TRACK- The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - April 14, 1997 -- 7B 'M' track answers questions Wolverines redeem themselves in Raleigh after time off- By Chris Farah Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's track team went into this weekend's Duke Invitational in Raleigh, N.C., with more questions than answers. The primary question being: Would the Wolverines allow their subpar per- formance two weeks ago at the Raleigh Relays to develop into a three-week slump, or would they instead respond confidently to the Duke meet's high level of competition? Consider the question answered. Taking advantage of a two-week break after the Raleigh Relays disap- pointment - a meet in which sopho- more high jumper Nicole Forrester was the only Wolverine to place first in an event - Michigan competed with a vengeance at the Duke meet. The Wolverines tallied two first-place and six second-place finishes. Michigan also provisionally qualified three ath- letes for the NCAA championships. Junior Tania Longe was one of the Wolverines who garnered first place, taking the top spot in the 100-meter hur- dles with a time of 13.97. The victory was even more redeeming for Longe, considering that she fell in the hurdle competition at the Raleigh Relays - a mistake Longe is not used to making. "The falling part isn't something I do regularly," Longe said. "But I didn't want it to happen again. Just the fact that I had fallen one time kind of makes you like, 'Don't let that happen again,' so I was just more aware of what I had to do. Also, I was just stronger having worked on higher hurdles. So I worked through the hurdles a lot more aggressively." The list of accomplishments becomes all the more impressive when one con- siders the various factors the Wolverines had to contend with such as the level of competition and the weather. Michigan had to contend with several other major Division I programs, including North Carolina, Georgetown, Syracuse and South Carolina. What's more, the Wolverines also had to deal with the weather - an element which may have been even more dis- couraging than the competition. The conditions Friday weren't that bad, but Saturday was cold and very wet with constant rain. Forrester followed up her impressive performance at the Raleigh Relays with another first place at Duke. Although she was happy with her placing, Forrester said the bad weather played a large role in the below-average height of her winning jump of 5-foot-6. "I have to say the weather was a big factor this weekend," Forrester said. "I couldn't run fast because it was slip- pery, and I practiced all two weeks on running fast, because my approach was too slow. You don't want to use weather as an excuse, so I guess I just have to learn how to work with the weather." The rain and cold wasn't nearly as much of a problem for the distance run- ners, considering all three NCAA provi- sional qualifying times also came from distance runners. Sophomore Marcy Akard placed sec- ond in the 3,000 with a qualifying time of 9:42.62. Fellow sophomore oKtie McGregor and freshman Julie Froud also qualified in the 5,000 with times of 16:29.75 and 16:51.72, respectively, with McGregor finishing second and Froud sixth. Froud was very pleased with herper- formance, which was. a personal best, but knows she will have to improveto guarantee a spot at nationals. "I was pretty happy with that time," Froud said. "There's always room for improvement, but it's very positive. So that's good, that's cool. I'll just continue with that. I'll probably have to knock 15 to 20 seconds off that time in order to make it.' Freshman Lisa Ouellet placed secopd in the 1,500 with a time of 4:28.33-all the more impressive -considering Ouellet has run in the event collegiately three times. Ouellet, who hails from Canada, thanked her familiarity with bad-weather competition, the two weeks of training and a little luck with her and the other distance runners' success. "All the (distance) girls got personal- bests, so the weather didn't really affect anybody," Ouellet said. "I think what really started us off was Katie McGregor and Julie Froud both making the provisionals in the 5,000. They wore their white singlets, so a lot of th# girls put on their white singlets because they had good luck in that. It was supersti- tion, but I think that was what started the weekend off, because everyone was like, 'Wow, they got personal bests, so let's get some, too."' Marcella Comell warms up on the track. The women's track team grabbed two first-place and six second- place finishes at the Duke Invitational this weekend. JONATHAN S UMMER/Daily Michigan men score five wins a I I I I Mother Nature toys with Michigan men's track down south By Chad Kujala Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's track team headed south this weekend to tangle with the No. 1 team in the nation. The 13th-ranked Wolverines com- peted in the Arkansas Invitational, hosted by the top-ranked Razorbacks. The 10-team field, although the smallest the Wolverines have faced his season, proved competitive. Part of the reason the field was so small was because No. 23 Baylor backed out due to the bitter cold weather in Fayetteville. The Wolverines felt right at home in the cold, totalling five victories. Perhaps the most inspirational vic- tory came from senior Kevin Sullivan. Sullivan cruised to a first-place finish in the 1,500-meter run, four seconds head of second-place finisher Dwight Davis of Tulsa. The victory was Sullivan's first since returning from heel surgery. The injury cost him the 1996 cross-country season and the '97 indoor season. Senior Neil Gardner lead the charge for the Wolverines, scoring two victo- ries in the hurdles. Gardner won the 110 hurdles in a time of 13.88. Following behind in close second was *eammate Brian Theisen, who finished with a time of 14.77. Gardner added to his victory by crossing the finish line first in the 400 hurdles. He finished in a time of 51.36, edging out Shannon Sidney of Arkansas. Theisen performed well in the 400, finishing fourth. The winning continued for John Mortimer as he earned his third victo- ry in as many weeks. Mortimer, previously a winner in the 3,000 steeplechase and in the 10,000, came home in first with a vic- tory in the 3,000. Michael Power of Arkansas finished second, three sec- onds behind Mortimer. Michigan freshman Steve Lawrence finished fifth. The final victory came in the pole vault by way of sophomore Don Stenger. Stenger's vault of 15-foot-6 was his season's best. His previous best this season was one foot lower than this weekend's. Although the relay teams did not con- tribute to the Michigan victory count, they did finish strong once again. The Wolverines have had to match up against the Razorbacks' relay teams the past two weeks. Last week at the Texas Relays, Arkansas finished first in both the 1,600 and 400 relays. Arkansas's 4x400 team scorched the track as it did a week ago in Texas. The four-man team finished first in the 1,600 with a time of 3:16.01. The Wolverines were able to finish second but nearly two seconds behind at 3:17.92. The Razorbacks also cloned a victory from last week in the 4x100 meter relay finishing in a time of 41.17. Michigan's team of Steve Jenkins, Martin Bowman, Edzra Gibson and Damon Devasher fin- ished third in 41.70. Overall, the Wolverines hung tough against the top-ranked Razorbacks. They ended the meet with five victories, trailing Arkansas by just one. By T.J. Berka Daily Sports Writer One of the main reasons the Michigan track and field team heads south for the early portion of the outdoor season is to experience warm, sunny weather. That practice, while sound in theory, has not produced the results the Wolverines had hoped for. The first two meets, at Wake. Forest and Texas, were dominated by incessant rainfall. The weekend, Mother Nature saved the worst weather of the season at the Arkansas Invitational, as a vigorous cold front wreaked havoc on the field. The 38-degree weather, coupled with strong winds, made Fayetteville, Ark. - where the average temperature is in the mid-60s - a winter Cm wonderland. Baylor, 7fateetu the 23rd-ranked team in the nation, pulled out of the competition due to the cold. Michigan will try its hand with the National Weather Service again next week at the Kansas Relays in Lawrence, Kan. A warning to the Wolverines: It was snowing Thursday night in / Lawrence. HE'S BACK: Kevin Sullivan complet- ed his comeback Saturday with a victory in the 1,500-meter run with a time of 3:52.17. The next closest competitor, Tulsa's Dwight Davis, finished more than four seconds behind Sullivan. Sullivan's win was the his first overall victory of the year in only his third meet. Sullivan, who competed in the Canadian Olympic trials last summer, missed the entire indoor season with a heel injury. NOSTALGIA: The Arkansas Invitational marked the reunion of Arkansas' 1984 indoor and '85 outdoor national championship teams. That sea- son, the first for current Arkansas coach John McDonnell, started a run of 12- consecutive indoor championships for the Razorbacks. Among the members of that team was Mike Conley, the Olympic gold medal winner in the triple jump. However, due to the erratic wegther that gripped the middle of the nation this weekend, Conley was unable to attend. DYNASTY: The main reason that Arkansas brought back its '84-85 team was because it was the beginning of a dynasty almost unequaled in any other college sport. Since McDonnell was hired in '84, the Razorbacks have won 13 of the past 14 indoor championships, including this season's title. McDonnell has also led Arkansas to six outdoor championships, including the last five. CLOSE CALL: The 13th-ranked Wolverines made a strong statementthis weekend at the Arkansas Invitational, capturing five events. That total was second to, the Razorbacks, who grabbed six events. While the Wolverines were racing in their element due to the cold weather, their performance against the five-time national champions could be a confi- dence booster heading into the national championships in June. MR. CONSISTENCY: If there is one Wolverine who could be considered a guarantee to win his event at anytine, it'd senior hurdler Neil Gardner. Gardner, the defending national champion in the 400 outdoor hurdles and a member of the Jamaican Olympic team, continued his stellar performance with victories in the 110 and 400 hur- dles. With those victories, Gardner has won every event in which he has raced duyng the outdoor season. FIELD OF DREAMs: So far this season, the majority of Michigan's victoriesve come from Gardner and the distance events. The field events have not been a Michigan strength, until this wemkod. Sophomore Don Stenger came up Oig at the invitational, winning the 2ple vault with a height of 15-foot-6. FILE PHOTO Michigan's Neil Gardner won the 110 and 400 hurdles at the Arkansas invitational this weekend. *Foreign-born Wolverines lead M' women By Fred Link Daly Sports Writer Coming to America. Besides being the title of a hyster- ical 1980s Eddie Murphy comedy, it could also summarize the story of many of the Michigan women's track eam's most talented athletes. Michigan's best all-around per- former, Tania Longe, hails from Norway. At this weekend's Duke Invitational, Longe led the Wolverines, placing first in the 100- meter hurdles and second in the triple jump. Longe wasn't the only foreign athlete to do well for Michigan at Duke. Canadian Nicole Forrester won the high jump, while Jamaican Maria Brown finished second in the 100. In the 5,000, Canadian Julie Froud finished sixth, with NCAA provi- sional qualifying times, and fellow Canadian Lisa Ouellet placed sec- "Canadian athletes are definitely interested in Michigan because of its good athletics and academics," Froud said. "This is a great opportu- nity for Canadians to come down to a program like this, because we don't have athletic scholarships in Canadian schools. It's a great oppor- tunity to do both athletics and acade- mics at the same time." For Brown, it was Michigan's aca- demics that were a primary consider- ation in choosing a college. "I'd have to say it was the school and not necessarily the track pro- gram," said Brown, of her choice to attend Michigan. Coming from another country to attend college can mean that interna- tional athletes face difficulties that other students do not. For some, like Brown, being far away from home can be a difficult adjustment. "It's difficult missing home - around to talk to has especially been helpful. "It's comforting, for one thing," Froud said. "You know you have someone similar to you. You know you have someone who will know what you're talking about." Brown has been helped tremen- dously by the foreigners on the women's team as well as the Jamaicans on Michigan's men's track team. "We can relate to each other more, because we're all not from here," Brown said. "Having Jamaicans on the guys' team, that's been good." Having athletes from different countries can also lead to some inter- esting differences. For instance, Brown's and Froud's description of the weather at this weekend's meet are so different it seems like they were at different places. While Brown described the weather as rainy and cold, Froud You guys have your little quirks too that are kind of fun to poke with." -Julie Froud Canadian-born Michigan run- ner, on American accents. said. "That's kind of cute, I guess. I'm sure we hassle them the same, ya know? You guy's have your little quirks, too, that are kind of fun to poke with. "Some people, ya know, ask ques- tions about the differences. It's funny because a lot of things are the same. I guess some of our vocab is differ-' ,n n n h ntnr er rt