the Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 25, 1999 - A' Blue to get 'feet wet' in Arizona SHARAT RAJu Sharat in the Dark Baseball bizgs sp g to Arnn Arbor ople are excited. It's an exciting time - the Final Four, NCAA hockey regionals, MSA elections. Oh yes, the end of March has everything. None of those do anything for me, however. Sure, I'll enjoy -watching the Final Four as I do every year, even with Michigan State and Ohio State in St. Petersburg. I've been eliminated from winning almost every pool I entered anyway, including a last-place showing in one of em. That probably surprises you considering that my .700- us winning percentage in football picks last fall put me way ihead of the rest of the pack (add applause here). Although the hockey tournament is as fun to watch as any tourney around, it really doesn't have the same feel for me right now. I like watching the Michigan hockey team of outse, but I saw them win it all, first hand, in Boston last yeat, And I saw them do it on television two years ago. And MSA elections ... well, you know. No, the one thing that excites me about late March cannot 1 illustrated inside of a gym with artificial lights and hard- od floors. It cannot be felt in the fake cold of an ice rink 'arded off by Plexiglas. The feeling - the feeling that spring is truly here can only :be captured by wide open green expanses and tiny sand dia- monds that dot the landscape. I know that spring starts on March 21, but for me it doesn't officially start until the first pitch is thrown nearly a week later. It's baseball season. That's spring, the feeling of hope against hope that the home team will win - or it's a shame. The home team. For years, for myself, the 'home team' has always been a certain professional team in a certain large, t-of-state, nearby Midwestern city. But now that I think 'out it in my waning days in this town, the home team, our home team, is the Wolverines. Sure, we may be Yankees fans, Red Sox fans, Tigers fans or even (heaven forbid) Mets fans. Those divisions represent dur backgrounds, our upbringings. They help us hold on to our childhood, to days when we skipped class to go to ball games with our parents and devoured large amounts of hot But in our formidable college years, we each spent our time in this large town that tries to act like a little city. And rooting for the home team means rooting for the Wolverines. Down at Ray L. Fisher Stadium, nine guys try to do what people have been trying to do since before the Civil War - hit a round ball with a round bat. It's great to watch - it's baseball, pure and simple. Fisher Stadium has no modern amenities to speak of. There is no organ but a scant outdated sound system. The scoreboard, although electronic, doesn't explode or have a Jumbotron television screen. The field is real. The players aren't paid a salary. Sure, the team uses a designated hitter, the metallic clink of the aluminum bats is a bit irritating and the team isn't neces- sarily a national contender. Fisher Stadium is no Wrigley Field or Fenway Park,though. In fact, it isn't very pretty and has very little character. The metallic bleachers are sometimes cold, the field is symmetri- cal and the wind howls in through the stands on chilly days. If there is any facility that the Athletic Department needs to rebuild and modify, it's Fisher Stadium. Despite that, games are fun to watch. It's baseball and it's cheap. Michigan baseball has a rich tradition. Along with football, baseball is the only Michigan team to have won a Big Ten title in every decade since the conference has been around. Still, not enough people take the opportunity to stroll down State Street and catch a ball game on a Friday afternoon. What is so great about a baseball game? Nothing. It's the chance to sit and do nothing. That's what is great - do no homework, think about no problem sets or essays, move as little as possible. In our hectic college lives, a chance to sit around and do nothing is golden. Baseball provides that relaxation, that laziness borne of the fact that classes are end- ing soon, daylight lasts longer and the nights need no jackets. On March 30, that's next Tuesday at 3 p.m., the Wolverines open the home season. And spring will officially begin. - Sharat Raju can be reached via email at sraju@umich.edu. By Ron Gaber Daily Sports Writer This weekend marks the beginning of the end of an era in Michigan men's track and field. The Wolverines head to the Castillo Invitational in Tempe, Ariz. tomorrow and Saturday to jump start their outdoor sea- son. The meet is the first of coach Jack Harvey's 24th and final season with the Wolverines. Harvey, who announced his retirement during the indoor season, has won six Big Ten Outdoor Championships during his illustrious career. But this year the Wolverines aren't entering the season with expectations of capturing a seventh title for Harvey. Instead, the young team hopes to gain experience and improve upon its ninth place indoor finish. For many of the young athletes, this weekend's invitational is their first out- Wom-en's t door meet wearing maize and blue. The meet will show them where they stand among other more experienced competitors. "We're looking to gain some experi- ence," freshman Jeremy Schneider said. "It's a long outdoor season. We want to get our feet wet" Many Wolverines are also bouncing back from'injuries sustained during the indoor season and will use the weekend to see if they are fully healed. Among them are freshman high jumper Robert Arnold, freshman' sprinter Ike Okenwa and Schneider. "I just want to prove to myself that I'm healthy again," Okenwa said. "There's not going to be any world-class times or anything. We're just trying to get our names out there" Fortunately for the Wolverines, there are several healthy upperclassmen who seem poised to lead the team through the ,rack heads beginning of the season. Sophomore hurdler Jonathan Cohen; sophomore pole vaulter Charles DeWildt and junior distance runners Dan Snyder and Jay Cantin have been consistent throughout the indoor season and have looked strong in practice. In addition, a healthy and reenergizd Derek Applewhite is looking to improve on his indoor season. The freshman hui- dler has lost 10 pounds and is poised foia breakout season. "Derek's been looking real fast in prac- tice," Okenwa said. With strong performances from its upperclassmen and consistent improve- ment from its strong freshman class the team could rebound from its indoor finish and send Coach Harvey off in style. "I think the experience from the indoor season will really help us," Schneider said. "We can really surprise some teams in the Big Ten." to Arizona- By Chris Langrill Daily Sports Writer Having started off its season on a successful note at last weekend's Florida State Relays, the Michigan women's track and field team looks to continue its winning ways as it heads to Tempe, Arizona for the Castillo Invitational tomorrow and Saturday. In the unscored meet, the Wolverines will face Arizona State, Northern Arizona, Dartmouth and Indiana. Dartmouth is led by a group of strong middle-distance runners, who should match up well against Michigan's competitive middle distance group, especially in the 400 meters. At last weekend's unscored meet - the first of the outdoor season for the Wolverines - though many runners placed in their events, only two Michigan athletes took home individual titles. Senior Nicole Keith won the shot put and junior Elizabeth Kampfe took the 3,000. But in contrast to late-season meets, the focus of these early meets is not exclusively on winning and head-to-head compe- tition, Michigan assistant coach Mike McGuire said. "Non-scoring events are all about cultivating team develop- ment," McGuire said. "Events like team relays aren't part of the Big Tens or national competitions, but we like running them because it lets us see what the kids can do together. "Track and field isn't just about the score. It's more cost effective to have a multitude of events ... it provides opportu- nities for our kids." The team will have plenty of opportunities this weekend to continue improving. Having had the chance to enjoy the Florida sun last weekend, the warm Arizona weather nNow awaits the team. But does the shift to an outdoor venue, after a few months of strictly indoor competition, pose any adjustment problems for the team? "After competing indoors, and now being outside for the first time, the track seems bigger than Texas," McGuire said "But that's about it ... we've had good conditions so far, which should continue in Arizona, so that has definitely made the transition easier." The biggest change - indeed a positive one - is that events that were really cut down by the nature of an indo, venue can be run as they should be. Hurdlers, discus competj.: tors and hammer throwers get the biggest boost with the sta t of the outdoor season. For example, during the indoor season, discus throwers have to toss a rubber version of the discus against a brick wall: whereas now they toss the traditional metal discus into they wide-open sky. This weekend, the Wolverines will bring a relatively healthy- team of 30 athletes (the NCAA limit forroad events) to the: Castillo Invitational. And what does McGuire want to get most out of this week end's trip? "We just want to have a week better than last;" he said. dogs and popcorn. EG IONALS ntinued from Page 9A "We need the fans in the building," Berenson said. At least "our band is going, but we can't control that. With Denver, both teams will be on equal footing. I don't think either team has the edge." The Wolverines hopefully will be able to count on a larger alumni crowd out east when compared with Denver in taer to make up for the fans who can't ake the long trip. "Maybe we'll have a few more, 100, 250 more," Berenson said. "It's too bad that the low- est attendance has to come in the most important game of the year." And instead of a No. 3 seed, the Wolverines settled for a lower No. 5 seed this season, meaning they will be the underdogs for at least the first two games. A No. 5 seed has never won the tour- nament. Lake Superior, a No. 4 seed, won the 1994 championship. But the process of seeding teams only began eight years ago, and Berenson believes that his team knows how to play in different rinks. The Wolverines had a 3-2-0 record in neutral rinks this season. In its two loss- es, though, Michigan still gave Michigan State a run for its money. "We know we have to play a hockey game whether it's on the road or at home;" Berenson said. "Of the nine years we've been in the NCAA Tournament every year we played in Wisconsin and that sure as heck wasn't home ice. The regionals have been in all sorts of rinks." But with the huge home-ice factor, last year the Wolverines lucked out in the regional pairings by landing a spot in the West regional. The selection committee may have changed its mind when deciding this sea- son's NCAA brackets. Boston College was shipped out to Wisconsin, instead of playing close to home in Worcester where it may have had the home advan- tage that Michigan had a year earlier. "It can be a factor, but it won't be a factor this year," Berenson said. "I don't think it's been a factor in most games, but it was in the game against North Dakota." . --i6 FREE! PHONE CARDS Only 14.90 per Minute Rechargeable phone cards! Details provided with card. . Conveniently add minutes by Internet or Phone!" . Great for students/travel! Wolverine Telecards, P.O. Box 4246,Ann Arbor, MI 48106 Must send $2.00 for P,S&H .s:.:ss -'-s ::::s. ° CALL FOR FREI SIIGIIXA~ SARMESIM- TRIAL OFFER STOP GAMNBUNG AND START INVESTING f W DO'T INTI ON' P I a- r. w ii Y. fe Bdll' s I 1 oUr 'ItA ourt " $45,000 Base salary " $5,000 Relocation bonus * Project management I