The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, February 28, 1994- 3 .Men's track surprises at Big Tens Freshmen shine as harriers capture first conference title in 14 years By EUGENE BOWEN FOR THE DAILY For the Michigan men's track team, the 83rd annual Big Ten Men's Indoor Track and Field Championships this weekend was a time for tears-tears of Ovictory and joy, that is. The track team hasn't won a Big Ten Indoor Championship since 1982. Over the years, the Wolverines have steadily declined, hitting an all-time low of 10th place in 1992. After their eighth-place performance last year, the team bounced back to take first place this year in Ann Arbor with 91 points. Ohio State took second place with a *score of 87 points, followed by Illinois (83). Freshman Kevin Sullivan won the 3,000 meter run Friday with an NCAA provisional qualifying time of 8:11.69, while fellow freshman Neil Gardner finished fourth in the long jump with a distance of 7.60 meters. That same day, the four-man team of Nick Karfanta, Trinity Townsend, .Matt Schroeder and Scott MacDonald won the distance medley relay with a time of 9:57.49. Two Michigan run- ners, sophomore Sean Clancy and se- nior Brian Smith, finished the pentath- lon in fifth and eighth place, respec- tively. Thanks to these showings, the Wol- verines held a commanding, 26-point lead heading into Saturday's events. It was a lead they would never give up. Saturday, Sullivan won the one- mile run with a time of 4:04.74, an NCAA provisional qualifying time, 'l.ile MacDonald finished third with 4;07.56. Marko Koers of Illinois, who led through most of the run, tired down the stretch and finished second. Both Sullivan and MacDonald said they felt stronger on Saturday's run than in Friday's trial run. This is re- *flected in their performances, as MacDonald cut more than four seconds offc:his trial time, and Sullivan chopped almost six from his previous run. Michigan also had a strong show- ing in the high jump. "People don'tjump that well at Big Tens," sophomore Jon Royce said. "It's due to too much nervous energy." None of that nervous energy could be found in Royce, however, who won *the event after jumping a whopping x.19 meters, placing him as an NCAA provisional qualifier. Michigan's Ben Ludka jumped 2.09 meters, tying him for second with five other competitors. Freshman Neil Gardner, who fin- ished first in the trial run of the 55- meter high hurdles, came in second in Michigan's Jon Royce attempts to clear 7-feet, 4 1/4 inches. He missed, but jumped 7-feet 2 1/4 inches earlier. RYAN HERRINGTON The R. H. Factor Oympic coverage subpar from any view r the fourth consecutive February, I decided to spend my vacation at home in Connecticut, recuperating from the stress and strain of idterms and recharging for the final months of the semester. Since it usually turns out to be the coldest seven days of the year or winter storm Helen dumps a metric ton of the white stuff the first day I return, I planned the usual house-bound itinerary. Nothing too strenuous, mind you. Merely spend some time with the folks, have a few home- cooked meals and basically see about as much activity as a snow plow in San Diego. While in the past I would spend most of my 168 hours at home looking at the sorry New England weather and wishing I was instead soaking up the sun on a golf course in Florida, I was actually looking forward to being "trapped" indoors for the week. After all, the friendly administrators at Michigan were such visionaries when they decided to schedule spring break during the same time the rest of the country is celebrating the Winter Olympics. (No matter what calendar you use, February has never been considered springtime.) Thus, with Sports Illustrated's preview issue in one hand and the remote control in the other, I eagerly accepted the opportunity to "share a moment with the world." Well, afterwatching way too many Norwegians freeze their buns off on Lillehammer's main drag - the Storgata - and far too many hours of Greg Gumbel trying to look pretty in his dopey-looking sweater vests, I'd just like to say that the world can have it's moment back. The 17th Winter Olympiad was about as memorable as The Chevy Chase Show. How sad is it that the only really enjoyable thing about the entire event was watching David Letterman's Mom, Dorothy, capture the hearts of the entire late-night viewing audience with her gripping interviews of American Olympic champions. ("Hi David!") For starters, the television coverage provided by CBS was even more disappointing than seeing the Buffalo Bills appear in the Super Bowl again. I hoped to be riveted by the drama of this quadrennial spectacle. Instead all I got was a remedy for my insomnia. With one or two headline events each evening, CBS constantly teased viewers with tantalizing promos, only to finally show the anticlimactic "big" event at 10:35 when half of America had already fallen asleep on the couch. Thanks, Greg. In the meantime, all one saw between 8 and 10 were features on everything from the Norway's rampant troll problem to American troops in the Arctic Circle. If you were lucky, you actually got to see some half- day old Olympic action between- 10 and 10:35, the outcome of which you already found out about on the CBS evening news. Thanks, Connie. (Just an aside - when did the International Olympic Committee make it a requirement for each athlete to have at least one major tragedy happen to an immediate family member in order to participate in the Winter Olympics? It seemed that every medal winner had overcome something horrible making his or her achievement "that much more meaningful." The only escape from this triumph over tragedy clause seemed to be for the 1,000 or so athletes who had birthdays during the Games. Since my big day is in December, I have decided to forego trying to be a member of the 4 x 7.5 km biathlon relay team in 1998 out of fear that it will cause my brother to develop some rare form of cancer. I'm just looking out for my family.) And if the coverage of CBS weren't bad enough, you could tune into TNT for its nauseating five hours in the afternoon. You know there's a problem when the two studio hosts aren't even on the same continent as the actual event their hosting. Thanks, Nick and Fred. Actually, TNT had a chance to show many of the events live but due to See HERRINGTON, Page 8 that event with a time of 7.37 seconds. Gardner's performance was an im- provement over his trial run time of 7.46 seconds. The victories weren't over for the Wolverines, however, as Karfontawon 'People don't jump that well at Big Tens. It's due to too much nervous energy.' Jon Royce Michigan track team the 800-meter run, with a time of 1:52.67. Sophomore Todd Burnham kept up the pace in the 400 meter dash. He came in third with a time of 48.70 seconds. Townsend came in third in the 600- meter run with a time of 1:19.15. The winner of this event, Minnesota senior Norris Williams, tied the Big Ten meet record he set one day earlier at the trials with a time of 1:18.08. It was after these showings that problems started to arise for Michigan. First off, no Wolverines qualified for the shot put, the 55 meter dash or the 200 meter dash. The winner of the 200- meterdash, Ohio State'sChris Nelloms, set a Big Ten meet record and became an NCAA automatic qualifier with a time of 21.07. Michigan's Toby Van Pelt came in fifth place in the pole vault with a height of 5.25 meters. Although this was Van Pelt's personal best, it wasn't enough to overcome winnerMarkBuse of Indiana, whose vault of 5.50 meters gave him first place and a spot in the NCAA championship meet. Gardner, who tasted from the cup of victory, was to also sip from the river of sorrow as he finished in fourth place in the long jump, and then finished a non-scoring seventh in the triple jump with a distance of 14.81 meters. Gardner, although chagrined, wasn't totally disappointed by these results, as various external factors con- tributed to these lowerscores. He wasn't originally expected to participate in the triple jump. After sophomore Winfield Pollidore injured himself last week, Gardner, the only other member of the team with any triple jump experience, filled his shoes. Also, Gardner was given little recuperation time, as the three events in which he participated overlapped. Sullivan finished anon-scoring sev- enth in the 5,000 meter run with a time of 14:49.17. Michigan's 4 x 400-meter relay team finished a non-scoring eighth with a time of 3:27.13, despite a gutsy per- formance by junior Felman Malveaux, who was slowed by tendon injuries in his left foot. Illinois set a Big Ten meet record and became an NCAA provisional qualifier with a time of 3:09.32. Much of the credit for the Michigan victory must be given to head coach Jack Harvey, who works to focus his team more on the Big Ten meet than on the NCAA championships, to be held in two weeks. "(The victory) has been great be- cause it's been so long," Harvey said. "We thought, coming into the meet, we had a chance to do it, but you never know. We thought it was going to be a much closer meet and a lower-scoring meet than it actually turned out to be." Royce credits new freshmen blood for adding some spice to the team's life. He gives special credit to Gardner and Sullivan foradding much-needed points to the team's score. The freshmen com- bined to score 22 points - nearly tying last year's team total of 26 points. Read the Daily INCOME TAXES STUDENTS 1/2 OFF! FED & ANY STATE 769-3031 REG $50 work o BRITAIN & IRELAND- student exchange employment program campus presentation speakers from London and Dublin Tuesday March 1, 4:00pm - 5:30pm International Center. & display/info table 10:00am - 4:00pm Student Union visit sponsored by University of Michigan ncmarionid Center (614) -242-6101 tiTM sit " SI it's more than Summer it's Boulder * Enjoy the relaxed, comfortable atmosphere of the Boulder campus * Choose from over 500 courses * Select from five-, eight-, and ten-week terms or intensive courses Have time to work, travel, or just have fun Plan now to make the Summer of 1994 a Boulder one! Term A: June 6-July 8 Term C: June 6-July 29 Term B: July 12-August 12 Term D: June 6-August 12 Shorter, intensive courses also available. Call or write for your free CU-Boulder Summer Session Catalog. (303) 492-2456 Office of Admissions -Regent Administrative Center 125 - Campus Box 30 University of Colorado at Boulder - Boulder, CO 80309-0030 UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER Yes, send me the free 1994 CU-Boulder Summer Session Catalog. Name ,.. '>.z