20A - The Michigan Daily - SportsTuesday - September 7, 2004 Willis misses 1,500m finals by 0.2 seconds By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer Nick Willis crossed the finish line in the Olympic semifinals for the 1,500-meter run and knew immedi- ately that he had not made the finals. He didn't need the scoreboard to tell him that Kamal Boulahfane from Algeria had sprinted by him just split seconds before to take the fifth, and final, qualifying spot. He didn't need anyone to tell him that his heat ran the race a full five seconds slower than the first heat and therefore wouldn't get one of the extra qualifying spots. And he certainly didn't need anyone to tell him that he had missed his goal of qualifying for the Olympic finals by just one-fifth of a second. One-fifth of a second after almost a mile race. Willis is a Michigan junior track star who holds the school record for the 3,000-meter run. But he was running for his native New Zealand in the Olympics and finished the semifinal race in sixth place with a time of 3:41.46. The top five racers from each heat, plus the next two overall, were able to advance to the Olympic finals. "This race was basically a sprint from 800 meters out," Willis said. "So, I ran a 1:48 for the last 800. And I just got beat out. The three guys who were ahead of me got first, third and fourth (in the finals). I was obviously pretty disappointed right at the end, but, looking back on it, I was pretty satisfied." After the race, Willis collapsed on the track, exhausted. He spent the next few minutes curled up in the fetal position, throwing up. It was a big change from the quarterfinal race two days earlier. "The first race went really well, and I couldn't believe how easy it felt," Willis said. "I was just smil- ing across the finish line and was thinking 'Wow, this is the Olympics. That wasn't too bad.' It gave me a lot of confidence going into the semifinals, but then I didn't recover as well as I had expected." Blue drops 21 shots a on St. Francis in win By Anne Uible Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING --Opportunity could have been the name of the game Sunday when the Michigan men's soc- cer team played St. Francis College at the Michigan State Invitational. The Wolverines had 21 shots on goal. 17 more than the Red Flash. However, the team was able to notch just two goals. One of them surprisingly came from defender Chris Glinski, who scored the second goal in the 2-0 victory. The game marked the Wolverines' third shutout of the season, improving their record to 3-0. Senior goalkeeper Joe Zawacki posted the save for the game. The Wolverines attacked the Red Flash aggressively right from the start of the game. In the first 30 minutes, Michi- gan had three clear shots on goal. In the 33rd minute. senior forward Mychal Turpin broke away from his defender and ran the ball down the right side of the field. With an open lane to the net, St. Francis goalkeeper Simon Fox came out of the net in an effort to stop the threat.Turpin crossed the ball to fresh- man striker Tolu Olowolafe, who fired a shot into the open net and gave the Wol- verines their first goal. "I was really pleased wvith Turpin's performance," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "He's just dangerous out on the field. He really pulled apart the St. Francis defense." While the Red Flash played a strong defensive game, they found themselves in a tough position after a red card was given to their key offensive player, Scott Thompson, less than a minute into the first half after he roughly pushed soph- omore defender Kevin Hall in pursuit of the ball. "I think it hurt them when they got the red card so early in the game," senior captain Matt Niemeyer said, "They are a hard-working team and they tried to play along. They got a couple of good chances on us and kept us on our toes. It was good for us defensively to work on playing against a counter." Glinski scored the Wolverines' second goal in the 75th minute, when he headed the ball into the net off of a corner kick. Junior defender Ryan Sterba serviced the ball to the far post, finding Glinski for the shot. Glinski sent the ball back across the net, banking it off the left post for the goal. St. Francis was unsuccessful in breaking down the Michigan defense for the remainder of the game. Burns was encouraged by the num- ber of opportunities the team had to shoot on net, but was slightly disap- pointed by the team's failure to finish with more goals. "I think we are able to get in behind other teams' defenses," Burns said. "It is very tough to defend when you are fac- ing your own goal. As a defender, you always want your back at your own goal so you can keep everything in front of you. We are a dangerous team in that sense. Yet, we are not finishing when we get those chances in behind defenses, slotting ball back across and serving balls into players that are making good runs. The finishing leaves a lot to be desired right now." The game Sunday marked the Wol- verines' third shutout win of the season. On Saturday Michigan beat Western Illinois 1-0 in overtime. Last weekend, the team beat No. 10 Connecticut 1-0 in an exciting season opener. "Defensively we have guys that take pride in working hard and getting a shut- out no matter what it takes," Niemeyer said. "We have to keep that attitude up. We have a team that works hard across the board this year. We have to keep that blue-collar attitude up." The Wolverines return to Ann Arbor this weekend for their first two home games of the season. Michigan will face off against Dayton at 7 p.m. Fri- day at Saline High School and will host Detroit at 5 p.m. on Sunday at the Var- sity Soccer Field. Michigan's Nick Willis came up short in the 1,500-meter semifinals in the Olympics for his native New Zealand. Willis was sick for the first three days of the Olym- pics. He had a bacterial nasal infection that caused him to miss the opening ceremony, forced him to miss a couple days of practice, and kept him awake for a couple of days. Willis insisted that he was at full strength by the time the racing began. "The day we started racing, that's when, for me, the Olympics really started," Willis said. "Just walk- ing out into the stadium was the biggest adrenaline rush. And then we started having fun. I was feeling 110 percent. I just might have been lacking a little bit of training. But my health was fine." Willis missed some practice time in Athens, but he had worked very hard the previous three weeks. At the end of July, he ran in a race in Belgium and then went to Zurich, Switzerland, for another race the next week. While in Belgium, Willis actually broke his personal record in the 800-meter run with a time of 1:45.54. He showed up to Athens feeling great, but he said that the 11 days leading up to the race were very stressful, mostly because he was sick. After narrowly missing the finals, Willis said that he was disappointed because his aim was to make the final. He said that going into the race he thought he had a 50-50 chance of making it. "But I'm really happy with how it ended up, and I think it will help me this year," Willis said. "Now the hunger is right there and I'm back in training again. If it had gone extremely well, then I might have just been like, 'That's the end of that what is there to train for now,' you know." Willis took eight days off from racing and practice immediately following the race. He spent the time enjoying Athens and recovering from the stress of racing. He has since returned to Ann Arbor and has spent the last week hanging out with the friends that he hasn't seen for a while and training once again. He said that he's going to take it easy getting back into cross country season. Willis said that he will get back into an intense training schedule, but will probably not compete again until the Big Ten Championships at the end of October. "Mentally, I need the break," Willis said. A break that was caused by and will certainly be longer than one-fifth of a second. RYINW EINER/ DiIly Michigan senior Mychal Turpin set up a goal and led the Wolverines to a 2-0 win over St. Francis College on Saturday. Come Check Us Out!! First Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor 1432 Washtenaw (between South U and the Rock) __ Fellowship, Fun, Musk, and Meaning, learning & service, munchies & morel 662-4466 see our web page for details: www.firstpresbyterian.org/campmin.htm A'an Arbw CIBA FreshLook Dimensions