12 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 20, 1999 BY GEORGE! BY MICHAEL KERN * DAILY SPORTS WRITER S he may not be as famous as the former heavyweight boxing champion, but Catherine "George" Foreman is a star in her own right. Foreman, who hails from South Australin, was given the notable nickname by her teammates on the under-21 Australian n'ational field hockey team. When the Michigan field hockey team visited Foreman in Australia before last season to do some preseason training, they needed a shorter name to use to communicate with Foreman on the field. "So we said, 'What does your team call you?"' teammate and housemate Ashley Rcichenbach said. "She said, 'Well my team calls me George.' She wanted us to call her something else, but we couldn't come up with anything." The team tried to come up with another nickname, but couldn't. S"The weight trainer put us through a box- ing circuit one day, and while we were box- irig, he would yell out all of these boxing nicknames," Reichenbach said. "After she said her last name was Foreman, he would yell, 'Come on, George!"' More important than what her teammates and coaches call the sophomore defend- er/midfielder on the field is their talk about her off the field. With senior co-captains Reichenbach and Erica Widder anchoring the defense for the seventh-ranked Wolverines, it would be easy for an under- classman to go unnoticed. But Foreman's knowledge of the game and ability to make plays on defense have stood out to her teammates and coaches this season. "She's a fantastic defender," Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz said. "I think she has a real savvy for the game. She's smart in how she plays, and even if she is being beat- en she knows how to make sure it doesn't hurt us." One reason'that Foreman is able to excel for the Wolverines so early in her career is due to her experience with the Australian under-21 team. Australia, the current women's field hockey world champion, has one of the strongest development programs in the world. "She is a sophomore, but she is a very mature player," Pankratz said. "When she gets out there, she is serious and leads by example on the field. She's had a lot of experience playing hockey over in Australia, so she brings a lot of that experi- ence to the field. She stays poised under pressure because she is used to high-level hockey." Foreman uses that experience to frustrate her opponents, helping to shut down some of the top offenses in the country. "The difference between Catherine and a lot of other players around the country is that she really reads the game well, knowing when to break it up and just create a foul and when to actually put a tackle on," assis- tant coach Tracey Fuchs said. "She has stepped up more and more as the season has gone on and into her sophomore season." Foreman exploits that defensive know- how in a system that allows her to move freely around the center of the field. Michigan's defensive zone requires play- ers to guard an area rather than playing man-to-man with one particular player from the opposition. Foreman's zone in the mid- - dIe of the field is paramount to the Wolverines' success, as she often draws some of the most skilled players on the other team to defend. "She is responsible, along with Ashley (Reichenbach), for the toughest zone because she has the other team's most dan- gerous player, the center forward" Fuchs said. "But with Catherine back there, I don't worry about the other team's center forward getting too many shots that day, because she is always in the right place." While Foreman is one of the key players for Michigan's defense, she is also a key to the Wolverines' offense. Playing in the cen- ter of the field, Foreman is often responsible for the transition of the ball from the defense to offense. "We play a very different style back home," Foreman said. "We play a lot faster with the ball, a lot more passing give-and- go than what they do here. Hopefully I've brought some of that back, but I think the team is starting to do that a lot more of that now, and it is having some success for us." More importantly, though, Foreman plays a key role on penalty corners, where the Wolverines score most of their goals. Foreman's job on corners is the stick stop- per. She stops the ball with her stick at the top of the circle for a teammate to shoot. While that may sound easy, for the shot to count, Foreman has to stop the ball dead before it can be struck by one of her team- mates. All of this has to be done while the opposing defense is charging at the ball from the goal mouth. Despite playing a primarily defensive role, Foreman's play on corners has garnered her II assists, the second-most on the team. "The corner itself is a real specialty posi- tion," Pankratz said. "You have someone who does each thing as a skill, like a place- kicker in football. She is our best stick stop- per, and she does it for the Australian under- 21 team. "(Foreman) is the most consistent and really makes sure the ball gets stopped dead on the corner. So regardless of what posi- tion she is, that's where we have her for that because she is so effective." Foreman's consistency and combination of offense and defense make her one of the Wolverines' most valuable players and one of the top defenders in the Big Ten. "Catherine is a great defender," Reichenbach said. "It's great playing behind her because a lot of times I don't have to get the ball. She's got a really great game sense, and she's got great stick-stopping skills on corners. She's an all- around extremely solid player and a great asset to the team." J'"REMY M'N'I'"rUaiy Defender/midfielder Catherine "George" Foreman lives up to her dominating nickname by shutting down the opposition's offensive attack while contributing to the scoring opportunities on the penalty corner. FreTrIAnd Cash#''$' Spring Break 2000 StudentCity.com is look- in for Highly Motivated tudents to romote Spring Break 2000! Organize a small group and travel FREE... Top campus reps can earn Free Trip & over $10,000! Choose: Cancun, Jamaica or Nassau! Book Trips On-Line Log-In and Win Free Stuff. www.StudsntCity.comn 1-800-293-1443 Emerging Michigan cross country 'won't be overlooked' By Ryan C. Moloney Daily Sports Writer Everybody loves an underdog. But the way the Michigan men's cross country team has been going lately, the team's reputation has made quite a sizable shift - from darkhorse to favorite. Last Sunday's victory in the Wolverine Interregional all but quelled the little-team-that-could facade the Wolverines hid behind in recent weeks. The secret is out - the Wolverines are good. "I think most of the cross country geeks have found out about us by now," senior co-captain Jay Cantin said. "Teams are starting to figure out the times we've been running and we won't be as overlooked (as before)." In fact, the Wolverines are seen by most to be the only legitimate chal- lenge to favored Wisconsin in this year's Big Ten meet, to be held Oct. 30 on Penn State's home course. The Badgers return their entire top seven from last season, including Big Ten champion Matt Downin. "We're going to have to be on to beat Wisconsin," Cantin said. "Everyone is going to need to per- form, including our sixth runner." The Wolverines are shooting for a rare three-peat of Big Ten title victo- ries, but Cantin said the pressure is off. "It won't be that big of a disapoint- ment if we don't beat Wisconsin," he said. "We've already had a wonderful season and we can compare with any team." But in the meantime, the Wolverines are followin> a training formula very similar to that of the last two championship seasons. "This week we're tapering down to about 75 or 80 miles," coach Ron Warhurst said. "There will be more quality in our workouts and some emotional group therapy." Assistant coach Kevin Sullivan recently dug up his old training log from the 1997 season in which he fin- ished second in the NCAA meet and the team finished fourth. Amazingly, the regiment he followed during that season follows this year's workout slate nearly to a tee. "I sit down during the summer and make up the workout schedule," Warhurst said. "You tweak it a little bit during the season, but it is funny how similar Kevin's log is to this season." Under Warhurst's tutelage, the Wolverines are a democracy rather than a dictatorship - each runner has some say in the weekly training sched- ule. "Ron talked to Steve (Lawrence) and I and we decided on what inter- vals to run in the next few weeks." Cantin said. "Everybody agrees on the same thing - we just follow the same routine because it has worked in the past." Nothing has changed from the team's makeup at the start of the sea- son. Those are still the same.faces in the top five. The intangible that has boosted the Wolverines up into the status they now enjoy has been their knack for going the extra mile, so to speak. "Every guy on the team is supposed to get up before school and run at least three times during the school week," Warhurst said. "This year, we have got guys going four or even five times each week. "Everyone has done a tremendous job." I . F I AT TIAA-CREF, LOW EXPENSES ARE A HIGH PRIORITY. 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