The Michigan Daily -Thursday, June 9, 1983 - Page 15 onfidence is the key or Weaver By JEFF FAYE "It has all come together this spring." That is how Michigan women's track coach Francie Goodridge summed up the performances Melanie Weaver tur- ned in over the last three weeks. AFTER PLACING second in the 10,000 meters with a personal record 33:54.18 at the Big Ten Championships the weekend of May 20, Weaver went on to finish third in the NCAA 10,000 championship. Her time eclipsed per- sonal and school records as she ran an impressive 33:06.70. According to Goodridge, the education graduate's stellar perfor- mance has been a long time coming, but expected nevertheless. "It was a combination of physical maturing and confidence," said Goodridge. "She had no idea how good she was. Melanie would psych herself out, convince herself that she wasn't as good as the others in the race." THE PROBLEM STEMMED from the beginning of her collegiate career. Weaver is from the small town of Scot- tville and arrived at the University when the athletic department first established the women's track team. "I came in when the program was just getting started," Weaver said. "Right away I was the number one distance runner. That is what I thought I wanted, but it put a lot of pressure on me." Unfortunately for Weaver, she didn't respond to the pressure as well as she might have hoped, and the outstanding performances were not there. "IT WAS ALMOST all mental," said Goodridge. "And the turning point was her championship last year." A year ago Weaver won the outdoor crown in the 10,000 at the conference meet. "That made her realize she was as good as the rest of the runners in the Big Ten," Goodridge continued. "It put her up to the level the rest were at in her own mind." WEAVER SAID, "I always had enough confidence but the outdoor 10,000 was a confidence booster. (A con- ference championship) is pretty much the goal of every runner." Goodridge did not always see the con- fidence Weaver professed to have, but admitted that part of it might have been the maturity factor. "I had to beat her over the head to get her confidence up," said the coach to whom Weaver credited much of her success. "It is tough being a distance runner in college. First there is cross country, then indoor track and then outdoor. She had to peak three times a year." Next on the agenda for Weaver is The Athletic Congress meet, equivalent of the national AAU meet. She will be run- ning against all amateur-status run- ners, not just collegians. If she places in the top two from the Northern region, she will qualify for the National Sporta Festival in July. Unfortunately, there is no 10,000-meter in the Olympics, so the incoming Graduate School of Business Administration student will enter the 3,000. Also entering the 3,000 will be Mary Decker-Tabb, the premier female 3,000- meter runner in the world. When asked about running against her, Weaver said, "She's so good! She builds such strong leads early that it would be crazy to try to keep up with her. I hope to do well against the rest of the run- ners, though." :.: ;; Scoreboard Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Graduated distance runner Melanie Weaver, during the NCAA indoor track meet held in March, shows some of the determination that led her to a third- place finish in the NCAA outdoor 10,000 meters. Michigan Baseball Statistics- Hitting Name, Pos. Rich Bair, c................... Chris Sabo, 3b ................. Jeff Jacobson, 2b .............. BarryLarkin,ss............... Dan Disher. of-p............... FredErdmann, If.............. Ken Hayward, lb-p ............ Mike Watters, rf ............... Chuck Froning, if-of ........... Dale Sklar, cf .................. Casey Close, p-of .............. C. J. Beshke, if. Jeff Minick, of .... ..... .. Kurt Zimmerman, if-of ........ Dave Kopf, p-dh ............... Eric Sanders, ................ DanSygarof.................. Tim Karazim, p ............... ScottKamieniecki,p........... Mark Dadabbo, c .............. MICHIGAN ................. Opponents............ ...... Name Jamie Piper ................... Gary Wayne .................. KenlHaywsard.......... Scott Kamieniecki ... Tim Karazim .............. Dave Kopf ... Rich Stoll .. . .. Casey Close .................. Bill Shuta ..................... Dan Disher .................... Dan Sygar ................ MICHIGAN ... . Opponent...................... Not including last night's game. G 55 57 57 55 39 47 57 53 48 50 44 33 19 18 23 18 46 20 14 8 57 57 G 9 15 13 14 15 13 10 5 17 57 AB R H 2B-3B-HR SB 156 27 59 10-5-3 2 201 57 75 16-4-16 18 189 38 68 10-0-10 7 184 50 66 7-3-5 13 60 14 21 3-1-1 8 119 23 41 8-0-4 5 177 38 59 10-1-5 7 128 36 41 9-4-0 12 99 17 30 1-0-0 2 116 31 33 7-1-3 5 79 10 22 4-2-1 3 49 11 13 5-0-0 0 19 1 8 0-0-0 0 10 6 4 1-0-0 3 21 2 8 1-1-1 0 24 4 7 1-0-0 1 19 22 5 2-0-0 9 3 0 0 0-0-0 0 2 0 0 0-0-0 0 1 2 0 0-0-0 0 1681 411 562 95-22-49 100 1557 186 338 49-10-22 62 BB 9 25 22 23 3 26 32 34 15 9 7'e 8 1 5 3 3 5 0 0 0 235 246 BB 15 29 35 19 40 23 47 23 9 246 235 RBI 35 55 61 57 4 29 49 26 16 14 14 9 4 2 3 2 3 0 0 0 563 172 SO 8R 51 43 29 40 40 31 16 6 268 174 AVG. .379 .374 .360 .369 .350 .345 .334 .321 .303 .285 .279 .265 .421 .400 .381. .292 .263 .000 .000 .000 .335 .217 ERA 1.56 1.81 2.9 3.13 3.38 3.45 3.58 5.14 6.72 00 3.06 7.41 Arizona St. 6, Oklahoma St. 5 R H E Texas 6, Oklahoma State 5 Arizona State ................102 001 110-6 10 0 R H E Oklahoma State.............100 000 004-5 7 1 Oklahoma State .......002 011 001 00-5 11 1 Arizona State-Carter, Jefferson (9) and Wakamatsu. Texas ................. 010 000 310 01-6 10 4 Oklahoma State-Livingston, Henneman (7), Kan- Oklahoma State-Schmidt, Kanwisher (8) and Wine. wisher (8) and Wine. Texas-Clemens, Killingsworth (9) and Hearron. WP-Carter (12-2). LP-Livingston (15-3). WP-Killingsworth (12-3). LP-Kanwisher (9-4). HR-Bonds (11), Edwards (16), Incaviglia (23). Alabama 6, Michigan 5 ALABAMA oh r Ih hi a b r h bi Larkinss... 4N 1 1 Elbin3b........... 4 2 1 1 Wattersrf......... 4 0 0 0 McClendon dh ..... 5 1 2 0 Sabo3b............ 5 1 1 1 Simspr............ 0 0 0 0 HaywardIb....... 5 1 2 0 Magadanilb ....... 4 1 3 2 Disher pre,......... 0 0 0 0 SkatesIf...........5 1 1 1 Jacobson2b....... 4 0 3 1 Stallings cf ........ 5 0 1 1 Closedh........... 3 1 1 1 Velleggia c ........ 5 0 1 1 Laeh 4 5 1~ Froning ph-dh . 2 0 0 0 Lake 2b ........... 4 0 1 0 rmnif....3 1 1 0 Smitheyrf......... 4 0 1 0 Erdmannf. 3 1 Shipleyss......... 3 1 0 0 Sygarpr-If........ 0 0 0 0 Bairc ............. 3 1 2 0 Sklar cf ........... 4 0 2 1 Kamrieniecki Totals ............. 39 6 11 6 Totals ............. 37 5 13 4 R H E Alabama ................................................201 300 000-6 11 1 M ICHIGAN .............................................000 301 100-5 13 3 E-Browne, Larkin, Bair, Silar. DP-Alabama. LOB-Alabama 11, Michigan 10. 2B-Sabo, Close. 3B-Lake, Larkin. HR-Elbin (8). SB-Skates (10), Velleggia (3), Smithey (13), Lake (11). S-Bair. Alabama IP H R ER BB SO BrowneW,11-1................ 6 9 4 4 2 3 Meacham ..................... 2% 4 1 1 1 3 BrauchleS,12................. ' 0 0 0 0 0 Michigan Kopf L,9-1.............. 31/3 5 4 2 3 1 Kamieniecki .......... 41/ 6 2 0 1 2 Wayne ............. 1/ 0 0 0 1 2 Ha -ward HBP-Larkin (by Browne). WP-Browne. PB-Bair (2). T-2:56. A-11,246. e 5co " co15% Off a All Merchandise " * A pWITH THIS COUPON 201 E. Washington { (except sole items) at Fourth a urWe stock a full line of boots, camp- " Open M-Sat 9-6 ing equipment, hunting clothing " 994-3572 W winter coats. 0 Pitching SAV W-L IP 1 3-0 17.3 1 7-2 69.7 0 2-0 8.7 7 4-1 46.0 2 9-1 72.0 1 11-2 78.3 0 5-1 50.3 0 3-0 21.0 0 0-1 6.7 0 0-0 0.8 12 49-8 424.0 4 8-49 403.3 54 60 40 66 76 35 12 8 338 562 R/E 3/3 25/14 2/2 19/14 23/16 37/27 35/30 23/20 13/12 5/5 1)/0 186/144 411/332