2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsTuesday - January 16, 2001 CLUBSPORTSWEEKLY Michigan dance club earns national television appearance By Kristen Fidh Daily Sports Writer Kirk Herbstreit won't be analyz- ing the pirouettes, and Dick Vitale won't yell "Awesome" to the perfect batmas. Or will they? Dancing to a compelation from the "Matrix" soundtrack, the Michigan dance club performed in the Universal Dance Association's national competition this past week- end in Orlando. Pressure surfaced for the Wolverines upon making the finals - as the top eight would appear on ESPN. But for the first time in team his- tory, the 23-member squad walked away satisfied, taking eighth and finally earning the right to be seen on national television. "In years past, it was so frustrating because we would just miss (the top eight)," co-captain Amy Friedman said. "We would walk away frustrated with our ranking. "This year, we were the team to beat." Preliminary judging began in November when the team sent in a videotape of the routine. Michigan earned the ninth spot and began preparing for the trip south. "We brought on Rebecca Wass as our head coach this year, and she real- ly made an unbelievable difference," Friedman said. "She works with us for the athletic aspect of training such as running and weightlifting." Six-hour practices during the week before departure provided the needed preparation and the extra con- fidence for Michigan's stellar perfor- mance. The dancers slid past the semifi- nals and advanced to the top 15. Cheered on by friends and supporters from Oakland, the team took the stage and the eighth and final birth. "It was so great to walk up and take a trophy for the first time and to be able to leave with our heads held high," Friedman said. The performance will air this fall. But one of the nation's top programs will be visible before its television debut. The team will continue perform- ing during halftime at men's basket- ball games and between events of men's gymnastics meets. SOUND OFF! Your chance to speak out on issues in Michigan sports : Give us your thoughts on the NFL draft. Comment on the basketball team's lopsided loss at Illinois. Who is going to win the Super Bowl and why? Daily Sports wants Michigan sports feedback! Select fanfares will be printed in SportsMonday every week. This is your chance to sound off! dally.fan fare@umich.edu. DAILYSCOREBOARD NFLPLAYOFFS Who: Andy Hrovat Hometown: Gates Mills, Ohio Weight: 184 eIftditgnmBalt ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Sport: Wrestling Year: Junior Why: Hrovat continued his recent success with three victories at the Wendy's Classic in Ashland, Ohio. this weekend. He finished with one pin and two major decisions, improving his season record to 20-1. His win over then-No. 8 Rob Rohn of Lehigh last weekend helped him raise his national ranking from 16 to 8, according to the Amateur Wrestling News.Hrova I SPORTSBRIEFS NHL STANDINGS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division New Jersey Philadelphia Pittsburgh NY Rangers NY Islanders Northeast Division Ottawa Toronto Buffalo Boston Montreal Southeast Division Washington Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay Florida w 22 21 20 17 12 w 24 21 22 17 14 w 20 18 15 13 8 L T RT Pts 11 9 0 53 14 9 0 51 176 1 47 242 1 37 264 2 30 L T RT Pts 136 0 54 147 3 52 155 1 50 176 4 50 254 2 34 GF GA 144 101 126 118 135 136 141 162 102 142 GF GA 138 103 140 115 117 102 111 132 112 130 GF GA 119 113 106 112 121 146 112 149 95 135 SUNDAY'S RESULTS: NY GIANTS 41, MINNESOTA 0 BALTIMORE 16, RAIDERS 3 r w a ; >:; . fir. " 3'k . _ 1 d'. WESTERN CONFERENCE \ central Division St. Louis 29 Detroit 25 Chicago 18 Nashville 17 Columbus 13 L T 16 6 16 6 20 8 23 5 22 8 L T 8 4 134 204 21 7 26 4 RTI 1 2 1 2 6 RTI 1 4 2 1 2 CBS 6 p.m. Pts 49 44 39 33 30 Pts GF GA 63 148 89 58 134 119 42 120 124 42 105 120 32 100 143 CLUB SPORTS SCOREBOARD Women's ice Hockey MICHIGAN 5, Michigan State 1 .. MICHIGAN 2, Michigan State _1 Men's Ice Hockey MICHIGAN 7, Dayton 4' Dayton 3, MICHIGAN 2. ,Send your club sports info to dailyclubsports@umich.edu 'M'SCHEDULE Thursday, Jan. 18 Men's Basketball at Ohio State, 7 p.m. Women's Basketball at Northwestern, 7 p.m. CST FMax. Jan19 . Men's Swim and Diving vs. Penn State, 6 p.m. Women's Tennis vs. Bowling Green, 6 p.m. Women's Gymnastics vs. Minnesota and Iowa, 7 p.m. Hockey vs. Western Michigan, 7:35 p.m. B0 rdv. Jan. 20 Men's Track and Field hosts Red Simmons Invitational, 9:30 a.m. Women's Track and Field hosts Red Simmons Invitational, 9:30 a.m. Men's Swim and Diving vs. Penn State and Purdue, Noon Women's Swim and Diving at Ohio State, 4 p.m. Men's Gymnastics vs. Ohio State, 7 p.m. Hockey at Western Michigan, 7:05 p.m. Men's Basketball at Iowa, 7 p.m. CST Wrestling at National Dual Team Championships (State College, Pa.), all day Sunday. Jan. 21 Women's Basketball at Ohio State, 4 p.m. Men's Tennis vs. Western Michigan, Noon Wrestling at National Dual Team Championships (State College, Pa.), all day 'M'STATIsTICs Northwest Division Colorado Vancouver Edmonton Calgary Minnesota Pacific Division San Jose Dallas Phoenix Los Angeles Anaheim W 28 24 21 15 14 L T RTf 134 4 196 1 188 4 20.8 2 Pts 65 56 49 42 38 GF GA 140 101 14.8 127 129 129 105 128 93 108 W l 26 11 25 13 18 13 19 11 14 22 T RT Pts GF GA 6 0 58 124 97 4 1 5512293 111 48 105 97 7 1 46 147 134 6 4 38 108 142 Yesterday's games PITTSBURGH 3, Anaheim 2 FLORIDA 2, Dallas 0 COLUMBUs 3, Minnesota Detroit at SN Jose, INC. St. LOUIS at PHOEX INC. Today's games Tampa Bay at Buffalo. 7 P.M. Philadelphia at New York. 7 P.M. Los Angeles at Ottawa, 7 P.M. Carolina at Montreal. 7:30 P.M. Boston at New Jersey. 7:30 P.M. Edmonton at Nashville, 8 P.M. NY Islanders at Colorado. 9 P.M. Detroit at Vancouver, 10 P.M. NBA STANDINGS e '-, APtPHOTOS Giants ease into Super Bowl EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Philadelphia New York Miami Orlando Boston New Jersey Washington Central Division Milwaukee Charlotte Toronto Cleveland Indiana Atlanta Detroit Chicago W L1 28 9 24 13 22 17 16 20. 13 24. 12 26. 7 32. W L1 22 15. 23 17. 19 18. 17 18. 17 21. 14 23. 14 23 6 30. Pct1 .757 .649 564 .444 .351 .316 .179. GB 4 7 11.5 15 16.5 22 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Men's basketball Hockey Through Monday Through Monday Player G Blanchard 14 Robinson 14 Asselin 14 Young 14 Groninger 13 Queen 14 Moore 14 Searight 13 Jones 14 5Dill 5 Gibson 7 Gotfredson 7 Adebiyi 6 Garber 5 Min 31.9 28.0 22.9 24.9 19.1 28.4 13.9 12.3 16.5 1.6 1.4 4.1 1.5 1.6 A 1.9 2.6 0.5 0.4 1.6 4.0 0.3 2.1 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 0.4 Reb 8.4 5.2 6.3 5.4 1.3 3.0 3.8 1.8 1.6 0.4 0.3 0.9 0.5 0.4 Avg. 17.3 14.6 10.7 8.9 6.6 6.1 5.7 2.8 2.4 1.6 1.0 0.4 0.3 0.0 Player Hilbert Cammalleri Shouneyia Ortmeyer Langfeld Matzka Jillson - Koch Mink Kosick Murray Komisarek Vancik Trainor Burnes Blackburn Wyzgowski Roemensky Kautz Swistak GP 22 22 25 24 25 25 23 20 25 22 22 21 20 23 24 25 11 25 19 16 G A 17 24 13 20 7 13 10 8 9 9 7 11 6 11 7 9 6 9 5 9 6 5 3 7 1 5 1 4 0 4 0 4 1 2 0 3 1 1 0 1 PTS 41 33 20 18 18 18 17 16 15 14 11 10 6 5 4 4 3 3 2 1 +/- +15 +17 +3 +5 +2 +6 +7 +13 +3 +2 +4 +8 +5 +1 +8 +2 +19 +2 0 San Antonio Utah Dallas Minnesota Denver Houston Vancouver Pacific Division Portland Sacramento LA Lakers Phoenix Seattle LA Clippers Golden State W L 23 13. 23 13. 24 16 21 16 21 17 18 18 11 25 W l 1 28 11. 25 10 24 12. 22 13. 21 18 13 26. 11 25 Pct GB .595 - .575 .5 .514 3 .486 4 .447 5.5 .378 8 .378 8 .167 15.5 Pct GB .639 - .639 - .600 1 .568 2.5 .553 3 .500 5 .306 12 Pct GB .718 - .714 1 .667 2.5 .629 4 .538 7 .333 15 .306 15.5 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) - Not even Jim Fassel would have guaran- teed this shocker. Led by Kerry Collins' career-high five touchdown passes, the New York Giants reached their first Super Bowl in a decade with a 41-0 romp Sunday past the hapless Minnesota Vikings - the biggest rout in NFC championship history. While Collins was tying a playoff TD passing record set in 1943 by Sid Luckman, his teammates were having their way with the Vikings despite being underdogs. Minnesota, which rarely plays well outdoors, was a 2-point favorite. The Vikings became the first NFC championship shutout victim since the Giants beat Washington 17-0 en route to winning the Super Bowl following the 1986 season. It was their first shutout loss since Dennis Green became coach in 1992. For the Giants, however, it was the seventh straight victory since their coach promised the team would make the play- offs. They did him one better. "I think we shocked a lot of people, but we didn't shock ourselves,' Fassel said. The Giants will next face the Baltimore Ravens. The Super Bowl will be played Jan. 28 in Tampa, site of the Giants' 1990 championship victory. Collins, whose career was revived when he joined the Giants in 1999 fol- lowing controversial stops in Carolina and New Orleans and bouts with alco- holism, was remarkable from the outset. He threw for four touchdowns and 338 yards in the first half, then added a fifth TD pass just 2:54 into the third peri- od. He finished 28-for-39 for 381 yards and waved to the crowd from the side- line when his stats were announced. With Collins and receivers Ike Hilliard (10 catches, 155 yards) and Amani Toomer (six for 81) dominating, Minnesota's fearsome trio of Daunte Culpepper, Randy Moss and Cris Carter was rendered invisible by New York's ,stingy defense. Culpepper was held to 78 yards pass- ing and threw three interceptions. Moss had two receptions for 18 yards; Carter had three for 24. Carr leads East squad in annual Shrine game SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - , receiver Steve Smith capped his coll. e career Saturday with two touchdowns in the West's 20-10 victory Saturday in the East-West Shrine Game. The 76th annual East-West game, which raises money for Shiners' hospi- tals, was played at the San Francisco Giants' bayside ball- Carr park for the first time. The event has become a showcase for seniors like Smith, hoping to get another chance to impress NFL scouts looking for draftable talent. Kansas State's Jonathan Beasley was 5-of-10 for 117 yards and the two scor- ing passes to Smith. Nebraska's Correll Buckhalter caught three passes for 61 yards and ran 10 times for 54 yards. Mack Brown of Texas served as coach for the West, which included punter Nick Harris of California and defensive lineman Casey Hampton of Texas - both first-team All-Americans. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr led the East squad, with three players from Sugar Bowl champion Miami: safety Al Blades, running back James Jackson and King, a receiver. Weinke, Heupel to miss Senior Bowl MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Two of the nation's top quarterbacks - Heisman Trophy winner Chris Weinke and Josh Heupel - will miss the Senior Bowl on Saturday because of injuries. Heupel led Oklahoma past Weinke and Florida State in the Orange Bowl to settle the national title. The two arrived in Mobile on Sun ay and informed Senior Bowl officials and NFL scouts they needed to rest. Weinke has a sprained left foot and was examined by Dr. James Andrews of Birmingham on Friday. Heupel, a left-hander, has an injured throwing arm. "It's not a serious condition," said Heupel, who guided Oklahoma to a 0 season. Weinke initially hurt his foot in September and said he needs to rest so he can begin getting ready for NFL workouts. Senior Bowl officials replaced Weinke on the South team with Florida quarterback Jesse Palmer. Heupel was replaced on the North team by Rashard Casey of Penn State. Wells traded to Sox after bashing Jays CHICAGO (AP) - David Wells could be just the pitcher the Chicago White Sox need. It's a safe bet he'll also be more than just the staff ace. The White Sox sent pitchers Mike Sirotka, Kevin Beirne and Mike Williams and outfielder Brian Simmons to Toronto for Wells, aO- game winner last season, and pitcher Matt DeWitt. Wells, 37, is 161-107 in his 14- year career, including 20-8 last sea- son with a league-best nine complete games in 35 starts. He has averaged 16 victories the last six years and has been at his best in the postseason with an 8-1 record in 19 games. "We needed an ace, and the price for an ace is high," Williams said. "We won 95 games and got too playoffs and it wasn't enough." Earlier this month, Wells criticized the Blue Jays' organization was not doing enough to win. He also said the Blue Jays' fans "stink." Two Stars arrested in Tampa nude club TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Two D as Stars players were among those arrested when police raided a nude club to enforce a city ordinance banning lap dances. Left wing Ted Donato and Tyler John Bouck, a rookie celebrating his 21st Dog-gone Vikings Yesterday's games NEw YORK~ 104. San Antonio 82 Milwaukee 101, WASHINGTON 95 PHILADELPHIA 84.Charlotte 79 New Jersey 84. ATLANTA 78 Sacramento 116, DALLAS 105 Boston 107. MINNESOTA 102 Cleveland 107. GOLDEN STATE 102 ORLANDO 133. Chicago 104 INDIANA 89.LA Clippers 74 Vancouver at LA Lakers. inc. Seattle at Denver, inc. Houston at utah, inc. Today's games Detroit at Miami, 7 p.m. Toronto at Houston, 8 p.m. LA Clippers at Milwaukee. 8 p.m. Cleveland at Portland. 10 p.m. Field goal percentage leader Young 48-74 .649 Free throw percentage leader Robinson 64-79 .810 Three-point percentage leader Blanchard 26-65 .400 . a . ... i... r 'Max,' the most spirited Giants fan, who is also a dog, dons his NY Giants cap dur- ing Sunday's game. Max's barking may have affected a Minnesota offense that had only 78 passing yards. Raven's D' dominates Raiders after this, the corporate l~adder wiU be a piece of 'S. CakeJd OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Evep Shannon Sharpe acknowledges that the Baltimore Ravens don't have the typi- cal Super Bowl offense. "We're not that good, but we're effec- tive," the Ravens tight end said after Baltimore beat the Oakland Raiders 16- 3 Sunday to reach the first Super Bowl in the history of the franchise that, until 1996, was the Cleveland Browns. In truth, the offense needed to make just one play, a 96-yard pass to Sharpe from Trent Dilfer on a third-and-18 from their own 4-yard line in the second quarter. It was the longest pass play in NFL postseason history, gave the notably the one big play and ball securi- ty. He was intercepted early in the third quarter with the Ravens leading 10-0. But the defense did its work afterward - - with a first-and-goal at the Baltimore 2, the defense held Oakland to a field goal by Sebastian Janikowski. Then, Dilfer took the offense down the field for 51 yards and Matt Stover's field goal boosted the lead back to 10. That was all the Ravens needed, although the defense played loosely in the fourth quarter and Oakland almost scored - a TD pass from Bobby Hoying to Andre Rison was nullified by pass interference on Rison. '