18—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981 Women spikers look to By PETE WALDRON Daily Collegian Sports Writer Last year at the NCAA men's basket ball championships, St. Joseph's upset No. 1 ranked DePaul and nixed the Blue Demons chances of winning the 1981 national championship. :Women's volleyball coach Russ Rose is hoping the Lady Lions will be the spoiler for the rest of this year's NCAA women's volleyball championships. Especially at 7 .(EST) tomorrow night when the Lady Lions tackle fourth-seeded University of Ppcific at Northwestern. ."Tournament time is upset time," Rime said. "Last year St. Joes defeated DpPaul in the NCAA basketball championships. Hopefully, we are going to be the St. Joes of women's, volleyball. ;"We have to stay together and serve tough and.we're capable of doing that. If, we serve easy, they are going to beat us because their offense is great. We have to hope we can control their perfor mance. A lot will come down to serving and passing. "We have to hope we can control their performance," Rose said. "If we play well we are going to make Pacific work." :But Pacific is no pansy team and Rose knows that. They play the game yearround in California and Rose said this keeps the. Lady Tigers' competitive edge up. The Lady Tigers, three time Nor Cal Conference champions and 24-11 this season, were runner-ups in the national tournament last year to Southern Califor nia. Last week they upset third-ranked UCLA, 15-13, 15-7, 15-4, in the first three games. Rose was not surprised they demolished UCLA. He knows they have talent lots of it. ,With a list headed by 6-2 All-America middle-blocker Jayne Gibson and top freshman recruits Jan Saunders (5-9 setter) and Linda Vaughn (5-10 setter), no wonder Rose believes. Pacific should be the No. 2 or 3 team in the nation. But enter NCAA match against Pacific 'realistically' Lady Lion Lori Barberich (left) and the women's volleyball championship. Penn "We cannot key in on any one player," Rose said. "Pacific's got balance, depth he's (Pacific coach, Dr. Terry Liske vych) got everything. I know we are the underdogs. We are up against a pretty formidable foe and it is going to take the best game of the year to beat them. "They are capable of winning the na tional championship we are not. We may be the top team in the East, but they are one of the top teams in the nation." Could this be true? Russell D. Rose, proud of his winning traditions in East ern women's volleyball, going into a match pessimistically? women's volleyball team hope to spoil the University of Pacific's quest for the NCAA State takes on Pacific at 7. (EST) tomorrow night' at Northwestern. • "No, realistically," Rose said. "Our chances of beating them are just as good as any other teams but it's not 50-50. Don't get me wrong. I want to win, but it's going to be tough. "We control our own destiny. This ,is not a mail-in ballot or computerized volleyball game we have to do what we do best on our side of the net. "It's college girls playing volleyball against college girls," Rose said. "The only difference is they have a sun tan." The Lady Lions had little time to catch some rays for they have been drilling hard all week. Rose has been rattling his be spoilers brain. trying to find the right plan to hopefully stop the Lady Tigers. "I am hoping the (Pacific) freshmen can be rattled. I am hoping they don't respond well to the cold weather and I hope we play well. "If those three things happen, we just may be the St. Joes , of women's volley ball." SPIKES AND DIGS If the Lady Lions win tomorrow they will play the winner of the Northwestern/Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo game at 3 p.m. (EST) Sunday. The winners will then advance to the semi-finals and finals at UCLA next weekend. • Photo by Janis Burger Cards, Padres swap shortstops By HAL BOCK AP Sports Writer HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) The St. Louis Cardinals and San Diego Padres, locked in day-long negotia tions for shortstops Garry Temple ton and Ozzie Smith, announced what they called a "partial trade" at baseball's winter meetings yester day. The Cardinals will send outfielder Sixto Lezcano and a playei to be named later presumably Temple ton to the Padres for pitcher Steve Mura and a player to be named later ostensibly Smith. The shortstops were not included in the immediate announcement be cause of difficulties in the renegotia tion of their contracts. Templeton is entering the third year of a six-year, $4.4 million deal and Smith makes a reported $300,000 a year on his con tract. Earlier the shortstops were "re ported to be the key men in a much larger swap between the teams, and because the trade was within the same league, there was no deadline facing the clubs. But general man agers Whitey Herzog• of the Cardi nals and Jack McKeon of the Padres decided to go ahead on the portion of the deal to which they had agreed. The winter meetings conclude to night at midnight the inter-league trading deadline. Herzog was asked specifically if Smith and Templeton were the other . players involved in the trade. "Not necessarily," he replied, grinning. Mura and Lezcano seemed to be the appetizers with the main dishes still ahead. Mura, 26, a right-hander, was 5=14 with a 4:27 ERA in 23 games for the Padres last season. His career re- in trade cord is 17-27 in three full seasons at San Diego. Lezcano, one of the many players Herzog traded for at these meetings a year ago, batted .266 with five homers and 28 RBI last season. He had demanded a trade. Meanwhile, the Ron Guidry sign ing sweepstakes entered their final stages as John Schneider, attorney for the free agent left-hander, pre! pared for a late-night meeting with New York Yankee owner George Steinbrenner. Schneider and Steinbrenner was set to meet beginning at 11 p.m. "My gut reaction is we can work something out with the Yankees," Schneider said, indicating that the pitcher may be prepared to stay in New York where he has been the ace of the staff since 1977. The trade market was quiet fol lowing a late Wednesday night deal in which Detroit sent pitchers Dan Schatzeder and Mike Chris to San Francisco for outfielder Larry Hern don. In another development, outfield er Tom Paciorek rejected a final contract offer from Seattle and it appeared the Mariners would corn plywith his demand to be traded, if not by the end of the week then shortly after that. With trading stalled, Guidry's con tract status became a central issue. Schneider had promised a decision by the end of the convention and the long-awaited meeting with Stein brenner was 'expected to hasten it. "We'll stay in (the bidding) all the way," Steinbrenner said before the meeting. "We'll stay in and never be out. The Yankees will never say to him, 'We're out of it.' " Battered icers to face Delaware By PAUL ALEXANDER - Daily Collegian Sports Writer A battered and bruised men's ice hock ey team will travel to the University of Delaware tomorrow to meet a team that's been playing excellent hockey. The Lions will be without the services of their second leading goal scorer, Brad Rush. He suffered a fractured right hand against Cortland State last weekend. They'll also be playing without de fenseman Dave Hornack and left wing Wayne Powers. Hornack has been ham pered by a pinched nerve in his neck and Powers has strained ligaments in his knee. Both players have been large con tributers to the Lions' impressive 8-2 record. Aside from coming off a very demand ing weekend with Cortland State —where dental work and stitches were common, along with one fractured bone the Lions will be facing a team that soundly * beat Penn State rival Villanova and lost by one goal in overtime toNavy. "Delaware is traditionally tough at home," Lion tri-captain Joe Battista said. "We haven't played them for two years and they were tough then. Howev Lady swimmers on the road for 2 By CHRIS WIGHTMAN Daily Collegian Spirts Writer Senior Sandy Bizal, who has been hampered recently by arthritis in ,her elbow, will not be in the pool tonight at Princeton when the women's swim team goes against last year's Eastern champion, Princeton University. 'Fri-captain Bizal, an All-American for the Lady Lions, was kept out of last week's PSU Relays because of the injury, which her doctor diagnosed as either arthritis or a broken piece of cartilage. "The doctor told me to stay out of the water until it gets better," Bizal said. "I've had this problem ever since childhood and it usually comes and goes. Right now it's hanging on longer than usual. I thought it would never be like this." Bizal, who is on a therapy program for her elbow, said the swelling is going down and that she is getting a better range of movement in her elbow. "I'm starting to feel better already," she said optimistically. Joining Bizal on the doubtful list is freshman Sue Beau champ, who swims the breaststroke and is in the individual medley for the Lady Lions. She is currently having knee problems. However, sophoniore Cindy Post, who was also sidelined for the relays, will be back in the lineup for Princeton and the Lady The HUB Craft Centre 312 HUB 863-0611 Holiday Sale of Instructor's Work in the Browsing Gallery on the first floor of the Hetzel Union Bldg. December 14th and 15th from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Craft items for sale: pottery, macrame, loom-woven scarves, drawings, wheat weaving, decorations, silkscreen prints, . . . and many more!! er, this year's team is supposed -to be their toughest in a while." A bright spot for the Lions is the fact that their most productive line of Toby Ritner, Joe Grainda and Matt Glass is healthy and, according to Glass, the line has worked well together this week in practice. Grainda leads the team in goals with 11 and also leads the team in total points with 23. Ritner and Rush are the second leading goal-getters with nine apiece. The Lions as a team have outscored their opponents 67-43, an average - of 6.7 goals for per game and 4.3 goals against. Despite their average margin of victory, the 4.3 goals against average does indi cate that the Lions have been rather suspect on defense. "In order to beat Delaware we're going to have to play a better overall game defensively," Glass said. "That doesn't just mean the defensemen. The offense has to get back more effectively and we have to have a man in the outer slot. "We've also been working on stopping the oppoging team from executing its breakout play so easily. It seems we're not getting enough pressure out of our Krimmel, who said the team had to work on several things this week if it is going to beat Princeton, was generally pleased with the way practices went the past week. "Practice went very well this week," Krimmel said. "We've had good workouts every day." Krimmel also said the Lady Lions are very excited about traveling to a meet for a change. "We've been swimming in this same pool since December 3, and the girls are very eager to travel," he said. "Plus a lot of the girls' parents will be making either the Princeton meet or the Villanova meet. So we'll have a big following." However, the Lady Lionns will need more than a big following to beat Princeton, a team Krimmel said is difficult to accu rately assess. "They had a' meet last Saturday," Krimmel said, "but their swimmers only swam twice, so it's difficult to understand their times. (Princeton coach) Jane Tyler is an excellent coach and always comes up with surprises." Lions' meet at Villanova tomorrow afternoon "Cindy Post will definitely swim this weekend," said Penn State coach Bob Krimmel. "She's looked good in practice all week." forechecking. We have to bottle up Dela ware in its own end." Lion head coach Jon Shellington has been forced to fill some vacancies cre ated by the injuries. Roger Furce will occupy Rush's left wing spot alongside Clark Dexter and Norm Jacobs, and freshman Bill Mayer will play a regular shift on defense. "I've been stressing technique in prac tice and Larry (Rocha, Lion assistant coach) has been drilling them physical ly," Shellington said. "We're still not in shape after that two week lay-off over Thanksgiving. "I also implemented two new options to our power play. I'm hoping that they will pay off against Delaware." "Our o pride was a little hurt last week end in that second game with Cortland State (a 9-4 loss)," Shellington added, "but we worked on those mistakes and have more or less got the fine tuning readjusted." The Lions won't return to the Indoor Sports Complex until after Christmas break, but they'll be home to stay at that point. Penn State will play 10 consecutive home games starting Jan. 8. ATTENTION FACULTY MEMBERS Let Kinko's help organize & distribute material (required readings, notes, etc.)Among your students & col leagues with our unique Professor's Publishing Plan. Leave required material with Kinko's & we'll copy & sell them directly to your students. kinkol copies 238• COPY 256 E. Beaver Ave. (across from Penn Towers) . It's a Sony Wa1,......,:,..,..:„. :,...:'..i:,..,.0..,-.::•..:.-..k ..., it's on sale! OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8:30 HOLIDAY GIFT IDEAS for the budget mind ed music lover. 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