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°",.

2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 20, 1999

CLUB SPORTS CORNER

EDITED BY DAVID DEN HERDER
AND MARK FRANCESCUTTI

Junior Mike Haley (left) eludes the guard of freshman Sean Halladay in a scrim-
mage yesterday at Elbel Field. The clinic was held to attract new members.
Disc clinic draws new recruits
Ultimate clubs will hold another exhibition Saturday

The Michigan men's and women's ulti-
mate disc clubs hosted an open clinic for
new recruits yesterday on Elbel Field.
Men's club co-captain Phil Broering
said the clubs convene each fall to adver-
tise the sport and tutor possible new
members.
"Not a lot of people know how to play
ultimate when they come to college,"
Broering said, "so they come out here
and we teach them."
Last season saw the men's club finish
ninth in the country and qualify for the
national tournament - a first for
Michigan since 1987.
Men's co-captain Tim Murray also
finished third in the voting for the 1999
Callahan Award, "ultimate's version of
the Heisman Trophy," Broering said.
The men return 14 players from last
Rilers hold open
tryouts this week
The Michigan rifle club will hold
coed open tryouts for the 1999-2000
season this Wednesday, Sept. 23 at the
NUBS rifle range adjacent to the ROTC
facility at North Hall.
Rifle club contact Neil McNeight said
that no experience is necessary, and the
team will provide all equipment at the
time of tryouts.
"We have shooters at all levels of
experience," McNeight said, "from those
who have been competing for years to
those who have never picked up a rifle."
There is no fee to try out for the team,
and tryouts are set to begin at 7 p.m.
Equipment will also be provided for
team members throughout the season.
McNeight said concentration and fine
motor skills are key to the sport. "You
don't necessarily need to be, big and
strong" to be on the team, he said.
"It is perhaps the only truly coed sport
on campus, where you have men and
women competing side by side."
Although this season's schedule has
not yet been solidified, the team com-

season, but Murray said they hope to fill
an 18-24 man A' team and also field a
'B' team this season.
"We practice two to three times a
week and travel to tournaments,' Murray
said. "It's just got to be a lot of fun -
last year we traveled to Yale and to the
Stanford Invitational in California"
Women's club co-captain Kathy
Haley said the women did not qualify for
nationals last season, but are building for
the future.
"It's new, and it's a good sport," Haley
said. "There's so much fun in the playing
and the traveling - its almost like you
become a big family"
The clubs plan to hold another open
clinic on Saturday, Sept. 25 on Elbel
Field from 2-5 p.m.
- David Den Herder
petes intercollegiately and travels to var-
ious campuses throughout the year.
More information on the Michigan
rifle club is available at its website,
www.umich.edu/-rifle .
-- David Den Herder
Tabe tennis club
will meet tonight
The Michigan table tennis club is
ready to begin the defense of its nation-
al title. Tonight, from 7-9 p.m., the club
has its first meeting in the Sports
Coliseum.
The team plays monthly in local
United States Association of Table
Tennis (USATT) sanctioned tourna-
ments.

'M' SCHEDULE
Wednesday Sept22
Field hockey at Michigan State, 730 p m
Friday._Sept.24
Soccer vs. illinois, 4 p.m
Volleyball vs. Ohio State, 7 p.m
Saturday. Set. 25
Field hockey vs. Ohio, 1 p.m.
Football at Wisconsin, 3:30 p.m.
Volleyball vs. Penn State, 7 p.m.
Women's cross country at Sam Bell
Invitational, all day
Women's golf at Spartan Invitational, all
day
Sunday Sept26
Field hockey vs. California, noon.
Soccer vs. low a, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
EAST
Alfred 39, St. Lawrence 23
Boston College 14, Navy 10
Brown 25, Yale 24
Colgate 49, Fordham 24
Connecticut 23, Buffalo 0
Cornell 20, Princeton 3
Delaware 29, West Chester 10
Fairfield 34, Duquesne 21
Georgetown 47, Siena 12
Harvard 24, Columbia 7
Hofstra 28, Rhode Island 13
Holy Cross 30, Lafayette 12
Iona 31, La Salle 23
Ithaca 21, Mansfield 7
James Madison 35, New Hampshire 28
Lehigh 56, Monmouth, N.J. 10
Maine 21. Richmond 14
Mass. Maritime 20, MIT 2
Michigan 18, Syracuse 13
Penn 17, Dartmouth 6
Pittsburgh 30, Kent 23
RPI 42, Coast Guard 3
Rowan 38, Albany, N.Y. 37
Shippensburg 42, Kutztown 12
Slippery Rock 34, Fairmont State 10
St. John's 16, Marist 0
Towson 27, Bucknell 20
Villanova 26, Massachusetts 21
Wagner 33, Sacred Heart 0
Worcester Tech 7, Union, N.Y. 3
MIDWEST
Akron 25, Temple 15.
Ashland 14, Northern Michigan 10
Central Iowa 29, Simpson, Iowa 13
Chadron State 24, Fort Lewis 7
Chicago 22, Rose-Hulman 20
Cincinnati 17, Wisconsin 12
Cornell, Iowa 32, William Penn 28
DePauw 27, Hope 21
Defiance 10, Kalamazoo 0
Ferris State 56, Findlay 14
Indianapolis 30, Grand Valley State 14
Iowa 24, Northern Illinois 0
Kansas St. 40, UTEP 7
Kentucky 44, Indiana 35
Miami, Ohio 35, Eastern Michigan 14
Michigan State 23, Notre Dame 13
Michigan Tech 31. Hillsdale 7
Minnesota 55, Illinois State 7
Missouri 48, Western Michigan 34
Nebraska 20, Southern Miss. 13
Nebraska-Omaha 62, Minn-Mankato 31
North Dakota 17, South Dakota 10
Ohio State 40, Ohio 16
Purdue 58. Central Michigan 16
Southern Illinois 34. Eastern Illinois 6
Saginaw Valley State 45, Wayne State 33
Toledo 23, Ball State 10
Valparaiso 17, Robert Morris 13
Washington, Mo. 24, Wabash 20
Wis.-Stevens Pt. 28, Drake 17
SOUTH

MarshalI 35. B(wlifg Green 16
Maryla3nd 33. West Virginia 0
Memphis 31, Arkansas State 26
Mississippi State 29, Oklahoma State 11
Nor thwestern 15. Duke 12. OT)
Penn State 27. Miami 23
South Florida 21. Western Kentucky 6
Southern 42, Prairie View 0
Tennessee State 42. Florida A&M 25
Tennessee Tech 3S. Libertv 15
Tulane 48, Army 28
Virginia 35. Wake Forest 7
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 44, Louisana-Monroe 6
Arkansas Tech 32, West Alabama 17
Central Oklahoma 37. Angelo State 34
Hampton 26, Ark.-Pine Bluff 13
Hardin-Simmons 38. Panhandle State 31
Houston 45, Louisiana-Lafayette 0
North Texas 21, Texas Tech 14
Oklahoma 41, Baylor 10
Texas 18, Rice 13
Texas A&M 62, Tulsa 13
Texas Lutheran 53, SW Assemblies of God 16
Texas Southern 38, Lane 15
FAR WEST
Air Force 31, Washington 21
Cal Poly-SLO 40, Montana St. 37
Colorado 51, Kansas 17
Hawaii 34, Boise State 19
Idaho 28, Washington State 17
Iowa State 24, UNLV 0
New Mexico 45, Northern Arizona 14
New Mexico State35, Arizona State 7
Oregon 72, Nevada 10
Oregon State 48, Georgia Southern 41
Portland State 48, Eastern Washington 39
Rocky Mountain 29, Mary 28
Sacramento State 48, UC Davis 27
San Diego 30, Cal Lutheran 14
San Jose State 38, St. Mary's, Cal. 3
Southern Cal 24, San Diego State 21
Stanford 50, Arizona 22
UCLA 35, Fresno State 21
Utah 38, Utah State 18
Weber State 27, Idaho State 24
Whitworth 33, Simon Fraser 19
Willamette 42, Chapman 13
AP POLL
Associated Press Top 25, Sept. 19
(first place votes in parentheses)

Team
1. Florida State (59)
2. Penn State (7)
3. Florida (3)
4. Michigan
5. Texas A&M
6. Nebraska
7. Tennessee
8. Virginia Tech (1)
9. Miami (Fla.)
10. Georgia Tech
11. Georgia
12. Ohio State
13. Purdue
14. Arkansas
15. Kansas State
16. Southern Cal
17. Brigham Young
18. UCLA
19. Michigan State
20. Wisconsin
21. Marshall
22. Texas
23. Mississippi St.
24. Air Force
25. N.C. State

Rec.
30
4-0
3-0
3-0
2-0
3-0
1-1
2-0
2-1
2-1
2-0
2-1
3-0
2-0
2-0
2-0
2-0
2-1
30
2-1
30
31
30
2-0
31

Pts. Prev.
1,738 1
1,658 3
1,628 4
1,447 6
1,426 7
1,412 4
1.396 2
1.157 10
1.130 8
1.101 12
1,096 11
960 13
927 14
858 15
778 16
637 17
526 25
452 21
435 -
390 9
297 -
252 -
211 -
145 -
142 20

SPORTS IN BRIEF
Next step in process:
Notre Dame reports
possible violations
SOUTH BEND (AP) - Notre
Dame has reported three possible
rules violations to the NCAA,
including one in which a part-time
tutor wrote a paper for a student-ath-
lete.
The athlete no longer is at Notre
Dame and the tutor was fired, the
school said in a statement released
Friday. The university's statement
also disclosed a student-athlete's
alleged misuse of complimentary
football tickets and an allegation that
a student-athlete received extra ben-
efits. Identities of the individuals
involved were not disclosed by
school officials.
Notre Dame's statement came just
days after senior quarterback Eric
Chappell, who was dismissed from
the team by coach Bob Davie for
"internal team discipline," was
reported to have been involved in
both the ticket and extra benefits
cases.
Notre Dame's student newspaper.
The Observer, quoted an anonymous
source in Thursday's editions who said
Chappell offered to sell him and a
1998 Notre Dame graduate two tickets
for the Sept. 4 Notre Dame-Michigan
game in Ann Arbor for 50 each.
The source said he had previously
received free tickets from Chappell and
other players and claimed the 1998 grad-
uate had given Chappell at least a dozen
gifts over the last 18 months.
Chappell has told The Tribune of
South Bend all the allegations are
false and that he was not involved.
In Friday's statement, Notre Dame
also asked the NCAA to delay its final
report on a case involving contact
between former booster Kim Dunbar
and up to a dozen players while the new
allegations are reviewed.
Trinidad goes the
distance; wins in
decision, 2-0-1
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Felix
Trinidad fought off frustration and
cam,. on in the late rounds to beat
Oscar De La Hoya on a majority
decision Saturday night in their wel-
terweight showdown.
Through the early rounds,
Trinidad was clearly outboxed. But
the IBF champion from Puerto Rico
would not give up and he controlled
the late rounds with big right-hand
punches against a tiring De La Hoya.
Trinidad landed some crashing
rights to the head in the final three
rounds and although De La Hoya
never appeared ready to go down, he
felt their power and he did little
fighting of his own. He chose to ped-
dle away from the bombing Trinidad.
The victory earned Trinidad De La
Hoya's WBC title and kept him
unbeaten in 36 fights. It was the first
loss in 32 matches for the Golden

Last year, a combined club con
of students from the University
and Ann Arbor campuses beat d
ing National Collegiate Table
champion Maryland for the title.
The club's current president is
Ashoo Jain, who is ranked 22nd
all male players in the U.S.
Piavers of all skill are welco
join.
-Dav,

ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Who: David Terrell Sport: Football
Hometown: Richmond, Va. Position: Wide receiver
High School: Huguenot Year: Sophomore
Why: Terrell caught seven passes for 110 yards in Saturday's 18-13
road victory over Syracuse. Perhaps most notable was Terrell's per-
formance on Michigan's second touchdown drive, which gave the
Wolverines a 13-7 lead. On that drive, quarterback Drew Henson
found Terrell four times, all for first downs.
Background: Terrell is Michigan's leading receiver so far this season,
with 19 catches and 287 yards through three games ... Saw signifi- Terrell
cant playing time last season as a true freshman.

nprised
's Flint
lefend-
Tennis
junior

COACHES' POLL
USA Today/ESPN Coaches' Top 25, Sept. 19
(first place votes in parentheses)

Boy who grew up in East Los-
Angeles.
Judge Glen Hamada of Tacoi.
Wash., scored the fight 114-11 .
Judge Jerry Roth of Las Vegas saw it
115-113 and Bob Logiste", of
Belgium had it 115-114 for Trinidad.
Trinidad won all of the last three
rounds and the fight on two of'the
scorecards.
The AP card favored De La Hoya,
but scored the last three rounds for
Trinidad.
A CompuBox punch anal*
credited De La Ioya with landing-
263 of 648 punches. Trinidad was
credited with connecting on 116 of
462 punches.
De La Hoya's most effective punch
was his left jab, with which he con-
trolled the first half of the fight. De
La Hoya also landed some body
punches and some nice combinations
and seemed to be also controlling the
fight with his lateral movement.
The dogged Trinidad, howev*
would not quit and he earned the title
by fighting for it in the final three
rounds, while De La Hoya sought t
stay away.
First-place Lions sell
out Silverdome
snuff out Packers
PONTIAC (AP) - Brett Favre r
out of miracles.
A 91-yard kickoff return by Terry
Fair and the heady play of Charlie
Batch brought Detroit back for a 23--
15 win over the Green Bay Packers
yesterday, keeping the surprising
Lions unbeaten after two games. The
2-0 start was the first for the Lions
since 1993.
It was the sixth loss in the last
seven trips to the Silverdome for t
Packers (1-1), who bolted ahead 15-
14 with 12:55 left in the fourth quar-
ter, erasing a 14-6 deficit thanks to a
safety and a touchdown.
But the Lions came up with some
fireworks of their own to stay unde-
feated, despite playing without All-.
Pro Barry Sanders, who retired in
frustration over the direction of club
management and the Lions' 5-1 1 fin-
ish in 1998.
Fair returned the kickoff to the 8,
and three plays later, Batch made a
nice fake and took it in on a bootleg
to put Detroit back in front, 20-15,
with 10:57 remaining. The Lions
would never relinquish the lead
again.
Jason Hanson's 48-yard field goal
capped a clock-eating 63-yard, 10-
play drive, and made it 23-15 with
2:46 left.
With three timeouts and the tw
minute warning, that seemed like
plenty of time for Favre, who
brought the Packers back in the final
1:51 for a victory over Oakland i
their opener at Lambeau Field a
week ago.
Favre alternated runs by Dorsey
Levens with passes of 22, 13 and 8
yards to drive the Packers to
Detroit's 27. But on fourth-and-tw
his pass intended for wide reeiv
Antonio Freeman was swatted away
by Robert Bailey, and the Lions
killed the final 1:02 without inci-
dent.
Don't look now, bu: the Lions are
2-0 heading into next Sunday's games
at Kansas City, which is followed by
a bye week
Thanks to losses by Tampa Bay,
Chicago, and Minnesota, Detroit's
victory moved them into sole pss ,
sion of first place in the N.
Central, a division where mpot

expected to see the Lions at the bot-
tom of the standings - not at the
toU
ONE ORo.
sPORTSMONDA

CLUB SPORTS RESULTS
MICHIGAN FENCING
(At the Schoolcraft Open in Livonia)
Women's Epee
Jill Siegelbaum - second place
Rebecca Diener - third place

g Auburn41, LSU 7
Chattanooga 49, Savannah State 0
ame to Davidson 21. Sewanee 0
wne to East Tennessee State 26, VMI 17
East Carolina 21, South Carolina 3
' Roth Florida 23. Tennessee 21
Florida State 42, North Carolina State 11
Furman 52, William & Mary 6
Georgia Tech 41. Central Florida 10
Illinois 41, Louisville 36
Jackson State 31, Grambling State 6
Kentucky State 38, Clark, Atlanta 7
Louisiana Tech 29, Alabama 28

Women's Foil
Rebecca Diener - third place
Men's Sabre
Jake Laks - third place

Team
1. Florida State (50)
2. Penn State (6)
3. Florida (3)
4. Michigan
5. Nebraska
6. Texas A&M
7. Tennessee
8. Virginia Tech
9. Georgia
10. Ohio State
11. Purdue
12. Georgia Tech
13. Miami (Fla)
14. Arkansas
15. Kansas State
16. USC
17. Wisconsin
18. UCLA
19. BYU
20. Texas
21. Michigan State
22. Marshall
23. Mississippi State
24. N.C. State
25. Air Force

Rec.1
3-0
4-0
3-0
3-0
3-0
2-0
1-1
2-0
2-0
2-1
3-0
2-1
2-1
2-0
2-0
2-0
2-1
2-1
2-0
3-1
3-0
3-0
3-0
3-1
2-0

Pts. Prey.
1,466 1
1.393 3
1.366 4
1,279 5
1.204 6
1,162 7
1.127 2
1,019 10
937 11
880 12
842 14
837 13
787 9
706 15
672 16
510 9
476 8
388 21
382 -
357 22
308 --
238 25
183
107 20
95 -

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