The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 18, 2007 - 9A Blue better, butnot its best By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer After Saturday's race at the NCAA Pre-Nationals in Terre Haute, Ind., the consensus among the women's cross country team went mostly like this: "It wasn't our best race, but it was better than the Notre Dame Invitational." Two and a half weeks ago in South bend, the team finished in a disappointing fourth place. On Saturday, No. 13 Michigan finished third among the 35 teams at Pre-Nationals - behind No. 8 Princeton and No. 6 Arizona State. Three Wolverines finished in the top 25, including redshirt junior Nicole Edwards (20:29) at 11th place, fifth-year senior Erin Web- ster (20:39) at 13th and sophomore Jenny Morgan (20:56) at 25th. The pace was fast, and the Mich- iganrunners had difficulty running as a cohesive group. "In big races, it is helpful to find each other out there on the course and help each other along the way," Edwards said. "If you are running with a teammate and you feel tired, all you need to remember is to stay with them. If I run with them in workouts, then I canrun with them in a race." On Saturday, many of the Wol- verines struggled with pushing the pace during the middle of the race when they began to feel fatigued. Michigan will have few worries about keeping motivated in the next two weeks as it prepares to compete for its sixth straight con- ference title at the Big Ten Cham- pionships. "I wouldn't say that the third- place finish (at Pre-Nationals) was a complete failure," Webster said. "It's good in a sense that no one will be satisfied, and that will give us motivation to work even harder going into Big Tens." 'M' surprises with 4th finish By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's cross coun- try team was ranked eighth among teams in the White Division in NCAA Pre-Nationals on Saturday. It finished fourth. "I thinkwe surprised a lot of peo- ple, and a lot of guys really stepped it up this weekend," said senior Mike Woods, who finished seventh over- all (23:24) in the 8,000-meter race. Woods started fast but fell back from the leaders after 5,000 meters. Still, the captain's time was his sea- son best, despite the hilly landscape of the LaVern Gibson Championship Course in Terre Haute, Ind. The 18th-ranked Wolverines have surprised all season with their continued improvement. Two other Wolverines finished in the top 50: redshirt sophomores Sean McNamara (23:48) at 28th and Brandon Fellows (24:03) at 48th. Junior Lex Williams, out with a case of poison oak, didn't compete. "Once we get Lex in jersey, we will really be a force to be reckoned with," Woods said. Williams is set to return next Fri- day at the EMU Classic, and could eliminate 30-40 points per meet. He will also be in the lineup in two weeks when the team heads to Columbus for the Big Ten Champi- onship. Last year, the Wolverines finished second behind Wisconsin. "Wisconsin has got to be the heavy favorites," Warhurst said. "They are Big Ten Champions eight years in a row. I think we can run with them. We have to have the best run of the season, and they have to have a mistake or two. But I think we could win." Michigan has been preparing since Aug. 20, and the top run- ners on the team ran anywhere between 92-98 miles last week, said Warhurst. The team has used the training to improve mentally. The runners admit they were not mature enough in their preparation for last year's championship meets, when they didn't qualify for nationals. As the Wolverines continue to improve and surprise the competi- tion, they are getting a sense of how good they are. "The teams that were there (at Pre-Nationals) were very good," Warhurst said. "So we compare ourselves to them, and we think we came out pretty good." Senior Nicole Edwards led the Wolverines to third place at NCAA Pre-Nationals. Besides the freshmen, no one on the team has ever experienced any- thing but first place in the Big Ten. "I don't even want to think of not winning Big Tens, because it's that huge," Webster said. "Win- ning the Big Tens would give us the motivation we needed that we are this good team that we practice as every day." But winning a sixth conference championship will be difficult. Michigan is ranked behind three Big Ten powers: No. 4 Minnesota, No. 9 Michigan State and No. 10 Illinois. At Pre-Nationals, Michi- gan finished ahead of Illinois, who took fifth. Just as the Wolverines felt that they ran better at Pre-Nationals than at Notre Dame, they know that the team must continue to improve when it looks to extend its Big Ten superiority at the Big Ten Championships in Columbus in two weeks. "Winning five times in a row, that's something that we are defi- nitely proud of," Edwards said. "It will really hurt if we lost the sixth time out. How can we have any other goal but to win?" UP, OUT AND FOR SUSTAINABILITY WIN $25,000 VIEW OFFICIAL ENTRY RULES AND ENTER ONLINE AT KEENFOOTWEAR.COM/STAND KEEN is launching the Hybrid.Stand campaign for those who are passionate, active and involved with making a difference around sustainability. We will reward the best ideas or projects that fit into one of the following categories: STAND UP. Artists, filmmakers, designers, sculptors, photographers, and writers. Any person who is using their creative skills to create a message or work that addresses sustainability. STAND OUT. Hikers, kayakers, swimmers, climbers, or any athlete who is passionate for outdoor adventures. STAND FOR. Environmental or sustainability activists who are looking for help in supporting their cause, research project or big idea: HYBRIDLIFE- GET INVOLVED AT THE HYBRID.STAND W EVENT HUSSEY ROOM IN THE MICHIGAN LEAGUE MONDAY * OCT. 22, 2007 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM TAND UPc Ad WeIP ttos ~ '':00: b ":.: . . K .,I K ::: . ,, r; ::. r ':t: a ::,a E , : ::, :ai, r.':.'s1::ti