The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 16, 2002 - 3B Stickers rally after giving up early goal By Brian Schick Daily Sports Writer For the third straight game, the Michigan field hockey team surrendered the first goal. And for the third straight game, the Wolverines won despite the early deficit. Yesterday's 2-1 overtime victory over Connecticut is the most dramatic, example of an early-season trend of the Wolverines overcoming an opponent's lead. Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz is happy her team keeps winning, but is concerned that the Wolverines have not come out early and con- trolled the pace of the game. "It's a little disconcerting," Pankratz said. "I'm not sure if it's in the warmup, our focus or just bad luck. "We are very potent and dangerous, so the fact that we can let up a soft goal and bounce back is something we can look at as positive.'' FIELD HOCKEY Saturday's Boston College match might have been the Notebook most unsettling. Only a minute and a half into the game, the Eagles' Kim French beat Michigan goalkeeper- Molly Maloney for the 1-0 lead. Granted the Wolverines went on to win 6-2, but senior mid- fielder Jessica Rose is worried because the goals aren't coming in the early going. "We tend to have games like this," Rose said. "You're not always going to score that first goal, and sometimes we're going to be down. I think we showed how to keep fighting today." SHOT DOWN: After Saturday's 6-2 romp over Boston College, the Wolverines struggled to put the ball in the net against Connecticut. Despite firing 25 shots on the Huskies' goalkeeper Mau- reen Butler, Michigan could not get the ball in the net until the 64th minute, and added the game winner in overtime. With the exception of the 2-0 loss to Wake Forest on Sept. 1, yesterday's game featured the lowest team shooting percentage - eight-per- cent - of the season. Senior defender Molly Powers felt it is a strain on the team's morale when it drives the length of the field and comes away with nothing. STEVE JACKSON Bridge fans understand the value of This just in: Disa Eythorsdottir was stripped of her silver medal. for failing a drug test. I know what you are thinking - is that the same Disa Eythorsdottir that is one of the premier bridge players in the world? The one that was born in Iceland but now lives in Alabama with her Ameri- can husband? Yes, sadly, I am speaking of the same Disa Eythorsdottir. Now, for the benefit of those of you who don't follow the latest develop- ments in the World Bridge Federation, I'll relate the whole story. Random drug testing for bridge play- ers at the World Championships was, introduced in January of 2000 as part of the WBF's campaign for bridge to become an Olympic sport. To streamline the process, the WBF While baseb used the same list of to begin ad banned substances as random dru the International Olympic Committee. bridge is al That way it doesn't serious abou have to argue over the possible performance-enhancing effects of legal substances like Ginko Biloba, caffeine, etc. Four members of the team were cho- sen for the tests, but Eythorsdottir refused. WBF President Jose Damiani told the London Telegraph: "Since we intro- duced random testing two players have failed, but both so narrowly that we did not publish the names, informing only the player and their federation of the problem. "However, she (Eythorsdottir) refused the test. She is deemed to have failed the test. Her medal has been removed and her name has been referred to her federation." Eythorsdottir said she believed she would fail the test because of the "diet drug" she took for her back condition. Apparently playing bridge professional- ly can really make an impact on your dress size. Eythorsdottir was forced to stand aside while her teammates accepted their honors at the medal ceremony. Close to tears, she said: "They have taken everything: My medal, my name." She was later consoled by the fact that no one in the world really wanted her medal or her name. So what can we learn from this story of woe? Well, besides the fact that I can drug testing spell Eythorsdottir, I also learned that while baseball has yet to begin adminis- tering random drug testing, bridge is already very serious about this issue. Bridge fans around the world demanded an even playing field, and they got their wish. I understand the way those bridge fans felt. If I'm watching a game on ESPN74, I want to know that all the players at the table are legitimate. When I see them shuffling those cards, I need to know that they are not just a bunch of juiced-up creatine-created freaks. Some medicine closet of a bridge player must not be allowed to break the age-old records that belonged to the legends of the game. I think we would all agree that it is crucially important to be able to compare different generations in a ball has yet ministering ug testing, lready very at this issue. sport with as much tradition as bridge. Eythorsdottir's incredible weight gain and back prob- lems (while they may have something to do with her inability to JESSICA YURASEK/Daily Sophomore Katy Moyneur and Michigan needed to overcome two early deficits in order to notch their victories this weekend over Connecticut and Boston College. "It was frustrating (not to get the ball in the Michigan huddle was composed, the sign of an net) because you exert so much effort to get the experienced team. ball down there," Powers said. The timeout gave the veteran players a chance SENIOR LEADERSHIP: After Connecticut scored to demonstrate why this team won the national the go-ahead goal with 13 minutes to go, the championship last season. Huskies called a timeout to prepare for the poten- "The leaders and the upperclassmen had some tial Wolverines onslaught. words to say that were pretty resilient," Pankratz Despite the need to score to keep the Wolver- said. ines' comeback hopes alive, the mood in the "The team listened, and stepped up." BS1ms rounds out next year s recritingcClas leave the house or even stand up) could lead bridge fans to believe that she was using a banned substance. Was she using? We'll never know because she never even took the test. Why would any athlete elect not to take a random drug test? Well, from my limited data in other sports, I would say that she is either a) guilty or b) a mem- ber of one of the most powerful unions in the world. I repeatedly tried to call Ms. Eythors- dottir at her home in Alabama so that I could pull a Rick Reilly and offer her a place to get tested. But no one answered the phone, and she has not returned any of my messages. However, I can tell you right now - without a shadow of a doubt that I am not her father. Rumor has it that back in the 1990's Eythorsdottir was a champion of the drug testing movement. One of the peo- ple I met on the pro bridge'message boards even told me that she claimed she would be "the first in line" when testing began. I'm glad the WBF laid down the law in this case. This sort of hypocrisy has no place in the world of sports - or card games. Steve Jackson can be reached at sjjackso@umich.edu. By Charles Paradis Daily Sports Writer A few years ago if you asked Courtney Sims what his plans for col- lege were he might have told you that he wanted to play tennis. After all, the Boston native did win the Youth Games Nationals three times. But now, a few years later, and seven inches taller, Sims will be playing basketball for Michigan, a school he has wanted to go to U since he was a kid. Sims Michigan coach Tommy Amaker proved once again how talented of a recruiter he is, securing another blue-chip recruit. "I just felt very comfortable with Tommy Amaker," Sims said. "I con- nected with him and I always wanted to go to Michigan." With Sims, Amaker secured his third verbal commitment by a top- 100 recruit for the 2003-04 season, after locking up Dion Harris and Brent Petway earlier this year. Sims committed to the Michigan basket- ball program last week and according to' Sims' high school coach, the Wolverines got a gem. "As a player he is about as talented offensively as you can find," Noble & Greenough basketball coach Michael Herring .said. "He's 6-11 and 225 (pounds) and can shoot the ball very well from beyond the arc. He hits a lot of threes for us, and he can post you up. He can shot fake, take one or two hard dribbles and hit the mid-range shot." Sims offensive skills are not the only thing he brings to the table. Despite seriously picking up basket- ball just four years ago, Sims is also a force on the other end of the court. "Defensively he is clearly one of the best shot blockers in the country," Herring said. "He will be a force." After two years of coaching Sims, Herring knows what kind of individ- ual Michigan is getting with the com- mitment of Sims. "As a kid there is no finer person," Herring said. "He's a straight arrow from a great family." While at Michigan, Sims has a few simple goals. "I want to win the national champi- onship, I want to get as good as I can get and maybe go to the next level after that and to graduate." Sims' mentality sounds a lot like the philosophy instilled by Amaker, and according to Sims seeing eye-to- eye with his coach made his decision to come to Michigan even easier. Another thing that made Sims' decision easier was his interaction with the Michigan team when he came to Ann Arbor. "I got along well with (the team) and they showed me a nice time," Sims said. "I heard that they liked me a lot too." One of Sims' fonder memories of his campus visit occurred at the West- ern Michigan football game when fans started cheering his name. The unexpected surprise startled Sims. "My mother enjoyed it more than me," Sims joked. With Sims, Michigan seems to have secured a top recruit with size and versatility. "This kid is very, very talented," Herring said. "He can absolutely score the ball virtually everywhere on the court ,and he will make his pres- ence felt defensively and he will erase a lot of mistakes." With the way he plays, Sims can expect to hear Michigan fans cheering his name in years to come. DAILY.SPORTS. NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED. No DRUG.TEST.S NEEDED. MASS MEETINGS ONSEPT. 17, 19, 8 P.m..23.9.P.M. DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Senior Kim Benedict, one of two returning starters from last year's team, shot a final-round 79 during Michigan's runner-up finish at their own invitational. Schmucker, Olin set pace for young team By Dave Stuart For the Daily As far as Michigan women's golf newcomer Amy Schmucker is con- cerned, her first collegiate tourna- ment finish was a good stepping stone for both herself and her team. For someone who has been swing- ing golf clubs since the age of three, that's certainly saying some- thing. Despite a shaky start with a dou- ble-bogey on the first hole of her first college tourney, Schmucker eventually regained her poise and finished strong. Before her first round was through, Schmucker sank two birdies and ended with a satis- factory 75 strokes. Sophomore sensation Laura Olin began Saturday with phenomenal play, draining four birdies on her first nine holes. But the back nine for someone new to come in and fill the void. After this past weekend, it appears that Schmucker is going to be the person to take on this task. Teichert feels good about the potential of Schmucker and the rest of her team. "I think we were very consistent in this tournament, and I'm very happy about that," Teichert said. Although Teichert believes that some players are going to need to "step up" in the future, she was very happy with how her top golfers competed this weekend. "I'm happy for the players that really came through for us today," Teichert added. "Amy Schmucker and Laura Olin really played well." Next week the Wolverines will be travelling to Michigan State, look- ing for their first tournament win of the fall. Before that happens though, the : , ' '' ;' < . >< ' Sy 3 A J y , x ,, z '" } Y .. # r ::F . '#' { . « m