BRUCK'S LUCK Gymnast Lindsey Bruck counted on her lucky bathmat again this past weekend at NCAAs. PAGE 6B 'M' NINE SPLITS WITH ILLINI Jim Brauer was one of the few bright spots this weekend for the Michi- gan baseball team, which split its series against Illinois. PAGE 5B THE SPORTSMONDAY COLUMN J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH: Looks back on his four years at Michigan and what he leamed about love. SP PAGE 3B TSA April 19, 2004 SECTION B dbe fiftd tm]DaUv Ray of Light Team fails to make Super Six, but Ray wins national title on uneven bars By Melanie Kebler Daily Sports Writer LOS ANGELES - The mood Saturday 1 night before the NCAA women's gymnastics individual event finals was light. In warmups, Michigan junior Elise Ray played tag with i members of the UCLA team on the floor mat,t and coaches and competitors from all teams chatted freely. It was a stark difference from the atmos-t phere on Thursday, when the Wolverines com-t peted in the preliminaries, hoping to qualifyi for the Super Six team competition the follow- ing day. Michigan drew the most difficult rota-l tion for the second meet in a row, and it failed, to qualify in the preliminary meet that featured1 perennial powerhouses UCLA, LSU, Utah and t Alabama.; The disappointment of Thursday was- for- gotten momentarily as Michigan cheered onj teammates Ray and Lindsey Bruck. Both competed in the balance beam event final. Ray - who was the event's national champi- on in 2002 - led off the event and scored a 9.900, which was good enough to tie fori third. Bruck followed up with a solid 9.850z performance, which earned her a tie for sixth place. Ray also qualified for the uneven bars, an event she excelled at during the regular season despite having just recovered from a shoulder injury the year before. She earned a 10.0 on the event at the Big Ten Championships, and in the NCAA event finals, she nearly replicated that result. After adding a more complicated dismount to her routine, Ray performed flaw- lessly, and half of the judges gave her 10.0 scores. Her final averaged score was a 9.975, good enough to earn Ray her third National Championship in four years. "This means a lot to me because I had to sit out last year," Ray said. "I didn't like it all Fri- day sitting in the stands. I'm glad I can end on this note." Bar scores weren't nearly so high for Michi- gan on Thursday night. The team tallied scores of 9.700 and 9.750, and there deductions were taken because of steps during landings. Ray's 9.925 perform- ance anchored the rotation and allowed the Wolverines to total a 49.025 on the event. But while the Wolverines struggled on bars, Alaba- ma and Utah were surging. Both teams boasted AP PHOTO large followings in Pauley Pavilion, which shouted "Roll Tide Roll!" and "U-T-A-H - Utah!" after almost every performance. "We made our routines, but we counted so many deductions on dismounts that it just kind of deflated us," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. Michigan had a decent start on floor, earn- ing a 49.225 total. The team tried to continue to build momentum on the vault. Sophomore Jenny Deiley's 9.900 lead the team, and the Wolverines compiled a 49.150 score. After two events, Michigan trailed second-place Utah by just a few tenths of a point. Defend- ing champion UCLA had jumped out to an early lead with a two-event total of 99.000. But then Michigan had difficulty on the bars. As a result, the Wolverines needed an exem- plary score on their fourth and final rotation to get past the Utes and the Crimson Tide for second or third place. "I thought that we came out and did the best job that we could on floor and vault," Plocki said. "I thought we had a lot of momentum going in to bars. We just kind of lost our momentum on bars." Unfortunately, the Wolverines ended the night on the balance beam, an event that is nerve-wracking enough by itself without any added pressure that comes with the last event. And the pressure piled on even higher after sophomore Becca Clau- son fell off the beam during Michi- gan's third routine. Dei- ley, senior Calli Ryals and Ray anchored the lineup without a fall, but small mistakes again added up to a lower score than the Wolverines needed. They were the kind of small mistakes that Alabama and Utah just weren't making. "We didn't have to count any falls on beam but we had a couple of wobbles," Plocki said. "I just think we didn't keep our momen- tum going." Failing to qualify for the Super Six for just the third time in the last 10 years meant that Michigan found itself in an unfamiliar position - sitting in the stands, watching as UCLA cruised to its fourth team national championship in five years. "Overall, we did well," Plocki said. "But this is a national championship, and you have to do great." Assistant coach Scott Sherman emphasized the significance of the missed landings that plagued the Wolverines. "Good teams make their routines," Sher- man said. "Great teams make their rou- tines and stick their landings. We didn't stick our landings." Luckily the Wolverines didn't have to end on a bad note. "Not making the Super Six was a disap- pointment for our whole team, and to be able to come back in the finals was great," Plocki said. "For Elise to get another national cham- pionship was fantastic. This ends it all on a positive note." Triple Crown Junior Elise Ray has done it all. In addition to winning an NCAA title in each of her years of eligibility at Michigan, Ray was captain of the 2000 U.S. Olympic gymnastic team. 2001: All-Around title Just a freshman, Ray earned the NCAA All- Around title. Her 39.625 total was the highest all- around score ever achieved by a Michigan gymnast. This came a year after being the cap- tain of the U.S. Olympic team. 2002: Balance beam Ray won Michigan's first ever NCAA balance beam title with her score of 9.925. The then-soph- omore beat out two-time defending beam champi- on Theresa Kulikowski (Utah) and '99 beam champion Andree Pick- ens (Alabama). 2004:. Uneven bars Yesterday, Ray added another NCAA title to her growing list of gym- nastic accomplishments - this time in the uneven bars. Her nearly flawless performance earned her an almost-perfect 9.975. Junior Elise Ray celebrates her NCAA individual title on the uneven bars. Blue topples Hoosiers in OT for CWPA title Wolverines now focused on getting back to Final Four By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer For a few key moments yesterday at Canham Natatorium, it seemed like the Collegiate Water Polo Association Western Division Championship might slip away from No. 8 Michigan. But every game against rival No. 10 Indiana feels that way. f. When it was all said and done, the game ended just like so many games before - the Wolverines (8-0 CWPA, 28-8 overall) edged out a 5-4 over- time victory, and their third straight Divi- sion Championship. "I always think that we're Michigan and they're Indiana - we just always beat them," junior Jo Antonsen said. "It's just something we have to do. It's not an option to lose." The Wolverines can now expect a few days of practice before heading to Buck- nell, Pa., for the Eastern Championship, where they could face the Hoosiers again. If they can survive that bracket, the Wolverines will advance to their second Final Four in school history. Michigan is now 15-0-1 against Indiana since becoming a varsity program, but more than a handful of those wins have been a little too close for comfort, much like yesterday's matchup. It took a full six- minute overtime period and part of a sud- den-death period before a winner emerged this time around. But 42 seconds into that sudden-death frame, junior Meg Knudtsen finally broke the stalemate, scoring just inside the left post from four meters out. Senior Julie Nisbet drew an ejection from her Indiana defender in front of the cage, giving the Wolverines a short six-on-five advantage. "Megan (Hausmann) made an awesome pass down, and I just shot it near side," Knudtsen said. "If I'd have missed it, I probably would have been in pretty big trouble. It's a good thing it went in." The goal was just Knudtsen's 11th of the year, a small number for a player on a team that normally bulldozes through its competition. Michigan scored 18 and 19 goals in its two victories on Saturday over Salem International and Washington and Jefferson en route to yesterday's finals. "Julie did what we asked of her," Michi- gan coach Matt Anderson said. "Margaret Knudtsen decided, 'I'm going to be the player that's going to step up. They don't think I will.' She rammed it home." The Hoosiers had their chances to shut the door on the Wolverines. With seven seconds remaining in regulation, Indiana sophomore Bridget McKeon managed to SOFTBALL Defense puts clamps down on Hawkeyes By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer IOWA CITY - Michigan softball coach Carol Hutchins constantly explains to her players the importance of defense. At practice, they work hard on it, and she tells the team regularly that defense wins games. Yesterday's double-header at Iowa was a perfect example of this maxim. No. 9 Michigan won both of its games by a score of 3-1, but the outcome could have been different had it GAME 1 not been for a handful of spec- tacular defensive plays. MICHIGAN "Our defense always has lw amazing plays, and they always GA 2 make it look easy," junior pitch- AME er Nicole Motycka said. "They are the key to our success." In the top of the second inning, senior captain Angie Churchill made the play of the day when she dove to her right to snag a line drive out of the air. Churchill had just come into the game to replace injured shortstop Jessica Merchant, a key player for the Wolverines. It was the first strong defensive play Churchill made, but was not the only significant play she made this weekend. In the bottom of the first inning, Churchill came to the plate with runners at the corners for her first at-bat of the day. With two outs, the Hawkeyes intentionally walked senior slugger Jennifer Olds to get to Churchill. She made them pay, hitting a sin- gle into left field and scoring the first run of the game. The Wolverines never trailed again. TONY DING/Daily The Wolverines celebrate their overtime victory over Indiana in the CWPA title game with a rendition of "The Victors." freshman Shana Welch's two goals earlier in the game. The Wolverines were trailing control of the game until Antonsen's equalizer. ________________~ ~ ;..~ I