12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 6, 1997 AROUND THE HI5TiN CONFERENCE o Yes, the rest of the Big Ten plays this weekend, too By Chris Duprey Daily Sports Writer Football fans all over the Big Ten will be glued to their TVs for the marquee matchup of the week, No. 4 Michigan at No. 3 Penn State. But that's not to say they won't steal a few glances at the sports ticker on the bottom of the televi- sion screen. With five teams having one loss or fewer, the race for a Pasadena pilgrimage is still up for grabs. The winner of the Michigan-Penn State contest will have the inroad to the Rose Bowl, but by no means will it have the championship locked up. Who will escape this week's Big Ten obstacles unscathed? No. 7 Ohio State at Minnesota: First-year Minnesota coach Glen Mason has done a fine job of gaining the Golden Gophers' respect but hasn't exceeded former coach Jim Wacker in the victory column. Despite near misses against national powerhouse Penn State and Wisconsin, Mason has no Big Ten victories to show for his efforts. The Golden Gophers return home to the library-esque Metrodome to take on the Buckeyes, who see Minnesota as one of two obstacles in the way of the Revenge Bowl at Michigan. Minnesota quarterback Cory Sauter has been unable to adapt to Mason's bal- anced offense, a sharp contrast from the airfests that were common under Wacker. Against Michigan last week, the Golden Gophers passed only 1 1 times. Minnesota will need to stay away from the big play against Ohio State. Their offense is capable, but they will need run- . fling production from Thomas Hamner to keep the Buckeyes off balance. After sputtering in the early part of the season, Ohio State is starting to run like the well-oiled machine expected after last year's national championship near-miss. Two straight blowouts of Northwestern and Michigan State, decent teams, have fans in Columbus jumping back on the bandwagon. Ohio State will try to maintain the offensive balance against the Gophers that they have displayed all season. Running back Pepe Pearson hasn't been spectacular, but good enough to keep the Buckeyes on a roll. Ohio State has been getting solid lead- ership as well. Although Cooper official- ly uses two quarterbacks - Stanley Jackson and Joe Germaine - he seems to have made his choice in recent weeks. Germaine has been seeing the lion's share of the game snaps. Cooper likes Germaine's abilities as a drop-back pass- er and his capacity to lead the team. Fortunately for the Buckeyes, it would- n't matter if Cooper himself stepped up behind center. Ohio State 34, Minnesota 10 No. 12 Iowa at Wisconsin: The truth is starting to leak out in Madison. Wisconsin is not a very good football team. This season has been an up and down one for the Badgers. They lost their open- er at Syracuse, 34-0, and it has been a rocky road from there. Wisconsin quar- terback Mike Samuel has been inconsis- tent at best, while a young offensive line struggles to create holes for king-size running back Ron Dayne. One might not think Wisconsin is in trouble, sporting a record of 4-1 in the Big Ten, and 7-2 overall. But the Badgers have won their last ballgame this season. With Iowa starting to pick up steam again, followed by games against cur- rently undefeated Michigan and Penn State, Wisconsin may be looking at the Aloha Bowl on Christmas Day, if it's lucky enough to get a bowl bid at all. The Hawkeyes are busy wringing their hands over what could have been. Iowa opened conference play against Ohio State and Michigan, both on the road. Had the Hawkeyes salvaged one of those contests, they conceivably could have run the table and finished the conference 7-1, making prospects interesting. Instead, Iowa will try to impress bowl representa- tives by reaching the nine-win mark. The Iowa offense is alive and well. Despite off-games against Ohio State and Michigan, Tavian Banks remains a big part of the Iowa attack. The star halfback didn't gain 100 yards in either game. But Saturday will be the day that Banks breaks it open again. The Badgers suffered large graduation losses on both their offensive and defensive lines, and they have had a size disadvantage against most opponents. Iowa coach Hayden Fry will go to Banks as long as he is success- ful against Wisconsin. The Badgers have shown the ability to win games in wacky ways this season, but they don't have the firepower to give the Hawkeyes a serious fight. Iowa 38, Wisconsin 23 Michigan State at No. 23 Purdue: One of these teams started the 1997 season with all the hope in the world, and the other wasn't given a chance. Now Purdue, the quiet Cinderella of the Big Ten, has risen to a No. 23 rank in the AP poll while Michigan State has gone in the exact opposite direction. The Spartans scared many Big Ten teams with their ability to rack up points on non-conference opponents in a hurry. Michigan State scored 202 points in its first five games, and many picked the Spartans to finish high in the standings. But like all the other hot starts by the Spartans in recent history, this one died fast. Michigan State gave Northwestern its only conference victory, then proceed- ed to drop home games to Michigan and Ohio State in brutal fashion. Michigan State quarterback Todd Schultz has thrown seven interceptions in his last two starts. While Schultz is still slated to start against the Boilermakers, Michigan State coach Nick Saban has made it clear that backup Bill Burke will be ready if needed. Running back Sedrick Irvin will have to carry the load if the passing game is not moving the ball for the Spartans. Irvin does everything, and he does it well. The sophomore has been having a spec- tacular season, and he should continue his success against the Boilermakers. Purdue is coming off a disappointing loss to Iowa, its first legitimate opponent. Early this season, it looked like the Boilermakers were back to old form, blowing their opener at Toledo, 36-22. But Tiller's passing-centered offense has started to take root. Quarterback Billy Dicken has found a favorite in flanker Brian Alford, and Purdue has averaged more than 42 points per game over the last four contests as a result. Tiller has been the most successful of the four Big Ten coaching newcomers. Formerly the coach at Wyoming, Tiller has brought a WAC-style offense to West Lafayette. No one believed that a run- and-gun attack would survive in the cold weather of the Big Ten, but it has. Michigan State has very few strengths, and strong secondary play is not one of them. Look for the Boilermakers to exploit the secondary with mid-grade 20- yard passes. If Purdue has any success, Saban will start to look at NFL coaching vacancies with a little more vigor. Purdue 35, Michigan State 20 Northwestern at Illinois: Any Big Ten coach who plays Illinois this year should thank the schedule selec- tion computer for its good graces. The Illini are having a hard time with each opponent. Illinois has only scored in double dig- its three times this year, and the situation won't improve soon. Running back Robert Holcombe, the team's only note- worthy player, is a senior and will be leaving the Illini with very little talent upon which to build. FILE"PHOT There are other games in the Big Ten this weekend, besides Michigan-Penn State. All those in Champaign who pushed for former coach Lou Tepper's firing last year have quietly hidden themselves away. Tepper, popular with players, was forced to resign following yet another unsuccessful campaign. New coach Ron Turner, fresh from the NFL, is still searching for his first victo- ry with Illinois, and this may be his best opportunity to get it. Ohio State and Michigan State are waiting in the wings, licking their lips for a blowout victory. No one really expected Northwestern to dazzle the conference as in the past two years, but the Wildcats' slide to the bottom of the Big Ten is still somewhat surprising. Northwestern coach Gary Barnett started the season with two fifth- AEE'S CONEY ISLAND RESTAURANT Great Food, Great Prices Breakfast Anytime Lunch, Dinner & Daily Specials 663-6302 1952 S. INDUSTRIAL " 6 am-11 pin " Carry Out Hill St. Stimson N0 N TEXAS Continued from Page 11A try during the last 60 years. Texas, on the other hand, was, the team of the 1980s. The Longhorns finished in the top two in the country every year except '83, '85 and '86. Included in that period was a streak of four straight national championships from 1988-91. In more recent history, the Longhorns finished fourth at the 1997 cham- pionships. "Texas, Michigan and Stanford are the top three swimming programs in the country," Urbanchek said. "Texas has an excel- lent team every year." Texas was the No. I team in the country when Michigan took the meet in Canham last year, 129-114. The Longhorns will be looking for revenge in their home pool. Texas is coming off a loss to Stanford in its initial test of the season, but the Longhorns return quite possibly the top colle- giate swimmer in the nation in senior Neil Walker. Walker was named the swimmer of the meet at the 1997 NCAA championships. He set American records in the 100- yard backstroke, and an NCAA record in the 50 freestyle. Walker also swam on two relays before breaking his left hand, slamming it into the wall on a touch. "Walker's the franchise," Urbanchek said. "He could lead them to the national championship by himself." 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"She is a very unusual athlete in that she has tremendous range," Richardson said. "Right now she's our fastest dis- tance freestyler, but she will not swim distance at the end of the season." North Carolina will also pose a chal- lenge for the Wolverines. Kristin Miller brings strength and experience to the Tarheels in the distance and individual medley events, and last year's Olympic hopeful, Rochelle Fox, will be a force in the butterfly. "They are a very good in-season team," Richardson said. "They swim very fast in-season." Richardson said that although swim- ming well during the regular season is important, Michigan will focus its train- ing on the end of the season. "We know we're not going to be 100- percent at that meet, and that's okay," Richardson said. "You can lose 40 days of effective training by backing down every time you need a little extra rest to win a meet that no one is really going to care about the next year." Even if the Wolverines' focus is on the end of their season, they will still have reason to be attentive this weekend. Minneapolis will be the sight of 1998 NCAA championships this March. year quarterbacks, hoping their experi- ence would carry through a killer Big Ten lineup. The schedule has the Wildcats skipping Minnesota and Indiana this year - not the best possible draw. Adrian Autry has performed adequate- ly at running back for Northwestern, but falls short compared to the departed Darnell Autry. Many of the linemen who helped Northwestern to the Rose Bowl in 1995 and a Big Ten co-championship in 1996 have graduated, leaving gaping holes up front w Unfortunately for Illinois, someohe forgot to tell Turner that unlike in the NFL, losing all 11 games does not get you the best draft pick. Northwestern 20, Illinois 9 Men's gol wraps up season out in the sun' By Rick Harpster Daily Sports Writer After two weeks away from competi- tion, the Michigan men's golf team con- cludes its fall season this weekend when it travels to Palo Alto, Calif., for the Stanford Invitational. So far, the inexperienced Wolverines have surprised a lot of people. Michigan is coming off a second-place finish in its last tournament, the Persimmon Ridge Invitational in Louisville, Ky. This weekend's 18-team field includes six of the nation's top-25 teams, includ- ing No. I Arkansas and No. 2 Georgia Tech. The tournament should give evy- one a good idea of how fare he Wolverines have come this fall. "The field will be the strongest we face all year," Michigan coach Jim Carras said. "But we enjoy the challenge of playing with very competitive teams because it gives us a good indication of where we stand" Sophomore Mike Harris, who won his*' last two tournaments, will lead the young Michigan squad into the tournament.As the only returning letterman, Harris is the lone Wolverine to have played the par-71, 6,778-yard course. But, he thinks his teammates will be able to learn the course very quickly. "The course is not very long and is pretty wide open," Harris said. "So I think it will be easy for our newer guys to adjust." The newcomers accompanying Harris will be junior Kevin Vernick, senior Keith Hinton, freshman Mike Reabe and freshman Kevin Harris, Mike's younger brother. Vernick, Hinton and Mike Harris have participated in all four of the previous tournaments this year. Although Michigan's top three have not changed this fall, its fourth and fifth spots have been about as consisterit as a promise from Bill Clinton. Five different players have already held the two posi- tions this year. "We had a qualifier last week in the bad weather to determine who would capture the final spots for us this week- end," Carras said. "Kevin (Harris) and Mike (Reabe) earned the opportunity." Kevin Harris has played in tw& tour- naments this fall and hopes to capitalize on that experience when he travels to!' Stanford. "We've played some of these teams before;" he said. "When we're playing well, we can compete with them." One thing is for sure - the weather in Stanford will be better than the cold, wet weather that affected the Wolverines' practices l1ast week. Must present this ad for special offer. Expires: 12/18/97 4/8 a4/ ga adAn, dr4, ' W Ai an' 48/03 wl- 665-7207 g : 665-24/8 Fran Coy's Salon is a full service Salon serving Ann Arbor for 20 years. 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