The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - March 16, 1998 - 3B Diver Wilmot rips his way to NCAAs Wilmot to be only diver at nationals ALAN GOLDENBACH The Bronx Bomber By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer He paused at the top of the tower, ten meters above the still surface of the water. He leapt backwards into space, twisting. His body tumbled more than 1 1/2 times and entered the water, leaving no trace of his entry except a few thin bubbles. When he popped back to the sur- face, Brett Wilmot knew he had come up big - but when he saw it later on video, he was even more exultant. He said his score of 83 was the best he'd ever scored. But the best moment of this weekend's Diving Zone meet in Oxford, Ohio, won't be realized until next Tuesday, when he steps on a plane bound for Auburn, Ala., and the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships. Wilmot was the only Wolverine to qualify for the meet, but teammate Josh Trexler had a "pretty good" meet according to Wilmot, but just missed the top six, who qualify for NCAAs. But Wilmot's personal-best dive didn't propel him to NCAAs - he had already qualified the day before, he thought. Wilmot was "95-percent sure" he had made it after the first day of competition, when he bounced to fourth in the three-meter springboard competition. "I was real confident with that," Wilmot said, adding that his strength, and that of the entire diving team, is platform events. The Wolverines took the tower on Saturday. Wilmot, certain that he had qualified, said he felt no pressure as he climbed the tower stairs, which may have resulted in a spotty perfor- mance for some. And although he said he dives best under heavy pressure, he managed to pull off a stellar dive. Divers live for "rips", clean entries into the water that leave no splash. Going in perfectly vertical isn't enough. "You kind of have to make a hole for yourself." Wilmot said, trying to explain the precise positioning of his hands as lie hits the surface of the pool. "I can feel when its a really, really clean entry. The water kind of sucks against you. It's a weird sensation." . . . I FILE PHOTO Brett Wilmot was the only Michigan diver to qualify for the NCAA Championships, which will be held March 26-28 in Auburn, Ala. Purdue cruises past Detroit; Western falls CHICAGO (AP) - Opening tip. Game over. Once again, it was Purdue Pearly - and decisively. For the second consecutive game, Purdue took a large lead and was never caught. The Boilermakers, the second seed in the Midwest, defeated Detroit 80-65 Sunday and advanced past the second round of the NCAA tournament for only the third time in coach Gene Keady's 18 seasons. Chad Austin scored 20 points and Brad Miller 18 for . .- - .- . . . . . . . . . P u r d u e ( 2 8 - 7 ) , Midwest which will meet Region third - seeded Stanford (28-4) in Friday's regional semifinals at St. Louis. The Cardinal beat Western Michigan 83-65 on Sunday. The Boilermakers, who scored the first 18 points and defeated Delaware 95-56 in the first round, took a 24-8 !lead in the opening 13 minutes against Detroit as the 10th-seeded Titans made only three of their first 21 shots. Detroit (25-6) closed to 33-22 by halftime but Purdue began the second half with an 11-3 run and was never seriously threatened. Desmond Ferguson came off the bench to score 19 points, including five second-half 3-pointers, as Detroit tried .but failed to make it close. The Boilermakers reached the NCAA tournament 13 times in Keady's first 17 seasons but only in 1988 and 1994 got past the second round. They got knocked out in Round 2 in each of the last three years. They made sure there was no doubt this time, outscoring their two subre- gional opponents by 54 points.. Purdue, a much taller tepm, outre- bounded Detroit 44-29. Brian Cardinal scored eight points as Purdue took its big early lead. Ferguson sparked Detroit with two layups and aggressive defense to help the Titans rally before halftime. But after Brian Alexander opened the second half with a free throw to cut Detroit's deficit to 33-23, Miller made two free throws and Austin hit two layups to put Purdue back in control. Gary McQuay' three-point play gave Wle Boilermakers a 59-37 lead with 9 1/2 minutes to play before Ferguson started hitting from outside to make it 63-50 with 6 minutes left. Again, the Purdue seniors responded. Austin hit a 3-pointer and a short jumper and Miller made two free throws and a dunk. Just like that, the Boilermakers were back up by 18. . STANFORD 83, W. MICHIGAN 65 Stanford, a school known for its brains, used its muscle to win a trip back to the NCAA tournament's round of 16. With Arthur Lee scoring from the outside and Tim Young and Mark Madsen using their size and strength to control the inside, the Cardinal over- came Western Michigan's quickness and beat the Broncos 83-65 in the Midwest Regional on Sunday. Western Michigan, the No. I I seed in the Midwest, saw its chances of pulling off a second straight upset ended with 12:03 left when Rashod Johnson fouled out after he was assessed a technical foul, minutes after picking up his third and fourth personals. Stanford (28-4) scored seven straight points in the sequence to take a 14-point lead. "We were going to go at him (Johnson) to get his fifth but he accom- modated us with the technical and it hurt them," Montgomery said. Johnson, who scored a career-high 32 points with eight 3-pointers in the first round against Clemson, finished with just 13 points on 4-of-1S shooting. Apparently upset with a non-call sec- onds earlier, Johnson continued to argue after Stanford's Young was fouled by Western's Isaac Bullock as the Stanford center made a layup. "The official said it wasn't what I said. He said he didn't like my reaction to the call,' said Johnson. After the technical, Young hit a free throw to complete the three-point play, Lee made two free throws on the tech- nical foul and when the Cardinal main- tained possession, Kris Weems banked in a shot to put Stanford up 14. Western Michigan (21-8), making its second-ever NCAA tournament appearance and first since 1976, got no closer than eight points the rest of the way. With or without Johnson, Stanford was playing tough perimeter defense and working the ball inside on offense. The Cardinal had a 41-25 rebounding edge. Lee finished with 24 points. Young, the Cardinal's 7-foot-1 center, scored 19 points and had 13 rebounds and 6-8 Madsen added 19 points and 10 rebounds as Stanford (28-4) matched the school record for most victories in a season. Western's tallest starter was just 6-7. Lee scored eight points in the final 48 seconds of the first half, hitting two 3-pointers and then a jumper at the buzzer, as the Cardinal took a 42-39 lead. Western, moving the ball well and penetrating the lane with Kimbrough, led by as many as seven. Stanford then outscored the Broncos 19-9 in the final five minutes of the half. RHODE ISLAND 80, KANSAS 75 The Rams, behind the play of guards Cuttino Mobley and Tyson Wheeler, beat the top-seeded Jayhawks 80-75 Sunday to stop Kansas' string of five straight trips to the regional semifinals. Mobley had 27 points on 10-of-19 shooting, while Wheeler scored 20 and had eight assists to cap a weekend of upsets in this subregional. Kansas (35-4) got great games from its All-Americans, Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce, but they didn't get enough help. Billy Thomas was 2-of-15, includ- ing 2-of-13 from 3-point range, and the Jayhawks shot just 43 percent. VALPARAISO 83, FLORIDA STATE 77 Valparaiso took another big step in its surprise run by beating Florida State 83-77 on Sunday, sending the smallest school in the NCAA tournament to its first regional semifinal. Bob Jenkins and Antanas Vilcinskas made follow shots in the final two min- utes of overtime as Valparaiso won its 13th straight game. Bryce Drew scored 22 points and made two free throws to ice it with 8.3 seconds left. kilo, Krni*/zt frm two derentkid fmadness A s a child of the Nike Generation, I am forced to view sports with the notion that it is a form of entertainment. That entertainment is often manufactured for us the likes of Disney, oozing with phoniness. During his lengthy tenure in Bloomington, Indiana coach Bobby Knight has creat- ed a character for himself that has made him one of sports' biggest headliners. Knight's character forces sports fans to take one side or the other as far as our opir- ion of him. People who find his heartless disposition a facade laugh hysterically, an(d those who think his act is his genuine nature seethe with utter disbelief. Knight has always worked against the grain. He has tossed a chair across the court like a Frisbee, played like a jockey and cracked a whip on one of his players during a press conference, and likened a basketball blowout to sexual assault. Two weeks ago, Knight added a relatively tame offense to his resume of debatable displays of emotion. During a home contest against Illinois, Knight was ejected after picking up his second technical foul after arguing with officials. When he continued to protest, he became further enraged, picked up a third T, and as he walked off the court, bumped the ref who tossed him. He later went on to say that the officials deci- sion to eject him, not to mention the official himself, was "the biggest travesty" he had ever seen. Sinice criticizing the referees is a no-no, Knight was punished a week later. But rather than inipose a cut-and-dried penalty , Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany chose a radical alternative. With the inaugural Big Ten Tournament looming as Knight's next scheduled appearance, Delany did not want any of the conferences most attractive figures absent from its first entertainment extravaganza. So the Big Ten decided to give its most noto- rious outlaw a choice of punishment: a $10,000 fine or a one-game suspension. From a short-term public relations standpoint, Delany did a marvelous job pulling this out of left field. But in the long term, this decision is an absolute disaster because of the horrible precedent it sets. You can just imagine, for example, Northwestern coach Kevin O'Neill up in arms after his Wildcats lose a tough one to Michigan State next season on a questionable call in the final seconds of a mid-January tilt. After O'Neill blasts the refs for not calling the goaltending that should have been whistled, that should have given his team the victory, Delany would be fenced in by the precedent that he set with Knight. 1 prefer my entertainment from sports to come naturally, and the NCAA tournament this year has provided us with examples of entertainment and spirit that makes the fans of Knight's antics think twice about their loyalty. The movie "Hoosiers" is the dream of any small-school basketball team. Although it was based on an actual, pea-sized high school team from the cornfields of Indiana, it appears to be a story that is so perfect that only Hollywood could write its script. But Hollywood was beaten to the punch for the 1998 remake of "Hoosiers". The sequels name: Valparaiso. This year, buoyed by the father-son combination of Homer and Bryce Drew, Valparaiso is looking more and more like its uniforms should read "Hickory." The Crusaders shocked No. 4 seed Mississippi on Friday when Bryce Drew hit a storybook 3-pointer at the buzzer and followed it-up with a thrilling overtime victory over Florida State yesterday. The Seminoles were the latest team to play the part of that team from downtown Indianapolis that just couldn't stop Jimmy Chitwood. As Bryce Drew hit the free throws that iced yesterday's victory, he waved his clenched fists in the air and gave us emotion that even Robert DeNiro couldn't pro- vide. When the game ended, the team congregated at mid-court and raised their arms together, signifying their one-unit, one-cause theme, and marched off the court wear- ing smiles that stretched from the arena in Oklahoma City back to the cornfields of Northern Indiana. There's nothing phony about that; it just happened this way. And that spontaneity is why Valparaiso's story is more captivating then any stunt pulled by Knight. -Alan Goldenbach can be reached by e-mail at agold@umich.edu. ,,,, Svnvnoer \10t)K / . This summer... give yourself some credit. A summer is a terrible thing to waste. Particularly when Grand Valley State University makes it so convenient to catch up or pull ahead while you're home in west Michigan. GVSU is offering a wide selection of courses this summer at campuses in Allendale, Grand Rapids, Holland and Muskegon. It's a perfect time to pick up that class you missed because of scheduling conflicts or to take a course not offered by your college or university. Look for a schedule of courses on our Web site at wwwgvsu.edu or call us at 1-888-442-8083 to request one. Registering as a guest student can also be done on the Web or over the phone. Tuition is affordable and classes are taught by