The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 19, 2004 - 3B Smith goes to Shock in pro draft By Erk Ambinder Daily Sports Writer On the day that would decide her future, outgoing Michigan women's basketball senior Jennifer Smith was at her boyfriend's baseball game, waiting anxiously for the phone call. Smith's cell phone finally rang on Saturday afternoon - it was former teammate Rachel Cortis. Smith's dream had come true. The defending WNBA champion Detroit Shock selected Smith, a Lansing native, in the third round (32nd overall) of the 2004 WNBA Draft. "When people would say, 'What if you got picked up by the Shock?,' I was like, 'No way. That would be impossible because that would be too perfect,' " Smith said. "It really is a perfect situa- tion. It's incredible that I'm playing for such a good team." With almost every player returning from last year's 2003 championship team, Smith's chances of making the Shock's final roster are debatable. At 6- foot-4, Smith played primarily center and forward in her career at Michigan. Shock coach Bill Laimbeer is looking to fill spots at center and power for- ward, and he intends to fill team needs through the draft rather than free agency or trades. Smith was the fourth player selected in the draft by the Shock. Detroit select- ed Iciss Tillis from Duke with its 1lth pick along with Purdue teammates Shereka Wright and Erika Valek with the 13th and 23rd picks overall. She edited me out, but Ifound true love as Daily Sports Editor RYAN WEINER/DIaly The Detroit Shock - the 2003 WNBA champions - came calling for Michigan's Jennifer Smith in the third round of Saturday's WNBA draft. Moments later, the Shock traded Wright and Valek to the Phoenix Mercury for the eighth pick, guard Chandi Jones. But Smith is pretty sure she will remain with the Shock. "(The Shock) called today and want- ed to get my jersey number, so I'm pret- ty confident that I'll stick there," Smith said. "But I know I'll just have to work really hard and prove to them that I belong there." Smith set Michigan's all-time single- season scoring record with 659 points this season, an average of 21.3 points per game that made her the Big Ten Scoring Champion. She earned the Pres- tige Award - Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett's version of Most Valuable Player - for her efforts as a Wolverine this season. She ranks second on Michi- gan's career scoring list with 1,714 points, trailing just Diane Dietz (1978- 82), who totaled 2,066 points. "Nobody is more deserving of this than Jennifer Smith," Burnett said. "She was unbelievable for us this season and posted mind-boggling numbers when you consider our opponents threw a variety of defenses at her this season, including double and triple teams. She worked extremely hard in the offseason and was rewarded with one of the best seasons any Michigan player has put together on both the offensive and defensive ends of the floor." Smith is Michigan's fifth WNBA draftee in the past seven years. She joins former Wolverines Pollyanna Johns, Stacey Thomas, Anne Thorius and Alayne Ingram. Thomas won a title with the Detroit Shock last season. "I'm as excited as I could possibly get," said Smith as she anticipated Laimbeer's congratulatory phone call. "This is probably the best situation that I thought I could be in." N MEN'S TRACK & FIELD Eastern helps M' through season By Phil Kofahl Daily Sports Writer For many schools, their biggest rivals live just down the road only miles away. But for some schools, their neighbors may just be their greatest training partner. The Michigan men's track team has has enjoyed great suc- cess competing and training with the Eastern Michigan track program for decades now. The Wolverines push their MAC neighbors at home and away meets. Eastern Michigan stand- out Jordan Desilets credited his All-American performance at the NCAA Indoor Championships to the support he received from the more than 20 Wolverines who traveled to Arkansas. While the elite men of these two schools took this season off to train for the Olympics, the future stars for both sides took to the track against each other during the Eastern Michi- gan Twilight meet at Olds/Marshall Track in Ypsilanti. Sophomore Andrew Ellerton and senior Joe Baldwin led the Wolverines with their regional qualifying performances in the 800-meter run and long jump, respectively. Ellerton's time of 1:49.05 and Baldwin's leap of 24-feet-4 1/2 were both per- sonal bests and their first victories of the outdoor season. The win for Baldwin was also his first as a Wolverine. The 800-meter run ended up being a Wolverine-Eagle showdown, with nine of the 10 runners wearing green or blue. Junior Rondell Ruff captured third, senior Dan Cooke took seventh and freshman Sebastien Lounis finished ninth to round out Michigan's scoring in the event. Ruff's perform- ance was a best for the season in the 800-meters and a good indicator of his strength. "I feel like I'm there in the strength department," Ruff said. "I've been doing a lot of training, a lot of work in the weight room to get my legs stronger. I'll start doing a lot more speed work towards the end of the season." Ruff will run the 1,200-meter leg in the distance medley relay at the Penn Relays this weekend, and then attempt a Regional Qualifying time in the 1,500-meter run at Ohio State in two weeks. While Ruff used the race for training, Lounis used it to solidify his spot on the team. "I just need to be ready to go out with the front pack and stay with them," Lounis said. "I'm just getting that confi- dence that I need for the rest of the season." Freshman Stann Waithe was Michigan's top sprinter, finish- ing third in the 200-meter dash and fifth in the 400-meter run. Both times were a personal best this season, and great signs of recovery from an injury that cut his indoor season short. "I thought that my 400 could've been better, so I just moved on to the 200," Waithe said. "I got out good in the 200 and finished where I felt I should. The weather was great; it really helped." Michigan also gathered plenty of hardware in the field. Sophomore Adam Kring captured second place in the high jump with a 6-feet-8 jump. Sophomore Spencer Dowdall set a personal best in the pole vault with a second-place perform- ance of 15-feet-7 1/4. J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH The SportsMonday column B y the time I graduated high school, I think I had "asked out" or pursued more than 100 girls. A few of them really stick out in my head. I spent third and fourth grade chasing Erin Jackson around the play- ground, only to have her choose David Griffin - who wasn't athletic enough to chase her anywhere. In seventh grade, I let the preach- er's daughter know of my intention to be her boyfriend. She ended up dat- ing one of my best friends at the time, Doug. I had to hear all about it. Let's just say Doug put good use to his pool table. But no matter how little success I had finding the love of my life during adolescence, I always _ knew things would be I came different in college. campus They would have to be - love, a college girls would be mature and ready for a else. i w J. Brady-sized com- eXperie mitment. Id See I came to this cam- those rl' pus to fall in love, come above all else. I wanted to experience what I'd seen in all those romantic comedies, and it didn't take long to find it after I realized it wasn't anywhere near the dance floor at the frats. Amy I met Amy in the computer lab in South Quad Residence Hall freshman year. She was a real looker. Great smile, hearty laugh. She was full of life, ambitious and intellectually stim- ulating. I was hooked. 1 was in love. Love was everything I always imagined it to be. Love was telling her things after knowing her for two days that I had never told my best friends. Love was listening to every- thing that came out of her mouth, soaking it up to the point it became a part of me. Love was sacrifice, as I continually ignored my obsession with videogames and sports to learn more about her interests. Love was dependence. Love was her calling me a day after leaving for the summer to tell me she missed me already. It was me tearing up when she said it. Love was her crying on the other end of the line a week after we parted for the summer, and me telling her it would be OK. Love was desperate. Love was telling our parents we were staying at friend's' houses and meeting in State College - halfway between our home- towns of Buffalo, N.Y. and Bethesda, Md. - for a night. (Sorry, Mom. Please still come to my graduation!) Love was going biking later that summer on a bike that was way too small for me. Love was her taking care of me all weekend because I broke my nose on that bike ride. Love was her wiping pus off of my nose one minute and kissing me the next. Love was considering stunting my growth at the Daily by covering women's basketball instead of hockey my sophomore year, so that I could have more time to spend with her. Most of all, love was fleeting. I realized this standing near the cor- ner of Packard and Division one night at the beginning of sophomore year, bawling my eyes out because she decided she didn't love me anymore. I realized it when I left her voicemails minutes later and said things I never thought I'd say about her. 1 t it va en "Of Love was suddenly painful and exposing, and after one relationship, I had two scars: one on my busted nose and another on my heart. Having accepted that my nose would always bear a scar from Amy, I had to find a way to start healing the other. A few days after the break-up became official, I strapped on a shirt and tie and marched into 420 Maynard St. on a mission. I was going to cover hockey; I had to. The editors at the time took a chance on me. Maybe they could see how desperate I was for something new to love. Epiphany Beginning the year in a sophomore slump, I forced myself to pour my love into the Daily. From the surface, the sports section was a bunch of dudes who loved sports - sweet! But they were committed dudes. Talented dudes. Dudes who cared enough about the paper to give up the traditional col- lege experience. I remember the day I fell in love with the Daily and sports journalism like it was yesterday. It was a Novem- ber Saturday night in o this Omaha, Neb., covering o fall in the hockey team's series we all against the Mavericks - inted to nothing like CCHA hock- nedhato ey to make a man weak in the knees. After inter- in all views that night, I realized mantic that I was born to be a ties. sportswriter. Born to be on the road with the team, chronicling its agony and ecstasy. Born to bring athletes to life. Born to tell their stories. Born to make them human for you, the fan. As the scar on my nose became less glaring, my other scar began to do the same. I was in love all over again. Love became an entirely new entity for me. Love became a battle between the Daily and my family's wish for me to get a degree in something practical. Love was crying myself to sleep a day after I realize returning from that was bor fateful trip to Omaha sports because my mother - Born to b always firm in her con- ro victions - told me that roa 1 if I didn't pass Calculus team.M 3 (a pre-req for my Sta- bring a tistics major), she tol would make me quit the Daily. I was flirting with failing, and I was scared - as scared as I'd ever been of anything. Love was considering dropping my financial ties to my family and taking out loans for the rest of my years so that I could continue working at the Daily and major in something less practical. Love was "cowboying up" like a true Red Sox fan. I hired a tutor and passed the class. Love was the feeling of seeing that "P" on Wolverine Access, knowing that my dream of running the sports section and covering Michigan football was still alive. Love was making sure that I didn't waste another minute on this campus, and that meant spending every minute at the Daily. As Managing Sports Editor in 2003, I learned more about love than I ever could have in a relationship with a girl. I learned about selfless love. It was my job to put above my own desires the section as a whole and each of its 35 to 40 staffers. I gave every- thing I had to the Daily, but what it gave back was so much more. Love waswatching Gennaro Filice, Daniel Bremmer, Ellen McGarrity and many others grow as writers and edi- tors and fall in love with the Daily under my tutelage. Love was bringing my best and most real friend, Jim Weber, back to the Daily because I knew he needed it as much, if not more, than I did. Love was passionate. Love was sending portfolios to every newspaper in the country, begging for a chance to write. Love was screaming like a school girl on my porch when I got the call from the Tampa (Fla.) Tribune in December of my junior year saying they wanted me to come down for a few months and write some sports. Love was the relief in knowing I had my foot in the door. Most of all, love was reciprocal. The movie "Moulin Rouge," while being cheesy, teaches a timeless les- son, one that I only could have learned at the Daily: "The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." The last love Less than two weeks until gradua- tion, love is uplifting and depressing at the same time. Love is having slumber parties with Peter Janowski, a.k.a. "The Dude." Love is calling Eric Ambinder at 3 p.m. Friday, pulling his studious butt out of the UGLi and taking him to Dominic's. Love is yelling "BAY- BAY!" to Mark Bonges as many times as possible because when I'm intern- ing at the San Antonio Express-News this summer, nobody will understand the power of a "BAY-BAY!" Love is singing Backstreet Boys' "I want it that way" with Naweed Sikora Friday at Mitch's karaoke night. Love is doing everything I can to know that when I leave Ann Arbor at ( that I the end of May, there will to bea be no doubt thatI did it vrlter. big these four years. Son the Love is sitting with Jim Eh the at China Gate a week ago orn to and talking about why Mletes graduating from college is so much worse than e from high school. It's try- ing not to tear up thinking about how it's almost over LoVe is seeing Bob Hunt in the Union, won- dering if I'll ever see him again and giving him a bear-hug. Love is uncer- tainty and instability in the face of an intimidating future. This is it for us - me, the crazy sports columnist and you, the reader who somehow bears with me for 35 love-filled inches even when you have doubts about where I'm going. Some of you are lucky enough to be coming back next fall. Here's a tidbit from an old-timer: Love can be experienced in many ways. Make sure you give somebody or some place your love before you go. Thanks to Mom, Dad, Granny and Granddaddy, who loved me and taught me how to love. I can be reached at bradymcc@umich.edu. AndI'm out. i vii, .WOMEN'S TRACK & FIELD Split squad builds up confidence By Gabdela D'Jan Daily Sports Writer If no one on the Michigan women's track and field team wins an event, does it mean the meet was unsuccessful? No, especially if the meet is non-scoring. In fact, at the Eastern Michigan Twi- light, even though not a single event was won, the depth of the program revealed itself. With two meets scheduled for the same weekend, the team split: Nine members went to Ypsilanti to face regional competitors, while the other group headed to Walnut Lake, Calif., for the Mt. SAC Relays to face collegiate, sponsored and international competition - there were even runners hailing everywhere from Brazil to Slovenia. However, it was at the local meet that less-worked athletes excelled, gaining experience and confidence in the lime- light. Competing against the finest from Central Michigan and Eastern Michi- gan, senior Annessa Schnur's debut per- formance in her outdoor season was notable. Her event-filled weekend con- sisted of a personal best and third place finish in the high jump (5-feet-4 1/4), an 11th place finish in the long jump (17-feet-3 1/2), and a 22nd place finish in the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 16.03 seconds. "I was pleased with the high and long jumps," Schnur said. "The running events weren't so great. But then again, these were the first races of my outdoor season, so I think it's still a good start." to competing in the heptathlon, which is comprised of seven events. After receiv- ing a cortisone shot in the knee in December, Schnur has had an easy recovery and is eager to compete in all seven events next weekend. Schnur finds the time commitment more strenuous than the physical demands: "It is difficult in the sense that you are expected to be in two dif- ferent places in the same time." Freshman Jackie Gaydos did not have the same problems - as she competed in just the 1,500-meter run - but she did find similar success as Schnur. Gay- dos tied her best time in the event (4:32.83) and finished fourth. She needs to drop three seconds from her time in order to make the cut for regionals. "This meet was a lot more relaxed," said Gaydos, who ran at the Eastern meet. "The competition wasn't as good, and we didn't bring the full team, but for the people who competed, it was a good meet." Schnur found it slightly challenging not having Michigan coaches present at the Ypsilanti eventh- especially in the jumping events, where form is such an integral part of the sport. The coaching staff accompanied the other group of athletes to the West Coast. Although Michigan had not competed in the Mt. SAC Relays for the past two years, it was impera- tive that the team send as many sen- iors as possible to this meet. With graduation on May 1, the senior s " 1 for that weekend, and will just have three more opportunities to qualify for their events in the NCAA Region- al Championships on May 28. Juniors Andrea Parker and Ana Gjes- dal posted regional qualifying times in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. Parker clocked in with a time of 10:42 for fifth place, and Gjesdal finished shortly after in eighth place at 10:44. Sprinters and throwers also competed. The Wolverines will divide up again and head to Des Moines, Iowa, and Philadelphia, Pa., for the final round of relays. r.. .... .. -. . .--. - -- ----.. 15 $Every Tuesday I O FF College Night! aOn Hour 1 Soak for TWO !ยข( I Sunday-Thursdayx Not valid on holidays or weekends. I Not valid with any other offer.Coupon required. Expires 5-15-04. Must be 18 with ID. 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