MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL National League ATLANTA 4. New York 2 Braves lead series, 1-0 NHL HOCKEY Florida 2, MONTREAL 1 WASHINGTON 5. Philadelphia 4 NBA PRESEASON BASKETBALL Orlando 99, DETROIT 91 NEW JERSEY 115. Atlanta 102 Milwaukee 103, TORONTO 98 Philadelphia 85, NFW YORK 78 S~Ije £idignu Nv Tracking 'M' awards Michigan hockey center Mike Comrie earned CCHA Dlay- er of the week honors this week. The sophomore taiedO four goals and two assists, including his first career hat trick, helping the Wolverines to a sweep of Notre Dam . Wednesday October 13, 1999 14 Men's hoops ticket sales increases By Mark Francescutti Daily Sports Wter Thanks to a top-flight freshman class and increased marketing exposure, the Michigan Ticket Office has sold 17 per- cent more student season basketball tickets for this season. After selling a dismal 712 student packages for the 1998-99 season, the office sold 119 more 1999-2000 pack- ages, Michigan Ticket Office Manager Marty Bodnar reported. While the new number translates into a slight increase, it's still far behind the thousands of tickets sold in earlier years. Since the 1992-93 season, Michigan has dedicated 3,100 seats to students. More than 4,500 students applied for tickets that year, but the numbers have declined since - reaching only 712 last season. One of the problems that can affect ticket sales is the confusion about the deadline for applications. The Michigan ticket office set a Sept. 24 deadline for student ticket packages this season, even bolding the date in its information sheet included with student football tickets. But the deadline for tickets doesn't mean any more than the ink it's printed with if the office doesn't sell the 3,100 tickets it offers. Since only 831 students purchased tickets this year, plenty of student ticket packages remain avail- able, and even first-time ticket pur- chasers have an opportunity to receive a good seat. "We have to set the deadline to get all the applications into the computer, and then sent to the printer," Bodnar said. "Student tickets can still be purchased. It's conceivable that (first-time buyers) can get a decent seat." Some students didn't know that the supposed deadline is for naught, since the information sheet about the tickets doesn't explain what happens if tickets are undersold. Students and their class- mates who might have bought tickets were left in the dark. "I thought that deadline was written in stone," Engineering freshman Marc Shmerling said. "If I had known, I would have gotten more people in my group. Michigan Marketing Director Tom Brooks wants to give the students the information. The marketing department has insti- tuted a plan to create more awareness about tickets through the use of the mgoblue.com Internet site. Students can now find information about ticket pack- ages and even purchase them online with a credit card. Michigan also sent out a mass e-mail reminding students about the deadlines. But Bodnar said the deadlines will Yes ... basketball tickets are still available Despite a Sept. 24 deadline, student season ticket packages for Michigan mens basketball are still available. All students who purchase a package will receive a free "Maize Rage" T-shirt. Tickets can be ordered from the ticket office at 1000 S. State St. or online at wwwmgoblue.com/icketofffce Past student season ticket sales Here are the sales figures for Michigan men's basketball student season ticket sales. The data includes overall ticket applicants and the number of season and split-season packages sold. YeaYr Overall easn Spli 1999-00 831** 831 0 1998-99 712 712 0 1997-98 2,200 2,200 0 1996-97 2,796.- 2,796 .5 0 1995-96 3,830 2,404 1,426 1994-95 3,905 2,455 1,450 1993-94 ' 4,267 1,999 2,268 ' 1992-93 - 4,542 1,678 2,870 Split season gives students a half-year ticket package "Through Sept 24 deadline. r r have to stay for now, to give the ticket office a chance to process tickets in a timely fashion. Brooks said that those students who buy a student ticket package, whether it be before the deadline or after, will receive a free gift - a Maize Rage T- shirt. The Rage, which Brooks helped develop last season, brought student fans together by giving them a free yel- low shirt and encouraging them to get wild during home games. "We want to give students an identi- ty" Brooks said. "We want them to know there's pride in being a season ticket holder." The office will hand out the free shirts when students pick up their ticket packages starting Nov. 1. Single game tickets can also be purO chased at a new special $6 price. However, the home game against Duke is excluded from the promotion. DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Purdue quarterback Drew Brees squares off against undefeated Michigan State in a weekend that should separate the men from the mice in the Big Ten. ['['at's gone wrong wt B NBA great Chamberlain dead at 63 S omething's wrong here. It's the middle of October now, well into the Big Ten football sea- son, but the standings are just wrong. Indiana and Minnesota ahead of Ohio State and Purdue? The Big Ten race is more muddled than ever. Usually, this time of the year, Michigan, Ohio State and Penn State begin to emerge to the forefront of the conference, waiting for the last two weeks of the season when Michigan faces the Joshother bigwi gs. Nowith this Kleinbaum newfangled Big Ten that has half the conference run- ning the spread offense and Minnesota - Minnesota! playing competi- A ILYPsE tively, the Spartans NowE are one of the two remaining unde- feated teams, along with JoePa's Nittany Lions. And after that, it's a mess. Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, the Buckeyes and the Golden Gophers all have just one conference loss, and, with the exception of Indiana, all are playing well enough to make a run for Pasadena. This weekend, while the Wolverines sit at home licking their wounds from an embarrassing loss to Sparty in which they were thoroughly outplayed, look for the contenders to separate from the pretenders. Penn State will face one of its stiffest tests of the season in Ohio State, but has the luxury of playing in State College. Purdue's Drew Brees will try to show that he is still, in fact, the best quarter- back in the conference, as Michigan State's Bill Burke tries to show that his eye-popping performance against Michigan wasn't a fluke. Indiana and Wisconsin are both still darkhorses in the conference race, but after Saturday, one will be out of it. And Iowa and Northwestern play the Pointless Game of the Week, a battle for sole possession of the Big Ten base- ment, which means it'll probably be a CBS national telecast. BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Big Ten Overall Michigan State 3 0 6 0 Penn State 2 0 6 0 Michigan 2 1 5 1 Wisconsin 2 1 4 2 Indiana 2 1 3 3 Minnesota 1 1 4 1 Ohio State 1 1 4 2 Purdue 1 2 4 2 Illinois 0 2 3 2 Iowa 0 2 1 4 Northwestern 0 3 2 4 LAST WEEKEND'S RESULTS Michigan State 34, Michigan 31 Indiana 34, Northwestern 17 Penn State 31, Iowa 7 Wisconsin 20, Minnesota 17 Ohio State 25, Purdue 22 THIS WEEKEND'S GAMES Ohio State at Penn State Michigan State at Purdue Indiana at Wisconsin Minnesota at Illinois Iowa at Northwestern OGUNLEVE GONE: Now in his third year as Indiana's head coach, Cam Cameron has been trying to prove that his school is not just a hoops school. After a 34-17 victory over Northwestern on Saturday - a game Indiana once trailed by two touchdowns -- the Hoosiers appeared to be on the right track. The win improved their record to 2-1 in the Big Ten and they looked to be a potential sleeper in the conference race. Which is why, when Adewale Ogunleye went down with an injury on Saturday, it was more than his knee that hurt - all of Bloomington was in pain. The star defensive end has been a force for the Hoosiers all season. In six games, he has 22 tackles, 11 of them for loss including eight sacks. The hard-hit- ter has forced two funbles. The tackles-for-loss, sacks and forced fumbles all lead the team. "No question, he was having an all- Big Ten season, an All-America sea- son," Cameron said. "We're going to miss him, but he'll continue to captain this football team." - Josh Kleinbaum can be reached via e-mail atjkbaum@umich.edu. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wilt Chamberlain, one of the most dominant players in the history of basketball and the only one to score 100 points in an NBA game, died yesterday at 63. Chamberlain's body was found by authorities who were called to his Bel-Air home shortly after 3 p.m., said John Black, a Los Angeles Lakers spokesper- son. A fire department spokesperson, Jim Wells, said there were signs that Chamberlain had a heart attack. Chamberlain was hospitalized with an irregular heart beat in 1992. Known as "Wilt the Stilt" and "The Big Dipper" the 7-foot-1 Chamberlain domi- nated the NBA from 1959 through 1973, when he played for the Philadelphia (later the San Francisco) Warriors, the 76ers and the Lakers. He scored 31,419 points during his career, a record until Kareem Abdul- Jabbar broke it in 1984. Chamberlain, who never fouled out in a 1,205 regular- season and playoff games, holds record for career rebounding with 23,924. "Wilt was one of the greatest ever, and we will never see another one like him," Abdul-Jabbar said. Chamberlain, who began his profes- sional career with the Harlem Globetrotters in 1958, was one of only two men to win the MVP and rookie of the year awards in the same season (1959). He was also MVP in 1966 through 1968. He led the NBA in scoring seven straight seasons, 1960-66, and led the league in rebounding I1 of his 14 sea- sons. One of his most famous records is the 100 points he scored in a single game in the Philadelphia Warriors' 169-147 defeat of the New York Knicks on March 2, 1962, in Hershey, Pa. In the 1961-62 season with Philadelphia, he averaged a record 50.4 points a game, and averaged 30.1 for his career. He also was one of the most ver- satile big men ever, leading the league in assists with 702 in 1967-68. Chamberlain led his team into the play- offs 13 times, winning two world champi- onships. The first came in 1966-67 with the Philadelphia 76ers, the second in 1971-72 with the Los Angeles Lakers. A lifelong bachelor, Chamberlain made news after his basketball career by claiming in an autobiography that he had made love to 20,000 women. "The women who I have been the most attracted to, the most in love with, I've pushed away the strongest," Chamberlain said in a 1991 interview with the Associated Press. His jersey was raised to the rafters of Allen Fieldhouse in 1998, where Chamberlain starred for the Jayhawks. He led the 1957 team to the NCAA tourna- ment finals, where Kansas lost to unbeat- en North Carolina in triple overtime. AP PHoO Wilt Chamberlain, who averaged an unprecedented 50.4 points per game in one season, died yesterday at the age of 63. Former M' wrestler Reese remembered Student-Athlete Advisory Council creates scholarship in his name By Dena Krischer Daily Sports Writer It will be an unforgettable experi- ence for an unforgettable person. Exactly one year, 1 months,aand 11I days after after the tragic death of Michigan wrestler Jeff Reese, 10 people will stand on the field of Michigan Stadium - holding a ban- ner in his honor - as the football team takes thefield against Ohio State. Reese would have graduated this spring as a fifth-year senior. He would have finished his fourth season as a wrestler. He would have just celebrated his 23rd birthday. He wouldn't have wanted to be remembered any other way. Reese, son of Edwin and Veronica of Wellsburg, N.Y., desperately needed to make his 150-pound weight class one - December day two years ago, and he only had four days to do it. He dedicated the final 96 hours making weight so .. that he could compete for his team, for his school, for his wrestling career, for the love of the sport. Just over one-and-a-half pounds short of his goal, Reese collapsed. Less than an hour later, he was gone. But never forgotten. As a tribute to Reese's hard work and determination, the Student- Athlete Advisory Council created the first scholarship at Michigan to be sponsored by a student organiza- tion - a $100,000 endowment fund in his name to forever instill his brief presence as an elite athlete at Michigan. "The point is not to remember the tragic accident," SAAC treasurer and Michigan wrestler Matt Michalski said. "The point of the scholarship is to remember the per- son." The idea was proposed in February, 1998, by Dwayne Fuqua, the then-president of Michigan's SAAC. "We want to do something that creates a memory for Jeff so people won't forget about him," said current SAAC president Andy Potts, a fifth- year senior and former Michigan swimmer. "Jeff didn't just die from an accident. He died giving his life for Michigan wrestling, and you just can't give anything more than that, He gave so much of himself to h: wrestling that it consumed him a n his life. I think that should speak a lot about what he was trying to do, what he wanted to represent." d The scholarship is a way that the athletic organization can do Reese's memory justice. The SAAC plans to give the scholarship to the varsity athlete who representstthe drive and the hunger to compete that Reese possessed. "We all want to give the most everything that we do, and we wai7 to perform to our best ability as stu dent athletes," Potts said. "That was very important to Jeff, so important that he was willing to push himself beyond his physical limits. It's not possible to give anything more than what he gave, and we want to try and remember that... remember why hV gave his life, and remember him." : The recipient will be decided by the SAAC and Reese's parents. r won't be a full scholarship, but; according to Potts, it will be on a need basis to help student-athleteg with their athletic endeavors. "You dedicate a lot of time being a See REESE, Page 16 4 4 p The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is currently offering a new investigational treatment for acne. ... . f . a t ! 9