8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 30, 1998 SWIMMING International swims. wore down athletes "it was so . don't know what else you can say," was how Michigan's Tom, ' Maichow, left,k E } described his fifth-place finish f'>;? in the finals of the 200-yard but- terfiy. .. Mike McWha, right, stares atY the scoreboard in U ,.s....,disbelief asr Michigan fals to f t rwin the 800- freestyle relay at NCAAs for the first time in five JOHN KRAFT/Oai ive-year 'Michigan race' hooked by Texas By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer AUBURN, Ala. - A meet such as the NCAA Championships will, naturally, feature some of the top swimmers in the world. During the regular season, these high-octane swimmers center their train- ing around meets other than their regu- larly scheduled intercollegiate competi- tion. This year, several top swimmers from highly competitive-------------- teams competed in NCAAs the World Championships Notebook held Jan. 8-17 in-------------- Perth, Australia. But observers bandied about the idea that training for three big competitions in as many months - worlds in January, the swimmers' respective conference championships in February and nation- als in March - was too much of a drain on the top teams' top guys. Michigan, which sent Derya Buyukuncu and Tom Malchow to Australia, seemed to be hit the hardest as the Wolverines finished well below expectations. But some teams, such as third-place Texas, fifth-place USC and 12th-place Michigan, didn't get all the mileage they wanted out of their worldly swimmers. Texas' Neil Walker, last year's NCAA swimmer of the year, won the 100 back- stroke, beating out another World Championships swimmer, USC's Lenny Krayzelburg. But Walker was beaten out by this year's swimmer of the year, Southern Methodist's Lars Frolander, in the 200 backstroke. Malchow and Buyukuncu didn't seem as crisp as they usually do in their fin- ishes. But worlds didn't take too big a bite out of some swimmers. Stanford, the eventual champion, sent two swimmers to worlds as well. "Nothing's slowing down those suck- ers,' Reese said. Nothing slowed them down, and nothing kept them down either. Every final had at least one Stanford swimmer participating. WHERE'D THEY Go?: Texas took the stealth approach to the last night of finals. The Longhorns were hoping, per- haps, to sneak past the host Tigers into second place. They traded their play-cowboy pow- der blue shirts (complete with collars) for menacing camouflage T-shirts that read 'Operation 3-28-98'in burnt orange on the back. Unfortunately for the Longhorns, there weren't enough potted plants in the Martin Aquatics center for hiding pur- poses, and they were unable to tiptoe past the tigers. By Jacob R. Wheeler Daily Sports Writer AUBURN, Ala.- Jon Urbanchek sat alone on the bleachers Friday afternoon after the second day's preliminary rounds of the NCAA Championships. His face showed no signs of the carefree humor for which he's internationally known. There was no playful towel slapping of his Michigan swimmers - this was the serious side of Urbanchek that most had never witnessed. At the time, Urbanchek found himself i a pretty unfamiliar situation. He was watching the Michigan dynasty that he had built slowly sink to the bottom of the James E. Martin Aquatic Center pool. The Wolverines were struggling in the NCAAs and on the verge of their first finish out of the top 10 since 1986. Michigan, ranked seventh before the meet, entered the second day of competi- tion tied for 13th, 20 points away from at least breaking even. But during Friday's preliminary round, an already bad situa- tion took a turn for the worse. All hopes oferacking the top 10 faded when five of six Wolverines swam slower than their NCAA qualifying times. Junior Tom Malchow's 200-yard freestyle swim was especially backbreak- ing. Malchow - the Big Ten Swimmer of the Year - was counted on to defend his top ranking in the 200 free and save the day for Michigan. But the 6-foot-7 Malchow was not accustomed to the short course and quick turns at Auburn because of his tall frame, and it showed. He finished dead last in his heat and 24th overall, missing the consolation finals by almost a half-second. "Malchow's just not a short-course swimmer" Urbanchek said. "He's real tall and lanky and it's hard for him to get around. He'll eat up all these guys long course, but he just can't do the short course. It's frustrating for him, but even more so for me, watching him struggle." A lull swept over the Michigan bench. Little had gone well all day, but now the hero had fallen. One could read a famous sports poem in the eyes of the Michigan faithful - but with a little change of subject: "somewhere hearts are merry, some- where children shout, but there is no joy on the Michigan bench, for the great Malchow has just struck out.' "I'm sure this is" one of the lowest moments for me "in the last 13 years," Urbanchek said. "We haven't finished out of the money since 1986.' And as Urbanchek sat there absorbing the harsh realities of defeat that his swim- ming program had eluded for so many years, he knew that another Michigan giant was likely to fall that evening. But this one would rattle straight to the bone and hurt even more than Malchow's sur- prising defeat. In college swimming, there is an event known as "the Michigan race"- the 800 yard freestyle relay, a race which effec- tively measures a team's depth. Some experts consider it the benchmark for a swimming program because it requires four swimmers to be adept in the 200- yard leg - which is somewhere between a sprint event and a long-dis- tance event. Unlike a ~r; medley relay, in which swimmers use a com- bination of strokes, one's fastest stroke is used in the freestyle, mak- ing the 800 free relay the ultimate test of speed. In this decade, no one has monopo- lized any event like the Wolverines have in "the Michigan race.' Urbanchek's teams had won the 800 free relay at NCAAs each of the past five years, a stretch in which the Wolverines won a national championship ('95), finished second ('93) and finished third twice ('94 and '96). During the dynasty, Michigan swimmers also won more medals in the 1996 Olympics than any other school. One of them, Tom Dolan, became a com- mercial icon in the process. But the Wolverines finally lost "the Michigan race" Friday night in Auburn. And they didn't lose it by just a heartbeat. The team of Malchow, freshman Chris Thompson, sophomore Mike McWha and senior Owen von Richter finished in ninth place, a full seven seconds behind the winning Texas team. The Wolverines did manage, however, to beat out conference rival Minnesota by 0.73 seconds. Still, that miniscule fact did very little to ease the pain. "We've had the talent the last five years," Urbanchek said. "But this year we just didn't have it. You talk about guys who were in it before, like Dolan - they're big-time swimmers. You've got to have the talent. You can't squeeze blood out of a turnip I guess." Urbanchek's team was relieved that the "Michigan race" record still stands, though. No one came close to the NCAA record of 6:20.89 set by the Wolverines in '96. And as long as that mark stands, these Wolverines will call the 800 free relay "the Michigan race." "That's been our race, so it hurts to get demolished like that" von Richter said. "Luckily they didn't even come close to the record. It's just too bad we didn't have all our cylinders firing, but if we get our heads out of our asses, maybe we can get it back in a couple years." 'M' swimming went south at wrong time NCAAs Continued from Page 1B coach Dick Kimball said Wilmot "was- n't real sharp." After the three-meter, however, Brett said he was "definitely more confident" for Saturday's plat- form event -his specialty. Wilmot remained in contention for a scoring position on the platform until his feet hit the tower on a dive he said he hits in practice every day. The low scores dropped him to 18th. "This was the worst meet of my life;" Wilmot said. Wilmot, like his teammates, didn't find answers this weekend. The Wolverines could only pack up and leave to soothe their wounds with thoughts of next season. Urbanchek said that the brightest point of the meet was. the way Thompson, the Big Ten Freshman of the Year, withstood the pressure of his big races. Thompson swam to third in the 500 free and second in the 1,650 free. "He's gonna be tough," said Urbanchek of his top freshman's future. Thompson said he couldn't wait for next year. But what about the four seniors on the team who ended their careers - ones that started with an NCAA title - on a sour note? "You can never look at it that way;' Derya Buyukuncu said. Steve Williams called his time at Michigan a "great experience" and said he "wouldn't have it any other way." No regrets. Maybe that's the per- spective that comes with four years of experience. McWha said that his second year, a year in which Michigan also lost to Minnesota at Big Tens, has him seem things in new ways. He said seeing Minnesota on top of the podium at the Big Ten Championships made him value the conference crown he won his freshman year even more. "I didn't realize what success was until it's gone,"he said. 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