Tuesday April 08, 2003 michigandaily.com sportsdesk@umich.edu PRSa I 9 Won the i at Forget Jalen and Co., I'm infor long haul ne Jayhawks miss 18 free throws to lose the title NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Syra- cuse Orangemen were playground play- ers early, a bundle of nerves late. They juked, jammed and barely held on for a victory that gave coach Jim Boeheim his long-awaited championship. Freshmen Carmelo Anthony and Gerry McNamara did the scoring and Hakim Warrick came up with a huge block at the end last night to lift the Orange to a thrilling 81-78 victory over Kansas. Warrick, who missed two free throws that would have sealed the game with 13.5 seconds left, made up for it by coming from nowhere to swat a 3-point attempt by Michael Lee that would have tied it. Kirk Hinrich, cold all night, shot an airball at the buzzer and the Orangemen (30-5) ran to the floor to celebrate their first-ever title. Boeheim threw his arms in the air and ran to shake hands with Roy Williams, deprived once again of the championship. Anthony showed he is certainly ready for the NBA if he chooses, fighting off a bad back to finish with 20 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists. McNamara hit six 3-pointers in the first half to fin- Syracuse players react after winning the NCAA championship game 81-78 against Kansas yesterday in New Orleans' Superdome. ish with 18 points. In a marquee coaching matchup between Boeheim and Williams, a pair of brilliant tacticians who had never won it all, it was Boeheim who finally broke through, after 27 years coaching at his alma mater. Sixteen years ago, Syracuse lost by one to Indiana on Keith Smart's game- winner with 4 seconds left on the same Superdome floor. Boeheim said he wanted to get the last 4 seconds right this time, and he did just barely. "I think this building kind of owed us one" he said. In the first half, it didn't look as if he'd have to sweat it. See ORANGEMEN, Page 10 Piece of advice to everyone: Don't trust dad's alma mater Jim Boeheim, you just won your first national champi- All-American seniors came up short in their biggest onship. Where are you going next? game, and Michael Lee had a game-tying 3-pointer Boeheim: I am going home with my twenty-something blocked by Hakim Warrick, who took off like Superman year old wife, Julie, who got more face Seth K l em p n eers to get to the shot. time than the Syracuse dance team last But in reality, Williams is anything but DAVID HORN Tooting My Own Knox Cameron. Al Montoya. Elise Ray. Bernard Robin- son, Abby Crumpton. Jason Coben. Adam Stenavich. Kristi Gan- non. Kyle Smith. Ron Warhurst. Tommy Amaker. Marcia Pankrantz. Red Berenson. Steve Burns. Bev Plocki. Jim Richardson. Varsity Field. Canham Natatori- um. The Big House. The Fish. Yost Ice Arena. Belleville Lake. The Frozen Four. The Orange Bowl. The Women's College World Series. Countless NCAA Champi- onship performances in swimming, track, wrestling and gymnastics. Field hockey's 2001 NCAA champi- onship. The Olympics. They are some of thestudent-ath- letes, coaches, venues and events of Michigan athletics today. There are many more, and they are all impor- tant brush strokes on the Wolverine portrait. These men and women, these places and events, are part of my mental image of four years at the University of Michigan and The Michigan Daily. For four years, I have covered Michigan sports for this newspaper, and for four years, I have observed and participated in numbed awe at the history, the drama and the excel- lence of the Michigan Wolverines. That was to be expected. What came as a surprise were the emotions I felt when Michigan and her programs failed to perform in a manner befitting to the Leaders and Best. See, I came to Michigan with a quixotic attachment to the school's athletic history - to Jalen Rose and Desmond Howard and Brendan Morrison. I very much expected to buy into the Maize and Blue romance that's packaged and sold every autumn Saturday. But this Leaders and Best nonsense? Come on. I was, and still am, cynically aware of the realities of collegiate sports, and in my 18-year-old naivete, I was uninterested in the troublemaking of Michigan's ath- letes, or in the transgressions of its athletic department. It's just part of the game, right? Every program has its problems, and if Michigan does, then it means we are doing what we need to do to stay competitive. But here's the thing: Over my years at Michigan and my Daily career, I've found that my attach- ment to this school and its athletics runs deeper than yelling vulgarities at opposing goalies and holding sea- son tickets to the Big House. As time passed and Michigan players and teams found themselves in vary- ing degrees of trouble, I found that I was, in fact, genuinely embarrassed. The role of a fan can be passive, and the role of a journalist is necessarily objective. But as my college experi- ence became increasingly shaped by the exploits of our athletic teams, I found myself wholeheartedly invest- ed in not just the wins and losses posted, but by the conduct - the image. When the Ed Martin scandal hit, I felt a wave of emotions that I never thought possible as a sports fan. It was like the disappointment and shame in finding out that your par- ents were unfaithful. Those emo- tions are impossible without a true love of the parties involved - you have to care. I came here as a fan of Michigan athletics; I'm leaving as a part of it. If this comes across as nostalgic, romantic bullshit, well, it is. But these are the last words I will have printed in The Michigan Daily, and when I sat tiown to reflect on my See HORN, Page 10 night. Jim "Bohemian Rhapsody" Boeheim was a winner well before he captured his first national championship last night. He is one of the winningest coaches in college basketball history, has coached three Final Four teams, landed the top freshman in the nation last year and had married a women who looked 20 years his junior. Based on the lack of television cover- &o New o DanceI a loser. Sure his team is cursed and gets more spooked during the postseason than Shaggy and Scooby Doo in a haunted house after a few doobies. But Williams will be rewarded for his years of premature exits and under- telkf performances with one of the most presti- gious honors in college athletics - the Floo r North Carolina head coaching position. When asked about it after the game by CBS's Bonnie Bernstein, Williams dropped the "S" bomb on national television like bombs over Baghdad. See KLEMPNER, Page 10 TONY DING/Daily Bob Kender: The Rob Deer of NCAA Pick'em. age dedicated to his wife last night, people may look at Roy Williams as a loser after an 81-79 shellacking at the hands of the prepubescent Orangemen. After all, his two [.1 «The travels of Nike sneakers have been traced back to the abusive sweatshops of Vietnam, Barbie's little outfits back to the child labourers of Sumatra, Starbucks' lattes to the sun-scorched coffee fields of Guatemala, and Shell's oil back to the polluted and impoverished villages of the Niger Delta... The cumulative response...has been a slow but noticeable shift in how people in the West see work- ers in the developing world. 'They're getting our jobs' is giving way to a more humane reaction: 'Our corporations are stealing their lives.' - Naomi Klein, Canadian Author & anti-globalization activist COME JOIN .-.. . T 7.... "........-....w Dr. Tom Palmer, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute Tuesday, April 8 at 7:00 p.m. Pendleton Room Michinan Union or nnline at 1 1 i