The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 3, 2005 - 3B Sometimes fans are just difflcult to understand Senior Amy Schmucker tied a course record on the first day of the Michigan invitational, shooting a 68 on 18 holes. Golfers defend home greens By Max Kardon Daily Sports Writer "The world needs dreamers and the world needs doers and the world needs dreamers that do," - quote posted in the women's golf team's locker room. The Wolverines "did" yesterday - shattering the dreams of the competition with a victory on a hot, cloudless day at the Wolverine Invitational. Although the Wolverines' dreams extend far beyond this tournament, Michigan has now validated its hard work with a glass trophy. The motivational message coach Kathy Teichert posted encouraged the confidence of her squad after the disappointment of consecutive sub-par tournament appear- ances this season. "I think it's better we started slow," senior captain Amy Schmucker said. "We can build momentum all season, rather than coming out hot and burning out in the end." Schmucker scalded the competition in the first round Saturday morning. She tied the U-M Golf Course record of 68 after her first 18 holes, eventually leading Mich- igan to the champion's trophy at its home tournament. Michigan nearly squandered the 10-stroke lead it carried into Sunday's final round, but managed to hold on for the victory. "Ideally, I would have liked to see us win by 20 strokes," Teichert said. "We slipped a little bit in the final round. We played great on Saturday but gave up a lot of strokes on Sunday. I'm not too happy about letting the other teams get so close when we're sitting on a lead like that. We need more consistency around the green because it's the key to victory. These are things to work on, but the bottom line is that we won." Sophomore Lindsay Davis came through in the clutch for Michigan, post- ing a 75 in the final round. Davis held off a storming Southern Methodist University squad that finished 3 strokes behind the Wolverines. Davis's three-round total of 233 was her best showing this season, and it couldn't have come at a better time. With her teammates' performance fall- ing off in the final round, Davis's strong outing retained many lost strokes. Michi- gan edged out Southern Methodist's team total 905-908 - a figure that kept Michi- gan ill at ease until the final scores had been posted by the clubhouse. "Yesterday. (Saturday), I felt like I didn't play well, so I put pressure on myself to help out the team," Davis said. "Coach Teichert let me know she needed me to score, but there's no scoreboard out there to let me know where we stand. I knew I had to per- form. The heat made it tough to focus out there, but I managed to hold it together for a pretty solid round." As the teams assembled in the pounding heat by the scoreboard out- side the clubhouse, it was difficult to resist the urge to head inside to the air-conditioned locker room after play had ended. Davis' 75 was the best score posted by Michigan on Sunday, but Schmucker's 54-hole total was good for a second-place medal. Her 222- stroke total was only three behind field leader, Maryland Terrapin Katie Ste- panek. With rounds of 68, 75 and 79, Schmucker said she was disappointed by her performance despite tying the course record on Saturday. "I wish I could have helped a little more on Sunday," Schmucker said. "I guess that 68 was at the front of my mind all week- end, which didn't really help my play. I'm glad we came away with the trophy, but I'm going to need to work hard on my game in the next few weeks." Although Sunday's performance was less than ideal, the Wolverines rounded out their team total with very strong scores. With a disappointing 81 on Sunday, junior Ali Stinson's 227-stroke total was good for a tie for fourth place, and senior Kelly Easton chipped in a career-best 235 despite Sunday's 81 to round out the Wolverines' victory. The Wolverines will have some time to enjoy the victory. They get some well- deserved rest this weekend before heading to Arkansas for the Lady Razorback Invi- tational in two weeks. "We can really use this time to work out the problems that have dogged us," Tei- chert said. "It's a great opportunity to work on our short game and consistency. It's a real luxury to have this extra time. Most importantly, the girls are looking forward to catching up on schoolwork." F ans are so funny. After Saturday's game, a half-dozen Michigan fans sat on the walls outside of Spartan Stadium waiting for their hero: not Chad Henne, not even Mike Hart - who I'm sure all of them were thrilled to see - rather, they searched for Michigan coach Lloyd Carr. That's right, Lloyd Carr - the Athletic Department's most popular target of hate e-mails and firing demands. When Carr walked out of the visiting team's locker room within minutes after Rivas's game-winning field goal, fans sat there, cheering for the coach that had just led their favorite team to a victory in one of the biggest games of the year. "We love you coach!" they screamed. Wha? Are you serious? Where have these fans been for the last three weeks? And where are the doubters now that Michigan is back in the top 25? Last week, I heard Michigan fans calling for Carr's head on a stick. I'm not joking. I heard someone actually say that he wanted Carr dead. It's clear, either there is one extremely fickle group or there are two pretty polarizing contingents of Michigan football fans. "When you lose, you get a lot of criticism, and when you win, you get a lot of praise," cornerback b Leon Hall said about Carr after the game. "So you HER just have to take it as it comes." The Spo The Michigan Daily got scores of e-mails from CoI people who wanted the coach out. They looked past his national championship in 1997 - the first for Michi- gan in the modern era - and generally focused on conserva- tive play calling and the fact that he is 1-3 against Ohio State, 1-3 against Notre Dame and 1-3 in bowl games in the last four years. We received dozens of letters blaming Carr - and not the team's incredible lack of experience - for the program being 2-2 and on the verge of having a losing record for the first time since 1998. The letters were usually long and were often very heated. Here's just a small sampling of some com- ments we received: - "The true failure of this program has always been its coach- ing and its blind loyalty to those coaches." - Pete M., Alum. - "During the last four years, we've gotten into a rut. How do you think it makes us feel when you've barely shown up to the last four Notre Dame, Ohio State and bowl games?" - Nel- son L., Alum. - "It is time to fire 'Loyal' Lloyd Carr. ... I'm tired of this, I'm tired of 9-3 seasons and I'm tired of Conservative Carr." - Jason B., LSA junior. Don't just blame these three. There were plenty more where those came from. Most people complained about Carr being too conservative with his offensive play calling. They said that A RI rt (u he sat on the lead and ran the ball in the second half of Michi- gan's loss to Wisconsin - a loss that dropped the Wolverines out of the top 25 for the first time since 1998. Yesterday, Carr struck back. Chad Henne threw the ball on six of the nine opening-drive plays, including a perfect fade pass to senior co-captain Jason Avant to take a 7-0 lead. And one of the least conservative plays of the drive was a run. On third and five from the 11-yard line, Henne lined up at wide receiver and Carr put freshman Antonio Bass in the backfield. Bass ran the keeper and picked up nine yards and a first down. A quarterback draw when the opposing defense is backed up against its own goal line is riskier than most coaches are willing to be. It's not like this is anything new. Carr's offense has been fairly aggressive all season. Against Notre Dame, the Wolverines threw the ball more than they ran it. Against Eastern Michigan, they put up 55 points. Against Wisconsin, they took the lead with a 49-yard flea-flicker. On the last drive of Saturday's game, Carr ran the ball 13 times in 14 plays; the other snap was a missed field goal attempt. That line might make it seem like Carr was a "con- N servative" play-caller, but the drive went for BERT 50 yards and bled almost six minutes off the sMonday clock. Plus, Carr also went for it on two fourth mn " downs during that drive. If Rivas had made a 27-yard field goal at the end of regulation, everyone would have loved Carr's conservative tendency - because it would have given Michigan State the ball back with just 30 seconds to drive the length of the field. Fans complain that Carr doesn't care about the team. Since his job is secure, they figure that he is content with just going through the motions. I've only covered the team for a month now, but as far as I can tell, that there's no basis behind it. Carr comes into press conferences fum- ing after losses and looking forward after wins. He hides injuries from the media not because it's fun but because it would give the other team a competitive advantage. Carr cares about the team as much as anyone. "Nobody wants to win more than me," Carr said at Big Ten Media Day in August. "Nobody.". And if all that wasn't enough to convince the doubters to quit the fire Lloyd talk, how about this: Bo Schembechler didn't make it to a Rose Bowl until his eighth year with the team. If he were coaching now, would Michigan's ruthless fans have even allowed him to stay that long? - Herbert can be reached at iherbert@umich.edu. DO YOU LIKE ICE HOCKEY? ICE BREAKERS? JOIN DAILY SPORTS, WHERE YOU CAN HAVE BOTH AND MUCH, MUCH MORE. Lai