14- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 15, 1995 Veteran men's golf squad begins season Spikers face tough test on east coast 'M' to see UMass, Syracuse, Brown By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's golf team will get its season underway by participat- ing in the first annual ReliaStar Colle- giate Golf Invitational in Dellwood, Minn., Sunday and Monday. The Wolverines will be among sev- eral big-name teams flocking to the Dellwood Hills Golf Club. Among the other participants are UCLA, Duke, Florida State, Kansas, Louisiana State and Vanderbilt. Big Ten foes Iowa, Northwestern and host Minnesota will be on hand as well. Coach Jim Carras heads a team that returns four starters from a squad that advanced to the NCAA Regional last year. However, Michigan will have to replace its second-leading scorer from last season in Bill Lyle. Michigan's top scorer, Chris Brockway, returns and will serve as team captain. Brockway averaged un- der 75 1/2 strokes per round last year. Also returning is junior Kyle Dobbs who turned in the lowest single-round score last year at 67. Carras doesn't want his team going into the tournament thinking that it's there just to play with some of the top teams. He expects the Wolverines to contend for the top spot. "This is a big-time tournament with a lot of quality teams," Carras said. "But I think we should be there in the end competing for the title." our qualifying play has been excellent in practice with the average score being around 76 112a ff -Jim Carras Michigan golf coach So far in preseason practice, Michigan's showing has given Carras no reason to think otherwise. "Our qualifying play has been excel- lent in practice with the average score being around 76 1/2," Carras said. But Carras was quick to point out that practice is just that, and that the possi- bility is there for things to change sig- nificantly. "You head into a season assuming that the returning players will be as good or better than they were a year ago and that the newcomers will be as good or better as they were overgthe sum- mer," Carras said. "But we should re- ally have a better idea about how com- petitive this team will be after agcouple of weeks-after the Wolverine Invita- tional." By Monica Polakov Daily Sports Writer It's going to be a tough weekend for the Michigan volleyball team as it travels to Amherst, Mass., forthe Mas- sachusetts Invitational. In addition to UMass, the Wolverines will play Syra- cuse and Brown. UMass, which was 27-8 last year is presently 4-3, will be the toughest competition of the tournament for Michigan (3-3). "Our goal is to go in and get three wins," Michigan volleyball coach Greg Giovanazzi said. "But we're not healthy and our first match is against the best team." The Wolverines will play without key players Colleen Minuik, Chereena Tennis and Karen Chase due to inju- ries. However, the Wolverines are not too worried. "We have so many great players," senior Shannon Brownlee said. "The six starters that we've had this year will all continue to play." Giovanazzi is confident that Michi- gan will do well against Syracuse - the Wolverines are 3-0 against the Orangewomen since 1992 - and Brown, a school the Wolverines have never competed against. "We're looking to gain momen- tum," Giovanazzi said. "We gained momentum last week when we played at a level we never played before," Brownlee agreed. "We are focus- ing on playing at the level we played at against UCLA (during last week's Kaepa Challenge)," she said. After the UMass Invitational, Michigan will continue to travel until Tuesday when it faces Eastern Michi- gan, a team that is off to a slow start but is preparing to play the Wolver- ines. Both matches are important be- cause they will decide how Michigan's postseason will look. The Wolverines anticipate a strong postseason performance. They are ranked fifth in the Big Ten and were- predicted to finish eighth. But they feel they can do better. "I predict us to finish in the top five or even top three," Brownlee said. The favorite for the Big Ten title is expected to be Michigan State. The Spartans are ranked 11th in the coun- try and are predicted to win the con- ference. However, Michigan feels it has a good chance at beating them. "We've played them so many times and we've beaten them half of those times," Brownlee said. The Wolverines will also have to compete well against Ohio State and Penn State, who are favored to finish in the Big Ten's top three. MARK FRIEDMAN/I The Michigan volleyball team faces Brown, Syracuse and UWass this weekend. Michigan harriers look to coast through Boston College Invitational By Dorothy Chambers Daily Sports Writer There will be more than one Michi- gan team doing battle in Boston this weekend. While the Wolverines fightthe Eagles on the gridiron, the Michigan men's cross country team will be taking part in the Boston College Invitational Satur- day morning. The nine teams that will be running with the Wolverines around Franklin Park include Brown, Iona, Maine, New Hampshire, Northeastern, Massachusetts, and host Boston Col- lege. None of the participating schools should give No. 8 Michigan much trouble. "I know they're not as strong as we are," Wolverines coach Ron Warhurst said. "It's just a matter of controlled damage for those people once we get going." Warhurst expects junior Kevin Sullivan to be the first to complete the 8,000-meter run Saturday. "Kevin is going to be up front and he'll get away from everybody with about a mile and a half or a mile to go," Warhurst said. "He's not in a different class than anyone else, but it doesn't take long to take roll." Sullivan, who took a breather last week by not running in the Michigan Open, will be running in his first meet for Michigan this year. The Wolver- ines' top runner needed surprisingly little time off after a whirlwind summer in which he finished fifth in the 1,500- meter World Championships in Guttenburg, Germany, and then ran a 3:52 mile in a meet in Zurich, Switzer- land. "He ran in Zurich on a Wednesday," Warhurst said. "And on Thursday (he) flew home to Toronto and came back here to go to school and get his classes ready and go to cross country camp. And he's ready. He's an amazing young man." The freshman tandem of John Mortimer and Todd Snyder should be among the first five Wolverines to reach the finish line, along with junior Dave Barnett and sophomore Don McLaughlin. Mortimer, who finished first in last week's open meet in Ann Arbor, has been impressive early this season. "I knew he was going to be good, and I don't think people realized how good he was going to be," Warhurst said. With Sullivan leading the pack, Warhurst hopes to see the rest of the team stay together by running in pairs or groups of three. He added that three Michigan runners in the top 10 and another five in the top 20 should spell out an easy victory for the Wolverines. Although Michigan doesn't know what to expect from the Franklin Park course, Warhurst thinks that the Wol- verines should be ready for anything after their training runs from the Arbo- retum to Hill Street. Despite being at an away meet, Michi- gan should get a great deal of vocal support this weekend. Fans will range from Mortimer's parents, who live about 40 minutes away in New Hampshire, to the family of Greg Meyer, a former Wolverine runner and Warhurst's first All-American. "There's going to be about 50 or 60 people that I know that are associated with the University of Michigan that will be there yelling 'Go Blue!' So it's going to be a lot of fun," Warhurst said. M women to race Eagles in dual meet The Women's Cross Country team also heads to Boston this weekend. The Wolverines face the Eagles in a dual meet beginning at 11 a.m. Saturday at Franklin Park. In their opening meet, the Wolver- ines finished second at the Miami Invi- tational in Oxford, Ohio. The individual champion ofthe meet was Michigan redshirt sophomore, Michelle Slater. The Wolverines' top two runners, Courtney Babcock and Puline Arnill, were given a rest last week and did not travel to Oxford. - From staff reports TONYA BROAD/Daily Kevin Sullivan and the rest of the Michigan cross country team will compete In the Boston College Invitational this weekend. l U__ EVERYONE WILL GIVE YOU THEIR TWO CENTS WORTH, BUT WILL THAT BE ENOUGH TO RETIRE ON? 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The University of Michigan School of Music Monday, September 18 Marimba Masterclass with Keiko Abe 8 p.m., McIntosh Theatre, School of Music, free Sunday, September 24 Faculty Recital Andrew Jennings, violin Anton Net, piano The Complete Beethoven Sonata Cycle, Program 1 4 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music, free Sunday, October 29 University Symphony Orchestra Halloween Concerts 5:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium Tickets: $7.00 (main floor and 1st balcony) Wheatle looks, like a star for Giants The Washington Post EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -He's bold, talkative and, like so many ath- letes and entertainers who see them- selvesas stars, Tyrone Wheatley some- times refers to himself in the third person.Wheatley, though only 23, knows how to act like abig-time player. Sunday against the Packers he will get his first chance to show if he is. Tyrone Wheatley is sure New York Giants fans are going to like Tyrone Wheatley. "I'm not arrogant or cocky or any- thing, but I don't have any doubts in nly mind about my ability in anything,".the rookie running back said. "I'm going to go full steam ahead. That's the best Tyrone Wheatley can give and if you don't like it.... 'I'm not where I want to be right now. That will take a couple of games, a couple plays, maybe a quarter. Who knows?"' A quarter might be nice, as the Gi- ants' offense hasn't been much to'speak vi I I