryland in the third round of the tournament. Howard scored - a career-high 34 points - he rebounded - a career- high 18 boards - and he did it without committing a single foul. "Juwan was simply outstanding," Michigan fSgame coach Steve Fisher said 'exas, after the game. "We've 10:30 p.m.- put the ball in his hands VCenter, a lot of times, so he's now got the ability to el 62 make some decisions to shoot it or pass it. He ex as 79, was magnificent." Howard even nailed his first career 3-poi nter, a no-other-choice-but- to-shoot heave with four minutes remaining in the first half. Y "When he threw in that three-pointer with the 35-second shot clock running out, 1 knew something was in types of situations." Now, Fife has been there before and he's been through those types of situa- tions. And he's about to go through one again tomorrow night. Fife, though, is by far the most expe- rienced ofthe Wolverines. He's dressed for more Michigan tournament games than the rest of the Wolverines com- bined. He played all but a minute of the game two years ago. But that Texas game two years ago is done with. It will have little effect on tomorrow's game. "I don't think that will have any bear- ing," Fisher said Tuesday. "The only two current players who got any sig- nificant minutes were (Texas' Reggie) Freeman and Dugan Fife. We don't have anyone in the program who was even on the bench." So it's nothing but a memory - a memory ofJalen Rose and Jimmy King calmly sinking free throws to ice the victory, a memory of Ray Jackson play- ing possessed against the best team in his home state, a memory of Juwan Howard scoring virtually at will. Quite a memory. (March 19, 1994 TEXAS (79) IFG FT RES MIlN M-A MA 0T A F PTSI IBurditt 37 4-6 0-3 4-9 1 4 8 Freeman 3 0-0 0-0 1-10 0 0 Mclver 27 5-7 0-0 2.7 1 2 10 Tyler 39 6-24 9-9 2-2 6 3 22 Rencher 37 6-12 3-4 0-3 3 5 16 Wingfield 10 2-2 0-1 2-3 0 2 4 Anderson 35 6-17 0-1 1-2 3 2 13 Watson 8 2-3 0-0 2-3 1 4 6 Houston 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 00 0 Totals 200 31-71 12-18 14-34 1524 79 FG%: 437. FT%:.667. Three-point goals: 5-21, .238 (Watson 2-2, Renc her 1-2, Anderson 1-6, Tyler 1-11). Blocks: 1 (Burditt). Turnovers: 12 (Anderson 6, Mclver 2, Tyler 2. Rencher, Watson). Steals: 11 (Anderson 3. Tyler 3, Burditt 2, Rencher 2, Mclver). Technical Fouls: none MICHIGAN (84) FO FT RED MIN W4A PM-A ". A F PTS Rose 40 4-9 7-8 1-4 5 4 17 Jackson 30 6-10 3-5 5-14 7 5 15 Howard 39 16-24 1-3 4-18 1 0 34 Fife 39 1-4 0-2 0-1 3 3 3 King 37 3-8 6.11 0-2 0 4 1 Saint-Jean 20 0.1 3-4 0-2 3 2 3 Ndiaye 7 0-1 0-0 0-0 01 0 Totals 200 30.57 20-33 10-41 1919 84 FG%:.526. FT%: .606, Three-point goals: 4-12, .333 (Rose 2-4, Howard 1-1, Fife 1-3, Ndiaye 0- 1, Saint-Jean 0-1, King 0-2). Blocks: 3 (Howard, Jackson, King). Turnovers: 18 (Rose 7, Howard 5, Fife 3, King 2, Jackson). Steals: 6 (Saint-Jean 3, Fife, King, Rose). Technical Fouls: none Texas-......36-43 -79 Michigan...41-43 -84 At: Kansas Coliseum; A: 10,036 eadysnag aads Big Ten P'layer of the Year, was joined y Iowa's Jess Settles and Andre Eno Carlisle.*The miedia'sfirst teamy file Big Ten coaches gave the nod to' re'sGene Keady was named coach of Samn Okey is freshman of the year.y Thursday 8 March 14, 199 "We are fine financially," Reynolds said. sers ab ence "We did well enough this year that we were Lsers ab ence able to buy new uniforms and warm-ups for this season." ve unit. Justin Biebel, Suresh The finances, however, are not enough to lIarus and Chad Stilstra round cover two matches against every team in the Big Ten each year, so a regular-season league dds experience on the court championship is unrealistic. This makes club sbackground and four years volleyball difficult for all teams because no e team. of them are able to point their regular seaso W das the team's assistant coach to a title. of the season before activat- But the team's record, despite the season's injuries and inexperience, has improved to 53. port, the team must support The team is looking at the game against accomplished through fund- Michigan State as more than a tune-up for the tournament Michigan hosted Big Ten Championships March 23 at Ohio State. ........... t y15- e.{..)c r s?. C k ..~o ....s.#....4 , . -- . . a YYt }°Y"'' a, s^ c~r^ j i , - yak, . c 5 z: 53 E. ,"t.d j k 's r ', 4' a I - ';, s ! 3- &")''a t r -4 r y~f l k Y { } a : ^^' ' A t , sF , s . . Y G O r ~ x - -c 4-s a . C £Y s sE ' , r :k' 4 - FY -r s . ~k da cs 4 k a Ss c y~e,,e i Y ''' - z I t k S '.K 4 'E u - - - .- a :_ -w t , YC '° a x a Y ~ u- Y£, Y -..,.. , F 5' DQ 6 k i~f : k s ' {y{ ' xkS~ 'a v~ C kreR' tigteUie Sae f h lpc wt hs prformance this weekend3-Fbut ~ thy sucessflly omplte th dificul Olymic tcket Aiain ~rht o c oe b , u t ' M a k t i l wr ti fis-lceso to h wrdp du . Yotesw m igeensd en'cerc Un ot naey for 9some, the r rin- fro.my pot nt a Olym i memori., ing just wasn't enough. Hours of men- Among my friends, my tickets translate tal preparation and elbow grease in the into Olympic participation; witnessing application process the games from may not have trans- stands is as close 75 fated into ticket suc - any of us will prob- cess. The lottery pro- ably ever get to cess used to deter- __ Olympic glory. mine ticket recipients bt But I'm not alone in this year proved thait train- ~ my bragging rights ohn the ing does not necessarily trans- University of Michiganxcah- late into victory, or, to put it in context, pus. Just today, as a matter of fact, I finding a seat in Atlanta. The family of learned that seven other people ini Ann swimmer Summer Sanders, a three-time Arbor may have better tickets than, , gold medal winner at the 1992 Barcelona "Impossible," you may say. "Betterti games, was not even able to secure ets than Susan Dann's? Was her appli- tickets for their daughter's potential cation training in vain?" :~ events at the Atlanta games. All of the available credit on: your Call it irony, but Sanders' family VISA couldn't get you better ttets won't be needing those swimming tick- than Carlton Bruner, Tom Dolanjh'm ets after all. Sanders failed to make the Malchow, Erie Namesnik, ",q. n United States Olympic team at the re- Piersma, Eric Wunderlich and:,Jon cent trials held in Indianapolis. I never Urbanchek have. These men have the thought that I had anything in common best seats in the house - if they-don't with Oiympi c-caliber athletes, but Sum- See OLYMPICS, Pag 1OA this is also the emotion many fans feel whe Tktstoul I the cards," Penders said. " I said, 'Mr. Howard's going to have himself a night."' Mr. Howard did indeed have himself "a night," but the rest of the Wolverines weren't exactly missing in action. Rose had 17 points and five assists. King scored 12, and Jackson tossed in 15 to go with 14 rebounds and seven assists. And the fifth Wolverine starter on that Fab-ulous team? He played 39 min- utes, distributed three assists, scored but three points, and went on to become the captain of the Fab-less Wolverines. His name? Dugan Fife. "We've got veteran players," Fisher said at the time. "With the exception of Dugan Fife, the rest of the guys who did the bulk of the playing have been here before, and they've been through those Olympians By Susan Dann Daily Sports Writer "Sure, I'm going to the 1996 Olym- pies in Atlanta," I brag to my friends as I proceed to tell them that my brother miraculously snagged four tickets to the men's basketball gold medal game. among other tickets my family toiled to apply for and ultimately received. Applying for spectator tickets to the Centennial Games was tiresome - physically, emotionally and mentally. I even heard some people say you had to be a Harvard graduate just to under- stand the ticket application. (I had no idea that the Olympic Ticket Commit- tee would have any way to verify that my brother really is a H-arvard grad.) I considered myself lucky to get any tickets, let alone the varied selection which I now have in hand. My Olympic training is now com- plete. The hard work has paid off. My gold medals? A ticket stub and a wooden El Dlo you feel like you have no voice in he Universit? The Michigan Student Assembly is looking for students to serve on campus-wide committees. Committees are comprised of students, facultyt and staff, and advise various University Departments. Most committees meet about once a month and require a commitment of one to two years. 'POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Student Legal Services (3) 2 undergrad and I Law student Financial Affairs (2) 1 grad and I undergrad Student Relations (4) grad and undergrad Research Policies (3) 1 undergrad and 2 grad - Recreational Sports (2) students University Library Council (1) graduate student (1) undergraduate student Distinguished' Faculty Achievement Awards (1) student Distinguished Research Scientist Award (1) student Faculty Awards (1) student TM A 1 I ;G 5 ' *. 0u~A A wU1'1Y a' I.. ~n1uE UflW~. 131111 III III I