The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - March 29, 1993-- Page 7 In T he aa Error gives runner-up finish more meaning by Antoine Pitts -Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - It almost fell apart for Michigan. Yes, the Wolverine swimmers already knew that they were not going to catch Stanford for first place. But a disastrous beginning to the Friday session nearly cost the Wolverines second. After deciding not to swim in the 200-yard freestyle relay, Michigan knew it would need as many points as possible in the rest of the relay events in order to hold off Texas. However, in the first preliminary heat of the second day of competition, the unthinkable happened. Gustavo Borges, poised and readied himself on the starting blocks to swim the anchor leg of the 200 medley relay. Tom Hay touched the wall and Borges took flight. But there was something dreadfully wrong. The ensuing debate by the officials confirmed that Michigan had erred. The Wolverines were disqualified because of a mental breakdown that caused their anchorman to jump a fraction of a second too early. Hay coasted in on the third leg with his eyes closed and mis-timed touching the wall. This offset Borges' timing and caused the DQ. "That was just one of those freak mental errors," Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek said. "The guy on the block has to be in motion. Tommy misjudged the wall coming in and when a big body like Gustavo is in motion you can't reverse it." You could sense a somber mood because for the Wolverines, it meant that in two relays they had scored nothing out of 80 possible points. Meanwhile, Stanford had picked up 74 while Texas scored 58 with the relays. Without the relays, the prospect of finishing second looked dim. The Wolverines had all Friday afternoon to think over the mistake that could cost them second place. That evening the Wolverines were still smarting from the afternoon mis- cue. Texas and Michigan remained close all night long on the scoreboard. The Wolverines were two points ahead of the Longhorns with one more event to go. The 800 freestyle relay would be Michigan's last chance of the day to put some room between'themselves and Texas. Marcel Wouda, Rodney VanTassell, Brian Gunn, and Gustavo Borges had the last crack at keeping the Wolverines on top. Wouda got off to a quick start and VanTassell kept the lead. Gunn re- tained the lead as well on his leg. The team began to anticipate Borges' jump into the pool. "GUS-TAV-O. GUS-TAV-O," the team serenaded him. Borges' swim finished off a first-place finish .39 seconds ahead of Texas and put the Wolverines up by eight. The relay swim was good enough to break a Michigan and Big Ten record. The Wolverines followed the lead of that relay into the third and final day. Three first-place finishes, a second-place and a third- place finish gave the Woeines an overwhelming victory over the Longhorns for second place behind Stanford. SWIMMNGNOTEBOOK: Hude ohl's choice puts Stanford over the edge by Brett Johnson and Antoine Pitts Daily Sports Writers INDIANAPOLIS - Last season, the Michigan and Stanford swimming teams were hooked up in a recruiting war for Joe Hudepohl, the nation's No. 1 recruit. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, Hudepohl decided to go to Stanford. His decision did not cost the Wolverines the national title this weekend at IUPUI Natatorium, but things would have been much closer. "It was a tough call," Hudepohl said. "I just thought I needed a change to go out to California. I would have liked to have swam for (Michigan coach) Jon (Urbanchek). He's a great guy and Gustavo (Borges) is a great guy; the guys on the team are good friends of mine from the Olympic team. So, it was a tough call." Hudepohl scored 41 individual points and also participated on four relay teams. Three of those teams placed first and the fourth team finished third behind the Wolverines and Texas. Hudepohl was a crowd favorite as the Stanford fans and his hometown "box-heads" from St. Xavier high school in Cincinnati had Hudepohl faces to wear during his races. "I had mainly family and Stanford's crowd," Hudepohl said. "(The box heads) were here but they weren't wearing their boxes." RECORD SETTERS: Michigan swimmers set five new school records and three new Big Ten conference records at the NCAA championships. Marcel Wouda broke both the 500-yard and 1650 freestyle records. The +1650 record was a five-year old record set by Scott Ryan, and Wouda broke it by 18 seconds. However, neither of these were Big Ten records. The the conference records were set by Royce Sharp in the 200 backstroke and the 400 medley and 800 freestyle relays. The 400 medley members were Sharp, Eric Wunderlich, Tom Hay, and Gustavo Borges, and the 800 freestyle members were Wouda, Rodney VanTassell, Brian Gunn, and Borges. GOLD MEDALISTS, ANYONE?: In addition to the tremendous swim- mers competing in the NCAA championships, the crowd this weekend was *'also a star-studded group. Olympic gold medalists in the house included former Michigan standout and 200-meter breaststroke world record holder Mike Barrowman, 100-butterfly world record holder Pablo Morales (Stanford), 100-backstroke world record holder and 400 medley relay gold medalist Jeff Rouse (Stanford), 1984 and 1988 diving gold medalist in both the springboard and platform events Greg Lougainis, and 1984 100 freestyle champion Rowdy Gaines (Auburn). Both Gaines and Lougainis were working for CBS in the broadcast booth. U TANKERS FINISH STRONG: Third-day surge cements second place for Blue AP PHOTO Sophomore Marcel Wouda swims the breaststroke during his 400-yard individual medley. Wouda won two races at the NCAA championships. SWIMMING Continued from page 1 freestyle. Marcel Wouda, who had already claimed the 500 free individual title and placed second in the 400 individual medley, put in a solid race breaking the Michigan record by more than 18 seconds. Texas' Matt Hooper took the race out quickly, but Wouda started to catch him and eventually passed Hooper in the final 250. "It was a good race," Wouda said. "Jon told me to swim not for a time but for the win. Hooper went out so fast that I never thought I would be able to catch him. I divided my race into three 500's, and I tried to accelerate each 500. After 6-700, I felt that the gap was getting smaller." Wouda's performances left him as the top individual swim- ming scorer at the meet with 57 points. Miami diver Dean Panaro, who was named Diver of the Year, tied Wouda in individual scoring. The final night also saw senior Eric Wunderlich and sophomore Gustavo Borges take individual titles. Wunderlich had been battling an illness for the' first two days of the meet but came back to take the 200 breaststroke. It was a victory that Wunderlich really wanted after his second-place finish in the 100 breaststroke. "It really didn't hit me until after I was warming down," Wunderlich said. "I was excited to turn around and see '1' next to my name. I just didn't expect it; I don't know why. I think part of it was because of Olympic Trials last year. I had to deal with disappointment twice. Yesterday, I thought I was coming down with the flu. Mike (Barrowman) really calmed me down." In the 100 free, Borges was able to defend his NCAA title. He finished fifth in the 50 free, and third in the 200 before Saturday's 100. His 42.91 time was .16 seconds faster than individual event. I was a little nervous going in. I didn't want to have him to catch me and have Brian go in down." Both Gunn and VanTassell provided Michigan with indiv- idual points. Gunn finished second in the 200 butterfly and fifth in the 500 free. VanTassell made the finals in the 200 free and made the consolation finals in the 500. 'It was a good race. (Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek) told me to swim not for a time but for the win. Hooper went out so fast that I never thought I would be able to catch him. I divided my race into three 500's, and I tried to accelerate each 500. After 6-700, I felt that the gap was getting smaller.' - Marcel Wouda Wolverines at the NCAAs, finished fifth and sixth, respectively. "I thought they did a fantastic job," Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball said. "I'm really pleased at what they did." "It was my first time at nationals and I just wanted to final," Sanchez said. "I was kind of disappointed with the prelims but I was pleased with my final three dives." In the end, it Stanford's depth allowed them to score a decisive victory. The Cardinal won only three individual titles, one fewer than the Wolverines, but they had enough depth in each event to get multiple finalists. Their depth also led them to three relay victories. The pressure of winning back-to-back championships and the fact that it was the year after the Olympics had Stanford coach Skip Kenney worried. However, the victory was never in doubt. "It's much harder to repeat," Kenney said. "I thought it would be difficult to get these kids up from an Olympic year. So this is sweet." The most impressive indiv- idual performance of the meet was put in by Florida's Greg Burgess. Burgess, the silver medalist in the 200-meter IM at the Olympics, set American and U.S. Open records in both the 200-yard IM (1:43.52) and the 400 IM (3:41.54). "I just try to sit back on the first half and let the other people do the swimming for me," Burgess said. "After the 100,I do my strategy which is doing the breaststroke real hard and then the freestyle. No one could keep up with me." David Fox of N.C. State, who set the NCAA meet record in the 200. "I wanted to win again," Borges said. "I wanted to race again to win this year and I did it." The other Wolverine national championship was in the 800 free relay of Wouda, Rodney Van- Tassell, Brian Gunn, and Borges. The relay victory in the final event on Friday night allowed the Wolverines to regain their confidence and make up for the disqualification in Friday's 200 medley relay and the non-scoring 200 free relay. "Gustavo and I have been talking about this all year," VanTassell said. "I felt really good. I had a little lead going in. The guy I went in with was Dan Kanner. He'd beaten me in the Other Wolverines that pro- vided points to the second place finish were Royce Sharp, Eric Namesnik, and Tom Hay. Sharp finished third in the 200 back- stroke, where he set a new Big Ten record, and fourth in the 400 Individual medley (IM). Name- snik finished third in the 400 IM. "I was happy with (my 200 back)," Sharp said. "It was my best time. I'm not that good of a yard swimmer, so to be that close to these guys who can swim sprint and go 47 low in the 100 back. I go 48 low. It was good to be in there. I was only .3 off." The Michigan divers after two days of subpar scores on springboard came back with a strong night on platform. Abel Sanchez and Eric Lesser, the only two divers for the Here are the final top 20 team scores from this weekend: 1. Stanford 2. Michigan 3. Texas 4. Arizona 5. UCLA 6. Auburn 7. California 8. Tennessee . Florida °0. SMU 520.5 396 326 263 260 215 175 170 157.5 148.5 11. Minnesota 137.5 12. Miami 13. USC 135 129.5 14. North Carolina 96 15. Georgia 16. Kansas 17. Iowa 18. Alabama 92 83 79 71.5 19. Arizona State 20. Nebraska 71 69 p U N Don't Miss This! 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