8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 1, 2001 4 A Bronx tale: 'M' places seventh at Iona By Bob Hunt For the Daily The Michigan women's cross-country team got back into action after a three-week layoff by heading to the Bronx for the Iona Invite. The Wolverines flew into Newark International Airport, which was the ori- gin of United Airlines flight 93 which crashed in Penn- sylvania during the Sep. 11 terrorist attacks. While it didn't physically affect the race, where the Wolverines finished seventh out of 22 teams on Satur- day, being near everything that happened was still an experience for the Wolverines. "When we flew in, I don't think anybody really thought anything of it but it was much more of the reality," Michigan coach Mike McGuire said. "It was there. In the Daily News, it's still in there like it hap- pened yesterday." Field hockey Despite the presence of a few strong teams like Boston College, a squad that finished fourth in last year's NCAA Championships, McGuire and the rest of the Wolverines were disappointed with their finish. Michigan ended up behind Boston College, Boston University, Cornell, Yale, Dartmouth and Villanova. "We improved over the first meet so I was satisfied with that but (our performance) still wasn't reflective of the progress we made in training from the first meet to the second meet," McGuire said. The Wolverines had four runners place in the top 50 in the 6 kilometer race. Lindsey Gallo finished 24th, while teammates Andrea Parker (33rd), Katie Ryan (45th) and Jeanne Spink (48th) all placed in the top 50. But Michigan would have liked to finished as a team in the top three or four considering the competition. Despite the team performance, McGuire said the performance of redshirt freshman Parker was impres- sive. "She's the most improved kid on our team and she's been racing as well or better as she's been practicing," McGuire said. Michigan was supposed to have run at the Spiked Shoe Invitational atPenn State on Sept. 15 but the meet's cancellation left the team with a three-week layoff. The team last raced on Sept. 8 in the Miami Invitational at Miami (Ohio). Many of the teams the Wolverines raced against originally scheduled last week as a bye week, but because of the recent cancellations, those teams found meets. The Wolverines took a different route - instead of scheduling a meet, they decided to just train in prepa- ration for later meets. "I don't think (the layoff) had a huge effect," McGuire said. The women's crew team dedicated its new boathouse on Saturday. Alumni turn out for boathouse dedication swats away Iowa, Ball State By Brian Steere Daily Sports Writer By Dan Rosen For the Daily The Michigan women's crew team officially dedicated its new S I.2 mil- lion facility during its annual Boathouse Day event on Saturday. The building was functional last sea- son but wasn't fully completed until recently. Saturday's event was a celebration for a program that has come a long way in its first five seasons - the team finished second in the NCAA Championships last year. A sign of the tradition that is building on Belleville Lake - the home of Michigan women's crew - was the large group of alumni present for the ceremony. "It's important to see where this program has come from, to see who the club rowers were who started the program, who had to fundraise and pay for everything themselves, who had to travel in the vans and sleep on gym floors," said senior rower Julie Brescoll of the alumni who returned for the event. "It's inspiring to think that when people like Kate Johnson were fresh- men here, there really was no boathouse, there really wasn't much of a program," freshman Brett Sickler said. "They came into it blindly, not knowing what to expect, and just went for it." As a member of Michigan's first varsity crew team, Johnson sees the new boathouse as a way to link the program's promising future with the birth of the varsity team five years ago. "I think it's important just to keep the spirit going," said Johnson, a 2000 graduate and three-time All-Ameri- can. "It doesn't end after you leave here. The tradition of being a part of Michi- gan rowing continues for the rest of your life." The new facility covers 6,000 square feet directly on the shores of the lake. It has a classroom, a locker- room, offices, a lounge for team members, and an athletic training facility - in addition to the large garage for the team's boats. "A facility like this, for a sport of this nature, it's absolutely essential," Athletic Director Bill Martin said. The rowers will now have a heated building to return to after practice. They will be able to put boats directly in the water, instead of carrying them down the large hill from the old boathouse. In addition, they will be ablo to study video and discuss strategy in the comfort of a home space. "Anytime you have a facility that you can take pride in, that helps psy- chologically but also functionally," said coach Mark Rothstein of how the facility has improved the program. "It's made a big difference. We have meeting rooms right here and we're right on the water, which is more effi- cient for practice." "The old boathouse really wasn't a home," said junior Helen Dallas. For the second-straight weekend, the Michigan field hockey team benefited from a strong offense and a nearly impenetrable defense to earn two wins. The fourth-ranked Wolverines (2-0 Big Ten, 8-2 overall) cruised past Ball State 5-1 yesterday on the road and dominated No. 16 Iowa 4-1 on Friday afternoon at Ocker Field. Against Ball State, Michigan had to adjust to different playing conditions than it usually sees back home. "It was a little bouncy out there today, which means the ball runs a lot slower," Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz said. "I thought the team stayed poised and han- dled the adjustment nicely." The Wolverines have now beaten Ball State in each of the past four years. On Friday, facing their first ranked opponent since losing 2-1 to No. 1 North Carolina back on Sept. 8, the Wolverines responded against Iowa with a tremen- dous effort on both sides of the ball. "This is one of the best games we've played all year," Pankratz said. "Iowa is a very good team. Our girls came out with a lot of confidence, and they never relented." After being stymied for nearly the entire first half by Iowa goalkeeper Saleema Rogers, the Michigan offense finally found an answer with two min- utes remaining, when sophomore for- ward April Fronzoni fired a shot past Rogers into the right corner of the cage. Trailing 1-0, Iowa nearly tied the game before the half on a breakaway. But senior goalkeeper Maureen Tasch came up with a huge save as she rushed out from the goal and knocked the ball out of bounds to preserve the lead. "I like one-on-one situations," Tasch said. "We work on them quite a bit dur- ing practice so I have a lot of confi- dence." Michigan picked up its scoring to start the second half with two goals in the first seven minutes. Sophomore defender Stephanie Johnson scored on a penalty shot for her sixth goal of the year and junior forward Molly Powers netted her fifth score of the season on an assist from forward Jessica Blake. Sophomore forward Kristi Gannon finished off the scoring for the Wolver- ines with just over six minutes remain- ing on another assist from Blake. Tasch would have recorded her sixth shutout of the year if it had not been for a questionable goal by Iowa forward Tiffany Leister. The controversy centered around whether Leister should have received a high stick penalty on her shot, which would have eliminated the goal.. "I did not think it was a goal at all," Tasch said. The victory extended Michigan's win streak in the conference to 10 games with No. 6 Michigan State looming on Thursday night in East Lansing. "This is going to be a huge game," Pankratz said. "Michigan State has an outstanding team this year and is always an intense, competitive rival. Both teams are ranked in the Top Ten so it is an important national matchup as well." U M This Week in Presented by: neritch. Michigan Athletics Volleyball Wednesday, Oct. 3 Michigan vs. Michigan State 7 p.m. State Pride Match Free NIKE water bottles to the first 300 fans! Home matches at Cliff Keen Arena. Admission is $4 for adults; $2 for children and senior citizens. U-M students admitted for FREE! For more info. on Michigan Athletics visit MGoBlue.com. .1 4 4 - hings differently. I 4 ch to a Ban 4 Business School: Investment Bank Sales & Trading, Corporate Banking 4 LA&S: Equities/Global Financial Markets Sales & tr M-17