m-9 88 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - March 10, 1997 TRACK Gardner wins 55 hurdles at NCAAs Gardner grabs title; 'M' finishes 13th 'M' women left in dust at tourney Blue send three, have subpar showing By Kim Hart Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - "Under the big top" is a phrase associated with the circus, where lions, tigers and bears perform amazing tricks and humans with extraordinary talents perform daring feats. Five runners from the Michigan mdn's track team were "under the big top" at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis for the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships. The Wolverines and North Carolina finished in a tie for 13th place with 15 points. Arkansas was the team cham- pion, finishing with 59 points, fol- lowed by Auburn (27) and Iowa State, Georgia Tech and Oklahoma (25), which finished in a three-way tie for third. Michigan sent three runners to the preliminary rounds of the champi- onships. Neil Gardner began in the 55 meter hurdles, followed by Scott MacDonald and Don McLaughlin in the mile run. 1n the first heat of the 55 hurdles, the top competitor was Marcus Stokes (7.35), ranked second in the nation before the start of the championships. Gardner won the second heat with a time of 7.26 seconds. Big Ten champi- on and collegiate leader Reggie Torian from Wisconsin won the third heat. Torian has been clocked at 7.07 sec- onds but only needed to run a 7.27 to grab the heat. The semifinals pitted Stokes and Torian side by side in heat one. They got off to a fast start, but at the third hurdle, Torian hit the hurdle and tum- bled to the ground taking Stokes down with him. Many, including Gardner, watched the same thing happen two years in a row to Torian, who fell at last year's Big Tens. The door was suddenly open for Gardner. "I saw the whole thing," Gardner said. "My heart went out to him (Torian), and I couldn't get my mind focused on running, because I felt for him and I had a bad semifinal run." Jeremichael Williams from Clemson took the second heat with a time of 7.23 seconds. Gardner fol- lowed with a time of 7.25. NCAA rules did allow Stokes to compete in the finals of the event, but Stokes declined, leaving Gardner and Williams. Gardner took the lead early in the race. Gardner crossed the finish line in 7.18 seconds for the championship. "It's a tremendous feeling," Gardner said. "For four years, I have been try- ing to at least make it to the finals here, and every year ... I never even contributed to the team total because I never made it to the finals before." Don McLaughlin was up first in heat one of the men's mile and faced the challenge of running against the defending champion Julius Achon from George Mason. McLaughlin hung with the leaders for most of the race before slipping behind. He crossed the finish line in 4:05.9, fin- ishing sixth. Scott MacDonald came out strong in heat two and held the lead position early in the race. Shortly after the second lap, Bernard Lagat from Washington State passed MacDonald, who slowly drift- ed to the back of the pack. The pack was tight with only a 2.04-second dif- ference between Eastern Michigan's Ben Reese's winning time of 4:04.5 and MacDonald's eighth-place finish in 4:06.54. "We were just hoping one of those guys would make it to the finals," Michigan coach Jack Harvey said. "We debated on whether to run them in the mile and the distance medley relay. If they did well, it was a bonus, and if not they didn't make it, we had a little better chance in the distance medley." On the second day of competition, the distance medley relay team of MacDonald, Dwayne Fuqua, Jay Cantin and McLaughlin took to the track. The relay team, which qualified for the championships the previous weekend at the Silverston Invitational by running the third fastest time in the nation (9:39.47), ran its best race of the season last Saturday night. MacDonald started off in the 1,200- meter leg at the back of the pack and eventually pulled way ahead of the group. He handed off to Fuqua who was tight with Dorian Green from Illinois for most of the two laps of the second leg. Cantin was up next for the 800- meter leg and began in second place after the exchange. He slipped into third with two laps left. When McLaughlin stepped up for the final leg of the relay (1,600 meters), Michigan was fighting for position with Illinois. McLaughlin moved into third place with 2 1/2 laps to go and then slipped to fourth in the final stretch. Michigan clocked in at 9:36.05, good for fourth place and a spot on the award stand. "The DMR was great," Harvey said. "We knew if everybody ran they way they were capable of, we could be among the top three and we were very close." By Chris Farah Daily Sports Writer Pressure. It has inspired songs, deodorant commercials and nervous breakdowns. And now it seems to have infected the Michigan women's track team. As is customary with the nature of pressure, it also happened at the worst time and in the worst place - the NCAA championships in Indianapolis last weekend. The Wolverines managed to qualify only three athletes for nationals - sophomore Nicole Forrester in the high jump, junior Tania Longe in the triple jump and sophomore Marcy Akard in the 5,000-meter run. The Wolverines performed well as a team during the outdoor season, ulti- mately finishing third in the Big Ten championships behind Wisconsin. But success did not continue for them indi- vidually at the NCAAs. After placing second at the Big Tens, Forrester marred an otherwise almost perfect season record by tying for 12th place with a height of 5-foot-8 1/4. Akard also finished 12th in the 5,000 with a time of 17:02.46, while Longe placed 15th in her event by jumping a distance of 40-2 3/4. "Their performances were below expectations," Michigan c James Henry said. "NCAAs are their party as individuals, as opposed to the Big Tens, and they didn't dance. They were so much in awe of the other dancers that they didn't even go oul onto the floor. "I have to do a better job coaching them and preparing them to handle high-stress situations like these." Forrester said that, although nerve5 may have influenced her performs, her poor showing was due mostly te problems with her technique. "I wasn't that nervous," Forrester said. "Maybe I wasn't focusing enough, but I wasn't nervous. I just don't think I was thinking enough - there was a lot of sloppiness:' Michigan doesn't have time to dwell on the indoor season's outcome - the outdoor season is only two weeks away. "Through experience, we will become more successful," Henry said. "All of our kids are young, and a lot were on the bubble of qualifying for nationals. We're looking forward to the outdoor season. As the most balanced squad, we're expecting to be a top-three team in the Big Ten, and we're going to go for a championship." JEANNIE SERVAAS/Daily After a successful outdoor season, the Michigan women's track team did not live up to expectations at the NCAA championships in Indianapolis last weekend. Nicole Forrester, Tania Longe and Akard represented the Wolverines in Indianapolis. FORESTER Continued from Page 113 advantage in the high jump. After all, how hard could it be for someone taller than six feet to jump a height of 6-3 1/4, the winning height at nationals ? This kind of common logic is far from the truth, according to Forrester, and a quick scan of an average field of her competitors proves her right. She is usually a head taller than most other women high jumpers. "That's a stereotype," Forrester said. "Actually, it has nothing to do (with how tall I am), because every- one has a different style of jumping. I'm a power jumper, so a lot of my ability comes from the spring in my leg. I don't really have a high verti- cal. I don't really know what it is - just a knack that I have, an ability to get off the ground. "Actually, a lot of competitors that I'll go against are really short. Last year, me and (teammate) Monika Black were two totally different ends of the height spectrum, and yet we jumped around the same height." Forrester even goes as far as to say that her height can put her at a dis- advantage to her shorter opponents. "Sometimes, because I'm so tall, it might actually hinder me because there's so much leg," she said. "I'm working on my arch, because there's so much weight in my legs that it "That's how I ran into my old coach and started being trained by him. Back in Canada, people aren't really hired to coach for schools, they're hired for education and then they volunteer. But my coach turned causes me to hit the bar." It's not sur- prising that Forrester still has trouble with her jump- ing technique. As high jumpers go, she is some- what of a i $used to high jump, but I sucked at it horribly - Nicole Forrester Michigan high jumper on the. start of her career out to be really good and he helped me out. That's when I really started jumping." F o r r e s t e r started her freshman year of college at the University of Ottawa, but eventually transfer prodigy, without much actual experi- ence on her resume. The story of her discovery, three years ago, of her tal- ent in the high jump is like some- thing out of a Disney movie. "I used to high jump, but I sucked at it horribly," Forrester said. "I did a lot of other sports, too, and I just did track on the side. One time, I was working in McDonald's, and this guy who probably saw me high jump at a meet before came over and he was like, 'Do you high jump by any chance?' And I was like, 'Yeah, but I suck,' and he was like, 'Well, just give this guy a call and talk to him.' knew she would - Canadian universities don't award scholarships based on athletics. She transferred to Michigan for the winter semester of her first year, but adjusting in the middle of the school year was tough for her. "This was the hardest transfer of my entire life," Forrester said. "I came in January last year, and I did- n't know anyone. "Usually, when everyone comes in as a freshman, no one knows anyone, and you spend that first month get- ting to know everyone. But by the time January comes around, every- -I WHEN & WHERE. March 12, 7:30pm Ann Arbor Theater (H) WHAT.J Cardmembers get tw compli- mentary passes to a prerelease screening of Universal's block- buster Liar; Liar. HOW. Just bring the American Express*® Card or Optima® Card and your student ID to the location listed below to pick up your passes. NOW. If you're not yet a Cardmember and would like to take part in our exclusive previews, it's easy to apply for the Card. Just call 1-800-942-AMEX, ext. 4114. AETITOENT M MICHIGAN HOCKEY FANS! March 14& 15 one's got all their friends, so that was hard." Despite her initial proble, Forrester has adapted well to her new school and team. Staying in Ann Arbor to take classes and compete over the summer helped her .feel more comfortable at Michigan. ; "I like it here - I made a really excellent choice," Forrester said. "Spring term allowed me to meet a lot of other people, so I'm havino a ball right now. We're a really' se team this year. We hang out al the time, do a lot of bonding. I'm enjoy- ing this season a lot." Although she may be at ease with her environment, Forrester still seems to have trouble with the pres- sures of competition. While dealing with high expecta- tions established by an impressive freshman campaign, Forrester failed to even qualify for the finals at e 1996 outdoor Big Ten and NC tournaments. "I don't want to look back on last year," Forrester said. "Last year was horrible. I choked. I could write a book about choking. I was shaking and really nervous, and I started doubting myself." The experience of giving into pressure has helped her to mature, however. Although not in top' form, she did much better at the Big Tts and NCAAs this year, and Forrester feels that she will only get better - as long as she works on her form. "Now I'm taking little steps to take giant steps," Forrester said. "Last year, I went in with all these expectations that probably could have been fulfilled, but I put too much pressure on myself. I expect to win now. I know I'm going to win, so I just have fun with it. ) "But there's so much to improve, it's not funny. I started picking up bad habits this year - 1 lean going into my take-off, for example. There are big problems. When I reachmy maximum, then I'll stop." Forrester, however, hasn't gotten entirely over her performance anxi- ety problems - she still brings a teddy bear to all of Michiga's meets, for good luck, of course. "I just bring it. I don't know," Forrester laughed. "Just for warmth ... just to take it with me. I need it for traveling, because when I bv a hotel room I sleep with my' teddy bear, so that one comes with me wherever I go. I don't know how much I believe in luck anymore. I just do it from force of habit. "I do bring jumping beans to hold sometimes when I'm ready to cl- pete." Henry has been impressed by the progress Forrester has made sce she came to Michigan. Henry says she has the chance to be one of the nation's top high jumpers, despite some of the problems she's had in the past. "She came to us in January, so we didn't get a chance to do any typ f training, so we threw her rightie pond" Henry said. "It was like the analogy about throwing the frog in the pot and it's boiling hot. That frog will just jump out of that darn thing. Nicole did that on many occasions J IM CAREY MORE TO COME. Liar; Liar is one in a series of five major motion pictures to LIj ELI, R 4 GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS 4 HOT DOGS or 4 PIZZA SLICES 4 COKES buisrbttFul y !a Shutidl 313.311751