12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 14, 2005 Erdman returns from oot injury By Chastity L. Rolling Daily Sports Writer After recovering from a foot injury from earlier this year, junior Katie Erdman is back and ready to run for the Michigan women's track and field team. Erdman, who finished 11th at the Big Ten Champi- onships and earned a second team All-Big Ten hon- ors for the second year in a row, suffered a stress fracture in her left foot following the cross country season this fall. "After cross country, I trained for indoor (track) with a sore foot," Erdman said. "I kind of expected that - transitioning from cross country to track. So I ran on it for three weeks, but it wasn't getting any better." Though she was having problems with her foot, she didn't know exactly what was wrong. All December, her left foot bothered her, and she could not train to her full potential. And then she was diagnosed with a stress fracture in her right leg at the end of Janu- ary. Upon finding out exactly what the problem was, Erdman changed her training program from running distance races to bicycling and a few pool runs. "The purpose of the pool run is that running in the water takes the impact off of running," Erdman said. While injured and unable to train, Erdman focused her energy on getting healthy and supporting her teammates. Even though she could not run herself, she made a conscious effort to support her team- mates though Erdman said that watching her team- mates run was not always easy. She admitted that running is not just a sport to her. "It's a lifestyle," Erdman said. "It's not something I do for an hour a day. I eat (healthy) so that I can run well. I go to sleep early so that I can run well. I lift weights so that I can run well. So, when you take away running, I'm only left with pieces." "(My teammates) are not random athletes, they are my friends," Erdman said. "Sure, I would rather run in a meet than be on the sidelines, but my natural (tendency) is to support my friends." Erdman said that conversations with her team- mates about their injuries helped her to recover. "Most of my teammates have gone through inju- ries, and, because of that, they can say, 'Katie, I know it sucks right now, but you will get through this,' " Erdman said. Erdman ran her first 800-meter race of the outdoor season at the Florida State Relays, and she finished in 2:12. She also contributed to a meet record when she ran the second leg for the Michigan 4x800-meter team at the Blue Devil Invitational last week. The team clocked in at a time of 8:42. "I'm glad that I'm not using eligibility," Erdman Completing a Michigan is . no easy task for 'M' runners By Ian Robinson Daily Sports Writer In men's track and field coach Ron Warhurst's office on the upper floor of Weidenbach Hall, it is difficult to find any empty space on the walls. There is so little room on the walls - which are covered with plaques honoring All-Americans and national champi- ons - that a picture of 1984 Olympic bronze-medalist Brian Diemer lies on the back of a chair, waiting to be hung. Each of the athletes whose names appear on the plaques and most other distance runners who have run for Michigan during Warhurst's tenure have endured his famous grueling training run: the Michigan. "Incoming freshmen are scared to death the first day we do a Michigan because they have heard about it," Warhurst said. "It is probably one of the most challenging things we do, but the kids love it." Completing a Michigan entails running a 4:14 mile on the track and then going for a 4:32 mile loop around the athletic campus. The athletes then return to the track to run 1,200 meters in 3:04 and then repeat their loop around the campus. After return- ing to the track, the runners complete 800 meters in 2:04 and complete the loop one more time. After the loop, the runners finish the drill by running 400 meters in 0:53. Warhurst can adjust the workout by adding a half-mile to the loop or swapping the placement of the 400 and 1,200-meter runs. The Michigan was developed in 1979 by modifying one of Oregon track coach Bill Dillinger's workouts, which involves a 1,200-meter run on a track. Under Dillinger, the runners would run three miles to a park where they would run one additional mile. Then, the athletes would run the three miles back to the track. After hearing about the Oregon workout, Warhurst changed the run to follow the struc- ture of a typical cross-country race. 0 TONY DING/Daily Michigan Junior Rondell Ruff couldn't complete a full Michigan until this year. TONY DING/Daily Michigan junior Katie Erdman finished 11th at the Big Ten Championship and earned second team All Big Ten honors. said. "It's true what they say - one year older, one year stronger. I was encouraged with my times. I mean, I am not expecting to run 2:04 (in the 800- meter race) just yet because I am not 100 percent fit, but my injury is healed." This was not Erdman's first injury. She has also suffered avulsion, where her ligament tore from her bone, a stress fracture in her right leg as well as mild tendonitis and sprains throughout her collegiate car- rier. But this injury was different, because she knew what to expect for recovery. "It just reminded me to take care of my body," Erdman said. "It didn't take much for me to go out of commission I learned that, if I feel any discomfort, stop doing that particular thing." "It combines a lot of different train- ing methods into one," Warhurst said. "It simulates what a race is like. It has an element of a timed run because it is seven miles. It is like a fartlek because you are going fast and slow. It is like an interval session, and it has a little bit of a hill." The effectiveness of the workout is evident in how other schools have copied it. "A lot of college coaches use it," Warhurst said. "A lot of high school coaches use it as well but tweak it for high school kids." THE MICHIGAN WORKOUT If you're an athlete on the Michigan track and field team, you have this workout to look forward to: " Start out by running a 4:14 mile on the track. Warhurst would not identify a single athlete who excels in the Michigan. "Anybody that finishes the workout is the star of the workout," Warhurst said. "When I was young and excited, I would ask the kids to see how fast we could go, but do it more controlled." Many of the athletes cannot com- plete a full Michigan workout until later in their career, if at all. "I did not do a full Michigan until my third year here," junior Rondell Ruff said. Around the track team, the athletes' opinion of the workout varies depend- ing on the individual. "It is one of my most enjoyable workouts," sophomore Nick Wil- lis said. "It fits into the style of run- ner that I am. The harder surface of the road and the track suit me better than the softer surfaces of the golf course." Ruff does not get the same satis- faction out of the Michigan that Wil- lis does. "I hate that workout," Ruff said. "I would rather do a cross country race than the Michigan." The athletes that can complete it realize the magnitude of their achievement. "It is an accomplishment to finish the Michigan," freshman Victor Gras said. * Next, run a 4:32 mile around the athletic campus. " Run a 1,200-meter on the track in 3:04 * One more mile loop around athletic campus in 4:32. *An 800-meter run in 2:04. eAnother mile loop around the athletic campus. *Finish off the workout with a 400 in 0:53 "You only get one chance to make a first impression." Have unwanted - stuff? Movin Out? O/. > Donate it! Look for t e yellow do tion boxes around a us! www.r cycl umich.edu 0 E { in nnr nt Ali +';nmiinhnd nrnronoe onhnnlL- CnaL nn thn I I