0 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 27, 1998 Neethling leaves 'M' in wake By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer AUBURN, Ala. - Swimming a championship event can be a tricky thing. You have to swim hard enough in preliminaries to -qualify for the finals, but you can't use up all your energy. . But what if you save your best for the finals, only to find out that someone else saved even more? That's what happened to Michigan's Tom Malchow and Chris ,Thompson in last night's 500-yard freestyle. At the James E. Martin Aquatics Center, both set pool records in the qualifying heats but fell behind Arizona's Ryk Neethling early in the final and never recovered. Neethling jumped out to an early lead and held Malchow, the Big Ten swimmer of the year, and Thompson, the Big Ten fresh- man of the year, at arm's length for the entire race. "It's always tough to get out to a big lead because there's no one to push you," Neethling said. ,,,;But if he was having a tough time, it was a well-kept secret. Neethling looked effortless as he glided across the surface of ,;he pool, leaving Malchow and Thompson's hopes for a nation- al championship spinning in his wake. "There wasn't much I could do," Malchow said. In the preliminaries yesterday morning, Thompson nipped Stanford's Steven Brown at the wire to earn a pool record. It did- n't last long, as the record survived only until Neethling and Malchow eclipsed it. But after the race, Thompson dismissed remarks about his own fantastic finish with an "Oh yeah, I'll be fine." And he was fine, as he finished third in the country. Neethling said himself that he "took it easy" in the prelimi- naries, but he still managed a sound victory. So was Neethling that good? His time was a plain-vanilla 4:13.42. Afterward, he was humble about his victory. "Now, (former Wolverine Tom) Dolan's time - 4:08 - that's amazing," he said. Neethling wasn't amazing -just good enough. He swam an easy race, and maybe the only tough time he had was the size of his lead. He was so far ahead of Malchow, he said he wasn't sure if he knew Malchow was gaining on him. It didn't matter - Malchow only gained about a half-second until Neethling regained his three-second cushion and held it for the rest of the race. MARG1tART MYERS/Dily The Michigan men's swimming team will look to crack the top 10 today as they continue to compete In the NCAA Championships in Auburn. Only two Michigan swimmers placed yesterday. NCAAS Continued from Page 9 Malchow swam even faster in the championship last night, but he would not retain his pool record, because Neethling would return the favor. The Arizona sophomore swam a time of 4:13.42 last night, denying the Wolverine his first-ever individual championship by an astounding 4.38 seconds. In all, six Wolverines competed in the 500 free - which has always been Michigan's dominant area - during yesterday morning's preliminary round. Urbanchek's swimmers didn't fare as well in the shorter races. Freshman Scott Werner finished a dismal 43rd in the 200 individual medley. Werner was dead last in his heat, even though he entered with the lowest seeding time. Malchow, Thompson, Potts and Owen von Richter were the only Michigan swimmers who placed in the top 16 and advanced to an evening ses- sion. But the latter two were forced to settle for the consolation final. Unfortunately, a disappointing per- formance in the 400 relay may have cost Michigan its shot to break the top five at NCAAs. Urbanchek has been saying for weeks that the Wolverines are capable of finishing as high as fourth. "A fourth-place finish is a long shot right now" Urbanchek said. "We won't even be in the top ten as of tonight. The only thing that didn't go right today was the relay - no one else could have con- tributed more. We needed the relay because this meet is relay-oriented. If your relays aren't up there, you're not going to score a lot of points?' I "u - m Get Ahead t/2 H ey, you don't do summer for fun. You do it to catch up. To get ahead. But you knew that. So if it's time to take care of business and you're heading home to Chicago for the summer, do it at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Our summer session's got more courses than ever and since we're a four-year research university, chances are they'll transfer easily back to your school. It also doesn't hurt that tuition is a great deal and applying is easy. So, what are you waiting for? Call us. Send e-mail. We'll send you what you need