8 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 14, 1994 'M' track ends stellar season Women take seventh place at NCAA Championships The Finish Lines 01 By DOUG STEVENS DAILY SPORTS WRITER INDIANAPOLIS -For the Michigan women's track and field team, winning the Big Ten title was its mission. Anything beyond that would be an added bonus. This week- end, the Wolverines went to the NCAA Championships, to conclude, in style, a season which has brought the program both national respect and a conference title. Michigan put the finishing touches on its championship season, finishing seventh in the nation with 23 points. Louisiana State won the title with 48 points. Fourrunners achieved All-Ameri- can status in individual events, and the distance medley relay team lived up to its No. 1 seed by running away with the national championship. Perhaps the biggest surprise of the weekend came from Karen Harvey in the mile run. Harvey came into the meet unsure of herself. After achiev- ing a personal best time of 4:45.30 in the preliminaries and narrowly quali- fying for the finals, she improved on her performance by running a strong 4:44.56, good enough for eighth in the nation and All-American status. Courtney Babcock were the second and third seeds, respectively. However, after leading the pack during the fourth kilometer, Babcock stumbled and lost her balance. As a result, she had to settle for fourth. "I don't think I got bumped," Babcock said. "I was just too close to the rail and stepped on it a couple of times and couldn't regain my balance. So I stepped off the track." McClimon also did not run her best in the 5000 as she came through with a fifth place finish. "I was happy to score. I was a little disappointed with my overall perfor- mance, but you can't run your best every time," McClimon said. In the distance medley relay, Babcock and McClimon had a great opportunity to forget about the disappointment of the 5000 by capturing the national title. The relay team, which also included Kristine Westerby and Richelle Webb, lived up to its top-seed, winning by a com- fortable five second margin. "This win definitely makes up for what happened yesterday (in the 5000)," McClimon said. In the high jump, Linda Stuck and Monika Black finished 10th and 11th, respectively. Although they both jumped at levels consistent with what they had been doing most of the season, the fact that they didn't rise to the next level in the NCAAs was a definite source of disappointment. In the 200 meters, Tearza Johnson came in fourth place in her prelimi- nary with a time of 24.78, failing to qualify for the final. "Tearza, Black and Stuck all came in and competed well for being in their first national meet," assistant coach Patty Davis said. Distance medley relay passes Alabama, Hoyas, wins NCAA title Westerby "I wanted to make the finals," Harvey said. "I didn't believe in myself at first but since I had a personal best in the heat, I figured I had nothing to lose in the final." Like Harvey, Chris Szabo also achieved All-American status. After having her preliminary race canceled on Friday, Szabo ran at a relaxed and conservative pace before finishing strongly in the last half-mile to place sixth. "Itbettered my mentality andmade me more confident only having to race once," Szabo said. The 5000 meters didn't go as well as expected forthe Wolverines. Going intp the race, Molly McClimon and By BRIAN SKLAR DAILY SPORTS WRITER INDIANAPOLIS - For two Michigan distance medley relay team members, it was a happy end to their indoor careers. For the other two, it was an honor that they will carry into next season. But for the entire dis- tance medley team, its win at the NCAA Indoor Championships at the HoosierDome Saturday was an inspi- rational effort. The champion medley team, com- prised of Kristine Westerby, Richelle Webb, Molly McClimon and Courtney Babcock - as well as the other Wolverines representing the Michigan women's track and field team at the championships - com- peted with the thought of assistant coach Mike McGuire on their minds. McGuire, a former Michigan track standout, left the team in Indianapolis on Friday with news that his father had passed away. "We wanted to win for Mike since he wasn't here," Westerby said. "We had a lot of motivation." The team was also motivated to win in order to prove that their top seed in the meet was deserved. Com- ing off disappointing finishes in the 5,000 meter run on. Friday, some people considered Babcock and McClimon overrated. "Some people thought me and Courtney choked (in the 5,000)," McClimon said. "But we proved that we're the best relay team in the coun- try." The team finished with a comfort- able lead. Its time of 11:08.60 was nearly five seconds faster than run- ner-up Georgetown. However, the team did not have this comfort zone for most of the race. From the onset of the event, the Wolverines battled for the lead with Georgetown and Alabama. Westerby, who ran the first leg, knew the impor- tance of starting off strong for the team. "I just wanted to get us in good position," Westerby said. "If we didn't have at least the third or fourth posi- tion, then it would be over." Westerby finished the 800-meter leg in third place, handing off to Webb, who ran the 400-meter leg. Webb, though, was not nervous about start- ing in third place. "I wasn't worried too much about time," Westerby said. "I knew if I ran smart the people behind me would do their jobs." McClimon, the third member of the team, ran the 1,200 meter leg and maintained the team's third place po- sition. Even though she was not "as fresh as when (the team) qualified," she was confident that the team would win the event. "I knew if I handed off near the lead, Courtney would be able to take care of the rest," McClimon said. Babcock received the baton from McClimon with the 1600-meter leg of the heat to go. She immediately passed Vicky Lynch of Alabama and eventually caught up to Georgetown's Joline Staeheli to take the lead for good. "I just tried to pick it up gradually and close on the leaders," Babcock said. "I kept pretending everyone was on my heels. We really wanted to win this one." PRINTING HIGHQUALITY LOW PRICES d% is bWUM Atd*rft Courtney Babcock takes Men's track finishes 16th at NCAA, meet, By ELISA SNEED DAILY SPORTS WRITER INDIANAPOLIS - Six mem- bers of the Big Ten champion Michigan men's track team quali- fied at various meets throughout the season for the NCAA Champion- ships. This weekend at the Hoosier Dome, in front of a crowd of 17,954, they got to compete with the best in the nation. "It was a really great experience knowing that you're competing against the best,"juniorNick Karfonta said of his first trip to the two-day meet. Friday, freshman Neil Gardner ran in the preliminaries and semi-finals of the 55-meter hurdles but missed qualifying for the final heat. His times of 7.43 seconds in the prelims and 7.47 in the semis were both slower than his NCAA qualifying time of 7.28. Robert Foster, the Fresno State senior who went on to win the event, posted a time of 7.11 - the fastest mark by a collegiate runner this season. Gardner indicated that part of the problem may have been that he wasn't quite ready when he ran. "My only thought is that they held us a bit long around the back before we came out," he said. "When we get out we're just ready to go and we didn't really have a chance to warm up. Sophomore Jon Royce also com- peted Friday, finishing a non-scor- ing ninth in the finals of the men's high jump. Royce's best jump this season came at the Central Colle- giate Championships when he cleared the bar at 7' 3 1/4". This weekend however, Royce did not fare as well, jumping only 7' 1 3/4" before faulting out at 7' 3". Royce did receive All-American honors, though. The top eight finish- ers in an event are automatically All- Americans, but in the high jump, one of the athletes was not an American citizen which meant he could not re- JOE WESTRATE/Daily the baton from teammate Molly McClimon. ceive the accolade. That put Royce among the top-eight Americans in the event. The winner of the event was Randy Jenkins from Tennessee, whojumped 7' 7". While the first day of competition ended with Michigan scoreless, the second day did bring some success to the Wolverines. Kevin Sullivan improved on his time in the mile prelims, running 4:00.83. It was only enough for a third-place finish behind second- place Providence's Andrew Keith (4:00.55) and Arkansas' Niall Bruton (3:59.34), who celebrated by slowing down to almost a walk at the finish line, and then running a victory lap. "It bothered me a little," Sullivan said of Bruton's behavior following the event. "He won the national cham- pionship, so it's acceptable for him to be excited, but the victory lap and all the commotion really were not called for." The distance medly relay team of Karfonta, sophomore Trinity Townsend, Scott MacDonald and Sullivan also finished third (9:41.15) behind Arkansas, who posted a new world record (9:31.17), and Seton Hall (9:38.97). "We competed real well," Sullivan said. "We were never out of it. We were always in the pack." MacDonald, Michigan's only meet veteran, added that inexperience may have affected them. "We didn't quite get it together like before," he said. "We didn't re- ally have much experience ... it's a really new experience running in a national championship." Despite holding the world record prior to this weekend's- meet, the members of the team said that they didn't feel any pressure to win. "Arkansas hadn't run a good race yet, so we sort of knew they'd be the team to beat," MacDonald said. "A. lot of people were watching us, though." "There wasn't really any pressure because Arkansas was the favorite," he said. "We had the best time, but we were considered underdogs." Even though they finished tied for 16th, the team's positive attitude has it looking ahead. "Wejust came out to run as hard as we could," Townsend said. "We'll be back next year, and the year after that." Michigan men have bright future By TOM SEELEY DAILY SPORTS WRITER INDIANAPOLIS - Confident, young, hugely talented and successful. Sound like the Fab Five? Well, it is, but it's not what you're thinking. This group of talented youngsters meets the above criteria, but they've never even touched a basketball, or any ball for that matter. Trinity Townsend, Jon Royce, Neil Gardner, Scott MacDonald and Kevin Sullivan are the men's track team's quintet of the future. Granted, only two of them are freshmen and you don't really think@ "recruiting hype," when someone says track and field. But together they are the ones who will lead the Wolver- ines to any promised land that they might see in upcoming years. Two weeks ago, these five led the team to its first Big Ten title since 1982,and their success has surprised everyone, including their coach. "We knew they were good," Wol- verine coach Jack Harvey said. "But we weren't sure how good." Townsend - the 600-meter cham- pion at the Central Collegiate meet- is the most charismatic of the group and has been trying all year to establish a new, looser atmosphere for the team. "People don't highlight personality in track and field," he said. "Basketball players have personality, it's time for track to have personality." Royce, on the other hand, tends to let his actions speak for themselves, and this year the sophomore's actions have been talking up a storm. The Chelsea native won the high jump at both the Big Ten and Central Collegiate meets and claimed Athlete of the Year honors at the latter. Gardner is the young colt from Jamaica's fair shores, who despite injuries, stepped in and placed high in the long and triple jumps and the 55- meter hurdles in key meets - events where the team had no one else. Gardner'spotential is huge.Inhigh school, his personal best performances in the long and triple jumps would have been good enough to win him Big Ten titles in the events. As important asTownsend, Royce and Gardner are, the future success of the team lies in the hands of two young men who you might recognize by the distinctive tattoos that they sport on their right thighs. Red maple leafs with gold 'M's in the middle adorn the legs of sophomore Scott MacDonald and freshman Kevin Sullivan. The Canadian pair are the best distance combination that the Big Ten has seen in quite some time. Last year, the soft spoken MacDonald, who also has been slowed by injuries this year, won the mile at Indoor Big Tens and was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. MacDonald echoed Townsend's belief that a new atmosphere has been a major contributor to their success. "We've got a better team attitude," he said. "At Big Tens, everyone wase looking around after they ran to see where their teammates were. That's the kindof team that wins championships." Sullivan has had a year that most can only dream of. In two collegiate seasons- cross country and indoor track - he is two- for-two in Athlete of the Year awards. "Even before the season, I considered myself to be the best (distance runner) in the conference," Sullivan said. He may come off as cocky, but after running in the 1993 World Championships before even getting to college, he has good reason to be sure of himself. It's difficult not to agree with Gardner when he said that "this is the beginning of a long, long season of victories for Michigan." And with a Big Ten title already in hand, they can consider themselves the most successful group of Michigan youngsters ever. Sweat. Anxiety. Time ticking away... Now consider a more pleasant dream: KAPLAN gives you insights into the test and the minds of the test- makers. Kaplan helps raise your score. Kaplan helps improve your chances of getting into the law school of your choice. Kaplan wants to help prevent the nightmare by giving you an edge on the competition. Our Total Training for the LSAT gives you the reasoning skills and the test-taking techniques you need to score high. A - - m m - POLICE PboR YOUR FOR YOUR -.'+ t i ,,,, I I I