Scoreboard,. 1* HL Nauhvilie at Tampa Bay 7, San Jose inc. BOSTON ? Phoenix at Calgary 4. Vancouver Inc. OTTAWA 3 PHILADELPHIA 5. NBA PRESEASON Colorado 4 Washington 102, Pittsburgh at BOSTON 101 Los Angeles, inc. Denver 92, TORONTO d7 Nev. ..sc 1._ NEW YO~i,103 Detot 212, ORLANDO 100 PHOENIX at Portland Inc. Utah at Los Angeles. inc. ZeeiEAdnhgzm 3tlg Tracking 'M' Teams Did you get rejected by an Ivy League school? Still bitter? Watch Michigan - your school - get back at those snobs when the hockey team faces Yale, tomorrow night at Yost Ice Arena. Friday October 29, 1999 9 'ennessee finds itself guilty of nothin Officials snap: 'We don't answer to ESPN.com KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - The University of Tennessee, claiming it has made a thorough investigation of allegations of academic fraud in its ath- letic program, is giving itself a clean i of health. "The result is pretty much what we have always said," general counsel Beauchamp Brogan said Thursday. "We found no violations of NCAA Tules at all. No cover-up. Nothing." Brogan's office has been reviewing allegations raised by ESPN's Internet magazine Sept. 26 of tutors doing homework for Tennessee athletes, par- ticularly football players, as far back as A995, and administrators failing to tell eriors about it. "I am satisfied that our investiga- tion has been complete on all the alle- gations, that we have not uncovered nything and we are going about our business," athletics director Doug .Dickey said. The two-page report, which will be sent to the Southeastern Conference .and the NCAA, was the product of a tnth-long investigation by the uni- Wrsity's general counsel's office. Brogan said his office "interrogated dozens of witnesses" in recent weeks. "Even though it is an in-house coun- sel, we have to do as thorough job as -possible," he said. "We can't sugarcoat our report. We don't answer to ESPN.com or anything like that. But we have to answer to the NCAA." Brogan said the NCAA "always has ( right to accept the report as it is written or to come in and question our findings or to look at whatever we did." University investigators talked to .more than 20 current and former uni- versity employees and eight current or former Tennessee athletes. None were named in the report "In no instance did a student-athlete identified in the course of this investi- tion receive an added benefit in vio- on of NCAA bylaws," associate general counsel Ronald Leadbetter 'wrote. The investigators found no evidence a tutor "wrote, typed or otherwise authored a paper" for any athlete in violation of rules. They did find one case in which a tutor typed a paper from an athlete's dictation in "good faith." But the athlete received no cred- .it for it and had to redo the assignment. The report said there was no "cover- W" in violation of NCAA bylaws. But it did find unnamed athletics department academic support officials failed to inform Dickv and NCAA compliance officer Malcolm McInnis about "reports of possible plagiarism (and) ... the investigative results" from looking into the earlier charges. Dickey called that a "mistake" though not so great to break the rules. "The lack of promptness does not Institute an NCAA violation," he said. .However, "a prior reporting of these .issues would have possibly avoided this controversy." Because of concerns raised by English professors, English tutoring -classes for athletes have been moved from the athletic complex to the English Department since the ESPN story broke. o other changes have come of the cfse- "Other than we have reminded peo- ple of their responsibilities," Dickey said. "I think that is certainly suffi- cient." Four football players were suspend- ed before the Tennessee-Memphis game but later reinstated after Tennessee's preliminary investigation found no evidence of wrongdoing. * se initial findings were turned over to the SEC. Bowl options fading, Blue faces Randle El By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Editor So Michigan has lost its last two football games. In a matter of weeks, the Wolverines have fallen from the rarified air of the nation's top five, a Sugar Bowl contender and a perch atop the Big Ten standings. Now, the Wolverines travel to Indiana for a noon kickoff looking to turn things around. Can they do it ? "I think we bounced back" last week against Illinois, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "For three quarters we played well." Uh-oh. If that's bouncing back, Michigan may be in big trouble. Last week, Michigan forgot there were four quarters to a football game and let up 21 points in the final stan- za in a stunning loss to unranked Illinois. "It's not a fact of pointing a finger, but we were up 20 points," Michigan cornerback James Whitley said. "We have to hold the lead." Even if the Wolverines (2-2 Big Ten, 5-2 overall) play a full three- and-a-half-quarters, against Indiana, that might not be enough. The Hoosiers (3-2, 4-4), led by quarterback Antwaan Randle El, can score points, and they can do it quickly. Carr described their offense as "explosive." Throw in a Michigan defense that has made some Wolverines fans want to explode recently, and there could be some fireworks in Bloomington tomorrow. The source of the firewvorks? Randle El. Last year, Carr stayed up many a night, his sleep haunted by memories of option quarterbacks. Earlier this season, with xictories over Syracuse and Notre Dame, he thought he had exorcised those demons. He was wrong. Carr's got one last option obstacle. Randle El brings a vicious attack. le's quick, slippery and has a great arm - just what a good option quar- terback needs. Penn State linebacker LaVar Arrington called Randle El the best option quarterback he's seen. "Even when you do something perfectly, he has the ability to cre- ate," Carr said. "In a perfect world, we'd go down there and have the ball for 50 minutes and they'd have it for 10, but it's not a perfect world. The best way to defend him is to keep him off the field." To keep Randle El off the field, Michigan's defense will have to get him off it. Last year, the Wolverines did just that, limiting Randle El to just 65 passing yards and forcing hits to miss over two-thirds of his passes. Carr described it as one of the team's best defensive effort of the season. Still, the game was tied at seven at halftime before Michigan eventually won, 21-10. See HOOSIERS, Page 11 DANA LINNANE/Daily Michigan running back Anthony Thomas and the rest of the Michigan football team will look to right their ship tomorrow against Indiana. The Wolverines have lost two straight games in the Big Ten, and now sit at 2-2 in the conference. Icebergs to Ivy: Yale skates into Yost Michigan returns from Alaskan split to face smart stick handlers from East By Chris Grandstaff Daily Sports Writer The Ivy League the name among names for academia. Eight schools world renowned for their aca- demics, their prestige and their arrogance. Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Penn, Brown, Cornell, and Dartmouth - these schools have produced our future leaders, businessman and even one damn good movie ("Good Will Hunting"). And despite the fact that they do not pro- vide any scholarships to varsity athletes they put out some pretty good hockey teams too. "The one common characteristic is that they're all very hard working teams," Michigan captain Sean Peach said. "They're all good players. A lot of people think, 'Ooh Ivy League they're not that competitive of team', but they're tough. I mean they're all division one players so they'll compete." This Saturday, the Wolverines will host Ivy League member Yale at Yost Ice Arena. Devils sign- Morrison for 1 year, $500K From staff and wire reports Former Michigan icer Brendan Morrison came to terms with the New Jersey Devils, signing a contract Thursday that will keep him in East Rutherford for at least the next sea- son. Morrison, who, along with forward Patrik Elias, missed the first eight games of the Devils' season due to contract disputes, reportedly agreed to a one-year contract worth S500,000. Elias was signed for three years, at S650,000 a year. Both players were reportedly pursuing $1 million con- tracts with the Devils. Last season, Morrison earned S400,000, scoring 13 goals and notch- ing 33 assists for New Jersey. At Michigan, he led the Wolverines to an NCAA title in 1996. In his senior season, 1997, Morrison won the Hobey Baker Award. The game will be the opener for the Bulldogs, who finished last season with a record of 13-14-4, good enough for fifth place in the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference. This year's Bulldog team returns 17 of 22 lettermen from last season, including seven of their top 10 scorers. Yale is led by All- American offensive sniper Jeff Hamilton, who led the ECAC in scoring last season with 48 points on 28 goals, and was named one of 10 Hobey Baker finalists. Hamilton is joined by fellow seniors Jeff Brow and Jay Quenville to form one of the most potent offensive scoring lines in the countrv. Yale's offensive capabilities should be a welcome test for the Wolverines who are look- ing to shore up their defense after last week- end's split against Alaska-Fairbanks. "We have to be a better team defensively," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We can't allow as many scoring chances that we've given up, we can't take as many penal- ties." The Wolverines will also be looking to improve on their own scoring - especially on the power play. "Our power play needs to be more produc- tive," Berenson said. "I mean our power play gave up a goal and another break away last game so they've got some things to work on" Michigan will also need to prove that they can play hard for an entire game. In Friday night's loss to Alaska Fairbanks the Wolverines looked sluggish until the third period, when it was already too late. "We've just got to play all sixty minutes," Michigan center Mike Comrie said. "You can't just play parts of the game, or half the game. You have to be ready to play right from the start, and everyone needs to contribute." After last week's reality check against Fairbanks, and a good week of practice, which included a day of rest on Monday, the Wolverines should be ready when the Bulldogs come to town. DANA LINNANE/Daily Michigan returns to Yost Arena tomorrow to face Yale. I Forerunner. Seeker. Big Picture. 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