14 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 15, 1997 CHASE Continued from Page 11 and sand doubles volleyball and some more running, left her in the best playing shape of her life, After her workout, Chase would take a shower and head to the local video store, where she worked. But four months of hard work is nothing compared to a month of inac- tivity. "It was disappointing to lose that preparation," Chase said. Chase has seen very little action since returning from her injury. She made a cameo appearance on Oct. I against Northwestern, where she came in for one play to block for Linnea Mendoza and didn't touch the ball. Then she watched from the side- line as 2,000-plus fans cheered the Wolverines past then-No. 16 Michigan State on Oct. 3. "It's pretty hard to sit on the side- line and watch your team," Chase said, "but it's a lot easier when their playing well. Even when you're sit- ting on the sidelines, you're partici- pating with the team." What's been more difficult for Chase has been the team's road trips. Her injury was serious enough that to prevent her from travelling with the team. She tried to occupy her time, finally attending a football game and doing simple drills the team doesn't do in practice. But one thing was always in the back of her mind. "I'd look at my watch and think, 'God, they're playing now,," Chase said. "I couldn't do anything. It's much more difficult to not be there." Chase returned to the lineup last Friday against No. 10 Wisconsin, only to play miserably. She played in one game, recorded one kill and mustered an attack percentage of only minus- .600 as the Badgers swept the Wolverines. But Saturday, the real Karen Chase showed up. The junior exploded, recording 14 kills with only two errors to lead the Wolverines past No. 25 Illinois. Her .480 attack percentage was a full point higher than it was the previous day. Chase has not lost her starting job flat-out but is rather in a platoon role. While Giovanazzi has committed to starting Jane Stevens and Sarah Behnke on Friday against No. 1 Penn State, Chase will see plenty of playing time and could start at any time this season. "You have to prepare to start every time," Chase said. "It would be really hard emotionally to not prepare that way. "I'm not disappointed (that I'm not starting), just because I can see the depth on this team. I really want to see us doing as well as we can, and the passing stability the other outside hitters can give is incredible. I can't give that as much." While Chase doesn't have the solid passing of Stevens and Behnke, she is more explosive than the other two and provides a more potent attack. "If Karen had been healthy, she could have been first-team All-Big Ten this year," Giovanazzi said. "She's that good." B+ Schroders Cordially Invites the Class of 1998 to a Presentation and Reception for a discussion of FULL-TIME OPPORTUNITIES in CORPORATE FINANCE Thursday, October 16, 1997 4:30 p.m. The Business School - Room B1205 Interviews: Corporate Finance: Wednesday, January 14, 1998 Marli~ns get 1st Series bid ATLANTA (AP) - Mission accomplished. The Florida Marlins, who spenti nearly $100 million last winter with the expressed goal of shucking their label as expansion losers and buying a team to beat the Atlanta Braves, earned their way into the World Series last night. The wild-card Marlins, not even in existence when the Braves began their record run of playoff appear- ances in 1991, defeated Atlanta, 7-4 behind Kevin Brown's complet' game and Bobby Bonilla's three RBI to win the NL championship series, 4-2. The victory over the two-time NL champions made the five-year-old Marlins the fastest expansion team to reach the World Series, surpassing the eight years the New York Mets needed to get there in 1969, and made them baseball's first wild-card club tt make it. Game 1 will be Saturday night in Miami against either Cleveland or Baltimore. It will mean the first trip to the World Series in 34 pro seasons for manager Jim Leyland, whose emotional ride may make him this October's version of Joe Torre. Leyland's teams in Pittsburgh lost Game 7 of the NLCS to the Braves in 1991 and 1992, but there was no need to worry this time because o Bonilla's hitting and Brown's second win of the series. The Marlins' win came five years ago to the day that Braves rallied with three runs in the ninth inning to stun Leyland and his Pirates on Francisco Cabrera's single in Game 7. USCHO College Hockey Poll Team 1. North Dakota (30) 2. Michigan State 3. Colorado College 4. Boston University 5. Michigan' 6. New Hampshire 7. Minnesota 8. Maine 9. Miami (Ohio) 10. RPI PLEASE DIRECT ALL INQUIRIES TO: Points Prev. 300 1 263 3 191 5 176 2 147 6 125 4 113 7 87 8 50 109 Basil A. Bliss, Senior Vice President Phone: 212-492-6290 Fax: 212-492-7188 Schroder & Co. Inc. 787 Seventh Avenue, Sixth Floor. New York, New York 10019 1 .1 [(First-place votes in parentheses) ;U ,1 V 1