14A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 19, 1998 Kwan, Lipinski leave field in the dust as they glide to first and second in short NAGANO, Japan (AP) - Gold, sil- Kwan, silky in a red and pink sequin Olympic champ. 45 seconds left in the two-minute, 40- ver, black and blue. dress, melded her skating in perfect American women have won the gold second routine, she pumped her fist and Michelle was nearly perfect. Tara, sync with piano concertos by and bronze in the same Olympics twice, smiled broadly, looking as if she wanted too. But, oh, Nicole. what happened to Rachmaninoff as if the composer had in 1992 and 1960, but captured the gold to shout in delight. you? written them just for her, and silver only once when Tenley "I did," she said, her eyes wide with 4 So went the wild dream of an Olympic sweep by U.S. women figure skaters. Michelle Kwan imagined herself in heaven and skated like an angel in the short program last night. Tara Lipinski summoned the vision of a cartoon 'princess, soaring gaily in her own ice palace. Nicole Bobek? She didn't know what to think when her first triple klutz wrecked any hope of a sweep. It was a bomb of a show that left her sobbing, stunned and speechless. The 1-2 punch of Kwan and Lipinski virtually guaranteed one of them will ,win the gold, the other the silver in the best showing by the United States in 42 %years. It wasn't so much their position in the standings that separated Kwan and Lipinski from No. 3 Maria Butyrskaya of Russia, No. 4 Lu Chen of China, No. 5 Irina Slutskaya of Russia or No. 6 Surya Bonaly of France. It was the way Kwan and Lipinski. the past two world champions, blended their artistry and athletic leaps with more fluidity than everyone else. "Before I started," the I7-year-old Kwan said, "I heard people cheering and I thought, 'I'm in heaven.' People clap- ping, billions of people watching on TV and I'm skating. It's just me and the ice. When I'm on the ice, I don't think any- body can stop me." Kwan sais she had "butterflies" in the warmup, but she put them to rest by thinking,'"I've done this so many times, I can do it now. I've done everything possible. I've trained hard.' I kind of knocked some sense into myself." She breezed through the eight required elements flawlessly, from her first combination - a triple lutz-double toe loop - to her final spiral. Her fine, quick footwork and her strong, graceful lines put her in a class by herself. The judges rewarded Kwan with a solid string of 5.9s for artistry, and 5.7s and 5.8s for technical merit. Kwan smiled and waved, not in any exuberant manner, but as if she merely did what she was expected to do and was saving emotion for the free skate tomorrow night. She came in as the reigning U.S. champion, and is four minutes away from leaving as the Albright and Carol Heiss did it in 1956. No country ever swept the women's figure skating medals, and none will this year. Bobek's botched performance - a spill on a triple lutz 20 seconds into her program, and mistakes on every other jump - assured that. The 1995 U.S. champion cried as she waited for her marks, 4.2 to 4.7 for tech- nical merit, 5.0 to 5.5 for artistry, and was still crying when she left the arena in 17th place. She declined to talk about it afterward. The 15-year-old Lipinski clutched her head in her hands and nearly cried with joy at the end of her portrayal of Princess Anastasia to the music from the animated movie. Calling her perfor- mance her best ever "technically and emotionally," she felt the tension melt away when the music stopped. "This is the first time I felt like I wanted to cry," said Lipinski, who looked even lighter than her 82 pounds as she floated in a dress of lemon yellow brocade with a light blue bodice. "It seems so hard ,.. and when you do it. it's like a miracle." When she landed a double axel with happiness. "I just felt great. After the double axel I was thinking, 'I wish this was a four-minute program.' I just want- ed to keep going." Lipinski's coach, Richard Callaghan, called her skating "her best emotional and artistic performance," and he was especially impressed by the speed she generated. "Technically she is good, but tonight the artistry shined almost more than the technical," he said. "She looked like she was on a mission. She looked energized to go out there and do it." Lipinski, who trains at the Detroit Skating Club, drew marks of 5.6 to 5.8 for the required elements, and 5.6 to 5.9 for presentation. Butyrskaya, the European champion, kicked off the brilliant night with a sexy rendition of "Fever." She shook her hip toward the judges on the first beat, then propelled herself into the first of her triple jumps. It was an alluring, if imperfect, per- formance-she two-footed a triple lutz and her spirals were weak -- but good enough to keep her at the top until Lipinski skated and moved ahead. AP PHOTO Domination was the name of the game for Michelle Kwan as she jumped out to an early lead over teammate Tara Lipinski in the short program. Nicole Bobek fell. Hockey tournament a 'waste' for Team USA NAGANO, Japan (AP) - "The biggest waste of time. Ever." America probably thinks so, too. With those six little words, Keith Tkachuk summed up the humiliating Olympic experience of the greatest U.S. hockey team ever assembled. Shut down by goaltending genius Dominik Hasek and caught out of position several times by an oppor- tunistic Czech Republic team, the United States was eliminated from the quarterfinals with a 4-1 loss on Wednesday. "I hate to be negative," said Tkachuk. the U.S. team's alternate captain, "but this is disgusting." "Everybody's shocked and disappointed," said Mike Modano, the only U.S. player able to score in 39 shots 'on Hasek. "A lot of guys are frustrated, thinking it was a waste of time ... to come over here at all. "I'm sure I'm going to be apologizing for a long time. I'm sure we're going to hear about it for a long time. That part is going to be tough to deal with. But what's done is done." Six 50-goal scorers and 17 other N HL. stars weren't enough to keep the United States from extending its record run medal. The U.S. team hasn't of five Olympics without a won so much as a bronze since the 1980 Miracle on lee gang captured gold. The Americans finished 1-3 in the Olympics' first "dream team" tournament - featuring six nations stocked with NHL talent - and were outscored 12- 4, by the three good teams they faced. The loss came one day after the U.S. women's hockey team won the sport's first Olympic gold medal by beating Canada 3-1. Many of them were in the stands Wednesday to watch this game, and like most of the pro-American crowd at Big Hat Arena, they filed out in stunned silence when it ended. "We had to play better in the preliminary round" to get a higher quarterfinal seed, U.S. captain Chris Chelios said. "We put ourselves in position to play against the best goaltender in the world. If we had finished higher and peppered Finland with (39) shots. I don't think we would have lost." As the buzzer sounded, Tony Amonte broke his stick over the boards and flipped it onto the ice. Heads bowed, the Americans shook their oppo- nents' hands and dejectedly left the ice. "We came here with expectations of gold," U.S. coach Ron Wilson said. "It's something that will always be in the back of your mind: What if? We feel we let a lot of people down, but more than any we let ourselves down." While almost everyone considered the U.S. team a lock for a medal based upon its incredible talent and thrilling World Cup victory over Canada in 1996, few picked the Czech Republic as a serious gold medal contender. But the Czechs are 3-1, their lone loss coming 2-1 to Russia in round-robin play. And with "The Dominator" in goal, they will be in every game. "I've never seen a better goalie," Czech captain Vladimir Ruzicka said. "Some of the saves he made were unbelievable. His legs were going over here, his hands were going over there. He's the best goaltender in the world. "We know we only have to score one or two goals." Hasek, the NHL's MVP last season, has won three Vezina trophies as the league's top goalie. Using hi* unique, scrambling style, he has allowed just five goals in the Olympics. AP PHOTO Three losses in four games spelled early elimination for Team USA at the Nagano Olympics. Keith Tkachuk was vocal in his disappointment, calling it a 'waste.' Skating not confined to figure eights and quads NAGANO, Japan (AP) - Eric Flaim swears this is it, his last Olympic short- track skating competition. No more roller derby on ice for him. Been there. Done that. Of course, Cathy Turner said the same thing. There's something about this demoli- tion-derby event that keeps bringing them back. Call it the lure of the pack, a sort of siren's song that compels skaters to chase each other around like Times Square at rush hour and then come back for more. CBS will show the short-track skaters tonight, covering the men's and women's 500-meter races and the men's 5,000 relay. Also scheduled is the women's 1,000 speedskating, the women's slalom, the men's giant slalom, cross country skiing and team ski jumping. And for the night owls, there's a hockey semifinal game beginning at 12:35 a.m. EST tomorrow. Short track is a sort of first cousin to speedskating. The difference is the clock doesn't determine the winner. Instead, what matters most is who crosses the finish line first. And please, no pushing or shoving on the passes to get there. Colliding with or obstructing, an opponent is strictly prohibited. Sure. And basketball's a non-contact sport, too. "It's got action, drama, speed, and it's flashy and quick," coach Jeroen Otter said of his sport. "We just need to mar- ket it more and make it more under standable. "Some people think it's like gam- bling or roller derby, that the one left on their feet is the winner, that it's about staying on your feet, that it's a lucky sport. But that's not the case. People don't always stay on their feet in the downhill and nobody says that's a lucky sport." The 35-year-old Turner, who wo. gold medals in 1992 and 1994, has retired three times. Though she has seen no racing action since Lillehammer, she competed here in the 3,000 relay as the Americans finished fifth. 8 medal count Bronze Total Nation Germany Norway Russia Canada Austria U. S. Finland Netherlands Japan Nagano 199 Gold Silver 7 8 7 8 8 4 8 4 1 4 5 3 2 3 7 7 1 4 2 3 6 4 4 2 4 1 3 22 20 13 12 12 12 11 10 8 II In.. J & Plan for Your Future MBA by Achieve the DAT scnre) 4 : F l -ii:1 Jil!Ij I am ._ .6 AL " 1T a -! m