The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 20, 2004 - 3 Duffers score four sub -par rounds By Seth Gordon Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's golf team is finally starting to see red. , After tallying just eight individual rounds below par for the entire 2003- 2004 season, the Wolverines recorded five this weekend at the Northern Inter- collegiate tournament at the University of Wisconsin. Sophomore Kevin Dore and junior Christian Vozza each fin- ished one-under par to lead Michigan to a sixth-place team finish out of 13 team. The duo tied for seventh-place individu- ally. The performance was quite a step up for the Wolverines, who finished 13th out of 14 teams in their own tournament last week. "It's definitely a good sign with two of our guys in the top 10 individually and under par for the tournament," Michi- gan coach Andrew Sapp said. "Basical- ly, we needed a little more consistency and our third and fourth players to bring their scores down. With two kids in the top 10, we would hope to finish in the top-three as a team, not top-six. But, there were a lot of positives to take away from this week." Dore and Vozza provided three of Michigan's five rounds under par and both had a chance to win the tourna- ment heading into the last round. Dore was five-under par before teeing off yes- terday. He carded an opening-round 70 and followed it up with a season-best 69 in the second. But Dore could not find his rhythm in the final round and his four-over 76 dropped him out of conten- tion. "I am proud of the way I played - I played solid," Dore said. "I gave myself a lot of chances, which was why I was under par. On Sunday, I was disappoint- ed because I had a chance to make a run at the title, and I didn't quite make it." Vozza opened the tournament with a 75 before scorching the University Ridge Golf Course with a 68 in the second round. Vozza continued his hot play in the final round and was tied for the lead at four- under par after 14 holes. But Vozza came undone with a bogey and double-bogey on his final two holes to finish in seventh. "After my first round, I was consis- tent, hit lots of greens and got a rhythm going," Vozza said. "Unfortunately, I lost it at the end." In the team competition, Sapp was looking to sophomore Matt McLaugh- lin, freshman Brian Ottenweller and junior Mark McIntosh to turn in solid scores for the Wolverines' third and fourth slots. However, all three strug- gled to turn in low numbers, finishing in 33rd, 54th and 68th, respectively. Fifth-year senior Rob Tighe turned in an impressive 16th-place performance while competing as an unattached indi- vidual. Tighe totaled a three-over par 54-hole total and carded the last two of Michigan's five red numbers, opening and closing the tournament with 71s on the par-72 course. Because Tighe com- peted as an individual, his scores could not be counted toward Michigan's total. Sapp was impressed with his perfor- mance nonetheless. "Rob fired two 71s on the weekend - that's spectacular," Sapp said. "His 77 in the second round was a bit unlucky, but overall he did an excellent job this weekend." I. U T-SHIRT PRINTERY A2'S FINEST & FASTEST PRINTED & EMBROIDERED TEES, SWEATS, CAPS, TEAM SHIRTS, SHORTS -UM PO#S ACCEPTED-- -CALL FOR OUR LOW PRICE QUOTE *-DAY TURNAROUND TEL. 994-1367 adrianstshirts.com IA1KEFOREST Ann Arbor's Best Public Championship Golf Course Twilight $20/W Cart Daily after 3:30PM Ilk !ny ntfn prrmi Frfis Advice for America's youth : Pick up the kicking tee Dear youth of America, My name is Gennaro Filice fan of college football. I write concern for the future of every sixth day of the week during the fall sea- son. And I'd like to give a message to all y ou youn- gins w ith pigskin passion and dreams of Saturday afternoon heroics: Please concentrate on the fdtbol aspects of football. We've reached a sad Th state in college football where the oddly even six- and I am an avid to you with great GENNARO FRICE e SportsMonday Column point drive is common and teams have to scheme for two possessions when facing a 10-3 deficit. The letter P' in the acronym 'PAT' now stands for "possibility," not "point." That 20-yard chip shot that used to be the icing on the proverbial touch- down cake has quickly turned stale. And this dis- crepancy in one of football's most straightforward plays has had a broad effect on the game we love. Announcers hate having to retract their spur- of-the-moment "tie ballgame" calls. Casual fans can't handle losing their bathroom/snack break that used to come when the point was guaranteed. And my cohorts and I (the diehard fans) are tired of having our hard-earned touchdown celebrations cut short by some dude who can't bench the bar. Field goal kicking has been no better. Thirty- yard attempts have been hooked and sliced worse than a U.S. player's Titleist in the Ryder Cup, 40-yard tries have become wishful thinking and 50-yard attempts are now laughable. The current college kicker seems to struggle so much with the three-pointer - even from short distances - that he may as well have sported the red, white and blue on the hardcourt in Athens. This trend is sickening. Oregon State's Alexis Serna, Northwestern's Brian Huffman, LSU's Ryan Gaudet ... More kickers have made national headlines in the first three weeks of this fall than in most entire sea- sons of the past - and it ain't for splitting the uprights. What happened to the days when Florida State kicker Scott Bentley graced the cover of Sports Illustrated, kickers like Kansas State alum Mar- tin Gramatica were "automatica" and Kathy Ire- land was a symbol for consistency in "Necessary Roughness" - the days when college kickers were glorified, not vilified. What happened to Mr. Reliable - the steady- footed, single-digited 120-pounder whose pre- pubescent face exuded confidence and assurance through his low-riding, unnecessarily thick single- bar facemask. The player whose foot was worth its weight in gold? Our game features many superstars in those sexy specialty positions, but we greatly lack play- ers who can boot the ball with any accuracy. For every consistent kicker like Ohio State's Mike Nugent, there's at least five Scott Norwoods out there. And "wide right" - which used to be Florida State's signature moment - has become a national phenomenon. Has football begun losing its best legs to the increasingly popular sport of soccer? Should kickers ditch the soccer style kick and return to the flat-toe shoe, straight on approach? Have col- lege kickers lost their legendary poise and ability to handle the most pressure-packed situations? Did the NCAA thin down the distance between uprights without letting us know? Whatever the problem is, we, the dedicated fol- lowers of America's Saturday afternoon obses- sion, look to you, our country's aspiring athletes, for assistance. Lower our heart rates, give us back our hair and stop the destruction of innocent head- sets belonging to head coaches around the country - become a kicker. High school quarterbacks, ditch the head cheer- leader for a kicking tee. Linebackers, trade in that intimidating facemask visor for a right-footed soc- cer cleat (or no shoe if you desire the old school bare-foot approach). O-linemen ... well, you guys were put there for your deficiency in coordination, so stay put. There are too many kickers in college football who can't boot the ball further than Lou Piniella can boot his hat. There are too many kickers who display less accuracy than a government survey. And, sadly enough, there are way too many kick- ers who can't chip the ball twenty yards through an 18-foot, six-inch space. Please help college football fans, kiddies. Drop your ego and pick up a kicking tee. Sincerely, Gennaro A. Filice IV AP PHOTO Before nailing a 50-yard game-winning kick, Tennessee's James Wilholt missed a huge PAT. Gennaro Filice can be reached at gfilice@umich.edu I I r. p. At Ernst & Young the climb starts here. You've just completed four years of college and the last thing you want to do is end up in a mindless job. At Ernst & Young we challenge our employees from the start and then encourage them to grow throughout their career. 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