6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 10, 2006 No upset, but Rowers still split . By Mark Giannotto Daily Sports Writer Being talented is one thing, but being great is a whole new ball- game. This is the dilemma the No. 10 Michigan women's rowing team faces after they split a two-race series with No. 17 Tennessee and No. 3 Southern Cal on Saturday in Columbus. The Wolverines beat the Vol- unteers but fell short against the Trojans. It marks the third time this spring that Michigan has fallen to a top-10 team. "I'd like to win a race like the Southern Cal one," Michigan coach Mark Rothstein said. "We need to start winning races like that." In the morning session, the Wolverines' first varsity eight cruised to a five-second victory over Tennessee, finishing with a time of 6:24.78. The second var- sity eight followed that up with a win of their own to cap off the team victory. In the afternoon session, the first varsity improved upon its morning win with a time of 6:23.24. But it wasn't enough, and the Trojans edged them by half a boat length. Southern Cal crossed the finishing line in 6:21.40. 40 ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily The varsity eight were instrumental in Michigan's split with Tennessee and Southern Cal this weekend. DAVID s I UMN Senior Shana Welch scored 15 goals in three games this weekend. She Is now the second- leading point scorer in Michigan history. Offense the name of the game for 'M' But just like in the Tennessee race earlier in the day, the Wol- verines' second varsity eight rose to the occasion, edging Southern Cal by nearly three seconds. "We raced well in the morn- ing," Rothstein said. "The second eight had a great day. I'm really encouraged by their improve- ment." The Wolverines' upset hopes were ended when the first varsity four lost to the Trojans by over ten seconds. Michigan lost many of its top rowers from a year ago, but it has downplayed any sort of rebuild- ing theme. The team has shown the ability to beat good teams like Tennes- see and No. 12 Michigan State but has come up on the short end against great teams like No. 1 Princeton and No. 6 Virginia. "I'm not satisfied with the results we've had (against top teams)," Rothstein said. "But I've been pleased with the improve- ment the team has shown since the beginning of the spring." The Southern Cal race was the final opportunity for Michigan to pull off a big upset this season. It finishes its spring slate with races against No. 15 Wisconsin and Iowa next weekend. 4 By Eileen Hengel Daily Sports Writer You give a little; you take a little. Over the weekend, the Michigan water polo team gave itself plenty of goals, but its defense took a beating in the process. In arguably their best offensive showing of the season, the Wolverines tallied 40 goals in three games. The offensive outburst catapulted Mich- igan to a 2-1 record at the Brown Mini in Providence. The Wolverines went 1-1 on Saturday, beating Harvard and losing to No. 13 Hartwick. They followed that up with a 14-9 win over Brown yesterday. Throughout the weekend, every member of the team stepped up offensively. Senior Shana Welch led the way, scoring 10 goals on Saturday and five on Sunday. The 15 goals elevated her to No. 2 on the all-time point scorer's list at Michigan. "I'm not happy with the defense," Michi- gan coach Matt Anderson said. "But that fact remains that the defense played well enough to win two out of the three games" In the last game of the weekend-long invite, the Wolverines found themselves in their first overtime game of the season, facing a Brown team that, on any other day, they would have toppled. Scoring on a last-second marker in what Anderson called an "Oh my God, that went in at the buzzer" goal, the Bears left Michigan speechless on the sidelines as the team waited for the extra stanza to begin. "You want to call it a fluke goal, but it went in," Anderson said. "And I think our girls just finally said, 'Wait a (second), we should not be going into overtime with this team, and we're pissed off.' " The Wolverines then took that anger and channeled it into their offense, scoring five goals in overtime to stifle Brown's attempts at a comeback. Coming off a depressing showing two weekends ago against Indiana at the Five Fluid Challenge in Bloomington, the Wol- verines saw last weekend, which it had off, as an opportunity to work on an offense that scored just five goals against the Hoo- siers. But this weekend it appeared Michigan gave up a couple defensive workouts in exchange for offensive drills. "The bottom line is in the last couple years we've had a team that could defen- sively dominate games," Anderson said. "I truly feel that this year we have the type of team that can offensively dominate, and this weekend we really showed it." M MEN'S TRACK & FIELD Sarantos continues success for Blue By John Geise Daily Sports Writer The first victory is always the hardest one to get. Redshirt junior thrower Paul Sarantos found that out three weeks ago when he earned his first colle- giate victory in the shot put at the Shamrock Invitational in Conway, S.C. This weekend, he duplicated the feat, winning the shot put at the Duke Invitational in Durham, N.C. with a mark of 54 1/2. "The biggest thing about a win is that it helps with confidence," Sarantos said. "In track, confi- dence is huge. Winning lets you go out and make improvements every week." In addition to his shot put victo- ry, he earned a seventh-place finish in the discus with a mark of 157-3. "I was happy with my consisten- cy," Sarantos said. "Nonetheless, I still feel I can get better." In addition to Sarantos, the team was buoyed by the Friday perfor- mance of redshirt freshman Dan Harmsen, who ran a personal-best 52.26 in the 400-meter hurdles to claim eighth place. Harmsen's time was good enough to earn him a spot in the NCAA Mideast Region- al meet later this season. It was the first qualifying time of Harmsen's collegiate career. "I was happy that I got a (region- al qualifying time) a little earlier," Harmsen said. "This way, I can focus on my form and other things as the season goes on and have that all locked up." Other notable performances for the Wolverines included a fourth-place showing by Adam Harris in the 100-meter dash. Running the race for the first time in his collegiate career, Harris posted a time of 10.91. The team also sent three athletes to the Texas Relays last weekend. Junior Jeff Porter earned his sec- ond NCAA regional time in as many weeks, posting a 14.23 to win his heat in the 110-meter hur- dles. Porter's time, however, was not good enough to earn him a spot in the eight-man final. Senior Brad Miller and junior Michael Whitehead also earned NCAA regional marks. White- head's jump of 51-0 earned him eighth place in the triple jump. Miller jumped a 6-10 3/4 in the high jump to place second. Miller's attempt was less than an inch away from his personal best. "I was pretty happy with how I jumped this weekend," Miller said. "I had a little bit of a nagging inju- ry, and so my goal was just to get a qualifying mark. I was able to do that, so it was a good weekend." Next week, the track team travels to Tempe, Arizona for the Sun Angel Classic. With another unscored meet on the horizon, Miller sees the Classic as an oppor- tunity for more individual achieve- ment. "I think, as a whole, we want to get a couple more qualifiers," Miller said. "In some races, like the 4x400-meter relay and the 400-meter dash in particular, we would like to qualify. Overall, we just need more qualifiers." 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