New Student Edition 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 5E Vanderk By Anne Ulble Daily Sports Writer ATLANTA - There was a momentary silence as the crowd registered the time that flashed on the scoreboard: 4:08.60. An instant later, the Georgia Tech Aquatic Center erupted for Michigan senior captain Peter Vanderkaay as he pumped his fist toward the Wolverine cheer- ing section. Not only did he earn his sec- ond consecutive NCAA title in the 500-yard freestyle, he also broke former Michigan swim- mer Tom Dolan's 11-year-old American and NCAA record by .15 seconds. "I looked up, and, first, I had to double-check in my head that I went under the record," Vanderkaay said. "But once I realized that I'd done it, I was aay breaks NCAA record really happy." From the start of the 20-lap race, Vanderkaay overpowered the eight-man field and main- tained a half-body lead, inch- ing farther from his competition with every stroke. By the half- way point, Vanderkaay was the recognized winner and the only question on people's minds was: "Could he break the American record?" "The race felt good," Vanderkaay said. "I knew I was going fast when I opened up with a body-length lead. For the last 100 yards, I could see my team jumping up and down and going nuts, so I knew I was either killing (the record) or I was right on. I'm still not sure how it ended up like that, though." Michigan coach Bob Bow- man acknowledged that he and Vanderkaay had been looking at the record for the past two years, strategizing about how to break it. Before the big race, Bowman and Vanderkaay had a brief meeting where all Bow- man said was, "You know what to do." And Vanderkaay got it done. "I saw Tom Dolan do that time in 1995, and I remember think- ing, 'Wow, nobody will do that time again,' " Bowman said. "But I honestly believed it was doable for Peter. To be a part of that race and keeping the record in the Michigan family means a lot. I was thrilled for him." Adding to the excitement of the race, Vanderkaay swam against his younger brother and teammate, Alex Vanderkaay, in the same heat. The sophomore placed seventh (4:17.88), earn- ing All-American status. "It was so special that Peter could do that in front of so many people and have his brother at his side," the Vanderkaays' mother, Robin Vanderkaay, said. Immediately after hitting the wall, Alex jumped out of the pool and embraced his older brother amid a crowd of fam- ily, teammates, neighbors and friends from high school and college. "It meant a lot for me to have him swimming next to me," Peter Vanderkaay said. Michigan also qualified its 400-yard medley relay squad of senior Chris DeJong, sophomore Grant Burtch, senior Davis Tar- water and Peter Vanderkaay for the consolation heat and earned an 11th-place finish (3:11.35). ' _ ' ,.a ; _.' This article originally Senior Peter Vanderkaay earned his second straight NCAA title In tl ran Mar. 2, 2006. yard freestyle, breaking former Michigan swimmer Tom Dolan's NCA Wolverines' repeat national title bid halted in Tennessee By Amber Colvin Daily Sports Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Rebekah Mil- ian swung. But spectators at Tyson Park never heard the sound of the ball hitting the catcher's glove - the eruption of celebra- tion from the Tennessee dugout drowned it out. And as the Volunteers clung to each other and jumped with delight, to their right stood a group of sweaty, dirty and worn Wolverines, silently consoling each other with tears. Facing a 1-0 deficit, Michigan fought through the bottom of the seventh to stay alive.With the NCAA Super Regional crown, a berth to the Women's College World Series and the Wolverines' season on the line, each batter took their turn facing All-American ace Monica Abbott. The 6'3" pitcher kicked off the bottom of the seventh by striking out senior third base- man Grace Leutele. Junior designated player. Tiffany Worthy stepped up and dinged an infield hit to short. Senior rightfielder Stepha- nie Bercaw followed by drawing a walk on five pitches. A groundout for freshman shortstop Teddi Ewing and an intentional walk for senior sec- ond baseman Tiffany Haas left Milian with the bases juiced and one very large weight on her shoulders. "That's what you live for" Abbott said of the two-out, bases loaded, bottom-seventh situation. And just like that, the Goliath in the cir- cle ended Michigan's hopes to return to the WCWS and to repeat as national champs. The 13th-ranked Wolverines entered the best-of-three series with No. 5 Tennessee expecting a battle. And with three games in blistering heat, that's what they got. "When you have Michigan and Tennessee playing ina best-of-three series, that might as well be a championship series right there," senior catcher Becky Marx said. Tennessee drew first blood on Saturday with a 5-3 victory. Home runs from Wor- thy and sophomore first baseman Samantha Findlay couldn't compete with the offensive prowess of the speedy Volunteers. But after almost 24 hours to simmer, the Michigan bats exploded in the first inning of game two. Haas set the tone first by slamming a perfectly placed single deep into rightfield. Home run leader Marx then brought in the first two scores of the game with a blast over the leftfield fence, her 13th this season. When Findlay followed with a single, Abbott was replaced after just 1/3 of an inning. As Abbott sat in the dugout with a cold towel over her head, the Wolverines kept firing - including another Worthy home run - for an eventual 5-1 victory to force a decisive game three. The winner-take-all game brought out the inevitable All-American pitchers' duel the crowd had been waiting to see all weekend: Abbott versus Michigan ace Jennie Ritter. Ritter and Abbott fanned batters to keep the score locked at zero for five innings. The Volunteers finally broke through in the top of the sixth with the only run of the game coming off a bloop single from Ten- nessee rightfielder Katherine Card. "It's a tough game to lose because both teams played like champions today," Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins said. Out of the hundreds of pitches Ritter threw over the weekend, she managed 22 total strikeouts. Said Ritter: "My focus in the postsea- son is just whatever it takes. If it takes a thousand pitches, I'll throw a thousand pitches:" The senior hurler ends her career with a slew of records, making her one of the most decorated pitchers in Michigan softball his- tory. Also graduating are Haas, Marx, Ber- caw and Leutele. When asked about the five departing seniors, the typically stoic Hutchins had tears in her eyes. "They won my heart," Hutchins said. "They won a national championship. I'll always be their coach." - This article originally ran May 30, 2006. MEN'S HOOPS Late comeback sparks Cagers' upset win against Spartans Voted the Best Bank/Credit Union and #1 in Customer Service in Ann Arbor By Scott Bell Daily Sports Writer The electricity at Crisler Arena last night could have been summed up by many dif- ferent words. Words like amaz- ing, breathtaking and thrilling were thrown around the sold-out crowd following what was argu- ably Michigan's biggest win of the Amaker era. But the most fit- ting word to describe last night's action was undoubtedly foul. Foul was how Michigan played during most of the first half. The foul was what got Michi- gan back into the game. And foul was the mood Mich- igan State coach Tom Izzo was in after his team's first loss to Michigan in three years. "The officiating, I question," said Izzo, whose team went 6- for-10 from the line, compared to the Wolverines' 27-for-34 performance. "It didn't cost us the game, it didn't cost us turn- overs, but ... it's just too bad, because I think we played well enough in a lot of ways to win the game." Michigan's 21-point advan- tage at the free throw line helped spur it to a 72-67 win over No. 11 Michigan State. The Spartans had a chance to tie the game with seven seconds to go. Trailing 70-67, they put the ball in the hands of leading scorer Maurice Ager. But his 3-pointer in the game's waning seconds fell short. And after junior Dion Harris corralled the rebound, a Michigan victory was just a formality. The win was the Wolverines' first in four tries against ranked opponents this year and also put them in the driver's seat for Big Ten notoriety. If it beats Wiscon- sin on Saturday, Michigan (4-2 Big Ten, 14-3 overall) will claim a share of the conference lead. "It feels good to finally get one," senior Daniel Horton said. "We've always believed. We know we have the pieces to be a very good basketball team - we just finally did it today." Just like in previous big games, it was once again the Daniel Horton show. Horton's 23 points paced Michigan. He shot a perfect 8- for-8 from the line and drained a trio of big 3-pointers at critical points in the game. Playing at home at Crisler Arena, the Wolverines beat the Spartans for the first time in three years with a come-from-behind victory. He made one in front of the Michigan State bench less than a minute into the game to get the crowd going early. He made another to put an exclamation point on Michigan's 23-9 run in the second half. And he made the final Michi- gan 3-pointer, an inside-out play which resulted in a Gra- ham Brown kickout that Horton swished from the right wing. The shot gave Michigan its big- gest lead of the game - eight points - which it never relin- quished. But unlike the big games ear- lier in the year when Michigan kept coming up just short, it wasn't a one-man show - this time, Horton had a supporting cast. Four Wolverines contributed at least nine points. But none added more than senior Chris Hunter. The Indiana native had 13 points off the bench - six more than Michigan's State entire bench combined. With less than 12 minutes remaining in the game, he hit the biggest shot of the night. After fighting back from a seven-point halftime deficit, Michigan evened the score at 45- 45. With the Spartans focusing their efforts on Horton, Harris calmly found Hunter in the cor- ner. Hunter didn't even blink and subsequently swished the three. The shot gave Michigan its first lead of the night and brought the crowd into a frenzy. Brown scored 10 and added seven rebounds for Michigan. Harris accounted for nine points, despite shooting 1-for-12 from the field. His 7-for-8 performance at the charity stripe was highlighted by the two free throws he made See CAGERS, Page 6E Saturday hours at 305 E. Eisenhower We have 4 offices in Ann Arbor: * Central Campus at 333 East William 1 1 asi * North Campus in the Pierpont Bring this coupon to any Commons i UMCU office and we'll 305 E. Eisenhower waive your membership fee * Michigan Union, lower level and provide your first box of 'M' checks free when you open your account. Offer expires10/13/06. REDIT umcu.org N Imembers u.N ~everywhere -