14A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 30, 1997 Blue tankers battle rising Eastern and Notre Dame By Afshin Mohamadi Daily Sports Writer Jim Richardson has been in his opponents' shoes before. As the Michigan women's swim- ming coach prepares his team for a home meet with Eastern Michigan and Notre Dame on Saturday, he can sym- pathize with Eastern coach Scott Teeters and Notre Dame coach Bailey Weathers. "(They are) rebuilding," Richardson said. "(They are) in a similar situation I was in when I first came here (three years ago)." Although the fifth-ranked Wolverines are favored Saturday, Richardson said that their opponents will be more formidable in the future. "He's doing a wonderful job of rebuilding," Richardson said of Weathers, who is in his second year in South Bend. "He's one of those coach- es who's really paid his dues, coaching under (some of the best) coaches in the history of swimming." Richardson said that Teeters, who just began his tenure at Eastern this year, is also starting to build a success- ful program. "He's finding out who wants to do it his way," Richardson said. - For the Wolverines, the meet against two rebuilding programs will be a well- needed break from a grueling last few weeks in which they have lost three straight dual meets to ranked oppo- nents Stanford, California and Georgia. Nevertheless, Richardson expects his team to face some competition Saturday. "On paper, we have more fast swim- mers than them," he said. "But we should be pushed a little." The Wolverines have been worked hard recently. After having to swim two tough meets at the end of an exhausting training trip in Coronado, Calif., they have had normal practice back in Ann Arbor, as well as a meet against No. 4 Georgia. The Wolverines' hard work will con- tinue today with a tough workout, fol- lowed by a normal workout tomorrow and the meet Saturday. Richardson does not mind making his swimmers practice so hard now because the regular-season meets real- ly have little bearing on the post-sea- son. "We don't use meets, really, to show- case anything," he said. "They're a p of our training. "We don't go into meets with a full tank. We basically see how well we can do running on fumes. I really like the things I'm seeing in workouts right now." As much as the Wolverines' coach is impressed with his team's practice ses- sions, he does not expect it to dramati- cally improve on its meet last weekend. "Against Georgia, we looked bets (than we did in California)," he sai.' "However, I don't expect-our times (on Saturday) to be any faster than then." Unfortunately for Teeters and Weathers, they aren't in a position to not worry about improving each and every regular-season meet, like Richardson. Maybe, however, when they watch Richardson and the Wolverines, they are looking into the future, just as w Richardson watches them and their rebuilding teams, he's looking into the FILE PHOTO/Daily Michigan's two-time All-American junior Karin Bunting and the rest of the women's swim team will host Notre Dame and Eastern Michigan on Saturday. The fifth-ranked Wolverines are heavily favored over the Irish and the Eagles. While the Wolverines are among the country's elite programs, their opponents are both going through rebuilding processes. The meet should be a relief for the Wolverines, who have dropped their past three dual meets to ranked opponents. Duke holds off North Carolina DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Trajan Langdon scored a career-high 28 points and his seventh 3-pointer with 41 seconds left, last night, sealed No. 12 Duke's 79-70 victory over No. 19 North Carglina, snapping a seven- game skid against its arch rival. The Blue Devils (5-3 Atlantic Coast Conference, 16-5) beat the Tar Heels (3-5, 12-6) for the first time since 1993 in a game that featured 17 lead changes and seven ties. Neither team led by more than seven points in the 197th meeting of the storied rivalry. Landgon's previous high was 25 points this season against Clemson. Jeff Capel was also big down the stretch for Duke, scoring 19 points and making several big defensive plays. Serge Zwikker led the Tar Heels with 14 points, while ACC scoring leader Antawn Jamison was held to a season-low 10 points. Duke fell behind 54-48 with 12:19 left as floor leader Steve Wojciechowski picked up his fourth foul and went to the bench. But the Blue Devils rallied with their point guard sidelined for more than four minutes, regaining the lead at 56-54. Near the end of Duke's run, Jamison picked up two offensive fouls 18 sec- onds apart and also had to go to the bench for a brief time with four fouls, setting the stage for a frenzied final six minutes. The lead changed hands five times on successive possessions before Capel's driving layup with 3:54 left gave Duke the lead for good at 67-66. Less than a half a minute later, Capel blocked a 3-point attempt by Ademola Okulaja at the top of the key and received an outlet pass from Greg Newton for another layup as Duke went up by three. But North Carolina was not dead yet. The Tar Heels closed to 72-70 on a 12-foot jumper by freshman Ed Cota with 1:33 remaining. After a jump ball possession that went to Duke and a timeout, Langdon nailed his career- best seventh 3-pointer, and the Blue Devils sealed it in the final seconds from the foul line. The Tar Heels were rattled early, turning the ball over on their first five possessions as Duke grabbed a seven- point lead with its small lineup. Newton, Duke's leading scorer who had started all 20 games this season and 51 in his career, didn't start the game, which began as a chess match of Duke's quickness against North Carolina's tall front line. After a quick start, Duke hit a cold spell against the zone, going 5:56 without a point. Five different North Carolina play- ers scored during a 13-3 run as the Tar Heels grabbed a 24-21 lead 8:18 before halftime. The Blue Devils missed eight shots and turned the ball over five times during their scoring drought. From that point the score was tied four more times before Duke took a 33-31 halftime lead. Both teams had trouble holding onto the ball in the opening 20 min- utes as there were a combined 24 turnovers committed by 14 different players. - w U -