6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 11, 2002 A FOURTH NCAA TITLE? TIM SICILIANO ISN'T Too WORRIED. 40 BY COURTNEY LEWIS U DAILY SPORTS WRITER Tim Siciliano is, as his coach Jon Urbanchek said, a "superstar." He is also a self-proclaimed "goofball," whose post-graduation plans include skateboarding and sleeping in. With three national titles in his pocket, this Michigan senior will be the focus of the entire 400-yard individual medley field at this month's NCAA Swimming and Diving Cham- pionships in Athens, Ga. If Siciliano wins, he will become just the second swimmer to win the 400 IM all four years and will join the elite ranks of eight men who own four titles in any event. He hungers to regain the "exhilarating" feel- ing that only a championship can bring, but he doesn't appear to be weighted down with pres- sure or expectations. He's too busy enjoying the last few weeks of life as he has always known it, and too excited about what's ahead. Siciliano said that other than becoming older and smarter, he hasn't really changed much in his four years at Michigan, and you wonder if he's changed much since he first started swimming 17 years ago. He still has a boyish fascination with boats and airplanes, and he's most at home in the water. Fishing, surfing, scuba diving - what- ever. He can't get enough. "I don't know what it is about the water," he said. "I think I've been around it so much that, just, I feel right in it, you know?" He also has a deep appreciation of the Michigan swimming tradition, The record board in Canham Natatorium, packed with the names of the NCAA champions and Olympic medallists who came before him, serves as a motivational reminder of the prestige of the program. Siciliano said swimming for the Wolverines is an incomparable honor. "I hate to say this, but I mean, swimming for Michigan is like nothing I've ever done before," he said, adding that competing in the World University Games last summer "just wasn't the same." 'I think swimming for Michigan is on a higher pedestal than swimming for the United States." Siciliano felt that pride right away, so much so that he got a big "M" tattoo on his left arm after NCAAs his freshman year. "I'd never been on a team that was so close and a team that had so much tradition," Sicil- iano said. That bond with his teammates helped him get through a tough stretch this season. Although he was able to swim in all of Michigan's meets, Siciliano missed signifi- cant training time because of a wear-and-tear shoulder injury that wouldn't heal. He said the most frustrating part was "sitting up there on the bike that overlooks the pool, watching everyone swim and put in their hard work." As if being unable to swim wasn't hard enough for a guy who loves the water, Sicil- iano felt isolated from his teammates. That is, until they started making fun of him. "One of the guys, Ryan Earhart, he had this thing. Whenever I'd get up on the bike he'd call it the Tour de Timmy, and he'd be like 'Hey, how's the Tour going today?"' Siciliano said, cracking up just remembering it. So Earhart got daily updates - and a good laugh - and Siciliano felt like part of the team again. Siciliano said he could feel the effects of the injury at the Big Ten Championships last weekend, but his fourth conference title in the 400 IM, followed by a solid week of training, have convinced him that the shoulder has healed pretty well - and just in time. The NCAA Championships are less than three weeks away. When the race Siciliano has had in his sights all season finally arrives on March 29, he plans on keeping it simple. He doesn't have a pre-race routine, and he doesn't study his opponents. But once he gets in the water, the strategy begins. Because the 400 IM involves four dif- ferent strokes, and most swimmers specialize in one or two, Siciliano said the mental aspect is a bigger factor than in other races. "It's a mind game, really," said Siciliano, who struggles in the backstroke but makes up for it in the breaststroke. "You can't go out too fast, but you don't want to get too far behind. It's tough." Siciliano will have to out-swim and out- think an impressive collection of athletes in Athens. "The event is'very deep this year," Siciliano said. "The field is going to be extremely fast. I definitely could say it's probably going to be the fastest field of the 400 IM in the history of NCAAs." But Siciliano's team thinks he has something that sets him apart from the rest of that field. "His heart is just incredible," junior Garrett Mangieri said with awe. "You can never count the kid out. I think he's got a competitive edge that no one can touch. He just goes out there and does what he needs to do." Said Urbanchek: "He's a hell of a competi- tor. If you give him an opportunity, Timmy will After winning three NCAA titles and four Big Ten titles, that competitiveness is some- thing that keeps Siciliano from getting compla- cent. "I think it is that," he said. "I think it's mak- ing everyone proud - making my team proud and just making my school proud." For Siciliano, the best part of winning a national championship isn't the ring or the recognition, but sharing the moment with his team. "Jon (Urbanchek) comes over and shakes your hand," Siciliano said. "He's always got a big smile and everyone's really happy for you. I like seeing that more than anything else. I like seeing other peoples' reactions, seeing everyone else so happy." While Siciliano wants that scene to play out one more time, his competitive fire is less about being the best and more about swim- ming his best. "If I could go best time, I'd be extremely happy," he said. "It's kind of like the same feel- ing (as winning). Like 'wow, I just went faster then I've ever been before."' No matter how he does at NCAAs, it will be his last weekend of competing. All eight swim- mers who have won four NCAA champi- onships have gone on to earn Olympic medals, but whether he joins that list or not, Siciliano is calling it a career. He said thinking about climbing out of the pool for the last time "is definitely strange. I'm kind of anxious in a way. I'm sad for it to be over, but I kind of want it to be over, because I a to DAVID KATZ/Daily Tim Siciliano is most comfortable In the water, but he's excited about life after swimming. want to try new things and do other things." Siciliano has no idea what life after swim- ming will bring, but he can't wait to find out. Four years of being the best in the country have not exactly left him with a lot a free time. So like a fourth grader thinking about summer vacation, Siciliano is just looking forward to the possibilities. He's planning a road trip home to San Diego after he graduates in the spring. "I'm definitely going to try and pick back up - because when I was a little kid I used to skateboard - so I really want to skateboard again," Siciliano said. "And then, like, snow- board and stuff. I'm anxious to do other things." After that, Siciliano said he'll just see what happens, which makes him both excited and nervous. "Excited because I don't know where I'm going to be, because who knows?" Siciliano said. "I've never really not known where I'm going to be, so it's kind of fun in that sense. But it's definitely nerve-wracking because I have no idea what's going to happen." Whatever Siciliano ends up doing, you can bet that he'll be giving his all. And that he won't forget that "M" on his arm or that goofy kid inside. a6 Kuchar claims first victory on PGA Tour CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. (AP) - Matt Kuchar could have done this years ago. Kuchar, the 1997 U.S. Amateur cham- pion who turned down millions in favor of graduating from Georgia Tech, earned his first PGA Tour victory yes- terday. The 23-year-old Kuchar shot a 6- under 66 in the final round of the Honda Classic and beat Brad Faxon (67) and Joey Sindelar (70) by two strokes. Kuchar finished at 19-under 269 and earned $630,000 in his 17th event as a professional. He had eight birdies and two bogeys in his final round. He made four consec- utive birdies on the back nine to help him rally from a four-shot deficit to Sin- delar, who made his first bogey in the tournament on the 71st hole. Kuchar needed just 23 putts, includ- ing eight in the final eight holes, to get the victory. He gained a share of the lead with a 12-foot birdie putt on the par-4 No.13, then grabbed the outright lead on with a birdie on the par-5 No. 14 - his fourth straight birdie. Kuchar extended the lead to two strokes with another birdie on the par-5 16th, and made sure no one could tie him with a solid par save on the tough, par-4 18th. "When that putt dropped, the rush of excitement I felt, I haven't felt that since the U.S. Amateur," Kuchar said. It has come full circle. Kuchar was a college sophomore when he graced Augusta National with a wide-eyed gaze to go with a game good enough to tie for 21st and earn an invita- tion back to the Masters. Two months later, he starred again in the U.S. Open. He outplayed several big names to reach the weekend just two strokes off the lead, and wound up in a respectable tie for 14th. He could have turned pro then and would have cashed in on lucrative endorsement offers. Though he never saw any numbers, Kuchar guesses the deals would have been worth at least $2 million. He passed it up for two more years at A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com Georgia Tech, where results were meas- ured by memories, not trophies. "I've always known it was the right decision," he said. The first player to win the U.S. Ama- teur after Tiger Woods turned pro, Kuchar never won another. He didn't even get past qualifying his last two tries. And Georgia Tech never won an NCAA title. That was the downside. Kuchar didn't decide to turn pro until after the deadline passed for PGA Tour qualifying school. He worked as an investment banker in nearby Boca Raton, tempted to follow in the steps of Bobby Jones and remain an amateur for life. But in the fall of 2000, after a few months in the business world, Kuchar was offered and accepted a sponsor's exemption into the Texas Open where a missed cut didn't matter. What surprised Kuchar was how much he wanted to play again. He turned pro about a month later. Kuchar's problem was that he was too late for the Q-School lead-in to gain eli- gibility for the 2001 PGA Tour season, and was restricted to seven sponsors' exemptions. He finished second once, third once and earned $572,669 - more than enough to earn his PGA Tour card. He had made five cuts in six events and earned $824,791. Andre Agassi exults after winning the Franklin Templeton Classic yesterday. s 0 Agrassi wins land-mark 50th career tournament 1 04 SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) - Andre Agassi changed his three-year run of bad luck in the Franklin Templeton Tennis Classic by beating Juan Balcells 6-2, 7-6 (2) yesterday for the 50th title of his career. He became the eighth player to win 50 championships in the open era, which began in 1968. Agassi won the last four gamesi of the first set and never faced break point in the match. Balcells pulled a hamstring early in the second-set tiebreaker. After withdrawing from the Australian Open with a wrist injury, Agassi began the 2002 season last week at San Jose, where he lost a three-set final to Lleyton Hewitt. Agassi won his third Scottsdale cham- pionship in 1998 but had to withdraw because of a hamstring pull in the semi- finals the next year. Then Francisco Clavet beat him in the first round the last twvo years, a jinx Agassi overcame by overwhelming Clavet 6-3, 6-2 in this year's first round. Against Balcells, Agassi faced a play- er who was 0-5 this year and No. 123 on the ATP entry system to Agassi's No. 5. Balcells toughened in the second set, holding serve all the way. The Spaniard forced the tiebreaker with a hard fore- hand toward Agassi's feet. Early in the tiebreaker, Balcells pulled his left hamstring and never tried for Agassi's forehand winner along the line. After each player won a point, Bal- cells had his upper leg taped. But he was virtually immobile and never tried for Agassi's last three winners. Milano Earn a Master of Science degree in: * Urban Policy Analysis and Management * Human Resources Management * Nonprofit Management " Health Services Management and Policy " Organizational Change Management Ph.D. degree: * Public & Urban Policy bulWORLD r " . ir nt" ;i r e n i i ina ;c n t' n Ah I