4B - April 7, 2008 4 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Freshman Thomas Kelley was the lone event champion (floor exercise) for the Michigan men's gymnastics team at the Big Ten Championships. High bar halts title hopes Injuries plague Blue in rematch Three months after Lex Williams sat out on Saturday with an illness that's been hamper- winning pennant in inghimsince the cross-country sea- son last fall. Redshirt junior Mike The Dual,' Michigan Woods is out for the season with a loses it shorthanded broken ankle also suffered during cross-country season. "It was just mediocre perfor- By GJON JUNCAJ mances up and down," Warhurst Daily Sports Writer said. "Especially with those guys injured.We'rekind ofthin,but that's Michigan coach Ron Warhurst what we've got to work with." wasn'tused to this. Even though the Wolverines His men's track and field team didn't take advantage of the warm stepped into Jesse Owens Memorial weather, four regional qualifiers Stadium at Ohio State to an unex- provided plenty of bright spots. pectedly warm reception. Sunny After staying even with Ohio skies and mild temperatures made State's Anthony Cole through the for a picturesque setting for the first half of the 100-meter dash, dual meet rematch with the Buck- junior Adam Harris turned the jets eyes on Saturday. on downthe stretch. The All-Amer- "We've been treated to some ican pulled away from his personal really lousy weather," Warhurst rival and surpassed an icon in the said. "So this was a treat. I bet the process. guys forgot howto compete because Harris's NCAA Mideast Regional the weather was so nice." time of 10.51 seconds broke Jesse There was just one problem - too Owens's Michigan/Ohio State dual- few Wolverines were there to enjoy meet record of 10.54 seconds, set in it. 1936. Michigan battled health prob- In addition to his contributions lems and the Buckeyes, falling in the 4x400-meter relay, Harmsen 110-93 and surrendering The Dual tallied a regional qualifying score pennant they won on Jan. 19. of his own with his victory in the Ohio State's superior depth ulti- 400-meter hurdles, while redshirt mately secured the pennant for sophomores Sean Pruitt and Vince the Buckeyes. Ohio State athletes Belitsos placed second and fourth finished 1-2 in five events - two in the hammer throw to stake their distance and three field. The meet bids for the Mideast Regional. was out of reach by the time the Fresh off receiving Big Ten Field Wolverines' 4x400-meter relay Athlete of the Week honors, Pruitt's team of redshirt junior Dan Harm- 197-03 missile eclipsed his own senjunior Andre Barnes, freshman school record setattheYellow Jack- David St. Amant and senior Andrew et Invitational on March 29. Wechter notched an upset in the Michigan still has its share of final event. The squad took down an details to work out as it enters the Ohio State unit that won the Big Ten heart of the outdoor season. Indoor Title this season. "We'vebeentrainingprettyhard, What makes Michigan's dual butit's kind of difficultto judge how record time of 3:11.78 more impres- hard the workouts are because of sive is that the relay team was com- the weather,"Warhurst said. "We're peting without fifth-year senior obviously not getting enough speed Stann Waithe, whom Warhurst training in because you can't run calls the Wolverines' top sprinter fast when it's cold, rainy and windy in the 200-meter and 4x400-meter on that outdoor track. Hope the races. The two-time All-American weather will give us a break." pulled up in the 200-meter dash The Wolverines couldn't get with a slightly strained hamstring. enough breaks on Saturday, either. Waithe will miss next weekend's The Buckeyes celebrated their meet, too. revenge after the meet, parading The absence of two of the Wol- alongthe track with the pennant in verines' top distance runners also their grasp as the scarlet and gray left big holes to fill. faithful provided a warm reception Three-time All-American junior of their own. Four falls lead to disappointing fourth-place finish at Big Tens By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - Just two rotations into Friday's Big Ten Championships, the No. 6 Michigan men's gymnastics team was almost completely silent, with heads hanging and hope gone. The Wolverines' dreams of winning a con- ference title were dashed. Michigan straggled into fourth place (353.00), more than seven points behind champion Penn State. Weeks of focus on parallel bars, the team's opening rotation, had paid off, helping the Wolverines to a strong start. Michigan coach Kurt Golder had shuffled the lineup coming into the meet. He sent up two of his best per- formers, freshman Chris Cameron and sopho- more Mel Santander, earlier than their usual spots late in the rotation, and the experiment seemed to work. The noise of the gymnasts and their nearby fans was unrivaled as Michigan hit four of six routines. But on high bar - the second rotation and one of Michigan's strengths - everything fell apart. "After (parallel) bars, I felt like we thought we had it wrapped up and kind of relaxed a little bit," said junior Jamie Thompson, who posted a 15.15 on floor. "That's where I honest- ly think we messed up on high bar." Four of Michigan's six high bar sets includ- ed at least one fall. Even the two hit routines, from freshman Ben Baldus-Strauss and Santander, didn't earn very high scores. With that, the Wolverines' usually irre- pressible enthusiasm was gone, along with any shot at a conference championship. "The energy comes from hitting, not from falling," senior co-captain Paul Woodward said. "After that high bar, you can't win. It sucks to know after two events that every- body else in here has to have a terrible, terrible event. Horrific - and it's not going to happen. You can't win a meet hoping other people are going to screw up." Even though Michigan was never able to string together enough solid hits to regain any momentum, there were some bright spots. Seven Wolverines made it to Saturday's event finals thanks to their Friday showings, and freshman Thomas Kelley finished fifth in the all-around competition. Junior Phil Gold- berg scored a Michigan- and career-high on rings with a near-perfect set (15.60). Sopho- more David Chan's meet-ending vault was another Michigan record (16.20). "We definitely did have some good rou- tines," said Kelley, who won the Big Ten floor title and Freshman of the Year award on Sat- urday. "Jamie had a great floor routine. Chris had a good pommel horse routine. But it was too much up and down. That emotion swing threw us off a bit." None of those performances could put more than fleeting smiles on the Wolverines' faces. Despite the valiant efforts of Michigan's fan section, the team never got fired up again. After the meet, Golder was unhappy but already looking forward to the NCAA Champi- onships in two weeks. "We're disappointed and upset with our underachievement, but it's now, 'What do we do with that?' " Golder said. "I felt that we were capable of winning Big Tens - we're that caliber of team - and I still do." A I1 4 I