6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday, November 29, 1999 m STflEE PeI'C pers remain resilient until en All picks made against the spread. Home teams in CAPS. Correct picks in bold. T. Berka ebraska (15) v .COLORADO Colorado Texas (-2.5) vs. TEXAS A&M Texas VIRGINIA TECH (-24) vs. Boston Colege Boston College Georgia Tech (-5.5) vs. GEORGIA Georgia STANFORD (-6) vs. Notre Dame Stanford SOUTHERN CAL (-1) vs. Louisiana Tech La. Tech Arizona (-1.5) vs. ARIZONA STATE Arizona State TENNESSEE (-23) vs. Vanderbilt Vanderbilt OKLAHOMA (-13.5) vs. Oklahoma State klahoma WEST VIRGINIA (-1.5) vs. Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Arkansas (-11) vs. LSU "Arkansas Texas Christian (-12.5) vs. Southern Meth. TCU HAWAII(45)vs. Washington State Hawaii MARSHALL (-25.5) vs. Ohio Marshall Rick Freeman Nebraska Texas Boston Colege Georgia Tech Stanford Southern Cal Arizona State Vanderbilt Oklahoma West Virgina Arkansas TCU Hawaii Marshall Vanderbilt 6-7-1 (0-1) 84804(6-6) Josh Kleinbaum Colorado Texas Virginia Tech Georgia Tech Stanford La. Tech Arizona Vanderbilt Oklahoma Pittsburgh LSU TCU Wash. St. Ohio Stanford 58-1 (0-1) 82-82-4(r7) Andy Latack Nebraska, Texas Virginia Tech Georgia Tech Stanford Southern Cal Arizona Tennessee Oklahoma Pittsburgh Arkansas TCU Wash. St. Marshall Southern Cal 6-7-1 (1-0) 82-82-6) Best Bet Last week Overall Hawaii 6-7-1 (0-1) 86-744 (2-10) Perfection! Hokies top Boston College to preserve sweet dream By Jon Zemke Daly Sports Writer The last few seasons the Michigan volleyball team has had a problem win- ning in the Big Ten. They would do well in the non-conference, or "pre-season" schedule, as the Wolverines refer to it. But the truth is Michigan can com- pete, but couldn't win in its own confer- ence. As close as their resilience could bring them to the brink of winning, it never seeme like itwa enough This was punctuated towards the end of this season. After being swept by Ohio State, Michigan's Big Ten record plummeted to 4-12 (12-13 overall) and brought their losing streak to five matchea. "Ohio State was a setback," Michigan volleyball coach Mark Rosen said. "We didn't play well or execute at all, we did- n't play very hard, and our effort was low" Those words forced the Wolverines to make a decision on their season. The consistent development and all-out effort that Michiganhad prided itself on was in question by their own coach, none the less. The Wolverines had to make a choice about how they were going to finish out their season: step up or roll over. Michigan went 3-1 in their last four matches and finished the season with three more wins in the Big Ten than last year. More importantly, their resiliency that had kept them close in matches all year was resilient enough to stick around when they could have easily given up on this year. "There were plenty of opportunities, especially late in the year, to just pack in the season and say, 'Look we're not going to the tournament, we haven't played as well as we'd like, let's just give up,"' Rosen said. "And we never did," It would have been easier for this year's squad to pack it in, because they were only graduating two seniors. The core of the team would be returning for next season. But the thought never entered Michigan's mind. They upset an Illinois team that had beaten them in four games earlier this year and was in the upper echelon of the Big Ten. The Wolverines dropped their next match to Indiana, but their resolve never left, even though as hard as they tried, they couldn't find the answer to winning back-to-back matches in the Big Ten. "I don't think you could ever find exact answers," Rosen said. "We'd love BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) -- The perfect regular season was finally one for the books. The fans streamed onto the field by the thousands, congratulat- ing the players, rejoicing the comple- tion of Virginia Tech's magical 11-0 ride. An hour later, coach Frank Beamer was both jubilant and exhausted, and the high emotion of the celebration sparked him to do a little lobbying for his team. "I think we've answered every chal- lenge, and we did it by playing and not talking," Beamer said. "What we've done on the field is the right thing. "Does anybody here think we don't belong in New Orleans?" On the biggest day in Virginia Tech sports history, the second-ranked Hokies completed their first perfect regular season in 81 years with a 38-14 thumping of No. 22 Boston College, but' concerns about the Bowl Championship Series lingered. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED IN CENTRAL AMERICA, INDIA, AND AFRICA Work with health education, child aid, and literacy campaigns. Call for an information meeting in your area. IICD (616) 782-0450 Could the Hokies at 11-0 be denied their obvious date with No. 1 Florida State for the national championship? Would Colorado make it a done deal by making its potential game-winning field goal against the "other" con- tender, No. 3 Nebraska? And most of all, what was the value of Virginia Tech's four games against ranked teams, games they won by a combined - and startling - 174-31? "You look at the ranked teams that we played this year, and we've taken all of them to the woodshed," an emotion- al Corey Moore said as he held on to a victory cigar. "I firmly believe and I'm confident that we'll be in New Orleans." ThesHokies got three long touch- down passes in another big day from sensational redshirt freshman Michael Vick and another big effort from its nationally ranked defense to beat an Eagles team that had won three straight and came in at 8-2. And when it was over, some of the 53,130 fans at Lane Stadium were tear- ing down the goalposts at both ends of the stadium or frolicking with the play- ers, and thousands more had directed their undivided attention to the end zone scoreboard. "Nebraska 27, Colorado 27," it said. Roars. "Colorado ball. 2:00 left." Near delirium. The Hokies are just ahead of the Cornhuskers in the chase for the right to play the Seminoles in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 4, and the race is close. Freshman Katrina Lehman and the Wolverines beat Michigan State this week to capture the 'State Pride" flag. The win sparked a weekend sweep that fin- ished with the Wolverines above .500 for the first time since 1997. Virginia Tech finished the season unde- feated with an 11.0 record. The stadium grew silent when word flashed that Colorado would try a field goal with one second left, then groaned as one when word came the kick was no good. Moments later, they roared even louder at the news that Colorado had won, 30-27. But they were silent when the final score was corrected: Nebraska, 33-30. But the Hokies, Beamer and even Boston College coach Tom O'Brien all seemed sure that the trip to New Orleans had all but been sealed at Lane Stadium. "There's still no doubt in my mind," Moore said. "I heard Nebraska came back and won the game. I don't think any of that matters. We're 11-0. "What more do you want us to do?" to. If we could we'd write a book and make a million dollars." But at the very end, in their last home- stand, in front of the largest Cliff Keen crowd in two seasons, Michigan finally began to realize why they were so resilient. The Wolverines did against Michigan State, one of the premier pro- grams in the conference, none the less. "We got' our clocks cleaned," Michigan State volleyball coach Chuck Erbe said. "It was a real quick evening. "We were made to look inept. Michigan had a lot to do with that tonight. They played really well and made us look inept." Michigan really started to come together as a team and play good cohe- sive volleyball to go with their all-out attitude. Their win against the Spartans and then the Wolverines' sweep o Northwestern to close out the season finally showed the progress they were making. "Towards the last half of the confer ence season we started to get a lot better," Rosen said. "It's tough in this conference because it doesn't always translate intE wins. It was Michigan's resiliency that allowed them to see that progression season, instead of waiting until next sea- son to try again. But waiting for next season would have been uncharacteristic for this team. They would have had to roll over and die, something Michigan never did in '99.--" "I thought that resilient attitude was the characteristic of our team," Rosen said. "It's the one that I am the most proud of." Cooper's leadership the difference The University of Michigan " W H AT'S REC Department of Recreational Sports SPORTS PNTRAMURAS INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM PRE-SEASON WRESTLING BASKETBALL ENTRIES DUE: ENTRIES TAKEN: Thurs 12/2, 4:30 PM, IMSB Mon 11/29 to Weds 12/1 11:00 AM to 4:30 PM, IMSB ENTRY FEE: ENTRY FEE: $5 per individual $35 per team MANAGER'S MEETING MANAGER'S MEETING: MANDATORY MANDATORY Thurs 12/2, 6:30 PM, IMSB Thurs 12/2, 6:00 PM, IMSB TOURNAMENT DATES: PoERBAR TOURNAMENT DATES: NIKE Tues - Thura 12/7 - 12/9 Sun & Mon 12/5 & 6, IMSB Sport Coliseum BASKETBALL ICE HOCKEY ENTRIES TAKEN: ENTRIES TAKEN: Monday 1/10/2000 ONLY Thursday 1/6/2000 ONLY 11:00AM to 5:30PM 11:00 AM to 4:30PM ENTRY FEE: ENTRY FEE: $72 per team $395 per team MANAGER'S MEETING: MANAGER'S MEETING: MANDATORY MANDATORY Weds 1/12, 6 & 9 PM, IMSB Thurs 1/6, 6:00 PM, IMSB PLAY BEGINS: PLAY BEGINS: Thurs 1/13/2000 Sun 1/9/2000 PoWE RBAR IMSB & Sports Coliseum NIKE Yost Ice Arena Thanks! to all the Students, Faculty and Staff who participated in the 1999 Fall Term Intramural Sports Program. The IM staff looks forward to seeing you during the 2000 Winter Term. Have a safe and enjoyable Semester Break and Holiday! Take care. OFFICIALS NEEDED! Join us at the IM Official's Clinics! Pre-Season BASKETBALL: Tuesday November 30 ICE HOCKEY: Wednesday January 5 BASKETBALL: Wednesday January 5 All clinics are held at the Intramural Sports Building (IMSB). All clinics begin at 7:00 PM.- For Additional Information Contact: Intramural Sports Program, IMSB, 606 E. Hoover, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-3717, (734) 763-3562 http://www.rec. srts.umich.edu PRIDE Continued from Page 11B nance early on. Making the last home appearance of her illustrious career, senior captain Maggie Cooper fitting- ly served the Wolverines to a 4-0 lead to get the action started. And Michigan only got stronger as the match progressed. "After the first five points, we all knew that the team was really on," Rosen said. "We executed really well, played very disciplined, and that's something every team strives for. Late in the year we're finding it more and more, but this was by far the best example all year long." "Every single player was on, every- one stepped up," Melka said. "It was awesome, everyone played out of their minds." Whether she was firing up her teammates on the sidelines or leaping and pumping her fist high in the air after every point, Cooper's unbridled enthusiasm set a tone for the evening, spreading contagiously on the Michigan side of the court. Katrina Lehman followed her captain's lead, eliciting jubilant screams to celebrate a smash. As hard as they tried to stay calm, the girls' anxious faces were ready to explode into smiles as the match neared its conclusion. And when a Nicole Kacor kill sealed the affair, they did. "In athletics you talk about getting into a zone, a flow where everythi happens, and it's really hard to maser that where you can do it all the time," Rosen said. "Tonight we definitely had it, we were very much in a flow where nothing could go wrong everything goes your way." Appropriately, Cooper provided the definitive word. At the end of the post- game press conference, as the reporters filed out, her voice penetrat- ed the relative silence. "Awesome win tonight!" Cooper yelled, clapping, exciting Cliff Keer Arena visitors for the last time. Her statement - and the way she said it - summed up a magical evening. We put the Finals are fast-approaching and Thinkwellcom is the perfect tool to help you through it- Confused about something? Video lectures from our great teachers will help you understand that stubborn concept you've been struggling with all semester. Can't make office hours? Our site is available 24/7. Fire off a question to one of our tutors and we'll reply in a matter of hours. Want to take a mock final? We'll build you a customized exam covering only the topics you need to know. See how you'll score BEFORE it counts. Emotion lifts A&M over Tex COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) After all the grief, TexasA&M final took some small solace. In as emotionally charged game they will ever play, the No. 24 Aggi rallied from a 16-6 halftime deficit t beat No. 7 Texas 20-16 at Kyle Field o Friday. s 'fhas b an unelentingly season for the Aggies, even beforeth Nov. 18 deaths of 12 people who di building the traditional campus bonfir Coach R.C. Slocu's son underwe heart surgery in April. In June, quarte backs coach Ray Dorr was diagno with LouGehrig's disease. On Oct. 2, a loss to Texas Tech co te Aggiesa runforsthe ntionaleca pionship. Embarrassing losses t Oklahoma and Nebraska dashed hopes for another Big 12 South title But Dorr kept coaching, and th Aggies kept fighting. On Nov.d I, they defeated Misso and started getting ready for thei biggest rival, the Longhorns. Then th bonfire tumbled.Eleven 11 students an 'a recent graduate died and 27 peopl were injured. Many players wnt immne diatel tohe scene to help remove faI en logsin the search for those trap Slocum worried that the gni would take its toll on his players. But the team found its strengtl against Texas. The Aggies got the ear lead, buta bobbled extra point try and fumble by quarterback Randy McCowi helped the Longhorns take a 16-6 half time lead. At the final whistle, players, coaches fans mingled on the field. They huggea and sobbed. Full membership Lots of is $7.95/week. FREE stuff. Sign up now and get 25% off. In the registration process you will be asked for a "coupon code". Enter the word 'PAPER' to get 25% off. Offer expires 12/31/99. I I