6 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, April 10, 1995 SOFTBALL Continued from page 1 Wolverines off of the bases. "We're just hoping that we don't hit as many fly-balls into the wind," she said. "We're definitely going to change that. We want to hit on the ground more so that they have to make harder plays." Michigan was able to find defen- sive success as well. Iowa was kept off of the bases for most of the day, with its lone run coming off of two sacrifice bunts in the fifth inning. Freshman Sara Griffin earned her 10th win, tallying two strikeouts and allowing only four hits. That Wolverine victory was fol- lowed up by an extra-inning mara- thon in which neither team could find the plate until Iowa came up big, scoring three runs in the top of the 14th. In what was described by the score- keeper as "windy/freezing" condi- tions, the two teams carried a score- less battle through 13 innings. Since Iowa played the game as the visiting team, they had the opportunity to score three runs in the top of the inning. The Wolverines were unable to catch the Hawkeyes, finishing the game with three straight groundouts. Kovach and Griffin split time on the mound, with Kovach striking out five and Griffin striking out seven. However, Griffin's efforts weren't enough to prevent her from picking up her fourth loss. Michigan is now in the midst of a small slump, losing four of its last five games. However, team members are keeping an upbeat outlook on the season. "It's not going to matter who our losses were to," Kovach said. "It's important, but it's just like any other Big Ten game, and we realize that." second green jacket TONYA BROAD/Daily The Michigan softball team dropped three of four to Iowa this weekend, including a 14-Inning marathon yesterday. AUGUSTA, Ga (AP) - As the final putt fell making him Masters champion, Ben Crenshaw curled into a knot of emotion, holding his head and thinking thoughts of Harvey Penick, his trusted teacher who died just a week earlier. "I let it all go,"' Crenshaw said. "I couldn't hold it in any longer." Everything that Crenshaw had bottled up inside himself since Penick died last Sunday, a week after giving Crenshaw one last putting lesson, poured out on the 18th green after Crenshaw tapped in the 18-inch putt that gave him a one-stroke victory over Davis Love III. "It was like someone put their hand on my shoulder and guided me through," Crenshaw said about his final-round 68 Sunday. "I believe in fate. Fate has decided another cham- pion like it has so many times be- fore." Fate and an absolutely brilliant putting touch that tamed the slick, dangerous greens of Augusta National Golf Club. Not once over the 72 holes did Crenshaw three-putt on the steeply contoured greens groomed to table- top speed for the Masters. His 14-under-par 274 was three better than Greg Norman and Jay Haas and five better than David Frost and Steve Elkington. As his final putt dropped on the last green, Crenshaw bent over and clasped his head with both hands, overcome with emotion. "I had a 15th club in the bag today and that was Harvey - Harvey Penick," Crenshaw said, the green jacket of the Masters champion look- ing comical over his patterned golf shirt. "I don't know how I got through the week, I really don't know," he said. "It was an emotional week. This place charges me up like nothing." It was a slam-bam finish after the day started with 12 players within four strokes of Crenshaw and third- round co-leader Brian Henninger. And it all turned, as always, on the tricky back nine at Augusta. The crunching blow came at No. 16 when, with Love safely in the clubhouse at 13-under, Crenshaw hit a brilliant 6-iron shot that showed great knowledge of the course, hitting well right of the hole on the par-3 and curling down the slope to within three feet. It was like someone put their hand on my shoulder and guided me through." -Ben Crenshaw Upon winning the Masters one week after the death of his coach, Harvey Penick * He knocked it in for the birdie that put him at 14-under and rode that exceptional sequence to a 12-footer for birdie at No. 17. "I played it like a dream," Crenshaw said about No. 17. "It was a killer 9-iron and the prettiest putt I ever hit. I'll never forget 16 and 17 as long as I live." He played No. 18 safely and made* a bogey. "I really don't thinkthere was any stopping Ben," said Love, who quali- fied for the Masters by winning in New Orleans last week. "He was driven. He was charged and obvi- ously he is one of the greatest putters ever.' It was the second Masters title for the 43-year-old Texan, who won in@ 1984 and also has finished second twice and in the top 10 seven other times, certain proof he is one of the game'4 best putters. Crenshaw, who went to Austin, Texas, Wednesday for Penick's fu- neral, saw the famed 90-year-old teacher a week before he died. "I had one last lesson with Harvey," Crenshaw said earlier in0 the tournament. "He said, 'Can you please get a putter and show me how you're stroking that ball?' And he said, 'Now, I want you to take two good practice strokes and then trust yourself and don't let that club get past your hands in the stroke." No course requires more nerve, touch and confidence with the putter than Augusta National. Crenshaw mastered it brilliantly. "You have to admire somebody who flies back to Texas to be at Harvey Penick's funeral and to be apall bearer and then come backs here," Norman said. "I think that is the strengthof his character." 'M' spikers trample and get tr ampled By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer It was a sweet and sour weekend for theMichigan men's volleyball team at Cliff Keen Arena. Friday night the Wolverines swept Michigan State, 15-6, 15-11, 15-4. However, the following night at the same place, Michigan fizzled against Western Michigan - the Broncos filled in after Notre Dame cancelled. Western Michigan pre- vailed, 15-8, 4-15, 17-16, 15-12, in adisappointing and emotionless per- formance by the Wolverines. "I don't think everyone came in with the same attitude (against West- emMichigan)as they did against Michi- gan State," Michigan coach Jennifer Slosar said. "Especially after the sec- ond game, when we blocked and served them off the court. "It was a lack of consistency and a serious lack of focus." Michigan couldn't have focused any harder against the Spartans. Maybe it was Michigan State's "1995 Big Ten Volleyball Champion" practice T-shirts that got the Wolver- ines fired up for the match. Perhaps it was the fact that the National Championships are com- ing up this week, and the team wanted as much momentum as pos- sible. Or maybe Michigan desperately wanted to beat its intrastate rivals for the third time this season, tying the season series. Whatever the motivation was, the Wolverines used it to their advantage, jumping to a quick 7-0lead. Michigan grabbed five of the seven points on its serve, highlighted by Brad Yeager's three blocks. The last one brought out the Wol- verines' emotion, and this fire lasted for the rest of the match. The Spartans made a run of their own, cutting Michigan's lead to 8- 5. Midwestern Volleyball Associa- tion tournament MVP Chip Popa had a key kill for Michigan State in its only bright spot of the opening game. However, the Spartans weren't able to catch the Wolver- ines in the first game. Michigan's only shaky part of the contest was at the beginning of the second game when it looked as if the Spartans could turn the match into another grueling five-game event. Twice before this season, Michi- gan and Michigan State dueled to the final game. And after the Spar- tans took the first three points of the game and had an early 6-1 advan- tage, it seemed as though the match would be heading in that direction again. But the Wolverines were fired-up, and this time no deficit would be too large to make up. "We're used to fighting," Slosar said. "I never giveuponourteam at all. We could be down as much as 14-5, but we still are fighting." Once again, Yeager was a huge part of Michigan's turnaround. Themiddle blocker, along with outside hitter Gun Unluer, brought the Wolverines back. Yeager struck with a consecutive kill and block that woke up Michigan, and Unluer contributed with a power- ful kill and two straight aces that tied the game at 9-9. Yeager completed the comeback with an ace that gave the Wolverines their first lead of the game and from there, Michigan cruised to victory. The Wolverines' match against Western Michigan was a disappoint- ment. However, it may have been a blessing indisguise. "Losing to Western may have, in fact, been good for us," Slosar said. "It is going to refocus us and get us ready going into the nationals." 01 It's One Of The Most Useful Credit Cards On The Planet. Unless You've Stolen It. Your MasterCard is stolen. You panic.You get angry.You panic some more. Then you call and cancel it. Now the thief is in pc )ssession of, r/ oh, about seven cents worth of stolen plastic. (Maybe he can use it as a coaster when he entertains at the hideout.) So relax. You only have to pay for stuff that you bought, and you can even get a new card ' the next day.* It'll be accepted at millions of locations, one of 1 i " Eons-,' I