:2OA - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 9, 2000 Acapulco fun can be Bpiled he dark-skinned Mexican sat at a round table, face covered , witha mask of intensity, head slightly tilted to the left, ears perked, jiand tightly gnpping a light b1ue'pen. } This man is not your typical athlete. His arms are a little too' flabby; his spare tire, hidden underneath the JOSH table, a bit too KLEINBAUM large. But he has Apocalypse one characters- Now tic that is all too common in today's athletes - com- plete and total disdain for those who don't understand and respect his sport (not to mention his considerable ,skill). I discovered this as I sat at the table next to him, trying to play his game. I called on a friend for help - whenever a number was recited in Spanish, my friend would translate it into English for me, so I could con- centrate on my card. But the Mexican Pele sitting next to us didn't take kindly to our chatter - apparently it interrupted his concentration, and, like Albert Belle snapping at a fan asking for an autograph, he let us know it. Guessed the game yet? Old Mconald had a dog, and Bingo was his name-oh. That's right, we were playing Bingo. The Acapulco locals spend their free time pla ing Bingo. This isn't yu'r grandma's church- basement Bingo, either. No, this is sophisticated, high-tech, intense Bingo. The B g Board shows all the numbers that lave already been called, and highlights the three most recent, in case you've fallen behind. Television scrcens scatter the room to display numbers as they're called. Security guards watch the doors, making sure nobody enters the room mid-game. The game ispretty simple. For 10. pesos -just over an American dollar - you get a card with three rows of five numbers. Underneath the Big Board at the front of the room, num- bers are called out rapid-fire - there's no dillv-dallying in this game, no TV time-oLts. If you slack for just two seconds, you're likely to tumble hopelessly out of contention. Two games are played at once: First, the race to fill a single row (linea), sec- ond, the race to fill.the entire card (BINGO). Linea, we discovered when fellow sportswriterT J. Berka won, pays just over 60 pesos. BINGO? You're guess is as good as mine. We stumbled over this hidden gem of Acapulco nightlife while attempt- ing to watch another high-stakes sports phenomenon, Jai Lai. In this beauty of a sport, individuals hurl tennis-sized balls at a wall from inside curved baskets at speeds approaching 100 miles per hour, hop- ing that their opponent can't catch the ball in their bsket. Meanwhile, drunken college spring breakers fill the stands, losing their tuition betting on the outcome of the game. We arrived at Jai Lai just in time to see the start of a doubles match. The Blue team had a five-three lead on the Red team in the race to 30. After watching a few points to get a feel for the game, I looked for the cashier so I could place a wager. Imagine my surprise when I found out the game was an exhibition, amateurs in the 30-and-under age group, so wagers could not be placed. As my wafet issued a sigh of relief, my heart tore. Jai Lai max be a lot of fun when ou've got money on the line, but straight up, it's pretty damn boring. So I starter wandering the build- ing. Downsta rs, a sportsbook invited me to place a wager on the Michigan- Michigan Stwe basketball game, but since I'd be leaving the country by the time the game was played, and unable to collect my winnings, 1 did- ;'t put any money on the Spartans. The sportsbook was pretty neat. Televisions showed games-in- progress. Big electronic boards showed odds an everything from Jai Lai (in other cities) to basketball to COMEBACK KID By Michael Kern - Daily Sports Writer . With the clock winding down at the end of the first half in the Wolverines' semi- final loss to Purdue, Michigan for- ward Raina Goodlow pulled an errant shot off the rim and went back up, drawing a foul and sinking the shot as the halftime buzzer sounded. The basket may have counted for just two points, but it gave the Wolverines a glimmer of hope, cut- ting the Boilermakers' lead back to single digits. On a team dominated by the perimeter play of Stacey Thomas, Anne Thorius and Alayne Ingram, Goodlow has been Michigan's most valuable player in the post this sea- son, averaging 9.7 points and 4.7 rebounds per game. Considering the adversity Goodlow has had to face the last three years of her basketball career, it's a wonder she has been so suc- cessful this season. Five games into her freshman campaign, Goodlow dislocated her patella forcing her out of the Wolverines' next four games. "It was really devastating when she hurt her leg last year because we needed her," Ingram said. "She was out of the. starting lineup for a while, and it was obvious that we were hurt- ing." The injury was equally difficult for Goodlow forcing her to spend extra minutes on the bench. "When I first came in, I was young and didn't know what to expect," Goodlow said. "I even started the first few games of my career, but then I had that knee injury and missed about four games. After that it was such a slow progress, someone else had taken my spot in the starting lineup and it was hard to get it back. "Coming from high school where I had played every minute of every game it was hard to sit.on the bench." But as the season progressed, Goodlow began to make bigger and bigger contributions until she finally broke back into the starting lineup in Michigan's first round game of the WNIT. In the Wolverines' final game of the season, Goodlow matched her career high of 18 points. "One day in practice, I decided I didn't want to sit on the bench any- more," Goodlow said. "I wanted to contribute more, so I just really start- Blue's ace By Dena Beth Krischer Daily Sports Writer On Tuesday Michigan announced that junior Bryce Ralston, Michigan's top pitcher, would miss the entire 2000 season, but would return for 2001. "He'll be back next year at a 100 percent, no question about it," ed focusing on the things I needed to girls loved D work on. I just tried to practice hard realized they to show the coaches that I wanted to The other par play and I was ready to play. Ever let this happe since then, I've tried to keep that The new same focus." agreed to run While it may have taken a tremen- enrollmentc dous amount of hard work and perse- expected tha verance for a freshman to comeback what they did from an injury in such impressive "We starte fashion, it paled in comparison to coverage," Br what Goodlow and her mother man- contact comp aged to overcome her senior year of donated, prom high school. "The sch TAKING CHARGE receives abou Located on Whittier two blocks off they brought of I-94 on Detroit's east side, also got a nu Dominican High School has the communi remained the last all-girls high endowment ft school in the city for years. The parents Three years ago, that ceased to school. Raina become the case. Dominican f In the waning days of Goodlow's basketball aloe junior year, the school's administra- That seaso tion announced it was closing due to ' No. 1 player drops in funds and enrollment. Detroit Free Goodlow would have to transfer to fourth in the another school for her senior year. ing, averagin "It was my senior year, and no one rebounds per transfers for their senior year, so itI was a really big deal," Goodlow said. Just minut "They had their hearts set on closing first exhibiti the school, and I was really upset Goodlow cras because I didn't want to go anywhere ing her kne else. silent, leaving "As far as basketball, our team had screams of pa just started to gel together. We had Michigan( our nucleus and I really didn't want thoughts imm to go anywhere else to play." previous seas When Goodlow brought the "Please Go announcement home to her mother, said later in t she was shocked. Brenda Goodlow initial reactio and the other parents took immediate She worked h action, organizing a meeting at the mer and cam school. Oh God, wec "Initially when we started, we prayed like th weren't getting anywhere," Brenda ACL." said. "But by the afternoon, the audi- For the sec torium was filled with parents and seasons, Good the administration agreed to get us a the lineup wit meeting with the Dominican sisters for Guevaraa because they are the ones who own was not an AC the school." sprain. Good In partnership with the school, exhibition gai Goodlow's mother and the other par- up for Michi ents formed a new parents' associa- son matchup tion that would have more control Colorado Stat over its daily activities. And mom The recove was elected the association's first ten minutes president. there. But the "It was a hard year, but it was well tating the pr worth it," Brenda said. "I knew the easier for Go .o have Tommy Dominican, but I never were that committed. rents and I just couldn't n to our daughters." parents commission its own fundraisers and drives. But no one t they would achieve 1. d to get a lot of news enda said. "We began to panies, get equipment aises of money. ool itself regularly t $70,000, but that year, in over $700,000. We umber of businesses in ity to put together an und of $3,000,000." s association saved the was able to return to or her senior and play angside her friends. n she was named the r in Michigan by the Press and finished Miss Michigan ballot- g 17.2 points and 9.1 game. Do IT AGAIN es into the Wolverines on game this season, hed to the floor, clutch- e. Crisler Arena fell g only the sophomore's in. coach Sue Guevara's iediately turned to the on. od not again," Guevara he season, recalling her n. "We can't lose her. er tail off over the sum- e back in great shape. can't lose her again. I e devil that it wasn't an cond time in as many flow was forced out of h a knee injury. Luckily and the Wolverines, it L but just a slight knee low sat out the next me but was able to suit gan's first regular-sea- on the road against e. ry was a slow one - here, twelve minutes experience of rehabili- evious season made it odlow to swallow. DANA LINNANE/Daily' Despite suffering through two knee injuries the past two seasons, Michigan coach Sue Guevara calls Raina Goodlow: "Our most improved player." "It was difficult, but it was the same thing as last year;" Goodlow said. "This time I think I was more mature in the fact that even if I just had three minutes or six minutes, I just need to go in and give it my all. "Every time I would go in I would just try hard and try to make some- thing happen. I knew I wasn't going to get a lot of minutes because of my knee." Goodlow finally returned to the starting lineup at home against Vanderbilt but struggled against the Commodores' strong post players. It wasn't until that weekend when the Wolverines headed south to take on Louisiana State and Louisiana Tech that Goodlow showed what she was capable of. The sophomore aver- aged 15 points and six rebounds for the weekend while showing off her versatility sinking two-of-two from t John surgery, out I beyond the arc. Goodlow carried that play o0r into the conference schedule averag ing 10.6 points and 5.3 rebounds,-as, Michigan's most consistent post player for most of the Big Ten sched- ule. "I think she is our most improvedt player," Guevara said. "She brings a good vision of the court. She can pass the ball. She can shoot the three. She is one of our best three-p shooters, and if anything, she hash gotten more aggressive rebounding the ball." Considering all that Goodlow has, been through, one might not expect her career to have been as successful as it has been. But the hard work and perseverance she learned from her mother have made her key to the sui cess of the best team in Michigaj women's basketball history. for season the team's 1999 Most Valuable; Pitcher. After not starting a game in his- first two seasons at Michigan" Ralston started 13 out of his 14 appearances last year. In his career, he's pitched 103.0 innings, given up 121 hits, 36 earned runs, 22 walks and has struck out 59 batters. Ralston will be greatly missd, and it will be up to the Wolverines to fill the void that he now leaves. behind. "From Bryce's standpoint, he's, a leader, he was our best pitcher last year and that's tough to fil," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn s "He was someone we counted on o give us a lot of innings and give us some wins. It just means that the other guys are going to have to step it up and take his place." Michigan trainer Joel Pickerman said. In 1999, the Michigan baseball pitching staff combined an ERA of 5.92. When the season was over, two of the three best starters - J.J. Putz and Luke Bonner - graduated. But with four new pitching recruits and the 10 returning hurlers, there wasn't much cause for con- cern. At least until now. The loss of Ralston, who led Michigan with his 3.54 ERA and 8- I record, is a huge blow to Michigan - even more than its 3-6 start in Florida. Ralston, who joined seniors Rob Bobeda and Kevin Quinn as the team's tri-captains, did not play in the 3-6 start in Florida. Ralston will not play in South Carolina this upcoming weekend, nor will he celebrate St. Patrick's day in Miami with the Wolverines next weekend. For Ralston, his biggest matchup is today, when he has Tommy John surgery to repair his damaged ulnar collateral ligament. Damage to the UCL is the primary constraint to elbow instability. That's going to leave a mark - both on his arm and on his team. "We've known for a while that he wasn't going to start out with us," junior infielder Bill LaRossa said. "It just hasn't really set in that he's not going to be here for the rest of the year." Michigan will not only be losing eight wins - it will also be losing I / NS S4' 4 ' -U- ; ::h .us U *U~1~-WAN"