1hle £ibiuufaiv g # P S P (:)R SA m I JL ". " Sports desk: 763-2459 sportsdesk@umich.edu SECTION B x .. ._. ,-: ., k .. ., flag ," :. " .wA . ,. . i f.. a ,.. .; .. .__ .. "Our main goal is still to win a national championship." - Andy Burnes MICHIGAN 4, NOTRE DAiE 4 (OT) "There's a lot to play for and a lot of hockey left. Michigan defenseman Down - Billy Powers Michigan assistant coach and out TOM [ELDKAMP/Daily lichigan won its 13th Big Ten title in the last 15 years. The Wolverines would soon take their celebration to the pool. Roller-coaster *year ends with Big Ten title Spartans frustrate 'M' again By Ryan C. Moloney D~aily Sports Writer WOMEN'S SWIMMING Ci AMPIC.NSH1PS BLOOMINGTON By James Mercier Daily Sports Writer When it was over, Jim Richardson couldn't resist tak- ing a plunge into the pool. It's customary for the swimmers and coaches on a Big Ten championship team to leap into the water after the award ceremony, but Richardson hadn't always been so respectful of tradition. "When we won the conference my freshman year, he didn't go in the pool," senior Missy Sugar said. "I'm 0lad we were able to get him in this time." For the Michigan women's swimming team, it was an appropriate way to wrap up a season that for so long had threatened to go into the tank. In their previous weekend of competition, the Wolverines suffered consecutive defeats at Notre Dame and Northwestern, which dropped the team's overall dual record to 4-5. Three weeks later, the team holds the 2001 Big Ten title. In a performance that seemed to mirror their entire season, the Wolverines surged into first place early on, slipped behind Penn State on the second *vening, and then rallied to outlast the Nittany Lions, 582-557. "Sometimes you may not be dealt a winning hand, but if you play it well, amazing things can happen," a jubilant - and wet - Richardson said following the meet. "This team has a spiritual depth to it." Heading into the final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay, the conference crown remained undecided, as the Wolverines clung to a scant nine-point edge. But the Michigan team of Samantha Arsenault, Jen- ifer Crisman, Sugar and Annie Weilbacher finally clinched the title, taking first place in the event with a pool record time of 3:19.61. "There was a lot of pressure," Arsenault said after swimming the final leg of the relay. "But I felt calm knowing that I had three girls going in the relay with me. I wasn't as nervous for this one as I was for my individual races." The relay capped an up-and-down meet for the Wolverines. On Thursday evening, Michigan seized an early 28- point lead, aided by a win in the 400-yard medley relay y Crisman, Traci Valasco, Weilbacher and Arsenault. he group set Big Ten meet and pool records with a time of 3:38.76 -just one of 14 events in which a pool record was set. DETROIT - As the final horn sounded Saturday night at Joe Louis Arena, a dejected Scott Matzka simply couldn't take it any longer. As he skated by two Michigan State fans holding up a banner that read "Go State," the senior delivered a wicked two-hander that shook the glass divider and startled the would-be celebraters. It was the most anyone could do - for the Spartans, once again, got Michi- gan's goat. The Wolverines fell to Michigan State 4-2 on Saturday night after tying the CCHA's then-last-place team, Notre Dame, the prior night at Yost Ice Arena, 4-4. It was Michigan's second loss in three tries against Michigan State this season, and the timing couldn't have been worse. The Wolverines are all but elimi- nated in their quest to;usurp the Spar- tans for the CCHA regular season title. Afterward, Matzka was asked if it was the worst loss of the season. See SPARTANS, Page 4B DANNY MDI-OSHOK/Daily Like Michigan's CCHA regular-season title hopes, Craig Murray was flattened by a tenacious Michigan State defense en route to a 4-2 loss Saturday night at Joe Louis Alna. Pressure sets in and rips icers rom CC-A race DETROIT - It was one of the most somber celebrations these Wolver- ines have ever given a goal. Particu- larly one against the hated Spartans. With 21 seconds left in Saturday night's game, Michigan's Scott Matzka wristed the puck past Michigan State's goaltender Ryan Miller to cut the score to 4-2 in favor of the Spartans. The Wolverines skated over to the bench and pumped fists with their teammates. No hugs, no wide-eyed glee exchanged with line- mates. The response - or lack thereof - was fit- JON ting considering the way S(WARTZ that the weekend went. Excellent chances turned The Schwartz into blown opportunities. Authority And the actual hockey was secondary. On Friday night, No. 1 Michigan State lost to Western Michigan in Kalamazoo, resuming the fight with Michigan for the CCHA regular-season title. How did Michigan respond to the pressure that resurfaced with the race resuming? Piti- fully. The Wolverines tied Notre Dame Fri- day night - the same Notre Dame team that they beat 9-0 in January - and lost 4-2 to State in Detroit on Saturday night. Today, Michigan is essentially out of the running for the CCHA title. It would take a collapse of titanic proportions for Michigan State - now six points up with three games to play - to lose the race. So when the Michigan pep band cracked into the Billy Joel song "Pressure" with 6:55 to play on Saturday night, the choice couldn't have been more fitting. "But here you are in the ninth, two men out and three men on, nowhere to look but inside, where we all respond to pressure." Pressure has not been a friend to these Wolverines. They spent five days in Novem- ber as the top-ranked team in the country before losing to the Spartans and subse- quently, losing the ranking. The team has lost winnable game after winnable game, but still was in a position to end on top. Until Saturday night. "It's been a long season and this is our chance to make a run for the CCHA title, and basically, it's out of reach now," Matzka said. "You're disappointed playing that many games and now not even having an opportunity to get it." Michigan has made a season out of losses to sub-par teams. In very few cases has the team looked as bad as it did against Ohio State in January. But the Wolverines were still in it. Since the game ended Saturday night, I've been enjoying thinking that choosing to play the Billy Joel song was a conscious decision to comment on the way that the Wolverines blew the opportunity of opportunities. It just See SCHWARTZ, Page 4B Crisman added to her success on Friday night, cap- See CHAMPIONS, Page 2B DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Scott Matzka can offer little defense as Adam Hall raises his arms in jubilation after scoring the game-winner in Michigan State's 4-2 victory over Michigan. Complacent cagers fail to Minnesota By Dan Williams ing off. It's disappointing, but we have a lot Many of Minnesota's open looks we] Daily Sports Editor of immature kids, and they have to grow created by penetrating off the dribble an up. then kicking the ball out to open shooters - I re nd Demonstrating a disturbing pattern of behavior, the Michigan men's basketball was bombarded from the 3-point line by Minnesota, another under- MINNESOTA 93 sized squad. The Wolverines were MICHIGAN 75 dominated in the second half, succumbing 93-75 to the unranked Golden Gophers. "We had a good practice yesterday, and then we have had some guys that have just really had a hard time getting the idea that "We're going to make some guys grow up pretty quickly and finish this season up with some pride and some character." The ill-prepared Wolverines allowed Minnesota (5-8 Big Ten, 17-9 overall) - which had just seven scholarship players available and no starters taller than 6-foot-7 - to connect on 14-of-24 3-pointers. "We were aggressive and able to swing the ball," Minnesota coach Dan Monson said. "We can't win games if shots don't go in from the perimeter. We don't have an inside game really." a different path to defeat than when Wiscon- sin used screens and motion two weeks ago. "They just created a lot of tough defen- sive situations for us," Ellerbe said. "They broke us down off the dribble. That's the formula for getting wide open looks." The visitors rode the hot hand of streaky guard Terrance Simmons, the game's lead- ing scorer with 30 points. Simmons started out torridly from behind the arc, and he fin- ished the game shooting 5-for-8 on threes. Bolstered by the success, he began mak- ing fadeaway jumpshots, and when he Samantha Arsenault won an Olvmnic : ; _ . ' I Lw t~ -