sprsesdmcheuSETO4 L MNDA Sports desk: 647-3336 SECTION B y...1 . ccelentee Siciliano repeats as NCAA champ, breaks U.S. record By Benjamin Singer and Jeb Singer Daily Sports Writers * MINNEAPOLIS - Michigan's 14th-place finish behind first place Texas at the NCAA men's swimming Championships is better than it appears. Especially when so many individual honors were earned, includ- ing sophomore Tim Sicil- iano's championship swim in the 400-meter individ- ual medley. "I think this weekend was very successful," ichigan coach ion MJrbanchek said. "We just needed more bodies at this level. We squeezed what we could out of this meet." The six Michigan swimmers who qualified for the NCAAs combined for five All-American performances. Not sur- prisingly, the team was ed by stellar performers iciliano and junior Chris Thompson. In repeating as the 400 IM national champion on Friday night, Siciliano lowered the U.S. Open and American records. In the preliminaries, after the record had just been broken, Siciliano set new standard which lasted all off one heat. Freshman Erik Vendt of Southern California toppe tremendous swim of his own With honors Michigan men's mwinmng All-Amercans (lsr-nth) and Honorable Mentions (9th-6th) Tim Siciliano Champion 400 IM 4th 150CM freestyle l th 40GM freestyle Chris Thompson 2nd 1500M freestyle 3rd 400M freestyle Jeff Hopwood 4th 20CM Breaststroke 10th 10CM Breaststuoke Scott Werner I2th 10CM Breaststroke I1th 20CM Breaststroke Tony Kurth 16th 20CM IM Michigan 14th 800M relay d Siciliano's time with a DANA LINNANE/Daily Michigan goaltender Josh Blackburn takes the puck from his goal as Maine celebrates again in the third period. Despite Blackburn's 40-save performance, the Wolverines were eliminated. Not to be outdone, Siciliano shined brightest when it counted - in the evening's championship heat - swimming a 4:06.02. This was over three seconds faster than Vendt swam in the prelims. "I think Siciliano's swim was obviously the highlight of this meet," Urbanchek said. In addition, Siciliano's time of 14:48.59 in the 1500- eter freestyle was good for fourth place and another All-American honor. Thompson was also looking to exorcise his demons -- or rather a demon in Arizona senior Ryk Neethling. Neethling won the mile-long freestyle at the NCAAs the past three years. He also has beaten Thompson in all of their competitions. After this past Thursday, the streak was still intact as Neethling won his third- straight 400 freestyle championship. Thompson had to 'ettle for third as Vendt finished second. "Maybe it's fate that I get third every year," Thomp- son said. "I can't control what Ryk does." See NCAA, Page 7B 'M' Ninldle of to-. luggish start By Dena Beth Kdscher Daily Sports Writer Ourt of gsS out Be proud Sean, this group has a strong legacy LBANY, N.Y. - Sean Peach couldn't help it. Tired, beaten and emotionally drained - the only senior starter fought back the tears in his last post game press conference as a Wolverine, but the battle-tested captain could not keep his emotions from letting from coming out. Peach understandably struggled to sum up his illustri- ous Michigan career - at times staring vacantly at the ceiling, eyes swollen from newly fallen tears, no doubt consumed by thoughts of what could have been and what has been on his mind. The Wolverines fell 5-2 to a strong Maine team that simply proved too much in the latter stages of yesterday's NCAA East QIRIS Regional final. The Black Bears, GRANDSTAFF last season's national champions, move on to the Frozen Four to try The Grand become the first team in nearly 30 Scheme of luck Seasons over - plenty for sequel By Geoff Gagnon Daily Sports Writer ALBANY, N.Y. - Josh Blackburn spoke softly through the goatee that he grew for this season's playoff run about the feeling of coming up short. His words were quiet, like the mood in the Michigan lockeroom, and though the sophomore had just recorded a career-high 40 saves, his frustration was evident - there would be no saving this season. But when asked about what he can take from reflecting on the season, the sophomore netminder with the crim- son whiskers made no secret of the fact that he and his teammates hope to bring an older Michigan squad back to Albany in a year. While Maine's 5-2 win yesterday secured the Black Bears a trip to Providence, next year's Frozen Four will be hosted on the same rink where Blackburn and his teammates say they left this year's title hopes - and maybe their hearts as well. "We're still a young, young team," Blackburn said. "We're going to work hard and come back next year with a little more experience." And for Blackburn, comeback is the operative word - as in what he did this season after returning in January from foot surgery after a banner freshman season - and as in where he'd like to bring Michigan a year from now. Helping Michigan do just that will be a talented cast of players who'll return as sophomores much the way Blackburn did this season after turning heads a year ago. Back will be playmakers and showstoppers like Andy Hilbert and Mike Cammalleri who finished with 17 and 13 goals respectively. Joined by the likes of Hilbert's late season linemate Jed Ortmeyer who notched 24 points, will be the likes of John Shouneyia, Mark Mink and J.J. Swistak, who all made late-season contributions as the Wolverines' play- off run gathered steam. Bolstered by the defensive addition of newcomer Mike Roemensky who managed to tally his first goal of the year this weekend, Michigan's young guns will be back - not as a successful freshman class - but as a solid corps of playoff veterans anxious to steer Michigan back to the New York capital. And their showing this weekend only seemed to solidi- fy that claim. Roemensky's first-period strike on Saturday put Michigan on the board and seemed to foreshadow a There may not be an 'I' in 'team,' but even more important- ly, there is definitely not an 'E' in 'win.' In fact, the Michigan baseball team proved this weekend that you can't spell 'lose' without the letter 'E' -- handing over a *ur-game series to Minnesota with its fourth consecutive loss on yesterday's three-hit, complete game 7-0 shutout - compli- ments of the Gophers' left-hander Kelly Werner. The weekend numbers: Four games, 18 errors, 15 hits, eight runs and four losses for Michigan. On the other side - four games, four errors, 35 hits, 34 runs, two shutouts and four wins for Minnesota. "If we're going to win, we've got to make less errors than hits," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn said. "We're giving them four or five outs an inning and that's hard to do." Of Minnesota's 34 runs for the series, 17 were unearned. In yesterday's shutout, the Gophers scored seven runs on six its and four errors. According to Zahn, when you hold a team o six hits, you should still be in the game. "I feel like we're beating ourselves," junior catcher David Parrish said. "It's almost pathetic, actually. It's just ridiculous. You can't expect to win when you make five or six errors a game." Parrish went 5-for-15 on the series, raising his batting aver- age to .290, creeping up on freshman third base- man Brock Koman's team-leading .342. "I'm doing everything the same," oman said. "I hit it pretty hard, I just 'ed to find the holes, I guess." Koman and fellow freshmen infield- ers Jordan Cantalamessa and Jordan French committed a total of nine errors, consequentially showing more signs of youth than the Wolverines thought they had. Although it seems that way on naper, the' years to repeat as champions - trying to establish their own legacy, something the Wolverines know all about. Michigan's trip to the NCAA tournament this season was it's tenth straight, a string which included two national championships - bringing its total to nine, the most in NCAA history. Peach was a part of the Wolver- ines most recent title run in 1998, an improbable stretch of games that culminated with a championship in Boston. While there'll be no championship this season, Peach and the Wolverines need not bow their heads after the accomplishments of the past seven months. The Wolverines unexpectedly lost three defensemen in the offseason; they lost their starting goalie for the first half of the year. Critics began writing off the young Wolverines. But Michigan bounced back with the return of Black- burn and the resurgence of a winning attitude. The Wolverines edged Michigan State out for the regular season conference crown and entered the postseason poised for yet another magical run. Problems began arising again for the Wolverines though - struggling to get by Western Michigan in the first round of the conference tournament, and then falling to upstart Nebraska-Omaha in the CCHA semi- finals. The result of their late season troubles was a No. AP PHOTO Brendan Walsh celebrates Michigan's season finale after scoring an empty netter to put the game out of reach. The Wolverines came to Albany an underdog, a posi- tion that became accentuated when, just minutes into Saturday night's game against Colgate, Michigan defenseman Dave Huntzicker, a pillar on the blue line all season, was sent crashing into the boards. Huntzick- er sustained a sprained knee that would end his season, and would hinder the already thin Michigan defense. At that point the Wolverines could have folded. They could have laid down in front of a predominantly Red Raiders' crowd, whose chants of "We own Pepsi" were sickeningly similar to those of the Spartan faithful in Crisler Arena. But they didn't. The Wolverines showed a level of heart and character usually absent from such a young team. Michigan withstood the Red Raiders' attack and captured a 4-3 overtime victory to set up the game against Maine. The overtime victory over Colgate took its toll as the Wolverines were visibly tired against Maine, despite I -