TWO TO GO Michigan is two wins away from hanging an NIT title banner in Crisler Arena. But Oregon stands in the way. PAGE 5Bw BOBBLE YOUR BRAINS OUT Get to know the Michigan base- ball team with a fun game of Blue's Clues. PAGE 8B THE SPORTSMONDAY COLUMN J. BRADY McCo.OUGH: The Michigan men's rowing team is out to prove that varsity is just a label. PAGE 3B R~RT March SECTION B able firoigttn jDttdig I i 1010111011momwommm 11111011111 TONY DING/Daily Michigan goalie Al Montoya kneels stunned as Boston College's Justin Dzlama (25) and Brian Boyle (10) celebrate their 3-2 overtime victory yesterday In Manchester, N.H. The Wolverines failed to advance to the Frozen Four for the first time In four seasons. Don't call me cynical: Despite loss, Michigan's CHESTER, N.H. Following yester- 's NCAA Northeast Regional final loss, I felt weird. Michigan had just dropped a 3-2 overtime heartbreaker that would S bring even Darth Vader to tears (especially since the voice of the GENNA Dark One is that of James Earl Jones, a Michigan alum), and I FILIC felt like I was missing some- Nuthin' Bu thing. It wasn't any of my val- Than ued possessions. After tapping both of my front pants pockets, I was assured that my keys, voice recorder and phone were present. R E ta 1g And my keeled-over walk indicated that my overly-stuffed, "Costanza" wallet wasn't left behind. After I performed a head count that would make any first grade teacher proud, I knew that the absence couldn't be credited to a stray Michigan Daily employee. No, it wasn't anything of this sort. I was D missing a feeling, something that had over- whelmed me after every other loss this sea- son: cynicism. 'G' Covering a team as talented as Michi- gan, it is difficult to just accept a loss. And after each of the Wolverines' 13 prior defeats, my postgame thoughts were extremely negative. Man, we got outhustled ... This teams consis- tency is laughable ... Coming out that flat, do the players even care? ... Is Montoya really worth all the hype?... These viewpoints and contemplations owned me every time Michigan came up on the short end of the stick. I guess I just believed that Michi- gan had never faced a team that was truly superior - thus, it shouldn't have lost. But that all changed yesterday. Boston College was the better team. Following Michigan's semifinal win over New Hampshire on Saturday, Red Berenson comment- ed on the daunting task the Wolverines had ahead of them. effort deserves commendation "We know Boston College is a great team," stayed in the game and continued to do so until Berenson said. "They're a deeper team than we Boston College's Ben Eaves finally broke the tie are. They're quicker, and they probably have and notched the game-winner 70 minutes and more skill." eight seconds after the puck had initially dropped. I thought that Berenson was just pulling a Lou The players in maize and blue were scrappy, Holtz - you know, over-hyping an upcoming they were opportunistic and they battled hard. opponent for motivational purposes. But Red Basically, this youthful squad embodied the style wasn't kidding. And yesterday, the Eagles lived of play that its senior captain, Andy Burnes, had up to his billing. displayed all season. They were dominant. They outshot the Wolver- In his four years at Michigan, Burnes has ines 45-17. When I received the shot chart after never been a player that lights up the stat sheet. the second period - Boston College's most Entering last night, he had accumulated a career assertive - Michigan's zone was so much more total of just 22 points - three goals and 19 cluttered, I thought that Michigan's shot-charters assists. The defenseman was never a player that had run out of ink. But, somehow, the Wolverines See FILICE, Page 4B M' ndes defense to Sunday sweep By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer If defense wins championships, then the Michigan softball team should buy its plane tickets to the NCAA World Series now. The No. 11 Wolverines (25-6 overall) had no errors and allowed no runs in their double-header against Valparaiso (4- 14) yesterday. They came away from the weekend, behind strong pitching and flawless defense, with two easy victories, 10-0, 7-0. The Ritter sisters, Jennie (10-3) and Meghan (0-0), started things off right for Michigan in front of a home crowd of 623. The two of them combined to post a three-hit shutout in five innings of work in the first game of the day. Jennie, a sopho- more, started the game and struck out seven in four innings, bringing her season strikeout total to a team-leading 126 and lowering her ERA to 0.81. The Wolverines built Jennie a 10-run lead before she turned it over to her older sister Meghan, a sen- ior. Meghan picked up right were Jennie left off, allowing just one hit, and finished off the Crusaders. "We stayed ahead of the hitters, and I thought that Valpo had a pretty good-swinging team," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "They were aggressive and they made some good con- tacts, even with (Jennie) Ritter. But it just shows what we're capable of." Freshman Lorilyn Wilson (6-0) took over in the second game and had no problem keeping the Wolverines on top. She pitched ,.. «.1 ,+.____ h~+_ + -r r +ha -r^ + +*:. i ha e..,.n~ E MEN'S SWIMMING Tankers take home three titles By Gabe Edelson Daily Sports Writer As the applause rained down on retiring Michigan men's swim- ming and diving coach Jon Urbanchek near the end of the NCAA Championships in East Meadow, N.Y., he knew he was leaving the program in good shape. "Michigan is back in the ball- park," Urbanchek said. "We're back where we belong." The Wolverines' 271 total points in the meet were good enough for fifth place, Michigan's highest NCAA finish since rank- ing third in 1996. Auburn won the title on Saturday with a score of 634. Seven world records were set over the course of the weekend. The final result was as good a placement as the Wolverines could have hoped for, since three teams at the top brought twice as many swimmers as Michigan. After being held without a national championship in a single swimming event since Chris Thompson and Tim Siciliano both took first in 2001, Michigan claimed three NCAA-best per- formances from this year's compe- tition. Over the course of the three-day schedule, sophomore Peter Vanderkaay won titles in the 400- and 1,500-meter freestyle races. The 800-meter freestyle relay team - composed of senior captain Dan Ketchum, Van- derkaay, sophomore Davis Tarwa- ter and junior Andrew Hurd - also captured a title in an NCAA- record time of 7:01.42. Perhaps the most impressive event for Michigan was the 400- meter freestyle during Thursday's first session, in which Michigan swimmers finished first, second and fourth. "We own that race," Urbanchek said. "We lived up to the (Michi- gan) tradition. It was an awesome swim for Peter (Vanderkaay). He made it look easy." Later that night, the 400-meter medley relay team of Chris DeJong, Tarwater, Christian Van- derkaay and Ketchum qualified for the event finals and displayed a strong resolve in finishing eighth. "The goal in the relay was to make it into finals, and we did," Urbanchek said. "The water was See TANKERS, Page 2B M BASEBALL Back at The Fish, Blue rolls By Matt Venegoni Daily Sports Writer Penn got behind batters in almost every inning, failing to throw first-pitch strikes. But Penn was able to battle back and get out of potential jams. "He wasn't mavbe ham ash usual. b~I ut I wasn't x.:.:,. ,. . .:._.;_ :;. ,. ....._ ......:.:... .. .. .,.,....... _.... (lneninp, 17av weekend started a little later