The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 3, 1998 - 15A Citrus, Outback bids up in air; Buckeyes not likely for Sugar 'M' could face any of three SEC foes in one of two bowls LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - If Tennessee beats Mississippi State in the Southeastern Conference champi- onship game on Saturday, Arkansas apparently will be in the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla. The 1Ith-ranked Razorbacks (9-2) will play a Big Ten team - either Ohio State or Michigan - in the Jan. I game. The Razorbacks beat Northwestern 38-7 in 1981, the only time they have faced a Big Ten team. Ohio State (10-1) is No. 5 and defending national champion Michigan (9-3) is No. 15. If Mississippi State upsets Tennessee, the Bulldogs would go to the Sugar Bowl and Tennessee would probably bump Arkansas out of the Citrus and into the Outback on Jan. I in Tampa. In that case, Georgia - now apparently headed for the Outback - would probably replace Mississippi State in the Cotton Bowl. Ohio State is No. 5 in the Bowl Championship Series rankings, but apparently is not going to play in the four-bowl alliance. Big Ten officials are bound to be irate, but it comes down to economics. The Orange Bowl has Big East champion Syracuse and bowl officials believe the Orangemen vs. Ohio State would mean lots of empty seats. The four bowls in the alliance - Fiesta, Orange, Sugar and Rose - pay each team $12 million. Tickets are $125 per to the Orange, Sugar and Rose and $150 to the national champi- onship game in the Fiesta. An Orange Bowl with 20,000 empty seats is $2.5 million short. So, the Orange Bowl might go around Ohio State and make Florida one of two at-large teams in the BCS. Southeastern Conference Commissioner Roy Kramer said that after the I vs. 2 matchup is made, "the rest of it is a business decision." Florida, he said, could take 30,000 fans to the Orange Bowl. The Gators have not played in South Florida since 1987. Tennessee is a two-touchdown favorite over Mississippi State. If the Vols win by 14 or so, they figure to play in the Fiesta Bowl. If they win close, UCLA and Kansas State could be matched in the Fiesta. In that case, Tennessee would replace Kansas State in the Sugar Bowl against Florida State. If Kansas State gets to the Fiesta against Tennessee, then Ohio State would wind up in the Sugar Bowl, UCLA would be in the Rose against Wisconsin and Arizona would get bumped out of the alliance. "All of us would love to have Arkansas," said Gary Walker, a former Arkansas resident who is a member of the Citrus Bowl committee. The Razorbacks could be in the top 10 next week, depending on the cham- pionship games this weekend. "No. 5 (Ohio State) vs. No. 10 (Arkansas) would be a great matchup," he said. Arkansas Sports Information Director Rick Schaeffer said the school sent out cards to season ticket holders about the option of buying tickets to the SEC championship game or a bowl. Responses indicated the sale of 11,000 bowl tickets, he said. Some said yes, thinking Arkansas would play in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. It's possible some of those people won't go to Orlando, but some new fans will make the trip to the Citrus Bowl because of the various entertainment opportunities in the, area. To make a good impression, Arkansas needs to bring lots of fans to Orlando Since the Citrus made an agree- ment with the SEC in 1992, the bowl has attracted the conference's elite - Tennessee three times, Florida once, Georgia once and Alabama once. After the BCS is set, the Citrus has first pick of the SEC teams and the league has nothing to do with the selection, Schaeffer said. AP PHOTO Tennessee misses the Fiesta Bowl - either by losing to Mississippi State or by failing to beat the Bulldogs by a sufficiently ressive margin - the Vols will likely head to the Sugar Bowl. intrasquad on-ramp for est of gymnasts' season By Chris Grandstaff daily Sports Writer The long road to the sucess begins on Friday for the Michigan men's gymnastics team, when the Wolverines will vault, flip, swing and roll into the 1999 season as they compete at the Maize and Blue Intrasquad at Cliff Keen Arena. The Wolverines will be looking to improve on last season's 8-12 record, a record that included trip to Amherst, Mass., for the NCAA East Regional, where they finished fifth. The Maize and Blue Intrasquad will be "a good chance to see how people work under the pressure of competition," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. One thing Golder does not need to worry about is his pressure-tested duo of junior Jose "LaLo" Haro and sophomore Justin Toman. Haro's list of accolades includes five national bampionships as well as two trips to the World ampionships. Toman's resume is nothing to scoff at either. He just returned from competing in Acapulco, Mexico, for the U.S. National Team, where he received a bronze medal. "It's quite rewarding to work towards and accomplish such a long-time childhood goal," Toman said. "It is also an honor to compete at this level." Haro and Toman - along with sophomore Kevin Roulston - "are the keys to this year's team," Golder said. Roulston completed a successful freshman campaign last season by winning Big Ten fresh- man of the year honors. This summer, Roulston just missed qualifying for the U.S. National Team along with Toman. The Wolverines' talented roster has them ninth in the preseason polls, but Golder said he expects his team to "greatly exceed" their rank- ing. "Our goal is to be one of the three teams that compete for the national championship." The highway to success will not be easy, how- ever, as the Wolverines compete in "without question the toughest conference in the coun- try," Golder said. "All six of the teams that com- peted at last year's East Regional were from the Big Ten." "Friday night, we're going to see if we're heading down the right road" With Roulston, "LaLo" Haro and Toman as the keys to the team, the Wolverines hope the road they start down Friday leads to Lincoln, Nebraska - home of this year's NCAA Championships. Jose Haro, more commonly known as "Lalo," starts his junior season this weekend when the Wolverines hold an Intrasquad meet at Cliff Keen Arena. WARREN ZINN/Daily Ferentz replaces Fry, returns home as new Iowa coach DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Baltimore Ravens assistant coach Kirk Ferentz, a former assistant at Iowa ender Hayden Fry, was named sterday to succeed his mentor. "Having spent a lot of time out tAere, I really have a love for that area and those people, no question about it," Ferentz said at the Ravens' practice facility in Owings Mills, Md., before the announcement was made. Ferentz, will replace Fry, who retired Nov. 23 after 20 years with the Hawkeyes. He will be introduced at a news conference in Iowa City tonight. Ferentz, the Ravens' offensive line ch and the assistant head coach for Tense, was an assistant under Fry from 1981 to 1989 before leaving to .become head coach at Maine. "I am simply elated that one of my former coaches and a member of the Hawkeye family will be coming on board," Fry said. "Kirk is very intelli- gent, very knowledgeable, an outstand- ing teacher and an individual who will be an outstanding representative of a football and the University of Iowa." - Ferentz moved to the top of the short list of candidates after Bob Stoops, who played for Fry on the Hawkeyes' 1981 Rose Bowl team, accepted the head coaching job at Oklahoma hours after interviewing with Iowa on AP PHOTO Hayden Fry is out as Iowa's coach, and his replacement, Kirk Ferentz, was an I