The Michigan Daily - Friday, May 30, 1986 - Page 15 Thinclads pushed to limit in Big Tens Cathy Schmidt and Omar Davidson win NCAA trip By EMILY BRIDGHAM When women's track coach James Henry said he'd be relying on his seniors this year, he wasn't kidding. Seniors Cathy Schmidt, Sue Schroeder, and Angie Hafner got the Big Ten Championship fever last weekend, picking up top finishes and placing the Wolverines fourth in the Big Ten with 62 points. Wisconsin won the title. "I think we did the best we possibly could," said Henry. "To take third would have taken some miracles." FOR SCHROEDER, scooping up the win in the 5000 meters and taking second in the 3000 meters paved a reassuring road to the NCAAs, which will be held June 3-7 in Indianapolis. "Personally, I was really happy because in the past I have not run so well in the Big Tens," said Schroeder. "The times are not my bet, hut con- sidering that I doubled, I am pretty happy." Schroeder qualified for the NCAAs earlier in the season, and by trim- ming her winning time in the 5000 meters from 16:09.13 to 16:02.12, she showed she had a lot left in her for the NCAA race. At the other end of the team, sophomore Debbie Duncan and freshman Starry Hodge proved their talent by taking third and fifth in the shot put. Duncan also took third in the discus, winging it 146-2. NOT AS pleased with its perfor- mance and riddled with injuries, the men's team turned out a fifth-place finish - 40 points behind first-place Wisconsin. It was a meet of hidden success for the Wolverines, however, who managed to qualify Omar Davidson in the 400 meters for the NCAAs. Davidson broke a track record in his preliminary heat, roaring to a 46.13 finish, but pulled a hamstring af- ter four steps in the finals. The injury also knocked him out of the relay, which, void of his talent, only managed to place fourth. Davidson's 400-meter time beat the winning time clocked by teammate Steverson, but his recovery is questionable. Steverson won the 400 meters in 46.29, but is till .09 shy of qualifying for the NCAAs. Steverson, along with triple jumper Butch Starmack, will be scooting over to Evanston for the Michigan's Thomas Wilcher, who finished second in the 110-meter high hurdlies in the Big Ten Championships Saturday, will compete in the NCAA Championships June 3-7. FRESHMAN ABBOTT JUST GETTING STARTED: Star Casey closes out career By PAUL DODD There weren't many, if any, Michigan baseball fans in Ray Fisher Stadium who weren't disappointed with the Wolverines' early exit from post-season play. A close look back at the season would turn many of those frowns up- side down. If a 47-12 record, a Big Ten title (the fifth in seven years), and being ranked one of the top ten teams in the country for-most of the season wasn't enough, there were the individual standouts. TWO PLAYERS come up immediately when discussing this spring's Michigan baseball team. One has started his collegiate career with nothing less than a flourish, the other has concluded it with one. In his first year at Michigan, Jim Abbott brought more attention from the media and the public in general to the baseball program than any victory in the wildly suc- cessful seven-year tenure of coach Bud Middaugh. Big Ten Player-of-the-Year Casey Close emerged from the shadows of former Wolverine stars Mike Watters and Barry Larkin. Larkin had won the league MVP crown two years in a row before joining the Cincinnati Reds after last season. ABBOTT, the rookie, and Close, the veteran, per- sonified the type of team the Wolverines are. Abbott, a blond-haired wiry freshman from Flint, was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays right out of high school. But the youngster, who spent hours at a time throwing a ball at a garage to perfect switching his glove from his right arm to his left hand, wanted to pitch for the Univer- sity of Michigan. Along with his gloves and spikes, Abbott brought along the interest of the likes of NBC, ESPN, and Parade magazine. He was a national celebrity almost before he threw a pitch in a college game. And he didn't let anybody down. IN BETWEEN interviews, which he carried on with the utmost patience and class, Abbott racked up a 6-2 record with a 4.11 ERA. He also struck out 44 in just over 50 in- nings of work. While Abbott's numbers don't really speak for the contributions he made, Close's numbers do. The Indianapolis native smashed 19 home runs this year, 72 in his career to top the list of his Michigan recor- ds. Close's 72 runs batted in this year is also a Wolverine best, as is his .869 slugging percentage. IN THE 3000 meters, Schroeder Central Collegiates this weekend to try CLOSE WAS named to the GTE-Cosida Academic All- didn't even crack her season best of to hit the standard. American team yesterday. His 3.22 grade-point average 9:11.2 and was still able to take in Communication and .440 batting average gave him a second in the race with a 9:14.7. Her Out of nowhere, Starmack was able spot in the outfield after making the third team as performance topped last year's in to clinch second in the triple jump, designated hitter lastspring. both of her events. going 50-7 after not leaving the ground He made the all-tournament team everywhere Schmidt, the other half of the duo for several weeks. He was beaten by Michigan played, including Rollins (Fla.) Baseball Week, that will represent Michigan in the Wisconsin's Kip Wright (50-8), but he Wheaties Tournament of Champions, the Big Ten Cham- Nationals, took second at the Big Tens has yet to return to his old form which pionships, and the Mideast Regionals here last weekend. in the 1500 meters Saturday, trim- placed him within a quarter-inch of It was in the Wheaties tournament in the Minneapolis ming her best time by three seconds thestandard last March. Metrodome against defending national champion Miami and gaining a berth for the trip to where Close delivered the biggest of his 16 game-winning Nationals. She finished in 4:19.3. Another damaging injury occurred hits this year: a two-out, two-strike grand slam in the bot- The second place finish, the same in the 110-meter hurdles. Senior stan- tom of the 11th. as last year's, but with a faster time, dout Thomas Wilcher managed to earned the team points that proved earn second, running far from his ABBOTT'S heroics included four innings of no-hit pit- instrumental in its move from sixth best after his calf tightened up on ching in his first appearance at Fisher Stadium against place in the indoor Big Tens to fourth him. His time of 14.18 was nowhere Grand Valley March 24. Scott Kamieniecki had thrown place this spring. near his record-holding 13.68. Never- three no-hit innings prior to that, but made only five ap- theless, Wilcher has already qualified pearances all season and may red-shirt himself. WITHOUT question, Angie Haf- for the NCAAs and should be ready Abbott's most astounding performance may have been WTr's winnsng ea of- nie Hag-to Compete. against Minnesota at the Big Ten Tournament. The ner a winning leap of 54 in the high Gophers shelled Abbott in a nationally televised game jump elevated the team to a higher earlier in the year, but the gutsy youngster fired 6% in- placing. The senior psychology nings of three-hit ball while registering ten strikeouts. He major, equally as slight in stature as entered the game down by one, but held on to allow his Schmidt and Schroeder, is still a few team to come back with its usual late-inning fireworks. inches away from qualifying for the Sixteen times the Wolverines scored in their last at-bats NCAAs. to win this spring. Three of Close's homers were game- Last year Hafner sprang for a winning hits. All of this made the end of last Saturday's second-place finish at the Big Ten gawi g rChampionship, but she has not been game with Oral Roberts thatmuch more disheartening. able to repeat her record-breaking 6- "Our team showed a lot of character out there (in the 0% leap since 1984, which would ninth inning rally)," said Close while toweling off from easily have qualified her for his last shower in Fisher Stadium. "We gave it our best Nationals. shot, but when you win the games we have this year, UNIVERSITY you're doomed to lose a few." For Jim Abbott, hitting Adam Casillas with the bases Think You're Pregnant? TOW ERS loaded in the bottom of the eighth to force in the winning Free Pregnancy Test The Beat of Campus Lifel run wasn't quite what he had dreamed of doing while Completely Confidential Furnished Apartments hurling that ball against his garage. Great Location If it makes him a better college pitcher in the long run, Pregnancy Counseling Center Corner of. University & s. Forest he'll accept it. He has a greatcareer ahead of him. 761-2680 Close has one behind him. ' -Call: 434-3088-(any time) r