8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 25, 2003 al Tide rol v Blue mishaps movertime By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer As Alabama junior forward Tawana Free- man's putback rebound fell through the hoop just before the buzzer sounded in overtime, it was hard to tell if Free- A man's only field goal of G 4 the game had beaten the Wolverines, or if they'd beaten themselves. The Crimson Tide toppled the Michigan women's basketball team in overtime, 76-74, last night at Crisler Arena. The deciding bucket came in the final sec- onds. Freshman Navonda Moore - who carved up Michigan for 28 points off the bench and sent the game into overtime by scoring with four seconds left in regulation - drove the lane and threw up a shot that was rebounded by Freeman, who banked the winning bucket off the glass just as time expired. Michigan (3-2) couldn't make the final defensive stop, but the Wolverines already had plenty of chances to shut the door. "We feel like we had it, but we gave it away," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. "Turning the ball over at critical times ... executing our press-breaker, getting the ball to the right people in the right situations. It was ours." Michigan was up by two in overtime with 43 seconds left when junior guard Sierra Hauser-Price was called for a travel along the Alabama bench. That mistake could have been negated after the Wolverines came up with a defensive stop, forcing a held-ball situation, but sopho- more Niki Reams was whistled for a travel on the ensuing inbounds pass. The Crimson Tide (1-0) converted on the mistakes when junior Natasha Gamble hit on a field goal that tied the game at 74. "We looked fearful when things didn't go our way," Hauser-Price said. "We need to have that air about us that when things aren't going our way, we can rally back because we have good shooters, we WOMEN Continued from Page 7 Wolverines to their proud finish by placing 17th and 25th, respectively. "I was pretty happy with the results," Wal- ter said. "I really liked the course, so it made it a better race." This was Allen-Young's first season with the Wolverines after running for four years at Dartmouth. She finished up her last year of eligibility at Michigan, where she is attending graduate school. Yesterday marked her first appear- ance at the NCAA Championships. "I was really pleased with how I ran in the race," Allen-Young said. "I was equally excited with how well the team ended up. A top-five finish is awesome, and I am so proud of everyone." Junior Sarah Pizzo, senior Lindsey Gallo and sophomore Katie Erdman were third, fourth and fifth, respectively, amongst Michigan scoring runners, all placing within the top 100 in a field of 225 runners. "We trained to peak for this meet, and that's what we did," Gallo said. The race was run on the Irv Warren Golf MEN Continued from Page 7 with high hopes of a top-30 finish, and he had reason to have them. He was a model of consistency the entire season for his team, dropping times and places as he went along. He earned All-Big Ten and All-Region honors coming into the race, but unfortunately one bad race can damper an amazing season. Greenless stood next to his mother and team- mates after the race quieter than he has been all season. Stanko and L'Heureux also finished off their careers on the national stage. Stanko capped off his third year as the Wolverines' captain in 137th place. L'Heureux's first and last season as a Wolverine finished well, as he finished in 152nd place. After running for Lehigh University for three years, L'Heureux transferred to Michigan to become a better course, where the Wolverines ran Pre- Nationals earlier in the season and finished in fourth place. "Knowing the course definitely helped us," Walter said. "The hills weren't too bad, and due to the cold weather, the ground was much harder." The bright sunny sky was very mislead- ing, as the temperature hit a frigid 11 degrees with the wind chill, forcing Michi- gan to wear warmer clothes. "I don't think the weather made for any worse of a race," Walter said. "We've run in all kinds of weather during the season." The runners left Ann Arbor late Friday evening so they could have enough time to be relaxed and focused for the race three days later. And on Sunday evening, the team held a meeting with McGuire to talk about race strategies and team goals. "There were mixed emotions the night before the race," Walter said. "In the meet- ing, there were definitely elements of being nervous and excited. "But, ultimately, we knew that we had all trained really hard for this meet since the beginning of the season. It's nice to see it pay off." runner under coach Ron Warhurst. Exhausted after his last race, he was able to smile and simply explain his last race collegiate race. "It was fun," L'Heureux said. The frigid weather couldn't stop Stanford, as it successfully defended its national title. Ranked No. 1 throughout the entire year, the Cardinal placed four men in the top six and five in the top 10. Stanford's 24 points is the second-lowest score ever, and its 150-point margin of victory over Wisconsin smashed the old record of 122 points, held by Arkansas in 1993. Dathan Ritzenhein of Col- orado won the men's individual crown, edg- ing out Stanford's Ryan Hall by 1.7 seconds. Ritzenhein, a two-time High School National Champion from Rockford and the fourth- place finisher in 2001, finished the season undefeated. He fought back from stress frac- tures in both tibias that forced him to redshirt last season. I SHUBRA OHRI/Daily Michigan junior guard Sierra Hauser-Price played more than 40 minuted last night before she was called for traveling with 44 seconds left in the Wolverines' overtime loss to Alabama. have good rebounders and we can stop people on the defensive end." The Wolverines still had a chance to run out the clock and come through on the free- throw line, but Alabama was able to force junior center BreAnne McPhilamy into a held-ball situation and gained possession, set- ting up the final play. McPhilamy was in the game for senior cen- ter Jennifer Smith - Michigan's most reli- able free-throw shooter - who fouled out with 44 seconds left in overtime. Smith left with 27 points and seven rebounds. She scored 11 of the team's first 13 points while logging 44 minutes,; but her presence dimin- ished the further the game went on. "I was running post players in and out try- ing to find somebody that could slow her down," Alabama coach Rick Moody said. "We were trying to make her really run up and down the floor. "It's hard for anybody to do that for 40 minutes." Hauser-Price and senior Stephanie Gandy also played more than 40 minutes. An over- time game was not the ideal situation for the Wolverines, who have now played five games in 10 days. "I don't want to use anything as an excuse, because we really came out of the gate quick, but let them get back in it," Burnett said. "When they started heating things up a little bit, we start not executing. To me, that's when we should execute the best." 0 Stupid for ESPNto pullshow O'NEILL Continued from Page 7 the coach, Taylor, has received nothing but but hatred for his supposedly kind action. A column praising Haasis and cheap-shotting Taylor was written by Rick Reilly of Sports Illustrated, and Taylor's name is being put into con- tention for ESPN.com's "Turkey of the Year" (other nominees include Dave Bliss, who convinced Baylor players to lie about a teammate after his murder; and Mike Price and Larry Eustachy, forever linked together by their differ- ent drunken escapades). Hmmm ... lying, murder, drunken behavior and trying to reward a senior for four years of hard work? Yup, all look alike to me. Neal Taylor is someone I don't know, but if I had to guess, he's very much underpaid and now receiving criticisms as if he were getting paid like Jon Gruden. Commend Haasis for realizing the difference between fair and unfair, but don't lambaste Taylor for trying to per- form a nice gesture that backfired in his face. 3. The Detroit Tigers will get Miguel Tejada. What? They will. (Insert blind-faith comment here). 4. ESPN is being told by the NFL to shut down "Playmakers", or else. That's right, ESPN's hit show is in the process of having its plug pulled. Apparently, the NFL isn't fond of the portrayal that the show gives, and now it is threatening the network to not resign its football deal with the Leader of Worldwide Sports in 2005 when its current contract runs out. Most likely ESPN will either tone the show down (leading to one of the most disappointing moments in television since the cancellation of Family Guy), or just axe it all together so that ABC won't feel the after-effects of what would occur with the cancellation. To this I say, go cry me a river. You're telling me Bill Romanowski sets a good example for the kids? That William Green's current ordeal isn't a reflection of the league? That the perception of drugs, illegiti- mate children, homosexuals, dreams crushed, abuse and off-field problems isn't there in the NFL? "Playmakers" is a bad show. So bad 0 A w it