12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 25, 1997 Men's tennis railroaded by Boilermakers, drops close one to Illinois, By John Friedberg Daily Sports Writer In 1938, Franklin Roosevelt was two years into his first term in office, there were only 48 states in the union, and the Michigan men's tennis team lost to Purdue for the first time. In 1997, Bill Clinton has started his second term as President, Americans are hopeful about the prospects of peace in the Middle East, and the Michigan men's tennis team lost to Purdue for the second time. The Boilermakers (2-1 Big Ten, 10-3 overall) eeked out a 4-3 victory, Sunday over the injury-plagued Wolverines (0-2 Big Ten, 2-9 over- all). The defeat completed a disap- pointing weekend for Michigan. The Wolverines fell, 6-1, on Saturday to No. II Illinois (2-1 Big Ten, 9-5 overall). "I was more disappointed after the Illinois match," Michigan assistant coach Dan Goldberg said. "We had some injuries both days, but we did- n't play our best against the Illini." Indeed, Michigan had its hands full with Illinois. Only Brad McFarlane was able to capture a point for the Wolverines. McFarlane, who played in the No. 6 spot against the Illini, defeated- Illinois' Jeff Laski, 6-0, 6-4. But even McFarlane's victory came at a price, as the freshman sustained a sprained ankle. Other than that, Illinois swept the doubles matches and the rest of the singles matches to win, 6-1. No.1 Cary Franklin of Illinois took a hard- fought, three-set match against Michigan's David Paradzik, 2-6, 7-5, 6-3. The only other three-set match was the No. 2 singles duel. Michigan's We Matt Wright took the first set nu is in a tiebreaker, 7-6 (7-4), over didn't pia Gavin Sontag of Illinois. Sontag, against b however, won the second, 6-0, and took the Assistant third in a closel fought tiebreak- er, 7-6 (7-4). The rest of the singles matches each lasted two sets. No. 3 Jerry Turek of Illinois defeated Arvid Swan, 6-3, 6-4. No. 4 Oliver Freelove Id o 3y beat Will Farah, 6-3, 6-0, and No. 5 Jakub Teply handled Miki Pusztai, 6- 3, 6-3. Illinois S some swept the dou- bles matches ) dayS to take the Y 0 doubles point f our best and secure its margin of vic- e IMini." tory. McFarlane's - Dan Goldberg ankle injury lichigan tennis did not stop coach him from play- ing a close match Sunday. He finally succumbed to Purdue's Jerad Harbaugh, 7-6, 6-4. That match was typical of Michigan's day: good effort, injury and loss. "The guys who played against Purdue did a great job," Goldberg said. "We were a bit short handed this weekend, but the guys who competed should take pride in their efforts." The teams split the six singles matches, and the Boilermakers swept the three doubles matches to earn the final point in their historic 4-3 victo- ry. Michigan was not without its high- lights Sunday, however. Paradzik was able to salvage his weekend with a 4- 6, 6-4, 6-1 win over Cris James. Paradzik was not the only Wolverine to overcome a set deficit against the Boilermakers. Pusztai, who moved up to No. 4 singles against Purdue, beat Greg Wessenberg, 0-6, 6-1, 6-1. All of the singles players except for Paradzik moved up a spot in the absence of the GRADUATION, w w Sunfire $400 Bucks of Incentive* Hot Looks Great Performance -9! Land Big Job Raises Summer Home iS Some Other Car ~- i Zero Incentive s26 Drives Like a Shoebox Looks Like a Shoebox Interview After Interview Working Two Jobs r9 t Living Back With Parents I 1 Join Bowling Team im- Borina .- Dullsville ta- Miss injured Matt Wright. Wright was able to compete in the No. 2 doubles, but was held out of singles competi- tion. Farah gained a split for himself over the weekend, taking a straight- set victory over Derek Myers, 6-4, 6- 4. Swan was not so lucky when he moved up to No. 2, falling to Jamie Gordon, 6-3, 7-6. Michigan's John Long was forced into singles duty at the No. 6 spot Sunday. Long had the most convinc- ing win of the day for Michigan, whipping Purdue's Tushaar Gautam, 6-2, 6-2. Long was forced to play due to the absence of sophomore Jake Raiton and the continued back problems that have slowed junior Brook Blain's sea- son. SEMIS Continued from Page 10 The matchup in the national semifi- nals will pit the Sioux against Colorado College, two opponents from the same conference. "At least we know there will be a WCHA team in the championship game," Blais said. The Tigers had a much tougher road to the semifinals than the other three teams. Colorado College was one of the last teams to get into the tournament - as evidenced by its No. 6 seed in the East Regional, but victories over No. 3 seed New Hampshire and top-seeded Clarkson earned a repeat trip to the national stage. Against Clarkson, the Tigers jumped out to a 5-1 lead only to see that advan tage dissolve into a 5-4 nail-biter. Buts survival was the final result, and Colorado College gets one more shot at North Dakota. "It's a pleasure to be back" Colorado College coach Don Lucia said. "Especially for this team compared to where we were a month ago. We were certainly a team that had to play our way in - not only to the final four, but the NCAA tournament itself." Lucia knows the source of his team'$ improbable run - senior netminder Judd Lambert. "It's amazing how smart you get as a coach when your goaltender is on top of his game," Lucia said. "And Lambert certainly is. He's got a lot of experience. I think he's up to a 10-I career record in the playoffs now. And he couldn't get hotter at a more appropriate time." ARKANSAS Continued from Page 10 Since breaking out of a season-long slump with a career-high 26 points against Northwestern March 5, Taylor has averaged 16.8 points in the last five games. He also has been taking the ball stronger to the basket and making moves in the post that he has been capa- ble of all season long. So, on paper, it looks like little could stop this Michigan juggernaut. Welt, Arkansas will be more than willing to give it a try. Employing his patented. "40 minutes of hell" pressure defense, Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson could very well give Michigan fits. The Wolverines have had trouble responding to pressure against teams like Iowa and Indiana. Now, against a more athletic Arkansas bunch, handling that pressure will be even more difficult. The Razorbacks got to New York sim- ilar to the way Michigan did, by winning three games on their home court - a 101-75 blowout of Northern Arizona, followed by a 76-71 decision over Pittsburgh and then an 86-73 victory over UNLV in the quarterfinals. Guard Pat Bradley has paced Arkansas in those games with a 19 point-per-game average. During the reg* ular season, Bradley led the Southeastern Conference in 3-point field-goal percentage. Bradley's backcourt partner, light- ning-quick sophomore Kareem Reid, will undoubtedly be pumped up playing in front of his hometown fans. Reid has averaged 7.7 assists per game in the tourney. TENNIS. Continued from Page 1. Weggenman and Danielle Lund, swept past their opponents to identically raise their records to 8-3 overall and 3-1 in the Big Ten. The doubles play, which featured only freshmen on two of the three teams, was even more impressive than the singles. Jen Boylan and Weggenman improved to 8-3 overall in doubles play, while thei p 4-1 conference record equals the marks of the Cyganiak-Moon and Lund-Hart combinations. "They bring a lot of enthusiasm and experience" Ritt said. "Even though they're freshmen, they have a lot of Pvwi-:i ha - t.c" Nobel Prizes ", r Fvr,+nr" ten} :rm-- Rrinfi irr3 tar, Rltcc i