88 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - April 14, 1997 'M' tumblers to be tested at NCAAs Despite top-ranking, Wolverines will face nation's best in Gainesville By Jacob Wheeler Daily Sports Writer The time-honored phrase - if you do your job, everything else will naturally fall into place - held true for the Michigan women's gym- nastics team last weekend. That phrase and its connotations may be the benchmark of a good gymnastics team like the Wolverines, which focuses only on its perfor- mance at the moment instead of looking up at the scoreboard and worrying about other teams' achievements. Last Saturday, the Wolverines did their job, winning the NCAA Central Regional and post- ing a school-record 197.7 all-around score. The victory gave the Wolverines an automatic bid to this weekend's NCAA championships in Gainesville, Fla. - along with four other regional winners. But more big news was soon to follow. On the same night, No. 2 Michigan smashed Alabama's string of 10-consecutive regional titles. And No. 1 Georgia and No. 2 Utah - tied with Michigan in national rankings - stumbled in their respective regional champi- onships, scoring far below Michigan's regional score. The Bulldogs failed to win the Southeast Regional and eventually settled for one of the at-large bids by placing in the top seven of the remaining teams competing in the five regions. Michigan now enters NCAAs No. 1 in the nation, according to the USA Today poll. The top ranking means that the Wolverines are allegedly the team to beat, but more impor- tant, Michigan will receive the tastiest entree of the entire feast. Michigan coach Bev Plocki's squad will compete in the coveted Olympic order during the preliminary round on Thursday. Like every home meet this season, the Wolverines will compete on vault, bars, beam and floor, in that order. The No. I ranking may be misleading, how- ever. Georgia was far and away the nation's best gymnastics team all season. Iguarantee you (Georgia) is coming to nationals feeling like they're going to win."' - Bev Plocki Michigan women's gymnastics coach After defeating preseason favorite UCLA on Jan. 12, Georgia glided week in and week out until last weekend. And the all-around score of 195.725 in the Southeast Regional was Georgia's second lowest of the season - high- er only than the season's first meet -and 1.535 below its regular season average. The stumble was mostly due to three 'falls on the balance beam. The question now is: Will the Bulldogs falter again, or was last Saturday just a fluke? "All the teams at nationals are good enough that they're not going to look back to just one meet;' Plocki said. "They're going to look back at how successful they've been the entire sea- son, and Georgia has been No.1 the entire sea- son. So the fact that they had one meet, which happened to be regionals, where they counted three falls, only proves them to be human. "I guarantee you they're coming to nationals feeling like they're going to win:' If the Southeast Regional was a fluke, can Michigan match the Bulldogs on a normal day? The Wolverines recorded an all-time school high at Crisler Arena - but Georgia has bet- tered that four times this season. In fact, Georgia's regional qualifying score was an immense 197.297 - a comfortable 0.403 high- er than the Wolverines. Hence, things won't be as black and white as they seem to be in Gainesville. The present No. I may only stay there until the former No.1 returns to seize the crown. If two single factors are in Michigan's favor, they are the Olympic order and sophomore Nikki Peters. Peters suffered two sprained ankles before the Regional meet and was bare- ly able to compete on the uneven bars at Crisle But Peters' outlook at nationals is looking u after a week of healing. "She's doing very well," Plocki said. "As a matter of fact, she tumbled (Thursday). If the meet were tomorrow she would not compete, because she hasn't been able to train a routine. But being as that we still have a little bit of time left, it's looking more favorable." Peters value to Michigan is immense, yet the subs filled in very nicely at Regionals. With Peters healthy, the Wolverines have the nation's best performer on the uneven bars and a tea leader. WOmens national rankings entering NCAAs Rank Team a. Michigan 2 UCLA 3 Alabama Regional Central West Central Central 4 5 7 8 9 ±0 '12 LSU Florida Southeast Georgia Washington Southeast West Score 197.7* 196.3* 196.25 196.175 195.75* 195.725 195.725 195.7 * 195.225 195.15 195.125 194.5* Utah Midwest Arizona State Midwest Nebraska Midwest Minnesota Central Penn State Northeast * Indicates winner of each of the five region- ats (Central, West, Southeast, Midwest and Northeast) JOHN KRAFT/Daily Sara Cain and her Wolverine teammates are teetering on the brink of a national title. The top-ranked Wolverines travel to Gainseville, Fla. this weekend for the NCAAs. The Wolverines won the NCAA Central regional by posting a school-record 197.7 all-around score. College-aged Woods wins The Masters in record-setting fashion. The Washington Post AUGUSTA, Ga, - Tiger Woods fin- ished with a fabulous final-round flour- ish yesterday on his stirring 18-hole vic- tory march to golf glory at The Masters. There was not the slightest hint of a fold, or even a falter, as the 21-year-old shattered the 72-hole scoring record on Augusta National's verdant fairways and unforgiving greens to become the youngest champion in tournament histo- ry. With a score of 4-under 68 yesterday and a four-day total of 18-under 270, Woods completed one of the most aston- ishing performances in the annals of the game less than eight months after he turned professional. "I've never played a whole tourna- ment with my 'A' game, but this was pretty close, except for the first nine holes Thursday," Woods said before 1996 champion Nick Faldo helped him put on the traditional green jacket that goes to the winner, along with a $486,000 check. "My goal is to obviously be the best. It's a lofty goal, and if I do, great. If I don't, at least I tried." This 61st Masters was all about histo- ry, and Woods made plenty of that. He set another mark by beating Tom Kite, his closest pursuer and a runner-up here for the third time, by 12 shots - the largest major championship victory mar- gin in the 20th century and three better than the Masters record of nine posted by Jack Nicklaus in 1965. Woods also broke the Masters record of 271 shared by Nicklaus (1965) and Raymond Floyd (1976), on his way to blazing another triumphant trail as the first man of color to win one of the four major championships. "I wasn't the pioneer," Woods said. "Charlie Sifford, Lee Elder and Ted Rhodes (groundbreaking African- American golfers) played that role. I thank them. I was thinking about them and what they've done for me. I said a lit- tle prayer and said thanks to those guys. You are the ones who did it for me." Elder, who was the first black player to integrate the field here in 1975, flew from his home in Pompano Beach, Fla., Sunday morning to witness Woods's last round. Ron Townsend, the first black member of Augusta National in '91, also walked several holes in the teeming gal- leries-Woods carried along with him. "If Tiger Woods wins here, it might have more potential than Jackie My goal Is to obviously be the brest." - Tiger Woods The Masters champion Robinson's break into baseball," Elder said, just before his eyes welled with tears as Woods walked to the first tee Sunday afternoon. "No one will turn their head when a black man walks to the first tee" Said Townsend: "What he's doing is great for America and great for golf. He's just an amazing talent, and it's a pleasure to watch him play." As Woods walked around historic Amen Corner on Sunday - that dicey stretch from No. 11 through 13 where many prayers are never answered - the Hallelujah Chorus mounted for his accomplishments from crowds standing six and eight deep behind the ropes. When he made a 15-foot putt for birdie at the 455-yard 11th, a giant roar rose from the gallery. The decibel level reached a final crescendo when he strode triumphantly up the 18th fairway, smiling broadly and waving his hat. Waiting for him there for a 30-second victory hug was his father Earl, who had trained him for this moment before his son was out of baby shoes. His mother, Kutilda, a native of Thailand, walked the entire 18 holes, a bright red headband on her wide-brimmed hat the perfect acces- sory for her son's favorite Sunday color: power red. "It's awesome" Woods said when asked how he felt about his parents wit- nessing his first major title as a profes- sional. "I was thinking about my father on the 10th hole. He'd say, 'Let's suck it up, let's do it.' "My father told me this could be the hardest round of golf you'll ever play, but if you'll just be yourself, it can be the most rewarding you've ever played. He was right." Woods never came close to being threatened yesterday. The lowest his lead ever got was eight shots, when he bogeyed the 360-yard No. 7 and slipped to 14-under. His playing partner, Costantino Rocca, who faded to a tie for sixth, parred the hole and was at 6 under. But by the time they hit the back nine, Woods was up by nine, with the best still yet to come. Meanwhile, up ahead, just as Tom Watson had said late Saturday, the only remaining question yesterday was sec- ond place. There was a spirited battle for that profitable placing, with Kite, the 47- year-old U.S. Ryder Cup captain, assur- ing that position with a final-round 70 and a total of 6-under 288. One last birdie at the 17th hole earned Kite $291,600. Tommy Tolles, playing in his first Masters, finished third with the day's best round, a 67, that left him at 5- under 283. Woods never really had to look at a single scoreboard. If ever there was any doubt that Woods could fulfill the promise so long predicted for him by so many, it ended here and now, Sunday at Augusta National. Since posting a 4-over 40 in his first nine holes Thursday, Woods played his last 63 holes in 22 under, overpowering the par 5s with his huge drives and show- ing a deft touch around the greens with wedges and a putter. In all, Woods hit 13 of 18 greens in regulation yesterday despite several wild drives, though he also managed to hit 11 of 14 fairways. Woods birdie at the 11 th got him to 16 under, and his birdie at the 485-yard 13th - with an eagle putt of 15 feet stopping a half-inch short - put him at 17 under. At the 405-yard 14th, his sec- ond shot sand wedge stopped eight feet from the hole, and he made that to go 18 under, one better than the tournament record. A weak chip at the 500-yard 15th cc him a chance at another birdie when h missed a 15-foot putt, and he had to save par with a dicey five-footer. A tough two- putt at the 170-yard 16th from 60 feet led to another par, and he barely missed yet another birdie when his 15-foot attempt stopped an inch from the hole. At the 18th, needing par to set the scoring record, he hit his wildest-drive of the day off to the left, flinching ever so slightly at the top of his swing when t heard the click of a camera from a near- by photography tower. But Woods had only 132 yards to the hole and a clear line of sight to the pin. He hit a wedge through a funnel of fans, many of whom'slapped him on the back as he walked toward the final green. When he broke through the throng and up the slope to the putting surface, his face broke out in a broad grin and he waved to the thousands lining both sides of the fai way. TWINS Continued from Page 11B other so closely that men's coach Jack Harvey can barely tell them apart. In one instance, Harvey even chose Martin instead of Kevin to travel to Florida for a relay. The problem? Kevin had run a fast time that week and should have been the one to travel. Martin quickly corrected the error. "I had to call him up and tell him, 'Wait a minute, I think you've got the wrong person,"' Martin said. Kevin and Martin's appearance isn't the only thing that could cause confu- sion. Besides having similar academic goals - they share many of the same classes and are both psychology majors - the two also mirror each other in many social aspects. "We have the same interests in girls, the same friends, the same everything," Kevin said. "But anybody can tell you we have different personalities. There's a good twin and a bad twin, and I'm prob- ably the bad twin." Kevin describes himself as the more open and free-spirited of the duo, while Martin has a much more laid-back, reserved personality. When it comes to track, they are, in a sense, equal and opposite - Kevin being the better sprinter, but Martin being the better long jumper. Martin began competing in track before Kevin, but Mrtin's success - along with a ball - soon inspired Kevin to follow in his brother's footsteps. "I was playing basketball back in high school,"Kevin said. "And I wasn't grow- ing, and I saw (Martin) bringing home all these medals. I figured I might as well start running and see what happens." Martin and Kevin are right on the edge of being consistent scorers in the meet. Ultimately, they want to perform at a level where Harvey can depend on them to score in important meets like the Big Ten championships. "My goal is to contribute to a Big Ten championship," Martin said. "If it's one point or a half-point, it wouldn't matter. I just want to contribute to a championship. That's my first and foremost goal." Tonya and Marcella are in much the same position on the women's team. Neither of them travel with Michigan as of now, although Marcella did compete in the indoor Big Ten championships, scoring a point in the pentathlon. Marcella's seemingly small contribu- tion to the Michigan effort proved quite consequential - the Wolverines placed second at Big Tens, barely edging out Ohio State, 82-79. The point she earned also gained Marcella her first varsity let- ter - an accomplishment that did not go unnoticed by her sister. "It didn't piss me off," Tonya said. "I tried very hard not to be jealous, I admit that, but I would have never wished her not to go. I was so happy she got to go. Of course, it was hard for me that I did- well, and I was so happy when she did.' Marcella and Tonya aren't exactly used to sitting out from competition. They dominated their Class B high school track team in Perry with either of their names appearing five times on the Perry High School track record boards. They are currently working their skills in the heptathlon in an attempt to carve themselves a niche in the Michigan pro- gram. Instead of being disheartened, though, the two enjoy and even expected the extra effort demanded by a team like Michigan. "We had the opportunity to go to some other schools where we would have been hot shots from the beginning" Marcella said. "We were heavily recruited by some other schools, but we came to Michigan because it was a good school academically, and we knew we would be challenged." The two are used to pushing each other to perform to their highest potential in everything they do, although they claim there's no rivalry. That means pushing each other very far; besides participating in track, they each have a part-time job and take classes at the same time, 12 credits for Marcella and 14 for Tonya. "We're not competitive with each other," Marcella said. "But we're very competitive with ourselves, and we push each other a lot to do the best we can and make the other person the best they can be." "Like in practice if one of us is run- ning and one is going faster, it pushes the other to keep up," she said. "It sets a standard you always try to meet, so I think it's helped make us much better. We don't really compete, like I want to beat Marcella, it's more like I want to run as well as I can, and I know I should at least run with Marcella.' Marcella and Tonya have even used their dual nature to help each other out in a few instances. At the Michigan high school track finals, Marcella accepted the eighth-place medal that Tonya won in the high jump so Tonya could warm up for the 800-meter run. They have also made use of their advantage in an issue that has become very pertinent of late - cloning. "We went to different summer insti- tutes," Marcella said. "They had a talent show. We did a thing with finding the key to genetic cloning. We had Tonya snuck in, and we brought her out. I did- n't tell anybody I had a twin or sister or anything, so they were pretty surprised when we brought her out and said 'Look we found the key!'" The two definitely seem to enjoy hav- ing another copy of themselves around - a point they made perfectly clear. "We get tired of each other," Tonya began .... "But we get along really well," they said - simultaneously, of course. Being twins can often provide some amusing moments. Tonya said, "sometimes I'll know some- one Marcella knows, but it doesn't always come up in casual conversation, 'Oh, I have a twin.' So, I'm walking along to class and someone will be like, 'Hey, how's it going?' and I have no idea who they are. So I'm just waving, saying 'Hi!"' The Bowman twins have also taken advantage of their similarities - but not always in the most ethical of ways. "Sophomore year in high school, I took a test for Kevin that he wasn't real- ly prepared for," Martin said. "I got a B on his test. The next period, I had the same test, and I got an A- on mine. So it worked to both of our advantages." The pair almost went on to grander, even more illegal, projects. "I tried to have him (take the SATs for me),"Kevin said. "But he wouldn't do it." "I could have," Martin admitted. "But I just didn't want to take the test again. It's not that I didn't want to get caught." Of course, being a twin provides other, non-illicit, benefits, as well. Besides helping each other in classes and pushing each other in track, Martin and Kevin genuinely enjoy each other's company. "People who have twins and they don't get along with them - I don't understand that;'Kevin said. "He's your brother, you gotta live with him, he's the closest person to you. It's a plus." Despite words to the contrary from many low-grade talk shows, as well as finishing each other's sentences, but also deny possessing any abnormal powers. "We spend so much time together, do so much stuff together," Martin said. "Our experiences are so much alike that at a given time, in a given sit- uation, we'll both be thinking the exa* same thing ..." "Or both be saying the same thing at the same time" they finished - say- ing the same thing at the same time. No joke. Aside from gimmicks, jokes and funny quirks, having a twin means something significant to the Cornells and the Bowmans. Perhaps this is epitomized best by one of Martin and Kevin's highest track priorities. Their senior year high school, Martin and Kevin's sprint medley relay was seeded first at the New Jersey high school state meet. Martin and Kevin bumbled the baton hand off between each other, and their relay team finished a disappointing fourth. "It's the only hand off we ever messed up in high school;' Kevin said. "It was our last one. "All we want is to be able to hand o0 to each other one more time ..." "... One more time;" Martin mir- rored him. "... Just for closure;' Kevin contin- ued. "Yeah, just for closure, Martin L