PORTrS TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 18, 2001 9 Football team anxious to get back to normal Michigan Stadium to be filled again; offseason workouts give 'M' a stronger defense Dail Sports Waster::>: ".. JON SCHWARTZ In the aftermath of last Tuesday's terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, football doesn't seem like a particularly pressing issue. Nevertheless, the season will continue this Satur- day for Michigan (and every other team in Division I-A). The Wolverines are in their second week of preparations for Western Michigan - the postponed game from last Saturday was rescheduled for this week, with the Big Ten opener against Illinois pushed back to Sept. 29. The fact that a seemingly impenetrable building like the Pentagon was attacked has heightened anxi- eties amongst the Wolverines, and with good reason. The thought of a plane crashing into Michigan Sta- dium with over 110,00 fans packed in sent chills through the spines of just about everyone associated with the football program. But the Wolverines sound determined to play on, attempting to get things back to normal. "With all that's going on, you've got to go out there and play this game to kind of show everybody that, as a whole, we're moving on," defensive tackle Dave Pearson said at yesterday's media luncheon. "With everything shut down last week, I think it was good to mourn and remember everything that hap- pened, but at some point, you've got to move on." So on Saturday, Michigan Stadium will once again be filled to the brim with fans. Although the odds of some kind of attack on the stadium are somewhere between slim and none, the fear of a possible strike may be in the back of some people's minds. Pearson, for one, thinks that such fears aren't worth losing sleep over. "I don't think security is that big of an issue," he said. "Sure, people wonder when you get 110,00 people in the stadium together. You know, I feel that if you're going to cancel one game you might as To help the healing, look back to the sports world Players return to the grass of Michigan Stadium this Saturday after an unscheduled week off. well cancel them all, because the chances (of some- thing happening) each week are just as likely." GETTING DEFENSE: In Michigan's 23-18 loss to Washington on Sept. 8, one of the many bright spots for the Wolverines was the play of their defensive line. Washington tailbacks Rich Alexis and Willie Hurst were largely ineffective against Michigan, combining for only 91 yards on the ground. After the much-publicized defensive struggles of a season ago, the improvement along the front wall had to be heartening for fans and players alike. According to the Wolverines, the secret to their newfound success on 'D' isn't much of a secret at all. "It's the offseason workouts, going in with a good attitude," defensive end Shantee Orr said. "Everyone knows what kind of skills they need to work on to become a better player." The hard work in the offseason has started to pay some dividends on the field, and Orr went on to explain just how Michigan has stepped up its play. "As a group, we've improved tremendously from last year, as far as our pass rush and getting a jump off of the ball," he said. QUICK wrr: Athletic director Bill Martin -who is always quick with a joke or a friendly barb -- provided one of the few moments of levity at the media luncheon. A reporter began a question to Martin by saying, "Bill, you aren't the football coach ..." at which point Martin interrupted the reporter and said with a laugh, "Thank God for Michigan." - , Soccer has:$ nRo merc or Detroit , By Jim Weber Daily Sports Writer P Feeling concern for the events which rocked our nation last week, and for what is most like- ly soon to come, I sit here today, ready to get back to life. I went to the weekly football lun- cheon/press conference yesterday. Before I went to sleep last night, I checked the Mets score. And it was reported yesterday that baseball's all-around good-guy, Carl Everett, had a run-in with manager Joe Kerrigan over the weekend. Ahhh ... sports are back. From a sporting perspective, the last week has been just about unprecedent- ed. There was nothing. Baseball was gone. Football was gone. A Saturday came and went with nary a fight song to be heard. Truly nothing. (Please note, that even though there was a CART race in Europe, I neither live in Tennessee, nor have only one tooth, and therefore, don't consider it a sport. It is a stupid activity that often gets people killed for no good reason.) There is no question in my mind that canceling the events was the right thing to do. America needed time to memorialize those who passed on Tuesday. And much in the same fashion, from yesterday forward, Americans must go back to being Americans. That means the New York Stock Exchange, located right in the warzone of Lower Manhattan, was open yester- day. That means that television is returning to normal and will soon be able to entertain again, rather than sad- den and depress. And that means that baseball stadi- ums should be - and hopefully will be - packed. Stop what you're doing, and make it to a ballgame sometime this week. I'm serious. It's going to be hard because the Tigers are on the road for the next week and a half, but what's a trip to Minneapolis or Boston if you're doing it to celebrate your American heritage? When you're at Michigan Stadium this weekend and the band cracks into the National Anthem, don't just get up and wait until it's over. Stand up straight with your hand on your heart and think about the words that fill the tune you're hearing. Think about the fact that our flag is still there. I've always said, often with a hint of sarcasm, that sports identify us as a united nation, more so than any other institution that I know of. America is not the only society to embrace athlet- ic competition and its competitors - not even close - but each country's obsession with any particular sport is part of what separates that country as an individual society. Think about it - baseball is played in countries around the world. And there are plenty of Americans who can't stand the sport. And yet it is still the "National Pas- time." Not because we decided to call it that, but because it simply is. You can't see a baseball game and not think of it as American. When I next watch a baseball game, I'm hoping to see a world that very much resembles the one that I saw before this madness started. It will be a bit more somber, and there will cer- tainly be acknowledgement of what happened, but the game will live on. , Same thing goes for Saturday's foot- ball game. For all intents and purpos- es, it should be just like any other football game. Sports are a rock of stability. Hope- fully, Americans can find a way in the next week or so to stand on that rock, to appreciate the fact that the rock can hold the weight of a depressed nation. n a side note, I think it is important to point out that when the sun went down last night as the baseball games along the East Coast were starting, nighttime brought the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashana. The celebration recognizes the start of the new Jewish year. In a lot of ways, though, yesterday represented the start of something new, in America. These next few weeks will be filled with confusion and nervous- ness. And yet, there is great hope that they can represent what could become the proudest time in American history. I share that hope. So I see these next few days almost as America starting over. It may not be a new "year," per se, but it is certainly a new era. Hopefully, all American institutions, including sports, will help lead us into a new time that will never know the hurt that we all felt last week. Jon Schwartz can be reached at jlsz@umich.edu. Up until yesterday, the Michigan women's soccer team struggled to play consistently for an entire game and paid for it. The team was 1-3 going into yesterday's game with Detroit-Mercy. The game was added after the team canceled last week- end's games against Hartford and Connecticut. In the first two minutes of the game it appeared that the Wolver- ines hadn't fixed the problem as they came out flat and allowed the Titans to get two corner kicks. But Michigan dominated the remaining 88 minutes and won 4-0. "The first two minutes they came out really hard and had a lot of pres- sure on us but we settled down and were able to get control of the game," freshman Kate Morgan said. On the afternoon, the Wolverines out-shot Detroit 30-2. Sixteen of Michigan's 30 shots were on goal, with many of the misses bouncing off the goal's frame. "We missed a few opportunities, but this is the time to do it," Morgan said. "We're just getting it out of our system." Detroit was unable to challenge Michigan goalies Suzie Grech and Bre Bennett as neither of its two shots were on goal. Both Grech and Bennett played a half as the two .continue to split time at the goalie position. After the Wolverines started the game with a couple of close shots, Morgan scored at 33:15 in the first half on an assist from Amy Sullivant and Abby Crumpton, who missed the last two games with a strained calf. Crumpton scored on Detroit Scholarships given to three walk-ons The Michigan men's basketball team awarded full scholarships to three senior walk-ons - Mike Got- fredson, Rotolu Adebiyi and Herb Gibson - yesterday. S .J..... vi~ . aao2 nm r~na Michigan's Laney Rosin scored the fourth and final goal in the Wolverines' 4-0 win over Detroit-Mercy yesterday. goalie Alisson Dube a couple min- By allowing only two shots, the trying new people," captain Laurie utes later after a scramble in front of Wolverines also found a solution to Peterson. "I think we're finally the goal. their problematic defense yesterday. starting to get more calm and more With a 2-0 lead at the half, the "At the beginning it's always hard organized. Everyone knows their team made a commitment not to let because we're trying new things, role on the team now." another lead slip away. "We went back out after the half and got in our little huddle and we were like 'Okay, the problem is we - need to stay focused for the full 90 * - S * minutes. We're halfway there, let's keep focusing,' " Morgan said. Less than three minutes into the second half it was apparent Michi- gan was not going to let up on Detroit as Amy Sullivant scored on intellectu a penalty kick. andc With the game winding down, Laney Rosin scored the final goal of the game at 83:33 with a ball that or snuck between the goalie's out- stretched hands and the top of therlooka goal. job-trainin One of the keys to Michigan con- sistent play was getting an early lead salary is so that more players could get intoM the game. "Obviously we used a lot of dif- ferent people so we had fresh legs," Michigan coach Debbie Rademacher said. "So it was kind of different than the other games we have had - being able to sub." NES Patent Examiner. ungs The U.S. Patent and Trz tal property protection t Scientists to research anc to the protection of nei advanced degree can lei at the latest technology. I g, flexible hours, and ad commensurate with exp growth has chr s. 1 care( ude opp I edu ent E 7 that grants g Engineers ents leading >r of Science a first hand and on-the- The starting r continued ositions for: . " C ers *Coi " B10 Sci Igineers e Chi ineers 0 year, scoring seven points. "We are excited and honored to award scholarships to Mike, Ro and Herb," said coach Tommy Amaker in a released statement. "Their dedica- tion and efforts have been a tremen- dous asset to the program, and they are most deserving of this honor." Some of Michigan's scholarships SINE To apply Check Stal *Must have nt Examir t Notificati I & II, Differential. go to & Statistics o.gov, click dI complete Job UNITED STATES PATF KIT A KMb