a DAILY SPORTS BREAKS DOWN THE WEEKEND THAT WAS The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com a 28 - Monday, February 5, 2007 'M' SCHEDULE TUESDAY - 2.6 M Basketball at OhioState, 7 p.m. THURSDAY -2.8 W Swim/Diveat BigTenChampionships W BasketballatIowa, 8p.m. M Gymnasticsat Winter Cup Challenge FRIDAY - 2.9 MTrack& Field at TysonInvitational W Track & Field at Tyson Invitational Softballat Wilson Demarini Invitational W Swim/Dive at Big TenChampionships M Gymnastics atWinter CupChallenge S MennisatWilliam&Mary 5 p.m. Ice H-tckeyoat Bawling Green, :05 p.m.. W GYMNASTIC7S VS SAID AND HEARD "I've decided to attend the University of Southern California." - Five-star cornerback RONALD JOHNSON announced from the podium at his church in Muskegeon concerning his highly anticipated announcement on which college he would play for next year. He was long thought to favor Michigan as his school of choice for next season. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK ANDREW ELKIND MEN'S GYMNASTICS The redshirt junior led Michigan to its sec- ond-consecutive big win, defeating No. 2 Penn State. Elkind finished first on the parallel bars (9.45) and also turned in solid performances on the rings and high bar. I 4 Gambling transcends the gridiron NEBR Wresli SATUR M Track M Track W Track Softball W Swir M Gym Water P M Tenn Ice Ho at Joe M BASK SUNDA Water P Softball WREST ASKA AND ILIN01S,7:30 P.M. ix-foot subs, multi-million- dollar commercials and ngatlndiana,8p.m. Lupstanding players getting DAY-2.10 arrested for K& Field at Tyson Invitational their night- & Field at E. Michigan Open before-the-big- k & Field at Tyson Invitational game antics at Wilson Demarini Invitational symbolize /Dive at Big Ten Championships some of the so-called pag- nastics at Winter Cup Challenge eancry that olo at Triton Invitational engulfs the is at Virginia, 6p.m. Super Bowl. keyvs. MichiganState Butif there's Louis Arena,7:35 p.m. one thing that KETBALL VS. MINNESOTA, 8 P.M. has become JACK Y -2.11 synonymous HERMAN withtheout-of- _ olo at Triton Invitational control nature at Wilson Demarini Invitational the two-week event has taken, it's LING VS. OHIO STATE, 2P.M. the millions of dollars exchanged (and thousands of kneecaps bro- *home games in all caps ken) because of various forms of *all times ESgambling. Even those who attend a Super Bowl party for free chips, dips E BLOG A LOT. and beer can get in on the action with those box pools that reward AILY SPORTS. an ever-growing number of win- ners using increasingly complex rules. For $5, you can be part of a phenomenon almost as popular as NCAA Tournament pools, and you don't even need any football knowl- edge. Heck, even Matt Millen could win one of these things. Politicians have also found ways to capitalize onthe gamblingfrenzy (surprising, I know) with the tradi- tional yearly bet waged between mayors from the cities of the two Super Bowl teams. This year, Chi- cago mayor Richard Daley offered potato chips, soda, Bears apparel and furniture. In return, India- napolis mayor Bart Peterson put up tickets to the Big Ten Tournament and all three races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, as well as meals at 13 different restaurants. Con- gressmen, senators and governors typically get in on the act, too. And, of course, there's the bet- ting that goes on in Las Vegas, on the Internet and with local bookies across the country. Maybe you're just a casual fan who wanted to test his casual knowledge. You could have bet on the outcome of the game, the 1 halves or any of the individual quarter or will run more plays in the first half. Or maybe you're a basketball fan who wanted to test his ... I don't even know what to call this knowl- edge. You could have bet on wheth- er Cleveland Cavalier Zydrunas Ilgauskas will total more points and rebounds in his game against the Pistons than Peyton Manning com- pletes passes against the Bears. These last two sets of bets may sound silly, but they're part of a very popular group of wagers called propositions, or "prop" bets. They've grown substantially since Super Bowl XX in 1986, when the sports book at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegasnoffered 20-to-a odds (that shrunk to 2-to-1 by gametime) that the Bears popular, 300-pound-plus defensive lineman William "the Refrigerator" Perry would score a touchdown (used occasionally as a goal-line fullback, he had two in the regular season). Even though Chicago coach Mike Ditka said before the game he wouldn't use Perry to run the ball, the coach went to him in the fourth quarter, and Perry barreled into the end zone, vindicating all those who placed the novelty bet. Makes you wonder if Ditka got in at 20-to-1. Taking even a quick look at Bodog.com, an Internet betting site, you have to wonder who even comes up with some of these things. There were 299 different bets you could have placed before the game, and, by the time the ball was kicked off, at least four of them will already be settled. If you felt like throwing money around based on pure luck, you would have wagered on whether the coin flip would be heads or tails, which team would winit and which teamwouldreturn the ball. Even Daily Arts writers could have played, as Bodog set the over/under of Billy Joel's Star- Spangled Banner at 1:42. The clock started when he hit the "Oh." The rest of the bets range from absurd to ridiculous. The football-only, team bets included what the first scoring play of the game will be, what the last scoring play of the game will be, which team will score first in the last two minutes of the first half, whether or not the team that scores first wins, how long Chicago's first punt will go, whether the Colts will score an odd or even amount of points, how many Bears will catch a pass, and just about everything else you can imagine. Wanted to bet on individual players? Should have guessed who would score the first touchdown or intercept the first pass. Could have estimated Reggie Wayne's yard per w W DA catch total total or the length of Bernard Berrian's first reception. Nine different defensive players had an over/under on their total number of tackles, sacks and inter- ceptions. You could even have wagered on how Manning's game would stack up against the historical perfor- mances of other great quarterbacks like Montana, Elway, Bradshaw, Marino and Aikman. And how he will do compared to Richard Ham- ilton, of course. You could have pitted a number of the gridiron stars against their counterparts on the hard court or on the golf course or on the ... stage. With the Grammys coming up on Feb. 11, you could have bet on whether Marvin Harrison will have more catches than Mary J. Blige wins awards and Rex Gross- man touchdowns versus John Mayer trophies. I was only half surprised there was no over/under on how long it would take me to write' this col- umn. But I'm holding out hope for next year. Don't believe in me? Well, I'm willing to bet. - Have your own idea for crazy prop bets? Let Herman hear it at jaherman@umich.edu. d-setting Blue meter hurdles. Ofili's winning time of 8.05 seconds beat her previous record by .01 seconds. Her run was fast enough to mark a qualifying time for Nationals in March. Senior Erin Webster and the distance medley relay team won events as well, each earning a spot at Nationals. Badgers' late surge Ofli's recor dooms Grapplers race paces The fourth-ranked Michigan women'n track and field had a The No. 21 Michigan wrestling But the tide turned quickly, and ucenstful weekend, claiming team couldn't hold an early lead Wisconsin won thenext five match- three event titlen and earning against No. 9 Wisconsin, falling es to go into the intermission. nix NCAA automatic qualify- to the Badgers 21-15 at Cliff Keen Wins from juniors Josh Churel- ix tCAA atot D an fyo Arena yesterday. la and Eric Tannenbaum helped Ingtimes at Notre Dame s Meyo Redshirt freshman Jordan Michigan in its uphill battle, but Invitational this weekend.o Sherrod and sophomore Tyrel Badger victories in six of the last For the third time this season, Todd both won their matches eight duels would seal the home sophomore Tiffany ofili broke t 1A--c nr 1A in~ f ,mc nt her own school record in the 60- I Three Wolverines run qualifying times The Michigan men's track of 52-6 3/4. The jump set a pro- and field team picked up three visional qualifying mark for NCAA provisional qualifying the NCAA Championships next times this weekend at Notre month. Dame's Meyo Invitational. Senior Jeff Porter and sopho- Senior Michael Whitehead more Lex Williams also earned broke an indoor school record provisional times in the 60-meter with a triple jump distance and 3,000-meter, respectively. for more information call 734/615-6449 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Presents the Twenty-Eighth Distinguished Senior Faculty Lecture Take a FREE practice test at this event and you'll receive a detailed score analysis and exclusive strategies to help you prepare for Test Day! Saturday, February 17th U of M Campus Angell and Mason Hall Visit us online or call for times! vrotessor on vatnematics, Economics and Public Policy Director, Center for the Study of Complex Systems 2 Pur zl"-by Tuesday, February 6, 2007 4:10pm Rackham Amphitheater LSA 6PGA0001 4 A S