The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 1, 1999 - 78 Wisconsin dominates Big Ten meet By David Horn Daily Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - Wisconsin's women would have surprised a lot of people if it hadn't won the Big Ten Cross Country Championship this past Saturday. As it happened, the Badgers surprised nobody, except perhaps by the dominance they showed over the rest of the field. The fifth-ranked Badgers won the meet with a 35-point showing, claiming the first, second, third, ninth and 10th individual spots. Michigan, Minnesota and Michigan State placed second, third and fourth respectively, but none were within reach of an undermatched Wisconsin squad. Sophomore Erica Palmer won the race with a personal-best time of 16:46:93. She was followed immediately by team- mates Erin Auferheide and Bethany Brewster. "I feel really well," Palmer said. " 1 __-I a~t~n+n.-__ t,., t,..+t,:t ".+ ' for the first mile and I didn't do that. I just got really nervous and took off." Palmer established herself early and never looked back. With a first-mile split time of 5:07 that shocked the State College crowd, the top runner impressed her team, her competitors and her par- ents, who saw her race for the first time since junior high school. "Erica looks like she'll be a contender nationally," Michigan coach Mike McGuire said. "She looked today like (last year's national champion, former Michigan runner) Katie McGregor did last year. If you run 16:46 on this course, you're really moving" By the second mile, things started to come into focus. Palmer, Aufderheide, and Brewster were runing first, second, and third, respectively. Minnesota's Rasa Michniovaite was in fourth, 21 seconds behind Palmer, and did not relinquish the spot. Michigan's top runner Lisa Ouellet was running Durocher and Indiana's Amanda Bell to move ahead of her. "I could have run better," Ouellet said. "I can knock off Wisconsin's two or three. At least at regionals I want to be right there with them. We ran with a lot of heart and courage today. By beating Michigan State and Minnesota we did ourselves a lot of good" Michigan entered the weekend unranked, and managed to upset Minnesota and Michigan State, ranked 17th and 18th nationally. A 12th-place finish by junior Katie Clifford and a 14th-place finish by senior Elizabeth Kampfe helped the Wolverines edge out Minnesota by three points. "We thought that Michigan State was going to be our battle," Minnesota coach Gary Wilson said. "We looked past Michigan and I said to the kids that you just can't count out Michigan. They've just got too much tal- ent there. They came out and performed ' a . - A A .., L . - _ Second a pleasant surprise for 'M' WOMEN Continued from Page 18 "Today, everyone just had their heads on straight, and the great thing is that we're only going to get better." While acknowledging the domi- nance of the Badgers in general and Palmer in particular, McGuire was nevertheless very pleased with his team's performance and sound- ed optimistic about the rest of Michigan's season. "Wisconsin is the fifth-ranked team, and they showed why today,"L McGuire said. "Palmer is just a- tough runner and a real talent. If they can keep that team together,. they're going to be very good. "As far as we're concerned, this was the biggest meet on our sched- ule, and we were able to handle ranked teams like Minnesota and. Michigan State. We've got two weeks until our next meet (NCAA' regionals). We just have to use thit result as a springboard into the rest of our season." 615 E. Liberty off State M-F 8:30-5:20 Sat til 4:20 JESSICA JOHNSON/Daiy Could do better on that last hill, but I'm fifth but aded in the final mile, as she today, and thats the sign of a true No. 5 Wisconsin dominated the competition at the Big Ten Championships this pleased. The plan was to stay as a team allowed Michigan State's Cynthia pion." weekend. The Badgers had five runners place In the top 10. Big Ten meet just the beginning of rvalry for Michigan wchai- Jon Schwartz y Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - At Saturday's Big Ten Championships, cross-country tems and fans spanning across the con- fRgene were in attendance. .Unfortunately, no one told the other. eight teams that it was actually the Michigan-Wisconsin meet - rather, war. In truth, though, Saturday's meet wS -only round one of the battle. toime might call it cockiness, others glism, but the teams' coaches, Ron 'arhurst of Michigan and Jerry Schumacher of Wisconsn, feel that this past meet and the ones to i Ilow are sole- ly. for the purpose of pitting he two lead- SECOND Continued from Page 1B the sophomore's first time in his career 4at e finished in Michigan's top ."ive. "(Tnom) must have passed 10 to 12 guys, in the last half-mile," Warhurst said. "Usually, guys can't do that." Downin expressed his frustration at seeing what seemed to be an insur- mountable lead turn into a race whose result was not immediately known. "We thought we had this thing won," he said. "We thought we were the better team." Schumacher reacted similarly, feeling *t after watching his two men cross the finish line first, he could never have expected how close it turned out to be. "I think our guys did a heck of a job rqponding to this." he said. "We're verv ers of the Big Ten against each other. "No one else can touch us," Warhurst said. "It's going to be us and Wisconsin again next time." The Badgers and the Wolverines have a mutual respect. The two teams have been at the top of the Big Ten conference and the Great Lakes region for the better part of this past decade. And they are both well aware of the challenges posed by their opposing competitors. "Michigan's a great team," said Matt Downin, Wisconsin senior and individ- ual champion at the meet. "Every year, it's us and them. They always come and they always race hard." Little was expected of Michigan at the excited about the outcome of this." Despite the second-place finish, the same was true of the Michigan runners. "They're the fifth-best team in the country, and I think we proved that we're equal to them," Lawrence said. "The only real difference is that we don't get the championship, we don't get the ring. Two points, that's such a small margin. It's no big deal." For the Badgers, trouble came at the end when junior Jason Vanderhoof went down with an injury after crossing the finish line. While details were not avail- able, it is unknown whether he will be available for their upcoming meets. Next up for Michigan is the NCAA Great Lakes Regional in Terre Haute, Indiana on Nov. 13, where they will again face off against the Badgers as well as the rest of the region. start of the season, in comparison to Wisconsin, who was returning their entire starting seven from last season. Michigan showed its abilities in the regular season, but it all came down to whether Michigan could compete with Wisconsin in this meet. It came down to two miniscule points. "We ran better than we did last year, comparatively," Michigan sophomore Tom Caughlan said, "with guys that weren't supposed to be half as good." The championship meet came down to the wire. To those involved, it was a care- fully planned battle waged by Warhurst to prove his runners' true abilities. "He's a 'Nam vet," Caughlan jokingly said. "I think that plays into his mindset." Caughlan's explanation has a glimmer of truth. Everyone around him, including Warhurst, smiled and nodded in agree- ment when Schumacher first attempted to describe the race. "It was war," he said. "That was great." From there, Warhurst was thankful that he will never have to worry about seeing Downin again. "Congratulations," Warhurst told the Wisconsin star. "I'm glad you're out of here, but that was great." All three men were trying to get them- selves ready to face each other again in two weeks at the NCAA Great Lakes Regional meet. Both teams will stop at nothing to point out that the relationship between the two teams is quite good. "Every single one of them, including Coach Warhurst, are great guys," Schumacher said. "It's very serious, and afterwards, we sit back and relax" "They're good guys," Michigan's Steve Lawrence said. "We still know that they're our arch-rivals, though." Only the top two teams at the region- al meets qualify for the nationals, but Warhurst and Schumacher seem to have little doubt that by the time that the NCAA Championships in Bloomington come around, they could be facing a decisive round three. 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