DAILY SPORTS BREAKS DOWN THE WEEKEND THAT WAS 2B - Monday, March 26, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SAID AND HEARD "I have no regrets about coming here, being a Wolverine. I'm still proud as hell to be one." - Former Michigan defenseman JACK JOHNSON on his decision to play for the NHL's Los Angeles Kings and forego his final two years with the Wolverines. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK ZACH PUTNAM BASEBALL The sophomore showed off his skills on the mound and in the batter's box during Michigan's four-game sweep of Oakland. Putnam was the winning pitcher on Friday and collected seven RBI over the weekend. L Cinderella-less Dance just isn't the same 01 Ifeel like I've been robbed. March Madness is supposed to be the most exciting time of the year, when we celebrate the achievements of people we've never heard of and schools with unusual - names like H. JOSE Texas A&M- BOSCH Corpus Christi and Central Connecticut State. But all we have this year is zero double-digit seeds in the Sweet 16, two No. 1 and two No. 2 seeds in the Final Four and Joakim Noah clapping after every play. Serious- ly, what's the guy's problem? Don't get me wrong, there have been exciting games -- Ohio State's come-from-behind win over Tennessee was fun to watch. And as much as it pains me to admit, waiting for Greg Oden to decide when he'd actually going to show up was entertaining. Southern Illinois' attempt to knock off Kansas was compelling. But even Bill Self and his players couldn't mess up enough to drop that game. So while I enjoy seeing two titans trading blows like Fore- man and Ali, there is a part of me that yearns for the little guy. Like a coach who enjoys coaching at a small mid-major and is finally rewarded for his dedication to the school. Or the awkward 5-foot-6 kid from a Nebraska farm who finally reaches the big stage and catches fire from beyond the arc, single- handedly destroying a major team's aspirations and everyone else's bracket in the process. I miss having the moments on cheesy MasterCard commercials, or featured every year when CBS plays "One Shining Moment." I want to have a Jimmy Valva- no. A Bryce Drew. A Hampton. What moments will we take from this tournament? George- town's Jeff Green blatantly travel- ing to hita game-winning shot, Louisville's Rick Pitino throwing~ freshman Edgar Sosa under the bus despite the fact it was the kid's first NCAA Tournament game and Ohio State coach Thad Matta sweating more than any normal human being should. Have fun with that "One Shin- ing Moment" montage, CBS. It should be riveting. This past week there was more excitement outside of the men's Division I NCAA Tournament. In the Division II final, Barton broke Winona State's 57-game winning streak when Anthony Atkinson scored 10 points in the final 39 seconds, including the game-winning layup with .02 sec- onds left on the clock. And in the women's tourna- ment, upsets have been the norm. No. 13 Marist became the lowest seed ever to reach the Sweet 16, Bowling Green (a No. 7 seed) also tasted Sweet 16 glory and Duke become the first No. 1 overall seed not to make the Elite Eight in 13 years. I know, I know. I've already complained about the lack of upsets and underdogs, and this is the Dance Floor and I'm supposed to talk about the Division I Tour- nament. Like the best storyline of March so far: Memphis' John Calipari telling his players to not even practice free throws, but instead just visualize making them. Can you imagine how bad a team must be doing for a coach to just give up and tell his players to pretend like they're making them? But it worked. And when the Tigers' Antonio Anderson stepped up to the line with 3.2 seconds left and his team trailing by one, he didn't remem- ber his two missed layups or the three straight missed free throws. He just visualized making his shots - and he made them. Sure, the Buckeyes dismantled Memphis in the next round and the Tigers were a No.2 seed (not exactly Bradley), but it's still a touching moment. Right? People who complained about George Mason being in last year's Final Four are finally getting what they want: all the best teams in the Tournament playing ina battle royale. Ask and ye shall receive every- one. So prepare yourself for the greatest Final Four of all time. Because as fans, it's the least we could ask for after such a dull Tournament. And if it doesn't happen, "One Shining Moment" will be pretty dim. Water polo blows past Lions By ADAM WOOD Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's water polo team harkened back 100 years Sunday to make their best impression of the most prolific football team in Wolverine history. During Fielding Yost's first five seasons as coach of Michigan, his teams were nick- named "point-a-minute" offenses for their proficient scoring. But this weekend, the 17th-ranked Wolverines nearly duplicated the feat against Penn State-Behrend in Erie, Penn., by averaging a goal every 83 seconds in a 23-2 victory. They also convincingly defeated five other teams for a perfect 6-0 record. The 23-goal outburst came just 20 hours after the Wolverines had tied the school record of 22 goals against Washington & Jef- ferson. It was clear the mark would be within reach after Michigan (6-0 CWPA, 19-10 overall) opened the game with four separate players tallying two goals to help build a 12-0 lead. In the second half, freshman Kimberly Gero scored two goals while also recording two saves in the game. The strongest per- formance came from freshman Sarah Davila who added onto her first half hat-trick with a fourthgoal late inthegame. Her seven points versus the Lions marked her career high in points for a single game. But it was another record that had the entire team excited after the game. With less than a minute remaining, soph- omore Carrie Stover scored the final goal of the game. The 23rd mark set the school record for the seven year-old program, but was not completely unexpected by Michigan coach Matt Anderson. "I did believe the team was capable of this sort of success, but I wasn't sure it would be this soon," Anderson said. "So it doesn't totally surprise me. We're capable of good things, but it's simply a question of when." "When" occurred on many occasions last weekend with Michigan outscoring its six opponents in CWPA conference play 110-35. The nearly "point-a-minute" Wolverines were led by senior Shana Welch and sopho- more Julie Hyrne, who combined for 38 goals on the weekend and kept alive their streak of recording a point in every single game this season. "Purely from an offensive standpoint we were completely in sync," Anderson said. "When a couple of the girls get it going, it becomes infectious for the entire team. (Hyrne and Welch) work so well together that teams cannot key on either one individ- ually, and they have definitely taken advan- tage of that this season." This was a key weekend for Michigan as it had an underwhelming performance a week ago in Ann Arbor at Canham Natatorium. Their 3-2 record in the Wolverine Invita- tional left the team frustrated, but Michigan showed no ill-effects during their record- breaking weekend. With their play, the Wol- verines solidified their position inthe CWPA Western Division by clinching a one or two seed in the Western Division Championship inAnn Arbor on April21 and 22. The weekend that would make even Field- ing Yost blush could prove to be the cross- roads for the Wolverines in an up-and-down The Michigan water polo team set a program record with its 23 goals yesterday. season thus far. "We'll see if this is a turning point for us," Anderson said. "You never know with the team in general. We just need to make sure we don't hit any more bumps the rest of the season." Rowers fall flat at home By ANTHONY OLIVEIRA Daily Sports Writer BELLEVILLE - If the Michi- gan women's rowing team was described in its recipe compila- tion Crew'd Food, it would be called raw. But after Saturday's meet, the 15th-ranked Wolverines were prepared like a fresh slab of salmon: smoked. Taking on Clemson, No. 11 Notre Dame and No.14 Michigan State, Michigan found itself at the bottom of the pile in its first major meet of 2007. The Wolver- ines finished in last place in the four-team regatta. The Wolverines started the regatta on a bright note as the second novice eight beat out Notre Dame by seven seconds for first place. But Michigan wouldn't climb atop of the podi- um again, instead registering a last-place finish in the first var- sity eight boat. Edging Michigan State for the third position by less than a length midway through the race, the Wolverines relinquished their lead, falling in last place with a time of 6:58.54. Michigan's first varsity four was blown away, trailing the entire race and finishing 17.83 seconds behind second-place MichiganStateand27.38 seconds after champion Notre Dame. "If we want to be competitive, we have to get faster," Michigan coach Mark Rothstein said. Despite capturing second place in each of the second var- sity races, Michigan didn't make an impressive showing at its only * home meet of the season at Bel- leville Lake. But with a majority of under- classmen on each boat, Michigan knows there is much room for improvement before the Big Ten meet in three weeks. "I think we raced OK on the 0 whole," Rothstein said. "We need a lot of development that needs to take place the next couple months and I'm confident our team will come back Monday and work even harder." Daily Sports. We have updates every day at our blog The Game * r i i ..... ................... .................... .............. ...............;.................... ................... 3 F 7 5 E2 6 8 63 7 6 2 ........ 3 16 5 Puzzle by s uIdak'synd i catiQn.com 0