SportsMonday - November 29, 1999 - The Michigan Daily - 3B * That's Men's cross country .never missed a beat a wrap T.J. BERKA I |Teeing Off Pnde, desire make prep football worth watchig By Ryan C. Moloney Daily Sports Writer They say there are two sides to every story. For the 1999 Michigan men's cross country team, there is a correct side and a better side. Statistically, the Wolverines were down this year - second place at Big Tens after two straight years of titles, a third at the Great Lakes regional after a second-place show- ing last year, and a drop from fourth to fifth in the national standings. But to judge the Wolverines solely on their numbers this year is to lose sight of what this team, and what this sport, is all about. The Wolverines were a team in the fullest sense of the word. When they ran well, it was collec- tive - nobody took the credit above anybody else. "When they ran badly, it was more of the same - nary a finger was pointed. After watching the Wolverines throughout a typical race day, from warm-ups, to the race, to the cool- &own, to the awards ceremony, you got the feeling that the final score was actually secondary to something much more important - brother- hood. "We're like a family," Jay Cantin said. "This team is one of the best in Michigan's history and we really didn't know for a while if we could do well this season." The element of camaraderie isn't as trivial as you might think - not every team has it. Even at Michigan, some teams are content to compete together in prac- tice and in races, then scatter when it's over. Compare them with this team, which lives together in two houses. A team's success, as well as its cancer, usually starts at the top. Give credit to the two captains, Cantin and Steve Lawrence. The "Canadian con- nection" shouldered all the expecta- tions left over from the Sullivan- Mortimer-Snyder days and they did it with the typical humble grace of a couple of guys from Ontario. And let's not forget about coach Ron Warhurst, for whom the phrase "tough-love coaching" was created. Even the eternally optimistic cross country legend couldn't have imag- ined such a season after half the pro- gram graduated or used up their eli- gibility last year. Now that Cantin and Lawrence are moving on, there's reason to worry, right? Deja vu all over again? "We're excited," Mark Pilja said. "We know we're going to rise to the occasion." This story just gets better and better. LUoIBROWN/Daiy Senior Steve Lawerence stepped up this season along with fellow captain Jay Cantin to fill the shoes of departed stars John Mortimer and Todd Snyder. 'M' women succeeded despite injuries By David Hoan O y Sports Writer it is natural, when a season ends, to attempt to gauge its success. Success is difficult to determine in intercollegiate sports, where becoming a true champion is a nearly unattainable task. A championship was not in the cards for the 1999 women's cross country team, and their successes came not on the leader boards of their meets, but in their ability to maintain national promi- nence through desperate and determined means. The 1998 season ended with a nation- al champion - current assistant coach Katie McGregor - and an 11th-place team finish at nationals. There was no potential individual standout on the 1999 squad, but coach Mike McGuire expected a stronger team. effort throughout the season, which would hopefully lead to an improvement over last season's showing at the nation- al meet. But for a team hindered by injuries to key runners all season long, even mak- ing it to nationals would require a tremendous effort from each runner that remained in the lineup. Wedefinitely could have been bet- ter" McGuire said. "We were missing three key people - (Katy) Radkewich, (Lyndsi) Gay, and (Erin) White. In review of the season, I consider it pretty * good, given what we have. But consider- ing the standard of excellence (at Michigan), it was not such a good sea- son." The past successes McGuire was referring to were as follows: four Big Ten individual champions, three NCAA regional individual champions, one indi- vidual national champion, three Big Ten team championships, three NCAA regional team championships, and one second-place team finish at the national meet, in 1994. There have been 18 All-Americans representing the maize and blue, and one U pmber of the Big Ten's All-Decade team - Mindy Rowand in 1991. This year Michigan saw early suc- ,cess. A first-place finish in early September against Michigan State was a promising beginning. But the team fell on hard times, as September turned into October. Disappointing finishes against top national opponents, such as Arkansas and Nebraska, at the Sam Bell Invitational and the Wolverine Invitational, caused the team to recon- sider its goals for the season. "We've been hurting from all the injuries,"said junior Lisa Oullet after the Sam Bell. "But we'll keep working, and we'll be able to run with anyone, includ- ing Wisconsin" When the Wolverines returned t State College for the Big Ten Championships, they nearly did. A second-place finish to the Badgers gave the team a tangible accomplish- ment in what had been a rapidly worsen- ing season. Oullet finished seventh, earning her All-Big Ten honors. Junior Katie Clifford finished twelfth, two spots ahead of senior Elizabeth Kampfe. Each performance made them All-Big Ten performers. "We answered the challenge" said McGuire after the race. "We came in with a goal, and we attained it." The Wolverines had been teetering in and out of the national rankings all sea- son, but by upsetting then No. 16 ranked Michigan State and No. 17 Minnesota, Michigan climbed to the No. 15 spot. Two weeks later the team ran at the Great Lakes Regional in Terre Haute, Ind. Oullet, who had been Michigan's top performer in each race of the season, performed well below par while battling the flu. But her stumble was not a problem for what was turning out to be a fairly deep team. Clifford, Kampfe, senior Marcy Akard, and sophomore Katie Ryan all ran what McGuire said was their "best races of the season." So good, in fact, that Michigan placed third behind Wisconsin and Michigan State, and found themselves in a position to accept an at-large bid to the NCAA Championships. "I think everything will fall into place, just because we've been ,working so hard," Clifford said after the regional, in which she placed fifth overall. "We need to keep the momentum going one more week. We'll be training our butts off" Receiving the bid was "not a shocking surprise," Kampfe said on the Monday it was awarded. "But it's a nice surprise. Now it's like there's another season." One week later in Bloomington that second season came to an end. A 15th-place finish among the nation's best left the Wolverines effec- tively where they began the season - on the outside of the top 10, looking in. It was not where McGuire likes to see his program. "We should have been a top 10 team," McGuire said. "That's the standard we set here. Big Tens was probably the high- light of the season, and we did a pretty good job in dealing with a lot of things. We need to recharge our batteries, and use the track season to get these guys running better. Next year we'll have some good experience, some team lead- ers. We can re-establish this program." For seniors Kampfe and Akard, this season was their last at Michigan. Kampfe leaves as an NCAA All- American, NCAA Regional Champion, Three-time All-Big Ten Second-Team member and All-Big Ten First-Team member. Akard ran to All-Big Ten Second-Team honors in 1996, and has been a emotional presence on the team for four years. "Kampfe gave us a great effort this year," McGuire said. "You have to applaud her effort. She contributed cer- tain intangibles to this team that you don't always see. Marcy came on so strong at the end (of the season) and helped us out a lot" The Wolverines fought all season to stay out of the doctor's office and in the national rankings. The loss of Kampfe and Akard was painful, but next year is promising. Clifford and Oullet will race in their final year, and bring years of experience and excellence to their roles as team leaders. Current freshman Jeanne Spink, who stepped up with impressive perfor- mances in the final meets of the season, and Gay, who was among the Wolverine's fallen this season, will rep- resent the distant future of this team as they move into consistent top-five roles next year. What is the proper instrument for the measurement of success? The answer to that question is hard to know for sure. Success is not gauged by numbers - it's RVING, Tex. - Thanksgiving has always been one of my favorite holi- days of the year. I love the ridiculous amount of food that is served, the fel- lowship that comes from seeing your family for the first time in months and the nonstop amount of football that is shown on television. The football is the greatest thing about Thanksgiving. You watch the Detroit Lions, eat a gargantuan meal, and then fall asleep on the couch while watching the Dallas Cowboys. But football on Thanksgiving is not a one-day thing. Not even close. The whole weekend is chock full of pigskin fun, as college football teams war against each other for the right to eat leftover stuffing from the days before. But colleges aren't the only schools that take part in the football fun during this holiday weekend. Thanksgiving weekend is huge for high school foot- ball as well, as the state playoffs are in full steam. In Michigan, Thanksgiving is the time where high school football ends. Championships are played, winners are crowned, and memories are made before the cold winter winds hit the state with full force. But in Texas, where I went to high school, Thanksgiving isn't the end of the season. In a state as gaga over foot- ball as Texas is, the season is never over. But while the playoffs end the weekend before Christmas, only the best teams are playing when Thanksgiving comes around. The Woodlands High School, my alma mater, is usually sitting on the couch letting Thanksgiving dinner digest at this time. While The Woodlands usually makes the playoffs, the Highlanders tend to have things go wrong for them once they enter them.. Missed field goals. Fumbles. Controversial calls from the officials. It seems as if every year my alma mater finds a new way to lose a Texas high school playoff game. But this year was different. For the first time in nine years, the Highlanders made it to Thanksgiving weekend. Thanks to this, the Highlanders got to leave the confines of Moorehead Stadium - a high school stadium that would put some Division I-A stadiums to shame - and traveled to Texas Stadium to play Plano East High School. If high school football in Texas is a religion - and there is a lot of people who say that it is - then Texas Stadium is its mecca. Being the home of the Dallas Cowboys, the closest thing football has to a cultural icon, playing in Texas Stadium as a high schooler is a big deal. I really didn't realize what a big deal it was until I sat in the fourth row at midfield of the stadium. Having been at Michigan for four seasons, I had been spoiled with the place where I saw football games six or seven times a year. I assumed that every player knew what it was like to play in a big game at a big stadium. I looked down on games with less-than-sellout crowds and games that didn't have teams ranked in the top 25 were meaningless to me. The game between The Woodlands and Plano East didn't come close to filling the 70,000 seats at Texas Stadium. Except for maybe a couple of teams in Division II and III, neither team could compete with a program at the college level. But the intensity and enjoyment were there. I really never appreciated high school football when I was in high school. Although I did write about it during that time, I can't say I ever really got emotionally involved in it. Maybe it was because I knew most of the players personally. Maybe it was because some of the guys on the team had the athletic skills of a sportswriter. Maybe it was because they were dating the girls I wanted to dat.. I don't know what it was, but I just didn't care about how my h h school team did. I even got pleasure in ripping on classmates about their performances once in a while. But Saturday at Texas Stadium - my first high school football game in four years - it was different. I was cheering with vigor, hoping to see The Woodlands progress to the regional finals, something it had never done before. Plano East ripped the Highlanders 38-15, but it was still a great game. I got to see young kids, many of whom will never put shoulder pads on ever again, play on a field that many of their heroes had graced. That in itself was worth the four-hour drive my family and I made from our Houston suburb to the Dallas area. Something has definitely changed during the past four years for myself. I'm pretty sure that high school foot- ball has stayed the same, so maybe it was something in me that has changed. Or maybe it was The Woodlands changing their fight song. Instead of some random tune that I didn't even pay attention to when I was in school, the fight song was changed to mirror a famous college fight song. Yes, The Woodlands High School's new fight song sounds exactly like "The Victors." While I was the only one pumping my right fist when it was played, I'm sure it will catch on. Like high school football caught on with me. - 7J Berka can be reached via e-mail at berkat@umich.edu LO'UI BOWN/ LDaiy Michigan turned in a gutty performance this season despite suffering a number of injuries. not really gauged at all. Success for Michigan women's cross-country is a story that is neither simple, nor com- plete. Special Egg Donor Needed $25,000 We are a loving, infertile couple hoping to find a compassionate woman to help us have a baby. 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