12 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 20, 1996 In subpar season for Blue harriers, Barber misses NCAAs by a hair By Afshin Mohamadi Daily Sports Writer When senior Jen Barber left the race course in Champaign on Saturday, her five- year career with the Michigan women's cross country team and one-year stint as its captain was over. "I thought to myself, 'Well, there's always indoor (track) season,'" Barber said. "Then I real- ized that I'm not going to run indoor this year. It was kind of sad." In her last meet as a Wolverine, Barber tried her best to lead the young Michigan team to the NCAA championships, but the squad fell short Bar r with a fourth-place finish in the NCAA District IV qualifying meet. Despite the disappointing conclusion to the season, Barber is has few ill feelings about her career. "I'm over the emotional part now," she said. "I'm coming away with a really good feeling." In her five years at Michigan, Barber was never the team's most talented runner. Even this year - one dominated by freshman and sophomores - Barber consistently finished behind four or five of the younger runners in races. Barber said that once she realized that, to be a true leader, she did not need to be the best runner on the team, she became a better captain. "I was intimidated by the role at first," Barber said. "I tried to run in the front during practice. Soon, I realized that (being captain) is not about being fast; it's about being a leader. "I realized I should have been leading from the middle of the pack." As she became more comfortable with the role of captain, Barber found that her duties did not only deal with the technical part of cross country; they dealt with emotions, as well. "Trying to encourage people (is impor- tant)," Barber said. "You need to be there for people. You need to try to set an example for them, more in attitude (than in racing)." That the Wolverines were not as strong this year as in seasons past made Barber's job even tougher. She had to try to pull together a team in which many of the runners were competing at the collegiate level for the first time. However, the challenges she faced did not deter Barber. In fact, she said that she gained knowledge this year that she hadn't in her first four seasons. "This was such a learning year for every- one," Barber said. "I learned when things weren't going as well as they had in years past that we are human, and we do have to work hard." Regardless of the team's finish, Barber said that she has enjoyed this season, mostly because of Wolverines' youth. "We had a bunch of new faces this year," Barber said. "I enjoy new people. It's been a lot of fun (because) everybody was really enthusiastic." While this is the first time in her career that the Wolverines did not go the NCAAs, Barber said that the bad, as well as the good, is what has made her grow as a person. "There have been a lot of ups and downs (in my career)," Barber said. "That has made me a stronger person." Freshman Akard qualifies for NCAA championship Maintaining the eight-year tradition of NCAA championship appearances for the entire Michigan women's cross country team is a responsibility that will fall square- ly on the shoulders of a single Wolverine. it was determined Monday that Marcie Akard's eighth-place finish at the District Invitational Saturday in Champaign was strong enough for her to qualify individual- ly for the national meet in Tuscon, Ariz., on Monday. Akard is only a redshirt freshman, but her relative inexperience is offset by a talent beyond her years. She has been performing particularly well .recently, garnering Freshman of the Year Akard will have to compete against a field of the nation's 184 best runners, but Michigan coach Mike McGuire is confident that she will respond to the challenge. "If she continues to race (as she has been), she'll have a strong performance," McGuire said. Akard will continue to practice this weck with some supportive teammates in order to prepare, but McGuire said he isn't going to pressure her about finishing at a particular place in the competitive field. "We haven't really figured out a number yet," McGuire said. "Rather, our thinking is 'Let's just go in and compete the way we've been doing and see what happens when everything's said and done"' Chris Farah honors at the weeks ago. Big Ten championships three ,Ipr= 00 , COTSONIKA Continued from Page 10 Cooper said. "I'll tell you that." Big players. Big plays. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr knows it all too well. "We've been very successful against Ohio State because of big plays," Carr said. "We just happened to have things bounce our way, and we made things happen." Michigan always seems to have the advantage in this one. The Wolverines' national prominence always seems to attract big players. But this year, no team in the country has a bigger player than Ohio State. We're talking about Orlando Pace, who is named after a city, and who might as well be named after a conti- nent, because he is so darn big. Pace is 6-foot-6, 320 pounds. Maybe. He might be even bigger. His weight might even equal the SAT score needed to be admitted to Ohio State. They say his hobbies are fishing in Lake Erie, which is apparently the same place he has to go to take a bath. Big players? Geez. He could play line. The whole thing. In fact, people are talking about giv- ing him the Heisman. That's not because Cooper insists that Pace, an offensive lineman, is the best college football player in the nation and that he should be treated the same as skill players. It's because Heisman officials are afraid that if they don't give Pace the Heisman, he'll come and take it. Really, who'd stop him? That would be like telling him to stop eating. Pace can do it all, and that might provide for some big plays Saturday. "He is a tremendous player, on both sides of the ball," Carr said. "Orlando Pace, should he have chosen to play defense, would be an all-conference defensive tackle." So will Pace be the man to step up this year? Can Pace turn the tide for Ohio State instead of create tides with his mass? That will depend on people like William Carr, Glen Steele and their buddies. Believe me, these gentlemen are not small. And judging from the past, they might be big enough. Big game. Big players. Big plays. The winner's big men will have come up big. If it's Pace, though, hide the Heisman. He might be hungry. - Nicholas J Cotsonika can be reached over e-mail at cotsonik @ umich.edu. HOLTZ Continued from Page 10 again and again that it was his decision to go. He started thinking about it last February, and quickly put the idea out of his mind. But as the season began, he thought once again that maybe it was time to leave. He went to athletic director Mike Wadsworth three weeks ago and told him to start looking for a new coach, and Wadsworth asked him to reconsider. He did, but told him a week later that his mind was made up. The details were finalized Monday.. "When I told the athletes that I had every intention of being here, that was sincere," Holtz said. "Sometimes situa- tions change. I just feel it's the right thing to do." The university wanted Holtz back next year, Wadsworth said. "The university intended to go in the same direction," he said. "We felt the football program was going extremely well. We felt very confident with it in Lou's hands." Holtz told his players before Monday's practice. Even though most of the team expected him to leave, hearing him say the actual words was a shock, senior linebacker Bert Berry said. "I thought he would finish his career here," Berry said. "It was a response I wasn't quite ready to hear. It's a sad day, there's a lot of sadness and disappoint- ment." Watching the players' faces as he told Read SPORTSMonday ONLY IN THE DAILY. I I I I NFAN ONLY SPECIAL. 97 RATEu WESTERVILLE/COLUMBUS $e 1-270 and State Route 3 +TAX I Exit 29 per night fl Call Today for Reservations! N (614) 8900426 U *Good Only at Westerville Knights Inn GO MICHIGAN! Smm m m m ooo ooo ioE them might have been the hardest part for Holtz. Junior cornerback Allen Rossum said there were a lot of bowed heads as Holtz spoke, and when the coach read his resignation statement at the news conference, Berry buried his head in his hands. Though Holtz joked about the players throwing a party, he expected there to be some disappointment. He just didn't expect this much. "That makes me sad," lie said, his voice dropping just a bit. "I expected indifference. What I got was a strong reaction, an emotional reaction. That's my main concern right now." Holtz said he thinks his players will feel differently once a new coach is named. There are fewer than six poten- tial candidates, and Wadsworth and the Rev. William Beauchamp, the universi- ty's executive vice president, said they are in the process of seeing if those peo- ple are interested. Barnett released a statement yesterday saying he isn't sure. "Once I have had time to fully consid-* er my options, I will let them know of my decision as to whether I wish to be con- sidered for the job," the statement read. Holtz won't have any say in the selec- tion, but said he hopes it would be one of his assistants, specifically Davie. The players hope it's Davie, too, Berry said. While they respect Barnett and what he's done at Northwestern, they know Davie better, he said. "He'd make for a smoother transi-0 tion," Berry said. "He and coach IHoltz have the same type of style." MORRISON Continued from Page 10 gested that his team needs to be more patient on offense, sometimes taking an extra step before shooting. The next weekend Michigan host-@ ed Ohio State. After failing on sever- al scoring opportunities during the game, Botterill finally converted midway through the third period. After the game, the left wing talked about his goal. "Early on in the season, and even tonight, I was rushing it. I'd get the puck right away, and I'd just shoot it," Botterill said. "It was actually Morrison who told me just to be more patient up there. And luckily it* paid off for me. "It was a good move by Morrison to tell me that." As important as that type of lead- ership is, though, Morrison knows that good advice won't be enough. "I just think that I have to do more ta help out the team right now. Games like (against Bowling Green) where we need to come up with a big goal and give the team a boost - I just don't feel that I have really been doing that to help the team." As for whether Mor-rison is feel- ing any pressure fromnbeing one of the preseason favorites for the Hobey Baker Award - given annu- ally to college hockey's best player, and for which Morrison has been a finalist each of the last two seasons - Botterill doesn't think so. "He's the type of player who's go# a quiet intensity to him on the ice," Botterill said. "But away froni there he's got a quiet demeanor to him. I don't think that stuff really affects him. "All his life he's been known as the star player on the team. So he's learned how to deflect that attention pretty well:' FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29 & SAURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 M ICH IGAN Friday, November 29 Michigan vs. Minnesota # 4:30 pm Michigan State vs. Wisconsin *8:00pm Saturday, November 30 Michigan vs. Wisconsin 4:30 pm Michigan State vs. Minnesota # 8:00pm Read the Daily. Sports. Arts. News. UW r' - , ,