8B -The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 22, 1999 O'Neill surprises competition; takes Big Ten title in 400 IM ( By Ichaei Kern Daily Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS - On Friday night in the biggest surprise of the meet, senior Cathy O'Neill won her first Big Ten title in the 400-yard individual medley. Her time of 4:18.16 edged out defend- ing champion Katy Kristoferson of Minnesota by just .07 seconds. When she touched the wall at the end of the race, the crowd erupted in the loudest cheers of the evening. Her team- mates rushed to the side of the pool to celebrate. Her coach gave her a hug, pulling her out of the pool. "There is nobody I'd rather see do it' Michigan coach Jim Richardson said. "I got teary-eyed watching the swim at the end of it." Nobody expected O'Neill to win the race. The event's program hyped two Gophers, Kristoferson and freshman Jinny Smedstad as the two swimmers to look for in the event. "I guess it's worth waiting four years for' O'Neill said. "I didn't come in expecting to win and I'm just happy that we could pull things together." When O'Neill swam to the fastest time in the preliminaries, most around the pool were surprised, to say the least. "I like being the underdog," O'Neill said. "It kind of freaked me out going in first." After O'Neill had fallen back to sixth in the finals during the backstroke, it appeared as if she might have used Frustrated and disappointed with the University? Need help making sense of your U of M experience? Check out http://universitysecrets.com everything she had that morning in the preliminaries. But in the last two legs of the race, O'Neill's strongest, she slowly worked her way past the other swim- mers, taking the lead into the final stretch. With Kristoferson gaining on her, O'Neill used all she had left to get to wall first by a split second. "I definitely used it all up and a little extra' O'Neill said. "Emotion is what got me to the wall" O'Neill has been known throughout her career at Michigan for being one of the hardest workers and fiercest com- petitors on the team. But the breaks never seemed to go her way. Shescame close many times to making the NCAA Championships but was always cut off, just short of qualifying. "I remember one year in particular that I didn't think she needed to rest and swim again." Richardson said. "I told her she was in and I was wrong. She missed the meet" O'Neill said she peaked in high school, struggling once she got to col- lege. Racing had always come easy to her, but suddenly it stopped happening for her. O'Neill struggled through a number of differentpractices and training groups but nothing really seemed to click. "I swam consistently but I knew there was something else there" O'Neill said. "I'm just glad Jim never gave up on me." Last year, when O'Neill lost to Kristoferson in the 400 IM, it looked as The Michigan women's swhl' ming and diving team couldn't overcome Minnesota this season, and saw their streak of 12 Big Ten titles come to an end. ' KRISTIN GOBLE/ Daily Wo-men are runners-up at Big Tens r 2 KRISTIN GOBLE/Daily Michigan coach Jim Richardson con- gratulates Cathy O'Neill on her victory, if she might never wim it all and go to NCAAs. Kristoferson was only a freshman and sure to improve on her time. Going into the meet this year, Kristoferson had the fastest time in the Big Ten and was favored to repeat. "She has her picture on the wall at Minnesota as the hardest worker they have;' O'Neill said. "I consider myself a hard worker, too. "I went into the race thinking, 'If you're the best Minnesota has, this is Michigan's program. Let's see who works harder."' O'Neill is excited about the NCAA Championships in March. "Anything there is just icing on the cake," O'Neill said. us." Shakespeare was the outstanding scorer of the meet for Michigan, gar- nering 54 points. Besides her second- place finish in the100 free, she fin- ished first in the 200 IM and second in the 100 breaststroke. She was also the anchor on the 400 free and 800 free relays that both took first and swam the second leg of the 200 medley relay that took first as well. Eberwein, who returned to the Wolverines after a two month lay off from Epstein-Barr syndrome, finished her Big Ten swimming career with 18 Big Ten titles - six individual and 14 on relays. Four of those titles came this weekend, as she also swam in the 200 medley and 400 and 800 free relays to go with her individual title in the 100 free. "I really had no idea what to expect and I just wanted to come and see what I could do." Eberwein said. "By the last day, I just figure that I would give everything that I had left and see what happened." Also winning an individual title for Michigan was senior Cathy O'Neill who won the 400 IM. It was O'Neill's first Big Ten title for the Wolverines. Jen Crisman won the 100 back- stroke, setting a Big Ten record with her time of 54.23. "After years of being with this team and working hard for it, I just didn't want to let anyone down," O'Neill said. "I love everyone of (my teammates) and they were all in the pool with me." Despite not winning individual titles, Sugar and freshman Lindsay Carlberg, and junior Jenny Arndt were also factors in Michigan's strong r- formance. All three participated in the relays that won Big Ten titles and qualified for NCAAs. Carlberg also finished second in the 200 back and third in the 100 back. "I was really excited because this is my first time," Carlberg said. "I just wanted to do the best for our team because we needed it this year." 'M' streak ends, but heroes persevere DAILY SPORTS. SHAVED AND TAPERED. By Ryan C. Moloney Daily Sports Writer The streak began to crumble after the first day - the rest was mere for- mality. The Minnesota women's swim- ming and diving team - so often the bridesmaid but never the bride - had claimed 181.5 points to Michigan's 134 when all was said and done. With two more days of competi- tion left, and Minnesota's strongest events still to come, the Fat SWIMMING Lady didn't need to sing in Commentary order to recog- ----------- nize the inevitable. The magic that guided Michigan's run of dominance atop the Big Ten - 12 years, 12 titles -would final- ly disappear into the cold darkness of the Minnesota night. While it wouldn't have been admirable for the Wolverines to roll over and die, it would have been understandable. Minnesota enjoyed all the luxuries of a host team - the convenience of a familiar pool, a raucous crowd fueled by the Minnesota marching band, a fan-friendly public address announcer and above all, the incen- tive of dethroning the perennial champion in the Gophers' own arena. Even the Gophers themselves played up their advantage to the fullest-they brazenly sported T- shirts after the first day stating in noticeable bold letters: "IT'S OUR TIME." The eternally optimistic coach Jim Richardson wouldn't sugar coat the obvious: "We knew what the math was after we graduated one of the best classes in the country last year. You just can't replace them with freshmen and expect them to com- pete at that level-we're in a rebuild- ing mode." In swimming, depth pays the bills. The Gophers only had two first- place finishes for the weekend, but dressed more than 20 swimmers to Michigan's eight. Then something happened. Whatever dread comes with the inevitability of loss was lost on the Wolverines. In nearly every event they entered over the remaining two days the Wolverines dominated - from their impressive relay victories to their sweep in the 100 freestyle. But what will remain and endure in the memories of all who attended these championships, was the cast of favorites and unlikely heroes who swam up to their capabilities, and in some cases, past them. One of those, Michigan's Cathy O'Neill, was the patron saint of swimming hard luck for most of her career - always the next swimmer to go to the big meets and always coming just short of the standard in spite of her reputation as the hardest worker on the team. In one breathtaking moment, O'Neill shed all the doubts and dis- appointments and captured a Big Ten title in the 400-meter individual medley - her first Big Ten title in four tries. Another hero? How about Jennie Eberwein? Also a senior, her name became synonymous with her famous "Epstein-Barr" syndrome which knocked her out for the latter half of the season. Who could have guessed she'd return from the form of mononucleo- sis, much less perform up to her All- American standards? Yet there she was on Saturo, defending her Big Ten title in the 100 free and swimming on all the freestyle relays. The usual suspects - Shannon Shakespeare, Missy Sugar, Jenny Crisman and Lindsay Carlberg exceeded their usual high expecta- tions, shouldering the burden of rac- ing in numerous events on all three days without a single complaint- no matter how painful it became. In fact, if it weren't for the sco e- board there would be little dispute as to who the real winners of the Big Ten meet were. "Not all winners are champions," Richardson said. "This is a champi- onship team - they get the big pic- ture and they see what's really important." Perhaps it was time for the Wolverines as well. Chun-Ma Taekwondo " Kickboxing Acadamy (734) 994-0400 .;" Hm ofNationa& Receive instruction in-: Taekwondo Kickboxing Hapkido Judo Our Cardio-Fit Kickboxin g pro- gram takes the music, excitement and energy of aerobics but adds important self-defense techniques like jabbing, kicking, punching and blocking. You learn-while you burn at 800 calories per hour! ! " Are Yo u Leavilng0 Ann Arbor Soon. * " DO YOU NEED TO SUBLET YOUR * ® APARTMENT OR HOUSE? * 0 * " * " * 0 Dawgs bite gymnasts By Vaughn R. Kiug Daily Sports Writer A margin of .825 is all that separat- ed the No. 5 Michigan women's gym- nastics team from the best squad in the nation-Georgia. Competing before 9,217 fans in Athens' Stegeman Coliseum on Friday, the Wolverines achieved their highest team score of the season, yet suffered their first road loss of the sea- son as the Lady Bulldogs edged them, 197.200-196.375. The highlight of the evening was tri- captain Sarah Cain's all-around victo- ry. Marking her fourth consecutive all- around title, Cain tied her season best with a score of 39.600. "Sarah is getting into her zone and has truly competing with confidence lately," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "A lot of the athletes she compet- ed against have the potential to win a national championship in the all- around and she defeated each of them:' En route to her all-around title, Cain secured a first place on the floor exer- cise with a 9.900. Thanks to four gym- nasts scoring a 9.800 or better, the Wolverines bettered Georgia onte floor, 49.150-49.025. "It was nice to see the team compete with such confidence on the floor," Plocki said. "Showings like that bring our team one step closer to being com- petitive in all four events." As for the beam, Cain again reigned supreme with a nearly perfect score of 9.950. Senior Kathy Burke's 9.900 marked a career high and was good enough to earn her fourth-place. Coming into the meet ranked firs n the nation on the vault, Michigan per- formed accordingly, with a team score of 49.300 thanks to strong showings from Cain and Nikki Peters who fin- ished in third- and fifth-place, respec- tively. The Wolverines were unable to prevail on the vault, though, as Georgia dazzled the judges and earned a 49.500. f .. *1