2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday, November 15, 1999 = LUB SPORTS CORNER EDITED BY DAVID DEN HERDER Women missing point, too many free throws KIM115U UL AIUk.HI, Jolly Sean O'Brien (right) defends Michigan's honor against Harvard's Sandeep Boppana. En gade. Blue hosts tourney Eight schools turn out for USFA event on North Campus By Raphael Goodstein Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's basketball team is not good enough to win when it misses its free throws. This was evident Friday night when the Wolverines con- cluded the pre-season by missing three crucial free throws in the final 1:47 of their 81-79 loss to Soproni-Postas, a Hungarian national team. "The good news is, it was an exhibi- tion game," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "We missed a couple free throws down the stretch. We missed the front end of a one-and-one and then we missed the first of two (free throws). I know what it was like in that locker room. I know how hurt they were feel- ing, and to be honest, that's good." With 1:47 left, Alayne Ingram missed the second of her one-and-one and then 22 seconds later, Anne Thorius missed the first of a one-and-one, leaving Michigan up by only one. With Michigan down one and only 17 seconds left, freshman LeeAnn Bies fouled Angela Delms. Delms split the two free throws, giving Postas an 81-79 lead, but leaving Michigan with a chance to force overtime, or win the game with a 3-pointer. The Wolverines looked like they would force overtime when junior guard Anne Thorius, who shot 82 percent from the free-throw line last year, drew a foul with four seconds left. But the first free throw rattled out, leaving the Wolverines needing to get the ball back to force overime. Thorius missed the second free throw on pur- pose in a vain attempt to get the ball back. Soproni-Postas rebounded the ball and ran out the rest of the clock to finish its road trip 6-1. The Wolverines held a 69-60 lead with 10:42, largely due to their ability to outrun the bigger, slower Hungarians. But Postas went on a 13-3 run to take its first lead with 4:53 left. "Their size wore us down when they were in the paint," Guevara said. "We changed our defense a couple different times." The Wolverines' biggest problem was their inability to find a go-to scorer in the second half. "Other people have to pick up the scoring, Guevara said. In the first half, sophomore guard Alayne Ingram poured in 20 points, including four 3-pointers. In tne second half, she only scored three points. Michigan turned to its all-America can- didate Stacey Thomas, but she never found her touch. With under one minute left and down by one, Thomas missed an open jumper. She finished with only four points. "I give them credit for their defense," Thomas said. "They were up in our faces and they had great weak-side defense, but a big part of that is me. I need to hit the shots and I just didn't fin- ish." The Michigan fencing club hosted the peculiarly named 19th annual 'Fourth of Jily' C and Under fencing tournament at the North Campus Recreation Building yesterday afternoon. The official United States Fencing Association tournament allowed fencers to have the opportunity to earn a person- al and national rating from "A" to "E." Sunday's competition was open to fencers who had a "C" rating or lower. The Fourth of July tournament was an i 4ividual event, with fencers of various ages competing as separate representa- tives of their university or fencing clubs The Wolverines entered the tourna- ment unsure of what to expect. "It's hard to say what you expect coming in;" said Michigan coach Jim Vesper. "You don't know what you're competing against until it shows up at the door." There was a large turnout at the NCRB. Representatives of eight fencing teams, including five independent clubs, competed. A highlight of the tourna- ment was the performance of Michigan sophomore Linda Novitski, the women's foil captain, who captured a silver medal out of a field of 15-and a coveted E rating-despite battling illness. "I didn't really expect to finish sec- ond. These USFA tournaments let you get to know people from other schools. It's a really nice atmosphere. There's a lot of support, even between people from different teams. The "E" rating was just the icing on the cake." - James Mercier Wbr Lichigan&ig ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Who: Ian Gold Sport: Football Hometown: Bellevile High School Bel:evilie High School Year: Senior Why: Gold recorded two sacks and forced two fumbles, including a sack of Penn Sate quarterback Kevin Thompson with less than a mnute to go, forcing a fumble which saved the game for Michigan, saturda Background: Recruited as a running back from Belleville. Moved to the liebacker oosition as a sophomore. Gold YEP POLERDAY'SXSCE AP POLL Assocated Press Top 25, Nov. 14 st place votes in parentheses) Team Record Pts 1 li mda State (63) 10-0 1,719 2. VirinialTech (6) 9-0 1,658 3. Fia a ( 9-1 1,565 4. Nebaska 9-1 1,534 5. 9-2 1,424 6 Texas 9-2 1,277 7. lienne4ssee 7-2 1,263 8.Aaama 8-2 1,250 9 Kansas State 9-1 1,136 10. Michigan 8-2 1.045 11. Marshall 10-0 1,032 12. Mississippi State 8-1 945 13. Penn State 9-2 923 14. Georgia Tec:h 7-2 898 15. Micigan mState 8-2 844 16. Misssippi 7-2 639 17. Minnesota 7-3 580 18. Southern Miss. 7-3 445 19 T Brigham Young 8-2 357 19T Purdue 6-4 357 21. Georgiai 6-3 338 22. Arkansas 6-3 234 23. East Carolna 8-2 232 24. Texas A&M 7-3 172 25. Boston Colege 7-2 164 Pvs 1 2 4 7 9 10 3 11 5 16 12 8 6 13 17 18 20 21 15 22 14 24 Team Prestige(74) R MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Clyburn 40 9-23 5-7 5-7 0 2 26 Williams 29 6-16 1-2 1-4 0 1 14 Trice 34 2-4 1-4 5-12 5 2 5 Blair 40 3-9 5-6 2-6 3 31 Smith 30 2-10 0-0 0-1 1 2 Eaton 10 2-3 2-2 01 0 1 8 Redeaux 17 ?.5 2.5 1-3 1 1 4 Totals 200 25-70 16-2620.47 10 12 74 FG%: .357. FT%: .615. 3-point FG: 16-26, .348 (Clyburn 3-10, Eaton 2-3, Smith 2-4, Williams 1-2, Redeaux 0-11. Blocks: 1 (Blair, Trice), Steals: 3 (Trice 2, Clyburn). Turnovers: 17 Clyburn 5, Blair 4, Trice 3, Williams 2, Redeaux 2, Smith 1). Technical Fouls: none. MICHIGAN (101) FO FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A FPT Jones 24 6-9 0-0 0-1 2 2 13 Young 10 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 2 0 Asseiin 19 8-10 0-1 2-6 1 4 1 Crawford 33 6-14 2-2 1-4 7 1 1 Groninger 23 5-11 0-0 0-2 2 3 14 Gaines 25 6-11 1-1 0-7 5 2 13 Taylor 3 2-3 0-0 2-2 0 0 4 Hunter 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 Gibson 1 0.0 0-1 0-1 0 0 0 Blanchard 21 5-9 2-3 3-7 3 4 14 Anderson 18 3-7 0-0 2-6 3 0 6 Adebiyi 1 0-0 0-0 00 0 0- 0 Vignier 21 3.7 0-0 1-5 0 3 6 Totals 200 30-74 16-2125-58 17 21 84 FG%: 543. FT%: .625. 3-point FG: 8-17, .471. (Groninger 4-8, Blanchard 2-3, Jones 1-2, Crawford 1-3, Gaines 0-1. Blocks: 2 (Blanchard, Crawford). Steals: 6 (Groninger 3, Jones 2, Young 1). Turnovers: 9 (Crawford 3. Groninger 2, Gaines 2, Vignier 1, Asselin 1). Technical Fouls: none. k 'M' Tae Kwon Do second at Big Tens, Blue men' s swinung muzzles Nittany Lions 'The Michigan Tae Kwan Do club team fought to a second place finish in this weekend's first Big Ten tourna- ment. The Wolverines were led by the per- f6mances of Han Jo Kim in the light- weight division, Jayme Hart in the mid- &leweight division, and Josh Rosenblatt in the heavyweight class. Kim fought a close match against the German National Champion from Penn State but lost, and Hart also lost a tough bout, this one against another Penn State competitor who was a U.S. Cup Gold Medalist. Despite these performances, the Nittany Lions were only able to muster a fourth-place finish. Michigan's A team was in first place after the forms competition (part one of the tournament), and eliminated Ohio State and Michigan State in the fighting competition en route to their strong fin- ish. -Arun Gopal M boxing club fights at DAC The Michigan boxing club competed last week at the Detroit Athletic Club. Although many Michigan boxers com- peted against each other, opponents from Miami, Ohio and Michigan State were also present. The DAC also announced plans to sponsor a trophy for excellence in col- lege boxing, named after Chuck Daly. - Staffreports By Benjamin Singer Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's swimming and diving team had solid perfor- mances in every event to edge Penn State in a thriller, 125-118, Friday. "This was one of the most exciting dual meets we've had in a long time," Michigan coach Jon Urbancheck said. "We knew it would be close, and it was. All the way down to the wire." The Wolverines (1-0 Big Ten, 2-1 overall) finished first in eight of the 13 events. Michigan dominated in three events, sweeping the 1,650- yard freestyle and taking first and second in the 200-yard breaststroke and 500-yard freestyle. With the score see-sawing throughout the meet, the Wolverines realized they needed the final three events. Senior tri-captain Josh Trexler and junior Scott Werner won the three- meter dive and 200-yard breast- stroke, respectively. That left it up to the 800-yard relay freestyle team to close the deal. Junior Chris Thompson and fresh- men Garrett Mangieri, who each had already won events earlier, teamed with senior tri-captain Mike McWha and sophomore Tim Siciliano to cap- ture first in the final relay, sealing the meet. COACHES' POLL USA Today/FSPN Coaches' Top 25, Nov. 14 (first place votes in parentheses) Team Rec. Pts. Prev. 1. Florida State(58) 10-0 1,474 1 2. Virginia Tech (1) 9-0 1,410 2 3. Florida .9-1 1,347 4 4. Nebraska 9-1 1,310 6 5. Wisconsin 9-2 1,218 9 6. Texas 9-1 1,104 10 7. Tennessee 7-2 1,011 3 8. Alabama 8-2 994 13 9. Kansas State 9-1 982 5 10. Michigan 8-2 918 16 11. Marshall 10-0 859 11 12. Georgia Tech 7-2 850 14 13. Penn State 9-2 757 8 14. Michigan State 8-2 753 17 15. Mississippi State 8-1 752 7 16. Mississippi 7-2 547 18 17. So Mi,sissippi 7-3 423 20 18. Minneso ta 7-3 407 21 .19. BYU 8-2 372 12 20. Texas A&M 7-3 345 23 21. East Carolina 8-2 283 24 22. Boston college 7-2 260 25 23. Georgia 6-3 241 16 24. Arkansas 6-3 143 25. Purdue 6-4 108 - Team Prestige ...........45 29 -74 Michigan .............51 50-101 At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 8.942 'M' SCHEDULE Friday November i9 Field hockey vs. Connecticut in NCAA Semifinals at Boston, 3 p~m. Men's basketball vs. Oakland at Crisler Arena, 7:30 p.m. Ice hockey vs. Lake Superior State at Yost Ice Arena, 7:35 p.m. Women's basketball at Colorado State, 9 p.m. EST. Women's swimming and diving vs. Ohio State and Clemson at Canham Natatorium, 6 pm. Volleyball vs. Illinois at Cliff Keen Arena, 7 pm. Saturday November 20 Football vs. Ohio State, noon, Michigan Stadium Volleyball vs. Indiana at Cliff Keen Arena, 7 p.m. 0 , ___ ___ ___ ____. GRAND OPENING Al I t 3 -. s f 1 $' '. .. > r tere Charm and WE KNOW MUSIC! ARE YOU LISTENING? 4 the largest buyer of music in the world invites you to learn what it takes to be the "channel of choice." 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