8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 8, 2002 A Virtually varsi FRIDAY: MIlClnGAN 1 3, t.M zxiAio S ; Lax inhospitable in three weekend wins SATURDAY: MICHIGAN 14, T A A&M 7; SUNDAY: MICHIGAN 12, BUFFALO 4 6l By Steve Jackson Daily Sports Editor A nagging Achilles tendon injury and a broken toe couldn't stop junior midfielder Chip Thomas from leading the Michigan lacrosse team to its biggest win in years. Friday night, in front of more than 700 fans in Oosterbaan Field House, Thomas made his triumphant return to the field, scoring a career-high five goals to lead the Wolverines to a 13-9 upset over No. 3 Colorado State - the defending national champion. "I was really excited to be back," said Thomas, who had been sidelined for the previous three weeks and was still playing through the pain. "It was the one game that I really really wanted everything to click." The Wolverines were clicking all weekend long, winning their three games at the Michigan Invitational. No. 7 Michigan defeated No. 13 Texas A&M, 14-7, on Saturday and No. 12 Buffalo, 12-4, yesterday afternoon. "This was a great weekend for us," Michigan coach John Paul said. "The Colorado State game was a big step for our program. We want to make this a tough place for teams to play." The Wolverines have won 10 straight at home and 36 straight in their confer- ence, the Central Collegiate Lacrosse Association. But the Colorado State win was especially meaningful to the Wolver- ines, as they had never beaten the Rams before. Colorado State is also the only visiting team to leave Oosterbaan with a win in the past three years. "I don't know that they've ever con- sidered us a rivalry before, but they may have to pretty soon," Paul said. Junior midfielder Brian Marchena started the scoring after he received a great feed from junior attacker Sloan Buchan-McGilliard, who teammates like to call "pocket Her- cules" for his powerful build and short stature. The Wolverines got off to a great start against the Rams, jumping out to a 4-1 lead 11 minutes into the game. "That's always important," Paul said. "But in a big game like this against a really emotional team like Colorado State, that fast start was especially key." The Wolverines easily could have been trailing 4-1 at that point, if not for the stellar performance of junior goalie Sooman Kim. Kim made 14 saves on the day, including several point-blank denials in the game's opening minutes. "Sooman played an outstanding game," Paul said. "He sometimes has a tendency to lapse, but in warm-ups I could see that he was completely focused. When he gets that fire in his eye, he's tough to beat." Michigan also took advantage of Colorado State's penalties, converting a season-high five of its eight man-up chances. "We knew they were a physical. team, and we knew they were going to give us penalties," Paul said. "We spent all week working on our man-up sets, and it paid off." The Wolverines never trailed in the contest, which was quite frustrating for the Rams, who came in expected to win easily. During a break in the action late in the game, Colorado State junior Joe Glischinski screamed at his teammates: "This is gut check time. We are not going tolose - not to this team!" Less than 10 seconds later, reality struck the Rams when Thomas scored the game-winner - his fifth goal of the night - to put the Wolverines up 10-7. "We came in here thinking that we were better than we really are," Col- orado State coach Flip Naumberg said. "Michigan is a great team. They out- worked us, they out groundballed us, and they deserved to win tonight." DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Michigan midfleider Jason Gal does his best to secure the ball while being Illegally checked by his Buffalo opponent yesterday. Gal notched a hat trick in Saturday's game against Texas A&M. BUILDI:NG THE P ROGRA The premier lacrosse club west of the Appalachians is in no rush to make the move to full varsity status ... yet By David Horn and Steve Jackson Daily Sports Editors Lacrosse's bosses Michigan coach John Paul is pleased that this year's team, after losing 90 per- cent of its scoring power to graduation last year, has found a balanced attack on offense. Here's a look at who has shared in the responsibilities of scoring, and what Paul has to say about them: Ryan Clark Junior Attacker No. 3 21 goals 17 assists 38 points JP: His emergence has been a blessing. Attack was the biggest question mark at the beginning of the season, and Ryan has been a difference maker for us this year. Jeff Hanna Sophomore Attacker No. 21 27 goals 4 assists 31 points JP: After all of our losses on attack, we knew that we had Jeff there to step up, but we didn't know that he would be this good. He has been one of the biggest reasons why we have been so successful this season. Chip Thomas Junior Midfielder No. 7 21 goals 10 assists 31 points JP: Chip is a really smart kid. We moved him to (midfield) last year, and he just keeps getting better. We are just scratching the service with Chip. Sooman Kim Junior Goalie No. 34 6.55 GPG 70 saves .565 pct. JP: Sooman has been a constant for us. He made big saves whenever we needed them in the Colorado State game. There was one question on every fan's mind this weekend at Oosterbaan Field House: When will Michigan initiate a varsity lacrosse program? "Speaking with my head and not my heart ... I'd say 10 to 20 years," Michigan coach John Paul said. "They have a ton of facilities issues and other things that need to be addressed right now." Paul worked in the athletic depart- ment for years before he finally became a full-time coach three years ago. That experience gave him an appreciation for the difficulties asso- ciated with funding a program. As a result, he is not the least bit bitter about the relationship between his program and the athletic department. "We have never been pushing for varsity status because that just isn't financially possible right now," Paul said. "I'm very happy with our sup- port. (Michigan Athletic Director) Bill Martin has done a great job of listen- ing to our situation and giving us the assistance we need." Paul and coach Gregg Hartsuff of the men's crew team went to see Mar- tin shortly after he took over the ath- letic director position in 2000, and that meeting helped to create the new "varsity club" status for two pro- grams. That status enabled the them to get hundreds of thousands of dollars from the athletic department along with access to other services, like aca- demic counseling, career planning, media relations and marketing. "We have a bigger travel budget and a bigger equipment budget than a lot of the true varsity programs here," Paul said. "But the academic support is the most important thing for us." Expanded medical coverage is the next issue that Paul is looking to acquire for his program. The team currently has a trainer on hand for games, but players must go to an out- side sports clinic and pay to treat long-term injuries. "It's the little things that impress me most," Paul said. "If you look, they painted our lines on this field. (Michigan football coach Lloyd) Carr said no, but the people in Martin's office overruled him. That's really impressive to me because nothing overrules football around here." This commitment to supporting lacrosse has led many followers of the sport to view the Wolverines as the premier western club program in the nation. CHAMPIONS OF THE WEST Last year, Notre Dame became the first lacrosse team from west of the Appalachians to make it to the NCAA Final Four. It was a symbolic occur- rence that speaks to the westward expansion of the sport and the inevitable rise of lacrosse at schools in states that lack a lacrosse tradition. What has traditionally been a sport for the prep-school elite of New York, Maryland and Massachusetts is spreading both geographically and socio-economically. Michigan, in a sense, is a sleeping giant, and it is the team in the west that may rise the farthest and fastest once it eventually becomes a varsity sport. "The whole lacrosse world would love to see (a varsity program) here," Paul said. "Michigan is already draw- ing East Coast kids. Everybody thinks of this place and the mystique about athletics here. It would be a natural, and this program could be a top-five program. Everybody really thinks that this is the program in the west: If it is added, that could very quickly be a Syracuse or Virginia." In recent years the program has grown considerably, evolving from a team of mostly novice players involved in what was very much a club sport to one of the elite club pro- grams in the country, fielding kids who are nearly as talented as many of the best players nationally. The talent "is picking up every year," Paul said. "For one thing, we're Michigan. Every coach says that but its true: Kids come here because it's Michigan. For another, our program is getting better and better, and we get a lot of national media attention in the lacrosse world so kids know about us, and they know this is a great pro- gram." WESTWARD HO Never underestimate the appeal of Ann Arbor. For junior midfielder Chip Thomas, the prospect of spend- ing four years in Lancaster, Penn. or Schenectady, N.Y was enough to lead him toward becoming a Wolverine. "I was planning on playing at some D-III schools out east - Trinity, Union, Franklin & Marshall - but I talked to (Paul) and he said that the competitive level is pretty much exactly the same (as D-III). It's incredible. And we still get to have some social life, so it's the best of both worlds," Thomas said. "Obviously the kids getting recruit- ed hard by Syracuse and Virginia are not coming here," Paul said. "But if they're getting recruited by a middle- of-the-road D-I school and they can get the whole package here - a great experience on a winning team and a Michigan education - they're going to come here." SPREADING THE GOSPEL Paul sees his program as an impor- tant part of the process of lacrosse's westward expansion. He feels it's important that young players have an opportunity to see competitive lacrosse, and the increase in the sport's popularity in southeastern Michigan in recent years may be a direct'result of Michigan's efforts. .*. .a oiri m;Aaahn Michigan could be the model for a new lacrosse L acrosse has always seemed to me to be a sport for upper middle-class white boys who were somehow too Abercrombified to play soccer and tennis and golf like the rest of us upper middle-class white boys. I grew up in upstate New York - the sport's Mecca - but all my life, lacrosse has been this off-put- ting afterthought in my considera- tion of American sports. It is seen by many as a leisure activity, DAVID reserved for privi- leged preppies - HORN polo for guys who Tooting don't like to ride my own on horses. That view is pretty common in the east, I think. Some guys play lacrosse and absolutely love it; a lot of other guys don't get it and resent the sport and its cul- ture. But what about here in the Mid- west? I got a chance to take a look at the Michigan lacrosse team this past weekend, and it reminded me that lacrosse is a lot of fun and deserves to receive more attention. It is at least as good a game as soccer in terms of complicity, pace, necessary skill and required athleticism. There's scoring, which Americans can't do without and a degree of contact and violence that would surely satisfy the popular appetite when football and hockey (tame as they really are) go into hibernation. My hope is that, as lacrosse spreads in popularity west of the Appalachian Mountains (where it has been, until recently, relatively unknown), a new generation of ath- letes will find a way to make it a game for everyone. Currently, there are 37 players on the Wolverines' active roster; 18 hail from Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts or Maryland. Not only are they predominantly New Englanders, but they are also from some of the nation's wealthiest hamlets like Chappaqua, N.Y. and Weston, Mass. They went to schools at places like Fordham Prep. and Milton Academy. Not to take any- thing away from these Michigan ath- letes, but in a way they represent that elitism of lacrosse that keeps the sport from achieving real cross- cultural and cross-country populari- ty. I spoke with Michigan coach John Paul, who assured me that the sport is growing in cities such as Balti- more and New York. He said that the success of schools, like Maryland, Johns Hopkins and Loyola (MD), has prompted inner-city athletes in Baltimore to pick up a lacrosse stick. That news was very encourag- ing. Paul conceded, though, that here in Ann Arbor, the high school ath- letes who are choosing to play lacrosse are ... I could have guessed ... white and upper-middle class. But what if Michigan, like Mary- land and Johns Hopkins, was a pre- mier D-I team? How might that affect the sports popularity among minority and economically disad- vantaged athletes in Ann Arbor and Detroit? Lacrosse ought to be embraced in America because it is truly Ameri- can. It has its origins in Iroquois culture, but has been adopted by contemporary non-Native American athletes. I think part of why lacrosse hasn't caught on nationally is the stereo- types (stereotypes grounded in reali- ty) surrounding it of a sport that is both culturally and geographically elite. The Michigan Athletic Depart- ment is a number of years -perhaps as many as 20 - from promoting its lacrosse team to full varsity sta- tus. When it does, a new tradition could be born - one that is as far removed socio-economically as it is geographically from upstate New York and the Abercrombified culture 6 6A 0 0 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: 9 Public 6 Urban Policy d A super-modern operating system that delivers the power of UNIX with the simplicity and elegance of the Macintosh. Engineered to take the Macintosh platform through the next decade, Mac OS X combines new and open standard technologies wmnmmmppp- al