6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 15, 2001 In sloppy weather, harriers manage fourth place finish Arizona advances to NLCS with 2-1 win By Bob Hunt and Kareem Copeland Daily Sports Writers The conditions at yesterday's Wolverine Inter- regional were not what the Michigan women's cross country team is used to. A soggy Michigan Golf Course caused the toughest trail in the Big Ten to be even tougher. "You have to disregard times on a day like this, and just concentrate on trying to beat people, which is what we tried to do," sophomore Lind- sey Gallo said. The Wolverines scored 92 points to finish fourth behind North Carolina, Wisconsin and Purdue, which tallied 26, 47 and 65 points, respectively. North Carolina sophomore Shalane Flanagan took the lead early and blew away the field, fin- ishing in 17:26 - 36 seconds ahead of Bethany Brewer of Wisconsin. Gallo was the top finisher for the Wolverines for the fourth time this season. 1er time of 19:05 was 10th-best in the field. "It was a good race, but (Lindsey) went out a little bit fast and paid for it in the middle of the race," Michigan coach Mike McGuire said. "We were hoping she'd be more like a top five." Jeanne Spink and Rachel Sturtz came in one after another by finishing 15th and 16th. Team captain Katie Ryan also had a strong perfor- mance on the gloomy day. After not scoring at the Notre Dame Invitational, Ryan's 19:50 was good enough to finish 24th. The squad was missing freshman Andrea Park- er, who is one of the team's most consistent run- ners. An Achilles injury, combined with the muddy course, factored into McGuire's decision to sit Parker. "We just didn't want to risk it," McGuire said. "As important as this meet is. being the first home meet, Big Tens are way more important." While the Wolverines knew that they were going to have a tough time competing against North Carolina and Wisconsin - both consensus top 15 squads Michigan wanted to fair a little better against Purdue. "(North Carolina) is one of the best teams in the country, so we knew coming in that they we're going to be a pretty tough team," Gallo said. "We have to keep it in perspective that we were running against Wisconsin and North Car- olina. Obviously, they are going to come out here and do pretty well." ALYSSA WOOD/ Daily Freshman Chelsea Loomis outruns her opponent at the Wolverine Invitational yesterday morning. Michigan now looks toward its biggest meet of the year - the Big Ten Championships Sunday Oct. 28. With the return of Parker, the Wolver- ines believe that they can come back and over- take Purdue at the Big Ten meet. "(The course at) Big Ten is really flat, and I think a lot of us have a good leg speed," Ryan said. "Our goal is to beat Purdue and finish in the top two or three. We think we have the ability and we think we can do it." I Stockbridge Community Schools is seeking candidates to be substitute teachers. To be a substitute in Michigan an individual needs to have at least 90 semester hours of college credit (hours do not have to be in an education related field). Our school system offers the following for substitute teachers. " $75.00 per full day and $45.00 per half day (Note: Substitute day is 7:50 a.m. -2:45 p.m.) * Complimentary adult lunch * Childcare at Kids Club for $10.00 per day. Child must be potty trained and be at least 3 years of age. * Reimbursement to new substitutes for the criminal records check charge and State registration fee after 5 days subbing in district If you are interested in becoming a substitute teacher with Stockbridge Community Schools please contact: Connie Risner - Secretary to the Superintendent 303 W. Elizabeth Street Stockbridge, Michigan 49285 517-851-7188 - Extension 0 PHOENIX (AP) - Tony Womack turned disaster into delirium, and sent Curt Schilling and the Arizona Dia- mondbacks to the NL championship series. Womack failed to get down a suicide- squeeze bunt, then singled home the winning run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning to lift the Diamond- backs over the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 last night in the deciding Game 5 of their division series. In an awesome encore, Schilling won his second duel with Matt Morris in five days. Schilling allowed six hits, struck out nine and walked one in his third consecutive postseason complete game. The Diamondbacks will begin their first NLCS at home on Tuesday against the Atlanta Braves. Reggie Sanders' 447-foot home run off Morris put Arizona up 1-0 in the fourth inning. J.D. Drew's two-out homer off Schilling tied it at 1 in the eighth. Schilling, still throwing 98 mph, struck out Edgar Renteria and Mike Matheny with a runner on second in the St. Louis ninth, then the drama really began. Dave Veres relieved Morris to begin the inning and Matt Williams. brutal- ized by boos from the home crowd and hitless in 15 at-bats in the series, nar- rowly missed a home run to right field with a double off the bullpen fence. Damian Miller's sacrifice bunt advanced pinch-runner Midre Cum- mmigs to third. Steve Kline relieved, and intentionally walked pinch-hitter Greg Colbrunn to put runners on first and third with one out. Arizona manager Bob Brenly, who had used the suicide squeeze several times this season. called for it from Womack. But he couldn't make contact with a breaking ball in the dirt, and Cummings was tagged out easily. Colbrunn moved to second on the play, and Danny Bautista replaced him as a pinch-runner. Food for Thought The Protest Movement Did it save or cost lives? Truong Nhu Tang, a founder of the National Liberation Front, writes in his book A Viet Cong Memoir, "The Western anti-war movements had contributed much to our victory." Question: Did the Protest Movement shorten the war and save lives, or prolong the war and cost lives? Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.com Four pitches later, Womack slapped a single to left field. Kerry Robinson fielded the ball cleanly and made a strong throw to the plate, but had no chance to get Bautista. NEw YORK YANKEES 9, OAKLAND 2 The New York Yankees calmly boarded a plane yesterday night for another cross-country flight to another playoff showdown. For any other baseball team, it would have been a thrilling journey to a game almost nobody thought would be played. But these are the Yankees. There is no postseason territory over which they haven't soared before. Bernie Williams drove in five runs as the Yankees tied their AL division series with the Oakland Athletics at two games each with a 9-2 victory. Playing with poise and pride on the brink of postseason elimination, Williams and New York finished two days in Oakland with two wins - and afterward, nobody in a New York uni- form would admit to even an ounce of surprise. "We were all aware of the situation," Williams said. "There was no sense in rubbing it in. We knew we were down two games to one, and it was a must- win situation ... but you don't want to be pins and needles out there." SEAE 6, CLEVELAND 2: Nine outs away from having all those wins and records overshadowed by failure, the Seattle Mariners simply wouldn't let their special season end. They didn't panic. Instead, they did whatever it took. And won again. Rookie Ichiro Suzuki provided the key hit and the Mariners staved off an early postseason exit yesterday with a 6- 2 win over the Cleveland Indians to force a decisive Game 5 back in Seattle. "It was down to nine outs," outfielder Mike Cameron said. "There was no ten- sion. It was just a matter of swinging the bats, and waiting for that one break." WEBB Continued from Page 1B Capturing the second and third places for the Wolverines were two seniors, Mike Wisniewski, and Mark Pilja who ran 25:44 and 25:48, respec- tively. The meet was somewhat of a break- through race for Wisniewski, who showed for the first time in a race this season that he is ready to run with the top guys in the country. "I haven't been running well (this season),"Wisniewski said. The senior attributed his fatigue to the high mileage he ran this summer. His improvement yesterday may be due to a slight decrease in mileage, in addition to a week off of racing which gave his legs a chance for some recovery. "I should be good from here," Wis- niewski said. Pilja has been a model of consistency this season for the Wolverines, and Sunday's race was no exception. "It's exciting," Pilja said. "We were hoping to go 1-2-3 (in the race) and have six in the top eight, and we did". Perhaps the biggest surprise for the Wolverines was a fifth-place finish from sophomore Nick Stanko, who covered the course in a time of 26:07. Stanko has been running well this season, but his finishes hasn't necessarily reflected his ability. "I've had a couple rough weeks," Stanko said. "But, I think the work I did this summer is finally catching up." Rounding out Michigan's finishers were Tom Greenless, who came home in 26:14, Ryan Hesselink, who crossed the line two seconds after Greenless, and Nathan Brannen who crossed the line in 26:47. "We did well," Warhurst said. "We've been training hard, and not too concerned with racing:' This will change drastically in the weeks to come. As the team enters into the last month of the season, racing will become much more important. But, Warhurst isn't too concerned. "We're going to do things I've been doing for the last ten years," Warhurst said. "We'll be ready." DAILY SPORTS: WHEN THE CLOCK IS ROLLING DOWN AT TINE Ekui fnE 44 0 __j 0