abe fichiganuati1g I "R. OY ti qSY. ,._ . .,. :.. .,.,.v.,, ,,.,: ! y r ".' ..'. .. ... ..:' ,. .. Piersma takes h Auburn runs away with its f By John Friedberg quite materialize." Daily Sports Writer Stanford, Georgia, Texas and VIINNEAPOLIS - Blonds really do Tennessee filled out the top five. The have more fun. hardest-fought competition was for fifth That old saying defined the 74th place, as Tennessee edged Southern Cal annual NCAA men's swimming and 235.5-235, for the hardware. diving championships, as blond-dyed Auburn dominated all three days, Auburn took home its first-ever title taking four of the five relays. The Tigers with 496.5 points. After the first day, won only one individual title - Brett the only question remaining was who Hawke in the 50-yard freestyle - but would fill out the top five. placed at least one swimmer in the For the first time since the 1991 sea- finals in all but four of the 13 individual son, the answer did not include the swimming events. Olverines, who finished the three-day The Tigers placed four swimmers in competition in seventh place with 209 the final of the 100 free taking second, points. third, fifth and sixth. Even diver Koffi "Coming into this meet, I figured in Kla managed eighth place in the plat-' my mind, (we would place) between form diving competition. eight and four," Michigan coach Jdn This is not to say that Michigan was Urbanchek said. without its highlights during the meet. "To be fourth place would be the ulti- Michigan senior captain John mate goal, and it would have had to Piersma waited three years to win his have been a perfect meet. But it didn't first NCAA individual title. It only took 'M' hitters tame Lions' roar By Tracy Sandier Daily Sports Writer It's Miller time. With the Michigan baseball team trailing Penn State, 4-3, sterday in the bottom of the seventh inning, catcher Andrew Millerstepped up to the plate with two men on base. Miller was planning to bunt the runners over, but a passed ball by Penn State pitcher Greg Arnold did the job for him, and Miller went to the plate swinging. He got a two-RBI single, starting an l1-run inning for the Wolverines (6-2 Big Ten, 16- 9 overall) and sparking them to a 14-4 victory over the Nittany Lions (0-4 in the Big Ten, 11-14 overall). "I was just trying to hit the ball hard somewhere, put the ball in play" Miller said. "I got a good pitch to hit and just drove it the middle. I just kind of broke things open for a big inning" e hit changed the tone of the game. "That was a great, big hit," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn said. "He was up there to bunt, and then we got the guys over on a passed ball, and then he got the base hit. That was big. He's a kid who'll go up there swinging. He did a great job behind the plate, and I'm happy to see that." The game started out a little shaky for Michigan, when start- ing pitcher Luke Bonner allowed three runs on six hits in three innings of work. Freshman Bryan Cranson came in for four See LIONS, Page 6B 4, P ~Y Michigan junior fo s hocked in the NC Lg Hs es AP PHOTO Ron Mercer (left) will need a repeat of his 20-point showing By Dan Stilman ~~m last year's title game if Kentucky hopes to knock off Daily Sports Writer ~tart Arizona in tonight NCAA championship game. ILWAUE *~lmention NCA~swillbe ahockey player Mi N C A ~ s will be aLegg. His eyes gi He struggles to f how he feels ab( defensive cat fight tives like "unbel Morrison wor INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Get the VCRs ready. The pace of Wolverine on Thi the NCAA title game promises to be so fast you might need to as one of the gri ,tch it in slow motion to catch it all. hockey. Friday, h Kentucky and Arizona are quick. No, they're quicker than vidual honor in that. Award - which The pressure won't be in trying to outstanding play repeat as national champion, Kentucky's To understand aim. And it won't be winning the crown name was finally for the first time, Arizona's goal. It will of Hobey Baker come tonight from defenses that live to Morrison and B force turnovers and create easy baskets. Hobart Amory "Our guys like fast-paced games," St. Paul's prepar Arizona coach Lute Olson said Sunday. "It's going to be like went on to beco etching a tennis match, so people better do some neck exer- football at Princ ises before they come in tomorrow night." playing on amat Both teams capitalized on their quickness to reach the title "wonder player game. Kentucky is well-known for the speed it uses in a vari- ety of defenses, which forced 26 turnovers in Saturday's 78-69 Hobey Baker victory over Minnesota in the semifinal. lete: fantastic i Arizona (24-9), the only non-No. 1 seed in the Final Four, and eye, iron di -.._:a. ... .. ...,_, S- - - --A .........« ..a.- - .. -- r«. ome two NCAA championships irst team title; Michigan finishes 7th, wins 800 free relay one day for him to get his second. After three years of top-three finish- es in the 500 free, Piersma took first. Piersma swam out to an early lead and. . was never caught by the field.'r "John's been the backbone of this - " team as far as competition goes," ;-. Urbanchek said Thursday night. "He stepped it up.' Friday brought Piersma's second vic- tory. Piersma swam the fastest 50 of the group in 22.45 and the outcome of the , race was never in doubt as he won in a time of 1:34.88. Rumley took sixth in 1:35.88, and teammate John Reich.C shocked the field by becoming the third Wolverine in the final, taking eighth place in 1:36.91. "Tonight, I just wanted to go out and A race those guys," Piersma said. "if one ECC- :r of them wanted to come out and race it MARGARET MYERS/Dad would have been a great race. Michigan sophomore Tom Malchow swims his way to a third-place finish in the 200-yard butterfly at the NCAA swimming and See NCAAS, Page 7B diving championships Saturday in Minneapolis. Malchow also swam leadoff in the 800 free relay. Michigan won the relay for y the fifth consecutive year. Maichow was swimming in his hometown oftMinneapolis for the first time in nis collegiate career. THE AmRMATH Super Sioux topple Terriers, 6-4, for title By Andy Knudsen Daily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - The Fighting Sioux hadn't been in the NCAA cham- pionship game in 10 years, and it was- n't an easy trip back. They spent Tuesday night in a Minneapolis airport, stranded, after a plane ran off the runway, delaying their flight. Their Hobey Baker Award candi- date, Jason Blake, had to play with a bruised right shoulder all week. And after beating Colorado College on Thursday, 6-2, the Tigers' coach, Don Lucia, congratulated North Dakota coach Dean Blais saying sar- castically, "That's all right, you have to play Michigan now." Well, they didn't have to play top- ranked Michigan, but they spotted Boston University a two-goal lead after the first intermission. By 8:38 of the second period, though, the Sioux tied the game at two, and went on to score three more goals in the period, securing the perfect end See SIOUX, Page 5B Seniors special for staying, despite loss By Jim Rose Daily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - The weekend didn't go as planned for Brendan Morrison and Jason Botterill, or any of the other nine seniors on the Michigan hockey team. This wasn't the way their careers were supposed to end. Not like this. But believe it or not, this was why they returned for their senior seasons. After the season screeched to a halt against Boston iol4 1 iS WARREN ZINN/Daily rward Matt Herr consoles classmate, goale Marty Turco after the Wolverines were CAA semifinals by Boston University, 3-2, last Thursday. University on Thursday night, the scene in the Michigan 11, 02 1 J 1411I lockerroom was one of devastation. Botterill sat by himself in the corner, staring in disbelief at the floor. Morrison sighed and blinked into the television lights and told reporter after reporter that he didn't know what went wrong. See SENIORS, Page 5B ERFECT MATCH: MORRISON AND HOBEY KEE - Something happens when you the name Brendan Morrison in the of a conversation with fellow Michigan dike Legg. A sense of awe overtakes grow wide with admiration and respect. find the words capable of describing out his captain, and he settles on adjec- ievable" and "incredible." e No. 9 for the final time as a hursday night. He will be remembered eatest players in the history of Michigan he received the most prestigious indi- college hockey - the Hobey Baker is given annually to the sport's most yer. why the three-time Hobey finalist's y called, you must first know the story himself. The similarities between aker tell the story best. y Hare Baker, born in 1892, made the ratory school hockey team at age 14 He me a star, even a legend, in hockey and eton, and continued his hockey career eur teams where he was deemed the of hockey." had all the attributes of a fabulous ath- reftexes, instant coordination of hand scipline, blazing courage. Earlier this season, one game after overtaking former Wolverine Brian Wiseman as Michigan's top assist man of all time, Morrison solidified his place in history, sur- passing Denny Felsner as the most prolific point scorer ever at Michigan. Morrison's four-year combined goal and assist total of 284 points has solidified his place in Michigan history. Over his four seasons, Morrison was named a Hobey finalist three times, first-team All- American three times, CCHA player of the year twice, and CCHA rookie of theY year. Morrison's numerous milestones are3 the by-product of a mastery of the game that was evident in his first sea- son at Michigan. "He was the best freshman, he was the best sophomore, he was the best+ junior, now he's the best player in the country," said senior center John Madden. One of the keys to Morrison's success is his vision on the ice. Time after time, Morrison, seemingly stuck in a crowd, finds a way to get the puck to the open man. He can thread the puck through lanes that don't. even exist in the eyes of most players. Probably no one has seen him do it more than Jim j Uitwh n -,a.c k -, the back of his head, to see the ice so well," Hunt said. "That's the one thing that's always amazed me.' Someone who may be the most appreciative of Morrison's ability to find the open man more than anyone is senior Jason Botterill, who played on Morrison's line during the majority of the past four sea- sons. / l"He makes the game so much easier out there," said Botterill. "You just 'Cneed to drive the net and call for the puck and he's gonna put it right on your stick." Morrison's total awareness on the ice always seems to land him in the right place at the most important times. When the Wolverines need a goal, Morrison scores it. His h x knack for the clutch was never more evidentthan when he scored the winning goal in overtime of last year's national championship game against Colorado College. "There's not that many players that have his aura on the ice," said Jeff Jackson, former Lake Superior coach and current coach of the U.S. national team. "The great players are the ones that make the play necessary to win when the game is on the line and it's a champi- onship caliber game." He did it again Thursday. With the Wolverines trailinY. 3-1. late in the third neriod. Morrison found k I