DAILY SPORTS BREAKS DOWN THE WEEKEND THAT WAS 2B - Monday, March 12, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.c SAID AND HEARD "Your dream is to make (the NCAA Tourna- ment), and to not make it all four years you are here, that's a huge disappointment." - Michigan senior COURTNEY SIMS on the Wolverines missing out on the NCAA Tournament for his entire career. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK JEFF PORTER MEN'S TRACK AND FIELD The senior took home the 60-meter national title at last weekend's NCAA Indoor Champi- onships. Porter broke the previous Michigan record with a time of 7.64 seconds, breaking the mark he set just one week earlier. S 0 Know nothing? No problem Bracket pools are the great uniting force between the sports nut and the rest - of civilization. It doesn't matter how much you know about NCAA basketball: If you can com- petently write H. JOSE down the name of a college, you BOSCH can participate in one of sports' greatest spectacle. But if you still can't decide whether Old Dominion will beat Butler or if you've never heard of Old Dominion and Butler, I'm here to give you some pre-March Mad- ness advice based on your under- graduate school. (Sorry if I left you out). School of Music and School of Art and Design So a couple of the oboe players are talking brackets, and you want to get in on the action. The problem is that you didn't know about NCAA brackets until about two minutes ago when you started reading this column. What do you do? Thanks to the power of the Inter- net, and your superior knowledge of musical scores, you can look up schools' fight songs and make your decision based on the song you like the best. (If a school doesn't have its song somewhere on the Internet, it doesn't deserve to be picked.) And if you're an art student, you know what looks aesthetically pleasing. Use that knowledge wisely and base your picks on which team's uniform you like the most. Florida's blue and orange ensem- ble could earn you some big cash. Ross School of Business All right. You're in the Business school. Congratulations. But what kind of businessman, or business- woman, can you be if you don't have a bankroll that can help you live it up? An NCAA Tournamentbracket pool may be the quickest way to get the money you need to become a millionaire. Going over teams' big wins and losses is a boring way to determine which one is better. You like money. You live by the creed "Greed is good." You go to one of the nation's premiere business schools. Why not pick the school whose athletic department has the largest profit? You're going into the busi- ness world pretty soon anyway. You might as well start noticing which institutions can turn a profit now. LSA You know more about William Shakespeare than Roy Williams; you're a history buff and the only George Mason you've heard of is the founding father; you can't get enough of chemistry, and your favorite numbers and letters are H2O. There's nothing wrong with any of that, but while you were enjoying all those academic pursuits, the rest of your friends have already filled out three different brackets. Now is the time to show those sports-watching friends of yours that all the years spent in the library rather than on the hard- wood was worth it. Big psychology fan? Indiana has the Kinsey Institute. Grew up admiring Thomas Jefferson? Make Virginia your pick to go all the way. Political science majors from the Detroit area may have a good reason to watch the play-in game. Florida A&M is the alma mater of Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. College of Architecture and Urban Planning and College of Engi- neering Yes, I understand that architects and engineers aren't the same. Still, both groups have a love for design- ing almost everything we use in life. And both groups love to ridicule LSA students for their easy course loads (hey, reading 450 pages a night is tough work). Now you have the opportunity to show off, not only your academic superiority, but also your bracket superiority. You could ask a friend of yours to help you fill out your bracket, but that's really cheating. It's something LSA students would do. So make your decision based on which school has the best archi- tecture on campus. Or, if you're an engineer, choose schools with famous engineering alums like Pur- due (Neil Armstong's alma mater) or Southern Cal (where Armstrong got his masters). The Division of Kinesiology Water Polo vs. Wagner,11:10 a.m. Let's be honest. Most of us are Baseball at East Carolina,lIp.m. expecting you to know what you're Wleisos.Alabama,6p talking about. Even though taping someone's ankles doesn't make you M Gymnastics at Ohio State, 7 p.m. an expert, we believe itgives you Softballvs. North Carolina, 6 p,.m. the inside edge over the rest of the ke Hockeyvs.Ohio State, 8:05 p.m. population in bracketology. Water Polo vs. Loyola Marymount, 7:20 But it doesn't, and you're facing p.m. the embarrassment of people know- SUNDAY -318 ing you're surrounded by sports but don't follow them. Water Polo vs. CaLutheran, 9:10 a.m. Here's the best solution: pick MTennisevs. Pennsylvania,12 p.m. the team with the fewest inju- Water Polo vs. Brown,1:50 p.m. ries. Browse through those injury Softball at Judi Garman Invitational, reports and go with the healthiest Championship Rounds, TBA team on the floor. This is what you M Golf at Pinehurst Intercollegiate know. Take advantage of it. .(Pinehurst, N.C.) Now you're all set to make your home games in all caps Tournament picks. So go ahead, all times EST talk with your friends about that No. 5- No. 12 matchup in the South region (Tennessee vs. Long Beach) because now you've made your Daily Sports. picks. . Of course, you could always just More NIT trips blindly guess. But what's the fun in that? than any other - Bosch can be reached college paper. at hectobos@umich.edu. Blue pleased with progress in exhibition play. 0 'M' finishes ninth at NCAAs By CHRIS MESZAROS DailySports Writer After quickly falling to 12th place in the distance medley relay, it appeared as if the doldrums fac- ing the Michigan women's track and field team at the Big Ten Cham- pionshiptwoweeks agowouldrear their ugly heads again. But seniors Katie Erdman and Chanelle Campbell and junior Nicole Edwards revived the fad- ing Wolverines, passing nine teams en route to a respectable third-place finish. The relay team, which includes sophomore Geena Gall, earned Michigan its fourth straight All-America performance at the NCAA Indoor Champion- ships at Randall Tyson Track Center in Fayetteville, Ark. Campbell began the turn- around for Michigan with a solid 800-meter leg, but it was Erdman who put the team on her shoul- ders. She scorched the competi- tion with a split time of 2:03.00 to put Michigan back into conten- tion. Edwards solidified the effort for the Wolverines, with a strong anchor leg to secure third place and six points. The event was the beginning of a solid overall performance by the Wolverines, who finished the weekend with a program record nine All-America honors. "They are very happy with their performance," Michigan coach James Henry said. "They did a great job to battle back and finish third." Overall, Michigan finished in ninth place with 21 total points, its best result since 1998. The Wolver- ines scored points in four events, finishing 17 points behind first- place Arizona State. "We competed hard," Henry said. "Everything didn't go as planned, but we're still happy with the result." Edwards also took home All- America honors after finishing third in the mile with a time of 4:44.89. Her efforts were tanta- mount to the Wolverines' suc- cess as she was involved in 12 of Michigan's points. Erdman was equally impres- sive for Michigan, continuing her success at distance events. She finished fourth in the 800- meter run (2:05.53), and brought home two All-America honors, raising her career total to an astonishing seven. Sophomore co-captain Bet- tie Wade claimed All-America honors of her own with her fifth- place performance in the pen- tathlon. Wade nearly matched her career best in the event, but fell just SOpoints short. "Bettie had five events in a five- hour period." Henry said. "We were concerned about how fresh her legs would be. They weren't fresh but she showed a lot of heart." Wade used that heart to carry her through the entire weekend, postinga personal-best time of 8.56 seconds in the 60-meter hurdles. She later captured fourth place in the long jump, leapingS5.91 meters. Senior Eri Webster rounded out the All-Americans for Michi- gan with a ninth-place finish in the 3,000-meter run (9:20.50). She fell just 0.3 seconds of a sec- ond short of scoring for Michigan. Her event rounded out the day for Michigan. "We're very pleased with our results," Henry said. "To make it into these events and finish in the top 20, you have to be a very elite program." The NCAAs mark the con- clusion of the indoor season for Michigan, which now heads out- doors for the second track sea- son. It has two weeks to prepare for the outdoor season opener, the Arizona State Invitational in Tempe, Ariz. By MATT JOHNSON DailySports Writer Despite losing its exhibition match to Michigan State Satur- day, the Michigan men's golf team came back from Arizona feeling confident because of a little extra practice. The Spartans beat the Wolver- ines by 12 strokes, led by fresh- man Jack Newman, who posted a 3-under par 69. Michigan's ath- letic department had not released the Wolverines' scores as of press time. Before the match, Michigan coach Andrew Sapp and Michigan State coach Mark Hankins agreed to change the format from match play to stroke play to better simu- late tournament conditions. Sapp saw both positives and negatives during the match. "Our ball striking was good," Sapp said. "We missed a lot of putts we shouldn't have. The greens we played on were fairly quick. In Puerto Rico, the greens were much slower than they were here." The Wolverines used their trip to Scottsdale to work on facets of their game they can't in Ann Arbor. The informal exhibition format allowed them ample time to do so. Michigan arrived Thursday night and practiced all day Friday, Sapp thinks the extra work will help the team at the Pinehurst Intercollegiate next weekend. "(Sunday) we spent three hours' working on our short game, which we really lack the ability to do back home," Sapp said. "In preparation. for Pinehurst, it's really good to" get out here and get some work-in around the greens." Sapp also felt the course provid- ed a good opportunity for the Wol- verines to work on their tee shots. "Ifyoudidn'thitthe ballstraighi, you ended up in the desert, so it was very difficult," Sapp said. "If you can pinpoint your tee shots on a course like this at Pinehurst, you won't be penalized as much." The extra preparation will help Michigan as it gets ready for next week's Pinehurst Intercollegiate. The tournament features No. 32 Wisconsin and No. 33 Southern Methodist University as the high- est-ranked participants. The tournament will take place place March 18-20. 0 I 6 I I is your life STRUCTURED? If so, you can help us. Sample Roundtrip Airfares From Detroit to: Chicago $123 Amsterdam $298 New York $131 London $310 I II 0 E-mail Brittany at brimaroc@umich.edu I studentUniverse.com N