2B -The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 12, 2001 0 CLUBSPORTSWEEKLY - Edited by Kareem Copeland and Jim Weber New look women's hockey finds success Face of fear AHETEidiFTHWilE ATHLETE 0OF THE WEEK, Who: Catherine Foreman Hometown: Happy Valley, South Australia Position: Defender Sport: Field Hockey Year: Senior By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's hockey club added eight freshmen to this year's ros- ter, but one wouldn't guess that after watching one of its games. On Saturday night, the team out-shot Buffalo for a 4-0 home win to improve to 5-0-2. Yesterday, Michigan showed no signs of inexperience as it overcame an early 2-0 deficit to tie Michigan State 3- 3 at Yost Ice Arena. "All of the freshmen came in from programs that were very intense," head coach Hal Krenkel said of his team's rapid development. "They knew how to play already. They were used to this level of play. Also, the upperclassmen are always around to hang out with the freshmen, which has helped a lot for team chemistry." Anyone who followed this team last season might have expected more of a letdown this year. The Wolverines fin- ished 30-2-3 on the way to winning their league and finishing fifth at the national championships last spring. But gradua- tion forced Michigan to bring in a lot of new faces this season. "The freshmen came in with a lot more skill than we ever anticipated," sen- ior Stacey Kilarski said, one of the team's two leading scorers through eight games. "They are all really good skaters, really good stick-handlers. And'we're finally joining as a team - everyone is getting to know each other." Unlike a varsity program, the. women's hockey club is coached by stu- dents. Krenkel, who also coached the team last season, is a junior in the Divi- sion of Kinesiology. He began with the program as a volunteer assistant during his freshman year. The team's assistant coach, Gordie Scott, is a freshman in LS&A. "I think it's helped to have a student as a coach because he knows the pres- sures of school as well as hockey," Kilarsky said. Said Krenkel: "In the beginning I thought (being the same age as the play- ers) would be a little weird, but after the first week or so it was clear that they still have the same respect for me that they would for an older coach. I can also relate to them a lot more than an older person could, being in school and under- standing that they have classes. Besides that, I don't think there's a real difference between me and someone older." The women's game is a little different than men's hockey because checking is not allowed. But despite the differences in rules, the intensity is still high. "Because there's no checking, you don't have to keep your head up as much in women's hockey," Krenkel said. "Women's hockey is a little less physi- cal than men's. It's more of a finesse game with faster stick-handling and a lit- tle faster skating," Kilarski said. Despite the team's undefeated record thus far in 2001, Krenkel still sees room for improvement. r "We're playing well right now but we're playing a lot better in practice," Krenkel said. "As soon as we start play- ing as well as we do in practice, this team is really going to come together" The Wolverines are hoping to continue to come together during a pair of games on the road next weekend. Why: Catherine Foreman scored the game winning goal in the regional final of the NCAA Tournament in a 2-1 win over Michigan State. The goal came with 9:54 remaining in the first overtime. The win put Michigan into the Final Four where they will play Kent State next weekend. Foreman SeorsBRIEFS AP 1PHOTO Detroit Lions quarterback Charlie Batch is sacked by Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive tackle Warren Sapp. Batch was sacked five times in the 20-17 loss. Monday, Nov. 12 M Tennis at Big Ten Singles Championships (East Lansing) Friday, Nov. 16 W Swim/Diving at Michigan State Invitational, 5 p.m. M Basketball vs. Oakland, 7 p.m. Volleyball at Penn State, 7:30 p.m. W Basketball at Louisiana Tech, 8 p.m. Ice Hockey at Nebraska Omaha, 8:05 p.m. W Swim/Diving at Eastern Michigan Invitational, TBA W Soccer at NCAA Tournament First Round (Campus Sites) Field Hockey at NCAA Tournament Semifinals (Kent, Ohio) Saturday, Nov. 17 W Swim/Diving at Michigan State Invitational, 9 a.m. Football at Wisconsin, 3:30 p.m. Volleyball at Ohio State, 7 p.m. Ice Hockey at Nebraska Omaha, 8:05 p.m. W Swim/Diving at Eastern Michigan Invitational, TBA Wrestling at Michigan State Open (unattached) Sunday. Nov.18 W Basketball at Detroit, 4 p.m. Field Hockey at NCAA Tournament Final (Kent, Ohio) W Soccer at NCAA Tournament Second Round (Campus Sites) Wrestling at Michigan State Open (unattached) DAILY 3OREAGAD Former Red Wing, Fetisov makes HOF TORONTO (AP) - Viacheslav Feti- sov, Mike Gartner, Dale Hawerchuk and Jari. Kurri represent one of the most impressive slates of Hockey Hall of Fame inductees in recent memory. Pittsburgh general manager Craig Patrick enters in the builder category Monday night, along with Eric Duhat- shek of Calgary for distinguished hock- ey journalism and longtime Penguins voice Mike Lange for broadcasting. The additions increase membership to 226 players, 89 builders and 68- media. Fetisov, 43, joins Vladislav Tretiak as the only Russians in the hall. Fetisov, an assistant coach with the New Jersey Devils, will coach the Russian team at the 2002 Winter Olympics. He helped the Soviet Union win two Olympic titles and six world championships, and was considered by many to be the best defenseman in the world in the 1980s. He joined the Devils in 1989 after barriers to pro hockey fell in his home- land, and helped the Detroit Red Wings win the Stanley Cup in 1997 and in 1998. "I've learned a lot about Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay and Maurice Richard," Fetisov said. "To be in the same category and mentioned with them is a great, great, great achieve- ment for me and a great honor." U.S. qualifies to play in 2002 World Cup PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) - With qualifying over, the U.S. soccer team turned its attention to the World Cup draw on Dec. 1 and to next year's tournament in Japan and South Korea. "Now we can get on with the busi- ness of preparing for the World Cup," U.S. coach Bruce Arena said yesterday after the Americans, their berth already secure, completed qualifying with a scoreless tie against Trinidad and Toba- go. "Obviously, the conditions were dif- ficult out there with the heat and the humidity," Arena said. "It was a pretty even game. I think the result was fair for both teams." The Americans clinched their fourth straight trip to the World Cup on Oct. 7 when they beat Jamaica 2-1 at Foxboro, Mass., as Trinidad upset Hon- duras and Mexico was held to a tie by Costa Rica. At this same stadium 12 years ago, the United States qualified for its first World Cup in 40 years, winning 1-0 on a 30-yard, 30th-minute goal by Paul Caligiuri, who retired from profession- al soccer on Oct. 27. The game drew just 5,000 to Hasley Crawford Stadium and helped raise money for Marvin Lee, a Trinidad and Tobago player who was paralyzed from the neck down following an on-field collision against the United States on March 20 in a qualifier for the FIFA World Under-20 Championship. Jordan declares his worst shooting night WASHINGTON (AP) - Michael Jordan missed his first 14 shots on the way to his first four-game losing streak in 11 1/2 years. By the end of the game, all he could do was laugh at his own misery. Jordan scored a season-low 16 points - making just five of 26 shots - as the Washington Wizards lost to the Seattle SuperSonics 99-84 Sunday. "It was probably one of the worst shooting nights I've had in my career," Jordan said. "I had great shots." Among Jordan's misses were an easy alley-oop, which he decided not to dunk, two reverse layups, and an open jumper that Brent Barry practi- cally dared him to shoot. When Jordan made his first field goal, a tip-in with 4:17 remaining in the third quarter, the fans gave him a long standing ova- tion. By the fourth quarter, Jordan was shaking his head and laughing as his own shooting and his teammates' assorted bloopers. He saved his seri- ous words for official Leroy Richard- son, who gave Jordan a technical with 19 seconds to play. Women rugby club gets dirty ,and bloody By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer If the women's rugby club finds an injured teammate on the field, they fol- jtow one guideline: bring them water. In a club sport where concussions are referred to as a "common occurrence" and on-site medical trainers do not -exist, no one questions this team's toughness. The Michigan women's rugby club has already scrummed its way through its fall season and now awaits the start of the spring season. This past season, with a relatively young team, the Wolverines just failed to make it out of districts. But the members of the team treated their finish as a success with the amount of new players they've attracted to the field. In a physically exhausting "men's" sport where aggression and injuries run high, recruiting enough players for the season can often be a challenge in itself. "A lot of girls think about it and don't want to get hit or don't want to get hurt," club president Lindsey Vastola said. "But once you play your first game you stick with it." Along with youth, the team is also dealing with a significant lack of size. The women often find themselves com- peting against opposition as tall as 5- foot-8 with a 200-pound build, whereas the average weight on their team is around 160 pounds and the tallest girl tops out at 5-foot-7. The challenge the team faces against the difference in these numbers often serves as another source of motivation. "When you have six-foot girls com- ing at you and you tackle them and hear them hit the ground, it's a great rush of adrenaline,"Vastola said. When opposing forces this large come face to face, injuries are bound to occur. Vastola herself has played with two broken ribs and a bad case of asth- ma. It is this passion for the sport that will often drive the players to play through their injuries. Senior Sarah Price played with one of the more serious injuries the team can remember in recent history. She was involved in a play where a tackle on an opposing player led to a head-on colli- sion. Both ended up with large gashes in the head. "I actually didn't realize I'd split my head open," Price said. "I just thought I'd knocked the wind out of myself. I was lying on the ground just trying to catch my breath." Price required eight stitches in her head and was actually back on the field for the next game. "I just put a bunch of gauze around my head," Price said. "I looked like I'd been to war with a huge head wound but I played and it was fine." Even after watching their team'mates succumb to the physical prices of the game, very few are willing to step off the field when they know they should. Whatever it is that drives them to play through the pain, they believe it is a cathartic relief. "It's such an adrenaline rush," Vastola said. "Basically rugby for me is a way to get all my aggression and anger out legally." This apparent reduction in stress is a realization all rugby players reach at some point. It is probably one of the bonds that brings them together as friends and not enemies from different sides of the field when each game ends. "Someone described to me once that on the field it's war," Price said. "But afterwards you get off the field and you party with your opponents. It's tradition for the home team to host a party for the visiting team after each game." NHL STANDINGS NFL STANDINGS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W NY Islanders 11 NY Rangers 11 Philadelphia 8 New Jersey 8 Pittsburgh 6 L 3 7 5 4 7 T RT Pts GF 1 1 24 49 1 0 23 54 3 0 19 47 1 1 18 40 2 2 16 34 T RT Pts GF 2 2 22 50 1 0 19 50 3 2 19 36 2 1 17 38 1 1 1.6 46 Northeast Division Toronto Ottawa Boston Montreal Buffalo Southeast Division Carolina Washington Tampa Bay Florida Atlanta W 9 9 7 7 7 W 10 6 5 4 3 L 4 6 5 7 8 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division Detroit Chicago St. Louis Nashville Columbus Northwest Division Calgary Edmonton Minnesota Colorado Vancouver Pacific Division San Jose Phoenix Dallas Anaheim Los Angeles W 14 12 9 5 3 W 12 11 6 7 7 W 8 6 5 5 5 L T RT Pts GF 6 2 2 24 49 9 2 0 14 39 9 1 1 12 30 8 2 2 12 34 101 2 9 29 L T RT Pts GE 3 0 1 29 58 4 3 0 27 61 4 3 0 25 47 102 0 12 40 104 0 10 31 L T RT Pts GF 2 1 2 27 51 5 2 1 25 51 6 3 1 16 43 101 0 15 37 11 1 0 15 52 GA 35 55 35 36 43 GA 39 38 37 45 42 GA 50 44 39 46 60 GA 42 48 36 49 50 GA 33 36 51 41 54 GA 43 41 48 43 45 Pittsburgh Baltimore Cincinnati Cleveland Tennessee Jacksonville Western Division Oakland San Diego Denver Seattle Kansas City W 6 5 4 4 3 3 W 6 5 4 3 2 AMERICAN CONFERENCE Eastern Division W Miami 6 NY Jets 6 New England 5 Indianapolis 4 Buffalo 1 Central Division NATIONAL CONFERENCE Eastern Division T Pct. 0 .750 0 .667 0 .556 o .52o 0 .125 T Pct. o .750 0 .625 0 .500 0 .500 0 .429 o .375 T Pct. 0 .857 0 .625 o .50 0 .429 O .222 T Pct. 0 .571 0 .500 0 .375 0 .286 o .250 T Pct. o .750 O .750 0 .500 0 .429 0 .000 T Pct. 0 .875 0 .714 0 .571 0 .5oo 0 .111 PF PA 180 161 184 182 206 171 224 224 133 216 PF PA 135 90 141 129 133 166 144 133 129 180 144 128 PF PA 189 133 206 146 192 182 118 158 171 199 PF PA 145 98 148 140 111 193 99 166 129 167 PF PA 174 115 188 117 159 136 138 165 127 217 PF PA 255 129 174 155 148 134 155 164 132 217 Philadelphia NY Giants Washington Arizona Dallas Central Division Chicago Green Bay Tampa Bay Minnesota Detroit Western Division St. Louis SanLFrancisco New Orleans Atlanta Carolina W 4 4 3 2 2 W 6 6 4 3 0 W 7 5 4 4 1 Blue takes Chicago The Chicago Bears are experiencing their first winning season in years despite yesterday's 20-12 loss to Green Bay. Two of Michigan's high profile players last year in AnthonyfThomas and David Terrell have made significant contributions to the Bears' winning ways. Anthony Thomas Chicago RB Thomas has amassed over 625 yards rushing and 4 touch- downs this season but was shut down yesterday by the Packer defense for only 45 yards rushing along with 45 yards receiving. David Terrell Chicago WR Terrell scored two touchdowns in the final 4:08 two weeks David ago that sent Chicago's game against San Francisco into Terrell overtime. Yesterday's performance against Green Bay resulted in three receptions for 12 yards. Lions still1 struggling' 10 L 4 6 6 8 9 T RT Pts GF 4 2 22 50 3 2 17 35 4 3 17 40 3 0 15 40 1 2 13 43 NHL GAMES Yesterday's games Edmonton 1, CAROLINA 1 (OT) Vancouver 5, MINNESOTA 0 NY RANGERS 3, Montreal 2 CHICAGO 3, San Jose 2 Dallas 2, ANAHEIM 2 Today's game Buffalo at FLORIDA, 7:30 P.M. to find winning ways COMMTERAA C O M N U T E Rf EXPRESS No Reservations Metropolitan Required Arp r Prepaid tickets LSe vc availaUble A look at the underside of U of M NFL GAMES Yesterday's games ATLANTA 20, Dallas 13 Green Bay 20, CHICAGO 12 Pittsburgh 15, CLEVELAND 12 (OT) Tampa Bay 20, DETROIT 17 Miami 27, INDIANAPOLIS 24 JACKSONVILLE 30, Cincinnati 13 NEW ENGLAND 21, Buffalo 11 NY JETS 27, Kansas City 7 ST. Louis 48, Carolina 14 DENVER 26, San Diego 16 NY Giants 17, ARIZONA 10 PHILADELPHIA 48, Minnesota 17 SAN FRANCISCO 28, New Orleans 27 Oakland at SEATTLE,iNc Today's game Baltimore at TENNESSEE, 9 P.M. Next week's games Seattle at BUFFALO, 1 P.M. Tennessee at CINCINNATI, 1 P.M. Philadelphia at DALLAS. 1 P.M. Atlanta at GREEN BAY, 1 P.M. NY Jets at MIAMI, 1 P.M. Indianapolis at NEW ORLEANS, 1 P.M. San Francisco at CAROLINA, 1 P.M. Cleveland at BALTIMORE, 1 P.M. Jacksonville AT PITTSBURGH, 4:05 P.M. San Diego AT OAKLAND, 4:05 P.M. Washington AT DENVER, 4:15 P.M. Chicago AT TAMPA BAY, 4:15 P.M. Detroit AT ARIZONA, 4:15 P.M. i PONTIAC (AP) - Warren Sapp had called yesterday's game against the win- less Detroit Lions the most important of his seven-year career with Tampa Bay. While the comment drew some snickering, the Lions certainly kept the game close and the Buccaneers needed Martin Gramatica's 35-yard field goal with four seconds left to secure a 20-17 victory. "If we lost to an 0-7 team, where is the morale of the team?" Sapp asked. "All the nuts and the bolts could've came out if we fell flat here in Detroit, no doubt about it" The Buccaneers are 4-4 for the fourth straight year, while the 0-8 Lions remained the NFL's lone winless team and are off to their worst start since going 0-11 in 1942. "The last five games have been extremely close," said Detroit coach Marty Mornhinweg, who has seen the Lions lose those five by an average of 4.6 points. "The good teams win those games. Not all of them, but many of them." While yesterday's game couldn't compare to Tampa Bay's loss to St. Louis in the 1999 NFC Championship game, Sapp insisted on sticking to his comparison. .23-yard toss to Warrick Dunn to the Lions' 26 were the key plays. "To get a drive like that was impor- tant," Tampa Bay coach Tony Dungy said. "Hopefully, that'll get us some momentum in the second half of the year." After starting 3-4 the past two sea- sons, Tampa Bay advanced to the play- offs by winning seven of the final nine games last season and eight of nine in 1999. "The past has nothing to do with this year," Tampa Bay's Derrick Brooks said. a www.uni'versitysecrets.com mr I Concentration? Study Abroad? Plan .B? internships? HELP! We can do that. Come to LS&A's i-f AV After missing chances to score a late go-ahead or tying touchdown the previ- ous four weeks, Detroit tied the game at 17 when Charlie Batch found a wide- open Reuben Droughns for an 8-yard touchdown. But the Lions' defense could not pre- vent Tampa Bay from driving down the field relatively easily. Detroit's Ron Rice compared Sun- day's defeat to last year's season-ending loss to Chicago, which knocked the Lions out of the playoffs and led to the hiring of a rookie coach and president: Mornhinweg and Matt Millen. "I'd almost rather lose by 50 points than to lose like that," Rice said. "That C0%of "0% s m r