6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 1, 2004 Former Olympian Ray grows up' a J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH The SportsMonday column Elise Ray's life has undergone a drastic makeover since she cap- tained the U.S. women's gymnas- tics team in the 2000 Olympics. She's a student at Michigan. She doesn't need to go to the gym to hang out with friends. She's got a boyfriend. You can see the biggest difference in her floor routine, where the change isn't in her style. It's in her smile. "Gymnastics is not my life anymore," Ray said. "It's so different, but in such a ~wonderful way." But, even with the separation of more than three years and a new life here in Ann Arbor, all it takes is one mention of her 14th-place finish in the all-around finals or her team's fourth-place finish to send her right back to the Sydney SuperDome, where her 12 years.of sweat and tears culminated. Watching her describe the experi- ence, it seems like she's feeling every emotion all over again: the unspoken pressure of living up to the "golden girls" of 1996, who became the first U.S. team to win the gold. The pain of a dislocated shoulder suffered during the first day of team competition. The fear of a blown vault ruining her chance at Olympic glory. The disappointment of not being able to recover from her ini- tial failure on the vault, which somehow was not set to the correct height. "Ughhh," Ray moaned while think- ing about the unlikelihood of the Olympic officials screwing up such key measurements. "They had the equip- ment wrong, so I fell, and it absolutely stripped me of any motivation. I thought I was done." Everything Ray had been doing since she was 6 led up to that moment. In junior high, she and her parents made the decision to join "Hill's Angels" an elite group of gymnasts coached by the renowned Kelli Hill. But this was not work befitting of an angel. Ray spent seven hours a day in the gym -6 to 7:30 in the morning and five more hours after school (that doesn't count the 45-minute drives to Hill's and back to her home in Colum- bia, Md.). There were monthly trips to Texas for training camps - not quite the same as a family vacation. "It gets hard, and your body hurts, and you're sick of being at the gym, and you want to go on vacation, but you can't," Ray said. "But I wouldn't change all the it Michigan sacrifice for anything in the world." Even though Ray and her teammates in Sydney became the first U.S. team without a medal in 30 years, she hasn't let it sour her memories. "I don't need to have a medal around my neck to capture the whole Olympic experience," Ray said. "An internal battle" Ray rested for three months after the Olympics and joined Michigan for the winter stretch of the 2000-01 season, having no idea what to expect. What she found was a more relaxed atmos- phere than what she'd known at Hill's or in Olympic competition. Two- or three- hour practices. Music blasting. Team- mates who were wholeheartedly behind her. As Ray put it, everything about it was great, but she didn't know what to make of it. "It was hard for her to open up and trust the people around her," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "(The Olympic experience) is so individual. We wanted to say that all of that is behind you. We really care about you. You can trust us." Gymnastics was suddenly supposed to be all about fun. But during her first year, Ray was still in her "zone," intense and focused as she had been all along. The older girls on the team tried to show her the way. Elise, calm down, chill out. Itsjust a meet. "She was putting a lot of pressure on herself," Plocki said. "She didn't look forward to coming to the gym." Ray tied for the all-around national championship her freshman year because she was still at her Olympic level. In her sophomore year, further removed from the training at Hill's, she began to notice the dramatic drop-off from Olympic gymnastics to college competition. For someone who spent her entire life trying to be the best in the world, it was hard to settle for anything less, even being the best college gymnast in the nation. "The Olympic level was the ideal level for any gymnast," Ray explained. "Now I come to college, and it was very different, a lower level. My routines were easier. It was less time. It was hard for me because of the realization of where I was and what caliber of-gym- nastics I used to be at compared to now. It was an internal battle for me, telling myself it was OK not to be at that level." "An eye-opener" After two years of figuring out how to get the most out of college gymnas- tics, Ray suffered a shoulder injury before the beginning of her junior cam- paign. She was forced to redshirt and sat out the entire season. "It really sucked," Ray said bluntly. Ray accepted that she wouldn't be able to physically help her team, and it By Jeremy Antar Daily Sports Writer In front of 3,743 fans at Crisler Arena on Friday, the No. 13 Michigan women's gymnastics team came up on the losing end of a close match versus No. 2 University of Georgia 197.000- 196.300. Junior Elise Ray shined for Michigan, cap- turing first place on the uneven bars and the floor exer- cise and earning second place in the overall competition. Michigan began the meet on the vault. Freshman Clare Flannery opened the scoring with a 9.725. Freshman Carol McNamara followed with a 9.700, and sophomore Becca Clauson earned a 9.675. Senior Christine Man- tilia and sophomore Jenny Deiley closed out the event strongly with scores of 9.825 and 9.875, respectively. Georgia opened on the uneven bars, earning a team score of 49.200 that gave the Bulldogs a lead they would never relinquish. The highlight of the meet for Michi- gan came on the floor exercise, during which the Wolverines out-dueled Geor- gia's No. 1 floor exercise team. Four Michigan athletes set or tied season- high marks on the floor exercise. Clau- son earned a 9.825, while McNamara and Mantilia each landed a score of 9.850. Freshman Lindsey Bruck then captured a 9.900, setting up Ray, who closed out the competition with bril- liant execution and a score of 9.925. The team total of 49.350 was just enough to squeak past the 49.300 put forth by Georgia. Overall, coach Bev Plocki said she was not very pleased with the team's performance. She noted that in almost every event there were one or two mishaps which forced the Wolverines to count a score that was lower than what the team would have liked. Plocki also attributes the loss to problems the team had with sticking its dismounts. She said the team as a whole has been taking too many lit- tle steps after a landing, which has led to costly point deductions. Another source of error was on the balance beam. "There are a lot of things we need to clean up," Plocki said. "We need to get back to the quality of the beam work we had at the beginning of the season. We have to do more dismounts off beam, more vaults with stuck landings." A recurring problem for Michigan throughout the season has also been fighting off injuries. On Friday, senior Calli Ryals was able to compete in just one event. Ryals, who is one of Michigan's most consistent perform- ers, suffered an injury at West Vir- ginia on Feb. 22. "Calli has a strain right now, and we thought she would be ready to go on bars and beam, but she landed kind of short in warm-ups, and it was bother- ing her," Plocki said. "It kind of put Kara (Rosella) in a tough position, because we had to put her in without much notice." Michigan hopes to get back on track next weekend when it travels to UCLA to take on the No. 1 ranked Bruins. While UCLA promises to be a difficult match, Plocki has confi- dence in her team and knows what it is capable of. "We've got the talent to be great," Plocki said. "I believe we can compete with anybody in the country." Injuries, lack of depth hurt in gymnasts'loss 0 Elise Ray is all smiles during her fourth year at Michigan. took just a day for her to find a new role. Ray's best friend, junior Chelsea Kroll, clearly remembers when Ray came into the gym the day after her injury and gave the team maize-and- blue beaded bracelets with inspirational quotes attached to them. "I took the next night and day to do some soul searching," Ray said. "I wanted to let them know I was OK, that I wanted to be there for them." Ray took on a coaching role last sea- son, using her immense knowledge to help her teammates. Kroll said that then- freshman Becca Clauson refused to per- form at the NCAA Championships without Ray on the floor to support her. "Mentally, she was such a spirit for us," Kroll said. "The girls saw what her value was in something other than just her perform- ance," Plocki said. The days of dreading training were long gone. Throughout the entire sea- son, Ray "craved" to be out there prac- ticing, struggling with her teammates every day. "It was an eye-opener that I was still so passionate about the sport," Ray said. "I could have been like, 'I really like this down time,' but I missed it so much. It really made me fired up for this year." Ray and Kroll were named co-cap- tains for this season and, unlike her stint as captain of Team USA, this one is fully about the team. Ray's goal is to lead the program to its first team national championship, either this year or next. But for the moment, Ray just appreciates being able to perform again. "I really see daily in the gym that there's a much higher level of enjoy- ment for her," Plocki said. "In her fresh- man year, it was a job - a duty." There's no doubt Ray missed out on being a "normal kid" during high school, but as she puts it, "What do you do in high school? "It's cool I missed out on that." It's "cool" because Ray is making up for it at Michigan. She gets to go out with her friends whenever she wants, and she has been dating her boyfriend for almost a year now. "I grew up in college," Ray said. "I never had any of that before I came here." Kroll, giggling the giggle Ray had previously missed out on, said Ray's current relationship is "serious stuff." Maybe it's because gymnastics isn't so serious anymore. J Brady McCollough can be reached at bradymcc@umich.edu. EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily Freshman Lindsey Bruck posted a 9.9 on the floor exercise, helping Michigan outduel the nation's top-ranked floor team, but it wasn't enough to win the meet. 'M' Nine still searching for right ingredients By Ryan Sosin Daily Sports Writer Food Network cooking show host Emeril Lagasse always talks about three things: using the right ingredients, using those ingredients in the right order to maximize potency and finding the perfect consistency. For Michigan base- ball coach Rich Maloney, the ingredients are there. The hard part is finding the right order m and consistency. The Wolverines (0-5) spent the weekend in Florida at the New York Mets training facility, tak- ing on the University of Illinois- Chicago in a three game series. "It was like being in a big league (spring training) camp," junior catcher Jeff Kunkel said. Michigan held leads in the first two games of the weekend, but thanks to some inconsistent play, found itself in the losing column all weekend. "It's hard to look really big until you've won some games." Maloney said. "To get over the hump, we are going to have to have some success." Maloney continually tinkered with his lineup over the weekend, putting forth a different look each day. The weekend had many notable individual performances. Yesterday's 13-1 shellacking saw junior Nick Rudden go 2-for-3 in the two spot. Dur- ing Saturday's 4-3 extra innings loss, freshman Brad Roblin moved up from number two into the leadoff spot and went 2-for-4. And Friday's 7-4 series-opening loss came on a day when Kunkel pounded out a perfect 4-for-4 performance. "During our nonconference games, we are going to play a lot of guys," Maloney said. "We are going to try and figure out what the right lineup is and get the right pitchers in at the right times." Yesterday's performance was not what coach Maloney was hoping to see after a close loss Satur- day. The Wolverines didn't put up much of a fight, notching one run on six hits. The game was sealed for the Flames when Mike Hughes drilled a Phil Tognetti pitch into the stands with the bases loaded in the fourth to put Illinois Chicago ahead 8-1. Saturday's contest looked like it could be Michigan's first win. After Michigan battled back from a 2-0 deficit when sophomore A.J. Scheidt scored in the fifth off of a throwing error, the teams remained deadlocked at two heading into extra innings. In the top of the tenth, the Wolverines found themselves on top after Rudden's RBI single to drove in junior Matt Butler. Michigan failed to widen their lead following a two-out single off the bat of junior Kyle Bohm. Bohm watched the Flames left fielder, Shane Crow- der, chase his ball, as Chris Getz was storming home, but Crowder's throw to the plate beat Getz and the rally was stifled before Michigan could add an insurance run. Illinois-Chicago tied the game up in the bottom half of the frame on a Crowder RBI. In the bottom of the 11th, inconsistency prevailed, as a wild pitch from Michigan freshman Andrew Hess got past the catcher, Kunkel, allowing the Flames' Jordan DeVoir to steal a run and the game. "I'm very confident in these guys," Maloney said. "I believe that we will settle things down here." Despite falling short in all three games, the Wolverines did enjoy some positives. Kunkel, who is in his first season as starting catcher, leads the team with a .539 batting average. After allowing a pair of runners he inherited from junior Bobby Garza to score, sophomore Derek Feld- kamp looked sharp Friday. He gave up just one run of his own in 4 2/3 innings of work. On Saturday, junior Michael Penn turned in the best performance from a starting pitcher this year, as he yielded just three base runners, two of whom scored, in five innings of work. "We have a lot of talented pitchers," Kunkel said. "That's going to be a strong suit for us." Inconsistencies have played a major role in the Wolverines' less than desirable start. With the pitchers yielding too many big innings, Mal- oney's small ball lineup has struggled to play from behind. "When you start from behind, and you know you're not a big offensive team, you really put your- self in a bind," Maloney said. TONY DING/Daily Junior Michael Penn turned In one of the strongest performances by a Michigan pitcher in Florida last weekend, allowing just three base runners in five innings. 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