Scoreoboard # MAJOR LEAGUE NHL HOCKEY BASEBALL N.Y. Islanders 4. NY.Yankees 6. MONTREAL 2 BOSTON 1 NBA NY wins series, 3-1 BASKETBALL Pre-season games NFL FOOTBALL Denver 106. N.Y. GIANTS 13, VANCOUVER 94 Dallas 10 DETROIT 118 INDIANA 116 Sacramento 107 ORLANDO 114, Houston 105 PORTLAND 117, Phoenix 110 Lox icIhbyi a Nd Tracking 'M' teams The Michigan hockey team is now ranked No. 3 in the nat on U.S. College Hockey Online poll, behind Bs Coege and MaIne The Wolverines moved up from the No spot a wek ago. Tuesday October 19, 1999 11 Dallas 100 Long-term contract can lead to long- term headache 5lipping quietly into the news this past weekend, burying itself deep in the fine-print transactions' section of most news- papers, Ohio State basketball coach Jim O'Brien signed a contract extension through the 2007 season. How nice. Jim O'Brien - last year's hit-you-right-in-the-heart story of college basketball when he Wok a team basically composed of two guards and a few Randy Ayers leftovers to the Final Four - is rewarded for his Chris good work with Duprey a generous deal and a big hug from the Ohio State athletic department. If things work ut for the ' Bucks, O'Brien ' will be around DUPE" for most of the Sc next decade where he will show the nation that football and basketball can peace- fully co-exist on college campuses. Ohio State will win six or seven national titles under O'Brien, and cross the country, elementary chool kids will recite "Fight the Team" instead of the Pledge of Allegiance each morning. But unfortunately for the Buckeyes, they have not yet learned the peril of the long-term contract. They ignore a similar plot line hap- pening all around them, as if things will turn out differently. After all, God does wear scarlet and gray, esn't He? Why is a simple long-term con- tract extension such a bad idea The Ohio State administration foolishly thinks it has just bought itself such a great amount of coach- ing security within its basketball program. Athletic Director Andy Geiger thinks he has taken the nec- essary steps to ensure that O'Brien stays with the program for a long 'me. Yet while O'Brien is "flattered ith the offer" today, how will he el next season, or in 2003? Surely, NBA teams will come calling to try and lure away a talent like O'Brien. Will O'Brien do the honorable thing, when the time comes, and finish out his contract? No one knows. (This assumes that any franchise except the Los Angeles Clippers is doing the lur- ing.) Remember the actions of former 'northwestern football coach Gary Barnett and former Gonzaga basket- ball coach Dan Monson. After sign- ing 10-year deals and proclaiming to the world how great of a situation they were in, this slippery duo bolt- ed a he next-best opportunity, leav- ing t1eir schools like deadbeat dads. And Michigan State, noble neigh- bor to the north, was so appalled at .orge Peres' inability to beat Central Michigan (among other things) that the university fired him and got stuck paying the remainder of his long-term deal back in 1993. Lost in academia, it appears that Ohio State has forgotten the basic rule of the stock market: buy low and sell high. By rushing to lock in O'Brien before this season begins, they have done the equiva- lent of buying Amazon for S300 a pare. O'Brien may never see anoth- et Final Four - that's a risk inher- ent in coaching, no matter who you are or how much talent you have - but he'll continue to receive checks, reflecting the university's gratitude1 for one memorable season. Geiger isn't exactly Gordon Gecko in his tim ing on this deal. t y Former Tiger Doyle Alexander *nce said, "I'm loyal to who pays e." But in the sports world, even in college, people are loyal to who pays them most. -Chris Duprey will be signing his long-term deal with the Daily before his boss reads this column. He can still be reached at cduprev(a umich.edit. After six games, Blue uses day of rest to heal By T.J. Berka Daily Sports Editor For the first time since late August, the Michigan football team spent a Saturday doing something besides playing football. While the other Big Ten teams were slugging it out on the gridiron this weekend, the Wolverines were sitting on the couch, watching the games unfold on television. This rest was welcomed by the Wolverines, as it gave them a chance to heal the wounds suffered in the season's first six games. "Our goal was to get as many guys back to 100 percent as possible," Michigan nose tackle and co- captain Rob Renes said. As Michigan healed the bumps and bruises sus- tained before the bye week, the squad also had to heal the mental nicks that came from its last game, a 34-31 loss to Michigan State. "My main question is how we are going to respond to a loss and a bye week,' Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "Eventually you are going to have a game when you aren't as mentally prepared as the other team. That's how you get beat." But, although the Wolverines admit that they weren't as excited for Michigan State as they were for other games, they weren't sure of the reason why. "We came out against MSU a bit flat," corner- back Todd Howard said. "It seemed as if we were hanging back, waiting for things to happen instead of making things happen." Senior safety Tommy Hendricks agreed with his secondarv mate. "I used my off week to think about myself as a player," Ilendricks said. "I didn't make enough plays. I thought I had an opportunity to make things happen." Michigan didn't have the opportunity to make things happen on the field this weekend, as it fell mercy to ABC and ESPN. Carr was frustrated by this, as the Wolverines were forced to root for teams ahead of them to lose instead of being in the position to control their own destiny. "When I watched the games, i couldn't stand it," Carr said. "You are rooting for some teams to lose. You can't do anything but watch." When Carr was asked which teams he was root- ing for, he just gave a sly smile. But fullback Aaron Shea had no problem expressing his rooting preferences in the games this past weekend. "I enjoyed seeing Michigan State lose," Shea said. "We needed them to lose - I'm not going to lie." Shea's opinion wasn't the only one present on the Michigan football team. Hendricks refused to watch Purdue's 52-28 whipping of the Spartans. "As far as I'm concerned, the MSU game is in the past," Hendricks said. "I didn't even watch the Purdue-MSU game. Those teams are worth nothing to me now. I'm concerned with Illinois." The Fighting Illini are an unfamiliar sight for Michigan, as the two teams haven't squared off since the Wolverines beat Illinois, 20-8, in the open- ing game of the 1996 season. Howard, a native of Bolingbrook, Ill.; has some working knowledge of the Fighting Illini. "I got a couple of boys on that team," Howard said. "I was excited that they got on TV this week- end. They aren't on there that often." While Illinois hasn't had a winning season since 1994, Howard is warvy, as Illinois is 3-3 (though 0-3 in the Big Ten) and loaded with a lot of young tal- ent. "They got a lot of athletes," Howard said. "A lot of them were on the all-state team ahead of me. They got recruited for a reason." A Su)N - SCARE: After visiting his family dur- ing the bye weekend, freshman running back B.J. Askew was rushed to the hospital on Sunday with possible appendicitis. But, after a few tests, Askew was released and should be ready for Saturday's game. "I'm fine now" Askew said. "They don't know what it was, but they said it wasn't appendicitis.: "I'm definitely playing on Saturday." Askew, who has eight tackles on special teams this season, is the only running back besides Anthony Thomas to score a touchdown this season. Carr wants to get Askew more involved in a stag- nant running game, which ranks 10th in the confer- ence with an average of 108 yards per game. "Askew had a good week of progress, as did Charles Drake" Carr said. "I'm looking forward to them playing more." A week after the bitter defeat in East Lansing, Ian Gold (right) had a chance to recuperate. DANA LINNANE/Daiiy and the Michigan footbnall team have 'M' saves utility outside hitter for upcoming seasons By Dena Krischer Daily Sports Writer There's that one who's always there - smiling and cheering on the side- lines during every Michigan volley- ball match. But she's never in uni- form. She never gets in the game. So who is she and why is she there ? "There wasn't really a set spot for me this vear," redshirt freshman Nicole Poquette said. "So I didn't know if I wanted to waste a year. (Michigan coach Mark Rosen) didn't know if he wanted to waste my year if there wasn't going to be a spot for me." And, for the 6-foot-2 outside hitter, there is little or no time for her to waste. Poquette's ultimate goal is to play for the women's U.S. Olympic team, and she feels that the extra experi- ence playing for Michigan will be her ticket. "I'd never want to limit anybody," Rosen said. "I think Poquette has all of the physical attributes as a matter of how much she's going to develop, and how much better she's going to get. She's somebody I think has got as much drive as anybody I've ever seen, so I think she's got as good a chance as anybodv." And staying with the team for five years rather than four -- with that extra year of practice - will only benefit Poquette. She's more than prepared for that. "I'm very excited," the outside hit- ter said. "I love it here, and I'm real- lv glad that Mark, Leisa and are here because I want to be with them for the next five years." Everybody else on the team is learning and accepting their roles as players on the court. Poquette's only time on the court is during practice. "You travel with the team, but you don't get to play," Poquette said. "You go, and you watch and you get to take stuff in, and you get the expe- rience of traveling and bonding with the team, but you just don't get to play." That's exactly what an aspiring Olympian needs to do. "Her role right now is to get bet- ter," Mark Rosen said. "She has to try to get more developed, learn our sys- tem, learn her role within that, and make the starting team better. "Every day in practice, she gets to play against them. The better she plays, the harder she makes it for our starting team, and the better our start- ing team has to get, and she's doing a great job at that. She fills that role really, really well. She comes in every day, she works hard, she keeps a real positive attitude, she does everything that you'd want her to do." After all of that hard work, it has got to be difficult for Poquette to stand tall on the sidelines, continue smiling as she cheers on the team, and somehow manage to resist every aching tempation to run out on the court during a match and tear things up with the rest of the team that she has, in her own way, helped build. "In high school, there were all of these people who were really good and always played, and then sit on the bench (in the NCAA)," Poquette said. "It's different, but Mark, Leisa, and Jun (Liu) have really helped me improve." Despite her urges to do her part on the court during games, Poquette is still working hard and maintaining her positive attitude. "It's not a fun role all of the time," Rosen said. "Nobody joins this sport to prgctice. As a redshirt, it's tough because you work hard every day, and you bust your butt, and then you don't get a uniform or a chance to play. But she's handling it as well as anybody." Due to her absence on the court during game-time, Poquette has not yet experienced firsthand the tough competition in the Big Ten - which could cause for a rude awakening for her next season. But on the plus side, she can use Yogi Berra's words of wisdom and "observe a lot by watching," and-pos- sibly see things from the sidelines that she wouldn't see while in court action - which can only benefit her in the long-run. "My feeling is that she's going to be a great player,' Rosen said. "I would never redshirt somebody unless I think they're doing to be. We only redshirt players when we think that they're not physically ready yet to make an impact, but we think that they're going to be really, really good. I think (Nicole) is going to be really, really good." Great, even. Damn! Yankees World Series-bound again BOSTON (AP) - Blame the curse and bad calls or El Duque and Derek. Blame any Yankee from DiMaggio to Dent. In the end the story was the same: New York wins, Boston loses. Orlando Hernandez pitched shutout ball into the eighth inning and Derek Jeter hit a two-run homer as the Yankees won their record 36th pennant and a return trip to the World Series, beating Boston 6-1 last night in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series. The Red Sox brought out all their good-luck charms, and yet it did no good against their longtime tormentors. Babe Ruth's 82-year-old daughter threw out the first ball - trying to reverse the Curse of the Bambino - and Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez roused the well-behaved crowd of 33,589 from the dugout and bullpen. And still, it will be the Yankees head- ing off to defend their World Series title while the Red Sox, after an eighth- See YANKEES, Page 12 YOU CAME TO COLLEGE WiliH-A- LOT OF STUFF. UNFORTUNATELY, ACNE CAME ALONG FOR Some people simply don't1IIE R ID E* "grow out" of their acne. It remains well into their twenties. Sometimes longer. Truth is, it's a medical condition. Right now, if you are a male between the ages of 18 and 35 and have moderate to severe acne, AP PHOTO The Yankees celebrate their third trip to the World Series in the last four years. d I WE WANT YOUR LETTERS ON MICHIGAN BASKETBALL FoR TIPOFF '99. STUDY JAPANESE ?"T"' . __ _ - I II