The NC _ ..-November ~11,1985, Volume --22 Number 40 tional Collegiate Athletic Association Mulhollan Commission identifies four appointed to Commission roll-call votes at Convention Paige E. Mulhollan, president of Four of the 110 proposals submit- of The NCAA News. (Division I Conference that would retain a refer- Wright State University, has been ted for consideration at the 1986 business session, Monday afternoon, ence to test scores in the legislation appointed to a Division II vacancy on NCAA Convention will be voted upon January 13.) and require student-athletes to take the NCAA Presidents Commission. by roll call, and three other amend- l An amendment to Bylaw 5-1-Q) one or the other of the tests, but Mulhollan replaces Raymond ments will be placed in the Convention submitted by the Southwestern Ath- specify that the scores would be used Burse, president of Kentucky State agenda in a manner that will facilitate letic Conference to eliminate national for”placement”purposes, rather than Univemity, who now serves on the attendance at the Convention by chief test-score requirements entirely from to determine initial eligibility for ath- NCAA Council and has resigned executive officers. that legislation. (Division I business letics. (Division I business session, from the Commission. Mulhollan Those were the decisions reached session, Monday afternoon, January Monday afternoon, January 13.) will begin his service on the Commis- by the executive committee of the 13.) l The proposal to move the Asso- sion immediately and is eligible for NCAA Presidents Commission in a l Another amendment to Bylaw 5- ciation’s definition of “commonly ac- election to a full term beginning in telephone conference November 4. I-(j) from the Southwestern Athletic See Commission. page 12 January 1986. Determination of roll-call votes and He was named president of Wright placement of proposals in the agenda are two of the authorities granted to Mailing of Convention notice State University in Dayton, Ohio, in Paige E. Mulhollan July of this year after seven years at the Commission when it was estab- Arizona State University, first as pro- Kansas State University for three lished by the membership at the 1984 scheduled for November 22 vost, vice-president for academic af- years, and on the history faculty at Convention. As prescribed by NCAA legislation, islation that were submitted in ac- fairs and professor of history, then as the University of Arkansas, Fayette- Three of the four rollcall votes the Official Notice of the 1986 NCAA cordance with the November I dead- executive vice-president from I98 I to ville, for seven years. deal with proposed amendments to Convention will be mailed November line. A story beginning elsewhere on 1984, and then executive vice-presi- He also served for a year as a NCAA Bylaw 5-l-Q) and thus will be 22 to the chief executive officer, faculty this page outlines the topics included dent and chief operating officer o d special research associate with the voted upon by Division I delegates athletics representative, director of among those proposals. Arizona State University West in Phoe- University of Texas Oral History Proj- only. The other involves all three athletics and primary woman admin- ’ Chief executive officers will receive nix in 1984-85. ect in Washington, D.C. divisions. istrator of athletics programs at each with their copies of the Official Notice Prior to his service at Arizona Mulhollan earned his bachelor’s Roll-call voting will take place on active member institution. the forms on which delegates are to be State, he was dean of arts and sciences degree in marketing and his master’s these proposals: Also receiving the Official Notice appointed to the Convention. Those and professor of history at the Uni- in history at the University of Arkan- l The joint proposal to modify will be officers of conference members forms are sent only to CEOs because versity of Oklahoma for five years, sas, Fayetteville, and his Ph.D. in Bylaw 5-l-(j) that is sponsored by the and affiliated members. it is the chief executive who must associate dean of arts and sciences history at the University of Texas, Commission and the NCAA Council, The Official Notice contains all I IO appoint each institution’s delegates. and associate professor of,history at Austin. as reported in the November 4 issue proposed amendments to NCAA leg- All members are urged to review the opening section of the Official Notice, which sets forth in detail the Students help NCAA committee attain its goals procedures for appointing delegates, as well as other pertinent policies Jay Bilas speaks with the experience differently than any other member of when they have a certain amount of committee went on record as urging regarding Convention operations and of an insider, like someone with first- the committee,” said committee chair weight behind them, we can have a . member institutions to consider taking voting. hand knowledge. William J. Flynn, director of athletics chance of getting things accomplished. the recommended actions. Among The Association’s 80th annual Con- His is the knowledge that comes at Boston College. “Someone like Jay “When you think about it, Ellen the two student-athletes’ suggestions: See Mailing, page 12 from separating Jay Bilas the student Bilas knows what’s good for the stud- and I represented the athletes around l The student-athlete should be from Jay Bilas the athlete. In combi- ent in athletics.” the country who are competing colle- made more knowledgeable of the nation, it is Jay Bilas the student- And that is the purpose of the giately and that’s a big responsibility. structure, purposes and activities of In the News athlete who may have the greatest committee: to “examine trends and I’m happy the other people on the the NCAA, possibly via production influence on his counterparts in the problems of intercollegiate athletics, committee are so responsive to us, of a videocassette. Notes, stats collegiate ranks. because they don’t really have to be, l Institutions should inform stud- Football notes and statistics in Bilas, a senior basketball player at and that’s to their credit.” ent-athletes of the campus services Divisions I-A, I-AA, II and III. Duke University, will complete his Representing thousands of student- available to them from outside the Pages 3-6. tenure as a member of the NCAA athletics department. athletes is not a responsibility Bilas Seminars planned Long Range Planning Committee we have to say That’s the shrugs off as some sort of ego boost l Institutions should develop stud- this year. Ellen Ferguson, a UCLA or as just another credential for his ent-athlete handbooks and should TWO NCAA Professional De- swimmer, ended her term last June most important part.’ resume. make The NCAA News available to velopment Seminars are planned and has been replaced by Michele His ideas are constructive, based student-athletes; similarly, the NCAA within the next year. Page 12. Conlon, who plays tennis at the Uni- to recommend goals, and to suggest on his experience as a student-athlete should consider producing an annual Not excessive versity of Iowa. to the Council courses of action that and what he perceives as the needs of publication for enrolled student-ath- A study conducted by Victor A. Their positions on the 13-member the Association may wish to pursue,” the current and future student-athlete. letes comparable to the NCAA Guide Bubas, commissioner of the Sun panel are not token appointments. according to Bylaw 12-3-(q). Bilas and Ferguson have suggested for the College-Bound Student-Ath- Belt Conference, shows that reve- Their ideas are sought, discussed and lete. “1 know people on the committee a number of steps to assist the student- nue teams share from the Division assimilated into the committee’s rec- do listen to what we have to say,” Bilas athlete, and the Long Range Planning l Institutions should provide career 1 Men’s Basketball Championships ommendations. said. “That’s the most important part. Committee asked that those ideas be orientation for student-athletes. The is not excessive. Page 13. “We certainly don’t treat them any When views are being considered and reported in The NCAA ‘News. The See Students, page I2 2 NovtmBu 11,198s The NCAA Commm t Academic achievement often treated as incidental By Samuel L. Becker colleges are permitting athletics and make it clear. simply staggering. Some had done Finkbine dinner it found worth re- Des Moines Register athletics coaches to be too influential They would see how much space important, original research; worked porting was that a journalism student I want to share with you some of on these young athletes, who, he the media devote to the exploits of with handicapped children; been and a journalism faculty member had my amusement and amazement at points out, are immature and highly college athletes and how little they champion intercollegiate debaters or been honored. the periodic bursts of self-righteous impressionable. devote to outstanding academic leaders in campus organizations. One At the same time, the student news- indignation we find in newspapers I would not take the position that achievements of other students. How had even founded an engineering paper, like all of the other news media and on radio and television stations ~ teachers and administrators are can a young, impressionable Iowan honor society on this campus. And all in the state, had ample space to report indignation that many college athletes wholly free of blame when some of read any newspaper in the state for a had perfect or near-perfect academic fully on every athletics event in the are not keeping their noses to the their students acquire the notion that while and not come away with the records in challenging programs of vicinity, and some from distant parts. academic grindstone. a is more important than feeling that nothing is more important study. Given this sort of media environ- These media pundits are unani- an A-plus paper, or a trip to the than athletics prowess. Even the bro- By any criterion, statewide or na- ment that envelops all of us, is it any mous in their insistence that these NCAA basketball finals is more glo- ken leg of a halfback gets far more tional, these students were champions. wonder that student-athletes get the stars of the gridiron, the basketball rious than initiation into Phi Beta press than the summa cum laude For some days after this awards idea that athletics achievement is floor and wrestling mat should be Kappa. But I would point out that the designation of a graduating senior. dinner, I scanned the local and state- more important than academic students first and athletes second. media must share a good part of the This inconsistent and counterpro- wide newspapers, listened to the radio, achievement?Ifjoumalistsandeditor- Implied in most of these outbursts blame for that set of values. ductive behavior of the media was and watched as much television as I ial writers want to find the causes for is the charge that colleges and univer- Strangers from Mars could under- brought home to me last spring when could, searching for some news of these mixed-up values, they might sities are not doing theirjob of making stand quickly why student-athletes four University of Iowa students were these outstanding achievements. Nary glance into their mirrors. these students aware of how important believe their designation as athlete is honored at the annual dinner for a word could I find. academics are and how unimportant more imporant than their designation student leaders. Each received a Even the student newspaper at the Becker is a professor of communi- athletics are. as student. A few days of listening to Hancher-Finkbine Medallion, the University of Iowa ignored these cations and Wg 10 Conference faculty A commentator on the CBS radio the radio, watching television or read- highest honor for a U of I student. awards. representative at the University of network, for example, asserted that ing almost any newspaper would The list of their achievements was The only thing about the Hancher- Iowa. Texas academic rule strikes deep in the leart of athletics By Bob Collins and every year. want to sound like an old fogie, but if with permission, spent 35 days of the Still, I stop just short of getting The Indianapolis Star The fewer the recruits, the fewer that had been the deal in my school academic year on the road exhibiting giggly over such statements. Like, for Not long ago, we were reading opportunities to cheat. book days, I’d have been on the a prize chicken. A newspaper checked example, if a kid can’t pass high about players in Texas The new rules say a high school honor roll. Barely. it out-and en route to discovering school courses, how in the world can who were getting paid to play for dear student must pass every subject to Any student who stays awake, at- the story was true, found a kid who he get a college scholarship? old room and board. A dollar here, a participate in extracurricular activi- tends class a few times a week and had been out 44 days with a sheep. The Texas situation merely is get- Camaro there; it adds up to living. ties. This not only has wiped out a few can’t make a 60 has an IQ that fits It definitely is something for people ting the most attention. At least the The NCAA is a bird dog with a football teams, it has reduced march- comfortably into a refrigerator. who believe in the three R’s to cluck legislature is attempting to regain lousy sense of smell. But it recognizes ing bands to the size where they A total of 790 athletes were declared over. some sort of perspective. a problem when it trips over one. would fit around a piano bar and ineligible in San Antonio; 637 in Naturally, lawyers are all over the There are other states where heads Houston. In Marathon, half of the case. One says that the law “impinges It currently has more troops run- causedcheerleading teams to, as News- are so deep into the sand they are members of the varsity football team on the fundamental rights of students.” ning around the Lone Star State than week reported, “form pyramids that about to strike oil. Santa Ana sent against the Alamo. look as ruined as the real things.” now are ineligible. Some of the smaller I assume he means the tight to You remember the Alamo-that’s At first, I thought the law was towns may be considering three-man sleep in or not to attend classes. The One man pointed out that students the place that became famous for lack unfair. A passing average would seem football. Constitution does not guarantee an will beat the rules in the future by of a back door. like the way to go. But I’ve done some Apparently, the approach to edu- education. But as long as you are taking easier courses. Wonderful. But, down the line, the NCAA may reading. And I’ve discovered that cation in Texas has been as casual as there, it doesn’t hurt to pay attention. They’ll pass, but they still won’t have luck out on its Texas recruiting prob- they have had some unique-if not that of a man whittling in front of a Coaches are lamenting that the much of an education. lem. The legislature has jumped in exactly progressive-ideas on high country gas station. failed players will miss an opportunity It is not a total exaggeration that with a law that may diminish the school education down there. You didn’t have to be in school to for scholarships. That’s sad, because we have in this land today stars who quantity of outstanding football talent Like, until recently, 60 was consid- be counted. I’m certain there are instances where can do anything with a football- Texas sends to its universities each ered a passing grade in Texas. Don’t A man told a story of a pupil who, the schools failed the students. except autograph it. There is no way that giving athletes $100 a month will work Bob Knight, head men’s basketball coach - Hayden Fry, head football coach Indiana University, Bloomington University of Iowa The AssociaredPress l3e AssociatedPress “I’m really against that (giving student-athletes a monthly “You try to talk to 90,000 people over the public-address allowance to avoid the possibility of cash payments from system and say ‘Now you better stop that (making too much alumni). I think the payment for a college athlete comes in the noise) or we’re going to suspend play for a while,’ and that’s all; right environment, from the exposure he gets to all kinds of and you know they’re just laughing. So it has to be controlled things way beyond what the normal collegk student gets. some way; and the official is the only one who can have the “Our basketball team made a trip around the world this leverage, and we just don’t have the rule for it. summer at no expense to any of them. How many college “Whether it requires electronic equipment or decible machines students have had that experience? They got it because they or whatever, obviously we need to do something. It’s kind of were college basketball players. Bob Knight D. L. Whitney J. Frank Broyles become a fad now. The fans are going bananas. It’s sad.” “One of the arguments is that if we give kids $100 a month, that will eliminate a lot of cheating. But it won’t eliminate the J. Frank Broyles, director of athletics Wayne Duke, commissioner people who want to give him S200 a month. There’s no way University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Big Ten Conference that’s going to work; that would be like pouring a pound of salt Dallas Times Herald 7he AssociatedPress in the Pacific. “It boils down to whether coaches want it (college athletics) to “It is that time of the year when coaches and teams don’t lose “Kids have the opportunity to work in the summer. I worked be clean. I’d estimate less than 20 coaches nationwide who are football games, only officials do. every summer that I was in school, from the time I was 14 years dedicated to the point of turning in any information on “We need the cooperation of the fans (concerning stadium old until I got out of college. So I can’t see why they can’t themselves or opponents. There are a few basketball coaches noise). I share the concern of the coaches. It is adisservice to the (work).” other than Digger Phelps and Bobby Knight who’d turn coaches and the players. anybody in. “WC are proud of our large crowds, but we are concerned. The D. L. Whitney, head men’s basketball coach “If coaches don’t want to clean it up, I don’t know how anyone crowds’ intrusion does have an effect on what transpires. We are Alcom State University else can. I don’t blame boosters. I blame coaches.” concerned about the crowds after the games, the tearing down of NarchszDemocrat goalposts. Noise has permeated college and professional foot- Anson Dorrnnce, head men’s and women’s soeeer coach ball.” “This wasn’t a victory by any means (the proposed modilica- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill tion of academic standards for freshmen entering Division I The AssociatedIfess “I don‘t think there was any question that it was an adminis- I trative decision to have a competitive women’s soccer team. Opinions Out Loud That was the key (to our success). They committed to our women’s program when a lot of other schools had the program Published weekly. cxapt biweekly in lhe summer. by the but weren’t supporting it. I feel that was the deciding factor.” National Collegiate AthI& Assoaation. Null Avenue at 63rd institutions by the NCAA Council and the Presidents Commis- Street, P.O. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas 66201. Phone: 913/384- sion). Jim Molinari, assistant basketball coach 3220. Subscription rate: S20 annually prepard. Second-class “From an academic standpoint-and that is how colleges DePaul University portage paid at Shawnee Mission. Kansas. Address correcciobs requested. Postmaster send address changes to NCAA Publishing, need to look at this-the idea is to increase our standards. The Los Angeles Times P.O. Box 1906, Mission. Kansas 66201. “We don’t want that image (compromising academics for “Let’s face it, in the past a lot of schools would go and look at Publisher ...... Tbd C. Tow athletics). The thrust of our university is to increase and upgrade a situation, and if the kid had a 2.000, that’s all they were Editor-in-Chief .Thomas A. Wdron our academics. They didn’t think about what lowering the concerned about. But this (Proposal 48) narrows down the field Managing Editor _. . _. .Steveo M. Carr of prospects. And another thing, some colleges might have to Assistant Editor.. .Timothy J. Lilley standards would do overall. Advertising Director.. _. _. . . Wallace 1. Rcnfro ‘Right now, the entrance requirement at Alcorn is higher take a risk. Some kid might have a 2.500, but has not taken the The Comment section of The NCAA New. is offered as opinion. than the minimum required by the NCAA. The reason for tests (SAT or ACT) yet. If he is a great player, most would sign The views expressed do not necessarily represent a cornet~sus of college is academics and not athletics. I think we can’t let anyone him. But if he doesn’t pass the test, the school loses a scholarship. the NCAA membership. An Equal Opportunily Employer. lose sight of that.” He can come to school, but he can’t play athletics.” THE NCAA NEWS/November 11.1985 3 Colorado appears headed for most-improved title By James M. Van Valkenburg NCAA Director of Statistics The Titanic has been raised in Boulder, Colorado. That is what they are writing and celebrating, as Colorado’s football team has risen from the ashes of a I- 10 season in 1984 and a .209 winning percentage over the past five years prior to this fall-sixth worst five- year record in Division I-A. Colorado now stands 6-3, with games remaining against 6-l Okla- homa and l-8 Kansas State. A likely split of those two would leave Colo- rado with a six-game improvement for the regular season at 7-4. Indiana, now 4-5 and second place in the most-improved race, would have to sweep its last two games, against Illinois and Purdue, to tie David Williams, Illinois, is ranked 7lrlsa’s Gordon Brown ranks Charvez Foger, Nevada-Reno. Vince Mazza, Ashland, ir ranked Colorado at six games (Indiana was third in receiving in DiviFion I-A among the Division 1-A rushing leads Division I-AA in scoring among the Division II punting O-l 1 in 1984). The worst Colorado leaders leaders can do is five games. Only two other I-A teams can reach five games by the Other most-improveds Post in Covington, wonders whether Commander in Chiefs Trophy, and fun with room check. “We were ex- of the regular season-94 Penn Besides those mentioned (Colo- any town in the country can better his team did that November 9 by pecting a graduate assistant to make State and 8-O-l Fresno State. Each rado, Indiana, Fresno State and Penn that ratio. routing Army; the next two were to the check,” Swenson told Chuck Wood- would have to win its last two games. State), 22 more I-A teams can reach We did a study of major-college beat Notre Dame a fourth straight ling, Lawrence Journal-World. “We Mathematically, Colorado could three games or more improvement by football rosters in 1975 that showed year and go to a bowl (his team beat all put on coats and ties and we put a reach seven games by winning its last sweeping their remaining regular- New Martinsville, West Virginia, with the Irish again, and a bowl seems a bunch of books and slide rules on the two, then 7% by winning a bowl season games. One can reach 4% one player for every 593 people (I 1 foregone conclusion for his 10-Oteam table. Then we turned on some classi- game. The all-time record including games-6-2-l Miami (Ohio). Eight players for a population of 6,528) but at this point), and the fourth was to cal music.” Guess who showed up to bowls is shared by Stanford in 1940 can reach four games-IO-0 Air that is the only better example we can win the Western Athletic Conference make the room check? Yes, it was and Purdue in 1943. Both were up Force, 7-l-l Michigan, 7-2 Baylor, 7- find (another such study in 1980 championship. DeBerry’s team can Fambrough. “Boy, were we surprised eight games. 2 Arizona State, 6-3 Minnesota, 6-3 showed nothing-better). Two of the do that by defeating Brigham Young and so was he,” said Swenson, grin- If Colorado splits its last two, then Southern Mississippi, 5-5 Cincinnati seven are at Kentucky- blocking November 16. “Nobody but BY U has ning. “But he loved it. He laughed so wins a bowl game, it would finish at and 3-6 Rice. back Chris Derry, a starter, and offen- won the league since we joined (in hard. He told everybody the next day 6% games-a level reached by only Four can reach 3% games. They sive guard Don Duck, who plays as 1980): DeBerry said. “It would feel that our room looked like Oxford.” I5 teams in I-A history. However, it is are 8-2 Utah, 6-2-l Alabama, 6-4 much as the starter. Two more are at good to take it away from them. A (Doug Vance, Kanm SID) possible Colorado would not accept a Long Beach State and 5-4-l Pitts- Michigan-outside linebacker Tim few years ago, we were so far down 6-7,246 and 3.620 bid if it involved the Independence burgh. Nine can reach three games. Schulte and his twin brother Todd, an that we were everybody’s homecom- Penn State Brian Silver- Bowl December 21, becausethe school They are 9-O Bowling Green, 8-l inside linebacker. Both see a lot of ing opponent Now we’re sitting up ing, a 6-7, 246-pound redshirt senior has a longstanding policy that pro- Miami (Florida), 8-l Arkansas, 6-2 action. Th? others are Ohio State there with a target on our chests. with a 3.620 grade-point average in hibits athletics events during final Texas A&M, 54 Mississippi State, 4- center Tim Odom, a starter until he Everybody wants to shoot us down.” civil engineering, is enjoying himself examinations, which this year are 5 Eastern Michigan, 4-6 California, was injured; Georgia Tech’s Mark (Dove Kellogg, Air Force SID) in Penn State’s 9-Oseason, although it scheduled December I6 through 21. 3-6 Northwestern and 3-6 Oregon Pike, a starting defensive end, and All four of Springfield’s road games has been hectic (seven victories by a State. San Diego State guard Jeff Lemker. had been homecoming contests and touchdown or less, coming from be- 8-1 was possible From another angle, there were 27 Rare feats, back-to-back coach Mike DeLong was ready for a hind five times). “We are getting a lot One long-time Colorado observer, I-A teams entering this season that Until this season, only two players change, with Springfield’s own home- more respect than last year (6-Q” he who admits he was as amazed as had won less than 40 percent of their in history in Division I-A had returned coming game next on the schedule. says. “I got my first collegiate touch- anyone else at the team’s turnaround, “It’s nice to be leading the nation in down against Alabama, but 1 still points out that the Buffaloes had a something, but it’s an honor we can haven’t started a game (he shares time chance to be 8-l without quarterback do without,” he said. “It’s tough with Dean Dimidio). The opportunity injuries. “We were down to the No. 4 Football notes enough to play these teams as it is. to start will be there next season. quarterback in those two losses to games the previous five seasons, and a punt, and kickoff each Now we’d like to have a little fun and Right now, I’m planning on coming Nebraska (7-l 7) and Oklahoma State win our own homecoming.” Final (1 l-14):’ he said. “We played defense 21 of these now have better won-lost for at least one touchdown in the back for my last year of eligibility. 1 score: Springfield 33, Lowell 3. (Bob well enough to win both games, but percentages than for those live years. same season-~-South Carolina’s Dick guess it’s for my ego.” (Dave Baker. Seven of these have winning rec- Harris in 1970 and Arizona State’s Marx, Springfeid SID) Penn State SID) we lost the No. 2 man for the season Brian Kollars, writer for the Torch, early at Nebraska and the No. 3 man ords-Colorado,6-2-l GeorgiaTech, Mike Haynes in 1974. Physics helps campus newspaper at Valparaiso, had for the seasonearly against Oklahoma Minnesota, 7-2 Army, 5-4 Michigan Then on back-to-back Saturdays, Carnegie-Mellon used a basic prin- this to say after the team’s 28-21 loss ciple of physics to defeat Washington State.“The No. 1 quarterback, Mark State, 54 Virginia and 54 Kentucky. October 19 and 26, two Western Ath- to St. Joseph’s (Indiana): “The Cru- and Jefferson, 24-17, although out- Hatcher, played all the way in a victory Three of the four teams not on the letic Conference players reached this saders played flatter than Whitey at Kansas November 9 although not under-.400 five-year list were under rare triple. Utah’s Errol1 Tucker was weighed by an average of 40 pounds Herzog’s haircut.” (Dave Mateer, Val- at top speed because of an ankle .400 for the last IO years but now are first October 19 with an interception per man in the offensive and defensive paraiso SID) injury sustained early in a victory at doing better--Air Force, 44 Oregon touchdown vs. San Diego State. The lines. Said coach Chuck Klausing: LJCLA wide receiver Willie Ander- Iowa State October 19. and 4-6 Wake Forest. Air Force’s Scott Thomas joined “Every player here takes physics. Akron leads I-AA list Tucker a week later with a IOO-yard son is known as “Flipper” to friends There is a theorem in physics that Wishbone not the whole story In Division I-AA, 7-2 Akron now kickoff return-vs. Utah. Tucker, by and family. Asked by Bob Cohn, says a smaller force can move a larger Much has been written about coach leads the most-improved race. It can the way, now leads the nation in punt- Arizona Republic in Phoenix, force if the fulcrum is low and there is Bill McCartney’s decision in the spring reach five games improvement by return average at 29.3-well above whether he prefers being called Willie a greater acceleration. Our kids know to switch to the wishbone offense, winning its last two games (it was 4-7 the I-A record of 25.9 by Tennessee’s or Flipper, he said he likes “Willie that.” And his team, which he terms and certainly that was a key. But that a year ago). Five teams can reach four Bill Blackstock back in 1951 -and is Flipper.” So where did the nickname “best I’ve ever had,” outrushed the is far from the entire story. Big Eight games by sweeping their remaining second in kickoff-return average at come from? “I had a nanny named bigger W&J team, 123-73. (Bruce media people had voted Colorado regular-season games. They are 7-2 28. I. (JelT/ Hurd, We.s~ernAthletic Mama Pearl back in New Jersey,” he Gerson.Carnegie- Mellon SlDl, dead last in the summer poll, and Jackson State, 6-3 Appalachian State, Conference SID) said. “Mama Pearl used to say 1 cried Winning the close ones after the late August tour of training 5-3-l West Texas State, 64 Massa- Division II career leaders like a dolphin.” South Dakota coach Dave Triplett camps still had McCartney’s team chusetts and 3-5-l Virginia Military. Western State (Colorado) senior Paul Swenson, a senior offensive now has a 9-l record in games in the only in seventh place. Few were pre- Two more can reach 3% games by Jeff Guy does not qualify for the 1985 guard at Kansas, likes to have a little DakotaDome that were decided by pared for the remarkable coming winning their remaining regular-sea- ranking because a knee injury limited fun with publicity questionnaires. three points or less, after his team together of the entire picture, espe- son games-4-5 North Carolina A&T him to six games. (A player must play Last year, he wrote that he stayed in beat Morningside, 30-28, as quarter- cially the surprisingly strong defense and 3-5-l North Texas State. And in at least 75 percent of his team’s shape by “watching the Olympics on back Scott Jones scored on a naked and kicking game (No. 1 nationally in nine can reach three games. They are games to qualify. He thus lost his television” and that his summer job bootleg from the two with no time on net punting with Barry Helton, an 9-l Nevada-Reno, 8-l Grambling chance to become the first player to was”wrestling alligators.“His favorite the clock. He stole a page from his unknown product of eight-man foot- State, 8-2 Idaho, 6-2-l Colgate, 44 lead Division II punters three straight story involves former Kansas head alma mater, Iowa. “Fly Roger 28 ball). Connecticut, 3-6 Lamar, 3-6 Western seasons.) coach Don Fambrough, who signed Keep is right out of Hayden Fry’s McCartney has developed quality Kentucky, 2-8 Prairie View and l-8 But Guy has done something even him in Osawatomie, Kansas, when he playbook,” said Triplett, a 1972 Iowa depth and the best seemingly is yet to TennesseeTech. more impressive. His career average was on the verge of taking an ap- graduate. “Chuck Long beat Michi- come, as he redshirted his entire fresh- From another angle, 19 teams in of 44 for 113 punts puts him No. 2 on pointment in the Naval Academy gan State, 35-3 I, with the same play. I man class in 1984 and essentially has eight-year-old Division I-AA were the all-time Division II list behind (that was in 198I, when he was 17 and looked right at Jones and said, ‘I a very young team-of the I 13 players under 400 for the previous five sea- Don Cockroft of Adams State, 1964 weighed about 50 pounds less than called this because you are the guy on the roster, 89 (including 35 fresh- sons entering this fall and 13 are now through 1966, who averaged 44.5 on his current 260). A year later, he and who can make it work.“’ (Mike Ma- men and 54 sophomores) now have showing better won-lost percentages. 95 punts. two roomates decided to have a little hon. South Dakota SID) two years or more of eligibility re- Four of these have winning records- Valparaiso senior Mike Healey, maining. 7-2-l Marshall, 5-3-2 Illinois State, 8- with nine catches vs. Butler, raised his Attendance laas some more “Actually,” McCartney said, “it 2 Richmond and West Texas State. season total to 97, breaking the Divi- Cold weather and sparse;owds November 9 sent attendance tumbling, as wasn’t that hard a decision. It was just A talent hotbed sion II season record by Idaho State’s 49 home games in Division I-A averaged only 38,150 and 41 in I-AA averaged a matter of what kind of triple option Villa Hills, Kentucky, a town of Ed Bell, in 1969, and moved up to only 9,158. Division I-A now is 976 per game, or 2.28 percent, behind 1984 in we were going to go to. Every team 4,402 across the Ohio River from fifth in the all-time I1 career list in per-game terms at 41,838. Division I-AA still is ahead of 1984 but by only 134 that has turned around in recent Cincinnati, may be the leading hotbed catches at 224. per game, or 1.22 percent, (vs. 338 a week ago) with 11,158. The chart: years has done it with the running of talent in Division I-A football. It Quotes of the week Games Attendance Average Pet. Cap. game (Air Force, Army and others). has produced seven I-A players, now Air Force came into the season Division I-A seasonfigures to date 496 20.751,655 41,838 79.5 Some pass to catch up, but pass playing at five colleges. That is one with four goals, says coach ,Fisher Same 105 teams at this stage in 1984. 525 22,477,I I 1 42,814 81.1 blocking is more difficult than run player for every 629 citizens, and Dan DeBerry, and now has three down Division I-AA seasonfigures to date 399 4,451,847 11,158 54.7 blocking.” Weber, sports editor of the Kentucky and one to go. The first was to win the Same 87 teams at this stage in 1984 427 4,707,066 11,024 55.1 4 November 11.1985

I I The NCAA Football Statistks Through games of November 9 Division I-A individual leaders

RUSMINQ FIELD QOAI f”:: ;$ ‘2 CL G Lorsnro White. Michipan St ...... $ AvG2 :: 13 yDsPG170.6 John Diettrich, Ball State Kevin Walker, East Carolina . . . Sr 9 00 Jackson, Auburn...... Carios Revsir. Tennessee . . 21 17 ,810 Jay Norvell. Iowa . Sr 9 Paul Palmer,Temple...... Joe Worle Kentucky...... Mark Moore, Oklahoma St. Jr 6 John lee. B CLA ...... :: 1; 1.l Chris White, Tennessee . . _. Sr 8 Thurman Thomas, Oklahoma St...... $ 2:: 1: 11::153.4

Jeff Jaeger. Washington ...... 19 17 .6% Mike Romero.Cal St Fullerton Sr 6 Doug Dubose.Nebraska...... 5.9 ...... Tom Ratello, Au Force Jr10 Gear e Saarn. Miami (Ohlo) ...... Jl Max Zendeas. Arizona Jeff Ward, f exam iz i: %i Tom Powell. Auburn _. . . Jr 9 Regg9e Dupard. SMU ...... :.y 12; 195117.5 Barr Word. Virginia...... I: 6.1 i 117.1 James ttamrick. Rice ...... I... 21 16 ,762 Greg Philpot. South Carolina So 9 Charr es Gladman.Pittsburgh ...... 5.1 111.6 Kenny Stadlln. Virginia ...... Oou Pavek. Army __. _____. _. ______. Sr 9 DerekSchmidt. Florida St. _. 1x :: :g MicI! ael Loper. OregonSt.. . Sr 9 Tony Cherry, Ore on . . ..I ...... “s 4.9 8 111.0 ...... Steve Bartalo Co orado St.. .I 1 ...... Jr Masslmo Manta. PennStale...... Barton Hundla Kansas State Sr 9 Larry Emer klsconsm ...... li!ii Barr Belll. Fnsno St...... i 1: .:: Allan Durden.1. rrzona . Sr 9 Napoleon&Cailm Navy ...... i: Don)(1 cAuiay. Syracuse...... 17 13 .X5 Lavance Northington. OregonSt Jr 9 Gordon Brown, lutei ...... 1!:8 John Carney. Notre Dame 16 13 .?22 Markus Paul, Syracuse Fr 6 Alien Pinkett Notre Dame ...... 3 Errc Franklm. Texas ALM . 22 13 6% Nuu Faaola. Hawaii ...... 1%: Darrell Wallace Missouri ...... 2 ::s : 102.4 PUNT RE TURNS UICKOFF R PUNTlNd RegpieTaylor. Cincinnati...... Jr tin. 3.6 per $ame) RonnieHarmon, Iowa...... Sr 5.3 ; lit! &i~il:zX~t). “s Y “iiz ’ ‘F2 ~~r!s~XsQ”L~r!3viile ark Srmon, rr Force. :: 2 RuebenMayss. WashmgtonSt ...... Sl Scott Schwa&e Syracuse Jr 20 315 2 15.7 Errol1lucker. ‘Utah Barry Heiton. Colorado _. so 40 John Harvey, UTEP...... 5.1 ‘ii:: StephenBaker. Frssno St.. 1 15.0 Luther Johnson UTEP Steve Kidd. Rice Jr 49 EddieLaws. Utah ...... 3 5.4 i Kelvin Martin. Boston Cal.. j: 2 82 While Goodloe.Mississippi Lewis Coibert. Auburn Ban Weiss. Air Force ...... Sl 2:: 11 2: Andrew Lrvin ston. SMU. Jr 10 141 i !:! Earl Allen. Houston Bdl Smith, Misslsslppi M Mathews. ! astern Mich. Jr 11 140 Na oleon McCallum.Navy Buzz Saw er Baylor MakeTrmpson. Penn St. Fr 12 152 ! 1;; J.cp .Penny. Miami (Fla.) Ray Errswe r I, Florida SCORINQ Robb Schnitzler Nebraska Jr 14 173 0 12.4 Keith Ross. Florida St. . Greg Montgomery. Mrchigan St. B. J. Edmonds.Arkansas. Sr 35 422 0 121 Joe Rsdding.SW Loulsiana John Teltschik. Texas Bernard White, Bowlmp Green ...... “s A. Parker. Arizona St. . . so 25 264 0 11.6 Jer Harris. Memphis St. DodgeCarter SMU Jr 44 Thurman Thomas.Oklahoma St...... Brian Wllllams. Kentucky 1 117 Tim7 ulllngton Wisconsin John Bruno PennState . . . . . R /(I Oupard SMU _. __. ____ ...... z Darold Lando Army. :: 1: 1: C. Pardrldgs Northern III. TomTupa, Dhio Stale : : : : s”,’ i W# Turrai Now Mexico ...... Sr DOUQGreen. duke . . . . ! 11:: Carl Miller. Arkansas _. . Alan Harime. Vandsrbdl. Jr 56 SteveGa eiulsa ...... ::::::: ...... Nate Odomss Wisconsin ?Y 1: 1: Kseta Covington. Maryland Robert M ers. Houston ._. __. So 48 Loranro L*hate. Michrgan St. _...... s”,’ Eric Metcalf, Texas . . Fr 26 2% : 11:: C. Redick. Cal St. Fullerton Adam Ker ly, Minnesota Sr 36 ...... ;; ...... 2 ...... Jr Division I-A team leaders Bo Jackson, Auburn ...... John Lee, UCLA ...... ;i Tim Lashar, Oklahoma _...... PASSING OFFENSE John Diettrich. Bali State...... VOSI.__. Kell Pinman. Air Force...... f : G ATT CMP r PC1 vos ATl Jeff yward Texas ...... Brrgham Young ...... 66.5 3679 6.4 Mark Beil/ni. Bri ham YOUnQ...... , ...... i: Purdue ...... 61.7 3152 NapoleonMcCal urn Nav ...... Sr Miami (FM) ...... 61.6 2857 ii:: Geort Swam F!ianii (Oh\6) : : : : : ...... Jr Iowa ...... Brad uster $lanford ...... San Dreg0St. !!.I E 2 Joe Worisy. ksntucky...... Long Beach St...... 71.9 2924 7.6 Max Zendefas.Arizona ...... Stanford ...... 67

Kansas ____..______...... ii:: Ei 7.4 PASSINQ EFW$ENCY Illinois ...... 62 IN1 VDSl TD New Mexrco ...... 1.: 3 1.9 ATT CMP PC1 IN; ;.C; YDS ATf i%% Florida Ki ii%:g;XE! . . 5: 5 176 111 6236 1692 9.51 7qcg: Boston Cal. iti :zi 2: Jim Karsatis Ohio Stale Jr 9 192 121 63.02 7 365 1673 6.71 E Utah 54.0 2583 Chuck Lon Iowa . . . 207 1% %.~CI 13 4.53 2442 6.51 Bs:Z 157.4 N C State...... 549 25% :: Ksrwin Bel,P, Florida . $ i 237 149 62.07 7 2.95 7 17 Bowlmg Green ...... go.6 22M Vinny lestaverde. Mrami (Fla.) g g ci;,g 2! E 6.76 ::.: San Jose St ...... i:! RobbieBosco. BrlQhamYoung 1: :.z 3344 0.62 151.1 Vandarbrit ...... $1 3: 6 Jtm Harbaugh. Michigan E: ‘i “p:: 147.7 Fresno St. . . 56.8 2129 ;:2” Tony Robinson.Tennessee.. Sr 6 1:: ‘Z E.E 67 3434.90 :z i::: 5.59 Washington Sl. 57.5 2115 7.9 11 Dou Gaynor Long Beach St. Sr 10 380 274 72.11 2912 7.66 4.74 1% Kentucky . . 53.6 2076 6.9 7 Jim!verett #urdue ‘?I E 144.0 David Nor&. UCLA :. : 3; / 3 :t i% 7 4.09 % E ::z 140.2 PASSINO DEFENSE VDSPG Kavln Swrene Frrsno St...... 24% 146 59.35 7 2.85 4.47 139.6 VDS/ ToddSantos. Y.an Dlqto St So 9 272 171 62.67 16 5.66 E iti IN TPCT YDS ATT YDSPG I% Danny McColn.Ci@matr Jr 6 180 101 5611 4 2.22 14% 7.60 5.7 :i;.: Baylor 10 41.4 954 53 108.0 Kent usbn. Mlssrss~ppi sr 7 147 1116 769 5.44 134.1 Texas Tech 7 47.1 1054 6.7 114.9 x:.: Lea Salh. Temple Jr 10 201 E 2:: ! ::1 1747 8.69 133.7 Nev.-Las Vegas 8 45.3 1087 6.0 120.8 s3.7 E 133.4 Oklahoma 11 46.3 835 5.3 i: i if? 17; z: : ::z 1% :.z! 4.99 Central Mich. 12 54.4 1075 5.9 E ii.: Jr 10 4.47 13: Western Yich...... 11 63.2 1214 60 E1 1: 26 110 2.754.39 f% :.z Oklahoma St ...... 14 49.3 lil5 5.5 1E.i 1Z.S :: 1: 2681 762 ::ii 1% KansasSL...... 1416 Bill Ransdsll, Kentucky Jr 6 3521% 202110 572957.39 ‘i ii: 1w 6.02 127.0 Toledo ...... 1213 48.2492 12761274 !:: 142.0 19.: Brian McClure.Bowling Green Sr 9 302 164 6D.93 10 3.31 2052 6.79 if 1267 Iowa State 4 435 1297 54 1441 SouthernCal. 13 50.5 1167 6.1 145.9 1%: RECEtVlNO Mlchrgan.. .___ 146.7 116.7 CTPG TexasALM ...... ‘! ii:: 1E ii 1495 Rodne Carter Purdue ...... 9.0 Southern Miss I ...... 15 42.9 13% 6.2 19; Brad d ustar. Stanford ...... Mississrppi .~...... 7 47.7 1370 ii!?: 121.9 David Williams. lllinois _...... 1.; Florida ...... i:: 1227 Webster Slaughter. S. DiegoSt.. Miss. Stale ...... ‘Z ii.83 :c 6.8 2.G 1260 ReggiaBynum, OregonSt.. i.: SMU 1262 Charles Lockstt. Long Beach St Florida St. 16g 48266.6 12371431 2: 1% Trevor Yolinl Erlgham Young %:f Richard Errtell.Kansas _...... TURNOVER YARQIN VDSPG ...... 5.6 Greg Eaty. Stanford ...... TU$OVERS GAINED TURNOVERSLOST MARGIN 518.1 Marc Zeno. Tulane ...... IN1 TDTAL FLiM /GAME

...... 2; Mark Beilini. Brigham Young Tennessee. loTAL 2.LmQ Zi:! Loren Rlchay Utah 1; 1: : ‘“‘9 139 ti Ohio State Ken Alien. Indiana. Arkansas 4 ::YE 2:: ...... 1: li 149 ” v ; ...... :i Nebraska ...... Utah ...... 28 3 1% :% West Virginia ...... :: ...... Jr 2: 444.6 ...... 1: ::11 :: xl Pacific. . . . . \““““” :: 441.1 ...... Arizona...... s 9 8 9 17 1.333 Everen Crawford, Vanderbilt...... ;i :.: 440.6 Mlchasl Ramssur.Wake Forest . . . . . Lakei Heimull Bri ham Young :.: NET PUNTING 2.; Joe Rowley New !lexico St. t 5.9 NO VDS NET REI RET AVG :z Scott Hrlvairon Iowa I.. Sr 4.9 StephenPmrcs. Illinois. . Jr 4.a Colorado . Mtchigan . 19 “5: “2 Auburn A5AS t :: it! ii.! LSU . . . . ; 5.: NevLasVegas... 17 32427 I& :mFh . 2 1”o.: 4Q17 Au Force 21 164 42.4 I? 73 104 399.3 VDS Ohio State . . Nebraska ____...______...... ; ‘E Kentucky :i ii :1.: Air Force _. 10 37.: 1:: Oklahoma. 10 59 412 Brrgham Young 1; i; 11.411.512.1 1416 !~I Mississippr Iowa ...... 1542 Cincinnatr . . . . ! ‘ii iit: Arkansas...... 9 1: 12.112.2 1192 1:::: Florrda 24 180 40.1 Arizona. _. _. . _. 9 112 12.4 1523 VDSPG 1491 1% KICUOA ! RETURNS 197.4 1478 164.2 PUNT RETURNS TO AVG GAMES NO YDS TD AVG Fullerton St. “8 “4 YE 3 27.8 $3 1E 1BZ Syracuse __ 350 3 15.2 An Force . 10 10 2?? 1324 147 1 Boston Cal. 11 E 0 14.6 South Carolma 9 27 601 1 ::.: %.a 139.4 Arkansas . . . . 0 12.3 Nebraska _.._.__.. 9 16 402 0 25.1 1% Army 9 21 ii! Texas Tech 9 22529 0 24.0 273.9 1370 :i% Duke . . . . 9 12 i :::s SW Loursiana 10 47 lQ% 276.1 1221 Indiana 1; 1 110 Louisville s % 276.1 1% Arizona St. ; :; 307 0 11.0 PennState 282.1 1z 1329 Kansas St East Carolina i E:! 264.2 11% 132.6 SMU P 1: z ! 1i.i GeorptaTech 0 22.4 285.6 2B6.5 !Ki 1%: 128 1 5%: :z 121.7 Division I-A single-game highs %:3 PLAYER Rumble and Pdnq TOW f!lJ Rushing and passing plays ...... Rushing and passrng yards.. 19) 5z Rushin plays Net rusR mg yards _...... 7ii Passesattem ted Passescamp P eted . 19 .!! Am Force Passln yards . . .Robbie Eosco, Brigham Young 191 5% Iowa Fiaoah! Fresno St. . . PassesX$.t!t!r.~.!!.e . . .David Williams, lllinols (Purdue,Oct. 12) _.._.____.__._...__ 16 Nebraska _____._.______..I. Receivingyards .Glan Koxiorskr. Bri Aug. 29) .Yl Utah . . Punt return yards ...... Erroil Tucker. Utah ...... t. Miami (Fla.) . Klckofl return yards .Luther Johnson, tale. Ott 12) 2 Arm _.______.._...... -ns Bri {am Young Field goals made.. .Dale Klem. Nebraska (Missouri. Ott 19) ...... ? Okihoma . . . Florida St. . . . . TOW Ohio State ...... % ...... 63 Eowllng Green . _. 14 ...... $ntq . . 18 ...... %J ...... 17 ...... SMU ...... 6 FeresCrGsh-pass yards allowed .AuSurn (MieeiLi pi. Oct. 5) I ...... UCLA...... 16 Fewest rushlno vards allowed .Iowa (Drake. SeaP 141 ...... Texas AhM. 8 Passesattem I&f I I .1_ .tftinot&(Purdue.Dct. f2) ...... -i! Georgia . 14 Passescamp & ted ...... Bripham Youn (ColoradoState. Oct. 5) ...... Minnesota . . Points scored. . . . _. .Florida State 8 ulsa. Oct. 19)...... !I! Oregon . . . . . November II, 1985 5

The NCAA Football Satistics i%rough games of November 9 Division I-AA individual leaders RUSHING FIELD OOALS-, _ INTERCEPTIONS CL G YOSPG :GPG Burton Murchlson. Lamar ...... GeorgeBenyOla, LOUtslana Tech . Sr 10 ‘%I5 72 f2.10 Gear e Duarre. Northern Avz :: ! GIII Fenerty. Holy Cross ...... % : 1% RussKlaus. Akron ____ ._._____.. .._.._. Sr 9 Carl 3ohnson. Jackson St.. So 9 Mika Clark. Akron ...... 1372 Mart Zendejas Nevada-Rena . 2n71; .% ::E Darrell Woods,Jackson St Sr 9 Ken Gamble,Colpate : ...... $ i 136.4 Tim r oley. Ga. Southern __. _. __. .: _. zi ‘! 16 15 937 Bartram Chew. DelawareSt Jr 9 John Satlla, Appalachian ...... Scott Roper.Texas-Arlmglon _. 22 15 ,602 :.t: Mike Cassld RhodeIsland Sr 9 Charvez Foger. Nevada-Rena...... :: t 2:: Paul Pol111.llhnois St. : ? 1; 21 16 ,762 Phdlip Alar1ir Qe.Pnn -Char1 $ ; Andre Garron. New Hampshire...... Roberto Moran Boise St _. _. _. ____ Jr 9 24 14 ,583 2 Robert Gems. Gramblmg James Crawford Eastern KY...... _ ...... 5: ; 1% Dale Dawson. taslern Ky Jr 9 17 13 ,765 1.44 Taylor Lackey, Richmond _: :. SrlO Byron Mitchell. Southern Ill ...... zi 1: 1115 Mike Anpell. Northern Iowa c; i 19 13 004 1.44 Tom Hennessey.Idaho Gerald Anderson, Middle Term...... 110.5 Chns Ingerslev. Brown.. 19 11 ,579 1.37 Wilhe Johnson, Howard : : 1. : :. g:‘,” 108.4 ReneWeilmann. Idaho Slate Jr 9 Tim Whale SE LouIslana. Jr 9 Jon Francis. Boise Stale ...... Cecil Cox. Warren Marshall. James Madwon ...... ?’ 1; 107.0 Brian Oacicio, Idaho _. _. Fr 10 1: 1: .E? :.: Aaward __. _. ____. Sr 0 Kellh Williams. SW Missouri St ...... s: 10 104.5 Ray Saunders. Pennsylvania Sr 0 13 10 769 LeeOldenberp. Harvard zsli Oscar Smith. Nicholls St...... “,; ,i Michael Beanie. Lehi h _. _. _. So 9 16 11 087 1g Roy Holmes, TennesseeSt Stephon Wilson. Ilhnois Slats ...... 2: Kirk Roach, Waslsrn e are _. __. _. _. ._ __ SO 9 18 11 ,579 1.22 Pa rack Hunter. Nevada-Reno : SrlO Jam18Townsend. Eastern Wash...... $ f %.Q 94.1 PUNT REl KICKOFF R ETURNS PUNTING Jamie Polkul. Brown ...... CL NO YDS Bruce McIntyre, Lafayette ...... Jr 7 (Min 1.2 per Qama) TD AVG Eddle Hayward, Term.lath ...... Jr 9 3 k$rl’~l!~r?$~le Term. ‘Y E4 d!b:g?“,~:f!~v!~~ East Term. : “i i.7 “,E:Fi:e;:%t:hr;n!. : : : E.7 R. Scott. Souihern B.R.. 1 304 Curtis Moodv Texa; Southern Jr 64 444 Duwayne Pitts. Eastern III...... 2 1: 2 29.3 MlkeRlcalk(dnlana Brian JaQer. Furman ...... 2: Crarg Hodpi. TennasseeSt. 1 13.9 Jr 55 44.3 Tarry Hoover. Delaware St ...... 91 1 Darryl Jonas. Jackson St 1 130 gJ$%y~~~ : ; 0 20.1 Greg Burke. MoreheadSt. Carl 0oyd. Northern Iowa ...... iA i 90.7 Bran1Bengen. Idaho 1 131 0 262 Russell Gnffilh. Weber Slate “; ii ii:! Enc Yarber. Idaho 1 13.0 Earl Beecham.Bucknell 1 26.1 John Earl. Norlhern Ariz . . Jr 59 431 H. Harbison. No Caro A61 0 11.9 Crai Hodga,Tennessee St. 0 25.0 Barry Woodruff. Western Ill. S Splvey. Southern III 2 11.6 M. C9 emons, Wm. 8 Mary 1 253 Greg Dam.. Clladal 2 : :;..i SCORIN-5 Mike Crow. NW Louisiana. LL ru PTPG 0 11.2 Isaiah Hill, Eastern K 0 246 Jr 56 422 10.7 ?{r$$~~$l~{$a?? j Willie Ware. Miss. Var 1 24.1 Steve Banco. Lehiph. Charvez Fo er. Nevada-Rena...... Fr 9 Nick Xldes. Youngstown St. : iz 2: Carl 80 d. orlhern Iowa ...... so 9 10.2 Y Ihi Tom Urquharl. Prmcelon 1 240 ...... 0. McCrary. Term-ChatI. 1 10.9 J. Crockett. Weber Sl Mark Royals. Appalachian Sr 63 417 Wayne I9III. Grambling 1 :i.i David Hood, TennesseeSt Fr 50 41.6 Joe Thomas. Mississlp I Val...... 5!: i ‘if Mark Garner. Nicholls St. 1 104 9.5 Kevm Desell. Gramblinp 0 231 RockyFernandar. Lamar :; 2 j;.: Mart Zendqas, NevaB a-Rena ...... 0 23.0 Billy Smith. Term-Chat1 Ken I! amble, Colgate ...... ii 2 Fhp Johnson, McNeeseSt. ! 1::: Char Fox. Furman ...... Sr 9 i.Y Keith Wllliams. SW Missoun St ...... RenmeBerm. Lehigh...... :: ‘i :: Andre Garron. New Hampshirs ...... Sr 7 0.6 GaOrQaBenyola. Louisiana Tech...... Division I-AA team leaders Russ Klaus, Akron ...... :: ‘i FL’3 John Taylor, Delaware St ...... Sr 9 0.2 PASSING OFFENSE RUSHING OFFENSE Mike Clark, Akron ...... G CAR YDS AVG TD DameonReilly, RhodeIsland ...... i: 1: !.i ...... G All CMP IN T PCT SW Missoun St 10 559 3001 5.4 31 Tom Slenglem.Col ate Sr 9 Furman 9 465 2655 Tim Foley. Ga Sou1 hem ...... so 9 2 RhodaIsland 23 54.0 57 24 Merril Hoga,,Idaho Slate ...... Jr 9 7.6 MISS.Valley ‘i ii; E DelawareSt.. 9 476 2445 5.1 20 Brian Declclo. Idaho ...... West Texas St ...... 9 429 259 t 2: Arkansas St 9 511 2322 4.5 23 Roberto Moran, Eolse St ...... 5: ‘! :: Idaho ...... 10 3% 251 12 63.5 MiddleTenn ..__.. 9 4352266 52 29 $hl~fn~& Mary ...... 1: ;;; g 14 504 EaslernKy.. ._._ 9 457 2249 4.9 24 DWI hl Stone, Mlddle Term ...... Jr 9 0 464 1399 4.3 10 Erwza, arber. Idaho ...... Sr 9 :: ...... Northeastern DOUQDorsey. Mame ...... Fr 10 7.2 Eastern Wash. : : 0 349 193 :: El:! James Madison .10 503 2441 49 11 Danny Holly, Richmond ...... Jr 10 7.2 Eastern Ill. 23 534 S.C.Slate _. _. 9 450 2105 4.8 22 LehlQh ...... ‘i iii it: 16 53.9 New Hampshire __ 9 482 2162 4.4 21 Waber Sr...... 9 326 172 16 52.0 Delaware. _. _. _. .lO 566 2367 42 21 PASSING EFFICIENCY^. .- Ga. Southern .._ 9 410 2125 5.2 19 IN1 YDSl TO RATING Western K ...... 9 400 23O 0 564 LMP Montana d1 ...... 10 432 220 27 52.0 Boise St 9 473 2111 4.5 12 YDS ATf Akron _. 9 4% 2055 42 15 I”: 2’; :“5 1E mll::.s NE Lowslana 9 204 152 10 53.5 t: CMP03 58.07 pcT 144110.22 Nevada-Rena.___ 1; g g 13 609 Colgate __. _. 9 435 2[135 4.7 24 177 126 7119 6 3.39 1546 073 13 7.34 1620 Marshall 70 49.4 Nevada-Rena .lO 445 2230 50 24 279 173 62 01 11 3.94 23 0.24 TennesseeSt...... 10 303 102 11 47.5 Southern III. .lO 460 2229 48 24 Willie Tolten. Miss Val ...... %i Y.3 Belhune-Cook...... 0 304 139 14 457 Term.Tech. ._. 9 469 1949 4.2 14 Richard Myles. Alcorn St...... % ‘i !E Y 7.E 1296 005 f i.2 ;:;,t139.2 WaberSr __..._.. 9 401 1924 40 20 16 6.02 1361 CiIadel ...... 10 392 217 16 55.4 Bob Bleler, Richmond...... 266 109 6353 WI 11 530 Lamar .._... .._ 9 415 1002 4.5 13 Stan Yagiello. Wm. & Mary 376 221 5070 ‘i E %?I ::: E i.2 13341341 : % 1: 16 45.9 Tom Buigess. Colgate. 1.. 12 4.80 Western Car0 Mike Smllh. Northern Iowa i: El ZE 7 297 E :.i 11 466 1333 PASSINQ DlEfENSE RUSHING DEFENSE Eubb Bnsler. NE Louisiana 277 151 54.51 10 3.61 13 4.i YDSl G CAR YDS AVG TD YOSPG Vern Aarris, Idaho Slate . a2 139 S3.05 10 3.62 i%! 7.:: 16 6.11 12.1 T PC1 TO YOSPG Jackson St.. _. 9 306 557 1.0 6 HazsenChoates Balsa Slate . 10 5.95 1277 7.80 10 5.95 127.5 Southern III. 50.5 1149yDs % 114.9 Gramblin __.__._. 9 200 563 2.0 3 E3 Dave Slirsman beber Slate E 12 9:: 16 5.35 2414 0.07 15 5sQ 128.5 Danmouth.. 546 Nevada-R ma.....10 322 730 2.3 0 73.0 Tom Ehrhardl. RhodeIsland 128.3 Term Tech 51 7 ifi 5.466 56” 1% Akron __. _. 9 3O4 744 2.4 8 02.7 Paul Singer, Western III % 243B5 5599s4.29 ‘i i% Eli t.z 7 ifi 125.0 Caaael 41.9 1372 5.3 0 1372 Term-Chattanooga 9 321 766 24 4 05.1 Jeff Mdler. IndIana St 270 15O 55.56 6 2.22 15 5.56 North Texas St 45.6 1270 65 : 141.1 TennesseeSt. _. .l; g; 6 ;; ; Scott Linehan. Idaho 215 124 5767 6 2.79 3 E 6 2.79 1;:: Holy Cross 40.3 1206 61 1429 Boise St E 349 792 57.00 5 143 2216 6.35 123.5 1z 6.45.7 i 1441143.3 MISS.Valley .I. 0 207 763 2.7 7 95.4 Jeff Cesarone.Western Ky Austin Pea : 49.5 97.6 T0a Mavfield. West Texas St. 420 259 60 51 14 3.27 1: :.3 122.6 Arkansas %1. .__. 45.6 EasternWash __._ 0 268 701 29 0 Alan Hdoker. No. Caro AhT 262 132 5c.30 7 267 E “p::: 19 795 1717 SW Texas St .I 45 7 :iE 5.9 1: 1453145.0 Arkansas St. __. 9 300 901 2.4 0 1001 Rick Worman, Eastern Wash. 13 3.70 Ii A&i 1709 Murray Slate OslawareSt _._.. 9 307 905 2.9 0 lOO.6 if7 Y E.E ‘El! 7.:: 120.3 Mame ._.._ __._. 10 371 1031 2.0 7 la31 Dave Palarzi. Massachusetts 3 j’ti .-- - Connecticut 106.0 DOUQButler. Prlncelon ~. 240 132 5500 ii iii 1620 675 9 3.75 1174 No. Caro. A61 110O 2:: 1; 3.: Eastern K _. _. 9 340 961 2.8 9 Texas-Arlmglon G-3& 60 1514 Northern rowa 9 321 961 3.0 0 lO00 1073 iA 7 153.3 ;la;;ma St. _. .: 9 343 979 2.8 10 Yale 1% RECEIVING New Ham shire 10 339 1101 32 9 CL CT YDS TO cm Western IP I. : : 1z :.i 1: 155.11560 Florlda A&M 9 332 997 3.0 0 Brian Forsler. RhodeIsland ...... Western Car0 1420 54 1: 157.8 Massachusetts.. .10 412 1133 2.0 7 :15.: Joe Thomas. Mississlppl Val ...... E lO40071 5 :! James Madison 1591 6.0 159.1 lllinms St . . . ..lO 3% 1150 29 0 115.0 Eric Yarber. Idaho ...... 69 1031 1; SE Louisiana 159.0 Delaware.. ..___ 10 367 1173 3.3 11 1173 Stan Carraway. West Texas St ...... $ Prawe View . % i.: 1; 1616 Scott Auker. Idaho ...... 66 ‘E : ml c RennieBerm. Lehigh...... 6’: 13 7.2 TURNOVER MARGIN AVG TD Wilham Brooks, Boston U ...... 2 62 3 T~;;OVER~ GAINED TURNOVERSLOST MARGIN Sebastian Brown, Belhune-Cook ...... ! E FUM INT TUrAL /GAME 2; ii CralQSlama. Weber Slate ...... 2 Appalachian St...... I:: TmA3: Nevada-Rena .10 6.3 48 Dawd Pandl. Montana St...... I ...... : E Grambling ...... ii 1: 2! ;.z Miss Valley _. 0 57 45 Ron Gdlam. Wm. & Mary ...... Middle Term .... _:...... E 44 1: 6 13 Furman.. 9 6.7 41 Tom Sten lem. Col ale ...... TennesseeSt ...... z 1E Cal ale. 5.9 41 Michael tons, Am. 8 Mary j; Nevada-Rena...... zi 0 1: :: 1.700 Idac 0 St.. _. _. ‘9 5.5 33 Merril Ho e. Idaho Slats ...... Harvard z 1.500 RhodeIsland 10 Duwayne 111s.Eastern III...... so Louisiana Tech :z 37 :: 1: :f 1400 SW Missoun St. .10 2: ii ...... Leland Melvm, Richmond NET PUNTING Eastern Wash. 0 5.3 29 Roy Banks, Eastern Ill ...... :: SCORINO DEFENSE DelawareSt 9 6.2 39 Alan Mullins, Western Ky...... G PTS AVG Northern Iowa 9 5.2 27 ...... :: PUNTS AVG Massachusetts 1: 1; 110 Donald Narclsse. TX Southern Northern Arlz. West Texas St 9 Alonzo Carmichael, Wesln Caro ...... Jr Appalachian St. 11.0 SC State.. ____. 9 ::i it Calvm Pierce. Eastern Ill ...... : Jr Citadel f$ if! Arkansas St 9 115 120 NW LouIslana 56 42.2 Willlam ELMary 10 5.5 31 John Ta iiaferri. Cornell ...... :; McnaeseSt. 9 116 12.9 LehlQh.. ; 4.9 2s ...... Appalachian St.. 64 41.4 Tern-Chat __. _. _. i 1: 133 HerbertR arblson. No Caro A&T East Tennessee 63 420 Boise Sl Akron 13.3 Richmond...... :10 2: E Lehi h.. _. _. .:. 43 41.9 IllmolsSl _._..__. .._. 1: ig 13 5 Was ern III AA 414 Eastern Ill 10 ALL-PURPOSE RUNNERS P Harvard 14 1 SWTexasSl. _._. 9 :s E CL G RUSH PR KOR YDS YDSPG WeberSt ti 435 Delaware 10 144 144 Cross. Furman. Western Car0 .:. 9 131 146 Touchdownsscored by rushlnQ~paS$inQOnly 8 E l&B1703 2054189.2 Western Caro. :: iti . 0 206 1z 173.0 PUNT RETURNS KICKOFF RETURNS TOTAL DEfEN8E amens Wm.hMar ______._.___.__.. 0 401 188.0 YDS G NO YDS G PLAYS YDS /nVG TD’ YDSPG Kellh Williams. Skr Hissourl t 1 _. 0 115 Richmond “““% “?Y 425 Mlddle Tann. ‘Y % Arkansas St 9 3.7 11 Burton Yurchlson. Lamar 0 1E 1E MISS.Valle a 21 Colgate . i :: :z 2 24.2 Term.-Chat. 9 Ei iit 3.7 12 % Mike Clark. Akron. . i 1347 149.7 Southern IIr 10 20 % 5 151 MISS.Valle 0 21 y)4 1 240 Austin Peay 9 505 2351 261.2 Jamie Polkul. Brown _. _. 0 27: 1041 1487 Idaho 10 31 2 13.5 Southern J 9 35803 1 n.9 Jackson St. 613 2393 !:8 ii Earl Beecham.Bucknell 0 470 1207 143.0 Alcorn Slate. 7 24 37 TennesseeStale 18 ; 4$ 0 22.0 Delaware St. I ! Ktl 2u5 Et; FreddieCook. Websr Slate : : . 0 200 1206 142.9 Jackson St 271 : 1% Howard 2 21.0 Gramblin 9 !:I 2 2727 Eric Yarber. Idaho.. No. Care. Ah1 i E 0 11.4 Murray Stale 10 23 494 FlorIda As M ____ 9 iii % 43 10 274.6 Charvez Foger Navada-Rena 1: 140 1260 1409140.9 TennesseeSt. E WeberSt. 9 79027 ! ii.2 New Hampshlra 9 620 2472 3.9 10 Andre Garron. kew Hampshire Eastern Wash. ‘oe z 197 1 1i.: MoreheadSt : 9 30723 Massachusetts .10 41 13 %.i Stan Carraaay. West Texas St. 8 2E ‘1247E :E.: Ga Southern 9 20 205 0 102 lnthana St. 9 31 056 8 :z Alabama St 9 !EE 4.5 22 John Settle. Appalachian.. d 20: 1% 137134.03 Akron 9 6cN 2551 4.2 14 fg Herbert Harbison, No. Caro A6T Delaware .10 4.2 17 Jamla Townsend,Eastern Wash Boise Sl.. 9 f4: z 41 19 207.0 Rodney Pa ne. Murray Slats 8 2 \g 1i.i Division I-AA single-game highs Westarn Ill 9 4.9 25 Duwayne pvIRS. Eastern Ill : TennesseeSt.. .lO E!i 43 21 ‘g:i Milton Barne Alcorn St. _. 19! 3OI 1%: PLAYER Northern Iowa 9 4.3 17 Jon Francis. k else Slate 0 119 1:; lJo3 Rudlmg md Pulnp Plyor. Tmm (oppmmt dmte) TOWTexas-Arlmglon 9 !EE 47 21 E!‘z Rushing and passing plays.. Vern Harris Idaho Slate {Montana. Oct. 12) James Madison. .lO 4.4 22 Rushinp and passing yards ‘ii;; ii%i;: id;ho Stale (Montana: Oct. 12) ...... sG SWTexas St. 9 Em 2: TOTALOFFENSE Rushm plays _...... North Texas St 9 647 2wo ::: z 298.9 YOS YDPL TDR’ YDSPG Net rusa mg yards ...... A! Touchdownsscored by rushlnp~passingOnll Willie Tottan. MISS.Val. . Passescompleted ...... 21) ...... Tom Ehrhardl. RhodeIsland zl 1.: E .. ..z SCORING OFFENSE Dave Slireman. Weber Slate Passin yards . . .Vern tiarriqibaho Slate (Moniana. Oct. 12) ...... a9 % 2 z TouchB own Passes .WIIIISTollen. Mississippi Val (Texas Southern. Oct. 26) ... ..a G PTS AVG Tod Mayfield. West Texas St Mlss.Vallay .._...... _. . . 42.4 Marl Horn. Lehiph ...... Ruotwing ti kH n(uma 0 3% Stan‘ c apiello. Wm. & Mary ...... % i.: :: Passescaught .Dawd Pandl. Montana Slate Eastern Wash Sept. 21) ..21 Nevada-Rena 10 399 Rick Worman. Eastern Wash. RecsivinQyards .Brian Forsler. RhodeIsland (B row Se@ 20) . . ,327 Cal ata. _. _. _. _. 9 332 ii:: Saan Pavlon Eastern Ill ...... Et! :.s Punt return yards .Ssbron Spwey. Southern Ill. SE Missour St, Ocl. 19) . .ig we&r Sl ,i g Vern H$rii. Idaho Slate _. f! Kickoff return yards .Miks Rice, Montana (Waber 4 tale. Nov. 2) Idaho...... :... it:: Tom Burgess. Colgate. _. it!! i.! Furman i i$ E Points scored.. .Keilh Williams, SW Missouri St. (NE Missouri St. Ott 5) .3O Delaware St ;:p Gilbert Renfroe,Tennessee St. MlddleTenn. _. .:_. 9 Jo5 Bubby Brisler. NE Louisiana Ei 2.: RenmeBerm. Lehlph (Indiana [Pa.], Sept. 14). . .39 Eric Beavers, Nevada-Rsno li SW Missoun St. 10 323 32.3 37 :.: 7-s.” Southern Ill.. _. 1: E JeR Casarone.Western K RhodaIsland E Bernard Hawk, Bethune-E ook 1034 61 1: 30.0 Carl Fodor. Marshall . 2286 5.1 Idaho St.. .I. 9 277 Al Comer Va. Mllilarv 7040 5.4 1: B 271 33.1 Jeritiilie;. Indiana Sf. 199255 20 i ;g 20.9 Kip Allen. Clladel 2193 5.0 1: Jackson St. % Richard Myles. Alcorn Sl. 1301 72 MonlanaSt .__.._.. ._.:I 1: gg 20.2 Dawd Bales, Texas-Arlington 1056 6.6 Mike Smith, Northern Iowa 1041 6.3 11 Northern Iowa. _. _. __ 9 252 Doug Butler. Princeton . . 274 1635 60 11 New Ham shim.. __. _. __. __ 9 251 2: Touchdawn%R~panaibleFor are RlchmonB 10 274 274 6 November 11,1985 The NCAA Football Statistics Through games of November 2

Division II individual leaders

RUSHING INTERCEPTIONS TD VOSPG CL G CL G NO VDS IPG Dan Sonnek. South Dakota St...... Walter Rule.Texas ALI Warren Culpe er. Indiana Cenfral Sr 9 12 154 1.3 Mark Co&n. Central St (Ohio) ...... l! 1% EddieLoreno. Callforma-Davis :: ; Tony~s. ~P,omsbur, _. _. _. _. Sr ; 1.1 Bob Dyer. Southern Utah State ...... a 105.0 K.C.Johnson, South Dakota St. Oann Brown. Cal St Hayward ;; Carl Painter, Ham ton ...... :: John Oesmond Clarron . :: I Tom ollms. lndrana Central 9 1:: Heath Sherman,f exzasAhl ...... :; : 104499.6 Dave DeSdva.bl St -Sacramento 16 9 563 1 13 Trac Miller, Tuskegee _. _I.. _.:. : So 7 Jeff Eentrrm.North Dakota St ...... Mark Turner. Abilene ChrIstian.. g 0 1.00 RanI y Whrte.Ashland _. __. _. _. _. Jr ; 7122 Wesley Willrams. Angelo St...... John Jenkms. Butler.. 17” ! 00o Melvm Wallace, N C Central.. Sr “7 2 ‘9.9” Don Harr. Cal St Sacramento ...... s: 168 !:a Jr 7 12 7 % 1:: ClarenceJohnson, North Alabama ...... t: ! 96.1 Jr 7 10 7 70.0 1.00 Chuck Sanders.Slrppery Rock ...... sr 9 1.W PUNTING 0ob De RICO.Kutztown...... Jr Fr 0 1: i A:: 1.00 (Min. 3.6 per game) Larry Brown. Mankato St...... Sr : 3900 KICKOFF RETURNS “s:“ 4 AvG454 VDS AVG pin. 1 2 per game) CLNO VDS AVG ;: ti 42.6 SCORING ndy Pool, Northern Mich Jr 11 41.8 CL FG 319 29 0 ler. Angelo St. 14.0 15 1::: ;rle Wilson,,Southern Utah St. Fr 22 614 279 Vince Mazza. Ashland . _. Jr 55 41.0 Jeff Bentrim, North Dakota St ...... Jr “2 pTPG 154 12.0 arence Barley. Ham ton.. Sr 10 261 26.1 Kevm Emigh.Cal Pal SLO so 44 416 eloSt ...... Sr ! 220 11.6 Robert Kearney.N C. e entral __. Sr 14 339 24.2 Harlow Fakes.North Klabama.. sr 48 41.1 “,; 0 'G B 8.1 TommyJohnson, Portland St So 13 311 23.9 Jeff McComb.Southern Utah St so 51 41.1 ...... Robert Hill. N C Central.. _. __. Fr 0 2 1::: Charles Johnson, North Alabama Jr 12 274 22 0 Bryan Barker, Santa Clara . . 39.0 ...... Jr Sedrrc Jefferson, Tuskepee Fr 9 90 too Jerry Haslett. Clarion __. Sr 17 300 22.0 Joel Nielsen, Mankato St. 2: z 39.5 Jo;tr Kolma. Cal Poly SLO ...... :; ii 797.7 Je Tiefenthaler.South Dakota St ...... Mike Heala Valparaiso ...... Sr L :.t Sean MurpK y. Towson St...... Sr James Noble. S F. Austm ...... Sr ii 7.5 Division II team leaders Robert Funderburk. MansfIeld ...... j; 40 6.9 Rep ie McGowan,Abilene Chrrstian ...... PASSING OFFE?ySE RUSHINQ OFFENSE CarP Painter, Hampton ...... Jr ?4 kc! ATT VDS YDSPG Mike Burnetta. West Chester...... 1; San Francrsco State . . . . . pcT‘1: CentralState($ihio) _..... G0 Yl Paul Magistro. Kutztown ...... ,, ...... G t: Portland State ...... :: North Dakota tale.. __. __ 9 520 E %i BobOyer. Southern Utah State ...... Sr 54 6.U North Carolina Central ...... MankatoState. _. ____ 9 435 2330 259.9 ...... Cal St Sacramento 0 3u) g g.; ;FICIENCV AbrleneChrIstran :::i PASSING El ...... Winston-Salem 0 RATING Towson State. .I : 61.5 9 408 7 163 113 Franklin . . Texas Ahl.. _. __. _. __ 0 410 LMin.15 an perjama) G ATT CMP 09.3PCT INT4 1613VLIS TD12 PO;:;,; South Dakota State Lock Haven ._._.__._. 8 411 1E Et: hrls Perersen._ ~~ ~~ al.-Daws ~~ ...... “J5 Indiana (Pa.) _...... Southern Connecticut 7 397 1543 zLD4 Kurt Beathard.Towson St...... s”,’ 0 270 173 622 Ferris State ...... Vlrglnla Umon _. _. _. _. 0 388 1087 212.1 [ire CalCaQnOSanta Clara ...... “%M If:: Northern Colorado .... North Alabama __. _. 0 398 1630 2cu.a Wills Gillus. N&folk St...... “9 % 1: % I1 1301 ...... a 3a3 168 554 1! :iif :: 135.3 PASSINQ DEFEc!SE RUSHING DEFENSE Rex Lambetll Abllene Chrrstian...... 2 G CAR Tony Carroll, tuskelee ..... 7 115 57 132.4 AllCMP PCT INT VDS YDSPG VDS YDSPG Todd.___Whitten ...... S_ F ustu...... “; 0 262 133 $3:; 1: 1g 2; 1324 Livingston Bg.0 Cal State-Hayward 7 206 Rich Ingold. Indnna (Pa ) ...... 5; 0 270 164 59.0 14 2015 ta 131.1 North Alabama ...... 2: 1: % 89.1 Mmnesota-Duluth A z:; Mike Leirermann.St. Cloud St...... Bioomsbur ...... ii ii! 102.997.0 NorfolkStateNorfolk State. ._.__._.._ _. __. _. _:::: ! ‘$ Vlnce LeavaIl. Central St (Ohio)...... i E: 12902 57.6 1: 1g ;4" If:.! Wmston-Sa9 em ...... 30.4 E Central State (Ohro) 6 253 fi 2.1 ...... “s: 7 124 62 ii.: 4 840 7 1257 Morris Brown ...... t :.I 915 1144 Vir inia Union _. _____. __ 0 263 Mike Glovas. Bloomsburg ...... 410 1: 1% 119.4 0uter9 ...... 9 323 ‘2 5u.a61.6 RECEIVING Vlrgmra Umon ...... Cl Bemidii State 43.0 27 American International 9 33Cl TD Dlstrlci of Calumbra ,..__.____ llO4 1z.1 Hamptan.Hampton.. __. _. __. 8 204 ii %8 Mike Healey. Valpararso 5; 11 7 Alabama A&M ...... 44.2 2: 1245 1393 West Chester _._ 0 204 Klm Boerema.Northern Cola. . Sr North Dakota State...... P.i 10 1253 139.2 Southern Connectrcut 7 246 E E.! . . Sr _. _. _. _. _____. . _. _. % SCORINQ TOTAL OFFENSE PTS AVG G PLS YDS VDSPG Central State (Ohro) ...... StaphanF Austin State 06 612 WI9 461.1 Jr Calrforma-Davrs ...... % ii:: Cal St Sacramento __. _. 0 552 . Jr Stephen F Austin Stare ...... South Dakota State _. 9 709 z zi.8 Brian Fopp Indrana Central $ % 8.; Sean Murphy. Towson St...... lndrana Pa.) ...... SantaClara _. __. __. _. 0 576 JlllO 4263 Towsonk tate ...... Central State (Ohio) _. 0 509 Steve Smlm. S rlngfleld Sr Valparalso ...... E&i if.! Callfornla-Davis 7 474 E % Tony Trave. Ina ram (Pa.) So Santa Clara ...... 249 31.1 Portland State __. _. ._ __. 7 566 2079 411.3 TaTu OFFENSE Norfolk State ...... Towson State. . PLAYS VDS Cal State-Hayward ...... z % San Francrsco State. : : y z % %:i Richard Strasser. San Francisco St...... “s Cal St Sacramento ...... 224 200 Indiana ___..._._... 60 565 3257 407.1 Terry Summerfield Portland St. zi E Earl Harvey, N.C. Central ...... :: s: All SCORING Dc’FEb$E TOTAL DEFENSE Rex Lamberti Abllena Chrrsban...... so XP 2XP FG SAF G PLS Kurt Beathard.Toweon St ...... Sr BermdjiState ...... 9 11 0 Virgmia Union i Chris Petersen Cal.-Davrs...... Notih Alabama ...... ! : A North Alabama 0x % ToddWhltten b.F. Austin ...... ;: Vir inia Union ...... I: ! 1: ll Central State (Ohro) 0 480 Mike Burch. fouth Dakota St...... sr IndP anacentral ...... 9 11 i ; ! Wmston-Salem . 0 476 Kevin O’Shea,Franklin ...... 1; Central State (Ohio) ...... 011 1; Morris Brown __. ______. U 5% Dave Denbraber,Ferris St...... Winston-Salem ...... 1 1; : 8 American International 9 550 Ned Cox. An elo State...... Jr Bloomsburg ...... 10 Minnesota-Duluth 9 507 Rich Ingold. Pndiana (Pa ) ...... sr Amencan lnternatronal ...... 9 13 0 Butler 9 610 Mike Leirermann, St. Cloud St...... Sr Ashland ...... 9 13 10 Hampton. __. ____. __ 0 480 Division III individual leaders

RUSHING FIELD OOALS INTERCEPTIONS CL G CAR CL G FGA FG PCT FGPG CL G NO Bruce Montella, Chlcago Sr Jim never. Rhodes _. _. __. Sr 9 21 13 Brian Barr. Gettysburg.. _. ._ _. _. _. Sr ; 11 Paul Martm. Get1 sbur ;; 1413 Phrl Kurmar. Hofstra _. Sr 0 13 11 E x Andy Fotopoulos. Hamilton So Kevin Weaver, d ash. B Lee HD ,A1.._ It Rrch Strasky, Hamilton 4; : 12 0 Will Hill, Brsho _.__... .__ Jr 9 ! Elll Kalsar. Wabash Jr 9 277 139.3 GregZlotnlck. Wesleyan 12 a ii:: 1.:: Dou Zimmer 1 a ton ._. _. _. _. _. Jr 0 Joe Dudek. Plymouth St., 9 170 130.1 TomO ’Riordan.Wagner : .I.. Jr 0 19 9 Bill Thomas St. &al.. Sr 9 8 PeteBaranek. Carthage Rims Roof. Coe tc.: l.13 Dave Adam;. Carleton Mike Panepinto.Canlslus ! :2 1% Trm Messersmith. Threl : : s” i 1: i 60.0 1.: D.J. Nickles. FDU-Madison : : s0Jr g7 Y Terry Underwood, Wagner 1; 124.0 WadeMassad. Baldwin-Wallace . Fr 7 9 7 770 1OO PUNTING Chris Sprigtj. s Danlson.. ! E 1224 PUNT RETURNS KICKOFF..-..-.. REIURNL~.-~- Win 36oeraamel CL Derrrck Fos er. Wrlham Paterson :; i isS CL NO VDS AVG )nrke f&ti&r’Cob: Sr Chip Kron, Fordham . 7 156 1%: b’y Schone. lmors College E; i 231 210 Dave LEWIS.huhlenberg So JohnHo art FDU~Madlson...:..::::‘::““‘.:::..:I:~:I: $ 7 149 F::S:::::z!‘,::,,,, 247 20.6 Chris Howell, L cominq. Jr BretDycR e. E,ureka...... 9 1% 1111 Dan Nrenhurs.Carleton i; 1: Joe Watt.Susquehanna : Bryan Haensre,r Caprtal Sr Darrell Hazel1 Muskm urn i% 1:: Ed Taylor. Allegheny. _. Brvan Ravitz. Susauehanna Sr Chuck Downiy Ston\\rook : 1: So 13 210 16.6 Derrrck Foster. Willram Paterson Arid Hastmgs Millikin ...... Jr Kevin Weaver. Wash. 6 Lee ...... Tony Wechter,iiettys urg So 25 340 13.9 .iohnRagrmerskr, Stan Brook.. Jr 10 259 25.9 Jim& in Rhodes ...... Sr Tim Norbut. Dayton ...... Mike Doetsch.Trinrtv (Corm.) Sr 15 109 12.6 Tom Neumann,Muhlen i erg. Sr 13 335 250 Make9 elis. DePauw...... Sr Joe Dudek. Plymouth St...... :...... Mark Lamandola.Alle heny Sr 17 Robert Brooks, Adrran __ Sr 17 436 25.6 Mark Slevm. Franklm 6 Marshall Sr Dave Hawkinson. Hamllne ...... Trm Beebe.Nebraska it esleyan Jr 27 fi 11:: Darrell Wood,Trenton St.. So 10 2M 25 0 OavrdStratton. Ferrum ...... So Tony Tarantlno. Mount Union ...... Mark Binder.St Norbart...... Mat1Schulte. Central la.) ...... _...... Don Lowney Wis -La I rosse ...... lodd Black Concordra(Ill )...... Division III team leaders Sam Gudrriri. Rochester ...... Derrrck Foster, Wrlham Paterson ...... Tim Fralick. Adrian ...... RUSHING OFFENSE Terry Underwood.Wagner ...... PAssINQoFF?slE VDSPG Wheaton...... “2 “il.! Wis -RoverFalls Concordra(Ill.)...... 0i Demean E.% Heidelber ...... ii 18: Au ustana (Ill. Yin Ban. rgame) PCT INT VDS TO Pomona-? ttzer ...... 346 214 Err! gewater ($ a.) i&t:! kc011 Woolf, P aunt Union ...... “s: i % “K !I!:: 105 100710t0 2110 Maryville (Term.)...... : Gett sburg 2769 Chuck Hooker, Cornell (Iowa) ...... Jr 9 1% tD0 Rlpon ...... %I$ Dayr on 274.4 De Nicola. DePauw ...... sr 9 210 130 Knox ...... ! Mercyhurst .__.__.__.____._ Jr 7 110 2: : ‘E :: Wrs.-StevensPoint ...... 297 170 Carnegre-Mellon '4.: nnett. Sallsbury St...... Sr 0 125 :: 59.2 5 1119 11 St Thomas...... : 255 129 Wagner...... 2014 Bruce Crosthwalte. Adrran ...... so 0 197 123 62.4 9 1640 13 t&i (Mmn.) ...... i Salrsbury State ...... Dave Geissler.Wis.-Stevens Pt...... Sr 9 284 164 ...... 38 Fordham E ...... Jr 0 105 22: 126 23071390 2116 Larr Barretta, Lycornln PASSING DEFENSE RUSHING DEFENSE Robi happy.Concordia (R I.) ...... Jr a 292 1: G PC1 'Ill ;D' YOSPG VDSPG Ed Graham.Baldwln-Wallace ...... 2: l6 '2 E G CAR WestfieldState ...... 02.7 Augustana (Ill.) _. 0 E 334 Tim Palmer. Muskingum ...... “,: ! 2 ii Curry...... % i.P 11 602 05.3 GlennCarlson. Coe ...... Sr 9 221 123 tt:: 12z 11%1724 1: Umon(NV) . . . .._._.... 0 CaseWestern Reserve ...... 7 470 10 876 Baldwm-Wallace 0 291 % RECEIVING “, Fitit;;; State ...... 47.0 10 076 2 Montclair State.. __. __ 6 263 49.0 VDS TD ...... , ...... a Gettysburg 0 3D9 Jlm Jorden. Wheaton (Ill ) “s i ti Amherst ...... :5.; 1115 01173t 1014lO4.4 Central (Iowa) _. _. _. 0 322 g Bob Glanville. Lewis 6 Clark . Sr ifi ! Oberlin ...... ; 49.0 14 941 Mrllsaps . ..___ 7 240 Chuck Longnecker. Heidelberg Sr : z! Ferrum ...... y 402 13 963 1z.1 Mount Umon _. __ 0 z Cra Gorclca. Hlram __. _. _. _. __. _. _. _. _. _____. _. $ % ! Nichols ...... 43.2 12 769 1099 Hope 6 Ei WaI? Kalinowskl. Catholic . . . i :: Lvcommu _. . 0 296 069 Todd Black. Concordia(IO.)...... Sr 0u 3; 1: SCORING O;FF;SE rim FG TOTAL OFFENSE Chuck Ritzier. Heidelberg ...... Sr t 3 SA: E AvG39.3 t PLS VDSPG Vlnce Dortch. Jersey City ...... Jr i E iii : Mount Union ...... 0 44 SaIlsbury State...... 0 43 Sr. Thomas. Steve Fe rer. Ripon Sr Dayton ...... 9 45 isi !.I Denison. ZE Ed Wlnkr e. Illmors Wesleyan ...... Sr ii Wheaton...... s; t !.i i Coe ...... 9 44 337 374 hIin Lund ren. Lake Forest Wis..River Falls...... 0 42 Carnepm-Mellon iii:! DanDaley,B omens Pitrer ...... ii SE 2 Concordra(Ill.). 433.0 ...... i 50 24 A Oenlson...... 0 40 MikeEmendorler.WilllamPenn Sr Carnegie-Mellon ...... 0 37 Hamilton.. 421.7 TOTAL OFFENSE StThomas ...... 9 41 g f!! Mount Umon 410.4 G PLAYS YDS VDSPG Adrian ...... Wagner . . 414 0 Keith Brshop.Wheaton (111.)...... “s Wheaton ...... is 257 32.1 WIs.-RtverFalls. 412.5 RobShI p Concordia(llI) ~.~.~~.~~.~.~~~.~.~ ...... Jr i !i 2::: Wis.-StevensPoint 405.3 Shane P/ul on, Hwdelberp ...... I; 7 E E 209.4 SCORING DEFE+SE Robert Bristow, Pomona-Pitter...... 276.0 Pg AVG TOTAL DEFENSE BobMonroe.Knox ...... g i 410354 2 Au ustana (Ill.) ...... ‘“2 SAF0 5.3 G PLS VDSPG iE:I GeI ysburg ...... ! : Augustana (III.) __. _. _. 0 440 .. : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : .... So E Mlllsaps ...... 7 6 Montclair State ______. 0 4.57 1% ...... So i ii gi Baldwm-Wallace ...... 0 7 “J 7 Genysbur 0 530 1740 ...... $ Amherst ...... 7 i CaseWesernReserve B 9 501 175.2 La;~~;~;tt;,;~~mmg ...... : 263 E1807 Cantral6lowa) ...... 0 Central (Iowa) ._ __. _. 0 5d4 z:: Union ( .Y.) ...... 0 0 ; 1 Baldwm-Wallace 0 515 1E SconWoolf:Yountii~io~‘::‘::::::::::::::::::::’~:::““’ 2 i ;!l 1f Rhodes ...... 9 10 Mlllsaps 7 472 190.6 John Map. Augsburp...... ? Z:1 Mlllrkrn ...... : : ~~~~;ll~~lush~l.:::::: ; g 199.0 Bob Barrett, Curry ...... % 133 19721712 2140 Montclarr State ...... ! t 5 2 2095 November 11.1985 7

The NCAA News Se & D~sring Preview

Names stavJ the same, order of finish may not in Division I By Lacy Lee Baker International’meet, which will include The NCAA News Staff top competitors from the United The top four teams from last year’s States, the German Democratic Re- Division I Men’s Swimming and Div- public and the Soviet Union. And, in ing Championships should reach the January, the Longhorns will. host top again in the 1985-86 season. Flordia and 1985 fifth-place finisher Stanford, Florida, Texas and Cali- UCLA in a double-dual meet. fornia were one-two-three-four at the Califorma could surprise some 1985 championships and all have the teams in 1986. , the Amer- personnel to be challengers for the ican record-holder in the IOO- and 1986 title. 200-yard freestyle events, heads a list Only the order of finish may of nine returning all-Americas and 12 change. 1985 NCAA qualifiers. Biondi also is Stanford, which also won the na- a member of the Golden Bears’ No. 4- tional ohampionship in 1967, will ranked water polo team and is a two- have to find a replacement for Dave time all-America in the sport. Bottom, who graduated-He scored 65 Rick Gill, third in the IOO-yard of the Cardinal’s winning 403% and fifth in 200-yard points. breaststroke at last year’s champion- “It seems very easy on paper to ship, and Dave Roach, fifth in IOO- replace Dave Bottom, but he did so yard backstroke and third in the 2OO- many different things for the team in yard backstroke, are other top com- and out of the water::’ said Stanford petitors. They will be accompanied coach . “Dave was a by outstanding freshman recruits Jeff great, gmat competitor and we need Prior, individual medley, and Tom to find somebody else to pick up the Werner, a sprint freestyler from slack.” Sweden. Stanford has a number of good UCLA and Southern California choices to select from, including four have strong personnel. , 1985 NCAA individual champions in American record-holder in the 50- seven events: junior in yard freestyle and lOO-yard back- the IOO-yard butterfly (46.52), 200- stroke, leads the Bruins, while Michael yard butterfly (1:42.85) and 200-yard UCLA’s Tom Jager O’Brien, American record-holder in individual medley (1:46.08); senior the 500-yard freestyle, heads up the in the RIO-yard breast- wins and four Pacific-10 titles. Wallace (breaststroke, freestyle, indi- stars; we have to rely on team effort.” Trojan contingent. Both won two stroke (53.62) and 200-yard breast- Challenging Stanford for the na- vidual medley) provide the Gators’ That team effort should come from individual titles at the 1985 cham- stroke (1:55.96); junior tion’s No. 1 spot will be Florida, main scoring threats. a strong senior class. Ten members of pionships. In addition, UCLA boasts in the 400-yard individual medley looking for its third NCAA cham- Coach , 58-l 3 in nine the squad are seniors, including 1985 Doug Shaffer, who finished second in (3:47. I I), and sophomore Sean pionship. Florida returns all but three years at Florida, looks for his brother NCAA finalists Rick May (second in the 1985 one-meter diving event and Murphy in the 200-yard backstroke scorers from the 1985squad and most Eddie’s Texas squad, along with Cal- IOO- and 200-yard breaststrokes), ninth in the three-meter event. Since (146.29). of the members from the national- ifornia, to be other top contenders. Stuart Smith (eighth in loo-yard last year’s diving champion in both Kostoff, the American record- championship teams of 1983 and Texas won its only national cham- breaststroke and second in 200-yard events, Ron Meyer of Arkansas, has holder in the 1,650-yard freestyle 1984. pionship in 1981 and finished second breaststroke), Ken Flaherty (third in used up his eligibility, the door is wide (14:38.22)and the400-yard individual The Gators should be the dominant in 1982, while California won its only 400-yard individual medley) and Asa open for a new champ. medley (3:46.54), currently is a team in the Southeastern Conference, national team honors in 1979 and Lawrence (seventh in 50-yard free- Following is a top-10 list for each of member of the Cardinal cross country where they have won six of the past 1980. style). the individual events. (The lists were team, which recently won its lirst seven league championships. All- describes his team as Texas swimmers will have plenty of compiled from questionnaires re- Pacific-10 Conference title. Kenney America seniors (free- one very strong in the individual opportunity to swim qualifying times turned by NCAA member institu- says Kostoff should be mentally style, butterfly) and Patrick Kennedy medleys, breaststrokes and butterflies for the championship, as the dual- tions’ sports information offices and fresher than he has ever been when he (individual medley and backstroke), and average in the backstrokes and meet season is one of the most chal- indicate 1984-85 season bests.) returns to the Cardinal swimming junior Duffy Dillon (freestyle, indi- both short and long freestyles. lenging in the country The Longhorns SO-yard frecs~ylc- 19.24. Tom Jager, Sr., lineup. vidual medley and butterfly), and “For us to have a good NCAA, I5 will make a November trip to Cahfor- UCLA; 19.27.Tom Williams. Sr.. Iowa, 19.31, The Cardinal will try to continue sophomores Jerry Frentsos (individ- swimmers must do well,” said Reese. nia to meet Stanford and California. Matt Biondi, Jr., Calrfornra; 19.63. Scott McCa- its consecutive streak of 35 dual-meet ual medley, backstroke) and Paul “We haven’t got four or five super- In December, Texas will host the USS SeeNames, page 8 Scoring points with recruits could take points from lexas After the Texas Longhorns’ shel- ist, completes a phenomenal back- IOO-Yard Fraastylc~49.60, Jet-ma Johnson. Fr., Stanford. 49.70, Mary Way% Jr.. Florida; lacking of the opposition in last year’s stroke trio for the Longhorns, which 50.02, Kirsten Wengler, SC. Texas; 50.07. Conny Division I Women’s Swimming and also includes 1985 national lOO-yard van Bentum, So.. Cahfornia; SO.14, Caroline Diving Championships, the top high backstroke champion Debbie Risen Cooper, So.. Cincinnati: 50.2. Heather Strang. school swimmers in the United States and 200-yard backstroke champion So.. Southern Cal: SO3, Anna Andernson, So., Southern Cal; 50.30, Amy Bertins. Fr.. Slan- received a flurry of calls. They were . They are both back for ford: 50.39. Jennie Sawyer. So., FlorIda; 50.40, needed, and needed badly. their junior years. Ann Drolsom. So. Texas. The Longhorns had rolled up 643 The Longhorns also feature three 200-Yard Freestyle 1.46.57. Mary WayIc. points in the championships, outdis- other champions in five events from Jr.. Florida: I.46 8 (1983). Sappy Woodhead, tancing second-place Florida by 243 1985- in the 500- SK. Southern Cal: I :47.00. Canny van Bcnlum. points and third-place Stanford by yard and 1,650-yard freestyles, Tracey So., California; I:47 69. Mary T. Meagher, Jr., California: l:48.08, . Fr.. Stan- 303. McFarlane in the IOO-yard breast- ford; I.48 17, Jennie Sawyer, So.. Florida; When signing day finally came, 10 stroke, and in the 1.48.23. . Fr.. Florida: 1:48.38. of the nation’s most touted recruits 200-yard breaststroke and 200-yard Tlffany Cohen. So.. Texas; 1:48.65. Palge went to Florida and 14 chose Stan- individual medley. Zemina, Fr., Florida; 1:49.21, Kim Beattie, Fc. ford. Their decisions signify a real Florida, characterized by depth North Carolina. battle for the 1986 crown. and versatility, is looking for its second 500-Yard Freestyle 437.90, Tiffany Cohen. SO.. Texas; 4z40.35. Mary Waylc. Jr., Flor,da; “I don’t intend to be 300 points NCAA championship. The Lady Ga- 4:41.63. Tami Bruce, Fr., Florida: 4.43.43, behind this year, and our women feel tors won the NCAA’s first women’s Stacy Shupe. So.. Stanford: 4:45.17, Patty that way, too,” said Stanford coach swimming title in 1982 and finished Tiffany Cohen, Texans Sabo. Jr., Texas; 4:45 64. Mary Pat Gaffney. . “Florida had the great- second in 1983 and 1985. SO.. Southern Methodist; 4:46.3 (1983). Sippy Woodhead. Sr.. Southern Cal; 447.16. Lau- est recruiting year of anybody. The The freestyle events will be their should provide a hefty scoring punch ord-holder Mary T Meagher (butter- rence Benslmon. So.. Alabama: 4:47.58, Vir- Longhorns should be favored going strongest, with the likes of lOO-yard for the Cardinal. flies) and national SO-yard freestyle ginia Diederich, Sr.. Georgia: 4:48.34, Karm into the season, but they’ll be hard- freestyle champion and In addition, Olympic silver medalist champion Conny van Bentum; South- LaBergc. Sr., Southern Cal. pressed to beat Florida.” freshmen Carmen Cowart, Paige Zem- Susan Rapp, who redshirted in 1985, ern California, and Southern Meth- 1.650-Yard Frmtylc~ 1553.85, TIffany Co- Texas coach said ina, Tami Bruce and . returns in the breaststroke and but- odist also look strong. hen, So.. Texas; l6:I 1.08, Stacy Shupe, So.. the 1986 championships would be “a In the diving department, six-time terfly events. Second-place finisher in Following is a top-10 list for each of Stanford; 16:13. I, Karin LaBergq Sr., Southern Cal. 16: 13.20, Florence Barker, So.. Southern very close meet, a real dogfight” NCAA champion Megan Neyer will the 1,650-yard freestyle Stacy Shupe the individual events. (The lists were Methodist: 16.13.73. Patty Sabo, Jr., Texas; among the three. “A team could return to the roster after redshirting and runner-up in the 200-yard breast- compiled from questionnaires re- 16:27.72, Libby Pruden, Jr., Auburn. lti29.26, swim well and be third,” he said. in 1984-85. stroke Kathy Smith also return, as do turned by NCAA member institu- Patricia Bulchtr, Sr.. N.C. State; 16:30.48. Texas is. the two-time defending Stanford, the other top contender backstrokers Patty Gavin and Jen- tions’ sports information offices and Mary Par Gaffney. So., Southern Methodist; 16:32.40. Susan And% Jr., Georgia: 16~33.88. national champion and returns 637 for 1986 honors, features 12 newco- nifer Pokluda. indicate 1984-85 season bests.) Laurence Bensimon. So.. Alabama. points from last year’s team. mers who placed i’n the U.S. National Stanford, which won the 1983cham- S&Yard Freaatylc ..- 22.82. Jcnna Johnson. IOO-YmrdBackacrokc~5S.3, Betsy M~rchell. ‘We don’t have as strong a freshman Short Course Championships this pionship, finished second in 1982 and FL, Stanford; 23.02. Susan Miller, So., Vlrgnia; Jr., Texas; 55.42. Tori Trees, Jr.. Texas; 55.44, class as in the past, taking last year for past spring. Olympic gold medalist 1984 and third in 1985. Seven-time 23.18, Conny van Bentum. So.. California: Debbie Risen, Jr.. Texas: 56.23. Jennifer Pok- instance. But we do have a transfer Jenna Johnson (freestyles and butter- Olympic coach Haines has lost only 23.23, Susan Hickman, Jr., Pdtsburgh; 23.28, luda. Sol, Stanford; 56.25, Mcgan Bresnahan, Anne Kelly, Fr, Miami (Florida); 23.28, Car- Jr., Georgia; 56.7, Patty Coraon. Jr.. Maryland; student, , who will help flies), freestyler Amy Berrins, and three dual meets in his four-year stint men Cowart, Fr.. Florida; 23.3, Kathy Coffin, 56.7. Heather Strang. So., Southern Cal; 56.88, us immediately,” Quick continued. backstrokers Michelle Donahue, Jen- at Stanford (36-3). So., Georgia; 23.32, Dana Powers. Jr., Ne- Diane Graner, SC. UCLA: 56.95. Nadra Sim- Mitchell, an Olympic silver medal- nifer Shannon and Jennifer Polk California, featuring NCAA rec- braska; 23.34, Nadra Simmons, So.. Clemson. SeeScoring, page 9 8 THE NCAA NEWS/November 11,19tM With South Florida gone, Division II, waters start churning The move of last year’s Division II Tammy Burch also should contribute Army; 24.7, Missy Sarver, Fr.. Clarion: 24.8. Jennifer GalsIcr. Jr.. Puget Sound; 2.28.19. Women’s Swimming and Diving in the butterflies and individual med- Kim Wilkinson, Fr., Wright State. Stephanie Schleg, So., Northern Mich.; 2:28.5 I, 180-yard frrcrtylc~ 51.0. Tina Bair. Jr., Clar- Jackie Diederrch. So. Air Force; 2:28.71. Championships winner South Florida leys. ion; 51.0. Sandra Crouase. Fr., Clarion; 52.0, Pamela Birsinger, Jr. New Hampshire; 2:3 I 14. to the Division I ranks has given new Tampa, 1Ith at the 1985 champion- A’Lrsa Woicicki. Sr.. Clarion: 52.41. Janet Melanie Steer, So.. Cal St Northridge. hope to the 1985-86 crop of Division ships, is led by the secondplace finisher Kcmper. Sr.. Youngstown St.; 52.61, Mary lOByard butterfly-57 I. Tammy Burch, II teams. in the backstrokes, Janet Pietroforte. Beth Dunlcvy. Sr., North Dakota: 53.04, Karen Fr., RIcc: 57.12. Mary Beth Dunlevy, Sr., Dimick, St, UC Davis; 53 3. Laura Atteberry. North Dakota. 57.34. Tma Bair, Jr. Clarion; The Lady Bulls were unstoppable Freshmen Wilma Goodwin (individ- So., Tampa; 53.7. Jane Hrlarzewskr, FL, Gan- 57.43, Janet Kcmpcr, Sr., Youngstown St., in 1985, surging to an unprecedented ual medleys) and Annika Svensson non: 53.9, Lori Pritchett, Fr., San Fran. SC.; 58.0, ALisa Woicicki, SC, Clarion; 58.0. Teri 492 points. Cal State Northridge was (breaststrokes) are new additions. 54.0. Trish Barber, Fr., Clarion. Messenger, Fc. Clarion: 58.0. Sandra Crousse. second with 3801/ points, while third Cal State Northridge has finished ZW-yard freestyle-- l:52.0. SandraCroussc, Fc. Clarion; 58.21, Harmony Lawrence, SC. Fr., Clarion; 152.20. Sarah Rudolph, Jr., Cal St Nbrthridgc; 58.24. Krrsten Wheeler, place Clarion compiled 3 15. prominently in all four years of the Puget Sound; 1153.0. A’Lisa Woicrcki. Sr., So., UC Davis: 58.32, Janine Owens. Sr,, Clarion, national champion in 1983 meet-first in 1982, third in 1983 and Clarion; 1:53.5. Cindy Patterson, Jr., Cal St. North Dakota. and 1984, appears to be the favorite second in both 1984 and 1985. How- Los Angeles: 1:54.82, Anne-Marie Lill, So.. 200-yard buttcrtty ~~2:03.0. Tammy Burch. to jump back to the top. All 1985 ever, the Lady Matadors were hard Furman; 1:55.00. Joan Wojtowicr. Fr.. Blooms- Fr.. Rice: 2.05.5, Ann Marie Wycoff, Fr., burg. 1155.70. Wenda Windle, Jr., Northern Army; 2:06.8. Gail Thompson, So.. Tampa; NCAA scorers are back, including hit by graduation and the loss of Mich.; 1:56.0. Laura Attetrerry, So.. Tampa; 2~07.5, Cindy Jones. Jr., Tampa; 2107.71, Mi- seven-time all-America Tina Bair. Christa Lawrence, national champion 1:56.0, Lori Pritchctc, Fr., San Fran. St.; chelle Dokter, SC, Race; 2:07.93. Krissy Walden, The junior placed second nationally in the 200-yard butterfly. Lawrence is 1:56.36. Kim Paskal. Jr.. Furman. So., Cal St. Northridge; 208.0. A’Lisa Woicicki, in the 50- and IOO-yard freestyles and paralyzed from a summer surfing WO-yardtccstyk-4:56.57, Sarah Rudolph. Sr.. Clarron; 2:08.13, Paula Bochme. Jr.. Fur- Jr., Pugct Sound; 459.78, Kim Paskal. Jr., man: 2:0X.59, Beth Rocder. So., Bloomsburg: the IOO-yard butterfly and assured accident. Furman; 5:O0.0. Monika Ehlers. Fr., Rice; 2:09.46. Carrie Erzen, So . VandcrbilI. Clarion top-three finishes as anchor Coach Pete Accardy will be relying 5.03.47, Carol Snell. So., Rice; 5:05.35. Ellen ZOO-yard Individual medley ~ 2:06.0. Tammy of four relays. on returnees Krissy Walden in the Moriarty. Sr., Wright State; 505.63. Kim Burch, Fr., Rice: 2:09.0. Teri Messenger. Fr.. Six-time all-America A’Lisa Woi- 200-yard butterfly (seventh); Melanie Hayes, Sr.. Clarion: 5:07.15, Gail Thompson, Clarion, 2:09.75, Carrie Convis. Sr., Slippery So., Tampa; 5:08.6. Crndy Patterson, Jr., Cal Rock; 2:10.79. Jill McKeevcr, So.. Air Force; cicki (IOO-yard butterfly and relays) Stoer in the 200-yard breaststroke, St. Los Angeles; 509.8, Cathy Sipka. Sr.. 211.05, Beth Haney, Sr., Air Force; 2.11.39, returns, as does Dori Mamalo, three- and divers Marion Gelhaus (third in Youngstown St.: 5:lO.O. Pam Griffin. Fr.. Clarion’s Tina Bair Laurie Musiek, Jr.. Navy: 2:1 1.7, Wilma Good- meter diving champion and second- one-meter and fourth in three-meter), Clarion. win, Fr., Tampa; 2: 11.71, Stacy Jones, Jr., place finisher in the one-meter event. Harmony Lawrence (ninth in both 1,65Cyard frcatylc- 1659.26. Sarah Ru- Au Force. Rice; 2:11.87. Michelle Doktcr, Sr.. Rice; dolph, Jr., Pugct Sound; 1730.0. Pam Griffin. 200-yard backstroke-2:07.32, Janet Pic- “I’m really excited about this year’s 2:12.16. Brookc Burns, So., Vanderbilt events) and Sherie McMahon (fifth in Fr..Clarion: 1731.63. Kim Hayes, Sc,Clarion; Irofortc, Sr., Tampa; 208.0, Teri Messenger, -yard individual madlcy -4:27.0, Tammy outlook. We had no seniors last year the one-meter event). 17:34.2. Cindy Patterson, Jr.. Cal St. Los Fr., Clarion; 2:OB.O. Wendic Reed, Fr.. San Burch. Fr., Rrce; 4.36.52. Jackie Diederich. but now we have an experienced Following is a top-10 list for each of Angeles; 17:36.38. Eileen Moriarty, Sr., Wright Fran. SI.: 210.71, Christine HartzelI, So.. So.. Air Force; 438.0. Wilma Goodwin, Fr.. nucleus. Also, we have six freshmen- the individual events. (The lists were State; 17:41.36. Ann Ackerson, Sc, Springlield; Furman; 2: 10.96. Suclynn Langdon, Sr., Clar- Tampa; 4:38.3, Jcanic Qumtana. Ft. Cal St. 1744.10. Jill Pritchard, So.. Rice; 17:49. IO. ion; 2:Il.W. Jill McKecvcr. So., Air Force; Los Angeles; 4:39.13, Carrie Erzcn, So.. Van- two swimmers and four divers-who compiled from questionnaires re- Ann Ackcrson. Sr.. Spriqticld; 1750.22, Krissy 2~11.4. Michelle Dotter, Sr.. Rice: 2.1 1.96, dcrhilt;4:40.00, Kelly Knaus. Sr. Bloomsburg; can score immediately,” said Clarion turned by NCAA member institu- Walden, So.. Cal St. Northridge; I8:28.1, Barb Hojnacki. So.. Wright State; 2: 12.0, Amy 440.4. Michelle DokIer, Sr., Rice; 4:40.96, coach Becky Leas. ‘Our strong point tions’ sports information offices and Jackie Rulon. Jr., E. Stroudsburg. Hamel, Jr., San Fran. St.; 2:13.56. Barb Gilbert, Dena Shumar. So.. Wright State; 4:41.69. should be the relays. Each of them lobyard backwtrokc-S8.89. Janet PicIro- Jr.. Northern Mich. Krissy Walden, So.,Cal St. Northridgc;4:42.63. indicate 1984-85 season bests. forte, St, Tampa; 58.9, Wcndic Reed, Fr.. San has an excellent chance to win.” loOyard bruststrokc- l:O6.6. BcIh Haney, Wenda Windle. Jr., Northern Mich. 50-yard fre&yle-23.6, Tina Bair, Jr., Clar- Fran. St.; 59.63, Bcbe Bryans-Mccs. Sr.. San Sr.. Air Force; 1:06.72. Jennifer Galstcr. Jr. One-meter dlvlnc (1985 flnlsh)- 2nd. Doria Rice and Tampa will be showing ion; 24.06, Bcbc Bryanr-Meer, Sr., San Fran. Fran. St.; 1:OO.O.Teri Messenger, Fr., Clarion; Puget Sound; 1:07.61, Kristen Wheeler, So.. Mamalo, So.. Clarron; 3rd. Marion Gelhaus, their best teams ever. The Owls return SI.; 24.08, Janet Kemper, Sr., Younptown SI.; 1:00.37, Christine HartzelI, So.. Furman; UC Davis; 1:07.83, Clam Hramiec, Jr., Army; Jr.. Cal St. Northridge; 5th. Shcrie McMahon, eight all-Americas, including Michelle 24.27,Mary Beth Dunlcvy, Se. North Dakota; I:M).54, Stacy Jones, Jr.. Rice; 1:00.71, Laurie 1:07.9, Annika Svcnsrbn. Fr.. Tampa: 1.08.37, So., Cal St. Nonhridge: 5Ih. Thcrsa Michael. 24.44, Paigc Wincers. So.. Furman; 24.5, Lori Lafferty, So., Slippery Rock; l:Ol.5. Karen Stephanie Schleg. So.. Northern Mich.; 1:08.5, So., Navy; 8th. Julie Pence, So., Northern Dokter and Stacy Jones in the back- Pritcbctt, Fc. San Fran. St.; 24.58, Karen Kimpton, Fr., Wright State; 1:Ol.M. Suclynn Sue Kelly, Ft. Slippery Rock; 1:08.53. Pamela Mich.: 10th. Missy Baron. So.. Northern Mich.; strokes and butterflies. Freshman Dimick. Sr.. UC Davis; 24.7. Terri Miller, So., Langdon, St., Clarion; 1:Ol.g. Judy Hupp. Sr.. Brrsrngcr. Jr.. New Hampshire: 1:08.57. Corrie 14th. Patti Wood&It. Convis, Sr.. Slippery Rock; 1:08.72. Lynn Tbmmrterdlvln~(l~S~nbb)~ 1st. Doria McPhail. Jr., Maine. Mamalo, So., Clarion; 3rd. Patti Woodcock, ZOO-yard breastswoke ~ 223.98, Beth Haney. Jr.. Vanderbilt; 4th, Marion Gelhaus. Jr. Cal Matadors set sights on 6th Sr., Au Force; 2~24.65. Krisccn Wheeler, So.. St. Nonbridge: 6th. Missy Baron, So., Nonh- UC Davrs; 2:25.5, Annrka Svcnsson. Fr., cm Mich.; 9th. Harmony Lawrence, Sr., Cal Tampa: 2:25.56. Corrie Convis. Sr., Slrppery St. Northridge; 13th. Juhc Pence, So., NorIhcrn Rock; 2:26.0. Clam Hramiec, Jr.. Army; 227. I I, Mich. consecutive national crown Names Cal State Northridge coach Pete miss Richard Ford, individual cham- So., Cal St. Northridge; 4~35.14. Jeff Sidor. Jr., Arkansas; 54.87, Stuart Smith, Sr., Texas; Accardy is running out of room in his pion in the 200-, 500- and 1,650-yard So.. Tampa: 4:35.96. Matt Croghan, Sr., Oak- Continuedfrom page 7 land; 4:36.04, Mike Rossic. Jr., Cal St. Nor- dam. Sr., Iowa State: 19.86, John Sauerland, 55.21. David Lundberg. Sr.. Stanford; 55.74, office-the championship trophies freestyles and a member of two win- thridgc; 436.36. James Bradley. Sr., Tampa: Sr., UCLA; 20.00. Asa Lawrence, Sr.. Texas: Paul Wallace, So.. Florrda; 55.8, Todd Gray, are piling up. ning relay teams. 436.41. Mark Brockway, So.. Shippensburg; 20.10, Norman Wyatt, Jr., Arkansas; 20.19, Sr., Maryland; SS.91,John Clark, Sr., Southern The Matadors have won nine of Tampa (1985 third-place finisher, 437.01. Tom Addington. Sr.. Cal St. Bakcrs- Per Johansson. Sr., Auburn; 20.2, Randy Cal. 200-Yard Brearbtrokc- I :55.96, John the past 1I Division II Men’s Swim- 293 points), Wright State (fourth frcld. Sprout, Sr., Cornell: 20.27. John Miranda, 1,650-yard freestyle- I5:45.78. Matt So.. Southern Methodist. Moffct, Sr.. Stanford; 1:58.5 I, Rick May, Sr., ming and Diving Championships, place, 282 points), Oakland (sixth Texas; 1:58.53. Stuart Smith, Sr., Texas; Croghan. Sr., Oakland; 15:46.04, Jon Carpa- II%Yard Frcaatyle-41.87. Matt Biondi, including the past five straight. In place, 201 points) and Cal State Chico dakis, So.. Cal St. Northridge: 15:51.08. Scot1 1:59.26, Rick Gill, St, California: 2:00.15, Jr., Calrfornia; 43.20. . Jr, Texas: John Ulibarri, Jr., Arkansas: 2:00.32. David addition, they claim the most individ- (seventh place, 193i% points) appear Troutwine, So.. Wright State: 16:02.44. Chris- 43.65, Albert Mestre, Sr.. Florrda; 43.68, John tian Gregory. Jr, Tampa: 16:03.26. Jack Cahil- Lundberg, Sr., Stanford: 2:00.41, Bobby Laugh- ual championships (54). to be other top contenders. Saucrland. Sr.. UCLAi43.71, Scott McCadam. erty. Sr. Florida: 2:01.16. Jan Errck Olsen, lane. Jr.. Shippenrburg; 16:03.96, James Brad- Sr., Iowa State; 44.03, Per Johansson, Sr.. When asked about the prospects National 200-yard butterfly cham- ley, SC. Tampa; 1604.36, Errc Nordhcim. Jr., So., Michrgan; 2:01.56. Tim Sanocki, So., Auburn: 44.15, Steven Creamer, Jr.. UCLA; Tennessee; 201.70, Giovanni Minervini. So., for the 1985-86 season, Accardy said, pion David Hunter leads Tampa, Tampa; 1604.48, John Heilbran, So., Cal St. 44.30, Dean Hagan. Sr.. Arizona: 44.34. Peter nonchalantly, “We should be about while Wright State boasts 400-yard Bakersfield: 16:06.89, Jeff Cooper. So.. Oak- UCLA. Rohde, Jr., Pepperdine; 44.40, Doug Boyd. Sr.. IOf@-Yard Buttemy-46.52, Pablo Morales, the same as last year? individual medley champ Scott Trout- land; l6:l I .96, Jeff Sidor. So.. Tampa. Indiana. IfI&yard backstroke- 50.76, Tom Roth, SC, Jr., Stanford; 47.89, Andy Jamcson. Jr., Ari- Last year’s Matadors accumulated wine. Cal St. Bakersfield; 51.72. Steve Larson. Jr., 200-Yard Freeatylc~ 1:33.22. Matt Biondi. zona State; 48.10. Duffy Dillon, Jr.. Florida, a record-high 488 points in the cham- Oakland, the Great Lakes Intercol- Oakland; 51.99. Curt Cochran. Sr.. Cal sl. Jr.. California: 1:34.96. Mike Heath, Sr , Flor- 48.16. Keith Hayes. So.. Miamr IFIn.); 48 29. legiate Conference champion last year, Chico: 52.87. ScoIt Grigsby. Sr., Cal St. Nor- Ida; 1:35.02. Mike O’Brrcn. So.. Southern Cal; Chrrs Rrvcs. Sr.. Texas; 48.30. Dave Cademar- pionship, keeping second-place Cal l:35.27, Chris Jacobs, Jr., Texas: 1.35.73, Don tori, So., Southern Cah48.41, Anthony Mossc. can count on five all-Americas and a thridgc; 52.95, Rich Swoboda, So.. Cal Poly- State Bakersfield at bay with 417i% SLO: 53.04, Todd McMurdo. So.. Cal St. Bergcr Sr.. Alabama: I.35 85. Thomas Lejd- So.. Stanford:48.59, Dirk Marshall, Sr.. North points. strong recruiting effort. Cal State Bakersfield; 53.07. Mark Mersner, Jr., Alas.- strom, Sr., Califorma; 1:35.94, Tom Fahrncr. Carolina; 48.74, Davrd Gean, Jr., Arkansas; Athletes representing 51 points of Chico, the 1985 Northern California Anchorage; 53.17. Dave Peura. So.. Clarion: Jr.. Southern Cal: 1:36.05. Rich Saeger. Sr.. 48.93, . Fr.. Stanford. Southern Methodist; 1:36.07, Albert Mcstre, 200-Yard ButIcfly~ 1:42.85. Pablo Mo- the total are gone, but the remaining Athletic Conference champion, fea- 53.43. Ted Bibber. Sr.. Pugct Sound; 53.44, Paul Pcricich. Sr.. Missouri-Rolla. Sr.. Florida; 1:36.19. Michael Sodcrlund. Sr.. rales. Jr., Stanford. l:43.92. Mike Heath, Sr.. 437 points still would have taken tures all-America Kurt Cochran in California Florrda; 144.45. Anthony Mo;se, So., Stan ZOO-yard backstroke- l:S3.29, Rich Swob- 1985 honors. the backstrokes and David Cunniff in oda. So.. Cal Poly-SLO; 1:53.92, Ted Bibbes. 569-Yard Frcestylc~4:13.06. MrkeO’Brren, ford: 1:45.88, Richard Green, Jr.. Miami(Fla).: Cal State Northridge’s 1985-86 the freestyle sprints. Sr., Pugct Sound; 1:54.45, Curt Cochran, SC, So., Southern Cal; 4: 14.85. Malt Cetlinski. Sr.. 1:45.94. Dave Cadcmartorr, So.. Southern Following is a top-10 list for each of Cal St. Chico; 154.58. Scott Troutwine. So.. Florida. 4.17.86. Jeff Kostoff. Jr., Stanford: Cal; 1:46.16, T.A. DeBiasc, Jr., California; lineup looks like a Division II who’s 1:46.53. Ricardo Prado. Sr.. Southern Mcth- the individual events. (The lists were Wright State; 154.76. Dave Pcura, So., Clar- 4:18.16. Gary Brrnkman. Sr., Southern Ill.; who, covering every event, sometimes ion; 1:55.58, Steve Larson, Jr., Oakland: 1:55.9, 4:1X.26, Mike Heath, Sr.. Florida. 4.18.84. odist: 1:46.66. Ken Flaherty, Sr.. Texas; 1:46.69, three-deep. Double champions junior compiled from questionnaires re- Kent Mitchell, Sr., Cal St. Chico: 156.14. Alex Mlawsky. Jr., Arizona; 4:19.08. Tom Thomas Lqdsrrom. Sr., California; 1:46.73, Jeff Kubiak (200-yard breaststroke, turned by NCAA member institu- Todd McMurdo. So.. Cal St. Bakersfield; Fahrncr. Jr.. Southern Cal; 4:19.46. John Jaymc Taylor, So., Florida. tions’ sports information offices and 1:56.41, Andrew Steinbrick, Jr., Southern Mykkanen. So.. California; 4:19.X3, Allan 200-Yard Medley -~ 146.08. Pablo Morales, 200-yard individual medley) and sen- Jr.. Stanford: 1:47.26. Paul Wallace, So.. Flor- indicate 1984-85 season bests.) Corm.: 1:56.66, Jon Carpadakis. So.. Cal St. Alarab, Jr., Southern Cal; 420.79. ior Roland King (one- and three- Northridge. 1.650-Yard Freestyle- 14:41.43, Mike ida; 1:47.43, Jens~Peter Berndt, So.. Alabama; SO-yard frecatyle- 20.68. Kennon Heard, 1:47.49, John Moffet. Sr., Stanford: 1.47.92, meter diving) top the list of veterans. 19%yard breaatrtrokc- 56.70. Jeff Kubiak. O’Brien. So.. Southern Cal: 1448.49. Jeff So., Cal SI. Bakersfield: 20.75, David Holmes, Neil Cochran, Sc, Arizona State; 1:47.94. Ken Jr.. Cal St. Northridge; 57.56, Brian Morrrson, Kostoff. Jr.. Stanford: 1454.72. Gary Brink- Kubiak holds the Division II record Sr.. Clarion; 20.8. Jeff Fagler, Jr.. Tampa: Flaherry, Sr.. Texas; 1:48.02, Ricardo Prado, Sr., Cal St. Bakersfield; 57.60. Mark Vander- man, Sr.. Southern Ill.; 14:55.29. Chris Hansen, in the 200-yard breaststroke at 20.87, Tom Roth, Sr., Cal St. Bakersfield; 21.0. Sr., Southern Methodist; 1:48.48. David Lund- Mcy. So.. Oakland: 57.91, Derek Coon. Sr.. Jr., Southern Cal; 1455.59, Scott Brackctt. Sr.. George Webber. Sr.. Cal St. Chico; 21.14, berg. Sr.. Stanford; 1:48.63, Duffy Dillon, Jr., 2:00.40. Reed Genhwind, who single- Missouri-Rolla; 58.12. Steve Longerbeam, Arizona State; l4:59 30, Alex Stiles, So.. Arrr Steve Larson, Jr., Oakland; 21.21. Mike Ko- Florida; 1:48.66, Bobby Laugherty, Sr., Florida. handedly collected 47 points, is back So.. Cal St. Chico. 58.63. Gregory Matthews. zona; 15:00.41. Jeff Erwin, Jr.. California: leber. Jr., Oakland; 21.37. David Cunniff, Sr.. 400-Yard Individual Medley ~~3:?6.54. Jeff So., UC Davis; 58.64, Chrrs Cooper, So., UC 15:03.07. Alex Mlawsky, Jr.. Arizona; IS: 10.93, in the freestyle middle distances and Cal St. Chico: 21.4. George Brew, Jr., Tampa: Kostoff. Jr., Stanford; 3:49.13, Jens-Peter Davis: 58.89, Tryggvi Helgason. So., Cal St. Tom Fahrner, Jr., Southern Cal; 15:12.39, 200-yard individual medley. 2 1.44. Lee Spccm. Sr.. Kutztown. Bemdt, So., Alabama; 3:49.92, Ken Flaherty. Bakersfield; 59.2. Arnic Sigunsson. Jr.. Tampa; . So., California. Although Cal State Bakersfield l86-yard fraaatylc 45.50. Reed Gcrshwind. SZ. TCX~S:3:49.95, Jerry Frentsos. So., Florida; Sr.. Cal St. Northridge; 45.62. Tom Roth, Sr., 59.90, Taj Hussain, So., UC Davis. loo-Yard Backstroke-48.21, Tom Jager, was a distant second, coach Ernie Sr., UCLA; 49.01. Mook Rhodenbaugh. Sr.. 350.25. Ricardo Prado, SC. Southern Mcth- Cal St. Bakersfield; 45.69. George Brew, Jr., 200-yard beeaaIatr&~z:00.40. Jeff Kubrak, odist: 3.51.08. Bruin Tsuchiya. Sr.. Tennessee; Maglischo knows the way to the Tampa: 45.7. George Webber, Sr.. Cal St. Jr.. Cal St. Northridge; 296.52, Gregory Mat- Southern Methodist: 49.60. Dave Roach, Jr., California: 49.82. Charlcy Srroky, Sr, Arizona: 3:51.93, Mike O’Brien, So., Southern Cal: awards stand. While coaching at Cal Chico;45.83, Steve Hayhow. Sr., Wright State; thews. So.. UC Davis: 2:06.54. Brian Morrison, 3:52.28, Shawn Blatt. SC. Auburn: 3:52.48, 46.0. Larry Jordan, Sr.. Springfield; 46.04. SC, Cal St. Bakersfield; 2:07.06, Mark Vander- 49.85, Bryan Jennings, Sr.. Alabama; 49.87, State Chico, he led the Wildcats to Scan Murphy, So.. Stanford; 49.87, Mike John Davey. So., Iowa; 352.91. Bobby Laugh- Davrd Cunniff, Sr., Cal St. Chico; 46.1. Jeff Mcy. So., Oakland: 2.07.32. Tryggvi Helgason. crty. Sr., Florida. three national championships (1973. Kowalaski, Sr., Florida State; 49.87, Cliff Faglcr, Jr.. Tampa; 46.19, Brett Frey, Sr., Cal So.. Cal St. Bakersfield; 2:07.32, Derek Coon. On&l&r Dlrlng( 1985 firush)+2nd. Doug 1974 and 1976). and then coached St. Bakersfield; 46.25, David Holmes. Sr.. Sr.. Missouri-Rolla: 2:08.22, Chris Cooper. Looschen. Sr.. Indiana; 50.01, Chris Stevenson. Sr., North Carolma; 50.28, David Bcrkoff. So.. Shaffer, Sr.. UCLA: 3rd. Daniel Watson, SC. Oakland to 1980 honors, one of only Clarion; 46.37, Mike Halfa.% Jr., Tampa. So., UC Davis; 2:08.49. Steve Krrkland, Sr., Harvard: 6th. Patrick Jeffrey, Jr.. Ohio State; Harvard. three championships ever to be won 208-yard freeslyle~ 140.66, Steve Hayhow, Cal St. Northridge; 2:08.8, Arnie Sigurtaaon. 7th. Thor Johnson. Sr., Stanford; 9th. Mrchael Jr., Tampa: 2:09.54. Steve Longerbeam. So.. 200-Yard Backatrokc~ 1:46.29. Sean by a team outside of California. Sr., Wright State; 1:40.7. Bart Frey, Fr.. Cal St. Wantuck. Sr., Ohm State: 12th. Scot1 Fosdick. Bakersfield: 1:40.7. Jeff Miller, Fr.. Cal St. Cal St. Chico. Murphy, So.. Stanford; 1:47.46, Charlcy Sir- Jr., Florida, 13th.Shawn McLane, Sr.. William The Cal State Bakersfield Road- Bakerslield; 140.75, Brett Frey, Sr., Cal St. 100-yard buIterlly~49.91, Tom Roth, St. oky. Sr., Arizona; 1:47.63, Dave Roach. Jr.. dr Mary; 14th. Pat Evans. So.. Cincrnnari; runners could be Cal State North- Bakersfield; 140.84. Mike Halfast. Jr.. Tampa; Cal St. Bakersfield; 50.02, Bill Key, Sr.. Tampa; Californra: 1:47.88. Bryan Jennings, Sr., Ala- 15th. Brad Kreishcr. Jr. Penn State; 20th. ridge’s nemesis. Led by the NCAA 1:41.48. David Cunnrff. Sr.. Cal St. Chico; 50 03. Todd McMurdo. So., Cal St. Bakcrs- bama; 1:47.93, Dan Vcatch, Jr., Princeton: Keith Harris, So., Texas. 1:48.01. Cliff Looschen. Sr., Indiana: 1:48.13. individual champions Kennon Heard l:41.59, Reed Gcrshwind. Sr., Cal Sl. Nor- field; 50.21. David Hunter. So., Tampa: 50.4. Three-Meter Divln~( 1985 finisb))5th. Mi- thridgc; 1:41.62. Doug Burchcll. Sr.. Cal St. George Webber, Sr., Cal St. Chico; 50.74, Kurt Nathan Brcarcalc. Sr.. Texas; 1:48.89, Michael chael Wantuck. Sr. Ohio Scale; 6th. Danrel (SO-yard freestyle) and Tom Roth Northridge: 1:42.19. Rich Swoboda, So., Cal Dcgcnhardt, Sr.. Kutttown: 51.14, David Soderlund, Sr., California; 1:48.91, Moot Watson, Sr., Harvard; 8th. Patrick Jeffrey, Jr, (IOO-yard backstroke and IOO-yard Poly-SLO; 1:42.51. Tom Addington, Sr., Cal Holmes, Sr.. Clarion; S I. IS. Neil Leary, So.. Rhodcnbaugh, Sr.. Southern MeIhodist, Ohio Slate; 9th. Doug Shaffcr, Sr.. UCLA; butterfly), Cal State Bakersfield hopes St. Bakersfield. Cal Poly-SLO; 51.29. Davrd Hayncs. Jr.. Pugct 148.95. Kevin Craig, Sr., Southern Cal. I Ith, Zekc Crowley, Jr., Southern Methodrst: its strong nucleus plus 12 outstanding 508yard BaaaIylc-4z29.98. Doug Burchell. Sound; 51.30, Scott Carney, Sr.. Missouri- IOO-YardBreaststroke-53.63, John Moffet, 13th. Shawn McLanc. Sr. William B Mary; Sr.. Cal SI. Northrrdgc; 431.16. Scott Trout- Rolla. Sr.. Stanford: 54. I I. Giovanni Mincrvini, So.. 18th. Nigel Stanton, Sr., Southern Ill.; 19th. recruits will be enough to overpower wine, So.. Wright State; 432.0. Ban Frey. Fr.. 20Qyard butterfly - 150.66. David Hunter, UCLA; 54.1 I, Rick May, Sr., Texas; 54.24, Pat Evans. So.. Cincinnati; 20th. John Klucck. the Matadors. The Roadrunners will Cal SC. Bakerslield: 4:33.84. Jon Carpadakis. See Matadors, page 9 Rick Gill, Sr., California; 54.39, John Ulibarri. Jr.. Wisconsin. THE NCAA NEWS/November Il.1985 9 Kenyon is synonym for Division III swimming Depth may be problem for men Women eye third championship Depth-Kenyon coach Jim Steen Peel. Jr., Hope, 21.1, Tom Smith. Jr., Lake Kenyon’s James Steen is a specialty 1:55.64. Amy Heaslcy. So.. Kenyon: 155.71. calls it the name of the game. Forest: 2 I IS, Paul Barnctt, Jr., Kenyon, 2 I .20, coach. He specializes in building dy- Ehzabeth Miles. Fr.. Wash & Lee; I:55 84. Derron Fredrick, Fr., UC San Diego; 21.38, Irene Mans, Jr. UC San Dtego; 1:56.04. Karah And, he should know. His Lords Mark Ferotel. SC. John Carroll: 21.39, Tom nasties. Coe, Jr., Pomona-Pnzcr: 1:56.21. Alison Gilt teams have won the Division HI Men’s Kubinski, SC, St. John’s: 21.44, Ktp Fulbeck. He already has established one more, Sr.. UC San Diego: 1:56.26, Tracy Mul- Swimming and Diving Champion- So, UC San Diego. dynasty in Division III men’s swim- vany, So.. UC San Diego. 1.5655, Anita Hill, lW-yard freestyle-43.65, Jim Born, Sr.. ming, winning the last six NCAA So.. UC San Diego: I .56.69. Kristtn McQuccn. ships the past six years. Kenyon; 45.70, Btll Kazmterowicz. Sr., UC San titles in the I l-year history of the Jr., PomonaPirzcr. The Lords lost seven seniors, in- Diego; 46.16, Rob Peel. Jr., Hope; 46.41, Jim SOO-yard freestyle-5:02.06, Irene Mans, cluding six all-Americas, from a 1985 Wang, SC, Tufts. 46.4). Paul Barnctt, Jr.. meet. And now the Kenyon women Jr., UC San Diego; 5:02.94, Tracy Mulvany, championship squad that easily Kenyon: 46.59, Larry Martin. Sr.. Wis.-Mil- are on a roll. The Ladies claimed the So., UC San Diego; 5:03&t. Linda Chamberk, clinched the title with 504 points. In waukee; 46.59, Denrus Mulvthdl, So.. Kenyon; past two Division III women’s crowns Sr. Whcaton (Ill.): 5:07 05. Patty Abt. Jr. 46.74, Steve Francis. Jr., Carnegie-Mellon; and appear to be the favorite for 1986 Kenyon; 5: 10.00, Elrzabeth Miles. Fr.. Wash. & addition, top breaststroker John 46.80, Tom McManncrs. Sr.. Wis-Mihvaukce: Lee. 5:10.37. Anita Hill. So.. UC San Diego: Goessman will study in England this 46.83, Derron Fredrtck, Fc. UC San Dtego. honors. 5.10 68. Amy Dantrler. St, Pomona-Pitzcr; year and relay-team member John 200-yard lrentylc~ 139. I, Bill Kazmiero- Returnees represent 403 points of wict. Sr., UC San Diego: 1.40.49. Dennis last year’s winning 496-point total. Nogaj will not be returning. Mulvthill. So . Kcnyon; 1:42.70, Kevin Casson, Kenyon still will be very competi- Fr., St. Olaf; 1:42.80. Jeff Hirsch, Sr., Rochester; Six-time NCAA individual cham- tive, thanks largely to senior Jim 1.42.83. William Andrew,Sr., Williams. 1.42.9, pion Patty Abt leads the Kenyon Born, the most talented swimmer in Jim Redfern. Jr.. Grinnell; I:42 9. Rich Hymcs. lineup and promises to be the out- So.. Alfred; 1:43.5, Kevin Anderson, Sr., Johns standing Division III swimmer once the I l-year history of Division Ill Hopkins; 1:43.57, Butch Cramer. Sr.. UC San competition. Born is the record-holder Dtego; 1.4366. Steve Francis, Jr.. Cnmcgie- Kenyon’s Jim Born again. The junior holds individual Parry Abf in the 50-yard freestyle (19.97), IOO- Mellon. NCAA records in the 50-yard freestyle yard freestyle (43.65) and IOO-yard SO&yfird bcntyle-4z33.06, Dennis Mulvi- Schaeberle, Jr.. Alfred; 58.49, Rob Danielson. (23.56) IOO-yard freestyle(52.04) and butterfIy (49.57) and is a member of hill. So.. Kcnyon: 4:37 23. Chip Thomas. So.. Sr., Denison. 58.8. Wink Dyer, SC, Johns 200-yard freestyle (1:52.80) and De&on; 437.93, Todd Clark, Jr., Kenyon; Hopkins; 58.9. Alan Barry, Sr., Johns Hopkins; three Kenyon record-setting relay 4:38.40, Sean Malottke, Jr., Mount Union; 59.12, Charhe Lownes, So., Deniron: 59.3, NCAA team records in the 400-yard teams. 4~38.35, Don Kuhn, So., Claremont-M-S. Mike Wcber, Sr.. John Carroll. medley relay (3:59.28), 200-yard free- The top challenger for 1986 honors 4:38.84. Jeff Prosswimmer. Sr.. Kenyon: 200-yard breaatatrokc-2:05.05, Nick Ba- style relay (I :36.56) and 400-yard free- 5: I I .63. Ellen Roe, Sr.. Pomona-Pitzcr: 5.12.87. is Claremont-Mudd-Scripps, second- 4:39.2S. Tom Creech. So.. Kenyon; 439.54, gatclos. Sr.. ClarcmonttM-S; 2:05.42, Rod style relay (3:32&i). She also claims Rtcb Hymen, So., Alfred: 440.0. Kcvm Carson, Miller, So., Mdlikm; 2:06.79, Tom Anderson. Kristm McQueen. Jr. Pomona-Pitzer; 5: 13.27, place finisher the last three years. The Fc, St. Olaf; 440.80, Phil Murphy, So., Ke- Jr., Dcnison; 2:06.83. Rob Danielson. Sr.. the honor of being the first Division Teresa Zurick. So., Kenyon. Stags feature a veteran lineup, along nyon. Denison; 2:07.58. Bill Bloomberg. Jr.. St. Olaf; 111woman swimmer to qualify for the 1.650-yard freestyle- I7:21.65, Linda with a solid freshman class. 1,6S&yard freestyle .16:02.44, Tom Crecch, 2:08.38, Steve Ray, So.. Dcnnon; 2:09. I, Alan Division I championships. Chambers, Sr., Wheaton (Ill.): I7:24.47. Denise So., Kenyon; 1602.90. Craig Hummer, Jr., Barry, Sr., Johns Hopkms; 2:09.39. Ned Busch, Barrett. Jr., Lake Forcsr: 17.45 99. Amy NCAA champions Tom Harrison Amy Heasley (freestyles and re- Dantzler. Sr.. Pomona-Pitzer; 17:53.35, Ellen Kcnyon; 1607.69. Todd Clark, Jr., Kenyon: Sc, Claremont-M-S; 2095, Wink Dyer, Sr., turning national champion in the (200- and 400-yard individual med- 16:08.33. Dave Higdon. Jr., UC San Diego; Johns Hopkins: 2: I I .34, Jeff Bugenbagen, Jr., Roe. Sr., Pomona-Pitzcr: 1756.0. DccDec leys) and Nick Bagatelos (200-yard 1612.37, Jeff Enright, Jr., UC San Diego; Rochester. 200-yard butterfIy), Barbara Misener Burgess, So., Smith: 18:01.85. Lauren Davis. breaststroke) pace a lineup that in- 16.14.43, Don Kuhn, So.. Claremont-M-S; 100-yard buttefly-49.57, Jim Born, St, (freestyles and butterflies) and Beth Sr.. Kcnyon: 18:06.21, Elinor Doty, So.. Kc- 16z18.49. Jeff Prosswimmer, Sr.. Kenyon; Kcnyon; 49.63, Roger Brisbane. Sr.. UC San Welty (backstrokes) also pace the nyon; 18: 17.0. Meg Carey. So., Kcnyon; cludes seven all-Americas. 18:17.67, Kathy Patoff, So.. Pomona-Pitrer; 16:19.63, Mark Postlcr. So.. Johns Hopkins; Diego: 50.70, David Waltuch. So.. Kcnyon; Ladies. Southern California neighbor UC 1625.42, Chip Thomas, So., Denison; 1630.94, 50.8. Lyndon Perry. Sr.. Wheaton (III.); 51.18, 18: 17.67. Liane Stevenson. So.. Pomona-Pitter. San Diego also is boasting its strong- Phil Murphy. So.. Kenyon. Tim Stanford, Sr.. Wash. k Lee: 51.25, Craig Kenyon’s primary competition loOyard backstroke- 1:00.62, Patty Rupp. est team ever. The Tritons finished W&yard backstroke-51.38. Bob Hauck, Helaig, Jr., North Central: 5159. Steve Kmg, should come from two Southern Cal- Jr, Rochester; 1:00.82, Beth Welty, Jr., Kenyon; Jr., St. Olaf: 51.48, Bill Kumierowicz. Sr.. UC Jr.. Wheaton (Ill.); 5 I .73, Jay Rice, Sr.. Wabash; l:Ol.lO, Irene Mons, Jr., UC San Diego: third in the 1985 championships and ifornia schools - Pomona-Pitzer and l:Ol.48, Joan Morgan, Jr., Williams; l:Ol.63. San Diego; 51 6. Steve Smith, So.. Pomona- Sl.84, Dave Kiefer, Sr.. Kenyon: 52.00. Art UC San Diego. Pomona-Pitzer fin- return three national champions from Pitrer; 53.02, Sean Malottke, Jr.. Mount Union: Apgar. Jr., Alfred. Nicki Fowler, Jr., Frostburg State: l:Ol.7, Blair that squad ~ Bill Kazmierowicz in 53.18. Dave Kiefer. Sr.. Kceyon; 53.38. Karl 2ttt%yud lrsrtttiy~ 1:49.87, Roger Brisbane, ished third in 1982, 1983 and 1984, Ambach. So., Emory: l’z02.35. Moniquc the IOO-yard backstroke, Roger Bris- Stnrck. Sr., Kcnyon; 53.51, Bob Moore, So., Sr., UC San Diego; 1:50.47. Tom Harrison. Sr., and second in 1985 with 348 points. Fischer, Sr., Smrth; 1:02.37, Dianna Gray, Fr., Claremont-M-S; 54.2, John Shank, So.. Whea- Claremont-M-S; l:S3.41, David Waltuch, So., UC San Diego: 1:02.53. Jody Skidd, So.. bane in the 200-yard butterfly and UC San Diego’s finishes are ninth, Wtlliams; 1:02.62. MISSYProctor, Jr., Albion. ton (III.); 54.4, Doug Brown, Fr., Amherst; Kcnyon; 1:53.65, Tim Stanford, Sr., Wash. & fifth, sixth and third last year with Jeff Stabile in one- and three-meter 54.47, William Everett, Jr., Williams. Lee; 1:53.86, Jeff Prorrwimmcr, Sr.. Kcnyon; 2O&yud backstroke- .2: 10.22. Melody Hop- diving. In addition, Kazmierowicz 200-yard backatrokc- 151.09, Bob Hauck. 1:54.4. Steve King, Jr.. Whcaton (Ill.); 1:54.74, 334% points. kins. Jr.. Wheaton(lll.); 2:10.69. Joan Morgan. was the 1984 champion in the 200- Jr...% Olaf; l:Sl.7. SteveSmith. So., Pomona- Jtm Walker, SC. Kalamazoo: 1:55.11, Dave Pomona-Pitzer returns almost all Jr., Williams: 2:10.8X, Moniquc Fischer, Sr.. Pitrer: l:S3.24, Scan Malottke. Jr.. Mount Kiefer. Sr., Kcnyon; 1:SS.E.Mark Postlcr So.. Smith; 2: I I .59, Jennifer Krimmel. St, Millikin: and SOO-yardfreestyles. scorers from last year, led by seniors 212.72. Patty Rupp. Jr.. Rochester; 212.8. Union; 153.84, Dave Ktcfcr, Sr., Kcnyon; Johns Hopkins; 156.8, Tim Sullivan, Sr., Amy Dantzler and Ellen Roe, both Following is a top-10 list of the 1:54.41, KarlStarek. Sr., Kenyon; 1:56.19. Bob Tufts. Blarr Ambach, So., Emory; 2:13.93, Beth Welty. Jr. Kenyon; 214.04, Nicki Fowler, Jr.. individual events. (The lists were Moore. So.. Claremont-M-S: I57 33. Wtlliam 206yard Indlrldual medley ~ I :5 I.00, Tom middle and distance freestylers, and Everett, Jr.. Williams; l:58.06. Peter Dobias. Harnson. Sr.. Claremont-M-S; l:Sl.O4, Bob junior Lyn Cunliffe, a breaststroker Frostburg State; 2: 14.90, Dianna Gray. Fr.. compiled from questionnaires re- UC San Diego; 2: IS.2 I. Shannon Delaney, Fr., turned by NCAA member institu- Jr., UC San Diego; 1:58.75, Craig Hummer, Jr., Hauck, Jr., St. Olaf; 1:53.94. Craig Hummer. and individual medley competitor. Kenyon; 1:59.0. Steve Wiper, Jr.. Wheaton Jr., Kcnyon; 1:54.28. Rod Miller. So , Millikm; UC San Diego. Likewise, UC San Diego returns an IOO-yard breaststroke- 1:07.0. Gail Me- tions’ sports information offices and (Ill.). 1:54.35, Bob Moore. So.. Claremont-M-S; experienced crew, featuring national neghin. So.. Montclair St.; 1:OE.Z.Lynn Kline. indicate 1984-85 season bests.) IO&yard breaatatrokc-57.89, Jim Wang. l:SS.lO. Jeff Hirsch. Sr.. Rochester; 1:55.1X, Fr., Pomona-Pitrcr; 1:08.74. Shcryl Thedford. SO-yard freestyle- 19.97. Jim Born. Sr , SC, Tufts; 57 91. Tom Anderson, Jr.. Den&n; Nick Bagatelos. SC. Claremont-M-S, l:55.41, champions Irene Mons in the 500- Kenyon: 20.81, ElII Kazmterowict. SC. UC San 58.03, Craig Puller, So., Millikin: 58.04. Nick Ned Busch, Sr., Claremont-M-S: l:56.0. Rob Sr., Grinnell: I :08.83. Nadine Neil, Sr., Kenyon; yard freestyle and Alison Gilmore in I:W.O, Susan Lenczyckt, Fr., Smith; 1~09.27, Diego; 20.86, Jim Wang. Sr., Tufts; 20.89, Rob Bagatelos, Sr., Claremont-M-S: 58.04, Cary Danielson, Sr.. D&son, 1:56.04. Dan Frttsch. the ItXl-yard butterfly. In addition, Jr., Johns Hopkins. Lyn Cunhffe, Jr., Pomona-Pitrer. 1.09.71, 400-yard individual medley-357.78, Tom seven freshmen join the Tiiton ranks. Ann Rownd. Jr., Denison: 1:lO.O. LeAnne Matadors Harrrson. Sr., Claremont-M-S: 4:01.69. Craig Following is a top-10 list for each of Derilct. Sr.. Lewis & Clark; l:lO.Ol. Elinor Hummer, Jr., Kcnyon: 403~50, Rod Mdlcr, the individual events. (The lists were Doty, So., Kenyon: 1.10.18. Ann McCann. Continuedfrom page 8 So., Tampa. 4.07.0. Christian Gregory, Jr., So.. Millikin: 406 IO. Ned Busch, Sr., Clare- So., Tufts. Tampa: 4.07 40. John Hcilbron, So., Cal St. mont-M-S; 4:06.81. Bill Coven. Sr.. Williams: compiled from questionnaires re- 2OB-yard breaststroke-220.43, Anne Ban- So., Tampa; 1:52.14, Bill Key. Sr.. Tampa; Bakersfield; 4: 10.0, Charles Hudson. Fr.. Cal 4:07.75. Peter Dobias. Jr.. UC San Dtcgo: turned by NCAA member institu- ter, Sr., Ithaca; 2:25.0. Susan Lencryckt, Fr., 1:52.15, David Hayncr. Jr., Pugct Sound; Smnh; 226.0, Gail Meneghin, So., Montclair 1:52.39. Chris Brockaway. So., Shippensburg. St. Bakersfield; 41 I .Ol. Steve Kirkland. Sr., 408.04. Dan Fritsch. Jr. Johns Hopkins; tions’ sports information offices and 408.21. Chrts Kuwan, Jr., Williams; 408.65. St.: 2.27.6. Tina Gaudlitz, Fr., Occidenta 152.46. Neil Leary, So.,Cal Poly-SLO; 1:53~78. Cal St. Northridge: 412.17, Jeff Cooper, So.. indicate 1984-85 season bests.) Oakland; 4:13.2, Jeff Stegncr, Jr., San Fran. Chtp Thomas, So., D&son: 4.08 78. Karl 2:28 33. Elrnor Doty, SO., KcnYOn; 2L28.54, Scott Carney, Sr., Missouri-Rolla; 154.27, St. Starek. SK. Kenyon. St&yard frmtylc~23.56, Patty Abt. Jr.. Lyn Cunliffe, Jr.. Pomona-Pitzcr: 2:28.59. John Scurlock. Jr.. Cal St. Bakersfield: I :54.87. OncmctcrdivinK(199Sflnisb)~ 1st. Roland One-meter diving (1985 Bntsh) 1st. Jeff Kenyon: 24.70, Mtchell Pregler. So., St. Olaf: Nadine Neil, Sr., Kenyon: 2:2896. Jennifer John Schwerzler, Sr., Clarion: I5S.O. Charles Kmg, Sr.. Cal St. Northridge: 2nd . Blau Stabile, So.. UC San Diego; 2nd. Btll Van EC, 24.85, Amy Moran. So., Tufts; 24.86, Laura Krimmcl, Sr.. Millikin: 2:29.15, Ann McCann. Hudson. Fr..Cal St. Bakersfield: 1:SS.l. Doug Nogosck. Jr.. Cal St. Northridge; 3rd, Jon So., Calvm; 3rd. Andrew Salm, SC. Millikin; Knocherhauer, So., UC San Diego; 24.88, So.. Tufts; 2:29.90, Kelly Miller, So., Kenyon. Erpenbeck, Fr., Cal St. Chico Staley. Sr., Missouri-Rolla. 7th. Richard States, 4th. Clark Dorman. Jr., MIT; 5th. Derek Mtssy Proctor, Jr.. Albmn; 24.95, Kay Ceske. IOO-yard butt&y -57.97, Alison Gilmore. 200-yard Indlridual medley ~~ 1.52.44. Jeff So.. West Chester: 8th. Errc Morris, Jr., Cal St. Eberhardt, Jr., Claremont-M-S: 7th. Andy Jr.. Occidental; 24.95. Lies1 Vandecreck, SO.. Sr~. UC San Dtego; 58.15. Amy Heasley. So., Kubtak, Jr., Cal St. NorthrIdge; 1:52.80, Reed Northridge; 9th. Craig Cohen. Sr.. Tampa; Beaudry, Sr.. Hobart: 14th. Larry Martin, Sr., Calvin; 24.97, Kathy Ktrmsycr, Sr.. Wiltian=; Kenyon: 58.73, Barb M~sener, So.. Kenyon: Gcrshwind, SC, Cal St. Northridge: 1:54.14. I Ith, Dirk Leone. Sr.. Cal St. Chrco; 13th. Bdl Wis.-Milwaukee; 15th. DanCudahy. So..Tufts. 25.0, Sheila Arredondo. Jr.. Occidental; 25.0, 59.98. Chrissy Lambert. So.. Pomona-Pnzcr; Larry Jordan, Sr. Springfield; 154.81, Errk Kokinos. Sr.. Clarmn; 15th. Erin McBride. Sr.. 18th. John Sturm. So.. ‘Alfred Meghan O’Brien, Fr.. William Smith. l:OO.l4, Ann Schwerrlcr. So.. Ohio Northern; Rinde. Sr., Cal Poly-SLD, l:SS.O4, Brian Mor- Cal St. Sacramento. Three-meter diving (1985 finish)- 1st. Jeff lOO-yard freatyle-52.04, Patty Abt. Jr.. 1:00.21, HarriSilva.So.. Redlands, I:OO.~,SUC rtson. Sr.. Cal St Bakersfield; 155.08, Paul Three-meter dlrlnK (198s finish)- 1st. Ro- Stabile. So.. UC San Diego; 2nd. Bill Van EC, Kenyon: 52 99, Mtchell Preglcr, So., St. Olaf. Riggs. So. St. Olaf; l:CKt.4, Lynn Khn~, Fr., Pericich, Sr., Missouri-Rolla: 1:55.46, Mike land King, Sr., Cal St. Northridge: 2nd. Blair So., Calvm; 3rd. Derek Eberhardt. Jr.. Clarc- 53 57, Amy Moran. So. Tufts; 53.60, Amy PomonaPitzer: 1:00.41. Michelle Steinberger Halfast. Jr.. Tampa: 1:55.88. Scott Carncy. Sc. Nogosek. Jr., Cal St. Northridge; 4th. Joseph mont-M-S: 4th, Larry Martin. Sr., WisMilt Hensley, So.. Kcnyon; 53.85, Missy Proctor, Fr.. UC San Diego. 1:00.54, Ann Erickson, Jr.. Mtssouri-Rolla: 1.5694. Curt Cochran, Sr., Geraci. Jr., Wright State: 5th. Erin McBride, waukcc: 5th. John Sturm, So., Alfred; 6th. Jr.. Albioo: 53.92, Anita Hill. Fr., UC San Tufts. Cal St. Chrco; 1:56.61. Mark VanderMey, So., Sr.. Cal St. Sacramento; 6th, Jon Staley, Sr., Clark Dorman. Jr., MIT; 7th. Andrew Salm. Diego: 53.96, Teresa Zurick. So., Kcnyon: 2tM-yard buttcrtly -2.09.22. Amy Heasley, Oakland. Missourr~Rolla; 7th. Daniel McCauley. Sr., Sr., Millrkin; 10th. Rick Browne. Jr., Kalama- 54 00. Alrson Gilmorc. Sr., UC San Diego: So.. Kenyon; 209.92. Barb Mtsener, So., Kc- &&yard individual medley-400.55, Scott Cal St. Chico; 8th. Craig Cohen, SC. Tampa; zoo; I Ith, Ricky Jobe. Sr. Ohm Northern; 54.1 I, Kristin McQueen, Jr., POtIIOna-PilZCr; nyon; 2:10.65, Alison Gilmorc, Sr., UC San Troutwine, So.. Wright State; 405.81, Erik 10th. Eric Morris, Jr.. Cal St. Northridge; 13th. Clayton York. Jr. Ithaca; 16th. Michael 54.12, Amy Anderson, Fr., Skidmore. Diego: 2.1 1.22. Ann Schwerzlcr, So.. Ohio Rmdc, Sr.. Cal Poly-SLO; 4:06.55. Derek I Ith. Cbrtstopher Keefe, Sr., Southern Corm.: Brooks, Sr. John Carroll; 19th. Dan Cudahy. 200-yard freestyle- 1:52.80. Patty Abt, Jr., Northern: 2: I I 3, Denise Barrett, Jr. Lake Coon. or. Missouri-Rolla; 407.0, Jeff Sidor, 12th. Jim D&y, Sr.. Clarion. So., Tufts. Kenyon; I:SJ.30, Barb Mrsener, So., Kenyon; Forest; 2: I I .32, Kathy Paloff, So., Pomona- Pitzer: 2:1 1.32. Montque Fischer, Sr., Smith: 2: I I .32. Lmne Stevenson, So.. Pomona-Pnzcr; 2:Il.40, Ann McCann. So., Tufts: 213.75. Scoring Kelly Miller So.. Kenyon. 200-yard individual medley -2: I I .85, Jcn- Continuedfrom page 7 Rapp. So.. Stanford; 214.92. Kim Rhoden Rapp, So., Stanford; l:59.0, Anna Andersson, Bruce, Fr.. Florida. (NOTE. Three-time cham- ntfer Krimmel, Sr.. Millikin; 2: 11.94, Lyn baugh, So., Texas; 2:IS 81. Kathy Smtth. Sr.. So.. Southern Cal; 159.32, Tcrrinnne McGuirk, pion Mcgan Ncyer ts back at Florida after Cunliffc. Jr., Pomona~Pitzcr; 2~12.33. Elinor mans. SO., Clemson; 57.00, Susan O’Brien. Stanford. 2: 16.17. Tracey McFarlanr. So., Jr., Texas; l:S9.74, Tami Bruce, Fr., Florida; taking a year off.) Doty, So., Kenyon: 2.12.38, Tracy Mulvany, So.. North Carolina. Texas; 2:16. IS, Janice Adamson, SC, Ball 2:OO.Ol. Linda Ruttcr. Sr.. Clemson; 2:00 32. One-Meter Diving (1985 f&nisb)~lnd. Jane So., UC San Diego; 2~12.55. Ann McCann, 2OtbYard BackaWoke- 158.5, Betsy Mit- state: 2:16.34, Polly Wtndc, Sr., North Caro- Holly Green, Sr., Florida. Figuciredo. Sr., Houston;; 3rd. Daphne Jonge- So., Tufts; 2: 12.58, Barb Miscner, So.. Kcnyon; chell, So.. Texas; 159. I I, Tori Trees. Jr, Texas; lina; 2:17.87. Erin Hurley, So., Nebraska; jam, So., Miami (Fla.); 6th. Lisa Trombley. 2.12.73. Melody Hopkms, Jr., Whealon (Ill.); 2W-Yard lndlvldual Medley~Z:Ol.93. Kim 159.35, Debbie Risen. Jr., Texas; 1:59.57, 2: 18.17. Terri Baxter. Jr.. ArizonaState. 2:18.23. Sr.. Arkansas; 8th. Tracy Cox, So., Arizona 2:I3.0. Gail Mcneghio. So., Montclarr St.; Rhodenbaugh, So., Texas; 2:02.40, Polly Michelle Donahue, Fr., Stanford: 159.58, Joanne Seymour, So.. South Carolina; 2: 18.38. State; 12th. Jane Anthony, Jr., Tcsnesrec: 213.40. Dianna Gray, Fr., UC San Diego; Windc, Sr., North Carolina; 2:02 70. Jana Susan O’Brien. So.. North Carolina; l:59.94. Lisa Geiger. Sr., Georgia. 14th. Leigh Anne Grabover, Sr., Michigan; 2: 14.3 I, Kelly Miller. So.. Kenyon. Ellis, So., Washington; 2:02.79, Kirstcn Jennifer Shannon, Fr.. Stanford. 2:00.2 I, 15th. Wendy Fuller. So.. Florida State. 16th. LOO-yard Individual medley ~ 4~35.32. Lyn Wengler. SC. Texas; 2:03.5 (1983). Sippy Wood- Megan Bresnahan, Jr., Georgia; 2:01.34, Patty loo-Yard Butterfly-53.36, Mary T. Debbie Fuller, So.. Flortda; 19th. Karen Ge- Cunhffe, Jr., Pomona-Pitrcr: 4:36.34, Elrnor head, Sr., Southern Cal; 2:03.51, Christ1 Gavin, Sr., Stanford; 2:01.61, Diane Graner. Meagher, Jr., California: 53.45, Jenna Johnson. renz, Sr.. Wisconsin: 20th. Bonnie Pankopf, Doty, So., Kenyon: 437.12, Amy Heasley, So.. Woolger. Sr.. Florida: 2.03.68, Vanessa Richey. Sr. UCLA; 201.91, Jennifer Pokluda. So.. Fr., Stanford; 53.58. Caroline Cooper, So., So., Mtchigan. Kenyon: 4.3817, Tracy Mulvany. So.. UC San Cmcmnati; S3.91. Melanie Buddemeycr, So., So.. Texas; 2:03.72. Juhe German, Fr.. Miami Stanford. Three-Meter DivlnK (19115 Diego; 4:38.73. Melody Hopkins, Jr., Whcaton (Fla.): 2:03.81. Janclle Bossc. So.. Ohio State; loo-Yard Brcaatrtroke- 1:02.50, Tracey North Carolina; 54.05, Susan Rapp, So.. Stan- flaisb)~3rd. Tristan Baker, Sr.. Brigham (lll.):4.41.68. Ann McCann,So.,Tufts:4:42.34. 2:04.21, Laurence Bensimon. So., Alabama. McFarlane, So.. Texas; 1:02.70, Kim Rhodcn- ford; 54.30. Jodi Eylcs. Jr., Texas; 54.4% Young; 4th. Lisa Tromblcy, Sr., Arkansas; Jennifer Krunmel, Sr., Millikin; 4:43.95, Mo- Conny van Benrum. So., California; 54.56. baugh. So.. Texas; 1:02.93, Kathy Smtth. Sr., -Yard Indiddual Medley ~4: I I .32. Polly 8th. Daphne Jongejans. So.. Miami (Fla.); nrque Ftscher, Sr., Smith:4:48.54. Kelly Miller, Stanford; 1:04.19, Joanne Seymour. So., South Lori Rca. So., Southern III.; 54.7, Anna An- Winde, Sr.. North Carolina; 4:13.27, Mary 9th. Bonnie Pankopf, So.. Michigan; 11th. So., Kenyon, 4.48.55. Meg Carey, So., Kenyon. Carolina: 1:04.34. Terri Baxter, Jr.. Arizona damson, So., Southern Cal: 55. IO. Dana Pow- Way@. Jr.. Florida; 4:16.89. Tiffany Cohen, Jane Anthony, Jr.. Tennessee; 12th. Debbie One-meter dlvinK (19115 lit&b)-4th, Sabra State: 1:04.64. Jann Ellis, So.. Washington; ers, Jr.. Nebraska. So.. Texas: 417.35. Janelle Bone, So.. Ohio Fuller, So., Florida; 13th. Lisa Williams, Sr. Kroll. Sr.. Smith; 6th. Sari Brummel, Jr.. 1:04.71. Erin Hurlcy, So., Nebraska; 1:04.73, 200-Yard Buttcrfly~l:SS.l3, Mary T. State; 417.6 (1983). Sippy Woodhead, Sr.. South Carolina; 14th. Leigh Anne Grabover. Calvin; 13th. Lori Marion, Jr.. Wbcaton (Ill.); Kathy Clarke, Sr.. UCLA; 1:04.85, Karen Mcaghcr, Jr., Cahfornrs; 1:57.54, Kara SouthernCal;4:18.16. Sofia Kraft, So.. UCLA; Sr., Michigan; 16th. Kelly Johnson, Sr.. Iowa; 7th. Beth Donovan, Sr., Ithaca. Dionnc, So., Kansas; 1:04.87, Tammy Pease. McGratb. So., Texas; 1:5X.04, Melanie Buddc- 4: 18.96, Vanassa Richey, So., Texas; 4:20.02. l&h. Karen Gcrenr. Sr.. Wisconsin. (NOTE: Three-meter diving (19tJ5 Bnlrh)-5th. SK. Kansas. meyer, So., North Carolina: I:58.@4. Martha Christie Woolger, Sr., Florida; 4:20.34, Lau- Three-ttmc champron Mcgan Neyer is back Sabra Kroll, Sr., Smith; 8th. Sari Brummcl. Jr., ZOO-Yard Breaststroke-2: 12.84, Susan McCann, Jr., North Carolina; l:SE.OS, Susan rence Bensimon, So.. Alabama; 420.61, Tami at Florida after taking a year off.) Calvin; 9th. Beth Donovan, Sr, Ithaca. 10 November 11,lWS The NCAA Fencing Preview

Ivy League clash could determine women’s -cro .--.-wn Worn&k fencing supremacy on the tion. will be the team leader, along with board this season. Coach Joe Brodeth senior, Cornell (33-13). and lsabelle national level may come down to a Pennsylvania has an excellent Sara Nuttall (32-l). Incoming fresh- must rebuild his squad completely Hamori, junior, Wisconsin (43-4, battle between Ivy League foes Yale group of returnees, including an out- man Dianella Gobbato, among the after last year’s top five fencers grad- I 1th). and Pennsylvania, although Temple standing sophomore class. Mary Jane top eight in Italy last year, is coach Gil uated. and Wayne State (Michigan) will be O’Neill (254), 1984 champion and Pezza’s top recruit. Senior Jennifer Yu and junior Holly right on their heels. runner-up last year, is one of the Penn State (I l-2), the 1983 NCAA Taylor head Stanford’s chances for Coach Henry Hartunian has put country’s top women fencers. Other champion and fifth last year, faces a national recognition. Yu was 16th together a solid program at Yale, key returnees are sophomore Gail rebuilding year. Two-time Olympian and Taylor 2lst at the NCAA cham- winning the past two NCAA titles, Rossman (19-9) and senior Tammy Jana Angelakis has graduated, as has pionships last year. but his coaching ability will be put to Moss (18-12). Rossman was 14th at Hope Meyer. Angelakis, the 1983 Yves Auriol begins his first season the supreme test this year. the NCAA championships last year. NCAA champion, was third last year; as coach at Notre Dame (12-6) and All-Americas Andrea Metkus and Now that Temple (18-l) has had a Meyer finished I I th. will be helped by sophomore Molly Beth Hull have departed, leaving the taste of NCAA tournament experi- Seniors Sue Hill (23-7) and Sue Sullivan (434), who finished fifth in leadership duties to juniors Susan ence with a third-place finish last Page, along with sophomores Lauren NCAA competition last year. Other Kemball-Cook and Jessica Yu. Met- year, coach Nikki Franke’s squad Fox (20-9). Johanna Picard (12-S) key Notre Dame fencers are juniors kus was fourth at the NCAA cham- could continue its move up the cham- and Stacey Weinreb (8-7). are coach Cindy Weeks (34-24) and Vittoria pionships last year. pionships ladder. Emmanuil Kaidanov’s top performers Quaroni (34-26). Kemball-Cook, the team’s captain, Senior Rachel Hayes (45-3) and at Penn State. Other top teams: MIT ( IO-7), Fair- and Yu both were second team all- junior Mindy Wichick (36-9). both Columbia-Barnard (8-2) may lack conference performers last year. Yu, with tournament experience, are the the depth to contend for the NCAA leigh Dickinson (17-5), Duke (16-5). IS-5 in Ivy dual matches, placed 13th top Temple fencers. Hayes finished title, but the Lions feature one of the Wisconsin (l3-2), Hunter (7-6), Cor- at the NCAA championships. 15th last year and Wichick 19th at the top individuals in Caitlin Bilodeaux nell (8-8) and Detroit (9-9). Coach Dave Mikahnik, who led nationals. Senior Julie Rachman (43- (38-5) the 1985 NCAA champion. Other top individuals: Katie Penn’s men’s team to the national 9) is another veteran performer. Bilodeaux, a first team allconference Coombs, senior, Fairleigh Dickinson title in 1981, directed the women’s Wayne State (Michigan) (13-O)won and all-America, was a member of (ninth for San Jose State last year); team to the Ivy championship last the first NCAA championship in 1982 the World University Games team Stephanie Greene, senior, Fairleigh year for the third year’ in a row. The and will be a national-title contender and the world-championships team. Dickinson (50-I 2); Andrea Mindell, goal this year is to continue that again. Laura Galassi (36-7) was 18th St. John’s (New York), seventh last junior, Duke (4 I-23); Rosemary Gara. mastery over Yale in NCAA competi- in NCAA competition last year and year, will go back to the drawing junior, Detroit (53-6); Siobhan Moss, Caitlin Bilodeaux .

Perennial titlist WavneJ State (Michigan) looks strong again Mention Detroit, Michigan, and bly 90 percent of the athletes on our pion in foil last season, returns along Russell Wilson and Bob Cot- Olympic team last year, Lofton has the immediate thoughts are automo- team have contacted us lint, so that with Giovanni Girotto, fourth in sabre tingham finished fourth and seventh, compiled a 158-l record in all levels biles, the 1984 world-championship helps our recruiting, which is the key two years ago and 12th last season. respectively, in last year’s NCAA of competition the past two years. He baseball team and hotbed of collegiate to continuing a winning tradition.” Chauvel was 384 last season in dual- competition. Cottingham, a sopho- has won two consecutive NCAA sabre ice hockey; however, an NCAA Divi- Although Pezza will be without match competition. Freshman Ulf more, has competed in the world titles and could become the first four- sion II school is beginning to create two-time epee champion Ettore Bian- Lernesso from Sweden probably will championships and World University time winner in the 44year history of headlines for the sport of fencing. chi this year, the third-year coach be Pezza’s top epee performer. Games. An even stronger weapon for the event. Wayne State University, a member should not have a problem maintain- If Wayne State falters, look for the Lions could be epee, which will be Following are other top teams and of the Great Lakes Intercollegiate ing his winning edge. Notre Dame (234 in dual matches) to manned by Steve Trevor and Bentley individuals to watch this season: Athletic Conference, has dominated Stephan Chauvel, national cham- to take the crown. The Fighting Irish, Storm, second and fourth, respec- Other top teams: Penn State (1 I- collegiate men’s fencing since the late champions in 1977 and 1978, have tively, last year. 2), North Carolina (IO-2), St. John’s 1970s. The Tartars have won four finished second two of the past three “We have a lot of experience and (New York), New York U. (7-3), Long consecutive NCAA titles and six of years, including a one-point loss to could challenge for the national title,” Beach State (l7-3), Wisconsin (124), the past seven. Wayne State last year. Kolombatovich said. “We also have Stanford (14-2). MIT (8-8). Navy (6- lstvan Danosi is credited with start- Coach Mike DeCicco will rely on some outstanding freshmen coming 4), Illinois (20-3), Brandeis (7-5), ing the Wayne State program. He led junior Charles Higgs-Coulthard, the in, including Ivan Fernandez Madrid, Hunter (9-5) and Air Force (15-l). the Tartars to national titles in 1975, 1984foil champion. Higgs-Coulthard, who was fifth in foil in the national Other top individuals (includes last 1979, 1980 and 1982 before retiring. 76-8 in his two-year career, finished junior championships.” year’s record and NCAA finish where Aladar Kogler was the winning coach fourth in his weapon last season. Yale ( 1l-l) and Pennsylvania (9-l), applicable): Adam Feldman, junior, in 1983, and Gil Pezza led Wayne Adding depth at foil will be Mike Van the top teams in the Ivy League last foil, Penn State (fifth); Brian Keane, State to victories in 1984 and 1985 der Velden (101-35 career record), year, complete the preseason top five. senior, sabre, Penn State (third); Mark and is favored to keep the string who placed eighth at the NCAA charn- Yale will be led by Jerome DeMarque Elvin, junior, foil, North Carolina intact. pionships last year. (22-8), second in foil; Dirk deBrito (10th); Scott Echols, senior, epee, “My objective this year is to place The Irish are equally strong in (26-IO), 13th in sabre, and Charlie North Carolina( I Ith); Greg Petranek, the team among the top four or live sabre behind seniors Don Johnson Melcher (23-g), 12th in epee. senior, epee, St. John’s (New York) teams in the country,” Pezza said. (98-25 career, ninth last year) and Pennsylvania, the last team besides (fifth); Mike Hartil, junior, epee, St. “There were a lot of people in the John Edwards (93- 16, fifth). Christian Wayne State to win the national title, John’s (New York) (seventh); Deme- past who were responsible for getting Scherpe (34-8, 17th) is the top epee will be led by Doug Powell (5- I), sixth trios Valsamis, junior, foil, New York the program to where it is now, and returnee. in sabre; Ashton Thorogood (14-g) U. (won 1983 foil title, sat out last the university has helped our national Columbia (8-2) has not won the 19th in foil, and Larry Wilson, a first- season); Tarek Yassir, junior, sabre, standing by lending its support. We national title since 1971, but coach team all-Ivy selection last year. Long Beach State (second); Frank work our athletes very hard, but we George Kolombatovich’s Lions have Individually, the nation’s top fencer North, senior, epee, Wisconsin (48- don’t emphasize winning and losing. the talent to compete with Wayne again should be New York University’s 30, eighth), and Elliott Cheu, senior, “We have a situation where proba- John Edwards State and Notre Dame. Michael Lofton. A member of the foil, Stanford (seventh). Don Larkin is best of Hunter’s men fencers at age of 43 At an age when most people are in the sport during trips to the local City. accredited by earning a degree,” Lar- most valuable player each of the past watching college sporting events on employment agency. On the advice of 1984 Olympian kin said. “I selected Hunter because I two seasons. His accomplishments television sets in their living rooms, “Some of the women at the em- Joel Glucksman, Larkin returned to was familiar with the CUNY Confer- would indicate that age has been no Don Larkin of Hunter College is ployment agency told me about their fencing in 1978. He served as an ence, I knew and respected Julia factor. putting the finishing touches on his love for the sport,” Larkin said. “So, I amateur women’s coach at Brooklyn Jones, and the campus was very close Larkin won the Eastern regionals college career. joined the New York Turn Verein to where I lived, plus the school has sabre competition in 1983 and 1984, Larkin, a senior on Hunter’s men’s fencing club in 1960 and fell in love an excellent physical education pro- placing 16th in NCAA competition in fencing team, will turn 43 next April, with the sport. I always enjoyed watch- gram.” 1983 and advancing to the second just prior to receiving his bachelor’s ing movies with fencing scenes.” Hunter, an NCAA Division 111 round in 1984. Probably the award he degree in physical education, a pursuit After a three-year stint in the Navy, school, is on the east side of Central cherishes the most is the Dan Tishman Park and Larkin lives on the west Memorial Award, presented to him he delayed 22 years after his gradua- however, Larkin lost a lot of his Don tion from Cardinal Hayes High intensity for the sport. He said it was Lmkin side. earlier this year by the United States School in the Bronx, New York, in not helping in his search for identity. “Delaying my college studies 25 Fencing Association. Tishman, an 1960. So, from 1965 to 1978, Larkin re- years has actually helped me in some important figure in fencing in this Not only is Larkin a member of the moved himself from the fencing scene areas, such as verbal communication, country, was killed four years ago. team, but he happens to be coach while going from job to job in an the language and concepts,” Larkin “I think my age is actually an asset Julia Jones’ best fencer, winning the “identity” search. said. ‘But I have had a difficult time rather than a detriment, both in the City Conference of New York sabre Although he was not involved in with math and sciences. It is a whole classroom and in fencing competi- championship the past two years. He fencing during those years, Larkin College for three years and led the lot easier in some respects because I tion,” Larkin said. “I’m certainly more also has advanced to the NCAA cham- became involved in martial arts. From Bernard M. Baruch College men’s am more motivated and more alert experienced in both areas than I was pionships each of the past two years 1974 to 1977, he was an instructor in team during the 198 l-82 season. Lar- than 1 was 25 years ago.” when I graduated from high school.” and had a 3 I-I dual-match record last a Tai Chi Chuan class for three hours kin, however, still had not found that Despite the tremendous age differ- After his graduation from Hunter, year. in the morning and an Eagle Claw identity. ence between him and his teammates, Larkin plans to pursue his master’s Fencing was not a part of Larkin’s Kung Fu instructor for three hours in “I determined that I wanted to Larkin said that the other team degree in teaching and curriculum. life until he graduated from high the evening. In between those classes, teach and coach on the college. . . level. members respect and encourage him. His eventual plans are to teach and school. In fact, he became interested In fact. he has been selected the team’s coach on the collene level. THE NCAA NEWS/November 11.1985 11 Illinois Benedictine, Elmhurst expect showdown in volleyball It seems to happen every year- the Division Ii1 bracket according to November 5) is ranked second in the the Juniata tournament in early Oc- will be chosen from each of the six Illinois Benedictine and Elmhurst geographic proximity, the meetings country and has beaten the third- tober,” said Grove City coach Susan regions, and nine conferences have square off in the first or second round are inevitable. ranked Blue Jays (31-9) three of four Roberts. “We thought it might have been granted automatic qualifications of the Division III Women’s Volleyball “I feel that there is only one chal- times in regular-season play. been a fluke the first time we beat for their champions. Conference Championship. lenge and that is playing Elmhurst,” “The difference in our team this Juniata, but then we went back two winners to date include Cortland This year may be no different. Both Illinois-Benedictine coach Deb Di- year is freshman setter Patty Mines weeks ago and beat them again.” State, State University of New York schools have excellent records and Matte0 said about the championship. and our strong middle game sup- Juniata has finished second and Athletic Conference, and St. An- are expected to be in the tournament “If we can cross that hurdle of beating ported by middle blockers Sherri fourth nationally during the past four drews, Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic field, which begins with first- years. Conference. The remaining teams round play November 22-23. The “We have gotten stronger and will be selected at large. final four will be held December 13- Championship Preview stronger as the season has gone along. The top schools in each region are: Northeast We did not have our gym all fall and Region-Nazareth (N.Y.) (34-12) and Ithaca 14 on the campus of one of the partic- (31-9): East Region-Grove Cny (38-O). Juni- ipants. them, we can go all the way.” Petrick and Anne Westerkamp,- Di- had to practice at the high school,” ata (29-7). Eastern Connecticut (28-E) and The two schools are only nine miles It’s no wonder DiMatteo feels that Matte0 said. Roberts said. “We had to overcome SO Ehzabethrown (29~10); WcsC Region-Colo- apart, and since teams are placed in way. Thus far, the NCAA tournament The No. l-ranked and only unde- much early that it matured us.” rado College (37-7). UC San lXego(24~1% La Verne (15-13) and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps series record reads: Elmhurst 3, Ilii- feated Division III squad (as of No- Defending NCAA champion UC (23-S); South Rccion-Gallaudec (D.C.) (37- nois Benedictine 0. In 1982, Elmhurst vember 5) is Grove City (384). The San Diego (24-15) is tied with Calvin 3) and Western Maryland (354); Ccnbal Re- -1 went on to win the championship Wolverines are three-time tournament (294) for the ninth-place ranking in glen-Gustavus Adolphus(39-IO), Wirconsin- witha15-10, l5-11,9-15,15-13victor-y participants but never have advanced the country. Srevens Point (40-13). Wisconsin-Lacrosse past the second round. (34-12) and Augahurg (29-13); Midwnt Rc over UC San Diego. A 24-team field will be selected for lion- lllinors Benedictine (394). Elmhursr Women’s soccer This year could be different, how- “We were playing well in the first the tournament and announced Mon- (3l-9), Calvin (294). Millikin (29-9). Oluo Four of the six opening-round ever. Illinois Benedictine (39-4 as of part of the year and started to peak at day, November 18. At least one team Northern (24-9) and Baldwn~Wallacc (28-l I). matches in the 1985 National Colle- giate Women’s Soccer Championship were decided in overtime. Indoor track championships qualifying standards California-Santa Barbara, North Qualifying standards for the 1986 Qualifying standards in oval events Division 1 Division III Carolina State and George Mason Division I and Division III Men’s and may not be met on banked tracks of Event FAT MT FAT MT each needed penalty kicks to move Women’s Indoor Track Champion- more than 220 yards. Standards must Mile R&y 3:08.22 3:Oa.O into the second round, while Boston ships have been approved by the be made during the current season in I @O-Meter Relay 3:07.12 3:06.9 Two-Mile Relay 7:29.80 7129.6 College required just one extra period NCAA Executive Committee. The indoor competition and no later than 3.200-Meter Relay 7:27X10 7:26.8 to eliminate Brown. Division I common-site event will be the Sunday prior to the meet. (The High Jump 2.22 (7-3s) 2.03 (6-8) Second-round matches at on-cam- held March 14-15 at The Myriad in 35-pound weight throw may be con- Pole Vault 5.22 (17%) 4.50 (l4- pus sites must be completed by No- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The Di- ducted outdoors.) 9%) vember 17. Semifinal and champion- vision III championships also are Long Jump 7.68 (25-25) 6.91 (22-E) ship matches are scheduled November scheduled for March 14-15, with Be- Fully automatic times or manual Triple Jump 15.95 (524) 14.71 (46-6) 23 and 24 at George Mason Univer- Shot Put 18.41 (604%) is.54 (51-O) the1 College, St. Paul, Minnesota, times may be used for qualification 3%lb. Weight 18.96 (62-2s) 15.24 (50-o) sity. serving as host institution. The Divi- purposes, with four exceptions in *Three-Mile Run and 5.000-MeterRun for Division 111. FirsWound muIts: Boston College 3, Brown sion II Men’s and Women’s Indoor Division I. Manual times may not be 2 (0.1.); Cortland State 2. Connecticut I; WomenkStandards George Mason 7, William and Mary 6 (2 ok Track Championships have been dis- used to qualify for the men’s and penalty lwk); Csl-Sanca Barbara 9, Cal State continued. women’s 60-yard dash, 55-meter dash, Division I Division III Hayward 8 (2 o.t.. penalty kick): Colorado In other Executive Committee ac- 60-yard hurdles and 55-meter hurdles. Event FAT MT FAT MT College I. Wisconsm 0; North Carohna State tion, the Division I men’s and women’s In addition, all field-event marks 60 Yards 6.86 7.34 7.0 6. Radford S (2 o.t., penaby kick). 440- and 880-yard runs and 400- and must be measured metrically in both 55 Meters 6.86 7.34 7.0 Second-round pairings: Boston College ( I3- 60 Hurdles 7.92 8.84 as 4-l) at Massachusetts (16+0); Cortland State 800-meter runs were discontinued. divisions. 55 Hurdles 7.92 a.84 8.5 (I 8-O-4) at George Mason (I s-2-I); Cal-Santa Men’Slandardss 440 Yards 59.84 59.6 Barbara ( 164-2) a( Colorado Collrgc (154-O); 400 Meters 59.44 59.2 North Carolina State (I l-S-3) a( North Caro- Diviaion I Division 111 600 Yards I :20.33 I:20.1 lina (16-1-I). Event FAT MT FAT MT 500 Meters 1:12.44 1:12.2 Field hockey 60 Yards 6.22 6.54 6.2 880 Yards 219.64 2: 19.4 Bloomsburg opened defense of its 55 Meters 6.22 6.54 6.2 800 Meters 218.84 2: 18.6 Division III Field Hockey Cham- 60 Hurdles 7.26 7.84 7.5 1,000Yards 2:31.54 2:3 I .3 55 Hurdles 1.26 7.84 7.5 1,000Meters 245.54 245.3 pionship with a Ia victory over Bridge- 440 Yards 5Q.04 49.8 Mile 443.52 443.3 5107.14 5:06.9 water State (Massachusetts) in lirst- 400 Meters 49.74 49.5 I.500 Meters 4123.52 423.3 444.54 44r44.3 round play and a 3-l overtime success 600 Yards 1:09.26 I 99.0 Two Miles i&05.24 10:05.0 iOz57.74 1057.5 against Bentley in the regional finals 500 Meters I :02.25 I :02.0 3,000 Meters 9125.24 9:25.0 lOz17.24 10:17.0 November 9. 880 Yards I r54.44 154.2 Mile Relay 3:42.64 3~42.4 I.600 Relay 3:4 I.44 3:41.2 Bloomsburg will face Trenton State 800 Meters I z53.74 1:5x5 I ,ooo Yards 2:08.70 208.5 Two-Mile Relay 8:52.84 852.6 in one semifinal match while Millers- I.000 Meters 2:23.00 2c22.8 3,200-Meter Relay 8:49.84 8:49.6 ville will take on Drew in the other Mile 4:03.20 403.0 4: It.94 4:12.7 High Jump 1.81 (5-l I%) I .68 (54) semifinal November 15. 1,500 Meters 3:45.00 3:44.8 354.24 3:54.0 Long Jump 6. I7 (20-3) 5.36 ( 17-7) First-round rcsult~~ Bloomsburg I, Bridgc- Two Miles a:4 I a0 8:40.X 14:11.94* 14:11.7* Triple Jump 12.45 (40-10~) 10.82 (35-6) water Scate(Massachurerts)0; Bentley I, Wis.- 3,000 Meters 8:02.al 8:Ol.a 1442.94’ 14~42.7, Shot Put 15.19 (49-10) 12.52 (41-I) S@wcnsPoim 0 (01); Trenton State 3, Glasshoro State 2 (01); Mesnmh 3. Salisbury State 2; Millcrsville 2, Fro&burg State I: Elirabcthrown 3, Shippensburg 2 (01). Drew 2. Ithaca I (3 ot. stroker): Wooster I, Corlland State 0 (3 ot, strokes). Regional finals: Bloomsburg 3, Bentley I Team UDvo w team with Finnair (01); Trenton State I, Messiah 0: Millerrville 2. Eliraherhtown 0; Drew I, Wooster 0. SemIfinals: (November I5 a( Drew Univcr- slty): Bloomsburg (I S-l) vs. Trenton Slate (l9- 3): Millersvillc (16-3) vs. Drew (18-4-t). andpl&iEurope to win. Winners play for the championship Novcmbcr 16. Compete intefnutiondy in Finland, Sweden, Eastern Europe, and elsewhere.. . that’s Men’s soccer e A new Division III men’s soccer the per fed prize for your team. +.in soccec hockeN basketball, swimming, wrestling, and more! champion will be crowned this year Finnuir will show you how easy and ul7ofduble it can be. Becuuse Finnuir is after defending champion Wheaton the SporTourairline to Europe. (Illinois) suffered a 14 setback to We schedule gumes, arrange uccommodutions, and plan guided excursions to Washington (Missouri) in second- round tournament play November 9. impoftunt cultuful and historic ottfactions. And that’s not all, we help you plun Washington extended the defending fund-raising strategies. champion into overtime before win- The excitement of your European experience begins the moment you step on board ning. Wheaton needed a penalty kick in overtime to secure a Ia first-round Finnair--the nutionul airline of Finland. victory against Kalamazoo. Toursusually include two meals doilK all transfers, pof teruge, udmission fees, All remaining matches are sched- tips and local taxes. uled at on-campus sites, with the With Finnair SporTours,you come out u winner! champion to be determined in the H!!ll!iM!i final game December 7 or 8. 0 sPoRlo‘”URS First-round results: Salem State I, Branders .: ...... O(o.t., penalty Lwk); Clark (Maosachusecls) 2, FINNAIR SPORTOURS NCAA-11/85 Rabson 0; UNC-Greensboro 4. Emory I; Be- thany (West Virginra) 3. Mary Washington I. IO East 40 Street, New York, NY 10016 Call collect 212/689-9300 Fredonia State 2, RIT I; Union (New York) I, Yes, please send me information on your SporTour arrangements. Ithaca& UC San Diego 3. Colorado College I; Claremonr-M-S 2, St. Thomas (Minnesota) 0; Wheaton(Illinols) I, Kalamazoo O(o.t., penalty Nome Title kick); Washington(Missouri) I, Ohlo Wesleyan 0; Elizabethtown 4. Drew 0; Glassboro State 3, Scranton 0. Second-round rcsultsz Salem State I, Clark 0; UNC-Greensboro 2. Bethany 0 (OX.): UC San Diego 2, Clarcmom-M-S I; Washington 2, Sport Whealon I (ox.). Third-round pmiringss: S.&m Stacc (16-04) vs. UNC-Greensboro (17-S); Frcdonia State Address Phone (14-2-I) vs. Union (12-l-l); Elizabcthtown( 17- I-2) vs. Glnssboro State (14-3-3); UC San Diego (21-l) vs. Washington 19-2). St Zip I 12 THE NCAA NEWS/November 11.1985

I Commission Legislative Assistance Continued from page 1 for the 1986 Convention is recruiting, bylaws consent package, 1I; acade- 1985 Column No. 40 cepted educational expenses” and with IS amendments. Playing and mics, five (all Division 1); special other related financial aid legislation practice seasons is the second largest, Presidents Commission grouping, Publicity for visiting prospects from the constitution (retaining an with 14. three; financial aid, eight; general The provisions of Bylaw 14-(a)-(3) prohibit a member institution from overall limit in the constitution) to the Of the 110 proposals, I3 will be items, 10 (one for single division); publicizing or arranging publicity of the visit of a prospective student-athlete bylaws, enabling each division to act acted upon in two consent packages. recruiting, 15 (three single division); to the institution’s campus. As set forth in Case No. 201 (page 313, 1985-86 separately on such matters in the Of the remaining 97, a total of 27 will membership and classification, I3 NCAA Manual), it is not permissible for a member institution to make a future. The proposal is cosponsored be handled by the respective divisions (seven single division); eligibility, 12 general introduction of a visiting prospect at any function or gathering (e.g., by the Commission and the Council. in their division business sessions (two single division); governance, the institution’s sports awards banquet or an intercollegiate athletics contest) (General business session, Tuesday Monday, January 13. The single- seven; personnel, four (all Division I); that is attended by representatives of the news media or is open to the general morning, January 14.) division proposals are scattered playing and practice seasons, 14 (live public. In addition, it would not he permissible for a visiting prospect’s name The three proposals that the Com- through seven of the topical catego- single division), and amateurism, six. or picture to appear on an institution’s scoreboard or electronic screen that is mission’s officers identified for special ries. In the next issue, the News will viewed by those in attendance at an intercollegiate contest. agenda placement at the Convention The order of presentation of the begin a group-by-group review of all Unofficial visits by prospective student-athletes are the other three that the Commis- groupings and the numbers of pro- proposed legislation, and that presen- As set forth in Bylaw l-840, a prospective student-athlete may visit a sion and Council are sponsoring posals included in each. tation will continue in all issues lead- member institution’s campus at the prospect’s own expense as often as the jointly: a proposal to affirm that Constitution consent package, two; ing to the Convention in January. prospect wishes. During each such visit, the institution may not pay any student-athletes are responsible for expenseor provide any entertainment except a maximum of three complimentary their involvement in violations of admissions to a campus athletics event for the exclusive use of admitting the NCAA regulations, an amendment Mailing prospective student-athlete and those persons accompanying the prospect on ’ that would limit each member institu- Continuedfrom page 1 the visit. tion’s basketball team to not more and a listing of the proposals that will vention will be held January 13-15, be voted upon in the separate division In addition, a Division II or 111member institution may provide a meal in the than one competition opportunity institution’s on-campus dining facility during such a visit. Payment of any per year that is exempt from the 1986, at the Hilton Riverside and and subdivision business sessionsJan- Towers in New Orleans, Louisiana. uary 13, instead of in the general other expenses or providing any entertainment, except as noted above, on such playing-season limitation in that sport, a trip, shall constitute an expense-paid visit. This legislation would not and a resolution authorizing the The Official Notice also includes business session January 14-15. This the following: is the first Convention at which there preclude a member institution from providing a prospective student-athlete NCAA Committee on Infractions to with a tour of the campus, but the provision of any arrangements or expenses evaluate possible changes in enforce- l Lists of the members of the six will be separate, final voting in the division meetings on legislation per- for off-campus tours would constitute entertainment under Bylaw 1-8-Q) and ment policies and procedures during NCAA Convention committees, as thus result in an expense-paid visit for the prospect. the next year well as a list of past Convention sites. taining only to a specific division. Those three will make up a special l An up-todate schedule of all l The report of the NCAA Nomi- Constitution J-l-(e) -commercial businesses grouping to be voted upon early in meetings being held January 9-16 in nating Committee, listing the candi- Member institutions are reminded that the provisions of Constitution 3-l-(e) the Tuesday morning session,January conjunction with the Convention, dates proposed by the committee to prohibit student-athletes of member institutions from making personal 14. including the major Convention ses- serve as Divisions I, II and III vice- appearances at commercial businesses or shopping malls to promote the Legislation at NCAA Conventions sions. presidents in 1986 and those nomi- institution’s athletics program, inasmuch as these appearances have the effect of promoting the businessesor malls by attracting the public to such locations. is acted upon in topical groupings of 0 An explanation of the Associa- nated for vacancies on the NCAA related issues,and the largest grouping tion’s new federated voting procedures Council. The committee’s recommen- 7% muterial was provided hy the NCAA legislative services department as an dations also will be reported publicly oid to member institutions. If on institution has 4 question that it would like IO for the first time in the November 18 have answered in this column, the question should he directed to William B. Students issue of The NCAA News. The Notice Hunt, ussistanr executive director, ot the NCAA notional o@-e. Continuedfrom page I also contains the procedures used for students suggest that former athletes nominating and electing Council at the institution might be effective in members and division vice-presidents. such a program. l An index of all of the proposed Calendar l Athletics departments should changes in NCAA legislation. seek to assist the student-athlete as an November 12-15 Division I Women’s Basketball Committee, Lexington,’ individual, rather than permitting Three join CFA Kentucky student-athletes to be insulated from November 15-16 Division III Field Hockey Championship, campus site to the institution in general and from the in new category as be determined activities and services enjoyed by November I5- I7 Committee on Infractions, Kansas City, Missouri other students. associate members November22 Division II Men’s Cross Country Championships, East Ferguson suggestedthat the NCAA Three institutions have been elected Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania permit institutions hostingchampion- to associate membership in the Col- November 23 Division 11Women ’s Cross Country Championships, East ships to donate unused tickets to lege Football Association, the first Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania underprivileged children. associates to join the 63-member November23 Division III Men’s and Women’s Cross Country “The idea of providing more servi- CFA. Championships, Atlanta, Georgia ces to student-athletes is something The schools are the University of November 23-24 National Collegiate Women’s Soccer Championship, Fair- brought up by Ellen, but one 1 agree Southwestern Louisiana, Temple Uni- fax, Virginia with,” Bilas said. “An athlete leads versity and the University of Tulsa. kind of a sheltered life as far as going The associate member category to college is concerned.. . There are a was created at the annual CFA meet- Two seminars planned lot of things that can be overlooked as ing in Dallas last June. An associate far as campus services they can make Jay Bilas NCAA Professional Development Seminars have been scheduled for member is entitled to attend CFA January and May, the first to be held in conjunction with the NCAA use of are concerned. That’s got to be to do. The NCAA is not there to meetings and receive informational up to the athlete as well, but it’s Convention January 10-I 1 in New Orleans. punish. mailings but is not entitled to vote or The seminar, “Administering an Efficient Athletics Department,” will focus important to make the athlete aware have representation on association “I’ve become more conscious of the on athletics budgeting, coaching-staff evaluations, computer applications, of what’s going on around him so he things the NCAA does every week, committees. can take full advantage of the oppor- management skills, cost reduction and promotion. although I don’t necessarily agree All of the new associate members The second seminar, “Promotion and Marketing Your Athletics Department,” tunities.” are Division I-A members of the with everything. If 1 weren’t on the is scheduled for May 30-31 in Indianapolis. For Bilas, part of a student-athlete’s committee, I wouldn’t be as aware of NCAA. Southwestern Louisiana and education must deal with the possibil- The cost for each seminar is $145 for each NCAA member, but the things like Proposal 48. I don’t know Temple are football independents. registration cost drops to $ I25 per person if three or more persons from one ity of illegal recruiting inducements if I’m more aware of things going on, Tulsa is playing its final season as a or illegal payments once enrolled at a member institution register. Nonmember registration is SZOO. but I do think I’m aware enough that football member of the Missouri Val- Persons interested in registering or obtaining more information can particular institution. ley Conference. It will play as an now 1 can have an impact on them, complete the form below. He cited an-&attitude problem” that when I didn’t feel that way before.” independent in 1986. leads to breaking rules and even to ------Registration form -___------y I point-shaving and involvement with I drugs, urging the committee to con- i sider means of “evoking a feeling of DATE I integrity and loyalty to yourself. your Call for Programs : institution and college athletics in NAME PHONE) ; general; make that fashionable, so I Third Annual Conference I you are not alone.” ; Title: He also suggested a bit of selfish- I ness. on Counseling Athletes Ii School: “In my opinion, the athlete has to I be a little more selfish with his reputa- Address: tion and theopportunity he’s provided Muy 22 and 23, 1986 City: St&UC: ZIP: to get an education and play on the collegiate level,” he said. “When you REGISTRATION FEE: look at these guys caught in these Springfield College situations, whether they knew what NCAA Member st45.oa they were getting into or not, their Three or More (Same institution) 125.00 careers and their reputations are dam- Late Fee after December 15 160.00 aged and their lives have been altered For further information, contact: Nonmember 200.00 dramatically.” i Bilas’ perspective of the NCAA has Al Petitpas Make your check payable to: NCAA Seminar and mail to: I i changed because of his time on the Athletic Counseling Host Communications I committee. : P.O. Box 3071 : “The NCAA has become more Springfield College i I I Lexington, Kentucky 40596-307I I human,” he said. “I think a lot of Springfield, Mass 01109 I people look at the NCAA as a lot of ! people who sit around and make (413) 788-3325 I For more information, contact Cheryl Levick, NCAA (913) 384-3220.or Dave : rules for basketball and other sports ,’ Littleton, Host Communications, Inc. (606) 253-3230. i because they don’t have anything else I :,--__--__,,__---______---______------~ THE NCAA NEWS/Novcmhr II,1985 13 Commissioner’s study shows tournament payoff not excessive Are NCAA member institutions ment but as his own research. “It is, approximately S18.6 million from the pitting the champions of the Mid- amounts (before conference distribu- making too much money by partici- however, the most comprehensive 1985 Division I Men’s Basketball American Athletic Conference and tion) ranging from S150,380 to pating in the Division 1 Men’s Basket- study done on this phase of revenue Championship, and 5 12.4 million the Pacific Coast Athletic Association $75 1,89!-compared to the S400,OOO ball Championship? sharing,” he said. went to the NCAA budget, in addition that is not subject to the Postseason to nearly S6 million in the bowl games. Does the amount of money availa- Comparing postseason football to another 51.6 million that was paid Football Committee’s minimum pay- After conference sharing-again ble in the NCAA championship cause bowl games with the Division I men’s to the participants for transportation out requirement). based on Bubas’ revenue-sharing as- undue pressure to win and encourage basketball tournament, Bubas’ study and per diem in the tournament. Under Bubas’ assumed conference- sumption-249 member institutions cheating? He noted that the only football sharing formula, the teams actually wound up with amounts ranging from Victor A. Bubas, commissioner of contribution to the NCAA budget participating in the bowl games 58,354 to S551,390, only about one- the Sun Belt Conference and immedi- comes from what is left of the Associ- wound up with amounts ranging from setenth as much as in football bowl ate past chair of the NCAA Division ation’s assessmenton members’regu- just over S60,OOOto more than S3 games. Only 56 of those 249 realized I Men’s Basketball Committee, ans- lar-season televised games-approx- million-with 58 institutions receiv- as much as S100,OOO. wered both questions emphatically: Victor A. imately S1.2 million in 1984-85.[Note: ing S220.000 or more, 41 of those The 29 Division 1 conferences re- “No.” And he has developed extensive Bubas Even when the Association’s football receiving S400,OOOor more and eight ceived totals from the basketball cham- data to “put to rest the idea that television plan still was in effect, the enjoying payoffs of 51.2 million or pionship tanging from 3150,380 to institutions are making too much Division I basketball tournament pro- more. about S3.1 million, well below the money on basketball.” vided approximately 65 percent of The data show that the major con- S900,000-toS8.7 million figures from Bubas sent his data to the members the Association’s income, compared ferences (again excluding the Califor- football bowl games. of the Division I Men’s Basketball to 10 to 15 percent from football nia Bowl participants) received totals “I believe you have some good data Committee September 26, after his shows that 92 institutions shared more television assessments.] ranging from S900,OOOto approxi- to be used with the news media, the six years as a member of the commit- than S39 million in net receipts from The data show that participants in mately S8.7 million from 1984-85 Executive Committee, the National tee ended September 1. He also pres- 1984-85 football bowl games, with no 1984-85 football bowl games received bowl games. Association of Basketball Coaches ented it to the NCAA Executive Com- money from those contests accruing amounts ranging from S400,OOtlto In the 1985 Division I Men’s Bas- and anyone else who wants to know mittee in its August 12-13 meeting. to the NCAA. nearly S6 million each (excluding the ketball Championship, on the other the facts about revenue sharing, or The information originally was Meanwhile, 249 institutions shared California Bowl, a ‘closed” contest hand, participating teams received ‘where the money goes,‘” Bubas said. developed to respond to suggestions that the formula for distribution of revenues from the championship be adjusted. “At a meeting of the basketball committee in Newport, Rhode Island, we talked to the National Association of Basketball Coaches about the po- tential threat to the present distribu- tion of Division I basketball tourna- ment revenues,” Bubas said. Noting that some individuals had suggested that the current formula- 60 percent to the participating teams and 40 percent to the NCAA-be changed to 5545 or even 50-50, Bubas said such alternatives “would have been drastic and harmful measures to many institutions and conferences.” In developing the data, two other HOW facts became obvious, he said: l Basketball supports NCAA ser- vices to a much greater extent than football. In the 1984-85 fiscal year, 73 percent of the NCAA budget came from Division I men’s basketball tour- nament revenues, while only four percent came from football activities. mm In the new 1985-86 fucal year, the basketball percentage is expected to increase to 75 percent, with the foot- ball percentage dropping to 2.4 per- cent. l Institutions participating in ma- jor football bowl games realize far mourn greater financial returns than those participating in the Division I Men’s Basketball Championship-in some cases, as much as five or six times higher. “IS this fair?“Bubas asked in regard to the support of NCAA activities provided by basketball and football. A’l;nUGH He also dispels the belief that money in basketball causes rules vio- lations. “People cheat because they are cheaters in everything,” Bubas said. “Just because the institution received $100,000 or S200,OOOmore in a tournament really doesn’t make a difference. Cheating is really a char- ROD acter trait, one that can be corrected by better investigation by the institu- tion before it hires its coaches.” Bubas emphasized that his data are based on the assumption that the typical NCAA Division I conference generally divides the postseason re- CC. venues received by its teams on a 50- 50 basis: “The competing institution gets 50 percent of the revenues.. . and then shares the remaining 50 percent American Airlines knows that when it comes to road games, the last thing you equally with the rest of the conference, including one share for itself” want to think about is travel arrangements. That’s why calling one of our more than He also noted that moneys not 100 Meeting Specialists makes so much sense. received by the conference’s institu- With one phone call, we’ll take care of everything down to the smallest detail. tions usually accrue to the conference itself to fund the operation of the From pre-reserved seating, to car rental arrangements. We’ll even deliver your conference oflice and other conference tickets directly to you or your team’s official ‘Iravel Agent. activities. “Since the institutions would have Its the perfect way to get to your meeting, convention or game. to assessthemselves a certain amount So when you’re the visitor, call the official airline of the NCAA Championships, to keep the conference office solvent, American Airlines, at (800) 433-1790. STAR #S9043. it is the same as receiving the money,” he said. “Otherwise, they would be We’ll take care of the travel plans so you can Amekadirlines paying dues to the conference from take care of the game plans. Mng.*htiati" university sources in an equivalent amount.” He also emphasized that his data are not presented as an NCAA docu- 14 November 11.1985 The NCAA NCAA Record 1 1

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS at New Mexico Stale. He was an assistant DEATH DENNIS D. BELL, president of East men’s baske[ball coach last season. I-KtU A. tNKt.iormcr basketball,lootball Stroudsburg. announced l-us retwement, effec- Men’s nnd women’s swlmmin-CASEY and golf coach al Arizona. died November 2 in tive July 15.. RODNEY FELDER. president CONVERSE appointed at New Mexico State. Casa Grande. Arizona. at the age of 8R. He of Upsaln, resigned, effective July I. BRUCE He is a former AAU coach. compiled a 510-326 record as basketball coach PETTEWAY. president of North Carolina Men’sand womcn’stcnni-ROGER MOR- for31 seasons. Herelircd in 1961. Hegraduated Wcslcyan. wrll retwe in June. RIS selected at St. Thomas (Florida). Morris from Mmnesota rn 1931. ASSOClATE DIRECTORS OF ATHLETICS is a member of the U.S. Tennis Arsoc~awm CORRECTIONS MILTONE RlCHARDSnamcdalTemple. DON BALL named at New Mexico State. Because of an editor’s rmstake, the Diwsmn where he has been an assistant AD. Richards He is a former professional at the El Paso II men’s cross country champion was incor- will handle business affairs for the department Coun(ry Club. rcclly identified in the November 4 issue of the PAUL FLORES appointed al California Wrestlh-BOB PASQUALEappointcd al News. Southeast Mw.our~ State II the defend- (Pennsylvania). He formerly was head women’s Stevens, where he was a member of the varnuy ing national champion. Also. irr the Oclober 2U basketball coach at East Srroudsburg. He also squad for three years.. BOB FEHRS resigned issue. it was incorrectly reported that Central will coach Cahfornia’s womcn*s basketball at Nebraska after 75/; seasons as head coach 10 Missouri State is the defending Mirsourl Inter- ream. accept a position in business. Assistant coach collegmte AthlerrcConferencc basketbnllcham~ ASSISTANT DIRECTORS OF ATHLETICS TIM NEUMANN named interim coach pion. Actually. Central Missouri State and BRENT qUTKOWSK1 appointed at Cen- Wrcrtlin# assistants- SCOTT CARZO Southeast Missouri State were tied at the end tral Connecticut State, where he also will bc in dlcbury. where he played as an underclassman has been an amateur track coach in Albu- named at Maine. He is a former varsity wrestler of Ihe 1984-85 regular season and Southeast charge of sports mformntion. He had bcrn and served as a coaching assistant... BILL for Ihc Bcars...DAVE GRANT selected at Missouri State won the poscscason tournament assistant sports mformation director at Cin- McKINNEY resigned at St. Francis (Pennsyl- Men’s fencing-JACK REDONDO apm Wartburg. He was an all-America two years a1 championship. cinnati.. MIKE RYAN named a1 New Mexrco vania). DAVE CALDWELL, a part-trme pointed at Stevens, where he sUll holds season Northern low.. . MIKE DEEHAN named al POLLS Slate. He was public relations director for the coach at St. Francis (Pennsylvania), appointed and career records for won-lost percentage. Seron Hall. Division I Men’s Cross Country asfull-timcassistant. __RICHARD HADDEN Women’s fcncin~~JEFF HYSON named Houston Asrros. STAFF The top 20 NCAA Division I men‘s cross at Stevens. where he graduated lasl spring. He COACHES sclec(cd at Wcslcyan. He formerly was an Sports information assista+ GARY country teams through meets of November4 BS Busball BOB GREINER named al Man- was a volunteer coach last season. assistant aI Coast Guard...CRAIG WUR- SCHOENE selected at NOW MCXICO state. HC selected by the NCAA Division 1 Men’s Cross ha~tanvillc, where he was assistant softball DlNGER named freshman coach at Wartburg, FootbaII~EDDIE VOWELLnamed at East is a former sports writer for the Carper. Wyo- Country Coaches Association, with points: coach last season. where he currently is a senior He was women’s Texas State. effective al the end of the current ming. Star-Tribune. junior varsity coach last season. _. RICH MI- season. He is the defensive coordinator and I Wisconsin ,238 Barcbmll l ulstmnta CLYDE OLIVER JR. Athletics academic ad&e- DICK DeLA- selected at Armswong State. _. DAVE EM- CALLEF named at Brooklyn, replacing ROB- will replace the retiring Ernest Hawkins 2. Arkansas. .230 NEY appornled at Philadelphia Tcxlilc. Hc is 3. WCs1Virginia ,212 RHEIN appornted as graduate assislanl a1 ERT FOX, who resigned. JERE STRIPLING, offensive coordinator an assistant professor in (he physical education Morehead State, where he lettered three years Women’s basketball assIstants- BILL and asw.tant head coach at Northeast Louiw 4. Colorado. I99 deparrmcnt and also serves as head baseball 5. Stanford _. _. _. _. _. _. 189 as a catcher. COOPERRIDER named at New Mexico ana. rcsigncd. and assistant men’s basketball coach. Mcn~baskctball -JOHN QUATTROCCHI Scale. He was an aswtant al Purdue lasl Men’s ice hockey assistants-SEAN 6. Boston U. ______. ___.____. ______. _. 183 appointed at North Adams Stale, where he season. LYNN DOSE appointed al Warr- COADY appomted at Princeton. He has been CONFERENCE 7. Purdue. _. . _. 176 also will serve as sports information director. burg, where she graduated as the all-llmc coachmg a high school team in Massachusetts Ereeuttve director of ice hockey ~ JOE BER- 8. Oregon.. .14s He formerly coached at Marist and Rensselaer. leading women’s scorer and rebounder. She DAVID A. MORTON named at Middle- TAGNA, director of pubhc relations for Dlw 9. IowaState ...... I26 Men’abuketballlubtantr KERRY NOO- played semiprofessional basketball in Europe bury, where he played four seasons. sion I ice hockey in (he Eastern Collegiate IO. UCLA ..____.__.__._____.______.._. 124 NAN named ar Manha~tanville. Noonan last year. Men’s roccc,~~PETER KASARJIAN rc- Athletic Conference, selected by the conference. I I. Arizona . . .I02 played varsity basketball at New York Univer- Women’s cross country and track FLOY D signed ar Massachusetts Maritime. He is a graduate of Harvard, where he played 12. Auburn _. 80 sity.. PATO’DONOGHUEappoinlcd al Mid- HIGHFILL named aI New Mcxrco Stare. He Women’s softball--GREG BERRY named goaltender for the Crimson for three scasoos. See Record, page I5

The NCAA The Mmket

dum at all times. Head coach experience unm Isan EqualOppoltunlty/AfFlmlabve m rqulrad. Mlnlmum ~bryof ~25.000 p&rmd;at Iaad flve~n’aperknce*mc A.&on 2 rnployr. VI%? outs&nding fringe lwnefih. This is a 12 lntereollegiate*vcl or higher required. Send month appdntmnt al 1.0 FI-E wllh Fhd 10ConferenaRcspxis1bil1tW.rc:In charge Readers of The NCAA News are invited IO use The Market to locate resumcand*acrdapplkarionhyNowrrber term and Is dketh-c January I. 1986. &Ii- d all duUa mquired for a na6onaltyeornpc candidates for positions open at their institutions, to advertise open 23,1985,to:LarryTnvls.M-dAmlcllc.. itin program. IneludIngraerultlng. orgsnb- dates in their playing schedules or for other appropriate purposes. Kansas State Univcrstty. 101 Aheam ncld Gymnastics lion, skill assessmentand acquisiljon,trudge, House. Manhattan.KS 66506 Kansas State of the game of w&n’s vdl+ll. demon. travel. conduetlng d praetkes and compccl Rates are 45 cents per word for general classified advertising (agate unlvcnlcy ISan aMrmntivc aetk.n and equal strated success In collage conchina. demon- opponunlty cmplo)rcr. um&daMllytoreeru%mthu&atkeomma- See 7he Market. page IS type) and $22.60 per column inch for display classified advenising. Elz;, fortipo&iorldHsadWrMlUlla Orders and copy are due by noon five days prior to the date of Awbbrt FM carh Position(s)avaIla. bk mntlngcnt on effactiuc data(s) d ‘ny Coach to 1111an Imnwdlaw vacancy.This Is a publication for general classified space and by noon seven days prior ml n&an(s) dudng 19B5. wt-knce In full.tim, twelve-monthposition. Responsibil~ to the date’of publication for display classified advertising. Orders foc& II coaching and recruiting atan NCAA i&s: The head coach will be responslbk for oMsk.rl I major unlucrslcyreqlrlred. Bachrloh and copy will be accepted by telephone. ~C~,X~:::~: Division I d ICC mq,,,md. Varied d&a In coaehlng and mg~ktlms d the NC4A and lhc Unlvw For more information or to place an ad, call 913/384-3220 or write a‘3 nxrultlngasdeflnedbytheheadfoc?ball coach. Wary cammensur~ ti ap& nlty QuallRcaUon~Applieanlll must have ., NCAA Publishing, P.O. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas 66201. &h&r’s Degree.F+evious DMsion I coach. FDU UNIVERSITY mcc. Icauonsaeceptcd UrlblpositIon Rlkd. 2? nd letter of application including %~2;c:,‘~Fg~~ lz?!z: FAIRLEIGH resume and references m: I.MIY Travis. Dl. Salary.Commensurate with upcrknce and DIRECTOR rector of Athletics. Ahesrn Flcld House. credenbsls ApplicaUonPmcou: Send k&r DICKINSON KansasSt&e University,Manhattan. Kansas of application and resume to Carol J. UNIVERSITY OF ATHLETICS zpania seeks appk+!gm for the pd 66506. Kansas State Unbcrs~tyix an Equal Sprague, Asslstsnt Dwector of Athletics, ~&l&k Trsincr. Indwdual R~nsi- Opportunlty/AjTirmativeAction Employer. Department of Athktlcs. PO. Box 7436. bil&ea: Cmrdlntion and administmtion of Adstml Fm Cm&. f&.labn Ill I& Pittsburgh.P& 15213.ApplicationDeadllne: Positions Available ~csrhMlc(rsinlngpogram:evcnlcomage: lion. Position avellsbk January I, I%6 A IcatIons till be accepted through Nov rrdicnl clearance for teams: mamntenance AssIstant Football Coach. recrultlng and 3 $.’ 1985 Intcmcw of qualmed applicants FAlRLEIGH DICKINSON UNIVERSITY is currently searching of raeords for athktew supcrviw student maytakeplaecedurin theapplkaUonpe+ad. for candidates for the position of Athletic Director. The tramen Ch,alificaUrms:Bachelor ’s degree The Unlvenlty of & t&burgh us an Equal with NATA ccrt~fkatlon. mad& degree Opportun,ty/Affwrrv,bveAction Employer. Director will report to the Vice President for Academic Affairs Sports Information preferrad.Minimum d lwo yearsurprknee. with specific responsibilities for: Salary commensurate with ~ncc and wall eKperlcnce. professIonal preparaaon. Applkatlons are cembcr 15.1985 letter d application -nt hfomulhnbulocDuke due by No~mber 25,1985. Sendapplication wlul resYnlIc.banscriDls and three kners of Volleyball l All aspects of a Division I Men’s and Women’s Intercollegiate (I- T=ubcr include full rcspxslblltles .ndresumeto:AndyHinmn.AthkIkDiraetor recommendation tof Frank An-&o. Head Athletics Program. for nonrevenue spats puhlicl~: asslatIng Cheyney Univcnity. Box 350. Cm, PA Football Coach,John Canal1Unhmi Unl Ha,d~b~Cnachwiththerank wllh publknyand game day n-IndiaOpmUons 19319. Equal Opp&unlty Employer. n&y Heights. Ohlo 44118. John F armll Ass&me or Full Professor Bachelor’s for revenue sports. dlr&rng student asslat- d l intramural programs on the Teaneck-Hackensack and anup~ram:cdlUngd~nmcntrr~ldter: and other mlgnd dutlcs OuaIHicaUons: Rutherford Campuses of the University. Buhclai.dcgm~uirrd.~amcuperienCC Football In the sports informatlon flcld referred. l Recruiting and recommending the appointment of ail coaches, Applkatlan deadlIne: Nwember 40. 1985. assistant coaches, trainers Smtlng dale:January I. I986 (nrm). Salary Had Forr&allCoach. Kansas State Unlverslry Enforcement Representative and support personnel. ~ommnsurmc with upcrience. Send re. IS seeking a person to dir& a DMsion I IUN. woh wampks and three letters d football p’9lram to include all mponsiMllt~ NCAA Compliance l Supervising ail budget matters relating to athletics. derence 10:John Roth, Sports lnformstion and aulhorily that goes along tith the pOs1 Offkc. 306 Finch Yeagcr Bullding. Duke mn. Thesere&bllitws to includecrcaUng and Enforcement Department l Monitoring all intercollegiate athletics schedules prepared by Unhenlty. Dutim, NC 27706. Equal 0~ nmosphcn conduclrr to moral, spiritual. po~rllly Ernplqer. academk and athkk grovrlh d student. coaches and for negotiating and approving ail intercollegiate athletes. Hire quality coaches and -TYC Applications are being acce ted for immediate openings on their prcducllvl~, InsthIk a nWbllWdC rt the NCAA enforcement sta f; , athletics contracts. Athletics Trainer cding proeram that will lift pr ra;er; progresalvelycompetrtive level.30 The positions will provide qualified individuals with the l Coordinating and monitoring the preparation of ail eilgbli@ ptctdy dthin framework d NCAA, EWEight compliance forms for appropriate NCAA, conference and He.4 AthMe ll&a Chyny Unlvenity d and KansasState Univemlty rules and p-c. opportunity to be a part of the emphasis on NCAA rules corn Lance and enforcement that was supported over- other intercollegiate organizations of which FDU is a whe P.mmgly by the Special NCAA Convention in June. member. (Works with the Offices of the Registrar, University Admissions Director, Faculty Representative for Athletics HEAD COACH OF WOMEN’S An enforcement re resentative is primarily responsible for and others as required.) the investigation o P assigned infractions cases and making SOFI’BALL AND VOLLEYBALL oral presentations of information and evidence at Committee l Implementing athletic programs and policies and serving on University committees on athletics. ML Union College on Infractions meetings. The investigation process includes locating principals, making appropriate appointments and Five years’ experience in athletic administration required, Mt. Union College is seekin applications for the position of travel plans for interviews, preparing memorandums of preferably in a Division I athletics program, and demonstrated head coach of women’s so f&f Ii and volieybail. Teaching and information collected, developing official case files, analyzing competence and experience in coordinating intramural pro- student advising res nslbiiities included. Masteis d ree, information on file to complete a case and ensuring that grams. Bachelor’s degree preferred. Consideration given to playing and/or coat r ing experience in voll vii or s3baii established investigative procedures are followed. equivalent university experience. required. Teaching experience or educationa background in either elementary ph*cal education or athletic administration The work requires a’comprehensive knowledge of NCAA Salary is commensurate with experience and consistent with desirable. Candidate must have a commitment to a career in regulations and the ability to communicate effectively. University structure. a liberal arts settin . Cover letter, resume, official transcripts It is preferred that the ap licant have a legal or other and three letters o 8 reference should be sent to: FDU is the largest private University in New Jersey, serving postgraduate education .an s experience in intercollegiate 14,500 students in 111 undergraduate, master’s and doctoral lmy Kehres athletics, either as a student-athlete or an administrator. programs at Florham-Madison, Rutherforcl/Wayne and Tea- Director of Athletics Interested candidates should send a resume to: neck-Hackensack, and overseas at Wroxton, England, and St. ML Union Col e Michael 5. Glazier Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. Alliance, Ohio 30 1 Assistant Director of Enforcement In order to receive best consideration, cover letter and resumes AwlbMe: January 1,1986. NCAA should be received by December 6, 1985, by the Office of p.0. Box 1906 Personnel, 217 Montross Avenue, Rutherford, N.J. 07070. Applica will be reviewed beginning December 9.1985. Mission, Kansas Equal Opportunity/AfFirmative Action Employer An affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Institution. THE NCAA NEWS/November II.1985 15 Record

Continued from page 14 8; 13. Hope, 5; 14. Washington (Missoun), ); 17. Delaware Scacc (62). I I Mcnb WMcr Polo 8. Southern Cal (17-10) ...... __ 163 13. Northwestern _. ___._____ ,...... 72 15. Conland S1atc. 2. 17. Pennsylvania (6-l) I1 The top 20 NCAA menb water polo teams as 8. Pepperdine (17-13) ______._.. I63 14.Tennesscc _____.__...... I..... 70 Division I Field Hockey 20. Tennessee-Chananooga (S-3) 7 selected by the AmericanWater Polo Coaches IO. Loyola(Illinois)(l5-7) ______.____154 IS. Dartmouth ______...... 69 The top 20 NCAA Division I field hockey Association. with records in parentheses and I I. Brown (21-S) ______.______151 DlvYon 111 Footbdl pomtr: 16.Texas ______..______._.____67 learns through marches of November 3, with The top 20 NCAA Division III football 12. Bucknell (21-5)...... I45 17. North Carolina., 64 records in parentheses and points: teams through games of November 2, with 13. Navy (20-6) __ _. _. I40 I Stanford (194) ...... 200 14. Pacific (6-16) ...... I35 18. Navy _.______...... 54 I. Connecticut (16-1) ._.______.______I20 records in parentheses and points: 2. UCLA (17-5) ______.. . ..__ ..______I95 IS. UCSan Diego(ll-14) _.__.______._.130 19. Pennscace ...... 31 2. Iowa(l7-2-I) . .._____.__.______II4 I. Augustma(Illinois) (84) ...... 80 3. UC Irvine (176).. _...... 190 16. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (16-8). _. _. .I25 20. North Carolina State _. . . _. . . . _. . . 23 3. Northwestern (16-l) _. ______. ______108 DlvbIon 111Man ’s Cross Country 2. Central(lowa) (84) _.. . _.. . _.. _..74 4. Lang Beach State (18-7) I85 17. Richmond (21-3-I) ...... 120 4. North Carolina (12-2) ...... I02 3. Carnegie-Mellon (88) .73 5. California (M-6) ...... I80 18. Air Force (e-10) ______I IS The top IS NCAA Division III men’s cross 5. Old Dominion (164) 96 4. Union (New York) (8-O). . .68 6. UC Santa Barbara (17-7) . . . .._. _____.I75 19. CalSt.LosAngelcs(l5-5) .______.__II0 country seams through mats of November 3 as 6. Penn State (12-3-I). ______. ______90 selected by chc NCAA Division Ill Cross 5. Mount Union (88) ...... 63 7. Fresno State (12-12)...... 169 20. lona (21-9) ______..______. __ 105 7. Maryland (13-6-3) 84 6. Lycoming (80) ...... 60 Counrry Coaches Association, with points: 8. Temple (I l-5-2) 78 I. St. Thomas (Minneso@, 170; 2. North 7. Wis.-River Falls (701)...... 57 9. Boston U. (l&2-2). _. . 72 8. Ithaca (6-l) ...... 49 Central. 151; 3. RIT, 137;4. Whcaton(Illinois), 10. Massachusclts (I 142) . 66 ’ I IZ; 5. Luther, 77: 6. (tie) Brand& and Mount 9. Gct(ysburg (8-O) .48 MAC to lose Huskies; won’t I I. New Hampshire (10-2-S) . . . 58 IO. Deniron (84). .45 Union, 62; 8. Wis.-Oshkosh. 52; 9. MIT. 37; IO. 12. Virginia (165)...... 56 Glassboro Scace, 31; I I. Wa.-Stevens Point, I I. Wagner (7-l) .38 13. Delawarc(134) ______.______._..____48 12. Occidental (6-l) _. _. _. . .37 activelv recruit new member IS; 12. Southeastern MPsnachusetts. 8; 13. 14. Lock Haven (13-5) 42 J Bates. S; 14. St. John’s (Minnesota), 4, IS. 13. DePauw (8-l) _. .32 IS. Ursinur (13-5-I) ______..._..__._...... 34 Wittenberg. 3. 14. Cot (9-O) . .26 The Mid-American Athletic Conference says it is not actively seeking a new 16. Rutgers (I 143) . . _. 28 14. Salishury Srntc (7-l) .26 member to replace Northern Illinois University, which has announced its Divlslon II Womenb Crm County 17. West Chesccr (10-6-g. 22 The top 20 NCAA Division II women’s cross 16. Baldwin-Wallace (7-I) ...... 17 withdrawal from the league at the end of the current school year. The IS. Northeartcrn(ll-244) _.______.._.. 21 17. Montclair Scacc (7-l) I5 country teams through meets of November I as 19. Boston College (94-s). IS 17. St. John’s (Minnesota) (7-I) I5 conference office said institutions are welcome to apply for membership. selected by the NCAA Division II Women’s 20. Scanford (7-3-I) 6 Schools mentioned as possible members are the University of Cincinnati, Cross Country Coaches Association: 19. Washington and Jefferson (7-l). . 9 I. Cal Poly-SM; 2. UC-Davis; 3. Indiana Dlvlalon I-AA Football 20. Hamilton _.______.__._____..__ 4 University of Louisville, Illinois State University, Marshall University, Indiana The top 20 NCAA D&ion I-AA football (Pennsylvania); 4. Cal S~atc Northridge; 5. Dlvblon I Women’s Volleyball State University and the University of Akron.. . State budget cuts may force teams through games of November 2, with North Dakota Scale;6. Cal Poly-Pomona;7. The top 20 NCAA Division I women’s records in parentheses and poinrr: Southeastern Louisiia University to end its 56-year-old varsity football South Dakota State; 8. Wis.-Parkride; 9. volleyball teams through matches of November program at the end of the season. The program may be continued if boosters Ashland; IO. Army; I I. Seattle Pacific; 12. Cal I Middle Tennessee Stacc (84) .80 3, with records in parentheses and points: 2. Furman (6-l) .76 can raise S2 million, according to J. Larry Crain, university president. StateHayward; 13. Holy Cross; 14. Nebraska- I. Stanford (If-l) ___._..._...__.______. 160 Omaha; IS. Southeast Missouri State; 16. 3. Nevada-Rena (6-l) .72 2. Pacilic (22-2)...... I52 4. Grambling (7-l) . . . .68 In remembrance of Bruce Proper, former director of physical education, Springfield: 17. Shippensburg; 18. Libeny; 19. 3. UCLA (21-3) _._____. ____. _. ____. _. 144 5. Northern lowa (7-l) .63 intramurals and recreation, Rochester Institute of Technology has opened a Air Force; 20. Troy State. 4. Cal Poly-SLO (204) I34 6. Idaho (7-2) .6l Divtdon 111Women ’s Cm Country S. Southern Cal (17-E) ______._. ______.. 124 The top IS NCAA D&&n HI women’s 7. Minrirrlppi Valley (7-l) .52 6. San Jose State (214) ...... 120 8. Arkansas State (5-3). .50 crosscountry teams throughmeets of Novem- 7. Nebraska(l9-2) _.__...... _...... I18 bcr 3 aa selected by the NCAA Division 111 9. Briefly in the News LouisianaTech (7-2) .42 8. Hawaii (214) .._._...... IO1 9. Akron (6-2) .42 Women’s CrossCountry Coaches Assoeiacion, 9. Texas (17-S) ...... 91 with points. I I. Richmond (7-2) .40 IO. Purdue(22-2) ____...... 84 new fitness center in his name. RIT also dedicated the John D. Pike memorial 1. Franklin and Marshall,97; 2. Wis.-La 12. Rhode Island (7-2) .37 II. UCSantaEarbara(l9-II) __._..____._ 81 Crosse. 87; 3. St. Thomas (Minnesota),62; 4. 13. Murray State (6-2-l). _. _. .35 12. Arizona(lS-7) ____._.______._._.____._ 74 press box in the ice hockey arena. The new facility is a gift from a construction 14. Colgate (6-2) .26 Wheaton (Illinois). 56; 5. Ithaca. M: 6. Ws.- 13. lllinois(31~) ______...... I..I...... 68 company. Southwest Baptist University has become a member of the Stevens Point, 43: 7. W~a.-Dshkosh, 32; 8. IS. Eastern WashingIon (6-2) .21 14. Arizona Scace(17-10) . . . . . 56 Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association and will join the NCAA in 1986- 16. Georgia Southern (6-2) _. 19 Luther. 28; 9. Middlebury, 18; IO. (tie) Augur- 15. Colorado State (20-7) 4S tana(lllinois) and St. Olaf, IS: 12. Millcnvillc, 17.Delaware (6-3) ...... II 87. The Division II conference now has eight members The University of 16. Western Michigan (20-2) 42 Connecticut has filled the fields for the 1986 and 1987 Connecticut Mutual 17. San Diego State (21-13) ..__. _. ._ _. __ 34 IS. Brigham Young (22-9) 23 Classic basketball tournaments. Next year’s field is composed of the host Ex-Lady Roadrunner coach 19. Texas A&M (21-6) __. _____. _. ______20 school, University of Hartford, Texas A&M University and Lehigh University. 20. LongBeach State (12-9) 9 The 1987 tournament will feature Connecticut, Hartford, University of San files sex discrimination suit DlvWon III Womcnb Volleyball Francisco and Princeton University.. . Southern Connecticut State University The top 20 NCAA Division 111 women.8 has purchased about six acres of land adjacent to its field house that will be Named as defendants in the suit are volleyball teams through matcher of November A former coach of the University of used for construction of an all-purpose facility. The school plans to construct the University of Texas System, its 3, with records in parentheses and points: Texas at San Antonio women’s bas- a combination football, soccer and field hockey facility with seating for 10,000. ketball team has filed a sex discrimi- board of regents, President James W. I.GroveCiry(38-0) _._..______.______I17 2. III. Benedictine(394) . . . I I5 nation lawsuit against the school, the Wagner and former athletics director 3. Elmhurst (31-9) _. _. ______. ______I05 Boston College has agreed to pay the city ofBoston $322,000 in linkage fees Associated Press reported. Rudy Davalos. 4. Cortland State (364). IO1 in exchange for support for the construction of a 1617million, 8,500-seat sports The suit, filed in Federal court The suit claims DeHaven was given 5. Guscavus Adolphur (39-10). 97 center. The college’s plan includes scholarships for neighborhood students, November 6, claims Virginia Lee De- fewer fringe benefits than male 6. Colordo College (37-7) 93 permission for high school teams to use the facility, and setting aside seats at coaches and was forced to work with- 7. Juniata (29-7) ______. __. __. __. __. 79 basketball and hockey games for underprivileged neighborhood children.. . The Haven was paid less than her male 8. Gallauder (37-3). . . . 77 counterparts, had fewer assistants out a contract. 9. Calvin (294) ______.._...... 67 Women’s Sports Foundation is accepting nominations for awards to the most and had a lower budget. DeHaven also charges in the suit 9. UC SanDiego (24-15). 67 promising women athletes. Nominations must be received by December 15. DeHaven led the Lady Road- that female coaches were harassed I I. Wis.-Stevens Point (40-13) 60 For additional information, contact Leslie R. Evans, Education Director, and that women were discriminated 12. Western Maryland (354) _. 57 Women’s Sports Foundation, 195 Moulon Street, San Francisco, California runners to a 54-27 record during her 13. E. Connecticut State (28-E). 49 three years at the school. against in the athletics program solely 14. La Verne (15-13) ______. ______. __. 40 94123, or telephone l-800/227-3988. The head coach of the school’s on the basis of sex. 14. Nazareth (New York) (34-12) _. _. _. 40 Davidson College has dedicated the Louise and Carl Knobloch Tennis women’s basketball team from 1981 The former coach seeks to return 16. W&.-La Craroc (3412) _. . _. . . 24 Center and announced plans to build a total-sports complex that will include 17. Ithaca (31-9) _. _. . . . . 20 to 1984, DeHaven claims she was to her job and receive an adjustment 18. Millikin (29-9). I8 a 6,000-seat arena for basketball. The tennis center completes the first phase of forced to resign because of her stance of wages and benefits equal to male 19. Claremonr-Mudd-Scripps (23-8). IO the complex, which is estimated at $13 million. Groundbreaking is expected on equal pay and benefits. coaches at the school. 20. Elizabethtown (29-10) 9 during 1986, with completion scheduled for the 1987-88 academic year.

to dir& operabonrr of major spomng events. dam open. Scotember 2. lQ6-home: Appllcam mua be detail oriented and titling September IQ. lQ87--au, Contact Jare Miscellaneous to work long hour% Fa~mlllsrity wth the Kkln. Dwecbr of Athktics. 1617497671. conduct of n”mero”s twen of wonlng Football B&on III. b&T,w events, knavkdgc d Research Tnangk area Open Dates + Q/9/.99sway. 9/23/B away,IO/ 0 09 The Mafket tiwlWommbLacmaeCnuhmd~~ sports fac,litks. and North CardIns contacts away, 1l/4/89 home. Q/0/% home, 9 22/ Soccer albkyht Coach. InsbvcUon in the are desired b”l not required. Job is guaran 90 home, I O/27/90 home. 1l/YQO srvay; Continued jiom page 14 WE program mI qualAed. Mast&s hree teed to be chalkngmg Send rewme. refer. FonttaO. Dk. III. Wldencr Owe&y, Chester, g/14/91 away Q/26 91 (IYIO 1 l/2/91 II tith rekvaiu upcrknce conch! -men cnccs. and other r&bard inform*lon M: PA (6 miks South of phikdelphk) needs a 1I /Q/91 ho& Q/12/92 tme 9/26/z Uon. management of staff. communicabon, DMsian home. 10/3llb2 home, 11/7/b2 home. “blic rebbons and promcaon of pqram. &,ktes al an NCAA IllLl wvl DperaUms, P.O. Bcx 12727. Research Tnan tommltmnt to coach,” in the contex?da gk P&k. North Csrdlns 27709. Contact Wd Cha F smilkr with NCAA ruks and reguktions. liberal arts college. Teat 1 Ing cclbficabon in hpplicationPmedu=:S”bmlt~rdappll. CmrdWtaUnhadtyd Physical Educ1~b011 mcpmd. This is a full. 71uln a(La curpu. Rnpanslbll~ Mvcl Cdkge (Ml) has the folbwng football catbn. mum. three leten drecommndr lime smli paslUan commencing January 1. tion. and an academic empksymmt applkm Itks Co.,rd,n&e ~hedullng of all athletic bon to: Chrk Voelz. Assc.cI~e AthkUc Graduate Assistant lQ%.blsycommensumtewithexpe~ce facilities: kad pknning of ConStrwXlOn Or Filing deadline December 1. 1985. Foward mwvdkn; mpe.3 or sllp34u mmntenance Director, Depaltment of Athletics, Univeti letter d applkcation. &A. photo. and current d Oregon. RcAnhlu tom. Eugene. 0 x d all athktlc faclllua: wpcrviv m~wement references to Dr. Linda Arena. Women’?l d golf course. ,ce rink, tennw court%: super. 97403,503/6W 3369. Application deadline Athletic DIrector, wttenbcr unlvxsi(y. PO Assistant to the Athletic Director IS November 25 (Em loyment application Eiox720.Splirvgfkld.Ohl04 s 5ol.Wltknberg fc.rmm”sthrecew& % NovemhrZS-all I wome”‘. athletic program under s”pervisio” 18 an equal opport”nity/afnrmaUve aCtton d the head women’s athktlc trainer. 0-r. cmploycr. for Academic Programs -%$;;2$giz$ikEc: tunities: Purwe a master’s degree. &lop kbcs. Sahry: 06,000 minlmum, initial ap u(DcIIIY in the UY of modem modal~es pdntmmt for 3 yrs. Requiremems: BA. BS UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ad esqenence Ylrth clght fernok Dwis~on I prdcl~Msand livcprd apcriencewith reided lo dir& mdi reklans for n-qor spoRs.Qualifications: Admtied to graduate cdkgc physical pknt (pr&r upcrience with Responsible for all academic related activities, including Wrestling uhml. NATA certKkaUon or cl ,bk to b&e spomn~ even(. Applicants should hm-e dem e&&tic facilities). For more informs exam. Tern-,: Jarway 6. IQ86 x rough May onstmkd medk relations experuu. Expzn. supervision of academic counselors for men and women 30,1%6. rcnwabk.Asslrrtsntip: Grad”& ewe both in print and broodcast medk. and athletes, reporting directly to the Athletic Director. Will insure w ti* w. Poslbon&ilabk as tuition and fees. room. board and books In orgonlrlng a major press center I5 desked soon after deadline when convenient for Deadline: December 6.1 !XSS.Send res”me t.mlotreq”ired. ‘cmlsls~“dte~ goals of graduating within a 4+$-year time period. Serve as successfulapphcant due to bd.minute resign and three letters of recammendatlan to: to work long hours.?Ld liaison with internal offices regarding admissions, registration, muon. will S”pervise growl program In Sarah Palterscn. AssIstant AlhkUc Director. and other rekvanl informat& to: Medi. sots 55455. Cbsl date for sppllcafl~s k Big 0 Conference.-ram ~nc“8 udes onefull- University d Akbama, P.O. Box 6449. (I& RekUon,.PO. Box 12727.Re~earchTrkngk January 15,1986. ?h e Urw of Mine is financial aid, residency, housing and the like. Administer P&q Nwlh Cardirwa 27709. bm asmstantand graduate aulstant. Must varsity. Akbama 35486. 205/34&7077. an equalcpponunlryeducatorand employer. academic certification, including reporting of NCAA require- possess weding pMiclpsbon St the inter Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Em and-ifically invitc..ndencourago~ppli collcgiatc level, prefcnbiy in a Divlslon I pbycr cacbns from women and mlnorltks. ments and, in cooperation with faculty representative, serve as spokesperson regarding NCAq/Bis B Conference rules and regulations. Organize orientation for incoming freshmen and visit with recruits. Direct all entries for post-season academic BUENA VISTA COLLEGE Athletic Director and Head Department honors plus some day-today counseling activities and other duties as assigned. ATHLETIC DIRECTOR of Physical Education And Athletics U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Requires Master’s degree in Education or closely related field. COACHING Experience in higher education in area of Student Affairs highly Buena Vista College seeks some combination of the following: Kingspoint New York 11024 desirable as well as in intercollegiate athletics, preferably in recruitment and counseling. Familiarity with NCAA rules and Athletic Director for Men’s & Women’s athletic program. Comprehensive responsibility to direct the intercollegiate, Varsi Baseball Coach. Varsi Track Coach. AD must maintain intramural and recreational athletic program at the Academy, regulations also preferred. and Bevelop a distinctive athr etic program within the Division a Division Ill institution. Candidates should have experience in Remit application letter with names of no less than three III philosophy. Must be able to coach a varsity sport. Coaches coaching, directing undergraduate and intramural programs, references and telephone numbers by December 1 to: must be able to teach, recruit and operate within the Division educational adminis&ation and supen+ision and an ability to III philosophy. Positions require MA or above in Physical supervise faculty and coaches. A master’s degree in a relevant Chair, Search Committee Education and/or Recreation. Salary and academic rank field is uired. Salary: $47347 to $61.042; commensurate c/o Athletic Director’s Office negotiable. Send resume and letters of recommendation to with qua117i cations. Applications should be sent to: Acting 103 South Stadium Dr. Sandra Madsen, Associate Dean of Faculty, Buena Vista Academic Dean, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Kingspoint. UNlVERSlTYOFNEBRA!XA College, Storm Lake, Iowa 50568. Position begins Fall of 1986. New York 11024. The U.S. Government is an Affirmative Lincoln. Nebraska 68588-0120 AA/EOE employer. Action/EEO Employer. Affirmative Act&/Equal Opportunity Employer. 16 THE NCAA NEWS/November 11.19115 Guidelines for payment of royalties St. Peter’s making comeback One of the more remarkable group of young people to over- stories at any level of college foot- come. They’re young people of to schools established by committee ball is being written by St. Peter’s great character, and 1 just simply A special NCAA committee has revenue will be credited as delayed c. If a “network” of stations is College of Jersey City, New Jersey. can’t say enough about them,” adopted principles of distribution for income in the next financial report involved, it frequently cannot be de- The Division III school had to Gilrain told the Associated Press. copyright royalty fees due member prepared by the controller for the ter?ined whether all the stations car- cancel its 1984 schedule after an “We’ve improved with every sin- institutions for nonnetwork telecasts respective championship. ried all the games in the series. opening-game, 72-0, embarrass- gle football game. We’ve played of their sporting events beyond a 4. All royalties shall be distributed d. The number of stations broad- ment at the hands of Catholic six games; when the season started, cable system’s local service area. on the basis of the number of events casting an event does not necessarily University left it short of players. that in itself would have been an As mentioned earlier by the special telecast, rather than on the basis of reflect its value. For example, a Divi- St. Peter’s is back this year with accomplishment,” Gilrain said. NCAA Committee on Copyright the number of stations that carried sion I-A institution may have its a 34-man squad and a 3-3 record “You can throw the record out Royalty Tribunal proceedings (The those events. wrestling matches carried on a net- as of November 9. the window. That doesn’t mean a “We’re about as thrilled as can NCAA News, October 28), member a. This principle avoids the need to work of more than 20 stations. It is whole lot. The record’s not the institutions must be the copyright determine whether or not there is unlikely that those events are more be about what’s happened to our important thing; the important owner of their sporting events to distant-signal carriage of each station valuable than certain Division I foot- football team this year;“says coach thing is what these kids have Jim Gilrain, who doubles as prin- qualify for payment of royalty fees. that broadcast the event. That contir- ball or basketball games telecast on a achieved.” The special committee has set a mation process generally is time-con- smaller number of stations. cipal of Carteret, New Jersey, High School. “Back in August, there St. Peter’s has games remaining goal of assisting member institutions suming and quite expensive. 5. Cable royalty fees are distributed were a whole lot of people who with State University of New York, in their efforts to secure copyright, b. The information provided by in accordance with the principles didn’t think-and probably Stony Brook, and Jersey City State according to Wilford S. Bailey, conferences and institutions often is outlined above for the qualified events rightly--that St. Peter’s College College. NCAA secretary-treasurer and com- incomplete and not subject 10 contir- of those institutions and conferences could come back from what had “We’ll show up for the next two, mittee chair. mation. They are unable or simply that have authorized the NCAA to happened to it. I couldn’t say that the first week of The Copyright Royalty Tribunal, fail either to identify all of the televi- file aclaim with the Copyright Royalty “The 34 young men that we the season when the big question established by Congress in the late sion stations that broadcast the events Tribunal and for the National Colle- have have overcome just about was, ‘How many games are you 19705, has awarded more than $2 or the extent of cable coverage of the giate Championship competition that every obstacle that you could ask a gonna get in this year?‘” million to the NCAA for distribution respective stations. may qualify for such royalty fees. among qualifying member institu- tions. More than $650,000 has been dis- tributed. and about $900,000 will be mailed to qualifying member institu- tions within the next few weeks. The remaining royalty fees awarded to date will be distributed in August. ATTENTION ATTENDEES OF... The distribution principles for copy- right royalty fees adopted by the committee are as follows: I. Royalties for any telecasts ar- ranged by an institution shall be dis- The NCAA Convention -January 13-15 tributed directly to it by the NCAA controller. 2. Royalties for any telecasts ar- American Baseball Coaches Assoc. -January 2-5 ranged by a conference (regular season or tournament) shall be distributed to the conference office by the NCAA American Football Coaches Assoc. -January 6-9 controller. 1~ is the responsibility of the conference to distribute fees to the appropriate member institutions. in New Orleans! 3. Royalties for any telecasts of NCAA championships competition shall be distributed to the respective event by the NCAA controller. The Dooley sees Major Savings on Airlin& benefits in current ‘crisis’ 70% Discount University of Georgia athletics di- rector and football coach Vincent J. WITH RESTRKTIONS Dooley is concerned about the image of college athletics following recent reports of payoffs received by basket- ball players. E&O% Discount Ino Restrictions1 Many of the former players have retracted what newspapers have writ- ten about money and gifts they re- ceived, but Dooley said he believes l NOW receive major, unrestricted and some of it must be true. “Obviously when there’s that much unpublished discounts on airfares smoke, there’s got to be some fire,” Dooley said in an interview with the l NOW receive $150,000 in travel insurance Associated Press. “I’ve been around enough 10 know there’s enough smoke every time you fly to make me concerned.- “I don’t know what the answer is,” l said Dooley, whose football and bas- NOW receive your tickets overnite if needed ketball programs are on probation for recruiting violations. “I’m sure the l NOW order or check flight information 24 NCAA will look into all of this. It is also the responsibility of each of the hours a day, seven days a week.. . toll free - schools fo act on those allegations.” DooIey said he hopes that the recent disclosures will purge college sports. 1-800-243-1800 “In the long run, it will be good that we’re going through this crisis now,” Dooley said. “I’d have to say it’s getting to the crisis stage.” Next in the News The first in a series of legislative topics to be considered by the 1986 FUWUY Convention. IlYIERIWIlONALTltAEL Collegiate basketball schedules from CBS, NBC and ESPN. 67 wIiImEYhwE~ NEW IUWEN CT. 06510 Division III Field Hockey Cham- pionship results. 203-772-0470 Championships previews in Divi- The Official Travel Agent for NCAA Championships sions 1 and II women’s volleyball.