2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 18, 2002 I CLUBSPORTSWEEKLY - Edited by Kareem Copeland and Jim Weber Wrestlers attracted to Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu club Demolition derby. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Who: Marissa Young Hometown: Santa Ana, Calif. Sport: Softball Year: Junior A By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer The main goal of Michigan's Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and submission wrestling club is for the participants to learn as much as they can from each member of the group. The club encourages a diverse membership due to the wide array of perspectives and experiences each person can provide. As a result, members of the club come aboard for a variety of different reasons. "I do it for stress relief and to stay in shape," said the club's vice-presi- dent Matthew Jubera. "(But) a lot of (people) do it to lose weight or just (to learn) self-defense." Some, like the club's competition captain, Glenn Hauk, participate because they feel like they "need to do something active." The only required attribute for join- ing is an open mind. Those who do decide to participate show a strong willingness to learn something new. "Most people just come in and see if they like it," Jubera said. "Some do, some don't." The sport itself is quite different from the better-known martial arts, like karate. "Karate is a striking sport, (with) a lot of kicks and punches," Jubera said. "Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is based on grap- pling, much like wrestling." As a result of this similarity, many of the club's participants have a back- ground in wrestling. "I wrestled in high school, and it just seemed like a natural progression from wrestling to (this)," Hauk said. While such experience is helpful in picking up the techniques of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, the club, true to its welcom- ing philosophy, does not require its members to have much prior training in order to join. "Wrestling sort of helps, but a lot of (people) do really well without it, too," Jubera said. Six members of the club also partic- ipate on the competition team, which travels to various tournaments in the region. Two of those members, Jubera and Robert Linn - who made it on to the competition team by winning the club's in-house tournament in 2000 - finished in the top three at the U.S. Nationals a year and a half ago. Whatever their reason for joining, club members seem to develop a strong affection for Brazilian Jiu- Jitsu. "I like it because it's just a unique sport, I think," Jubera said. "There's a lot of different (kinds of) grappling, but I think (this is) just a lot of fun." "It's really more like a competition with yourself than with anyone else, and I kind of like that," Hauk said. "You can push yourself as hard as you want." What: Young tossed the third perfect game in Michigan softball history, striking out 14 Utah State batters on Saturday en route to a 9-0 victory. After falling 7-1 to Pacific on Friday, Young recovered with back-to-back wins - including the historic performance. The junior followed up her flaw- less outing with a nine-strikeout, 9-0 thumping of Pittsburgh. Young also drove in three runs at the plate over the five-game weekend. Young M't'S)C HEDULE Today W Golf at Lady Aztec Invitational (Lake San Marcos, Calif.) + Wednesday, Feb. 20 W Swim/Diving hosts Big Ten Championships, 7 p.m. Thursday Feb. 21 W Swim/Diving hosts Big Ten Championships, 7 p.m. Water Polo at Loyola Marymount, 6:30 p.m. W Basketball at Northwestern, 8 p.m. After spinning out Dale Earnhardt In last year's race, Sterling Marlin again spun out a superstar, Jeff Gordon, causing a massive pileup. Marlin its Gordon to gve Burton Daytona 'M'NOTES Perfect! Young helps Blue go 4-1 at Classic For the first time in six years a Michi- gan softball pitcher achieved perfection. Junior Marissa Young struck out 14 in Michigan's 9-0 victory over Utah State Saturday and became the third Wolver- ine to pitch a perfect game in team his- tory. The last was Sara Griffin in 1996 with a win over Oklahoma. The feat came at the Campbell/Carti- er Classic, where Michigan went 4-1 to open its season. It closed the weekend with a 9-0 win over Pittsburgh. Young and Meghan Ritter combined for a one-hitter in the 11 the-ranked Wolverines' second shutout in a row, and the offense put together its fourth game with seven or more runs. Hitting 15-for-26 against the Pan- thers, Michigan was held scoreless in just one innings - the Wolverines won the game in five innings on a mercy rule. Centerfielder Meghan Doe, who was moved to the No. 2 spot of the line- up after hitting No. 9 all last season was 4-for-4 from the plate with four runs. Catcher Monica Shock drove Doe in three of those times with sacrifice flies in the first and fourth innings and a double in the third. Schock also had excellent chemistry working with starting pitchers Young (2- 1) and Nicole Motycka (2-0). Young struck out a total of 32 during her three starts - 34 in her four total appear- ances - while Motycka allowed just one run in each of her two victories. In Michigan's only loss on the week- end, No. 19 Pacific defeated the Wolverines 7-1 on Friday. Pacific pitch- er Cindy Ball threw a two-hitter, defeat- ing Young. A homerun by freshman Jessica Merchant in the sixth inning brought the Wolverines within one, but Pacific scored four in the bottom of the inning to put the game out of reach. Though the day ended with a loss, Michigan split on Friday with a 7-1 win over Loyola-Marymount. The Wolver- ines also defeated Cal.-Santa Barbara 8- 1 in Saturday's other game. -Staff reports Field hockey inks star pair from Mich., Penn. The Michigan field hockey team bol- stered its already deep lineup by inking defender Lori Hillman and forward Katie Morris on Thursday. Hillman was named Player of the Year in Pennsylvania two consecutive years by the Philadelphia Enquirer and The Star Ledger. She has played on the U.S. Field Hockey teams the past three years and was named a high school All- America selection each of those years. Morris led Ann Arbor Pioneer High School to three consecutive state titles and was named an all-state selection the past two seasons. This year, Pioneer finished with a 22-0 record. -Staff reports DAYTONA BEACH, Fla: (AP) - Sterling Marlin handed Ward Burton the biggest gift of his life - a victo- ry in yesterday's Daytona 500. Following a late red flag, Burton won a three-lap dash to the finish line for his fourth career win in 251 starts. Marlin, who received hate mail and death threats from people who blamed him for the crash that killed Dale Earnhardt at last year's Day- tona 500, appeared to have his third victory in "The Great American Race" in hand. Marlin had spun out Jeff Gordon as a pack of cars crashed behind them, then beat Burton back to the yellow flag by less than half a car- length. Then, NASCAR stopped the sometimes bizarre race to give the remaining leaders a chance to race for the win. After the cars halted on the back- stretch, Marlin got out of his car to check for damage on the right front fender. He started to pull the bent sheet metal away from the tire before an official warned him to get back in his Dodge. That little effort to repair the damage was enough for NASCAR to penalize him, sending his car back to the rear of the lead pack after the cars restarted. "I tried to get it pulled off, but NASCAR didn't like it, and they sent me to the rear," Marlin said. Burton called the last three laps "nerve-racking." "I didn't even look at the flag," he said. "I wasn't going to stop. When the other guys backed off, I backed off." Following the restart, all the con- tenders behind Burton's Dodge began to race two-by-two and even three-wide, letting the leader pull away. He crossed the finish line about three car-lengths ahead of Elliott Sadler's Ford. Former Daytona winner Geoff Bodine, making a comeback at 52, was a surprising third, followed by Kurt Busch, 2000 race winner Michael Waltrip, Mark Martin and rookie Ryan Newman. "A lot of what happens here is atmosphere and luck. We had some luck today," Burton said. The 44th Daytona 500 began with some unknowns, with NASCAR giving both Ford and Dodge a quar- ter-inch reduction of their rear spoilers on Friday with little prac- tice time to see how they would work in the draft. Chevrolet and Pontiac were con- sidered the big favorites, but the race turned into a 200-lap brawl, with lots of side-by-side action and two big crashes, one of them involv- ing 18 cars. Two-time Daytona winner Jeff Gordon, the defending Winston Cup champion, helped ignite the big one when Kevin Harvick, last year's top rookie, tried to block him on lap 149 as the two battled for second place. Gordon tagged Harvick's rear bumper and sent him spinning up the banking into the wall. Harvick's car then slid back down the track right in front of a pack of cars rac- ing at close to 190 mph. Kenny Wallace's car erupted in flames in the middle of the melee, but nobody was injured in the first big test of a NASCAR safety initia- tive that was accelerated after Earn- hardt's death in a last-lap crash here last February. Men's Basketball Season Stats Friday, Feb. 22 W Swim/Diving hosts Big Ten Championships, 11 a.m/7 p.m. Baseball vs. Oregon State at Riverside Tournament, 2 p.m. Softball vs. Connecticut at NFCA Leadoff Classic (Columbus, Ga.), 5 p.m. Softball vs. Mississippi State at NFCA Leadoff Classic (Columbus, Ga.), 7:30 p.m. W Gymnastics vs. Utah, 7:30 p.m. Ice Hockey vs. Ohio State, 7:35 p.m. M Gymnastics at Iowa, 8 p.m. Water Polo at Cal-Santa Barbara, 8 p.m. Saturday Feb. 23 W Swim/Diving hosts Big Ten Championships, 11 a.m/7 p.m. M Tennis vs. Illinois, Noon W Tennis at Northwestern, 2 p.m. Softball vs. Arizona State at NFCA Leadoff Classic (Columbus, Ga.), 12:30 p.m. Baseball vs. San Francisco at Riverside Tournament, 3 p.m. M Basketball at lowa,.7 p.m. Ice Hockey vs. Ohio State, 7:35 p.m. Softball at NFCA Leadoff Classic Bracket Playoffs (Columbus, Ga.), TBA M Track/Field at Big Ten Championships (Minneapolis) W Track/Field at Big Ten Championships (State College) Water Polo at Cal-Santa Barbara Tournament Sunday, Feb., 24 M Tennis vs. Northwestern, Noon W Tennis at Illinois, 2 p.m. Wrestling vs. Michigan State, 1 p.m. W Basketball vs. Penn State, 2 p.m. Baseball at UC-Riverside in Riverside Tournament, 7 p.m. Softball at NFCA Leadoff Classic Semifinals/Championship (Columbus, Ga.), TBA M Track/Field at Big Ten Championships (Minneapolis) W Track/Field at Big Ten Championships (State College) Water Polo at Cal-Santa Barbara Tournament Monday, Feb. 25 Baseball vs. Oregon State (Riverside, Calif.), 3 p.m. W Golf at Midwest Classic (Bradenton, Fla.) Tuesday Feb. 26 Water Polo at Long Beach State, 7 p.m. Baseball at UC-Irvine, 9:05 p.m. W Golf at Midwest Classic (Bradenton, Fla.) DAILYSComEL BOARD 4 A . SP t The Fowler Center Summer Camp for Children and k@ the Martial Art Adults with Special Needs June 10 August 16 AB - SOLUTION Seeks Applicants For: Lose 10 lbs before Spring Break Counselors Outdoor Education Barn & Organic Garden Martial Arts training will make Equestrian Instructor you look and feel better as you Creative Arts Sports & Recreation * Get in shape Lifeguards * Lose weight Outdoor Living * Increase confidence N * Learn self-defense IS w Make a difference in someone's life Expires Feb. 28, 2002 1,. {. 4.Barrier free recreation for all Call 989-673-2050 Email: programs@thefpwlercenter.org Write: 2315 Harmon Lake Rd. Mayville, MI 48744 Through yesterday NBA STANDINGS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W New Jersey 34 Boston 30 Washington 27 Orlando 27 Philadelphia 25 New York 20 Miami 20 Central Division W Milwaukee 29 Detroit 28 Toronto 29 Indiana 26 Charlotte 25 Atlanta 18 Cleveland 18 chicago 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division W Dallas 36 Minnesota 35 San Antonio 33 Utah 28 Houston 17 Denver 16 Memphis 12 Pacific Division W Sacramento 39 L.A. Lakers 35 Portland 27 Seattle 26 L.A. Clippers 26 Phoenix 25 Golden State 15 Yesterday's games NEW JERSEY 98, DenverE77 Memphis 92, CHARLOTTE 78 INDIANA 86, Philadelphia 76 Milwaukee 91, TORONTO 86 MINNESOTA 93, Miami 80 PORTLAND 111, LA Lakers 105 Utah at New York, inc. Dallas at Phoenix, inc. Atlanta at Golden State, inc. Seattle at Sacramento, inc. Pct .667 .566 .540 .519 .490 .400 .400 Pct .580 .560 .537 .491 .490 .353 .353 .235 Pct .692 .673 .647 .538 .333 .327 .288 Pot .765 .700 .529 .510 .491 .490 .312 GB 5 6.5 7.5 9 13.5 13.5 GB 1 2 4.5 4.5 11.5 11.5 17.5 GB 1 2.5 8 18.5 18.5 21 GB 3.5 12 13 14 14 22.5 Northeast Division W Boston 32 Toronto 31 Ottawa 29 Montreal 24 Buffalo 23 Southeast Division W Carolina 24 Washington 23 Tampa Bay 20 Florida 17 Atlanta 14 L 16 18 18 23 26 L 21 26 30 34 34 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Philadelphia 33 15 N.Y. Islanders 29 19 New Jersey 25 21 N.Y. Rangers 27 25 Pittsburgh 22 26 Player Blanchard Robinson Young Ingerson Jones Groninger Queen Bailey Gibson Gotfredson Adebiyi Dill Garber G 24 24 24 24 20 23 23 24 12 24 16 2 2 NHL STANDINGS Min 29.0 27.5 30.6 15.8 22.6 16.3 26.6 14.7 8.9 13.2 6.2 2.5 1.5 A 1.5 2.1 1.1 1.2 1.4 0.9 3.4 0.3 0.7 1.1 0.2 0.0 0.0 Reb 6.7 4.6 5.6 1.6 2.5 1.2 2.2 3.3 1.1 0.7 1.1 0.5 0.5 Avg. 14.4 11.9 10.9 8.2 6.3 5.8 4.7 4.2 1.3 1.0 0.6 0.0 0.0 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division W L Detroit 41 11 Chicago 33 18 St. Louis 31 18 Nashville 23 25 Columbus 15 33 Pts 75 67: 62 61 54 Pts 75 71 69 59 54 Pts 64 56 48 42 39 Pts 90 75 71 56 40 Pts 73 64 63 57 51 Pts 70 65 63 62 51 GF GA 176 128 168 157 143 137 164 178 134 164 GF GA 176 142 172 145 182 145 148 153 149 148 GF GA 161 175 159 178 113 143 123 179 138 209 GF GA 186 126 169 157 161 131 143 148 117 170 GF GA 158 125 152 144 178 155 136 155 135 175 GF GA 168 139 155 135 153 148 150 159 135 154 4 I Northwest Division W Colorado 33 Edmonton 26 Vancouver 28 Calgary 23 Minnesota 18 L 20 23 25 24 27 L 17 20 20 22 31 Pacific Division San Jose Los Angeles Dallas Phoenix Anaheim W' 30 27 26 25 21 NHL games will resume Feb. 26 due to break for the Winter Olympics. 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