PORTS michigandaiiy.com/sports sportsdesk@umich.edu TUESDAY FEBRUARY 19, 2002 91 Back in Blue: The return of Cammalleri JEFF PHILLIP S By Seth Klempner Daily Sports Writer The Michigan hockey team was greeted with an unfamiliar site at practice yesterday, as junior Mike Cammalleri dressed for his first full skate since he was diagnosed with mono on Jan. 17. It was a welcome site for Cammalleri's teammates and friends, who were glad to see him healthy enough to practice. "We're excited to have him back," * team captain Jed Ortmeyer said. "This is the sport he loves, and he just wants to go out there and play the sport he loves. It is good for him to be back on the ice and feel like he is part of the team." Cammalleri, a fierce competitor, chose not to go easy on himself in his first full skate - staying until the end and competing in every drill. The only sign that he was fatigued during practice was that he left the ice at 4:30, as opposed to staying until five and playing games with his teammates. While the junior skated as an extra forward in practice on Friday and Saturday, yesterday was the first time he skated with linemates. He worked on line No. 3 with freshman Michael Woodford and junior Mark Mink. Woodford said that Cammalleri hadn't appeared to miss a beat, and that as practice went on, the line was able to move the puckaround better. "It feels great to be back. This is what I love to do and it feels unbe- lievable to be back on the ice," Cam- malleri said. "I still feel tired. I think it will be a couple of weeks before I am back at 100 percent." Cammalleri added that his endurance is not near where he wants it to be, but that today was a big step in the right direction. Tomorrow will be a better esti- mate of Cammalleri's health, when the team has a full-contact practice. Cammalleri has been cleared by doctors to resume play full time and begin working out, but the decision as to whether or not he will play this weekend will be left entirely up to him. Berenson said the chances of Cammalleri returning were 50-50, but the coaching staff will have a better idea after tomorrow. "We have been playing well with- out him, and we need to continue to play that way," Ortmeyer said. "We can't relax just because he is back, we need to go out and continue play- ing the way we have been." Options and fun both endless with IM sports ALYSSA WOOD/Daily Mike Cammalleri went through his first full practice yesterday since diagnosed with mono on Jan. 17. He is still questionable for this weekend's games. Women desperately need a leader to follow By Charles Paradis Daily Sports Writer Before the women's basketball season started, Michigan and Purdue were expected to vie for the top spot in the Big Ten. With its win over Michi- gan on Sunday, Purdue locked up at least a share of the Big Ten regular season title, while Michigan will finish BASKETBALL in the bottom half of the con- Commentary ference. __ What was the difference between the two teams this season? Purdue guard Kelly Komara said that the Boiler- makers just wanted it more than the Wolverines. They wanted to win the game, and they wanted to win the conference title. a The Purdue game was a microcosm of Michi- gan's season. In the first half, Michigan's offense was explosive, but just as in its season, the second half proved to be a different story, in which Pur- due was the hero. What was missing in the second half? Simple: The Wolverines lacked senior leadership. Komara, Purdue's only true member of the class of 2002, demonstrated what it takes to lead, when she came out in the second half with intensity. At halftime, coach Kristy Curry called Komara out and put the game on her shoulders. Time and again Curry has been able to rely on Komara to do that for the Boilermakers. For Komara, leadership comes not from seniority, but desire. "By the time you're a senior in my position it's all about heart, it's not about experience," Komara said. Michigan coach Sue Guevara has been looking for someone to step forward all season and lead the team to where it was expected to be. No one has done that yet and it is not even clear who wants to be the leader. But someone has to step up. Guevara wants her players to approach the last few games as an opportunity to get better. She said the way to motivate the players to play, even though they have a losing record, is to get them to want to improve. In these last few games, someone needs to step up and guide the team the rest of the way. An NCAA Tournament berth is not impossi- ble for the Wolverines, just improbable. The Wolverines proved in the first half that they could play with and even beat the best team in the Big Ten. When it ran up and down the court in the first half with Purdue on Sunday, Michigan proved to be the better team. But in the second half, when Komara responded to Curry's challenge, Michigan had no leader of its own to respond. Leadership was the difference in Sunday's game, and it was not the leadership of the coaches on the bench. When the game is on the line, Gue- vara is not going to be the on the court trying to sink a basket or come up with a steal. Michigan's season is not over. The Wolverines are behind in the second half, but if they can surge late, they can push it to overtime, where anything could happen. The Wolverines just need a leader to step for- ward and start that late swell. They want to win and make it to the NCAA Tournament - someone needs to take them there. So this is what it came down to last Sunday: Three years of playing IM basketball, and finally (finally!) I had my title shot. After three years of never advancing past the second round of the playoffs, playing for the last time with two of my best friends whom I've known for 10 years (for anonymity's sake we'll. call them "Jon" and "Steve"), we finally found ourselves in the finals of coed, AB playoffs. I've experienced every kind of loss and played every kind of team in bas- ketball with "Jon" and "Steve". But perhaps because no all-5-foot-11 league is offered, we haven't gotten a basketball title. I've seen nearly all of my friends win at something, be it soccer, tennis, racquetball or wrestling - but the three of us have never won a championship. I thought it was our time. I wanted to finally say that I've plunked down . hundreds of dollars and played nearly half the sports offered, but at least I got this lousy T-shirt. I thought it was meant to be. Down by just one at halftime, I could taste it. But it turns out that it actually wasn't meant to be. In fact, I wasn't the only one that wanted that lousy T-shirt. We got behind by 14 quickly in the second half and the opposing team never looked back. We got as close as four with two minutes left, but sadly, that was as close as we came. Our basketball career together ended without a title. So yesterday we signed up for mini-soccer and broomball. But don't let my experience on Sunday fool you. We aren't trying to fish with dynamite here ("We're bound to hit somethin'!"). Even if I graduate without winning a title, I can still say that I've had an incredi- ble time playing IM sports. Freshman year, I missed high school. But what I decided was that some of my best times in high school were playing on athletic teams, and IM sports were the best way to repli- cate that at Michigan. I didn't want a Cameron Crowe to Ridgemont High sort of thing, but it is nice to be able to capture a little bit of what I was missing. Plus it keeps you "in shape." (Are you supposed to gain 15 pounds per year or is that just for the first year?) For me, IM sports eliminated much of what I hated about playing high school sports. I could play as much or as little as I wanted without parents, coaches, etc. telling me what to do. Instead of missing the Fresh Prince episode where Carlton and Will dance to "Apache" to run wind sprints, you can control where and when you want to play. Instead of kissing the coach's ass to get playing time, you are the coach. Instead of playing alongside that kid you can't stand, you can play with a group of your friends. There are a total of 38 sports that are offered during fall, winter, spring and summer terms by the IM sports program. All of the classics are here, such as basketball, football and soft- ball, but if those aren't up your alley, there are plenty of other options. Try wallyball or innertube water polo. In each sport, the play can be social or competitive. Nobody here is play- ing for a scholarship or money - unless you plan on making a Freddie Hunter-esque leap to the basketball team. If you played high school ten- nis, then put together an A-level team. If you are still working on the dynam- ics of throwing a football, put togeth- er a C-level flag football team. Even if you can't gather an entire team, the free agent board helps you find a group that may be a few players short. Believe it or not, the college expe- rience should not strictly be pounding 10 beers per night, or for that matter, pounding out 10 lab experiments per night. It should be somewhere in between, something like one beer per lab experiment. (Got that?) For me, IM sports helped fill in the gaps that were missing in my first year here. So go out there, get a group of friends together and find a sport you enjoy. You won't regret it - even if you can't get that elusive T- shirt. Jeff Phillips can be reached at jpphilli@umich.edu. Alford benches Evans for poor class attendance By David Horn Daily Sports Editor The Big Ten coach who seemed most ready to snap a week ago was Purdue's Gene Keady, who threat- ened retirement after a string of BASKETBALL bad losses. But the coaching Notebook move that drew the most attention last weekend was Iowa coach Steve Alford's decision to bench star Reggie Evans (16.3 points per game and 11.5 rebounds per game) against Michigan State on Saturday for his poor class atten- dance. I "I don't know how others do things, but at the University of Iowa you're going to be a student-athlete; you're not going to be an athletic student," Alford said. "And that message needed to be sent." ILLINI FIGHT BACK: After losing three straight games to fall below .500 in the Big Ten, Illinois has rebounded by winning four straight, putting themselves back in the hunt for the conference title. Most impressive has been the Fighting Illini's ability to win on the road, which they had not been able to do all season until their Feb. 7 win against Michigan in Ann Arbor. Illinois' rejuvenation has been the result of three crucial components: The return of gritty hard-nosed for- ward Lucas Johnson to the lineup, the dominant play of center Brian Cook and the reemergence of Frank Williams as an all-around leader and scoring threat. Over the four-game winning streak, Cook has averaged 17 points per game and 9.3 rebounds per game. But Williams has been the real difference. The preseason Big Ten Player of the Year was honored as the co-Big Ten Player of the Week for last week with 20.5 points per game, 5.5 rebounds per game, four assists per game and three steals per game. He shared the award with Wisconsin's Kirk Penney. There is a sense now in Cham- paign that the Big Ten title is withjn reach. And coach Bill Self is confi- dent that the winner of the confer- ence - a conference that has been criticized this season for being par- ticularly weak - deserves a high seed in the NCAA Tournament. "I would say any time you win our league, regardless of what the Food for Thought Manipulating Opinion In 1966, the NLF (Viet Cong) formed a seemingly rival political party, The Alliance of National, Democratic and Peace Forces, in order "to reestablish the image of the South's revolution as a broad-based movement." P. 130, A Viet Cong Memoir. Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.com so-called experts are saying, you have to be worthy of a No. 2 seed," Self said. *'Poor conditions, rust end Blue's win streak NEANWXN-' I By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Writer Deceptive greens and a tlwree- 0 month break between tournaments foiled the Michigan women's golf team as it saw its four-tournament win streak come to an end at the Lady Aztec invitational. The Wolverines' 643 total, laden with double and triple bogies, put them in fourth place, 17 shots behind winner Colorado State. Michigan entered the second round in seventh place -16 shots out of the lead - after struggling and then it slopes away from you and just takes off, Teichert said. "It's hard to make those adjustments early in the year." Freshman Laura Olin said the fairways were not in good condition because of lack of rain. The team also had to contend with bad weath- er. But Michigan's biggest problem may have been rust. The Wolverines have had to practice indoors all win- ter, hitting off mats and putting on simulated greens. The team wasn't sure how it would respond to the switch back to the course. HEY MICHIGAN WOLVERINES, MAKE YOUR CLIMB TO THE TOP AWHOLE LOT SHORTER. START YOUR CAREER OFF AT A HIGHER LEVEL. Dynamic, cutting edge, revolutionizing the industry ... We're Quicken Loans, powered by Intuit, maker of Quicken and I