SPORTSMonday Trivia When was the last time a No. 3 seed won the NCAA men's basketball tournament? (Answer, page 2) Abe Atiigan &idg NI '0 ND Y Inside SPORTSMonday M Sports Calendar Athlete of the Week The RH.Factor Basketball Hockey Women's Basketball Men's Gymnastics Track NCAA tournament bracket 2 2 3 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 A Men's gymnastics squeaks by Illinois-Chicago in final home meet ever By AARON BURNS DAILY SPORTS WRITER In the midst of his floor exercise Saturday night at the Michigan Invitational, Michigan gymnast Bob Young stared wide-eyed into the crowd and whispered to himself, "Whoa, momma!" It was that kind of night for the Wolver- ines, whose program is scheduled to be dropped at the end of this season. Team members received plaques and a standing ovation in a moving pre-meet cer- emony which honored them as they took the floor for the final time at Cliff Keen Arena. They then proceeded to coast through a solid display of gymnastics in the first five events, pulling away from the other seven teams and easing toward a new school record. But then on the horizontal bar, one of their stronger events, the roof caved in. Scoring only 45.65 points, the Wolverines (281.8) not only fell short of the school record, they barely eked out a victory over Illinois-Chi- cago (281.35). The Wolverines needed a 46.1 on the hori- zontal bar to equal the school record which they set last week at Ohio State. So coach Bob Darden decided to play it safe. He instructed his men to execute simple routines, not the more intricate ones that some of them had planned. Unfortunately, his plan backfired. Michigan struggled through the event as Royce Toni (7.6), Seth Rubin (8.6) and Raul Molina (8.15) all had breaks in their routines. Molina said Darden should have let him do the routine he had practiced all week, even though it is more difficult than the one he attempted. "I begged him to do it because I felt more comfortable with it," Molina said. "I told him, 'I'm not gonna miss.'... I wasn't mentally prepared for the routine he told me to do." Darden said he was guilty of over-coaching. "I asked them for just their normal best on the horizontal bar ... and that might have been changing gears too abruptly," he said. Molina said that in a pressure-packed situa- tion, coaches should let their athletes go for it. "We came in feeling ready to give every- thing we had, but Darden didn't let us do that on the horizontal bar," he said. "It may be risky (to do a more difficult routine), but that's what gymnastics is all about." Toni said that nerves were definitely a factor, and not only on the horizontal bar. "From the very beginning of the meet, receiving the plaques, getting the standing ovation and knowing that fifty years (of Michi- gan men's gymnastics) would be thrown out the window, I was a bundle of nerves," he said. Kris Klinger, whose 9.75 on the horizontal bar almost rekindled Michigan's hopes for breaking the record, said the team could smell the record through the first five events. "Going into the horizontal bar, the coaches said, 'We need this certain score to get the school record.' That put a little pressure on us, but I hope that's not our excuse," he said. Still, the Wolverines did win the meet. Illinois (275.8), Temple (275), Syracuse (272.95), Michigan State (272.5), Western Michigan (270.4), and Kent State (267.5) all finished well behind Michigan and Illinois- Chicago. "We did well. I'm proud," Klinger said. "We are, without a doubt, Big Ten con- tenders," Toni said, looking ahead to the Big See GYMNASTICS, Page 9 Blue gets third seed in Midwest for tourney run By RACHEL BACHMAN *DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER When the NCAA tournament brackets flashed on the TV in Crisler Arena's lounge, few were surprised by Michigan's draw. The Wolverines were named the No. 3 seed in the Midwest Regional, and will face No. 14 Pepperdine Thursday in the first round. The game will take place at the Kansas Coliseum Wichita, Kan. The starting time had not been determined at press time. "We got about what I thought and anticipated we would get," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "The last couple years we've had some immense The NCAA tournament success (in the bracket is on page 10. tournament) and we are looking forward to trying to have that same kind of run on Thursday." Besides Michigan, the lower half of the Midwest bracket includes No. 2 Massachusetts, No. 6 Texas and No. 7 St. Louis, among others. Should the Wolverines beat Pepperdine in the first round, they would face either Texas or Western Kentucky in the second round. "From what I saw of Texas, they're on a huge long win streak, and Western Kentucky is very, very good," Fisher said. The No. 1 seeds are Arkansas in the Midwest Region, Missouri in the West, North Carolina in the East and Big Ten champion Purdue in the Southeast. The tournament seedings were a welcome diversion for the Wolverines after they finished the season with their worst losing spell in 1993-94, a streak in which they dropped three of four. After falling to Wisconsin March 2, Michigan lost to Purdue and Northwestern the following week. "Truthfully, I'm not frustrated at all," Michigan center Juwan Howard said. "I'm disappointed with our perfor- mance the last four games. "(The Purdue game) disappointed me, because I knew that was my championship right there," Howard said. Team co-captains Howard and senior Jason Bossard said that a team meeting was held after the Northwestern game. Its purpose, according to Bossard, was to give every player a chance to voice his concerns about the team. "Coach Fisher decided we needed to talk about some things we needed to correct," Bossard said. He said the 90- minute meeting was "positive. I walked into the lockerroom today and it was a different atmosphere," Bossard said. Fisher said that in team meetings, "most of the time, See TOURNEY, Page 4 'Cats play the soier Wolverines blow chance at Big Ten title with 97-93 loss By CHAD A. SAFRAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER EVANSTON - It was supposed to be simple. Beat Northwestern Saturday and Michigan would have at least a piece of the Big Ten title. Then, move on to the NCAA tournament with at least a No. 2 seed. However, something happened on the way to the land of 64. The eighth- ranked Wolverines lost to the Wild- cats, 97-93 in an overtime thriller before a sellout crowd of 8,117 at Welsh-Ryan Arena. The loss dropped Michigan from a probable No. 2 seed to a No. 3. For the Wildcats (5-13 Big Ten, 14-13 overall), the victory produced their first winning record in 11 sea- sons and earned them a bid to the National Invitational Tournament. The Wolverines (13-5, 21-7) were just lucky to earn a chance in the extra session. Trailing by two, 79-77, Juwan Howard connected on 1-of-2 from the free throw line, cutting the North- western lead to one. The Wildcats' Kevin Rankin had an opportunity to put his team up three but made only one of his attempts from the charity stripe. Michigan had a chance. And as usual Jalen Rose made the most of what was there. The junior swingman hit a leaning, two-foot jumper for an 80-80 game, reviving the chance to win the conference crown. "I felt we had them in regulation," said Northwestern's Pat Baldwin, who was one of five Wildcat seniors play- ing their final home game. "We had to put them away in overtime." Northwestern began the overtime with a basket just 12 seconds into the extra five minutes. Cedric Neloms, who scored a season-high 28 points, dropped in a short layup off a pass from Rankin, one of the 6-foot-11 center's nine assists on the day. Neloms repeatedly found himself with uncontested layups. When a Michigan defender decided that he might want to stop the senior forward from scoring, Nelloms took advan- tage of his free throw chances, hitting 12 of 16. "Ced's a lot quicker than their post players," Rankin said. Wildcat guard Todd Leslie called the basket a turning point in the game. While that may have been one of the contest's several turning points, no basket was bigger than a Rankin trey, just his 10th in 27 tries this season, with 4:04 remaining in OT. The field goal gave Northwestern the lead, 85- 84 - a lead it would not relinquish. Yet, Michigan did not close the game without openings to cut its defict or stop it from growing. Rose helped the Wolverines get within three, 91- 88. It was the closest Michigan would come to Northwestern for the final 1:54 of the game. All the Wolverines needed was a strong defensive stand and they could jump back into the fray. Baldwin stopped that goal shortwhen he canned a three with just seconds left onathe 35-second shot clock, giving the Cats a six-point bulge. See 'CATS, Page 4 JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Michigan's Ray Jackson is stuffed by Northwestern's Dewey Williams in Saturday's 97-93 Wildcats win. The loss put the Wolverines out of the Big Ten title race. icers survive Friday scare, sweep Kent State The Shark bites back By ANTOINE PITTS DAILY HOCKEY WRITER The playoffs have finally begun. After clinching the CCHA title Feb. 11, the Michigan hockey team finished the season losing four of its last six games as it waited for the postseason to begin. The Wolverines (31-6-1 overall) defeated Kent State (6-22-2), 10-3, Saturday to complete a sweep of the CCHA first round series at Yost Ice Arena. Michigan received a scare Fri- day - having to go to overtime in the series opener to top the Golden Flashes, 5-4. Michigan dominated Kent from the start of Saturday's game, scoring early and often, to take the best-of- three series. "We got the early goals," Michi- gan coach Red Berenson said. "We P-ot the momentum and nlaved with a "A couple of things we saw from our team early in the season, like the power play was a real factor in the game," Berenson said. "That gave us a jump start. I thought after that our team played well." Four more goals in the second period gave the Wolverines an 8-2 lead. Kevin Hilton, Brian Wiseman, Rick Willis and Ryan Sittler all tal- lied goals for Michigan. Following Wiseman's goal - a shot from between the circles - the Michigan captain sheathed his stick, a la golfer Chi Chi Rodriguez. "Not to put it in their face or any- thing - I don't want to be known as that type player," Wiseman said. "It was just a satisfaction thing. I worked hard out there that shift." Morrison scored his 19th of the year and Knuble his 32nd to conclude the scoring in the third period. By JAESON ROSENFELD DAILY HOCKEY WRITER The warning flags are up at college hockey arenas across the Midwest. It seems the frozen waters of the CCHA are no longer safe. It's the heart of shark season, and attack numbers are reaching record highs. A blue shark has been reported to prey on Spartans, Redskins and even on occasion open Flames. Not since Jaws has'a shark attacked with this ferocity, sending defensemen and forwards alike, from Saulte Sainte Marie to Kalamazoo, scurrying from the corners of rinks for safer ground. Opposing coaches plead for this dangerous beast to be put in an aquarium, and when he is, the ice is again safe. Rnnl y fr n min t,;.Q_ Left winger Rick Willis brings fierce physical play to Michigan having his best scoring season this year with eight goals and five assists. Yet Rick Willis doesn't always leave his marks on the score sheet. He leaves them on the bodies of opposing players. For his part, Willis is content with this role. His surprisingly easygoing nature off the ice allows him to shed his ego and be the consummate team player. "He gets along with everybody," captain Brian Wiseman said. "I don't know if anyone has ever gotten mad at the guy." Indeed, Willis is a study in contrasts. When the shark leaves the ice, it seems he turns into a dolphin "Off the ice, he's pretty laid back. He never raises a finger," Knuble said. "He's very happy go lucky, and he's always got a smile on his fa " Wnlu.inP Q.Qnnt nn I _ I