12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 5, 1998 4 EN IORS Aotlnued from Page VA Johnson and Bunting are the utility- women, and while they haven't quali- d for NCAAs yet, they're no slouch- es themselves. While not NCAA record-holders, both Johnson and unting are consistent point-scorers and are integral to Michigan's dual .meet success. Johnson is an eight-time All- American and a six-time Big Ten champion. She is versatile in the meets, swimming the sprint-oriented freestyles, the butterfly and the indi- idual medley. She is also well-round- d outside the pool, participating in community serivce projects. Kim has done so many things in so ,many areas,' Richardson said. "She is the Big Ten champion in the 200 IM and a great leader in and out of the pool." Bunting, too, is known for her lead- ership qualities and energetic approach to swimming. While her energy has led her to overtrain in pre- vious years, Bunting has relaxed this year and is producing her best season ever. "Karin had a great first semester freshman year, but has had to deal with overtraining and containing her high energy levels," Richardson said. "She is a versatile performer and has had her best year ever this year." in addition to Johnson, Hale and Fraumann were appointed captains by their teammates. While Hale and Fraumann won't qualify for the Olympic team with their times, their leadership qualities make them irre- placeable for Richardson. "Kerri has been a hard worker and contributor at most distance events," Richardson said. "She's had a tough time because she has had to go it alone due to the lack of distance swimmers we have. "Ellen is probably a better land ath- lete than swimmer, but she is a great person and contributes to the team just with her personality." As with any other team, the Wolverines boast of a number of swimmers who have overcome injury to compete. In Gustin, Butzlaff and Breaux, Michigan has three swimmers who have completely recovered from injuries. Gustin, the conference record-hold- er in the 100 and 200 breaststroke, was redshirted last year after undergoing surgery on her shoulder. Her recovery has been complete, as she has re- emerged as Michigan's leading breast- stroker. "Rachel is very versatile," Richardson said. "Not only is she a good breaststroker, she has also been accepted to medical school. She is the prototype of the high-achieving stu- dent athlete." Breaux and Butzlaff started out their Michigan careers with a bang, but foot and shoulder injuries ( for Breaux) and knee surgery (for Butzlaff) bungled their careers. "Alegra had a great freshman year but has had to overcome a lot of injuries and adversity," Richardson said. "I'm interested to see how she does at Big Tens this year when she's healthy. "Lisa broke out sophomore year, but she has always been a thrill-seeker," Richardson said. "She went body-surf- ing during a training trip in Hawaii and injured her knee." Kaltenbach and Devereux were examples of the damage injuries can do. Both highly regarded swimmers out of high school, Kaltenbach saw a mysterious virus force her into a sec- ondary role and shoulder surgery forced Devereux to quit swimming. Now Devereux is an undergraduate assistant. "I really respect Kara because she has hung in there, although she isn't swimming at the level she used to," Richardson said. "Gabrielle has worked the deck the past couple years, and she brings a positive effect and an air of class to the team." The impact of this season's senior class cannot be understated. The seniors hope to use tomorrow night's meet with the Buckeyes help create the loudest statement of all --another Big Ten championship. O'Neill finally settlesi him e inWnyCt WI LDCATS Continued from Page 9A ever did." Byrdsong, who came to Northwestern the same season Eschmeyer did - 1993-94 - ran a more laid-back pro- gram and the program suffered accord- ingly. After receiving an NIT bid in Byrdsong's first season despite a 5-13 conference record, the bottom fell out - literally. The Wildcats returned to the Big Ten cellar, finishing last with only five con- ference victories in the past three sea- sons combined. The Northwestern tradition is hardly worth mentioning. Coming to a school that has won fewer than 40 percent of its total games, O'Neill has little to build on. But his plans include attending to the aspects of the job his predecessor ignored. "The bottom line is, you need play- ers," O'Neill said. "You've got to get four solid years of recruiting. The first thing I'm going to do is (actually) go out." Recruting "is something you've got to work at," O'Neill says. The active, fireball of a coach has a significant challenge ahead of him - and his captain, who has been around long enough to experience three coach- es, likes what he sees. "It's tough getting people to believe when they've been beaten so long," Eschmeyer said. "He never sits back and never sits down. He's going to be involved in everything. He also lets you know where you stand." While O'Neill can pace the sidelines all game long, his fate rests Eschmeyer's oversized hands. Ant which despite the center's enormous tal- ent, Northwestern's depth has become a troubling issue. The prospect of facing Robert Traylor and Maceo Baston tonight doesn't fig- ure to lighten the load. "It's great to play against great play- ers," Eschmeyer said. "The problem I've been seeing of late, against teams like Purdue that get a one-on-one matchup I'll guard Brad (Miller) and three gu, from their team will guard me. "That's the way it's kind of gone. I hope it can be a one-on-one matchup, but if it is, I'd be kind of surprised." Eschmeyer, who leads the Big T11 with 21.9 points and 11.4 rebounds per game, is the first - and often only , option for the Wildcats. The double teams are "happening now because other teams play off som other players,"he said. "I've seen doub and triple teams all year. You learn to read them and deal with them. For now, that's just the way it goes." Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe isn't planning any gimmicks tonight. "We'll play our normal defense," he said. "We double-team out of our normal defense. "But we'll be aware of where he is." WARREN ZINN/Daily Robert Traylor and the rest of the Michigan basketball team welcome Kevin O'Neill's struggling Northwestern squad into Crisler Arena tonight. The Wildcats, led by center Evan Eschmeyer, have just one conference win on the season. With Olympics rapidly approaching, drugs begin to overshadow athletes in Nagano Women's swimming and diving schedule Feb. 6 Feb. 13-15 Feb. 19-21 Feb. 27-28 March 12-14 March 20-22 April 1-5 at Ohio State Michigan Open Big Ten Championship Last Chance Invitational NCAA Diving Zone Meets NCAA National Championship, U.S. National Championship Columbus Ann Arbor Bloomington Ann Arbor Oxford, Ohio Minneapolis Minneapolis home meets inBOLD NAGANO, Japan (AP) -- Despite widespread warnings, the chief Olympic drug tester said today he expects some hockey players to be banned from the Winter Games for using Sudafed, an over-the-counter cold medication. "Sudafed is not an accepted substance," said Dr. Makoto Ueki, director of the International Olympic Committee drug testing laboratory. "It is prohibited, even for colds. It cannot be used." Ueki said he expects the medication to show up in testing of some NHL players in the Olympics. Sports Illustrated reported last week that 20 percent of NIHIL players routinely use the medica- tion to increase their energy. Sudafed contains pseudoephedrine, which in large enough amounts acts as a stimulant. It is banned by the IOC but not by the NHL. "I think the Sudafed issue will be a problem for this tournament," Ueki said as he guided journal- ists through the testing laboratory. "This is not new. It has been banned previously." Previously, only a few NHL players have played in the Olympics, mostly fringe players who were not involved in that season's league competition. This is the first year the NHIL is taking a break so its stars can compete on their national Olympic Showdown in A Chapel Hill: A 'WHAT:No1 Duke at No. 2 North Carolina WHERE: The Dean Dome c la, WHEN: 9 p.m. AT STAKE: First place in the ACC, The Chronicl and likely a No. 1 ranking in the DURHAI national polls. their week teams. Sudafed has never been a problem in other Olympic hockey tournaments. "All IOC facilities are able to test for it," Ueki said. "I don't know if they did. We will. Athletes who use it will be disqualified." It could be more serious than that. If a player tests positive in his medal round, his team would be disqualified. The NHIL says its routine drug tests have not turned up any use of the substance beyond the recommended dosage for treatment of colds and flu. But even that amount would be enough to dis- qualify a player in the Olympics. "I am shocked and dismayed at the irresponsi- ble statement by the IOC chief Olympic drug tester," said Dr. Dave Lewis, the joint director of the N HL-NHL Players Association substance abuse and behavioral health program. "We have developed a program of education and testing for our players, working closely with the IOC medical director, Dr. Patrick Schamasch, based on extensive testing, using the best labora- tories, following Olympic standards," said Lewis, who works at Anacapa Hospital in Port Hueneme, Calif. "I have no concerns about NHL athletes participating in the games in Nagano." Ueki, a member of the Japanese Olympic Committee's doping control commission, has been involved in drug testing for 15 years but is working at the Olympics for the first time. His previous international athletic experience came at the 1994 Asian Games, where I1 athletes were disqualified for drugs. The Nagano laboratory created for these gaies will conduct 550 tests during the Olympics, run- ning samples for every medalist and for one other athlete in each event. For hockey, two players from each team will be tested after each game. Results will be available within 24 hours. Ueki said the 10C drug lab is equipped wi* new, more sensitive instruments that will make detection of banned substances easier. He said some medications will be allowed. "All medicines that athletes take should be reported," he said. "If an athlete has a cold and takes antibiotics to reduce a fever, that would be admitted. If they choose carefully the medicine they take, then it should be OK. "No medicine that is a stimulant would be allowed." And that includes Sudafed. ;C coaches sound off about sh of titans in Chapel Hill e M, N.C. (U-WIRE) - At ly teleconference Tuesday, STUDY #1 Men and Women (ages 18-65) Who Have: No difficulty in sleeping LIKE NORTH CAMPUS? YOU'LL LOVE WILLOWTREE! 1 and 2 bedrooms Plenty of Free parking Now leasing for Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall WILLOWTREE APARTMENTS 769-1313 Look for us at the U-M Housing Fair! EHO the men's basketball coaches from around the Atlantic Coast Conference had a chance to reflect and offer their thoughts on this gigantic battle between the nation's top two squads. Coach Gary Williams' Maryland team, currently the only ACC team with a winning conference record other than Duke or Carolina, is the only squad in the country to defeat the Tar Heels this season. Since the Terrapins have also lost twice to Duke by large margins, some might think that this would translate into a Duke victory. But Williams wasn't so sure. "The thing is, with our style of play, we like to get up and down, and I think Duke plays the same game," Williams said. "They're the best in the country at the transition game. They try to do the same things, and they were better at it than us. "With Carolina's defense, they do a great job of staying in front of you. It'll be interesting to see if Duke can get those same open shots." Clemson head coach Rick Barnes spoke of the way the Blue Devils can wear down an opponent. "Duke is one of the hardest teams, if not the hardest, in the league to try to run an offense against," Barnes said. "They keep coming in waves. It's not like when they go from Steve Wojciechowski to Will Avery that there's a big drop right there. They just bring more energy and keep coming." In spite of his praise of Duke, Barnes was unclear as to which team would have the advantage Thursday night. "You're talking two great basketball teams, two teams with abilities to score everywhere on the court," Barnes said. "When you play (Duke and North Carolina), you know you've got to defend all five positions." Both Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski and North Carolina coach Bill Guthridge acknowledged the intensity of the rivalry between the two schools while eagerly stressing that this is just one game in the middle of a long sea- son. "I think games of this magnitude are terrific," Krzyzewski said. "It's bigger than any one player, team or coach. It's so good for college basketball and our conference that we have (the rivalry) and I think it's needed more and more." But, Krzyzewski cautioned, "I know that there are games we play after this game." Guthridge voiced a similar opinion. "It's a great rivalry and I think rival- ries help add a lot of fun to the game of college basketball," said the first-year coach, who has guided his team to a 22-1 overall record. "These are f games. There aren't many games your college career, and you should enjoy them. This is one of those games." Beyond the tension that this mid week matchup has caused, the coaches were also looking at the parity that exists among the other seven teams in the ACC. Currently all seven have between four and seven losses in the conference, and every team seers capable of beating every other team on any given night. Both Clemson, a preseason top-10 pick, and Wake Forest, a team expected by many to fizzle with the loss of Tim Duncan, have achieved three confer- ence wins this season. "It's hard to believe the quality of play in our league," Krzyzewski said."l hope that by the end of the conference season teams aren't hurt by the fact th we've battled each other." Florida State's Steve Robinson agreed. "Certainly there are two teams out in front," the Seminole coach said. "It's obvious that they've done the best job from the start until now. Everyone else seems to be one or two games apart and really clumped together." Barnes, whose Tigers have under- achieved this year, said he still expec the ACC to make a strong showi come NCAA Tournament time. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL SLEEP STUDY #2 CENTER (New CenterArea) Men and Women Get Your Bike Ready For The Season!!! 7)- V ' Itr M P : Fu