MEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL WYOMING 62, No. 5 Utah 50 No. 21 Stanford at No. 10 UCLA, Inc. ILLINOIS 84, No. 15 Michigan St. 63 No. 21 Cincinnati 70, ST. LOUIS 43 WOMEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL No. 1 Tennessee 91, MEMPHIS 65 No: 14 DUKE 83 No. 5 North Carolina 70 UCLA at No. 7 STANFORD, Inc. No. 8 NC STATE 70, No. 12 Virginia 63 No. 15 FLA. INT. 101 Samford 33 Texas Christian at No. 16 HAWAII, Inc. No. 17 Washington at OREGON STATE, Inc. ~~tjz Sisja ai Check out the Michigan men's and women's gymnas- tics teams this weekend. The men face Minnesota tomorrow at 2:30 p.m., while the women compete against Kentucky on Sunday at 2 p.m. at Cliff Keen. Friday February 13, 1998 11 Michigan volunteers first loss tor By Drew Beaver For the Daily Like any good thing, it had to come to an end. As much as the players and coaches downplayed it, it still hurt to see it go. It always hurts when a streak is broken. After nine straight wins at the new Varsity Tennis Center, the 28th-ranked Michigan women's tennis team dropped its first home dual meet, 7-2, to 12th-ranked Tennessee last night. The loss was not the result of any lack of effort on the Wolverines' part, though. "I thought for the most part we played well," said Michigan coach Bitsy Ritt. "We had some opportunities in singles that we didn't take advantage of and in order to beat a team of Tennessee's caliber, you have to be able to do that." Michigan sophomore Danielle Lund echoed her coach's sentiments. "I think we were ready for the match," Lund said. "We knew they were good, and we Tomorrow's match Who: Michigan vs. Syracuse Where: Varsity Tennis Center When: 1 p.m. Notables: Admission is free. After last night's loss to Tennessee, Michigan looks to regroup tomorrow afternoon in the first-ever meeting between the two schools. Syracuse has struggled so far this season and remains winless. were expecting them to Iennessee other five matches had concluded, was a war. With the score tied at five games apiece, Lowery held serve and took a 6-5 lead. But Weggenman battled back and held serve to force a tiebreak. Again Weggenman fell behind, this time 4-2, but she reeled off five straight points to take the tiebreak and the match. No. 4 singles was not the only close match of the evening, though. Another one took place at No. 1 singles, where Brooke Hart took on Tennessee's Manisha Malhotra. But this one ended in a Tennessee victory. After leading the first set four games to one, Hart was broken twice and eventually lost the set 7-5. The second set was even closer than the first. Again Hart took a lead and Malhotra battled back. With the score tied 5-5, each player held serve and forced a tiebreak. Hart took a 6-4 lead in the tiebreak, but Malhotra ran off four straight points and took the match. Michigan's Tumeka Harris and Tennessee's Whitney Dill squared off at No. 3 singles, in a match that also went to three sets. Dill took the first set 7-5, but the Michigan junior fought back to take the second set 6-4. Harris fell behind early in the third set, however, and Dill went away with a 6-2 victory. In doubles play it was more of the same for .te Wolverines. All three Michigan doubles teams got out to early leads, but only one came away with a win. The No. 3 doubles pair of Harris and Alison Sinclair earned an 8-5 victory. But the Wolverines are not dwelling on this loss. "Obviously, we're disappointed we lost, but I think we still know we're a good team and it's still early in the sea- son," Lund said. Next up for the Wolverines are winless Syracuse at home tomorrow and unranked Michigan State, in -he conference opener, on Suneday. come out here and be tough at every position. Overall, I don't think we underestimated them." The match was technically over after the singles play, as the Volunteers won the requisite five matches neces- sary for a dual-meet victory. But this was far from a blowout. Only at No. 4 singles did Michigan come away with a victory. Erryn Weggenman fought tooth and nail against Tennessee's Erin Lowrey. Weggenman won the first set 7- 5, but fell 6-4 in the second set. The third set, which was still being played after the FILE PHOTO umeka Harris, like four other Michigan singles players, lost last night to her Tennessee counterpart. The Wolverines lost their rit home match since moving into the new Varsity Tennis Center last season. When animals attack 'M' hockey) Wolverines square off against Redhawks and Wildcats this weekend ay Sharat Raju "I Sports Editor Miami (Ohio) goaltender Trevor Prior isn't a ihigan fan. He especially isn't a Marty Turco n, fact, rumor has it that Prior may once have owned a T-shirt with a bullseye and Turco's name Writtten across it when the two played against each 'tier in juniors. ve never seen it, but that's what I hear," the (ihigan goaltender said about the alleged shirt. "its a personal match. When me and Trevor go up look forward to it because he's such a good goal- tpoer."-, --------------------- The reasons for the This weekend's games rivalry are pretty sim- Who: Michigan vs. Miaum ;0 Both are seniors. (tonight), Michigan vs. Both backstop for the Northern Michigan (tomorrow) top teams in the con- Where: Yost Ice Arena ference. Both are When: Both games at 7 p.m. natives of Sault Ste. Notables: After sweeping the of Sult te. Wolverines three w'eeks ago in arie, Ontario, where rd hio t edh ks they played against come to Ann Arbor for the each other. first time this season. It's been Neither allows many even longer since the Wildcats pucks into the net. have been to Yost - they last Each goaltender will visited in 1984. be striving to one-up the other when No. 5 Michigan (17-4-1 CCHA, 23-6-1 overall) and No. 7 Miami (13-6-4, 18-6-4) do battle at Yost Ice Arena at 7 p.m. tonight. Then, on Saturday, the Wolverines play host to Northern Michigan (12-8-3, 14-10-4) for the first time since 1984, which was Red Berenson's first year as Michigan coach. Prior already has the upper hand this season in the ongoing feud between the two netminders. The RedHawks swept a crucial series in Miami on Jan. Nagano 1998 23-24. The two Miami victories were largely attributed to Prior's game-saving stops, and he was named CCHA defensive player of the week as a result. Turco, who let a few bad goals beat him that weekend, is ready to exact some measure of revenge. "We deserved to win," Turco said. "We played well enough to win. If you don't get goaltending on the road you're not going to win games. "I look forward to the opportunity to get back at them some way. You can say it's a little bit of a revenge." The rest of the Wolverines aren't quick to for- give and forget what happened a few short weeks ago, either. "When we were down in Miami, we didn't cap- italize on our chances," Michigan captain Matt Herr said. "I mean, shoulda, woulda, coulda - we still made a lot of mistakes. "And against good teams in the top half of the league you can't make those kinds of mistakes." And Miami is certainly one of those good teams. Last weekend, third-place Miami battled then-No. 1 Michigan State to a 0-0 tie, sending the Spartans into the No. 3 spot in the polls. "Now you've got two top teams, it's in our last year and we're playing for keeps," Turco said. "It could get more personal when things are at higher stakes. We look forward to playing each other - it's a rivalry." As much animosity as there might be between these two, Michigan's second opponent of the weekend is as far from a rival as two conference opponents can be. Northern Michigan, in its first year back in the CCHA in 14 years, hasn't played at Yost since 1984. The preseason coaches' poll picked the "1 mean, shoulda, woulda, coulda - we still made a lot of mistakes" - Matt Herr Michigan hockey captain, on the Wolverines' two losses to Miami (Ohio) earlier this season Wildcats to finish no higher than 10th in the con- ference. But now, in the final month of play, they have proven everyone wrong -- currently residing at fifth place in the conference. "Nobody knew about us, how good we've been," Northern Michigan coach Rick Comely said. "It's not really the coaches' fault. We got better from last year and we would've been better no matter what league." The Wolverines haven't been pushovers recent- ly, either. Coming off a sound 4-1 beating of Lake Superior last Saturday and a weekend sweep of Notre Dame, Michigan is poised for a difficult weekend. "I think we'll be seeing their team playing their best hockey and our team playing our best hock- ey," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. This weekend starts a four-game clash with tough opponents for the Wolverines. After the RedHawks and Wildcats leave Ann Arbor, Michigan has to begin preparations for a two-game prize-fight against second-place Michigan State next weekend. JOHN KRAFT/Daily Defenseman Chris Fox and the rest of his defensive linemates will play a key role in avenging a Miami (Ohio) sweep of Michigan three weeks ago. 0-i medal count Nation G S B Total Germany 4 4 4 12 Norway 3 3 3 9 Russia 4 3 0 7 -- ------------ ---- ---------- USA 2 0 2 4 w + . HE RY hRO LLI NS SPOKEN WORD TOUR Meet Henry 2116 at Borders 7:00 P.M. lly l itI "It's not that mom and dad don't like you, it's just that they can't stand the sight of you..." Sunday February 151 a gw*) I