The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday - April 1,1991-- Page! I In The I *U.S. swimming must respond to foreign foes by Ken Su giura Daily Sports Writer AUSTIN, Texas - To borrow the words of a celebrated wit, strange things are afoot in American swimming; it's in trouble. At last weekend's NCAA Championships, a bevy of international swimmers took home individual swim championships, seven of 13 titles in all. Florida's Martin Zubero and Anthony Nesty, Iowa's Artur Wojdat, and UCLA's Andrea Cecchi, who hail from Spain, Surinam, Poland and Italy, respectively, each won at least one championship. Texas coach Eddie Reese, coach of the victorious Longhorns, called the foreign domination "the worst I've ever seen this meet." What happened was a culmination of primarily one problem: American swimming's overproduction of sprinters. The relative dearth of stroke and distance swimmers makes more sense after a look at the NCAA meet's list of events. After his maximum three individual events, a sprinter can potentially swim on five relays, while a long-distance swimmer can hope to swim only one, and a stroke swimmer two. Michigan features a classic example of a sprinter's utility. Last season, the Wolverines had sprinter Brent Lang. Lang swam seven events and won two, the 50- and 100-yard freestyles. Meanwhile, Mike Barrowman, perhaps the world's best, swam three events and won one, the 200 breaststroke. Including the relays, Lang the sprinter accounted for approximately 76.5 points, while Barrowman the breaststroker, though NCAA Swimmer-of-the-Year, could only add a comparatively meager 44 points. This has led to the present condition, in which only Dave Wharton of @USC, Jeff Rouse of Stanford, Tennessee's Melvin Stewart, and Barrowman were the only Americans to win titles at either a distance, stroke, or indi- vidual medley event. The new NCAA restrictions will only serve to exacerbate the problem. The restrictions call for a reduction of practice time to 20 hours per week, while most programs currently train around 40 hours per week. Sadly enough, Indiana coach Kris Kirchner believes the reduced training will most harm the distance swimmers, who need the longest time to train. Barrowman agrees. "The way the NCAA is going, it's time to get out," he said. "They're going the wrong way." According to Barrowman, poor results will eventually force athletes with Olympic aspirations to leave school to pursue their training. "There's nothing easy in the world anymore. At one time, it was easy for the United States to walk away with anything," Kirchner said. Kirchner is right on the money. With the '92 Games fast approaching, United States Swimming (the national governing board) and the NCAA must respond now, each in its own way. They must ensure that the United'States, now caught by its interna- tional competitors, won't be left eating their wake. SWIMMERS Continued from page 1 high as I could for team points," said Namesnik, who entered the fi- nals seeded eighth. A weak first day of competition necessitated Michigan's recovery. The Wolverines ended Thursday in ninth place with 51 points, 109 points behind leader Texas, but just *25 points behind then fifth-place SMU. Eric Wunderlich's stunning third place in the 200 individual medley provided the day's only highlight, finishing in a Big Ten and school record time of 1:45.97. "I came in and hopefully wanted to make the finals if I could. I really didn't know I had it in me," Wunderlich said. Friday was much better for the Wolverines, who finished the day with150 points. It was good enough to put them in sixth place, 18 points in front of Tennessee. In the 400 IM, Eric Namesnik entered the finals as the top seed, but lost in the final, when USC's Dave Wharton dropped four and a half seconds from his preliminary time to win his fourth title. Namesnik ended up in second place, with a new Big Ten and school- record time, 3:44.14. Later, in the 100 breaststroke, Barrowman also entered the final ranked No. 1, and also was defeated. In the final, Barrowman and Wunderlich chased UCLA's Andrea Cecchi to victory in :53.50, ahead of Wunderlich at :53.52 and third- place Barrowman in :53.56. "That was my best time," Barrowman said. "It was right on the Big Ten record, and I just missed winning the thing. That's too bad. It's really frustrating." TEAM Continued from page 4 Senior Andrea Nelson leads the staff and will attempt to match her 23-win, nine-shutout sophomore season. She is quickly developing into the staff's stopper, a role she has not seen in her years at Michigan. "(Nelson) is our most powerful pitcher," Hutchins said. "We could save Andrea as our ace in the hole." She has already picked up five saves for the season. Rookie Julie Clarkson is devel- oping into the stingiest pitcher on the Michigan staff, at 3-2 with an 0.84 ERA. "Julie's thrown outstanding for us," Hutchins said. "She's just get- ting better and better." Sophomore Kelly Forbis rounds out the rotation, leading the team with five wins. CATCHERS: Senior co-captain Julie Cooper commands the Wol- verine pitching staff while provid- ing strong offense. After batting .293 last season, she is now hitting .315. Cooper also provides the di- versity of playing another position, left field. Sophomore Karla Kunnen will also see action behind the plate. After batting .143 in limited action her rookie season, she has improved to .279 this year, and leads the team in RBIs. INFIELDERS: At first base, junior Heather Lyke has the diffi-. cult task of replacing the graduated Sara Dyksterhouse, who finished third in Big Ten hitting. Lyke has developed into a solid player and is batting .277. Senior co-captain shortstop Bonnie Tholl anchors the Wolverine defense. After finishing First-Team Big Ten last year, Tholl has strug- gled this year, batting .200. Rookies Mary Campana and Tina Martin will start at second base and third base, respectively. OUTFIELDERS: After win- ning the 1990 Freshman-of-the-Year award, left fielder Patti Benedict has developed into one of the pre- mier players in the country. She leads the team in hitting with a .321 average. in her Nicinity, according jo Hutchins. Her defensive prowess, combined with strong power hit- ting, makes Hearns one of the Wolverines' better overall players: Sophomore Kari Kunnen will start in center field. OUTLOOK: Hutchins' philoso- phy for the season is very simple: Come out to play hard every day, and good things will happen. Without intensity and focus, the Wolverines will repeat their 1990 campaign. "We've shown we can play aw- ful and we've shown we can play like the best in the countryj" Hutchins said. The pendulum swing of consis- tent performance will be the differ- ence between a middle-of-the-pack Big Ten finish, and Michigan's first Big Ten title. team. Hutchins believes her three main pitchers need sub-1.00 ERAs for the team to contend for the Big Ten title. Hutchins Junior right fielder Stacey Hearns the team's defensive stand- out, catching almost everything hit CONFERENCE Continued from page 4 Among the teams with a lost a heartbreaker, 1-0, to Iowa last realistic chance at dethroning the champions is Minnesota. Playing a taxing spring schedule of 35 games, the Golden Gophers have showed signs of improving on last year's fourth place finish. They defeated fifth-ranked UNLV last weekend, and while their 18-17 record may not frighten many opponents, coach Teresa Wilson feels confident about her team. "We need to improve every weekend," Wilson said. "We have won 16 of our last 21 games but we still need to continue to improve." Along with Minnesota, Indiana, who finished one game behind last year's co-champions, has an eye on the crown. The Hoosiers (14-14) are young, returning only six letter- winners and fielding eight new- comers. Despite this fact, Stephen- son is excited about her team thus far. "I have really been happy with our upperclassmen, so far," Stephen- son said. "They are going to have to contribute a lot this year because we do have such a young team." A strong Michigan. squad will make the Big Ten season a close, four-team race. Led by a deep pitching staff, the Wolverines have already proven they can play with the elite softball teams, defeating No. 18 New Mexico, 3-0, and No. 11 San Jose State, 2-1. Michigan then weekend. "The reason Michigan has not won the Big Ten Championship in the past," Hutchins said, "is that we have only focused on the top team and not been prepared for the others. We must play every series like its the Big Ten championship." Ohio State, which shared the Big Ten title last season with Iowa, is a Jekyll and Hyde type of team. The Buckeyes have started poorly, winning three of their first 16 games. Erratic hitting has been a key problem for the Buckeyes. Ohio State posts a .190 team average, with only two batters hitting over .244. Big Ten Coach-of-the-Year Gail Davenport may need another outstanding effort for Ohio State to contend. This leaves Michigan State and Northwestern, who tied for last place a year ago. The Spartans, coming off their worst season in history, returni10letterwinners, including six starters. "We just want to improve," coach Gloria Becksford said. With a 4-7 record to date, the Spartans seem to be on the road for another sub- .500 season. The Wildcats, who have won the Big Ten title five times, four in a row, have also stumbled with a 1-8 record. In order to survive the Big Ten season they must improve on their .219 batting average. ARE YOU INTERESTED IN SOCIOLOGY? " AS A MAJOR? 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