The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 8, 2004 - 7B Gi ven one last chance, M I s short By James V. Dowd Daily Sports Writer Perhaps the best insight into an athlete's character can be seen in how he deals with failure. At times the competitor can fall into a funk, a seemingly never-end- ing downward spiral. It happens with batting slumps in baseball, with poor shooting in basketball and cer- tainly with a string of subpar marks in running and jumping in track and field. During this weekend's Alex Wilson Invitational at Notre Dame, five Michigan athletes participated in what is known as a "last-chance meet." Taking place during the final weekend before the NCAA Champi- onships, it was a last shot to qualify for a trip to Fayet- teville, Ark. But, only one athlete could match his previous high, and every Wolverine fell short of a pro- visional or automatic marks. Fortunately for Michigan, the general mindset of the team is converting the pain of failure to motivation for future performances. "This meet was sort of 'If you did it, great,' " Michi- gan junior Rondell Ruff said. "If not, we still have out- doors." All five athletes came close to their goals, including junior Nathan Taylor, who matched his best time in the 60-meter dash but fell a mere .04 seconds short of the NCAA provisional qualifying standard. Ruff also came within a second of reaching the pro- visional mark in the 800-meter run. Michigan already has two qualifiers in the 800-meter run - Junior Nate Brannen, the defending NCAA champion, and sopho- more Andrew Ellerton. Ruff made a significant jump during last year's outdoor season, from 1:52.74 to 1:50.99, ajump he thinks he can repeat. "It's likely I'll repeat that change," Ruff said. "Maybe even at a greater distance. I'd like to be under 1:50" M WOMEN'S TRACK Gallo, Blue put a close to solid indoor season By Matt Venegoni Daily Sports Writer RYAN WEINER/Daily Nathan Taylor matched his personal-best time in the 60-meter dash, but fell short of the NCAA provisional time. A similar jump this year could put him in good shape for the regional qualifying meet. Freshman Jeff Porter, a newly crowned Big Ten champion, already earned a provisional qualifying time in the 60-meter hurdles, but went to Notre Dame in hopes of reaching the automatic standard. Though he couldn't match his time of a week ago, he was still faster than the provisional standard. With his time at the Big Ten championship, Porter is sitting in a six- way tie for 16th place nationally, hoping to be one of the 18 who earn a trip to the national championships. In the field events, Michigan also had two competi- tors trying to qualify for the championship. Junior Darren Adams jumped 6 feet 8 inches in the high jump, three inches less than he did in the Big Ten championship. After steadily improving through the indoor season, Adams appears in good shape for the upcoming outdoor season. Freshman Michael Whitehead jumped to a third- place finish in the Big Ten Championships last week, but this week he jumped six inches shorter. Whitehead missed the provisional standard, but this disappoint- ment will serve as motivation for him, just as it has in the past. When looking back at the beginning of his triple jumping career, Whitehead describes himself as "unathletic" and "garbage." Finishing last week after week frustrated him and drove him from the bottom of the pile to second in the nation during his senior year of high school. Disappointment over missing this year's indoor championship will inspire Whitehead to aim for school records that he believes are within his reach. "My freshman year of high school, I wasn't any good at all," Whitehead said. " I'm not bent on the fact that there are people who will jump farther than me. I will catch them." Whitehead has his sights set on winning the outdoor Big Ten Championship. Although Whitehead and his teammates struggled to reach their marks this weekend, they have two weeks to regroup before the Florida State Relays in Tallahassee, Fla. The relay meet will mark the start of the outdoor season. A wise person once said that there are no endings, just new beginnings. That's especially true for the Michigan women's track team. While this weekend's Alex Wilson Invitational was the last chance for all the Wolverines to participate, the new beginning - the outdoor sea- son - kicks off in just a couple weeks. This weekend presented the last chance for individuals to qualify for the NCAA championships and set personal records. Most of the team just trained through the weekend, but there were eight team members who did participate. One Wolverine who took advan- tage of the meet was Lindsay Gallo. The redshirt junior posted an NCAA provisional qualifying time of 2:07.97 in the 800-meter run on Sat- urday. Her time - a personal record - was 1.03 seconds under the NCAA provisional standard and bettered her previous best time by 2.34 seconds. "This was sort of a tune-up for indoor nationals, but it definitely made me feel prepared for it," Gallo said. Gallo has already qualified for the NCAA meet in the mile and 3,000-meter run, and is the anchor of Michigan's distance medley relay. "I feel like I am really ready to run well next weekend," Gallo said. "It's definitely a good feeling to keep (setting personal records), even much for talent, but when half put it together, the other half doesn't." Two events into the meet, Michi- gan found itself trailing UCLA by 1.5 points. UCLA opened on vault, where senior Jeanette Antolin scored her fifth consecutive 10.0. The Bru- ins also had a 10.0 score on bars. On vault, bars and balance beam, UCLA is ranked No. I in the country. The miscues continued for Michi- gan on the floor exercise. Becca Clauson's 9.900 was the top score on the event for the Wolverines. Usual leaders Ray and Ryals stepped out of bounds and fell, respectively. Deiley, competing in the floor exercise for the first time since her ankle injury early in the season, posted just a 9.650 after stepping out of bounds during her routine. "Becca Clauson had a great meet," Plocki said. "She did very well on all three events. I thought her vault was better than the score reflected. "It's not that we go through meets without any positives. We have posi- tives that I could point to from every meet. The bottom line is if we're counting mistakes or counting falls the team is not going to succeed." The Wolverines finished on beam, at the close of the season. As for being satisfied - I won't know until after Nationals." While she has qualified for the 800-meter run, her priorities lie with the distance medley relay and the mile. Coach James Henry said that Gallo will not run the 800-meter next weekend, she just wanted to get a good time in the event before the NCAA's. Senior Vera Simms also per- formed well this weekend running the 400 meter. She clocked in with a personal best of 55.70 seconds, although that time did not qualify her for the NCAA meet. "This weekend was about wanting to continue to compete, and it was good to see those that wanted to," Henry said. For most of the team, the indoor season is now officially over. There is a small group of runners partici- pating in the NCAA meet, but most of the team is excited for the begin- ning of the new season. "We have different goals that will motivate us for the outdoor season," Henry said. "We would like to get our fourth straight Big Ten title." Besides another opportunity to win the Big Ten championship, the team also has the chance to go to places like Florida and Stanford. "Outdoor holds new possibilities for everyone," sophomore Katie Erdman said. "The change of scenery will be well-received, and we're going to respond better than ever." Michigan which was their best event of the evening. Ray tied for first on the event with a 9.950 and finished fourth overall. Ryals recovered from her fall on floor to post a 9.875, her personal-best in the meet. Solid sup- port from Bruck, Deiley and Clau- son brought Michigan's score to 49.275, but it wasn't enough to beat the Bruins. UCLA stuck on beam and on floor - where it earned a third 10.0 score - to clinch the victory. UCLA's composite score was its second best of the season, behind the Bruins' NCAA record-tying score of 198.875 against Oregon State. "This was their senior night and there were 'alot of emotions," Plocki said. "You can't take anything away from a team that is going to go out there and hit their performances. UCLA is a fantastic team." Michigan, however, has not been hitting routines in the way that Ploc- ki desires. "It's very frustrating from a coaching standpoint," Plocki said. "What we need to do to get this ship on the right path. It's hard for us because we're not really quite sure how to fix it." Perfect Bruins too 1 By Melanie Kebler Daily Sports Writer In gymnastics, the 10.0 is a covet- ed score and a rarely achieved state- ment of perfection. So how do you compete against a team that notches not one, or two, V A4. but three 10.0 scores during the same meet? The Michigan women's gymnas- tics team - which struggled through and lost its last two meets - had to ask itself this question yesterday night, when it lost to No. 1 UCLA in Los Angeles by a large margin, 198.325-195.725. "Our goal was to try to put a h'et together on the road so thatwe could come home with a good awaysetdre to help with our regional qualifica- tions," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "Unfortunately, we didn't achieve that goal." Michigan began on bars, where senior co-captain Elise Ray led the Wolverines with a 9.950 score, tying her season-high mark from last week against Georgia. She per- formed last, after senior Calli Ryals fell during her routine. Ryals suf- fered a strain two weeks ago at West Virginia and was not quite back to all-around strength yesterday, com- peting in three of four events. Injuries have kept the Wolverines from having a lineup at full strength throughout the 2004 season. This began with injuries to Lauren Mirkovich and sophomore all- arounder Jenny Deiley. "Early in the season, I think it was a factor," Plocki said. "Injuries have absolutely nothing to do with our performance tonight. We can't fall back on injuries because compared to a lot of other teams, we're healthy right now." Following a 49.100 score on bars, things got worse for the Wolverines when they moved to vault. After a 9.800 performance on bars, standout freshman Lindsay Bruck miscalcu- lated on her vault and sat down on the landing. Because fellow fresh- man Clare Flannery also fell on her landing, Michigan had to count a fall, making it the lowest-scoring event of the meet for the Wolverines. "If there's a theme (to our prob- lems), I haven't figured it out," Ploc- ki said. "It's disheartening. This group has an enormous amount of Senior Elise Ray tied her season-high score of 9.950 on the bars, but it wasn't enough as UCLA prevailed. Bobby Knight impression not enough in loss **~4 . ~. 1 ,~ *4:' I 125th urns seas~n ~ I ~ 4~ By Julie Master Daily Sports Writer On Saturday night, the judges at the men's gymnastics meet in Iowa were grilled about their scoring. Some might have thought Bobby Knight was doing the arguing. But on second w 2,7.9 glance, it was the normally well-mannered and laid-back Michigan coach, Kurt Golder. "I used to be on the coaching staff at Iowa," Golder said. "My former secre- tary came up to me at the end and said I looked like Bobby Knight out there, fighting with the officials. But, I had to fight for my athletes." Losing by a score of 217.925- 213.550, the Wolverines could never seem to get ahead of the Iowa Hawkeyes. And the double whammy of not getting the scores they felt they deserved and not performing their best made it impossible to win. All night the Wolverines were in a battle with the judges. Golder especially didn't agree on the vault score given to 2003 NCAA champion Drew DiGiore. "The one judge had a 9.6 and the other had a 9.4," Golder said. "That was the last performance of the night, so I stayed there and talked to them a little bit. I said (to the judge with a 9.4), 'That guy was the national champion.' FOOD FOR THOUGHT Manipulating Opinion In 1966. the NLF (Viet Cona) And he goes, 'Oh he was?' He implied that had he known that, he would have given him a better score." Despite the low scoring, both DiGiore and Eddie Umphrey were able to capture first place finishes on the vault and still rings with scores of 9.500 and 9.300, respectively. But, the best performance of the night came from Andrew Elkind on the parallel bars. Although he did not post an extremely high score because of a low start value, he came within a tenth of a point of hitting his routine perfectly. "Andrew has had trouble compet- ing," Golder said. "But as a freshman he has showed huge signs of knowing how to learn to compete well." Floor exercise proved to be a strong event for sophomores Gerry Signorelli and Luke Bottke. Signorelli came in third with a score of 9.325, while Bot- tke trailed right behind him to finish in fourth-place with a 9.300. The rest of the Wolverines struggled with a combination of missed routines and technical errors. Overall, Golder was disappointed with the way the team performed this late in the season. "Some of the guys are competing like they're scared," Golder said. "When you hold back, you try to make sure every- thing is perfect and, most likely, still mess up. There are still several guys who need to learn how to compete better." Though the meet was far from per- fect, the Wolverines are trying to keep a positive outlook with the Big Ten Tour- nament two weeks away. "We will use this meet to examine what went wrong and hopefully prevent something from going wrong in the future. I would rather have a feeling that a peak lies ahead of us than have things be too perfect," Golder said. 4.4.44'4 4.. .4...'4""' 1.'."'4 4.' .44.:: '4' 4 " ' ' ' . S"' 4' A .4.. .44'4". :4...'.' 1'.~'~ '.4. 44. '.4.$4 4$..4..' "'1.4 '~ 4: 4:. A $10 Rush Tickets on sale 9 am-5 pm the day of the performance or the Friday before a weekend event at the UMS Ticket Office, located in the Michigan League. 50% Rush Tickets on sale for 50% off the publiched ticket price beginning 90 minutes before the event at the per- formance hall Ticket Office. Merce Cunningham Dance Company Fri 3/12 8pm Sat 3/13 8 pm [with the Kronos Quartet] Power Center Always unpredictable and imaginative, America's iconoclastic choreographer has spent a lifetime notjust living on the cutting edge, but inventing it. His company celebrates its 50th anniversary with two different programs in Ann Arbor, including one with live muic by the Kronos Quartet. TONY DING/Daily Drew DiGiore captured first in the vault despite some problems with the judging. I - -I C HtGAN The Michigan Sports Marketing team is looking for individuals with the same dedication and commitment that has made our sports teams champions. Become a part of the team that drives Michigan athletics! Do you want the opportunity to delve into the day-to-day operations of a high profile athletic Kronos Quartet: "Visual Music" Sun3!14 6pm Power Center Me Synonymous with musical innovation, the Kronos Quartet is