SPORic i~n ~s~ Tracking 'M' teams The Michigan men's swimming team competes in the NCAA Championships this weekend at Auburn, Ala. The meet will be held from Thursday to Saturday. Check in Friday's Daily for results. Wednesday March 18, 1998 13 Practice makes Yost a kinder, But there's another Yost - another Yost that most people never see or hear. This Yost overflows with an icy quiet. The crisp air isn't warmed by packs of people shouting at the tops of their }< >lungs. The bleachers don't creak or groan under the strain of thousands of fans sitting CHRIS down or standing on top of FARAH them. Farah's In this Yost, every single Faucet noise reverberates throughout the building unimpeded, bouncing off the bare seats and walls. The cry of the hockey player as he scores a goal, the curse as he misses a pass or the laugh as gentler place he jokes with a teammate. This is the Yost of the Michigan hockey team's practices, a Yost I had never experienced before this year. Unlike the other revenue sports, hockey holds open practices, usually three or four times a week in the afternoons. Practices are open to anyone - the press, die- hard Michigan fans, old-time hockey buffs or chil- dren whose parents bring them to watch "the big guys" play. Usually that means about six or seven people in Yost's gigantic stands. In other words, finding the perfect seat isn't a problem. You can get close enough to see the faces of the Wolverines as they heave and gasp for breath after conditioning exercises, or far enough away to watch the strategy of the plays unfold in front of you like a See YOST, Page 14 Reid forgotten in stretch run Guard must team next season A fter Sunday's loss to UCLA, the Michigan basketball lock- rroom, as expected, was solemn. Some players dressed, others sat around, and in the bowels of the Georgia Dome, most pondered the worst three-point defeat of their bas- ketball careers. While none of the Michigan players were pleased with the scenario, all of them answered the MARK m media's ques- SNYDER tions in a calm Mark My and polite Words manner. Almost all, that is. Ironically, Robbie Reid, the last player to join this Michigan team, was the first one out the door. But as difficult as the loss was to handle - remember, Reid had not dealt with the end of a season in the past three years while on a Mormon mission - the overriding factor in his departure must have been his lack of impact in the second half of the biggest game of the season. After draining 3-pointers with his smoothest stroke all season in the first half, Reid barely saw the ball following the intermission. In the first 10 minutes after the break, dis- tribution became the key as Michigan attempted to climb back into the game despite an 1i1-point halftime deficit. Reid was Michigan's key player in the first half, matching UCLA shot for shot, working to keep the Wolverines close. But it obviously wasn't enough to warrant shots in the second. When a team has a shooter like Louis Bullock - one who has proven himself over three seasons compared to Reid's three weeks - that's who the coach will feature. See REID, Page 15 LOUIS BROWN/Daily All-American runner Kevin Sullivan was named the Indoor Track Athlete of the Year on Monday by the U.S. Track and Field Coaches Association. Sulliv.,;an namedf athle'wte of the year .ei By Josh Borkin Daily Sports Witer What more can you ask of track "god" Kevin Sullivan? He has broken almost every Big Ten record, won almost every race he has ever competed in, and yesterday, he was named the 1998 indoor track athlete of the year by the U.S. Track and Field Coaches Association. Sullivan is the first Michigan runner ever to garner the award. "This is a great honor, of course," Sullivan said. "Considering that this award was decided by all of the NCAA track coaches, and considering that coaches from different teams around the country voted for me, I am very proud." Sullivan did not participate in the season's first meet - he was coming off a minor injury and needed more rest. Sullivan, however, did not need a lot of time to qualify for the NCAA Championships. In his first meet back, Sullivan qual- ified provisionally for the mile run. They next week, Sullivan broke a 12-year-old; Michigan record, running the 3,000 meters in 7:51. The time was not only a Michigan record, but the best time in the nation this year. Sullivan also recorded maybe one of the most impressive victories of his career when he defeated American mile champion Paul McMullen in the mile ate Notre Dame. McMullen won the U.S. Indoor championship in South Bend two weeks ago. But all of Sullivan's efforts in they regular season were merely a prelude to this past weekend's NCAA Championships. Sullivan completed his comeback from foot surgery with his second national championship in the mile run. Sullivan also anchored the Wolverines', distance medley, which placed third at NCAAs. Sullivan has been noted as being See SULLIVAN, Page 16 SARA STILLMAN/Daily Michigan guard Robbie Reid torched UCLA during the first half of Sunday's game. But he all but disappeared as the Wilverines could not complete their comeback in the second half and lost, 85-82. Why can't women's hoops get respect? By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Writer The Nykesha Sales debacle was the biggest trav- tv in sports history. The NCAA ' handling of the Alabama-UCLA game shows everything that is --------- i rong with women s college Basketball basketball. The womren 's game .just isn 't Commenta? exit.Itl never be popular x -----among the average sports fans. For the past three weeks, talk-show hosts across the nation on the all-sports radio networks have been saying what is wrong with women's basketball. But while they're hung up on the few things that ave troubled the sport lately, they are overlooking everything that is right with it. . Tennessee, perhaps the best team in the history of the sport, is working on an an undefeated season and a third-straight national championship. Pat Summit, the coach and mastermind of the Volunteers, three weeks ago became the first-ever female coach to appear on the cover of Sports Illustrated. The maga- zine's cover asked if Summit was the best basketball coach since UCLA's legendary John Wooden. They didn't answer their own question, but they didn't have to. Michigan put together a pretty good team itself, right in our own backyard. The Wolverines' 19-10 record was the second-best in school history, and coach Sue Guevara was named the Big Ten's coach of the year. The biggest upset in college basketball history - men's or women's - was pulled off just under a week ago in the NCAA Tournament. No, it wasn't the Valparaiso men's team. Saturday night, the 16th-seeded women's squad from Harvard shocked top-seeded Stanford in the Battle of the Brains. But Tony Kornheiser and Mike Lupica didn't notice this rags-to-riches story of the Scholarship- less Wonders from Cambridge. Instead, they focused what little attention they gave to the women's game on the Sales incident. Sales, a senior at Connecticut, injured her leg while driving to the basket in the Huskies' second- to-last game of the regular season - seemingly end- ing the All-American's career just one point shy of the Connecticut career-scoring record. In one of the most meaningful gestures I have seen in sports, Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma and Villanova coach Harry Perretta, after getting the go-ahead from the Big East, let Sales score an See HOOPS, Page 14 Sampson contacted by Michigan NORMAN, Ola. (AP) - Coach Kelvin Sampson says he's happy at Oklahoma but will listen to what Virginia and Michigan athletic officials have to say. Athletic administrators from the two schools, as well as Alabama, have asked for permission to talk to Sampson about basketball coaching openings. Sampson said Monday that the schools had called but he hadn't returned their messages. "I'm very happy at Oklahoma," Sampson said. "I'm not looking for another job. I never said I wanted another job, but I never said I wouldn't listen. That's the extent of it right now. Michigan Athletic Director Tom Goss has said he has narrowed his list of can- didates to five, but has refused to identify them, saying only that interim coach Brian Ellerbe is among the candidates. Iii " h IA Lww H o urn Ja e . - *I Issp/m ,. ...,.,_. «wu .t ,y ;s.. lt*i .:. ;, ;; t. ~', ,C, n.. ,£! ' y:i ilfGd. .... r..:'. .. ..,_n,.,..x,.e:saw 'ah. " ..u4 a:s,:3,?,':. . :ra S s. .Ya A xv er>..akf+a i '