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8 • The Red and Black • Friday, January 19, 1990
SPORTS
FANFARE
The Georgia Rugby team will play Its first match of tho quarter
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the University Intramural fields against the
Atlanta Renegades. The Ruggers finished with an 83 record last
quarter. Admission Is free.
Where: "Tad” Smith Coliseum (9,000)
When: Saturday, 2:00 p.m. EST
Records: Georgia (3-2 SEC, 10-4 overall); Mississipi (2-3, 59)
TV/Radlo: WSB TV, WRFC (960 AM)
Coaches: Hugh Durham (206117 at Georgia): Ed Murphy (27-41
at Ole Mice)
Last Season: Ole Miss swept the series with Oeorgia last year
with an 74-70 overtime triumph In Athens and a 8879 win In Ox
ford
Scouting Report:
The Doga leave the fHendly confines of the Coliseum, where
they have won their last two SEC games. On their liut road
trip ths Dugs were embarrassed in Florida and Alabama.
Georgia comes Into this contact limping. Lem Howard is out
with an injured arm and Utterial Green sat out the end of
Wednesday night's game with a sore heel, but he will play.
The Rebels' Gerald Glass is playing superbly and should give
the Bulldogs fits. However, nit supporting cast lacks consis
tency.
Probable Stsrtlng Uneups:
QEORQIA BULLDOGS
PPG
RPG
F 33, Alec Kotaler, SR. 6-11. 230
204
10 2
F-44, Marshall Wilson, JR. 6-8, 210
12.0
5.0
C 35. Nevtlla Austin, JR. 610. 215
66
6.6
Q 11. Litterial Green. SO. 61, 185
17.6
2.7
G 22 Rod Cole. JR. 64. 185
91
3.3
MISSISSIPPI REBELS
PPG
RPG
M. Gerald Glass. SR. 66. 240
23.5
7 5
F-34, Joe Marvell, FH, 67, 220
98
5.4
C 21. Seen Murphy. JR, 611, 225
7.4
7.5
G 3, David Midlick, SO, 60, 170
5.4
1.0
G 22, Tim lumper. JR. 63, 195
104
3.5
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Across from Brumby
Gym Dogs prepared to roll over Auburn
By CHRIS LANCETTE
Sports Staff Writer
The defending national chain
pion Georgia women’s gymnastics
taam tumbles into it* home opener
against Auburn Saturday night,
but Lady Dogs' coach Suzanne Yo-
culan is thinking more about the
Tigers’ cross-state nval — Ala
bama.
"Our goal score for the week is a
190 plus," Yoculnn suid at practice
Thursday. “Anything less is unac
ceptable. And 1 say ‘plus’ because
Alabama got a 190.0 in its opening
meet."
Georgia is ranked second, be
hind the Crimson Tide, in the first
National Association of Collegiate
Gymnastics Coachea/Women poll
released Wednesday. The poll isn’t
fully representative of the early
season ns many top teams won’t
start competition until this
weekend.
To achieve the goal score,
Georgia must average a 9.5 per
performance as a total of five of six
scores are officially counted on
each apparatus. If successful, the
team would be over a point ahead
of last season’s second-meet pace.
The Gym Dogs are aware of such
scrutiny, especially in the Col
iseum opener.
‘The pressure is definitely on us
because of that national
championship hype," Yoculan said.
"Kverybody that saw us at na
tionals Inst yenr wants to see if
we’re as g<x>d ns we were last
season People that didn't go to na
tionals want to see what we're
alsiut this year."
The Lady Dogs best event Sat
urday will likely be the uneven
bars. Senior Corrinne Wright and
freshman Sandy Rowlette, two of
Georgia’s all-nrounders, head the
npparntus’ lineup. Wright tied her
career best last week, while Row
lette finished .05 behind teammate
Heather Stepp to take third in the
season’s first meet.
As many ns seven other athletes
are fighting for a spot in a bar
lineup whose talent is so abundant
that the coaching staff feels ath-
letes like Debbie Still, who isn’t
starting on bars for Georgia, would
start for most of the notion’s
teams.
'There’s not a weak bar routine
in those nine scorers,” said assis
tant coach Scott Bull.
Saturday, Georgia may be
without the bar performance of
sophomore Sophia Royce, who fell
from the bars and sustained mul
tiple bruises at practice earlier this
week.
The Gym Dogs are in good shape
at press time for the other three
event*.
In the floor exercise, senior An
drea Thomas, who turned in per
haps the best floor routine of her
collegiate career in an intersqund
meet Thursday, will start in a
lineup that also includes Wright,
Rowlette, Chris Rodis and Jennifer
Carbone.
Despite Georgia’s dominance on
bars and on floor in particular, Au
burn will be competitive. The Ti-
i
A*
w
I Tl
Sandy Rowlette
gers are improving each year with
the addition of better recruit* and
may soon be a serious contender in
the talent-rich SEC.
The meet starts at 7:30 p.m , and
is free to students presenting i.D.s.
Diaz’s Dogs tennis season opener in Chicago
Netters to face Irish
By RANDY WALKER
Sports Writer
The Georgia men’s tennis tenm
begins it* 1990 season with a
match against Notre Dame on
Friday and one agninst 21st-
ranked Northwestern on Saturday
in the American Airlines Classic in
Chicago.
For Georgia senior Mike Mor
rison, the Bulldogs’co-captain from
Deerfield, 111., the road trip to Chi
cago will be a homecoming.
Morrison, recently named Illi
nois High School Athlete of the
1980’s by the Chicago Tribune, is
excited about competing in his
hometown area.
"It’s going to be great going back
to Chicago and playing in front of
family and friends again," Mor
rison said. "We’re going to have n
lot people cheering for us, and 1
hear there’s going to he a big party
for us afterward. It should be two
great matches and a lot of fun."
While playing for Deerfield High
School, he captured four Illinois
state singles championships, tying
a record set by Marty Riessen, a
Northwestern graduate who went
on to star on the U.S. Davis Cup
team.
"Mike is the prototype Bulldog,”
Georgia coach Manuel Diaz said.
"He always competes and competes
very hard. He’s going to give a full
effort every time he steps on the
court."
In his senior season in high
school, Morrison had little inten
tion of playing for Notre Dame or
Northwestern.
‘Their programs weren’t any
thing compared to Georgia when I
was in high school," Morrison said.
"Now they've improved olxmt 100
percent. Both are probably going to
be ranked this year."
Dioz also refuses to take the
midwestern teams lightly.
"Notre Dame and Northwestern
have been rising in the rankings to
the point where both were ranked
lust year at one time or another,"
Dinz said. “Northwestern cl mbed
ns high as twelfth in the c< untry
last year Notre Dame started
building it* team by signing (op re
cruit David DiLucin a year ajo."
DiLucia, a former Easter Bowl
junior champion, was one of the
most sought after high school se
niors in 1988. The Norristown, Pa.
native, ranked 44th in the latest
Volvo Tennis collegiate poll, will
tangle with Georgia’s Al Parker at
the No.l singles slot in the Irish’s
match with the Dogs. Park* r will
also have to face another high
quality player in Northwestern’*
Todd Martin, currently r.inked
fourth.
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FIRST & TEN
JAY
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Headlines,
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Section will be published in the
Wednesday, February 14th edition.
So start thinking of a Valentine's Day message to send to that spe
cial someone, or even that OK other. 'Cause remember, ’If you
can't be with the one you love, love the one you're with!" & send
them a message! Deadline will be Friday, February 9th at 5pm.
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