The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 16, 2004 - 3B 'M' gets Golder 111estone By Julie Master Daily Sports Writer Winning a meet is great. Winning 150 meets is even better. On Saturday, the Michigan men's gymnastics team cruised to a 214.600-209.350 victory over Minnesota at Cliff Keen Arena. The victory marks the 150th win for eight-year Michigan head coach Kurt Golder. Junior Eddie Umphrey led the way for the Wolverines, placing first on both the still rings (9.35) and paral- S .3' lel bars (9.0). He also claimed .a second-place finish on vault and a third-place finish on floor. "It felt great," Umphrey said. "I haven't won an event in a home meet for a while. It was nice to come out here and just kick it out and get a couple per- sonal-bests tonight." At the Winter Cup last weekend in Las Vegas, Umphrey failed to shine in front of his friends and family who came from Albuquerque, N.M., to watch him compete. Without the pres- sure, Umphrey was able to put it all together. "It's funny how that went because (last weekend) his family was there, and I thought it was all staged, and he was just going to knock em' dead," Golder said. "But he had a pretty rough meet. Now he comes back a week later, does very well, and this may have been the best meet he's had since he's been here." For the rest of the Wolverines, the meet had its ups and downs as the team struggled to stay on top of its game. The Wolverines were plagued by numerous falls and missed routines, especially in the first half of competition. "Pommel horse and parallel bars Selfless Warhurst hoping duo strikes gold SHUBRA OHRI/Daily Michigan junior Eddie Umphrey performs on the still rings against Minnesota. Umphrey placed first on both the rings and the parallel bars. were a disappointment today," Golder said. "I thought we got off to a pretty decent start on floor, but we got really low scores and that kind of gets the guys down. I started to get real worried in the middle of the meet, because Min- nesota's a good team." Despite the shaky start, the vault seemed to turn the meet around for the Wolverines as 2003 NCAA champion Andrew DiGiore had a clutch perform- ance, posting a 9.55 - the top score of the night on any event. - Sophomore Justin Laury, a fierce competitor for the Wolverines, also had a strong showing by winning the high bar, his strongest event, with a score of 9.35. Laury also placed second on rings and third on parallel bars. "I felt good about my perform- ance," Laury said. "I had some rough areas. Parallel bars were okay and I had a lot of trouble on pommel horse, but it's just something I'm going to have to deal with and just get better as the week goes on." Absent from the competition was standout redshirt freshman Andre Her- nandez. Hernandez, Michigan's most consistent performer thus far this sea- son, sat out due to an aggravated knee injury. The injury weakened the lineup for the meet, but should leave him feel- ing strong as the Wolverines take on defending NCAA champion Oklahoma next weekend. Although Golder's 150th win wasn't the best meet he has ever seen, he still looks forward to what's in store. "I'm disappointed that, this late in the season, we have that many missed routines," Golder said. "But I feel that we're demonstrating how good we can be. We didn't have a very good meet, we didn't have our strongest lineup, I didn't feel that the scoring was real high or anything, and we still scored a 214.600. I think we can go another five points higher than that. So we'll just keep showing our prom- ise and hopefully that will all come together in the end." Michigan track star Nate Brannen remembers a race at the NCAA Indoor Championships his freshman year that didn't quite go as he and coach Ron Warhurst had planned. After the race, Brannen walked by Warhurst. "That sucked," Brannen said. "No. You sucked," Warhurst responded. "I kept walking, and I thought, 'Yeah, I did suck,' " Bran- nen recalled. In general, Warhurst doesn't real- ly care what comes out of his mouth. He's a war veteran with salty lan- guage and a "hard-ass" attitude, and in 15 minutes with him in his Wei- denbach Hall office, you'll join him in a good cackle a dozen times. f" "No one feels weird about talk- ing to him," Brannen said. "He's J. BRADY such an open guy." MCCOLLOUGH So open that sophomore Nick The SportsMonday Willis had to stop himself before column telling stories from his two years with Warhurst. "I could tell you, but you wouldn't be able to print it," Willis said with a grin. At the age of 25, Warhurst volunteered for the Marines and headed off to Vietnam because "it was something to do." He was a self-described hippie and wasn't ready to make a deci- sion about his life. Warhurst is the senior member of the Michigan coaching staff, having taken over as cross country coach and assistant track coach in 1974. At the ripe age of 60, his hair may have grayed, but even that hasn't slowed him down; he has a one- and-a-half-year-old son. "It wasn't a Viagra boy either," Warhurst said. "Another joke ... I'm a jokester." In 30 years of coaching Michigan's long- and middle-dis- tance runners, he's turned average runners into great runners and great runners into Olympians. Right now, he's working his magic on two of the world's top young runners, Brannen of Canada and Willis of New Zealand, who will both sit out the outdoor track season to prepare for the Olympic trials. "He has a passion for getting the best out of someone's lim- its," Willis said. "He's (hard on us) because he wants us to get the most out of ourselves." Two is better than one At this point in what would have been his junior year at Michigan, Alan Webb might have already won three or four individual national championships. Webb gained national acclaim by setting the high-school record in the indoor and outdoor mile and committed to run for Warhurst at Michigan. After an up-and-down freshman year, he left school, signed a pro running contract with Nike and has since had his life's work chronicled in a book called "Sub 4:00: Alan Webb and the Quest for the Fastest Mile." Webb's exit from Ann Arbor was no tragedy for the track, program, though. Now, instead of having one star that shines over all, Warhurst has Brannen and Willis. "They're better," Warhurst said. "They've got it all. They're the package - they raise the expectations for everybody." Willis, who sports an "I just rolled out of bed" hairdo and an accent like Crocodile Dundee, is reaching his potential in his second season under Warhurst. Last month in Boston, he set the collegiate record in the 3,000 meters - which isn't even "his event" - with a time of 7:44.90. Brannen, the Canadian high-school record holder in the mile, came to Michigan the sameyear as Webb, but Webb was the one who got all the media attention. Since Webb left, all Brannen has done is win the 2003 indoor national champi- onship in the 800 meters. "With Willis, it's totally different," Brannen said. "We both share the publicity equally. There's no one in front all the time." Except on the track, where inevitably, either Willis or Bran- nen will outrace the other. "In some ways, I'd prefer Nate beat me in every race," Willis said. "We're using each other to get better rather than run each other into the ground." Realizing their dreams Running each other into the ground wouldn't do much for Brannen and Willis's native countries in the upcoming Sum- mer Olympics in Athens, Greece. Unlike most college runners, Michigan's duo cares more about winning Olympic medals than NCAA championships. They trust Warhurst to get them to Athens and beyond, mainly because of the way he trained Kevin Sullivan, who finished fifth in the 2000 Olympics while running for his native Cana- da. Sullivan is now 29 and still makes running his livelihood - something that both Brannen and Willis aspire to do. Warhurst has earned their trust by taking their goals and making them his own. "Other coaches, they race their athletes just to get points for the school," Willis explained. "They don't care about the ath- lete's future. Ron has been here 30 years; his job is not at risk. He's got the athlete's heart in mind, rather than his wallet." "Since Sullivan, I don't really care about a dual meet against Eastern Michigan or Indiana," Warhurst said. "You have to pick your battles." Brannen and Willis run in specialized events in the indoor season. Brannen will try to repeat as national champion in the 800 meters, and Willis likely could win several events. "I would have the possibility of tripling in the mile, the 3K and the 5K," Willis said. "Yeah, I might get us seven points, but I might get injured from doing that." "You can't go into every skirmish and come out licking your wounds," Warhurst said. Warhurst supports Brannen and Willis's decision to sit out the outdoor season, even though it greatly decreases Michi- gan's chance of making noise nationally. Joined by Olympic hopefuls and former Wolverines Tim Broe and Sullivan, Brannen and Willis's workouts will intensify in May and June because they want to hit their stride for the Olympic trials in early July. They will all be in Ann Arbor, train- ing under Warhurst's guidance, and then will depart for their respective trials, where Brannen and Willis expect to qualify. "I know I can get them there," Warhurst said. In the "win now" culture of college sports, Warhurst goes out of his way to ensure that his kids are successful in what matters to them. He knows that win or lose, medal or no medal, Brannen and Willis's performance in these Olympics will do more for Michigan than any dual meet ever could. .J Brady McCollough can be reached at bradymcc@umich.edu. 0 MEN'S TENNIS Peretz steps up spot, leads 'M' rout By Ryan Sosin Daily Sports Writer Despite a tough loss from senior Anthony Jackson, the Michigan men's tennis team added another decisive win to its record. Sat- urday's 6-1 victory over Toledo was fueled by solid performances from the younger Wolverines (5-0 overall). Freshman Steve Peretz was solid, step- ping up to the No. 4 spot from his usual home at No. 5. The switch didn't bother the freshman, as he quickly dismantled Toledo's Cristobal Toral, 6-2, 6-1. "I was very happy with how I played," Peretz said. Peretz got the nod in place of fresh- man Brian Hung, who was sitting out after playing a match in the Davis Cup in Hong Kong during the week. Junior David Anving, sophomore r Carey Rubin and freshman Ryan Heller all earned wins in their respective sin- gles matches. Heller's match was cut short after back problems sidelined his opponent, Todd Wojtkowski. "We've got nine guys who can play," Michigan coach Mark Mees said. "Regardless of who they are or what spot we put them in, I expect them to compete and win." Junior Michael Rubin bounced back from a disappointing day against Wake Forest. He put forth a dominant performance over Khalid Al Nabhani en route to a 6-1, 6-4 win. Rubin con- sistently frustrated Al Nabhani, and at the end of the first set, Al Nabhani shattered his racket out of frustration. "I could tell he was getting a little frustrated because I was playing so well," Rubin said. "I was taking him out of the match, basically." The win is Rubin's 20th dual- match win in his singles career. Junior Vinny Gossain also earned his 20th win in doubles play. Carey Rubin notched his 20th-career sin- gles win in the No. 6 spot. Jackson was the only Wolverine to struggle Saturday, dropping his match to Freddy Gomez, 7-5,6-4. "Obviously, losing that last match with Anthony was disappointing," Mees said. "I know Anthony was dis- appointed." Chiropractic.. The Choice For Me Jason Kucma is a Third-Year student from Medford, NJ. He graduated from Ithaca College with a Bachelor's Degree in Exercise Physiology concentrating in Cardiac Rehabilitation. "The only thing that has ever captured my attention was studying the human body. The more I learned in school, the more I needed to know. The most logical step for me was to become a Doctor of Chiropractic so I could truly help people". Before making his decision to attend Logan, Jason visited nearly half of the chiropractic colleges in the United States. 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