I Wednesday, September 5, 2001- The Michigan Daily - New Student Editio - 9E Records nothing new for men By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Writer His heart was pounding, he was sweating, and the race hadn't even started yet. When Michigan junior Tim Siciliano lined up for the 400-yard individual medley Friday night in Col- lege Station, Texas he was nervous. Really nervous. "Probably more nervous than I've ever been in my whole life," Siciliano said. Never mind that he was the two-time defending champion and he had already swam a personal best in the preliminaries. This was the NCAA Championship - the biggest meet of the year and the one he'd been working towards since the beginning of the sea- son. He was going up against the best collegiate swimmers in the nation and they were all gunning for him. He was the one to beat As if that wasn't enough pressure, Siciliano looked over and saw Eric Vendt, a 2000 Olympic silver medal- list. Facing a swimmer of that caliber "really does intimidate me," Siciliano said. "You're sitting next to a silver medallist and one of the best swim- mers in the world. But it also gives you confidence" So when the race finally started, Siciliano jumped out to an early lead and then fought through the final laps to edge out Vendt with a time of 3:40.77. He became only the fourth swimmer to win three consecutive NCAA titles in the event. After three consecutive second-place finishes in previous NCAA Champi- onships, senior Chris Thompson put enormous importance on winning a championship in his final collegiate race. He was favored to win both the 500 freestyle and the 1,650 free, but he missed the 500 title by three tenths of a second on Thursday night. Thompson's hopes of an NCAA championship rested Saturday night's performance in the mile. But he brushed off the pressure and blew away his competitors, setting a personal best of 14:26.62 in the 1,650 and smashing Michigan alum Tom Dolan's NCAA and American record of 14:29.31. With outstanding performances by Klete Keller and Troy Dumais, power- house Texas dominated the meet and earned 597.5 points on its way to claiming the national title for the §ec- ond year in a row. Stanford took -et- ond, 140 points behind the Longhorth. Michigan came in 10th with 161 points - achieving its pre-meet goal of placing in the Top 10. Siciliano also swam an outstanding race and finished second to Thompson in the 1,650 freestyle, and freshman Dan Ketchum came in 13th. Ketchum also had two seventh-place finishes, in the 200 and the 500 freestyle. Also earning points, senior captain Scott Werner had a strong showing in the 200 breaststroke, finishing tenth. The 800-yard freestyle relay teanI of Siciliano, Thompson, Ketchun' and Garrett Mangieri clinched third place, and Ketchum and Mangieri teamed up with Werner and Jordan Watland to earn points in the 400 medley with 15th place. Michigan's finish was even more impressive because while several elite teams took as many as 17 swimmers, only nine Wolverines qualified. "The whole Michigan performance was a success," head coach Jon Urbanchek said. "We had a very small team, but it was pretty mighty." FILE PHOTO/Daily In its first season, Water Polo saw Incredible success. Ranked In the top 25 almost all season, it just missed making the NCAA Championships. Expectations eXCeeded in Water Polo inaugural season Dy J. Brady McCoelough ThiySportsWriter It wasn't complacency, it wasn't nerves, it wasn't inexperience, and it wasn't a lack of execution. Saturday, the No. 15 Michigan water polo team fell to No. 20 Brown 7-4 in the first round of the Eastern Conference Championships in Providence, RI. Michigan offered no excuses for its loss to Brown - the Wolverines were just beaten, plain and simple. "Brown just played a great game," Michigan coach ber Drury-Pinto said. "They just rallied under their home crowd and we were unable to respond offensively or defensively." The Wolverines jumped on the Bears early in the game, and took a 4-1 lead to halftime. But just like at other key times this season, Michigan's offense couldn't find its rhythm for an extended period of time. This time, that period covered the entire second half. The Bears ran off a string of six unanswered goals after half- tme, and there was nothing the Wolverines could do ,out it. "(Brown was) playing out of their minds,"junior cap- lain Delia Sonda said. "Going into the second half win- ping 4-1, in my mind, the game was sealed. But we didn't score. We just stopped playing offense in the sec- ond half" Contributing to Michigan's lack of offensive punch was the performance of its power play, which has been a key to the Wolverines' success all year long. Michigan was 1-10 with the one-woman advantage against Brown's defense, which was unlike anything the Wolverines had seen this season. With the loss, Michigan, also lost its chance to qualify for the NCAA Championships in two weeks - the Wolverines' goal from day one. The Eastern Conference receives one bid to the tournament, and that bid went to Brown, the first Eastern Conference Champion. "Brown just came out ready to play this tournament," Drury-Pinto said. "Also, being at home - they have that advantage." Michigan recovered well from its first round loss, beating George Washington 10-6 and arch-rival Indiana 8-2. With their 2-1 record for the tournament, the Wolverines earned a fifth-place finish in the Eastern Conference, and will finish the year with a mark of 21- 11-1. The Wolverines beat the Hoosiers for the fourth time this season, with one tie in the first match on February 18th. With Indiana joining Michigan as the only other Big Ten varsity team, the Wolverines' success against the Hoosiers has been crucial to the program's emer- gence in its first year. "(Beating Indiana) was very important at the begin- ning of the year within the Midwest, just to let everyone know that we are the team in the Big Ten," Drury-Pinto said. "And we did that. The 8-2 win was just putting on the exclamation point." In its first year as a varsity program, Michigan has exceeded all expectations. Winning 21 games, placing second in the Southern Division, and finishing fifth in the Eastern Conference are all accomplishments that will give Michigan momentum heading into its second year. And with one of the top recruiting classes in the country joining the current Wolverines, the prospects will be even brighter in Canham Natatorium next win- ter. "We have an incredible recruiting class coming in next fall," Drury-Pinto said" We've got three of the top ten players in the United States coming here next fall. It means that Michigan is here to be a force for years to come." Women fail to make top 15 in NCAAs LONG ISLAND, NY - After 14 straight years in the top 15, many would view 18th place as a disappointing showing for the Michigan women's swimming team, but not coach Jim Richardson. "Anywhere in the top 20 is good for this team," Richard- son said. "Maybe we could have done better, but I like the way we finished." The last day of competition provided the team with some long awaited success. In an amazing upset performance, freshman Emily Fenn became the Wolverines' only All-American with a sixth- place finish in the 1,650-yard freestyle. Fenn dropped 11 seconds off of her previous personal best with a time of 16:18.87. Because she was seeded 18th coming into the event, Fenn competed in the second of four heats, and could only watch the final race and hope that her time would hold up. Finally, more than 40 minutes after she emerged first from the pool, Fenn realized that her time was good enough to stand on the winners' podium. "It's just a shock right now," Fenn said after the race. "This will keep me motivated for months and years to come." The freshman Fenn may have been the All-American, but the Wolverines' senior captains saved their moment in the sun for Saturday evening's final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay. Both Jen Crisman and Missy Sugar posted lifetime-best splits in their final race for Michigan - good enough to win the consolation heat and secure ninth place. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, the entire meet diant go as well as those two particular races. Crisman entered the championships ranked fifth in the country in both the 50 free and the 100 backstroke. But she failed to reach the finals in either one, finishing 12th and 13th, respectively. The performance ended her three-year run as an All-American. Richardson pointed at two things that kept this teamfron another top-15 finish - an emphasis on their conference meet and a lack of star power. . "We finished in the top 10 here a bunch of times" Richardson explained. "But those teams were top-heavy." "We don't have superstars here, but that's okay with me1" The team's upper echelon was further depleted when Olympic gold medallist, Samantha Arsenault, opted to sit out the championships to rest her ailing shoulder. But even without Arsenault, Michigan was focused from day one this season, not on the NCAA final, but on a 13th Big Ten title in 15 years. "We all realized that we tapered for Big Ten's. That was our goal all year," Sugar said. "And when you do thatifs hard to swim well again here." "I'm not going to let anything that happens here detract from the great job they did at Big Ten's," Richardson said. "That was the truly great thing this team accomplished this year." _ , _ ,. Ui rU NtAD ciQ I UNI i * - a r' Oft / 4, 't iJ- :*, s. eq ti0 Y- I-r t X,. ! c. M E i, y y Y Y d Sian _ ,.d °t. .,;t . rt ; ''+ . 4 A; '; E 3 . a:. . ., s.. The Michigan Band program has several opportunities for non-music majors who play an instrument! Whether you are an accomplished musician or someone who just enjoys playing occasionally there is a place for you at Michigan. The Camnus and University Bands are concert arouns for students who wish ., iP * : . k . . , , ' ¢° , 4 = 8: I E i K-