Thursday November 13, 2003 www.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com SPORTS 5A A TOURNAMENT TIME g Two young Americans; two very different paths Hot finish means 'M' tournament bound again By Jake Rosenwasser Daily Sports Writer Sixty of the 64 teams had been named to partici- pate in the NCAA tournament, and the Michi n women's soccer team still had not been placed in the bracket. The Wolverines, a bubble team, watched anxiously in Schembechler Hall as the final four teams were named. Finally, just when it looked like Michigan (9-7-6) might be left out of the NCAAs for the first time since 1996, the Wolverines got the bid they had been working so hard for in the second half of the season. They will play Oakland in the first round on tomorrow in South Bend. "I think we deserve to be in the tournament," coach Debbie Rademacher said. "We've been play- ing our best soccer of late." No kidding. Michigan has won six of its last eight games entering the tournament. During this streak, Michigan knocked off an undefeated No. 2 Notre Dame team and made a run to the Big Ten Tourna- ment finals. After advancing to the quarterfinals in the NCAA Tournament a year ago, Michigan had high hopes coming into this season. The team began the year ranked No. 17, but that would change quickly. Michigan went winless in its first five games (0-3- 2), including a 1-0 loss at the hands of Oakland. Even after their first eight contests the Wolverines had managed just one win (1-4-3), but the team managed to turn it around. "We sorted out our defense," Rademacher said. "Then we kept working hard and became more and more comfortable out there." Michigan played better toward the end of the sea- son, but Rademacher feels the turning point of the season was the win at Notre Dame, Michigan's final regular season game. "We went down there with a .500 record," Rademacher said. "If we lost, we would have been under .500 and probably would have had to win the Big Ten Tournament to get an NCAA bid. After we won that game, it gave us the confidence we needed for the Big Tens. I think the two wins at the Big Tens (over Ohio State and Wisconsin) solidified our spot in the NCAAs." In Michigan's home-opener this season, Oakland handed Michigan a 1-0 loss despite getting outshot by the Wolverines, 21-4. "That was back when we hadn't figured ourselves out yet," Rademacher said. "I think that we're a total- ly different team now. That being said, we're very familiar with Oakland, and they're a team that is very hard to score on. They tend to get outshot by many of their opponents, but they seem to find a way to win. To beat them, we'll have to be at our best." If the Wolverines can advance to the second Sophomore Therese Heaton and the Wolverines will face Oakland In the first round of the NCAA Tournament. round of the NCAAs, a rematch with Notre Dame will most likely occur. The Fighting Irish will take on Loyola of Illinois. "We're not going to focus on Notre Dame right now," Rademacher said. "We've got to get past Oak- land first." Gannon gets her wish, Wolverines will dance despite Big Ten loss COURTNEY LEWIS The Daily Grind ellen Winslow is not a soldier. And John Crandall is not a col- ege student - not yet. Crandall can't wait to enroll in 2005, but for now, there's this little matter of serving his country. Crandall is a 21-year-old soldier in the U.S. Air Force. Winslow is a 20-year-old football player. Last Saturday, after Winslow's Miami team lost to Tennessee, and he was called for unsportsmanlike conduct, an emotional Winslow confused two very different things. "It's war," Winslow said of football. "They're out there to kill you, so I'm out there to kill them. I'm a ... soldier." Winslow's beef with the officials seems ridiculously small when com- pared to Crandall's version of war. Air- man First Class Crandall, a Michigan native, deployed to Kirkuk, Iraq, in July and secured the air base there; until he became seriously ill in late September. Crandall said his base took gunfire every day of his two-and-a-half-month stint there, and that the airmen "all pret- ty much got used to it; it got to be pretty normal." He said he did get really scared - once. "We got hit by mortars," Crandall said. "I was on walking patrol at the DFP (Defense Fighting Position). I was with my friends, and we were patrolling the wire. We were basically just sitting there behind cover, with rockets, ready to fire back." He didn't have to shoot back that day. And he didn't personally know anyone who was killed in Iraq, although other members of his squad did, because "it happened all the time." From his home in Italy yesterday, Crandall calmly spoke about what a war zone is like. He didn't seem to think that taking fire or exposing undercover al- Qaida operatives was anything more than just part of his job. Crandall was unaware of Winslow's comments, and he kind of smirked when he was told what Winslow said. "I feel bad for him," Crandall said, "because if I wouldn't have joined the military, I wouldn't know the difference either. Being a real soldier takes a lot of time and dedication and sacrifice. I know it gets frustrating at football games. But it doesn't compare to any- thing close to being an actual soldier." Winslow issued an apology Sunday, and he's certainly not the first to link war and football. But Winslow's com- ments were particularly troubling because he said them with such indig- nation, as if he actually believed them. He probably didn't intend any disre- spect; it's easy to get caught up in the game - or everyday life - and forget how real war can be. But that's the point. We shouldn't forget. Crandall and others like him deserve respect, even if it's the simple act of recognizing that football is just a game. Winslow will play in another football game this week. A world away, Cran- dall will continue to provide high-level security in Italy. He said it's "very pos- sible" that he'll return to Iraq within a year. His squad will probably go back in about four months if the airmen vol- unteer, or be deployed again in about eight months if they don't volunteer. It's a choice they get to make, and when Crandall was asked if he'll vol- unteer, he said, "Oh yeah. Definitely." He'll be leaving a wife and, by that time, a child behind, but he feels it's his duty to be there. I would say that Kellen Winslow should walk in John Crandall's shoes before he complains again about how tough football can be, but I don't think Winslow could cut it as a real soldier. Lucky for us, Crandall can. By Megan Kolodgy Daily Sports Writer In an otherwise deserted Weidenbach Hall, the field hockey team sat awaiting its fate. To pass the time, the Wolver- ines filled out brackets indicating their predictions for the NCAA Tournament. But senior captain Kristi Gannon did not complete hers. Instead, she etched one simple sentence at the bottom of her page. "All I wrote was, 'I just want to play,"' Gannon said. The defender, who last week was named Big Ten Player of the Year for the second consecutive season, will get exactly what she asked for. She and her team will head up to East Lansing on Saturday morning to take on No. 4 North Carolina in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. After getting knocked out of the Big Ten Tournament surprisingly early by Penn State, Gannon felt a bit anxious prior to the announcement that Michi- gan would have the chance to play. "I was more nervous about (if) we'd get in because there's always a chance that you don't get in if you don't win the (conference) tourna- ment," Gannon said. Now that she has that preoccupation out of the way, Gannon can concentrate on what she does best; she wants to help her team shine. This year marked her fourth assign- ment to the First Team All-Big Ten ros- ter. She is only the third athlete in the history of Big Ten field hockey to accomplish this feat. Although Gannon is a defender, she is third on her team in points, with 20. Last season, she received the Player's Player Award, which is voted on by the team and awarded to the player who best exem- plifies what it means to be a Michigan field hockey player. The list of accom- plishments goes on and on. Despite her standout status, impres- sive stats and litany of accolades, Gan- non maintains a selfless attitude. "We're all about teamwork, all about working together and being team play- ers, and I think that's our main goal as Michigan field hockey players," Gan- non said. "It's not the big superstars on the team that make the difference; it's playing together as a unit." Her current black eye is a testament to her toughness and altruistic attitude, a vivid illustration of her character in the world of field hockey and beyond. "I think what's been really neat was to watch is how she's grown as a young woman off the field into a really nice leader and a confident young woman," coach Marcia Pankratz said. The Wolverines will likely need Gannon's leadership to get them through this first, trying weekend of the NCAA Tournament. If her track record is an indicator of future success, and Pankratz believes it is, the captain will be ready to get the show on the road on Saturday. Her coach has the utmost confidence in Gannon. "She can do it all, and that's why she's our captain, and our leader," Pankratz said. "She's an exception- al player." Then, with a grin, Pankratz added: "I'm just glad we have her for two more weeks." Courtney Lewis can be reached at cmlewis@umich.edu