With only three weeks left in the Big Ten football nice, you wouldn't want r~ miss any of this Saturday's conference matchups. Check onl ine for rh i Saturd y's games and limes. michigandaily.com/Isports Terrell in graduate, By Madk Francescutti 1)aily Sports Editor Lloyd Carr called wide receiver [ Terrell a "tough and physical playeri showed aster side, discussing hi plans, academics and the strong bond made with his coach. At the forefront of the conversation three letters NFL. Draft analysts already place Terrell first-round pick, and most have him a 101) receiver. But will the junior wi( forgo his final year of eligibility and a d ma for the riches and fame of the pros Instead of restricting his comment he's done in past weeks, Terrell shined light on the subject yesterday. "The (NFL) question is going to con --you can't avoid it,' Terrell said. "'M thing is graduating, and that's big ot mom's list of things." Terrell said he only needs 24 credi graduate after this semester. If that I true, he could graduate by taking a full in the winter and some classes this sj and summer. That would possibly fulfill his r'eq ments of a diploma for himself an mother, and at the same time, allow hi enter the Draft. Terrell mentioned his respect for s tailback Anthony Thomas. who ret urne his senior season to graduate undei mother's wishes. Thomas is now breaking Mich records, including career-rushing to downs with 49 formally held by Ty Wheatley (who also put off the pros). SThe senior season also raised Thio prospects for a better draft position. No. I Michigan vs . No. 6 Michigan State 'M' ocki Ieers prep to host M By Jo. Smith Daily Sports Wricei. EAST LANSING TwI~o days alter hanging another CCHA season title ban- ner from the rafters of Yost Ice Aiena, the Michigan hockey team learned it was No. I in both major college hockey polls. Released yesterday, the USCHlO poll and the USA Today/A H M coaches poll th rank the Wolverines atop the nation the first time Michigan has been a regular season No. I since the 1996-97 ~season. But there is little time for glkoatiing. Michigan will host No. 6 Michican State this Saturday night. It will be the first of four meetings this season in what Michigan coach Red Berenson calls "arguably the best rivalry in college ockey." But Michigan State coach Ron Mason ~says that the Wolverines will see a "diF- feren t" type of Spartans team skating into Yost Ice Arena than they've gone to war with in the past. Notoriously, Michigan State is a hard- nosed, stingy defensive team - not only with talented blueliners, but also with unselfish forwards who block their share of shots on the defensive end. Graduation, aloiig with iinjuries, have *aken a toll on the S partans. T he of'sea- WHATS AUL Come find Challenge the memi bet you N -i~wu pouT11TS * * 9 TUESDAY OCTOBER 31, 2000 position to move to NFL C HRIS DUPREY )av id fUt u - Ihe's were as -a s the Iiplo- s, as some ie up y big its 10 hoids load pr rig u ire- d his im to en ior d for rhis igan uchI- rone mas' Oct. 30 standings Team 2. virgnia Tech 3. Florida State 4. Nebraska 5. Miami (Fla.) 6. Florida 7. Oregon 8. Washington 9. Texas Christian 10. Purdue 11.Oregon State 12. Michigan 13. Clemson 14. Notre Dame 15. Mississippi State Comp. Avg. 7.93 10.18 10.37 11.35 16.67 17.31 24.01 25.63 28.19 30.58 31.11 32.03 35.23 NORMAN NG/ Dady David Terrell's acrobatic catches, like this one against Illinois, might become property of the NFL next season, as the junior said he may be on track to graduate early-. "I look at Anthony's situation and I admire that he's still as accessible -he's still at tihe top, Terrell said. Terrell also spoke of the importance of' academics. In the past three semester-s, tihe wideout took 16 credits. Add that with summer classes, and Terrell has put himself in a one-up academic position. "I1 could have taken 10. I 2 credits," Terrell said. "But if I'm out here with a lot of fl-ce time, who knows what I would be doing. I'd rather be studying with a pretty girl" The bye week before this Saturday's 3:30 game at Northwestern gave Tei-rell and the other Michigan players a chance to catch up Oil schloolwork, removing the stress that comes with it. "If I'm not doing well in school things don't go as well all week." Teri-ell said. "If I flunk an exam, it feels bad. I am a competi- tive guy in everything." Whatever he decides about next vear-, Carr will likely have a big part in the deci- sion. Terre1 emotionally talked about his coach, someone he views as a str-ong iatlier figure. "That guv, he can guide you along in so many ways," Terrell said. "I call him all the time at I ,2 in the niorning withl imy prob- lems. People don't know that. I love that guy. Terrell said that having a person to fill the i-ole of a father figure has been key to his success. And thanks to that relationship, accorn- plishment and success haven't escaped Michigan's No. 1 receiver. Terrell leads the Wolverines with 46 receptions for 733 yards anld has eight touchdowns this season, sev- eral coiming on acrobatic-type plays. He has caught 1 31 passes for 1,.920 yards and has scored I 7 touchdowns dur- ing his career. Terrell, a big, physical receiver at 6-foot- 3 and 215 pounds, has the strength and height to be a big-time NFL receiver. I e's most well-known for sharing that idea and others in his somletime trash-talking tone on the field. "-It's nlever personal,. Terreli said of the ti-ash talking. "Without it would be just two guys - P brnngs out the best ill people. Last vear, he even beat then-freshman guard Jamal Crawford in a gaiie of I-on-l - proving his point. "After I beat Jamal I told him, he's never going to hear the end of this," Terrell said. lHe will likely never hear the end of reporters highlighting his incredible catches and talkative style. . But as for his NFL decision, maybe oth- ers wxill see the softer side that Terrell showed yesterday. "There's more to David Terrell than scor- ing touchdowns," lie said. Some Tuesday morning musings: * I know ABC play-by-play man Brent Musburger - thinks Drew-Brees is "a fine young man." Thanks to: Musburger, I know Brees still can't beat his mother in tenmjs, wasn't heavily recruited in high school because of injuries. and a bunch of other tidbits. Every season. Musburger feels the tieed to select a colloe football godchild. Brees has become Musburger's fascination of the 2000 season. Being Musburger's "godchild" equates to plenty of extrq benefits. Good plays become great plays. And thanks to Musburger, even bad outcomes can be turned into respectability. Saturday against Ohio State, leading 24-20 with under three minutes to play. Brecs threw a horrendous-looking bell off the wrong foot. The pass was picked by the Buckeves' Mike Doss near midfield. Doss had running room and took the interception all th$ way down inside the Purdue 5. Brees was the only . Boilermaker with a chance to keep Doss from scoring aiid managed to knock him out of bounds, saving the touchdo n temporrlyy. That sent Musburger into a flood of praise. Forget that Brees, the All-America, had just potentially thrown away the game. HeI made the tackle - a minor accomplishment that Musburger didn't hesitate to trumpet. Due to blown coverage by Doss himself, Brecs was able to rally Purdue for otne final score and a 3 1-27 victory Needless to say, Musburger loved that too. . . * Western Michigan is making a drive to be ranked in:thc Associated Press poll by season's end. It earned 50 votes in this week's poll, good for 27th. No. 25 Georgia Tech has 178. The Broncos have done almost all that could be expdcie~d of them this season. Mid-American Conference teams d6r)'t deserve respect when they play a shoddy nonconference schedule, or when they get enmbarrassed by mediocre tesni. Western Michigan hasn't cormmitted either faux pas. It played on the road at Wisconsin and Iowa in consecutive games at the start of the season and defeated the H~awkceyes. The average margin of victory in its seven wins has beiid5 points. The Brotncos were hurt by Marshall's drop-off this seas6Ii whchsppdth AC of the publicity the conference, Still, Western Michigan will have its chance to leap int t e top 25. Its final three games are free victories -- at Ball SiAte, at Central Michigan and home against Eastern Michigan. - The MAC championship game -and the Motor City Bhl provide the Broncos with t wo televised opportunities to imlpress enough voters anid lift themselves out of the "oihbr r-eceiving votes" bin. That would give coach Gary Darnell aind his perennially underrated program quite a lift. * Watching a visiting team pack up and leave town after i game ends is much like watching an evacuation. Tile coaches and players dress and take care of their duties with the medga; the support staff, mleanwhilc, loads every piece of equipment and other cargo into a large senli to head back ilonme The equipment truck doesn't hide its identity The cab' oT Mielhigan's is painted to resemble the winged helmet itself. Other programs paint the school logo on the side. Sonmc of Michigan's opponents have taken the truck dcsign a little furthe-. Wisconsin's truck sports the logos of its most recent bowl invitations - and the Badgers make sure to squeeze the red rose on there as much as they can. This is all fine aind good, but it gets ridiculous seeing Indiana do the same thing. When your equipment truck sports the logos "1988 Liberty Bowl" and "'l99l Copper Bowl," you know your program is scrubby -Chr'is Duprey' can be reached at cduprv@wnich edu. Rivalry week Sardy 73m. at Hockey 'U' Ys eAea ey No. 1in nation [ichigan State; Blackburn 'questionable' son loss of two key seinior blueliners, the CCH' IA's top defenseman Mike Weaver kind Brad Hodgins, will take away from their defensive strategy. Aild Mason believes that ilot only will the Spailans imiss the~ scoringt of the (CCH]A player of the year aind Hlobey Baker Finalist Shawn Horcoff, but also the fact that he was "'unbelievable on tile defensive side of the pttck.' In the absence of a few key players,. lmainy Spartans have had to take on new roles and try to build a solid chemlistry to play as a co>hesive unit on tihe ice. "New we're a different type of team," Masoil said. "It's takeil a little while for this learn to fiind itself. We think a little more oflensively now, not that we score imore goals. We're still developing a per- sonality and I think that we'll give up a little more chances" On the defensive enld. The early-season shloulder injuries to forwards Andrew Bogde and Joe GJoodenow hiave also added to the changes in Mason's squad. "No learm has toils of depth," Mason said. ''So that's going to htirt us a bit.' It hasift slowed down thle Spartans too nmuchl thusfar, as they hlave been tak- iing advantage of their chailces with the man~i advantage - scoring five pwr play goals this past weekend to sweep Notre Dame. More than half of Oct. 30 standings Team 1. MIchigan (16) 2. Wisconsin (16) 3. N. Hamnpshire (6) 4. Boston Cot. (2) 5. Minnesota 6. Michigan State 7. North Dakota 8. ColoradoCol. 1.Boston Univ. 11. St. Cloud 12. Northeastern 13. Neb.-Omaha 14. Rensselaer 15. Providence w 6 7 5 5 5 4 3 4 4 4 4 2 3 Pts 559 556 518 505 422 348 317 270 175 143 139 93 85 Pvs. 3 1 4 2 6 8 5 11 10 13 12 /~ DANNY MOLOsHOK/Oaiy Mike Cammalleri (left) and Mike Komisarek celebrate Komisarek's first collegiate goal. No. 1Michigan hosts the Spartans Saturday- Michigan State's tallies have been withl an extra mail. The power play is 'imlportaint every game for us," Mason said. "I don't know h1ow manyl fi ve-onI- five goals we're going to score. Especially in See STATE, Page 10 *Learn about the results of the survey conducted with graduates of the nation's leading business schools. The studyv was conducted by UMBS, CEW and Catalyst un~s~ of Michigan -Participate in a panel discussion of the study results with: Business -* - = . CA.J...II AtL'.2~ ~h~lc'school L THE HOOPLA A BOUT??? out on November 1st in the biag! bers of the Michigan Women's aasketball Team... didn't know girls could be this good' Susan Ashlord, Senior Associate Dean 0f Axcademic Affairs, UMBSf X Laura Sue D'Annunzio, Vice President, A.T. Kearney, Inc. Suzanne Watson, MBA 2 UMBS Co-President, Michigan Business Women V ~ J>~3..X~ U