tcoreboard - J, NATIONAL NATIONAL *FOOTBALL HOCKEY LEAGUE LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh at TORONTO, inc. KANSAS CITY, Inc. Phoenix at COLORADO, inc. ape 9irl gt n 3 ai(( SPORTS Tracking 'M' teams Most of the Michigan fall teams have home contests this weekend - hockey, soccer, field hockey, volley- ball and the Big Ten men's and women's cross country championships are all in Ann Arbor. Keep reading the Daily for stories and more information. Tuesday October 27, 1998 9 tAgr407 0 I Indiana safety Greg Yeldell intercepts a pass from Michigan tailback Walter Cross. B lame for CrOss as reStS with Carr BY CHRIS LANGRILL DAILY SPORTS WRITER C t all started for John Mortimer, senior co-cap- tain of Michigan's men's cross country team, on a fall day way back in fifth grade. He toed the line - if there even was one - with his tiny Nikes for his first-ever race as a competitor. Mortimer was one of many young fifth and sixth graders from three schools in his Londonderry, N.H., hometown with hopes of winning this ele- mentary school mile. When the race was over, the Il-year-old found himself in second place, having lost out to a bigger, faster sixth grader. It might have been the end of any possible running career for the youngster. There were other sports to play and have fun with - football, basketball, baseball and swimming. Mortimer enjoyed doing all these things at the time. So there was no expressed focus on running. But something - maybe just a childhood desire to be the best amongst friends - brought Mortimer back to running. "In sixth grade," Mortimer said with a grin, "I came back and won the event ... that kind of got me started." In time, Mortimer would phase out the other sports he considered fun, focusing his attentions more and more on running. Junior high saw a cross country state championship. High school brought more accolades, including back-to-back national championships in the two-mile. Next came a schol- arship to Michigan. Now, Mortimer, a senior architecture major, is one of the finest all-around collegiate runners in the nation. Last week, in fact, he was named Big Ten athlete of the week, after he won his third straight Wolverine Interregional individual title. Along the way, he helped the team capture its second straight overall title at the event, run annually on the Michigan Golf Course. It's funny how he got here, to this position as a senior co-captain of one of the nation's elite running programs. One may think, with all of his high school (not to mention grade school) accolades, Michigan men's cross country coach Ron Warhurst would have been knocking down John Mortimer's door to offer him a scholarship. But it didn't happen that way. "He called me," Warhurst said. "I knew he was good, but we were look- ing at other people. He came in for a visit and he liked the school, the kids in the program ... eventually, after I really looked into how good he was, I offered him a scholarship." "Yeah," Mortimer reflected, "I was narrowing it down to a couple of schools, and I came in for a visit. Meeting Ron and some of the guys on the team really inspired me to want to be a part of Michigan." Were those the only factors that affected his decision to leave the East Coast - home of many schools, such as Georgetown and Providence, with great running pro- grams? i i W T d9l 4 By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor There are moments when Lloyd Carr has to restrain himself from his own fury. On Saturday, when freshman alter Cross - a tailback - lofted a first-half trick pass into the end zone, it landed securely in the hands of Greg Yeldell. Unfortunately for Michigan, Yeldell is an Indiana safety and not a Michigan wide receiver. ,Carr stormed down the sidelines immediately, away from where Cross exited the field. Was it a chance to clear his head? To avoid confronting a timid freshman? ot a chance. At that moment, Cirr was only furious at himself. °I made the call for Walter Cross Cwhen he) threw the interception," Carr said at yesterday's media lun- Aeon. "That's why I was so mad After the game. Seeing as how that's ene of the few calls I made this ar, I wanted it to work. "t didn't, so I'm 0-1." The play came just one week Wer Cross fumbled against Northwestern, so Carr was careful tQ calm himself down before talk- ing to Cross about the situation. "I wanted to murder him at Northwestern, but his parents were there," Carr said half-jokingly. "It's a tough position to be put in. ... I said you've got to learn from that. When you put a guy into a pressure situation," it's tough. Michi gan takes 7th SBonita By David Alfred Daily Sports Writer Usually, a 'Fall Golf Classic' consists of lower temperatures and a chilly breeze. But not if it takes place in Bonita Springs, Fla., the site of this year's Notre Dame Invitational. With golf being a warm weather rt, the Michigan women's golf team seemed to be at an advantage playing in a beautiful 70-80 degree climate, instead of that cold South Bend, Ind. weather. " Compensating for the wind factor, the Wolverines ended their fall season in dramatic fashion, putting together what coach Kathy Teichert called, "the best two rounds of golf the team has lyed all season:' ompeting against 12 other teams, the Wolverines finished the tournament in-seventh place, shooting a final team score of 631. Michigan State finished second, and eventual winner Wisconsin concluded the two-day competition wiTh a team score of 615. Michigan State was by far the best THREE STRIKES: Reflecting on the victory over Indiana didn't hurt Carr quite as much after having time to stew, but problems still remain. The team's schizophrenic tenden- cies on third down are Carr's pri- mary concern. Though Michigan has improved its performance in the crucial situa- tions - on the season the Wolverines' have converted 43 per- cent of their third downs - the dis- tance to travel is still too much for this offense to consistently over- come. "We want to be in third-and-three and third-and-four," Carr said. "But that's not the way we played." The way they played was for Streets to bail them out of those jams. On three separate occasions - two for touchdown catches and once for a 20-yard possession pat- tern - he was Michigan's savior. How the Wolverines get into the frustrating third-and-long situa- tions is the problem. Early penalties - especially. those before the whistle - have Carr on edge, waiting for mistake- free football. But with a recent rash of jumping-before-the-whistle and holding calls, Carr's sympathy rope is at its end. "It's inexcusable," he said. "Guys simply aren't concentrating. Those are things that are concentration mistakes that keep us from being a better football team than we are." Not exactly. See, Mortimer isn't your average star athlete. He was actually looking for a school that had great acade- mics, as well. "There's not too many top 25 cross country and track programs that have architecture. So between the academics and athletics, it was definitely a match." And what a match it has been. As a freshman in 1995, he found immediate success, on the cross country team, earning the honor of Big Ten fresh- man of the year, and All-America status, with a 37th-place finish at the NCAA Championships. "He was mature coming in," Warhurst said. "Distance running is a head trip, and it takes more than natural ability ... he was able to overcome adversity quickly." It didn't hurt that Mortimer had Kevin Sullivan, who was two years ahead of him, as a training part- ner. Sullivan graduated last year as one of the University's most accomplished athletes ever - he set Michigan records in the 1500-meters in track and won numerous All-America honors in both track and cross-country. "I was second man on the team, next to Kevin, and he served as a role model to me, obviously," Mortimer said. In '96, with an injured Sullivan sitting out, sopho- more Mortimer was allowed to, as he says, "open up my wings and flourish as a runner." In other words. Mortimer was the one getting the headlines. He definitely took advantage of the opportunity, winning Big Tens and NCAA Districts in cross country for '96. In addition to this, he began to add track accolades to his already growing list of accom- plishments. Winning the Big Ten 3,000-metei steeplechase and 10K earned him All-America hon- ors for outdoor track. All this added up to a Big Ten athlete of the year award for Mortimer. Last year, according to Mortimer, Sullivan's return for a fifth and final season helped him mature as a runner even more. "Our timing was really good and we ran well together. We actually encouraged each other a lot, Mortimer said. At more than one meet last year, Mortimer and Sullivan approached the finish-tape with no one around them. Depending on whose parents were in attendance, one would let the other jog ahead for the win. Or, as they did at the Wolverine Interregional, they finished with identical times, sharing a title. See MORTIMER, Page 10 ~1 TIPOFF '98. IN THE DAILY ON Nov. Ia. WHEN AND WHERE. October 29 Ann Arbor Theater H WHAT. Cardmembers get two compli- mentary passes to a preview screening of Universal Pictures new film Meet Joe Black to be released November 13th. HOW. Just bring your American Expresso Card and your student ID to the location listed below to pick up your passes. SPECIAL OFFER JUST FOR APPLYING. Receive 2 complimentary pass- es when you apply for the new American Express Credit Card for Students (stop by the loca- tion listed below). MORE TO COME. Meet Joe Black is one in a series of three major motion pic- tures to be previewed on your camntjs this vear cnmnliments "Her active working relationship with the University, combined with her great acces- sibility, are two compelling reasons to give her another term." --Michigan Daily, I I-1-96 IIIIALZISAwnwil - : ' ITRIENWHI > a 3.:-