The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 11. 1996 - 5B indoor season finale letdown for men and women runners By Kim Hart For the Daily The Michigan men's and women's indoor track seasons came to an end ts past weekend at the NCAA In- door Track and Field Championships. Courtney Babcock and Monika Black of the women's team and Neil Gardner and the distance medley re- lay team, consisting of Trinity Townsend, Jeff Wood, Scott MacDonald and Kevin Sullivan of the men's team represented Michigan at the championships.. Opening day looked promising for both groups. The preliminary heats f4 the running events called on Courtney Babcock and Neil Gardner to pull both teams up in the standings. Courtney Babcock finished first in NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships heat one of the 3,000-meter run with a time of 9:27.38. The time was a season best for Babcock and guaran- teed her a spot in the finals. Babcock was looking to repeat as an NCAA champion (1994 distance medley re- lay),, but she finished fifth overall with a time of 9:13.84. Neil Gardner finished sixth in his heat in the 55 high hurdle preliminar- ies with a time of 7.46 seconds. The finish qualified him for the semifinals in which, with a time of 8.01 seconds, Gardner grabbed sixth place. The time did not qualify him for the finals. Monika Black finished the high jump in a tie for 11th place with Rainia Turner of Kentucky with a jump of 5-feet-8 1/2 inches. The top finisher in the high jump was Najuma Fletcher of Pittsburgh who cleared 6- feet-0 3/4 inches. The senior men of the distance med- ley relay team finished second behind Nebraska with a time of 9:32.28. Overall, the Michigan women ended the indoor season in an eight-way tie for 33rd place with 34 points. The NCAA champion was Louisiana State University for the fourth year in a row with a total of 52 points. The men finished in a three-way tie for 31st place with a total of eight points. George Mason finished first with 39 points. Michigan runner Kevin Sullivan paced the distance medley team of Scott MacDonald, Trinity Townsend and Jeff Wood to a second-place finish at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships in Indianapolis Saturday. TANYA BROAD/Daily 'M' women gymasts fall to Bulldogs No. 7 Wolverines come within a half-point of upending top-ranked Georgia I By Nancy Berger Daily Sports Waiter Judging from Georgia's deep-rooted gymnastics his- tory, the Lady Bulldogs probably have taken a lot more bites out of their opponents than McG2ffthe Crime Dog has taken out of crime. The Michigan women's gymnastics team found out } Saturday night at Cliff Keen Arena that Georgia's bite Slives upto its fierce bark. The No,-I Lady Bulldogs (I11- 1) edged No. 7 Michigan (13-6), 196.85-196.425, as the k sellout crowd of 1,841 watched Georgia take a bite out 3.:~ of the Wolverines' 47-meet home winning streak. Michigan wasn't as con- eem edabout Georg ia's tough______ f *growl and national reputa- tion as they were about turn- E eryon ing in some of their own im- pressive performances U OS n uog "Most ofall, Ijust wanted -w to make it a competition," r Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "I really didn't antici- our upsflon pate a win, but Iam proud of the kids for hanging in and Michigan making it a meet." Michigan not only barked just as loud as the Bulldogs but also took an even larger bite out ofthe school record book. The Wolverines set an all-time team record on the floor exercise with 49.45 paints and tied the school record of 49.2 on the uneven bars. Michigan's score on the uneven bars was highlighted by the fact that it came within .05 of a point of the country's top uneven bars lineup. If competing against the best gymnasts on bars wasn't WALKER VANDYKE/Daily enough for the Wolverines, their intimidating opponents Michigan tied a team record of 49.2 on the uneven bars Saturday. are also ranked first in the vault. Georgia freshman Karin m I Lichey became the first gymnast in NCAA history to score a perfect 40.0 in the all-around in a meet against Kentucky. A Michigan gymnast would probably be thrilled with achieving such perfection, but the Wolverines are con- tent with their score and would gladly take their perfor- mance against Georgia anyday. "It is a really good confidence booster," Michigan freshman Lisa Simes said. "When you have more people doing things, it starts getting exciting. The excitement has already reached sen ior co-captain Wendy Marshall,, who is currently ranked 10th nation- ally in the all-around. Marshall c onti nues to break t S , all of her career-highs in each ha tevent, including the all- around, which she has set this s. We season. Saturday night, Marshall received her sixth perfect 10 on the vault and n recorded personal bests on the floor exercise (9.95) and all- Beth Amelkovich around (39.6). vomen's gymnast Simes and fellow fresh- man Kathy Burke seem to have also caught the excite- ment bug as each have stepped up and have begun to assume larger roles for the team. Coming off a stress fracture in her shin, Simes recorded a personal-best 39.4 in the all-around and tied for first on the uneven bars (9.9). Burke set a career record in the all-around with a 38.9. With five gymnasts in the lineup, Michigan's early season injury troubles seem to be behind them. "Things are really coming together for us," Michigan freshman Beth Amelkovich said. "Everyone has their ups and downs, we definitely want to have our ups now." If their meet with Georgia is any indication, Michigan seems to be on the up and up. "We have had a couple down meets but it .hasn't ruined our hopes," Simes said. WALKER VANDYKE/Daily The No. 7 Wolverines ended their spring break with a. close loss against top-ranked Georgia. ,. x 1