The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - December 8, 2003 - 3B Despite loss, Precious' season will be cherished SANTA CLARA Continued from Page 1B instructing the team to play a more pos- session-oriented rather than direct style of play. To help implement this plan, he made his first, and only major sub of the game -junior Matt Niemeyer for soph- omore Chris Glinski, whose headers pro- vide the key in a more direct style game. Despite the setback at the end of the first half, Michigan came out looking dangerous after the break. "They typically have been very strong in the second half," Santa Clara coach Cameron Rast said. "Especially in the first twenty minutes of the second half, I think we were under a lot of pressure." But then it was the 80th minute, and Michigan had still failed to score. The crowd of Michigan fans was aware of a feeling of urgency slowly spreading through the team with 10 minutes to go. Santa Clara's Igwe may have sensed Michigan's desperation; he scored his second goal for Santa Clara with nine minutes left - a final nail in the coffin. "When they got that third goal, it just didn't look like it was going to be our day," senior Joey Iding said. The players fought hard in those last 10 minutes as the rain surged down harder than ever, knowing that their Cin- derella story had come to an end. "Playing in the tournament is like playing for your last breath of air," Burns said. "And with that is a lot of heart, and that comes from the leader- ship from the seniors, and they put that together on the field. There was no quit in them - and that embodies what we want to do as a program." Note: The game was played in Santa Clara despite the Wolverines' higher seeding because the Michigan athletic department failed to place a bid for the game. J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH The SportsMonday Column T otkeep his players from reflect- ing too much on their miracu- lous trip to the Elite Eight, Michigan men's soccer coach Steve Burns took a page out of Lloyd Carr's playbook. During the football team's run to the national championship in 1997, Carr used a book called "The Pre- cious Present" as a guiding force to motivate his players and keep them focused week in and week out. Burns introduced his team to the book in the preseason and dusted it off last Mon- day at practice. The book is a parable about the jour- ney of a young child growing up into a man. As the years go by, the child has trouble enjoying the present and con- stantly searches for happiness through thinking about the future. That is, until he meets an old man who is content with his life. "He's content because he's learned that staying in the present moment is one of the special things of life," Burns explained, "not dwelling on past failures or looking ahead to future outcomes. "(My team has) taken that to heart." But after Michigan's 3-1 loss Satur- day night to Santa Clara in the NCAA quarterfinals, it would be easy for the Wolverines to let the present, suddenly frustrating and painful, overshadow what they've accomplished in the past and how they've laid out their poten- tially bright future. There is not a program on this cam- pus that has gained more ground in the past four years, and while the Wolver- ines may not accept this silver lining right now, we, as students, should applaud them. I remember attending Michigan's first-ever varsity game against Dayton Sept. 1, 2000, at a sun-drenched Elbel Field. I was one of many freshmen Seniors leave soccer program at new high CURTIS HILLER/Daily Junior forward Mychal Turpin was the only Wolverine to score a goal In Saturday's game against Santa Clara. Michigan lost 3- 1 to the Broncos In the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament. who had gotten in free as part of a Welcome Week gimmick, and I didn't think about the men's soccer team again - until this fall. Four seasons later, the Wolverines finished second in the Big Ten with a 5-1 record and now can consider them- selves one of the top eight teams in the country. Michigan (14-7-1 overall) received a first-round bye, virtue of its high RPI rating (No. 12 out of 199 teams). Schools around the country - includ- ing Santa Clara - felt the Wolverines did not deserve it. But Michigan made quick work of Saint Peter's, 6-2, in the second round and shocked the college soccer world by upsetting No. 3 Notre Dame in a third-round shootout. Not bad for a team everyone expect- ed to be "one and done" in its first NCAA Tournament appearance. The Wolverines won just four Big Ten games total in 2000 and 2001 before making an improbable run to the Big Ten Tournament championship game last season. Michigan lost to Penn State, 2-1, and did not make the NCAA Tournament, despite a solid 11- 7-2 record. "What we used as fuel for our fire was that last year really should have been our first year in the NCAA Tour- nament," Burns said. "We had a lot of motivation to prove to the college soc- cer world that we're better than a one- and-done team. "The saying is you have to lose before you can win." The Wolverines learned that les- son again this season. After cruising into the Big Ten Tournament seeded No. 2 with a 13-5 overall record, Michigan was stifled offensively by No. 7 seed Northwestern, a perenni- al Big Ten doormat, and fell in the first round, 2-1. After the game, the team lingered in the lockerroom with its gear on, para- lyzed with shock over what had just happened. "It was bad, probably worse for me than anyone because I know the poten- tial we have," recalled senior tri-cap- tain Kevin Taylor. "Everyone was kind of stunned. No one really knew what to do." "Normally after a loss, everybody is taking their stuff off and doing their own thing," Burns said. "I walked into the lockerroom after the loss, and everybody was sitting there not doing anything, and I realized we need some leadership here. "They were gutted." Burns and his team gathered around the TV the next Monday in Crisler Arena's studio to watch the NCAA Tournament selection show, their fate again firmly out of their hands. When Michigan popped up on the bracket, the Wolverines received a new lease on life. "Every one of our guys looked at (the loss to Northwestern) and said, 'Our season could be over right now. That could be how my senior year ends. That could be my last game. Was I pleased with how I played in my last game? Did I play like it was the last game of my season?"' Burns recalled. "We've really used that to kind of jar everybody and wake them up. That's what we've rallied around." During the past four years, we sen- iors have had the pleasure of watching our own journey - that of a young program growing up into one of the nation's elite. But unlike the young man from "The Precious Present," it would do the Wolverines some good to look at their past as they deal with their not- so-precious present. Odds are, they'd feel content too. J Brady McCollough can be reached at bradymcc@umich.edu. By Ellen McGarrity Daily Sports Writer SANTA CLARA, Calif. - What do you do when everything you've worked toward for fours years ends in disap- pointment? The nine seniors on the Michigan men's soccer team faced this reality Saturday after losing to Santa Clara, 3-I, in the NCAA quarterfinals. After the scoreboard counted down the last seconds of the game, senior defender Kevin Taylor stood bent over, taking in his final moment as a team captain and student-athlete before walk- ing off the mud-soaked field. Senior defender Joey Iding, who was subbed out in the last five minutes of the game, sat on the bench in agony, wondering if his presence on the field in those final moments could have saved the team from defeat. "It's a weird feeling as a senior, knowing your career is possibly over and this is the last soccer team you'll ever be apart of' forward Kevin Robinson said. "I was standing there in shock, disbelief and sadness that the last four years had flown by, and it's all done now" For the seniors, this loss was espe- cially heart-wrenching. Four years ago, they were the freshman class on Michi- gan's brand new varsity team. They never dreamed that in this short amount of time, the program they helped begin would make it this far. But the ending for this class of sen- iors was not all darkness. As senior Mike White sat cupping his head in his hands after the game, memo- ries of all the good times he'd had with his team went through his mind - including this painful ending. Moisture stained his face, a mixture of rain and tears. But then he felt a tap on his shoul- der. Looking up, he was greeted with the smiling face of his 10-year-old cousin who drove up to the game with her par- ents from their home in Los Angeles. "Hi, Mike," she said. White said he knew then he would get through that moment. Even though the seniors would have written a different script for how the season ended, after the loss sunk in, they realized the giant step the soccer program had taken because of them. "I'm proud to have been part of a program that wasn't even existent five years ago and now we're here in the Elite Eight," Iding said. Advancing so far in the tournament, as well as receiving a No. 11 spot in the blank poll earlier in the season, will also help with recruiting. "We had a breakout year," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "Continuing into the future, we've emerged as a team who can say they're stepping into a power position in college soccer." One senior who will get the opportu- nity to play another year is defender Matt Niemeyer. After redshirting last season with a torn ACL, Niemeyer ini- tially thought himself unfortunate. Now his outlook has changed. "I feel lucky, junior Matt Niemeyer said. "With how hard (the seniors) worked and now being done and having to go home makes me feel like, 'All right, I owe it to them to do what I can next year.' " ~I11111111111111 II liii III 11111 I - ,., ,n , ; s u & j 2YY t " *" BOOK .. U SPPLY Sell Your Books Now! v We Want All Your Books!! Top Dollar For Your Used Books! Spin the Wheel for Extra Cash & Prizes! 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