Scoreboard NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles 7 , SAN DIEGO O PITTSBURGH 6, Cincinnatil 4 New York, 7 PHILADELPHIA 2 Montreal 5, ATLANTA 1 Chicago vs. ST. LOUIS, inc. Colorado vs. SAN FRANSISCO, inc. _ AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 8, DETROIT 3 SEATTLE 7. Texas 6 NEW YORK 9, Baltimore 3 (1) Baltimore 10, NEW YORK 9 (2) Minnesota 8 , CHICAGO 3 CLEVELAND 9, Kansas City 1 HOME TEAMS IN CAPS I0 Friday September 20, 1996 10 Stickers looking to keep Ball rolling By Devon Phelan For the Daily It will be the Wolverines' battle before the war. The Michigan field hockey team is 2- 2 heading into its game with Ball State at Ocker Field, the Wolverines' fifth and final non-conference game. Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz said "the team has been practicing hard everyday this week, trying to learn from the past weekend out East." Last Saturday in Norfolk, Va., the women battled against powerhouse Old Dominion, but they were unable to get a shot on goal. The Monarchs won, 7-0. The next day, they faced William & Mary, also in Norfolk, and were successful To rrow irk their pursuit Who: The of victory, win- Michigan field n ng, 2-0. hockey team vs. 4Pankratz Ball State believes a few ere: Acker imnprovements Field need to be made When: 10 am. toi "strengthen tle women's technique and increase their success rate," however, if Njichigan is to be successful against the Cardinals. She said the Wolverines need a tighter defense, faster ball execution and a bet- tr scoring touch around the net. Freshman sweeper Ashley Iichenbach said the team has been corncentrating on corners and transfer blls, which is the switching of the ball fipm one side of the field to the other. Reichenbach said Ball State is a pow- eiful team, and the game this Saturday shiould be exciting. : All the games so far have been non- l ague games, meaning they are not counted against Michigan's Big Ten record. But they are important to the Wolverines, giving them a chance to Gain experience and valuable practice under game stress. Tomorrow's matchup will be Michigan's third home game this sea- spn. Previously on home turf, the team challenged the Owls of Temple and lost, L-0. The Wolverines beat Boston College at Ocker, however, gaining their first win of the year, 3-2. Boston College! limps into town Eagles struggle with tough slate MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Clarence Williams and the Michigan football team hope to hold onto the ball against Boston College's porous defense. The Matchups: Eglsotest Michigan's foc By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor So Michigan wants into the elite again, wants to be one of those teams that beats top-five schools on the road, wants to be respected and revered as a national power. So the Wolverines think they're disciplined, poised and ready for the national and Big Ten title wars. Well, that's fine. But forget Colorado. Tomorrow's Boston College game will show us what kind of team Michigan truly is. Penn State would win this game, 49-0. Ohio State would- n't run up the score,- of course - but would win by at least 50. The Nebraskas, Tennessees and Florida States would eat the Eagles alive. But Michigan won't. Lloyd Carr has said publicly that he doesn't believe in embarrassing lesser programs. But if Michigan deserves its No. 8 ranking, the Wolverines need to show they can focus against the weak as well as the strong. They may have beaten Colorado, but if the Wolverines are to be champions, they must romp teams that don't match up with them. MICHIGAN RUSHING OFFENSE VS. BOSTON COLLEGE RUSH- ING DEFENSE: The Eagles aren't bad against the run. They limited their opponents to an average of 177 yards rushing in their first two games. But their opponents were Hawaii and Virginia Tech. Most defenses could do the Hula, lasso Hawaii's running backs with a flowery lei, and still stop the Rainbows. And the Hokies, while less of a mirage than the Rainbows, aren't that tough. A good defense would just switch from the Hula to the Hokey Pokey and everything would be fine. Well, the Eagles can't dance. Michigan's backs should shimmy and shake their way through the Boston College line and pick up some groovy yardage. Don't be surprised if Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach and cornerback Charles Woodson make cameo appearances in this bad ballet, either. ADVANTAGE: MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. BOSTON COLLEGE PASSING DEFENSE: Tai Streets is lovin' this. Tyrone Butterfield, Russell Shaw, Jerame Tuman and Mark Campbell are too. And Dreisbach ... well, he's proba- bly worried about getting too tired. Boston College is pretty bad against the pass. The Eagles have given up an average of 185 yards in the air so far this season. Dreisbach's average of 117 yards passing should jump dramatically tomorrow, and this could very well be a breakthrough game for Michigan's receivers. See MATCHUPS, Page 11 By Ryan White Daily Sports Writer Boston College coach Dan Henning should be used to poor starts. After all, two of his previous coaching jobs were with the Detroit Lions and the Atlanta Falcons. However, after the Eagles were dropped by Virginia Tech, 45-7, at home last weekend, Henning wasn't a jovial guy - especially with the Boston media beginning to question if this was going to be a down year for the Eagles. "That's their job to speculate," Henning said. "They're trying to sell newspapers." But does Henning feel it's a down year in Chestnut Hill? "I don't comment on that," he said. Whether Henning is willing to talk about it or not, things certainly don't seem to be looking up for Boston College. The Eagles barely got by Hawaii in their season opener and followed up an off week with last weekend's whipping by the Hokies. Now Boston College (0-1 Big East, 1- 1 overall) has to limp into Michigan Stadium at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow and face the Wolverines (1-0 Big Ten, 2-0 over- all). And while Henning isn't saying that his team doesn't have a chance, he's not °very optimistic. "(The Wolverines) are better than we are, plain and simple," he said. "If they play at their top level, we can't beat them." Henning's most unexpected problem this season has been at quarterback. Last season's starter, Mark Hartsell, was expected to be a strength for the Eagles this year. He was also expected to still be on the team. Hartsell had a change of heart, how- ever, and after the Eagles finished spring drills, he decided to give the NFL a try, relinquishing his final year of eligibility. "At the immediate time he decided to give the pros a chance, I was surprised," Henning said. "After that, I wasn't." Of course, Henning could have ques- tioned the intelligence of Hartsell leav- Eagles quick facts . The Eagles' offense has put points on the board on four of the six occa- sions that they have been inside the opponent's 20-yard line so far this season. * In 155 offensive plays (78 pass- ing, 77 rushing) Boston College has managed only one gain of 20 yards. Saturday's game between the Eagles and the Wolverines will mark the last of a four game set which commenced in 1991. The Hasselbeck brothers, junior Matt and true freshman Tim, both quarterbacts, are sonts of Dn Hasselbeck,kar All-Pr tight end for the New England Patriots. * Boston College's redshirt fresh- man placeicker, John Matich, was named Big East Special Teams Player of the Week for his three field goals against Hawaii Aug. 31, the last of which was a 42-yard game- winner as time expired. ing school to sign as a free agent with the Washington Redskins, a team he was cut from. But instead Henning had to find a signal-caller for this season. Sophomore Scott Mutryn started against the Rainbows but was replaced midway through by junior Matt Hasselbeck, who started last Saturday's game as well. In his two games, Hasselbeck has, completed just over 60 percent of his passes for 262 yards, but he led the, Boston College offense to only seven points against Virginia Tech. The biggest problem may be on the. defensive side of the ball, where the Eagles were barely able to stop Hawaii and didn't come close to slowing the Hokies. "If you can't play defense in the I-A* college level or the professional level, it doesn't matter what you do on the other side of the ball," Henning said. Linebacker Brian Maye leads Boston College with 30 tackles, but the Eagle.s are giving up a 177 yards a game on the ground, 185 through the air. Things aren't all bad for Henning, however. The Eagles brought in a talent- ed group of freshmen, and you'd think it would be easy to chalk up this season a rebuilding year. Easy for everyone but Henning, that is. "I don't consider this year or any other year at Boston College to be a transition year," he said, "because seniors don't want to hear that. "We're not into transition, we're here to do the best we can." MICHIGAN UPDATE: Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said yesterday that he doesn't. expect tailback Chris Howard or defe' sive end Glenn Steele to play tomorro against Boston College. Howard did not practice this week due to a rib injury suffered in the Wolverines' 20-13 victory over Colorado last weekend. As for Steele, it's the same old story. A physical game on a tough astroturf sur- face aggravated his back. While neither player is expected to play, both should be in uniform again the Eagles ~S}h die Today Women's soccer vs. California, Michigan Soccer Field, 4 p.m. Volleyball vs. Notre Dame, Cliff Keen Arena, 7 p.m. Women's golf at Lady Northern, East Lansing, all day ' Women's tennis at William & Mary Invitational, Williamsburg, Va, all day Men's tennis at Tom Fallon Invitational, South Bend, Ind., all day Saturday Volleyball vs. Eastern Michigan, Cliff Keen Arena, 7 p.m. Women's golf at Lady Northern, East Lansing, all day Women's tennis at William & Mary* Invitational, Williamsburg, Va., all day Men's tennis at Torn Fallon Invitationat, South Bend, Ind., all day Football vs. Boston College, Michigan Stadium, 3:30 p.m. Field Hockey vs. Ball State, Ocker Field, 10 a.m. U El 1 The University of Michigan School of Music Monday, September 23 Faculty and Guest Recital Contrasts-Music for Flute and Harp 4 STA Travel NOW OFFERS s t u d e nt discounts can domestic I 11