Women's Swimming NCAA Championships Thursday, all day Indianapolis S Men's Basketball vs. Pepperdine Thursday, 8:08 p.m. (CBS) Wichita, Kan. 'M' rugby squad uses D.C. trip to prepare By RAVI GOPAL DAILY SPORTS WRITER The Michigan men's rugby team's trip to the St. Patrick's Day Invita- tional in Washington, D.C. this past weekend served its purpose well - to give the team a chance to prepare for the rigors of the regular season. The club team, the defending Michigan Cup junior club champi- ons, posted a 1-2 record in the tourna- ment, as did its younger counterpart, the college team. The club team lost to the Wash- ington B Club team, 20-8. The Wol- verines came back to defeat the host Washington Irish, 12-10, before bow- ing out of the tournament with a tough loss to Severn River, 5-3. The collegiate squad lost to the Eastern Pennsylvania Selects, a team comprised of rugby All-Stars, by a score of 20-5. A 17-3 win over Towson State and a loss to Princeton, 20-12, ended its tournament run. Michigan's won-loss record overshadows the fact that it played against outstanding competition throughout the tournament. The Washington B team has gone to the national tournament three of the last five years, and Princeton is a mem- ber of the notoriously tough Ivy League. 'The conditions didn't suit us. We have a lot of speed and mobility.' - Tom Warburton Michigan rugby player "Ivy League teams are tradition- ally some of the best teams," said Mark Nemec, a graduate student, who is a fly-half on the club team. The conditions didn't suit the Wolverines' game either. Since Michigan is more of a finesse team, a dry field with clear skies would suit it well. However, its playing ground in D.C. was far from perfect. "We played in ankle deep mud," sophomore Mike Springs said. These sloppy conditions hampered the Wolverine attack, and thus didn't allow them to take advantage of their quickness, club president Tom Warburton said. "The conditions didn't suit us," he said. "We have a lot of speed and mobility." On the club team, Warburton cited the play of Nemec and Mike Carter. Carter, an M.B.A. student, and Nemec See RUGBY, Page 1 Pelinka's dream still vivid Former cager remembers 1989 championship run FILE PHOTO/Daily Former Michigan point guard Rumeal Robinson gets ready to drain the two free throws that sunk Seton Hall in the 1989 NCAA championship game. By TIM RARDIN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER When former Michigan basket- ball player Rob Pelinka was a kid, there was one thing he loved to do. One thing, more than anything else, he looked forward to with the free- flowing, unadul- The terated excite- Thement that only a Victors' kid with dreams can. Run "The thing I can remember most about (the NCAA tourna- ment) is when I was a little kid growing up in Chicago, I used to, like a lot of kids at this time of year, always turn on the TV and watch the games," Pelinka said. "Year in and year out, after the championship game, they run a piece where they kind of show highlights of the whole tournament and they play it to 'One Shining Mo- ment' or some song like that. That was my favorite thing in the whole year. "I liked that more than Christmas." Never in his life, though, not even when he arrived to play at Michigan in the Fall of 1988, did Pelinka expect he'd go to the Final Four. Never did he expect to see himself on that same goosebump-hatching highlight reel. But that all changed very quickly, when the Wolverines captured the 1989 national title - the first in school history - his freshman year. "That championship is so dream- like that it's like it's not there," said Pelinka, who is now a law student at Michigan. "It'sjustadream, it's some- thing that I replay in my head. I think the best thing to do is to just dream about it." Still, even when the regular season had ended that year, he didn't anticipate his dream becoming a reality. In fact, not many people, includ- ing the Wolverines, thought they would get to Seattle for the NCAA Final Four, much less win the cham- pionship. A 16-point loss to Illinois at home in the last game of the season left behind a host of doubts about how good this team was, and left Michigan in third place in the Big Ten. Like an innocent child, no one quite knew what to expect from these Wolverines. "I remember our last game of the regular season, we played Illinois," Pelinka recalled. "We got spanked by like 30 points at home on senior day. We wanted to win it for Glen (Rice), so that was a big game and we just got killed. I don't think any of us thought we'd be in Seattle. We had a good team, but I don't think any of us really thought we'd go all the way." That loss, coupled with the ensu- ing resignation of coach Bill Frieder - who took the head job at Arizona State - left the Wolverines in disar- ray just before the tournament began. Assistant coach Steve Fisher was pro- moted for the tournament, though Michigan basketball great Cazzie Russell's name was tossed around as a possibility. They were unsure of themselves and they were unsure of their coach, but the sudden change in coaches sparked a much-needed change in the team's attitude. "I think out of any bad situation like that where you lose your head coach, I think some good can come out," Pelinka said. "At first, it really caught us by surprise. I think the change was really refreshing for all of the players, just because it was kind of like starting the season all over again. It really rejuvenated everybody. "I can remember we were all in the locker room and Loy Vaught, who was kind of the team prankster, walked in before practice one night - I think it was before the pairings show. He said, 'Guys, Frieds just took the job at Arizona State. He broke out on us.' We were like, yeah, funny Loy, good try. Then they flashed something on TV, and in comes Bo Schembechler, with his trench coat - it was raining - he had a hat on, and an umbrella, so like, Bo. "He kind of laid it on us, and said, 'I want a Michigan man coaching the Michigan team. Steve Fisher's gonna be your coach and I want you guys to go out and show the country that you're a Michigan team.' It was defi- nitely a huge surprise but it was also very refreshing. I think that was one reason why we did so well was be- cause it was like a fresh start." Indeed, what at first spelled doom for Michigan eventually spelled relief. The Wolverines drew a No. 3 seed in the Southeast Regional in Atlanta, and climbed their way through the first three games of the tournament, includ- ing a thrilling 92-87 victory over North Carolina in Lexington, Ky. A 102-65 dismantling of Virginia launched Michigan - interim coach and all - into the Final Four, setting up a rematch with the Fighting Illini, who had uprooted their confidence just a few weeks earlier, and who had beaten the Wolverines both times they met in the regular season. This semifinal would leave plenty sleepless in Seattle, but Sean Higgins' baseline jumper at the buzzer exacted revenge on Illinois, and catapulted his team into the final game against Seton Hall. Regulation ended in that game with the Wolverines and Pirates tied at 71. Junior Rumeal Robinson stepped to the line with three seconds left in overtime, and Michigan down one. "I was just thinking he's gotta be the most nervous person in the whole world," Pelinka recalled. "We had had a game earlier that season at Wis- consin where Rumeal had missed. We were down one, and he missed 'I don't think any of us thought we'd be in Seattle. We had a good team, but I don't think any of us really thought we'd go all the way.' - Rob Pelinka Member of 1989 NCAA basketball champions both free throws with like 3 seconds left on the clock, and we lost. After that game, he and coach Fisher made a commitment to stay after practice 0 and shoot extra free throws. He had kind of promised the team after the Wisconsin game that nothing like that would ever happen again. "I felt like Rumeal was a pretty cool customer. I felt good about it, said a prayer, and the rest is history." Robinson - a dismal 50-plus per- cent free-throw shooter - made them both, Michigan won its first-ever na- tionalchampionship,80-7,andPelinka saw his childhood dream come true. "I remember after we won the national championship, I was stand- ing next to Glen Rice or giving him a hug or something, and I was kind of thinking to myself, man, we're in that thing they're playing on TV right now," Pelinka fondly recalled. "It was just like a total dream. At that point to me, it was something I couldn't even really fully grasp. Be- ing on the court, dancing around, wearing a ring, cameras everywhere, people everywhere, just feeling like you're on top of the world. "It was more like I was a little kid watching that highlight all over again." Ahh, to be a kid again. Use your coin the way the Irish .womw a -_ _ i f p N i c y I I 1 14C 1 would, I 22r 1220 l Doors open at 7:00 a.m. 925 Touchdown Mugs for the first 25 customers *20g a wing all day *$3.25 pitcher green beer 9$5.00 pitcher Long Islands *Watch NCAA Tourna- ment on big screen outh University 665-7777 gmw ak r-M V ' c ,1AEPmt Night Wednesdays $1.00 off Pints of the "Best draft beer selection" in town 9:00pm-Close 338 S.State 996-9191 $2.99 Cheeseburger & Fries 1/3 lb of lean ground chuck, charbroiled and served on our homemade French Bread. 11:30am-3:00pm Stand Out In YOUR Next Presentation. MOUTH-WATERING k MOUTH-WATERING BARGAINS. ' i 1 .:. r° Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM RCQUETBALL k V F'T'T AT A 'U E'YWULYTT i I