core boardK, i # ;Ng 10Mn m'tRams as Ciramploriship NHL COLORADO 2. Etdi~mThe Michigan soccer team travels to Minneapolis on Series DERI , Boston 2 a1lSO Ae OcaN Dt LOIs 2 EDMONTON 3, Friday to take on Big Ten archrival Minnesota. NEW TORE 4, NEW JERSEY 3, Carolina 3JOT Boston Amaem 2 VANCOUVER 3, NTA4O TORONTO 3, Calgary 3 OT ATLANTA 4, Floida 2.rsa New York 3 San Jose 2, 17AgTS Puma Ies, 20 DALLAS 0 14, 1999 rmR MORE. SEE PAGE 22 The Daily Grind= ets prove "s too soon give up ive days ago, Michigan State ended Michigan's football season. At least, that's been the attitude und town this week, where sentiment its football team quickly turned from ilation to disinterest. The transformation took about four urs on Saturday non. During Josh se very same r hours, hun- Kleinbaum ds of miles ay, another ryunfolded, y s one not of naction but res- on. Playing for the ured Mike Apomyps Todd Pratt Now a Matt ntei pitch to center field in the tenth *ing of Game 4 of the National e Divisional Series between the York Mets and the Arizona amondbacks. Steve Finley, the amondbacks' center fielder, raced to wall and leapt, raising his glove over blue Shea Stadium fence, trying to the unlikeliest hero on the unlikeli- of the unlikeliest home run. d~e catch it? Over 55,000 fans wait- not sure. Finley landed on the ground and ned his glove. Somewhere deep ide Shea Stadium, just as Finley's ulders shrugged and his head ed, someone flipped a switch: In an bridled display of sheer joy, the New rk crowd suddenly went berserk. And id too, celebrating the Mets' first n the National League ionship Series in IIyears. For over thirty minutes, I stood on a ca Stadium seat, screaming, cheering, oring. Spartan Stadium was about as to my mind as the Irish potato ine. To understand why this victory was special - and why it's an important ry for Michigan football fans - you e to travel back in time. I id-September, the Mets were lig, holding tightly onto a four-game dover the Cincinnati Reds for the Idcard berth in the playoffs and just game behind the Atlanta Braves for N.L. East division title. Barring a plete and total collapse, the Mets re a lock for the playoffs. And with of the last 12 games against the es, the division title was tantaliz- ly close. en, in three games in Atlanta, the put the Mets in their place, ceping the series and laying claim to division that has been theirs for the k of the decade. The Mets slumped to Philadelphia, ere the lowly Phillies kicked them in gut, sweeping three more games. ddenly, the reeling Mets had lost six 'ght and were in the thick of a battle the wildcard, and had to play three rames with the hated Braves. Ar the Braves took two of three in wYork, their third baseman, Chipper es, said the Mets were dead. The impossible, the collapse, had ppened. Three days left in the season d the Mets trailed the Reds by two es. And Michigan's football team is trouble? Facing the most adversity, the Mets ponded with some of their best base- r of the season. Capped by Pratt's iun - the biggest Mets hit of the e - the Mets won seven of their t eight games, restoring their pulse d their determination. College football is obviously different mn baseball. With just a 10-game sea- , and some of the best teams in the untry playing schedules made by stess, a single loss could cost the tonal title. But not necessarily. A one-loss team n*ke it to the national champi- ship game (see Florida State last ar). Yes, it'll take plenty of help from inkies nationwide, just like the Mets ded plenty ofhelp from a twinkie in, iwaukee in the last weekend of the ason, when the Brewers beat the Reds ice to force a one-game playoff tveen the Mets and the Reds last onday. So tomorrow night, tum on your tele- ip. Watch the Mets playthe Braves e 3 of the NLCS. Then close Jr eyes and imagine what the weather uld be like in New Orleans in tuary. Will it take a miracle for Michigan to .y for a national title?Yes (not to ttion one quarterback, an improved ining game and a consistent sec- iary). But Todd Pratt and the Mets have a that miracles can indeed happen. -ash Kleibnaum, can be reached via e-mail atjkbaum@umich.edu Volleyball continues swoon as Spartans sweep By Raphael Goodstein Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - The Michigan volleyball team had few reasons to feel good after Michigan State spanked the Wolverines 15-9, 15-6, 15-5. The Wolverines (2-5 Big Ten, 10-6 overall) arrived here facing a short- handed Spartans team without its start- ing setter, Christine Landry, and a down after a 1-5 Big Ten record. One hour and 15 minutes later, the Spartans were rejoicing in their biggest win of the year while the Wolverines were in their lockerroom for 45 minutes with their coach, Mark Rosen, who emerged red-faced. "We didn't execute very well and they executed very well," Rosen said. "They played great defense and were more consistent. We made too many errors and you can't win at this level with that many errors. We made a lot of attacking errors and servicing errors and it cost us." The Wolverines made more than "a lot of attacking errors." They finished with a minus .017 attacking percent- age compared with the Spartans' .283 percentage. "We did spiral tonight," Rosen said. "Mentality wise, once we got frustrat- ed, we allowed ourselves to focus on what just happened and not what's going to happen. "That's because we're a young team. I don't want to use immature, but we're young and without a lot of expe- rience." The Wolverines will now have to regroup and prepare for 0-6 Northwestern this Saturday. But after last night's loss, the Wolverines have to worry about their side of the ball and not who they are playing. "We need to focus more on what's going on on our side of the court and worry about every individual on our side," sophomore outside hitter Nicole Kacor said. "I think we're worrying, about everything else." The deflating loss left the Wolverines tied for ninth in the Big Ten and all the non-conference success that they enjoyed now seems to be nothing more than a distant memory. "We played looser, with less to lose during the non-conference season," Rosen said. "Sometimes when you get into the Big Ten, it becomes a little more mentally taxing. "In (non-conference) matches we were like '(we have) nothing to lose,' nobody knows if we're good or not, let's go play hard and let things hap- pen. "The other thing is our inconsisten- cy shows up at times and we get in trouble. Tonight we didn't play at the level we're capable of playing because we were inconsistent. Then when we get like that, we struggle:' If the Wolverines are to make the NCAA Tournament and accomplish their season-long goal, they will have to start a winning streak. The Big Ten is expected to land six tournament bids and a .500 conference record will be imperative for the Wolverines if they are to land one of those expected bids. "It felt like there was no chemistry," a near-tears Kacor said. "It was like six individuals out there. We need to learn to play as a team again and once we do that we'll be successful again. That's a really easy thing to say, but it (is going to take) every player on the team. "We need to slap hands when we come together and get an ace. I think that we're at the point in the season where if we don't do that, we 'could lose the rest of the season." Inside: Consistency hurts 'M' again Page 20. New kids on the block Ellerbe downplays heralded frosh class JEREMY MEsCII/Wily At yesterday's Michigan media day, Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe shielded his freshmen, including Leland Anderson, from the media spotlight. Instead, Ellerbe focused on his veteran players By Jacob Wheeler Daily Sports Writer No matter how many LaVell Blanchard questions a room of hungry journalists aimed at Michigan basketball coach Brian Ellerbe yesterday during Michigan media day, the third-year coach bounced them all away as if they were rubber bullets. Ellerbe is determined to divert pressure from his prized freshman class, which will inevitably fill out the Robbie-Reid-and-Louis- Bullock-less back court and one forward position early this year - at least until junior forward Brandon Smith returns from a knee injury. "It would create animosity if we split up the team and just talked about the freshmen," said Ellerbe, who at one point actually appealed to the media to take pressure off Blanchard. "The freshmen are going to have to earn all the min- utes they will get. Talent and abili- ty are one thing, but, at this level, everyone has talent." Michigan's preseason press con- ference was primarily geared around diverting pressure away from the freshman class - Ellerbe's first recruiting class - which includes winners of the Mr. Basketball award from three differ- ent states. "We feel that they will con- tribute," Ellerbe said. "But, at this point, freshmen don't even know how tough it is to win a basketball game in this league." Instead, Ellerbe highlighted the role of his upperclassmen - Smith, Josh Asselin, Peter Vignier and Darius Taylor. He introduced the veterans in the press room long before anyone got a peek at the coveted freshmen: Blanchard, Kevin Gaines, Jamal Crawford, Leland Anderson and Gavin Groninger. After the press conference, the freshmen walked on the court for photo shoots. Blanchard himself - the prized talent from Ann Arbor Pioneer High School -- treated yesterday's event less like a masquerade and more like a walk across the street, even though he was swarmed by reporters as soon as he set foot on the court. "This is a total shock," said the modest, 6-7 forward, referring to everyone around him as 'sir.' "It's an honor that everyone wants to talk to me. Right now I'm just try- ing to learn how to play in this league." But with the Big Ten the strongest it's been in years, Blanchard and the rest of the fresh- men will have to adjust quickly. Michigan State and Ohio State reached the Final Four last year and both teams return stellar back- courts which could easily have its way with a couple of freshman guards. "We're the best league in the country," Ellerbe said. "It's going to be brutal." The coach hasn't named any of the freshmen to the starting lineup, but thinks either Gaines or Crawford could handle point guard duties. "Both of them can handle the ball, but Kevin may have a little better understanding of getting everyone involved," Ellerbe said. "He could be a triple-double play- er." One thing is for sure: The Wolverines will utilize lots of dif- ferent guards to speed up the game's tempo due to their lack of bone-breaking strength in the front court. During the press conference Ellerbe played up Michigan's depth this season compared to last. He has at least 10 bodies from which to choose: five players who saw significant playing time last season and the five freshmen, com- pared to the eight-man rotation he used throughout much of last sea- son. "This year we've got competi- tion among positions," Ellerbe said. "It's good for you to look over your shoulder. Fear is a good moti- vator." .._. Ouellet trades hoops for runnmg shoes By David Horn Daily Sports Writer It may surprise some Michigan women's cross country fans to know that their team's that number one runner is not really a runner. She is a basketball player. "I'm a basketball fanatic," Michigan junior Lisa Ouellet said. A native of Sudbury, Ont., Ouellet is quick to admit where her athletic passions lay in high school. At LaSalle Secondary School, Ouellet found her way to the cross country course only by what she describes as a fluke. "My basketball coach didn't want me running because they were the same season," Ouellet said. "The first race I ran I was wearing my bas- ketball shorts, basketball shoes, my socks pulled all the way up. "But I won. Everyone just thought 'OK, it's a fluke,' but I kept going out and kept getting better." Running, both cross country and track, are not popular in Ontario. Athletic scholarships do not exist in Canada, so Ouellet was caught by surprise when she began receiving letters, phone calls and recruiting visits from American coaches for both basketball and cross country. "The first letter I got was from West Georgia College, and I'm like... 'What the heck? My running! Oh God!', Ouellet said. "But I was actu- ally torn between running and bas- ketball. The basketball schools were small, but to me it was big." Because of the absence of athletic scholarships in Canada, student-ath- letes tend to be more focused on aca- demics. Her prioritizing helped lead Ouellet to Michigan. "I was on a recruiting trip to Arkansas, and at the end of listening to the coach talk for a half hour I asked if I could see some material on some of the courses I could take," Ouellet said. See OUELLET, Page 20A 'Grinding' golf course looms for Wolverine s By Ryan C. Moloney Daily Sporis Writer Few people, if any, would say that the Michigan golf course is easy. In fact, many regard it as one of the hard- est courses in the nation. And that's just for golf. The object for most cross country teams in this Sunday's Wolverine Interregional will not be to con- queror the monstrously hilly eight-kilometer course, but merely to survive it. "Some of the teams say 'holy ...' when they see i* Michigan men's cross country coach Ron Warhurs said. "It's a tough course and it will grind you all day." Heading in to the meet, Michigan's stiffest test will come from James Madison - a team which handed the Wolverines an early season defeat. The Bulldogs come with perhaps the greatest intangible against the maniacal course - experience. "The course is deceiving when you first jog it the night before because you don't realize how much you'll be running hard," senior co-captain Jay Cantin said. "You See COURSE, Page 20A 4 r