2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 11, 2000 CLUBSPoRTSWEEKLY BrazlEdanJiu-Jiotsu sees populart g r 'M' SCHEDULE Thursday. Sept. 14 M Soccer vs. Illinois-Chicago, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 15 Field Hockey vs. Ball State, 4 p.m. W Soccer at Purdue, 5 p.m. Volleyball vs. Houston at Arkansas Invit., 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 16 W Cross Country at Spiked Shoe Invitational (State College), 10 a.m. Volleyball vs. Virginia at Arkansas Invit., noon Field Hockey vs. Rutgers, 1 p.m. Football at UCLA, 3:30 p.m. Volleyball at Arkansas in Arkansas Invitational, 8:30 p.m. W Golf hosts Wolverine Invitational SundaySept. 17 M Soccer vs. Detroit, 2 p.m. W Soccer at Indiana, 2:30 p.m. W Golf hosts Wolverine Invitational Monday, Sept. 18 M Golf at Inverness Intercollegiate (Toledo) AHET O THEBadWEE A TH LE TE OF T HE W EEK 0 Who: April Fronzoni Year: Freshman Sport: Field Hockey Position: Forward Why: In Michigan's home openers versus American and Ohio, Fronzoni sparked the offensive attack with four goals to help the field hockey team notch a pair of 6-1 victories. Yesterday against Ohio, she scored three goals in 13 minutes to put away the Bobcats. Fronzoni, along with sophomore forward Molly Powers, leads the team with five goals in six games. F- Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu fi'st gained prominence by being the choice method of combat in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Now it is making a impact in Ann Arbor. After three years, there are now approximately 60 members of Michigan's Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu club. "It was started so we would have a place to practice, but then when we had our first practice, 35 people showed up," club president Francis Garcia said. "We had no idea how popular it was." .Jiu-Jitsu is a form of wrestling that focuses on grappling and leverage to defeat an opponent. The club generally attracts former high school wrestlers and those trained in karate, but the club also sees members who want to get in shape or are looking .o learn self- defense. "It is a pretty casual environment."' Garcia said. "There isn't a very rigid schedule." Members of the club are trained within the group by those experi- enced in the art. The members also learn by competing against each other. "Very experienced members are open to showing beginners new moves," Josh Greenbaum said. "Someone will get tapped and they will say How did you do that? Show me that."' While many have competition experience, no experience is neces- sary to join. "We have beginners take a two-day course where they learn the basic mr;ov's," Garcia said. The group competes in tourna- ments offered by Ann Arbor Karate clubs, as well as tournaments throughout the United States. For more information, contact Garcia at /Pancisg'caiumich. du. --JeffPhi//ips Woods wins Canadian Open, Trie Crown1 AMERICAN LEAGUE East NY Ynkees Toronito Bosion B lt mc re Tampa Bay Ce nral Ci''srand on COy Mmne Sota Seattle Oakland Anailen Tex as WILD CARD RACE Cleivelanrd "flnsas Cit W L P i G13 82 58 31 61n2 77 18s 631 82 .42'7 22.5 W L 5 57 70 72 (r 7 713 h2 81 14 L 75 661 71 71 64/ 79 9/l7.5 Pct GB 1 3 14 4314 23.5 F GB 4,37.5 G43 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Sa Si Aet Atert a Fin.dn.. q C di ...n a 's n WILD CARD RACE VS I 8.1 SO "ni 131 I"'; ~/i in 82 itS, &r fr/i GB 9 nIl . 4/I, 'tin 29 ~ri (i~ i-/i ) (I 9' ii ia ir I A C) rr 41 F t (un 2 ,'(nn 7 ~91) I n/i 11 46(n ,. 1 A) 7i Ultimate team begins recruiting efforts 713 67 (;73 17 .Y h" 's 'rr./'ptn k) z r .914; 7 n 85J 12 Yesterdays Results American Laag ue NY Yankees "- BSTON 2. Chicago at CLLVT LAND. Postponed TORONTO 6. L:,rri2 KANSAS CITY 1.3. 1eas 8 OAKLAND It. lanipa Hay 0 SEATTL[ 8. Mrnnesoira 1 Balimore at Anahem.inc NationalLeue Ni M. , 3 rmli Oir Los A CO OA SAN FRANCSCO 10 S FLOR~IDA 4. 1Anmnira . 12 nng For those needing to fill that com- petitive void in their life the men s Ultimate club is holding its final clill- ic this Sunday at Palmer Ield. The men's club is comingO off a solid seasons by taking ninth at nationals at Boise. "It is a great way to stay competi- tive without sacrificing your whole life," captain Mike H-alev 'said. There are no cuts from the club and no experience is necessary to join. But for those with the ability and drive there is an A team that practices three days per week and will travel to Georgia, Stanford. Tennessee and Notre Dame. The B team does not require the same commitment and only plays on the weekend. "With new members (without expe- rience) we will teach the necessary throws," Halev said. The women's ultimate club is also recruitin next week. They are work- ing with the men's club at the same clinic this Sunday. The women's club finished third last year at regionals, just missing a chance to go to nationals. Like the men's club, the women's club requries no experience to join. For more information contact Jess Hoff at hotfjis'. unich.edu or Mike H aley at haleiWra engin.uniich.Ecdu. - A/ff Phi/lips OAKVIL.LE, Ontario (AP) -- Tiger Woods has a shot for every occ as to i. Pushed to the limits by an unlikely challenger. Woods completed golfs great summer in style yesterday with a 6-iron from a fairway bunker, over tie water and right at the flag, to win the Canadian Open by one stroke' over Grant Waite. Woods chipped from the back of the green to a foot and tapped in for Woods birdie to close out a 7-under-par 65 and his fifth victory in seven tourna- ments this sumllmer. Three of them were majors, one of them gave him the career Grand Slam and all of them were filled with unforgettable shots. And his last four victories included some kind of scoring record. Woods finished at 266, the lowest 72-hole score in the 22 years that the Canadian Open has been played at Glen Abbey Golf Club. He was nearly flawless yesterday, and had to be. Waite, a runner-up for the second straight week in Canada, matched him stroke-for-stroke and put the pressure on with a 4-iron into the par-5 18th green that left him a 20-foot eagle attempt that could have forced a playoff or perhaps snatched a victory away from Woods. Woods went right at the flag, the ball landed about 18 feet behind the hole. Waite missed his eagle try and had to settle for a 66 and one stroke short of winning, just like he was in Vancouver last week. "My goal was not to get too caught up in the hype," Waite said. "I gave him a run for the monev." Woods won for the third straight. time, and for the ninth time this year,- the most PGA Tour victories in one year since Sam Snead won I I times in 1950. He earned 5594,000, giving him more money in his last 38 tourna- mrents - S14.9 million - than any- one else in their career. And Woods can now add the Tripl9 Crown to the Grand Slam. he com- pleted by winning the British Open at St. Andrews. He became the only other player besides Lee Trevino in 1971 to win the U.S. Open, British Open and Canadian Open in the same. year. Those are the three oldest national championships in golf, all of them conauered by a 24-year-old who knows no limits. And his knack for dramatic finish" cs has no end. Woods had the outright lead for' only six holes in the tournament. He" grabbed it for good on the par-5 16th' with a 12-foot birdie putt. Woods pointed to the cup - a gesture that has replaced his famous fist pump as the ball disappeared to give him a- one-stroke lead with two holes to' play. With rain starting to fall, Woods missed his first green on the 17th, but:,' managed to blast out of the bunker to a foot to save par, a tremendous shot since he had so little green between the sand and the flag. And despite the pressure Waite applied at the end, Woods had anq ommmmi r p °w. j Red Right 322 Y Stick, on two! AP PHOTO Dre Bly and the Rams beat the Seahawks, 37-34. AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Buffalo Indianapolis Miami N.Y. Jets New England Central Baltimore Jacksonville Cleveland Tennessee Cincinnati Pittsburgh West Oakland Denver Kansas Cit'y San Diego Seattle w 2 1 1 1 0 W 2 1 1 1 0 W 2 1 0 0 0 Pct 1.000 .500 .500 1.000 .000 Pct 1.000 .500 .500 .500 .000 .000 Pct 1.000 500 .000 .000 .000 PF 43 58 30 20 16 PF 55 63 31 30 7 0 PF 47 78 28 33 34 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East PA 31 52 13 16 21 PA 36 48 34 30 24 16 PA 37 55 44 37 60 PA 34 47 32 21 41 PA 20 34 16 71 47 PA 70 70 42 41 74 Yesterday's Results BALTIMORE 39, Jacksonville 36 BUFFALO 27, Green Bay 18 Tennessee 17, KANSAS CITY 14 Oakland 38, INDIANAPOLIS 31 MINNESOTA 13, Miami 7 NY Giants 33, PHILADELPHIA 18 St. Louis 37, SEATTLE 34 New Orleans 28, SAN DIEGO 27 DENVER 42, Atlanta 14 Carolina 38, SAN FRANCISCO 22 DETROIT 15, Washington 10 TAMPA BAY 41, Chicago 0 Cleveland 24, CINCINNATI 7 Dallas at ARIZONA, inc. Bye Week: Pittsburgh. Toniigh ame New England at NY Jets, 9 p.m. Sundays games Atlanta at Carolina, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Green Bay. 1 p m. San Diego at Kansas City. 1 p.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, 1 p.rn. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Jacksonville, 1 p.1. Buffalo at NY Jets. 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Denver at Oakland. 4:05 p.m. NY G'ints at Chicago, 4:15 p.m. New Orleans at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. Minnesota at New England, 4:15 p.m. Balimore at Miami, 8:30 p.m. Mon day's game Dallas at Washington, 9 p.m. Bye Week: Arizona, Tennessee, Indianapolis. SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Koreans yesterday welcomed news that their athletes will march with their North Korean counter- parts during the opening ceremony at the Olympics. But the agreement, mediated by the International Olympic Committee, was hardly a surprise to South Koreans, who in recent months have seen far more signifi- cant improvements in the relation- ship between the two rivals. The Olympics agreement "is something we can all celebrate," said Shin Dong-hoon, a stock exchange official. "But he added that it is a small thing, compared to vhat both Koreas have already done or agreed to do." The Koreas, divided into the com- munist North and the pro-Western South in 1945, have never signed-a peace treaty since they fought .. three-year war in the early 1950s. They share the world's most heavily armed border with nearly 2 million. troops deployed on both sides. The relations between North and South have improved dramatically since their leaders met for the first time in June and agreed to work together for reconciliation and unifik cation. The two also decided to reconnect a cross-border railway and agreccjQ discuss opening a military hotljne, and a regular channel of dialogue between their defense leaders. Still, the latest news elated man* South Koreans. "It's better to march together. We are one people," said street-cleaner Koh Jong-soo. Korea to march united at Sydney Olympics DANNY MOLOshOK/Da+(y Kinesiology senior Aaron Park sets the play In the huddle during his pick up football game on Palmer Field yesterday afternoon in the rain and mud. N.Y. Giants Philadelphia Washington Arizona 'Dallas Central Detroit Minnesota Tampa Bay Chicago Green Bay West St. Louis Atlanta Carolina New Orleans San Francisco W 2 1 1 0 0 W 2 2 2 0 0 W 2 1 1 1 0 L 0 1 1 1 1 L 0 0 0 2 2 L 0 1 1 1 2 T 0a 0 0 T0 0 T a0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0o Pct 1.000 .500 .500 .000 .000 Pet 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 Pet 1.000 .500 .000 .500 .000 PF 54 59 30 16 14 PF 29 43 62 27 34 PF 78 50 55 38 50 Johnson becomes 12th to 3,000 strikeouts . _... . ... -e I WHY HAS THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FAILED ITS STUDENTS ? For some answers see: www.universitysecrets.com MIAMI (AP) -- Randy Johnson needed just four innings Sunday to strike out eight and reach 3,000 for his career, becoming the 12th player to reach the 3,000-strikeout plateau. Johnson, celebratin 1 his 37th birthdav, struck out the side in the second and the fourth innings aeainst the Florida Marlins. Mike Lowell became Johnson's 3.000th victim, striking out on four pitches to end the fourth inning. C:atchler Kelly Stinnett carried tile ball into the dugout, while Johnson walked off the field to a standing ovation. He raised his black glove into the air, acknowledging the crowd's applause, as he reached t dugout steps. .Johnson's first strikeout of the game. Marlins leadoff hitter Luis Castillo, also gave him 300 forthy third consecutive season and ,the fourth time overal. Nolan Ryan is thle only other pitcher to strike out 300 in three straight seasons, doing it in 1972- 74.z Johnson's four 300-strikeout sea- sons are second only to Ryan's six GET THE BOOKS YOU NEED. GREENPOST.COM BOOKS & MUSIC *A1RDIl NF1W and SAVE $5 off the year end price! 1U TripTheBookie.com I T'S T IMEA F ET FANATWUAUTw'i a pCIa id fPrnt I Ottq I WForce into the new Ce e -~ >~rn~a,"-.--