10- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 9, 1997 'M' grapplers face stiff competition Men tankers stop. in Cal after tour By Jordan Field Daily Sports Writer The Michigan wrestling team has a big weekend ahead of itself. And everyone is ready for battle. The 10th-ranked Wolverines (2-0) host Central Michigan on Saturday and No. 4 Penn State on Sunday. "This is a situation where we will be facing extremely tough competi- tion all weekend," Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. "Central has a very good young team, and Penn State is loaded again this year. I'm expecting hard fought matches both days."' This week- end's matches are important This not only from a team per- chance. . spective, but from an indi- be a clam. vidual stand- point for some of the Wolverines as well. Junior co-captain Jeff Catrabone (167 pounds) will face Penn State's unbeaten Glenn Pritzlaff, the only wrestler ever to beat Catrabone in dual meet competition. On Sunday, Catrabone will look for a chance to redeem himself. "This is my chance," Catrabone said. "I've worked so hard this week thinking about that loss, and I'm expecting a great fight with him. It should be a classic." Catrabone credited assistant coach Joe McFarland for pushing him this week to get ready for the weekend's matches. But Catrabone isn't the only , r, Wolverine practicing hard this week. "We all have really picked up the intensity this week," Bahr said. "After the break, everyone was a lit- tle out of shape, but now I'd say we've reached mid-season form. We've practiced every morning this week and have had good afternoon practices, too." Last season, the Wolverines lost to the Nittany Lions, 22-14. For the first time this year, the Wolverines will have the services of redshirt freshman Teya Hill (142), who had been sidelined with knee problems. "Hill is a fierce competitor and is immensely talented," Bahr said. "He hasn't it should been on the mat for a ricms year, at least com- - Jeff Catrabone petitively, Michigan wrestler but he should be able to help us at 142." Sophomore Corey Grant (134), who also suffered a knee injury, will return to the lineup as well. With Grant and Hill healthy, Bahr was forced to shuffle the lineup for this weekend. They will start at 134 and 142 pounds, respectively. Freshman Mat Warner will start at 126 pounds, filling in for freshman Damion Logan who is out for the season with a shoulder =-iury. Logan, who is 15-4, hurt his left shoulder in a match at the Las Vegas Open in December. "I guess I hurt it pretty bad. It By B.J. Luria- Daily Sports Writer While most Michigan students were relaxing during the winter break, the No. 4 Michigan men's swimming and diving team was hardly on vacation, despite its sunny Australian destina- tion. The Wolverines spent 2 1/2 weeks training in Perth and also visited the site of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. On its way home from the other side of the world, the Wolverines will stop in California, where they will face No. 2 Stanford tomorrow and No. 7 Cal- Berkeley on Saturday. Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek is excited for the meets. "Stanford is the No. 2 team in the country," Urbanchek said. "So we went against the No. 1 team (Texas), and now we have a lot of confidence going into No. 2 on the way back from the Christmas trip." The Wolverines (2-0) last saw action Nov. 23 when they beat Texas, 129- 114. In defeating the defending national champions, Michigan was aided by notable performances from senior cap- tain John Piersma, junior Owen von Richter and freshman Mike McWha. The Wolverines will need strong performances out of all their swim- mers if they hope to knock off their two highly-ranked opponents. Michigan will miss Jason Lancaster, a strong short-distance swimmer, who will miss, the entire season with a shoulder injury. "We'll miss Jason Lancaster, unfor- tunately," Urbanchek said. "He's got two years left though, so I'm glad that he's (coming) back and hopefully that he recovers." Stanford has a slight edge in t1 series, 5-4, and is the only active team with a winning record against Michigan. The two squads last met in 1995, with the Cardinal prevailing, 150-146. It was the Wolverines' only loss before they went on to win the national championship. The Wolverines have lost four in a row to Stanford, their last win coming in 1991. The Wolverines have faired slightj better in their series against Cal, h ing won all five meetings betweer2the two teams, in a series dating back to 1989. Michigan triumphed last year, 131-110. After a successful first semester, Michigan will try to gain momentum in the two crucial meets over the week- end. The season is short, leaving the Wolverines little time to prepare for the Big Ten championships at the e of February. The Wolverines will try to regain the Big Ten crown they lost in 1996 for the first time in 10 years. The Wolverines may have had something else on their minds at the time - the Olympics. This year, there are no excuses. The team should arrive in California ready to go after the grueling train- ing camp. The Wolverines had a chance to s* the location of the next Olympics. ' In this weekend's meets at Stanford and Cal, they will be able to see if they've got what it takes to make it. back in 2000. KRISTEN SCHAEFFER/Daily Bill Lacure and the Michigan wrestling team will face tough competition coming up this weekend. On Saturday, the Wolverines will wrestle at Central Michigan and No. 4 Penn State at home Sunday. Freshman Teya Hill (142) and sophomore Corey Grant (134) will be rejoining the team after suffering injuries. won't stay in," Logan said. "Everything I worked so hard for this year is down the tubes. But I'll be back next year, better than ever." Even with Logan, ranked 12th by Amateur Wrestling News, out of the lineup, the Wolverines are confident heading into the weekend. "We are in better physical and mental shape than we were last weekend," Bahr said. "I think at this point we're ready to go against anyone on our sched- ule." 'M' women's gymnasts brush away cobwebs, By Jacob Wheeler Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's gymnastics team has not competed for more than a month, but that doesn't faze coach Bev Plocki. "No team is at their very best right now, but we usually come out very strong after break," Plocki said. Plocki will reveal her starting six on each apparatus Saturday, when the Wolverines travel to Morgantown, W. Va., for their first meet of the regular season. This weekend, the Wolverines will face West Virginia and Towson State. "They are very respectable teams," Plocki said. "I don't know who they've brought in this year, but they have vied for spots at nationals in the past." The Wolverines, No. 5 in the pre- season polls, haven't had any trouble with the Mountaineers in recent years, but Plocki isn't downplaying the challenge. "It's early enough in the season that anything can happen," she said. But the Wolverines should be over- loaded with talent all year if the intrasquad meet Dec. 7 was an accurate preview of the regular season. Freshman sensation Sarah Cain and sophomore Lisa Simes recorded teamhigh scores in the all-around and the balance beam, which the Wolverines struggle in particularly as a whole. "(Cain and Simes) were no flukes," Plocki said. "They showed what kind of input they're going to have as spec- tacular athletes." The underclassmen have all but solid- ified spots in the starting six, on every apparatus, along with sophomores Beth Amelkovich and Nikki Peters. Peters excelled in'the uneven bars before the break but has yet to equal last year's scores on the other apparatuses. "The bars is only one of Nikki's high points," Plocki said. Amelkovich has recovered from an injury that limited her to one event in the intrasquad. "Beth is going at full tilt," Plocki said. "She hasn't complained about her feet at all." Still, last year's injury bug contin- ues to hurt Michigan. Captain Andrea MacDonald's stress fracture appears to have healed, but Plocki will keep her out of the lineup the first couple of weeks. Junior Heather Kabnick strained her hamstring on Monday, which might hinder Michigan's performance this weekend. "It's probably not that serious," Plocki said. "But her spot in the line- up this weekend is questionable." Kabnick is Michigan's most suc- cessful returner from last year. She excelled on the vault and the floor exercise at the intrasquad meet. "We have depth, and every person is equally important," Plocki said. "No one or two will make this team successful or unsuccessful.' Michigan won't open the season at Cliff Keen Arena like last year, and that may present a challenge to the squad's four freshmen. But Plocki is happy with the tougher schedule. "It's a good thing for us to start 00 on the road because, unlike last year, we'll appreciate that it's a lot harder away from home," she said. Athletes sue NCAA over SATs PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Hundreds of young black athletes have suffered because the NCAA uses SAT scores to decide who can play in college sports, a legal group said yesterday as it sued to block the practice. Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a Washington, D.C.-based organization, asked the U.S. District Court to issue an injunction against the NCAA and to rule it in violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The NCAA defended the standards as a means to protect athletes. It also released a report showing that the num- ber of black athletes enrolling in Division I schools was increasing. NCAA chief operating officer Dan Boggan said the lawsuit "is advocating a return to the bad old days when stu- dent-athletes could spend four years ... in athletics and (leave) not only with no diploma but without any real education at all.' The standards, once known Proposition 48 but restructured aW now known as Proposition 16, set a sliding scale of SAT and grade point standards for college freshmen athletes on scholarships. For years, black coaches and edu- cators, along with many whites, have maintained that standardized test scores are racially and culturally dis- criminatory and do not accuratel predict a person's ability to do c4' lege work. Two 1996 graduates of Philadelphia's Simon Gratz High School are the offi- cial plaintiffs: Tai Kwan Cureton, a freshman at Wheaton College, and Leatrice Shaw, now at the Miami (Fla.). Cureton was 27th in his class of 305, Shaw was fifth.-Both were recruited for track teams at numerous NCAA Division I schools, but the, overtures stopped after they received low SAT scores, according to Arthur Bryantb spokesman for TLPJ. "The NCAA emphasis is wrong, and it is hurting hundreds of athletes like myself," Cureton said. "I decided to sue the NCAA because I don't want others to go through what I've been through." At Wheaton, an NCAA Division III school that doesn't give athletic schol- arships, Cureton is competing. sprints and the long jump. But he said the rule robbed him of the opportunity to compete against the country's best college track ath- letes. Shaw is sitting out her freshman year at Miami and should be able to