The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - April 15, 1991- Page 3 ~& (azz Pb~"y aezawc Layden The immense one tells how enjoying his life in the NI Mike Gill After a successful coaching ca- Lakers, or Housi reer at the helm of the NBA's Utah be surprised if Jazz, Frank Layden retired and as- certainly, San An *umed the presidency of the club. D: The Piston Since, Layden, one of basketball's have been strug most colorful characters, has also Are you among begun broadcasting NBA games as think they'll b well. Recently, Daily Sports Writer around when t Ken Sugiura spoke with Layden around? about NBA basketball and his place L: I don't thi in it. they'll be able to Daily: This season, it seems the the greatest cc Jazz have taken their place among Chuck Daly has .he NBA's elite. How do you ex- think that they'r lain that? they used to be. I Layden: I think you talk about lot this year, live maturity. We have two legitimate broadcasting wi all-stars, Karl Malone, and cer- just feel that the tainly John Stockton. Then, I think, tough, rough, fla the players that we've put around they've been in t them: Thurl Bailey, Blue Edwards, Jeff Malone; Jeff Malone in his own right has been an All-Star a 'To me, on couple of times. You're talking basketball about a pretty solid team that goes about seven-deep that has really oe te good players. orientated I think that our weakness is be- like the re: yond that. We have a very young there's not bench, with real young people. But this team can play anybody. D: How far do you think they can go in the playoffs? I can underst L: The overall possibility is they won two champi Could go all the way. The 'also' is had to play all at they're fragile in this, that they think that somec could lose in the first round. Depth wears off. I just is very important. In the playoffs, I as hungry as the don't think you have to be ten-deep, past. but I think you have to be at least D: Can you eight-deep, maybe nine-deep. And I Conference chain don't think they are. L: I think C I also think that in our confer- win it this year. E ence, there are just so many good vulnerable. I s teams that it's almost impossible to Philly the other *say that you're sure to win it. I get they'd lost two it asked all the time who's going to I think they've w win out here, and I couldn't say one They'll have thing or the other. It might very vantage. I think well be Seattle. Right now, I'd have only..., well, to think in terms of Portland, the Celtics and Detr FOOTBALL Continued from page 3 lengthy list of injured players, suffering mild ankle *sprains. Already out for the spring have been: junior cen- ter Steve Everitt (knee), senior strong safety Otis Williams (pinched nerve in his neck), first-year linebacker Charlie Stumb (knee), sophomore linebacker Dave Dobreff (hamstring), senior linebacker Erick Anderson (shoulder), junior defen- sive tackle Chris Hutchinson (back), junior linebacker Curt Mallory (neck), and junior fullback -Barry Kelley (knee). Another player missing was se- *nior Brain Townsend due to some lab work he had to finish for class. The unusual amount of injuries, combined with the fact that Michigan Stadium was unavailable for play because of 'renovations, forced the cancellation of the annual Blue/White intrasquad game for the .first time in decades. But all was not lost, as Moeller got a good look at his two back-up quarterbacks, Todd Collins and Ken Sollom, in the controlled scrimmage. 0.4f everyone's healthy on the offensive line, it should be a good line. It has the potential to be as good as last year' - Gary Moeller Michigan football coach Collins had the better afternoon, tossing two touchdown passes with only one interception. However, it was his presence under pressure that stood out the most. On his second touchdown pass, he threw a bullet pass against the grain to tight end. Dave Diebolt while being thrown to the ground by defensive back David Ritter. "I didn't think Todd Collins did too bad," Moeller said. "He did a pretty good job. He's just a kid that just needs a lot of snaps. He needs more and more snaps to see what he can do." Sollom added a touchdown pass as well, hitting a sprinting Allen Woodard on a 25-yard pass down the sideline. Sophomore tailback Ricky Powers scored the final touchdown of the day on a 35-yard scamper. Michigan struggled the most at offensive line. The Wolverines could not run the ball up the middle as the injury-plagued line didn't open many holes. "If everyone's healthy on the offensive line, it should be a good line," Moeller said. "It has the po- tential to be as good as last year. We've just got to get some enthusiasm and things like that. I saw some ,of that at Thursday's scrimmage." The bright spots for the Wolverines were mostly ton. But I wouldn't it was the Jazz or ntonio. ns so far this season ggling a little bit. g the people who e able to turn it he playoffs come nk so. I don't think o. If they do, it'll be oaching feat that s ever done. I just e not as hungry as 've seen them play a , because I've been ith the network. I ey're not the same amboyant team that he past. that could beat them, but I don't think they will. D: How is the NBA draft shap- ing up this year? L: I think, as always, my opinion of the draft is that it's always over- rated. I think we put a high price, a lot of priorities, a lot of false val- ues marked on the draft. There are very few players com- ing down the pipe who can step in and be impact players. There may be rookies who get some good num- bers. But very few will step in and help you to win right away. I don't think that there are many players out there this year that are going to step into anybody's lineup and you're going to say, 'This guy will let our team win it.' And I'm talk- e of the problems I had with is that there's not enough fun. It's o serious. It's too money- . All sports are, and basketball is st .... There's not enough laughs, enough seeing humor in things' he's 3A ing is losing, there's always stress. But, I wasn't having fun anymore. That's why I got out. D: How have you found the job of being president of the Jazz? L: I tell you, I recommend it for everybody. I think that everybody getting out of college, when people say, 'What do you want to be,' you should say, 'I want to be the President,' because you get the best tables at restaurants, you get the best tee times, people send you pre- sents. You don't have to make any great decisions because you delegate all your authority. And it's great. It beats working. D: Tell me about your job as a color commentator for the NBA. L: I'm having fun there, too. I'm doing it on radio. On radio, I tell you, there's a lot of freedom. We work closely with the television people, because every game they do, we do, so we're right there with them, and then we do a lot more. But the ones where we're with them, I notice that they're so con- cerned. They put makeup on, they gotta have a tie on, and a jacket, and you're so concerned about every- thing. We fling it. We go out there, and we wing-it-and-fling-it. To me, one of the problems I had with bas- ketball is that there's not enough fun. It's become too serious. It's too money-orientated. All sports are, and basketball is like the rest. And so, there's not enough laughs, there's not enough seeing .humor in things. I've tried to do that, as a color commentator. And our feelings are, not my feelings, but the people who pay for it, the advertisers, they like it. They like that I've gotten humor into it. That we're not taking it so seriously. I always say this, that basketball's not invading France. It's not very important in the whole scheme of things. We just have fun. Opening Day marks start of end for Ernie When Opening Day rolls around, it signifies the resurrection of base- ball. The long winter has come to a conclusion, the green surrounding a diamond once again shows itself. One feels resurgent, ready to begin a 162-game trail through the hot days of July, the sunsetting days of September and October. Last Monday, Detroit kicked off its new season with a mighty black cloud over the ballpark. Opening Days were not meant to begin this ways The first day of the season should bring renewed optimism and a way to reason a championship even with faulty pitching. Yet, this tempered feeling didn't have anything to do with the on- field product the Tigers would showcase this year. Instead, there were questions of how many Opening Days would be left to attend on the beloved corner of Michigan and Trumbull. and that. If you've onships and you've the way to June, I of the luster of that don't think they're y have been in the pick an Eastern 1p? hicago's going to Even though they're aw them lose to day in Chicago and in a row to Chicago. von the division. the home-court ad- the Celtics are the I should say the roit both are teams ing about Magic Johnson, or Larry Bird-type players. D: Who are some of the Big Ten prospects that might be drafted? L: I don't know. That would be illogical to say. Really, in that de- partment, you should be talking with the director of player person- nel. D: Seasons ago, you retired due to the stress of the job. Do you still believe you made the right choice? L: I'd change the word 'stress' to complaints. I really felt that the job was not fun for me. That was due to several things: officiating, length of schedule, amount of travel, things like that. Winning is winning, los- Friday, longtime Tiger radio broadcaster Ernie Harwell signed copies of, his new book, Diamond Gems, at the Michigan Union Bookstore. And there were eyes looking above home plate to the small broadcast booth with the letters "WJR" on its facing. Ernie Harwell, who has broadcast the Tigers since 1960, began calling his final Opening Day fot the Tigers. Instead of zest and new life, the feeling of many inside Tiger Stadium, not to mention those across the street protesting the decision to oust Harwell from his job, was that of a morgue or funeral parlor. This day began the countdown to Ernie Harwell's death as the voice of the Tigers which would follow 161 games later. Life isn't supposed to be so unfair. One might be able to comprehend why the Tigers argue they need a new baseball stadium. But one cannot try to rationalize why the Tigers need a "new direction" in a baseball announcer - they already have one considered the best in the business. The usual feelings expected for Opening Day were missing; replaced with a coldness, a bitterness, a questioning of why, and a feeling of sad- ness for a man who calls himself "the pipeline to the Tigers." Ernie Harwell is the man with the golden voice. For one who has grown up in Michigan, he's like a grandfather or an uncle - following family and friends wherever they go. He's in the car, travelling down I-75 to grandmother's house in Ohio on a Friday night, describing the play Tom Veryzer just made at short. He's on the beach on a Sunday afternoon, telling about the shot Ben Oglive just made into the right field upper deck of Tiger Stadium. He's in the backyard, describing the plays of the pros, while a father teaches his son some useful lessons while playing catch. And he's next to your pillow on a summer night as you fall asleep while the Tigers play on the West Coast. It's hard not to grow attached to the melodic sounds of that special rhythm he creates describing the poetic game of baseball. Friday, Ernie made a stop at the Michigan Union to sign copies of his new book, "Diamond Gems." In a little over an hour and a half, 242 copies of the book were sold and autographed. Ten thousand have sold in a month. And while Ernie said hello to each person who stopped by and asked him to sign the book, a yearbook, a baseball, or a sweaty, old Chicago White Sox cap, there were stories. A few thanks. And a lot of "We're going to miss you." There came a vacationing San Diego man who grew up in Michigan. He, brought his family with him, and told Ernie, "You're like a second fa- ther to me." There came the pledges of Theta Chi fraternity, all in blue blazers, asking for a picture with the broadcaster who has been calling Tiger games long before they were born. There came a student, with a laser written manuscript from an English class. Its title: "Farewell to Ernie." Later Harwell said, "That's nice. I haven't read it yet. It's very thoughtful of him to go to that kind of time and trouble." There came a man with his beloved radio, which for years churned out magical descriptions of the play on a baseball field. "I am going to retire it after this year too," he said. Kind and gentle, Ernie thanked each one quietly. It's the way he's been doing it for so long. While fans have deluged radio shows with venom, bitterness, and hate, Harwell can't say a negative word. "I don't feel that way at all," he said. "I just don't feel any bitterness or any animosity toward anybody. I have to accept this. I'm not going to let those feelings creep into my psyche at all." Yet, owner Tom Monaghan shot his mouth off again in spring train- ing, saying he didn't see any Ernie Harwell fan clubs before the firing, and claiming the outcry was media induced. Still, Harwell will hold fast to the principles of his strong Christian faith - as in love thy neighbor and turn the other cheek. "Well, I'd rather not comment on that. That's his privilege to say whatever he wants to," he said. After a off-season of upheaval, Harwell's life is returning to normal. Shortly after his sacking in December, his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. She is recovering and he is home, where he belongs- -in the Tkr rndm r vmct hnn Tailback Ricky Powers carries the ball in Saturday's scrimmage. He scored the last touchdown of the day on a 35-yard scamper. Spitz' comeback falls short Associated Press MISSION VIEJO, Calif. - Mark Spitz wasn't dead in the water, but he didn't even come close to beating Olympian Tom Jager in a 50-meter butterfly match race Saturday, the first test of the 41-year-old's comeback try. Spitz was behind at the start and even farther behind at the finish, hitting the wall a 1 1/2 lengths behind Jager. Jager, 26, a world champion and world record-holder in the 50-meter freestyle, earned $20,000 for the victory and Spitz got $10,000. Jager got a strong start and swam across the pool in 24.92 seconds, almost two seconds ahead of Spitz, who finished in 26.70. The winner of seven gold medals in 1972 had hoped for a far better time. "I think I could have walked across the pool faster than I swam across it, the nerves It was the first time in 18 1/2 years that Spitz had raced competitively. The last time was in Munich, where he set a record that may never be equalled - seven Olympic gold medals. A year and a half ago, he made the improbable announcement that he was starting to train again with the hope of making the U.S. Olympic team in the 100 butterfly. Spitz is hardly a dinosaur, but his race indicated how the sport has changed since his heyday. Jager was all start and power, while Spitz used the same finesse stroke that once made his the world's greatest swimmer. "I think what you saw there was'a contrast in style," Jager said. "I knew after 18 years that a lot of things in the sport of swimming have chaned.