6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 22, 1999 Women slam dunk tiP to Colorado By Dena Beth Krischer Daily Sports Writer It was an in-state sweep for the Michigan women's basketball team this weekend as it defeated both Colorado 77-63 on Sunday and Colorado State 69-65 on Friday. Michigan starts the season off 2-0, improving the team's season opening record under coach Sue Guevara to 4-1. Michigan senior co-captain and guard Stacey Thomas led the Wolverines with 10 rebounds as she a#,senior forward/center Alison Miller both contributed 16 points in yesterday's victory over the Buffs. Thomas was three steals short of a triple-double with her 16 points, 10 rebounds and seven steals. The seven steals tied Thomas for eighth on the single-game record chart. Miller, whose 16 points were a career-high, also led the team in points on Friday night with 15. Junior forward/guard Ruth Kipping fouled out at 9:02 in the second half. Despite the fouls, Kipping con- tributed 10 points and three rebounds to theWolverine victory. Freshman LeeAnn Bies also made herself known yesterday in the state of Colorado, scoring 13 points and grab- bing eight boards, leaving her two rebounds short of a double-double. Colorado lost sophomore guard and team captain Linda Lappe went down witl 8:30 to play in the first half. X- rayashow that Lappe fractured her left paTlla, and is most likely out for the seao t :Jphomore forward Raina Goodlow matIe-her return to the line-up after recovering from a dislocated patella on Fray. Goodlow scored just one point in Fri y's game, and just three in yester- day'st S , Wolverines made history in Boutder, breaking two long-time Cc4.ado streaks. fe win for Michigan was the first ewi230me-opener loss for the Buffs si1W the program was established in The loss also left Colorado with an 0-4ecord for the first time since the 19-85 season. 'M' doesn't give up in semi-finals By David Roth Daily Sports Writer BOSTON - Though the Wolverines lost to Maryland 2-1 in the NCAA Championship game, the victory that got them there, a 4-3 crossfire with Connecticut, was by far one of the wildest shootouts in Michigan history. Michigan scored a whopping four second-half goals to oust the second- seeded Huskies. With the game tied 3-3, freshman Molly Powers rifled a shot past Connecticut goalie Danielle Vile with 1:56 remaining in the game to nail the Huskies' coffin shut. The game went back and forth and was tied four times. In the first half, Michigan con- trolled the game, but even though the Wolverines outshot the Huskies, 5-1, Vile was impenetrable, helping her team stay in the game. "Danielle is going to faze us because she's outstanding," Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz said. "But you just have to keep going at it, get some tips and maybe get the third and fourth rebounds to go by." Vile's defense seemed to spark her team's offense. With 8:41 remaining in the first half, Amy Herz stole the ball and served up a pass to Laura Klein, who made Connecticut's only shot of the half count as she tipped it past Michigan goalie Kati Oakes. But the Wolverines stormed back in the second period. "At halftime, we talked about how we were playing well, but that we had to continue to stay patient and relentless in the circle," Pankratz said. Michigan did, as senior Jocelyn LaFace was first to dive in Michigan's scoring pool, as she rebounded a Courtney Reid shot with 27:12 to play. Ali Balmer, who was substituted in just minutes before, followed suit, redirecting freshman Jessica Rose's pass past Vile to give the Wolverines a 2-1 lead, and to spark a scoring frenzy. The Huskies' Nicole Castonguay quickly answered the score to knot the game at two, scoring on a penalty cor- ner with 8:19 left to go in the match. "Connecticut is a very good team, and they're not used to losing," Pankratz said after handing the Huskies their first and only loss of the season. " When we got up a goal, they were as relentless as we are. They didn't want to lose that game. They fought hard and battled and came at us." But after Connecticut scored, the Wolverines came right back, on a penalty corner of their own two min- I MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Kelli Gannon and the Michigan field hockey team were the first women's team at Michigan to make it to an NCAA final. They beat Connecticut, 4-3, to do that. utes later. With 6:23 remaining, Reid zipped the ball to Foreman, who stopped it Courtney Catherine to set up 'Higher focus' of national title still eludes M1\ Kelli Gannon's penalty corner attempt. Gannon wound up, fired and the ball simply exploded off her stick. "I told myself I was putting the ball in the net, whether anyone likes it or not, so I hit it as hard as I possi- bly could," Gannon said. But the Huskies didn't die. Les than two minutes later, Kelly Cochrane intercepted a pass at the top of Michigan's arc, and flicked it into the cage with 4:33 remaining. With the game tied at three, Powers, who claimed that the Wolverines would shock the Huskies, gave them a jolt with 1:56 to play, when she scored alone inside the arc. "We had to take advantage of any opportunity we had, because theydi* n't come very often," Powers said. "Jessi (Veith) cut toward the ball and I cut away. She somehow got the ball to me and I knew my defender was coming. I just tried to get it off as quickly as possible. I didn't even look up, I just hoped that it would go in." The Wolverines' captain, senior Ashley Reichenbach, was proud of her team's relentless play and ability to fight back "I think our team feeds off adver- sity," Reichenbach said. "We are just not williNg to give up on the ball. No matter what the score is, or what's going on in the game, we're not going to stop until the final seconds wind down." /1'women, 1993, 1994, and 1995. Although such accomplishments are remarkable, they don't bring the prestige or recognition of a team victory. "Team championships rightly or unrightly get more publicity," Ocker said. "The 'team effort - working together - seems to say more than an individual championship. Either wa~ there are good individuals involve. The idea of working together and not just going after one's own famous accomplishment says a lot for a group." "We applaud the accomplishments of individuals," said Plocki, who guid- ed Wymer in her championship yearsi "But it's really about the team arnd about Michigan. One individual does not make a team, and team acco plishments far exceed the accomplis ments of individuals. If a team suc- ceeds, individual accolades automati- cally come, and it takes all individuals performing at their optimum for a team to be successful." For now, Michigan has to be content with individual national champi- onships and a second-place team fin- ish. The athletic department hopes that the Wolverines' time for victo ry i near, and is confident that soon a tea will cross the final hurdle. "To win a championship would be to get the monkey off our backs" Bradley-Doppes said. "Everyone wants to be the first." TITLE HOPES Continued from Page 1B women's team to come out and win a national championship," Michigan women's gymnastics coach Bev Plocki agreed. "We've been trying and have come close, so I think it would be great to see Michigan women's athlet- ics come out and take this final step." Duke women's golf coach Dan Brooks knows the significance of a school's first women's national cham- pionship. When his 1999 squad won the NCAA golf championship, its championship was the first in Duke women's athletics history. "We're pretty proud of our women's programs down here, and I didn't feel like there was a dearth of attention before we won," said Brooks, whose school appeared on Sports Illustrated for Women's top 20 list. "But I thought our reception was really nice; we didn't expect the high fanfare. It was a pretty neat thing to win and we were recognized well." Brooks also acknowledged that owning the title of national champion adds credibility to his team. "I think winning helped recruiting," Brooks said. "There isn't any top prospect interested in a top program that doesn't know that we won. We recruited well and brought in two top players this year, and I think winning the championship had to be part of that success." This is not to say that winning a national title is the only way to have a strong athletic program. Michigan ranks among the most successful women's programs in collegiate sports, with or without a champi- onship to its name . Reaching the pin- nacle is an undeniable goal for every team, and places a stamp of credibili- ty on the entire program. "Michigan has a first-class women's athletic program," Bradley- Doppes said. "Winning a title is just a byproduct of great coaches, great kids, and a wonderful institution. Winning a national championship does not make one a better team, it is just the ultimate goal or challenge that any team could achieve. At Michigan, everyone wants to add to or enhance the tradition." Michigan senior captain Ashley Reichenbach agreed that winning the championship is the ultimate goal for an already amazing program. "It means a lot to get this far and be in the top four who are left competing for a national championship," Reichenbach said before leaving for the Final Four. "The women's athletic program at Michigan is awesome. This is just another stepping stone for women's athletics and I feel honored to- be a part of a team that is getting close to reaching the pinnacle of all collegiate sports." A championship for one team clear- ly would be a victory for the entire program. Women's teams at Michigan have a sense of community unmatched by almost any other school. Coaches, administrators, and athletes agree that if one team could win a championship, it would validate their prior successes and inspire their teams to succeed in the future. "(Winning) gives a program a little higher focus," said former Michigan Women's Athletic Director Phyllis Ocker for whom Michigan's field is named. "I think that it inspires the whole program and says to other coaches and players, 'It's attainable. Let's get on with it."' "There's a strong sense of team throughout the athletic department, and that's critical," Bradley-Doppes said. "Coaches support other coaches, athletes go to the games of other ath- letes-there's a sense of family com- mon to the entire program." Michigan assistant hockey coach Tracey Fuchs, who won an NCAA championship while a student-athlete at Connecticut, agreed that in the Final Four, her team was playing on behalf ofthe entire Michigan women's athletic program. "Just to be representing Michigan women in a Final Four is a great thing," Fuchs said. "We're great friends with softball, and other teams have been in there, so just to be here and see what we can do for Michigan athletics in general is awesome." The lack of women's team champi- onships at Michigan does not mean there has been a dearth of national champion female athletes. 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