2B - October 22, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Philly fans are in it together after 25 disappointing years Michigan runners post peak times at Pre-Nationals 0 T he World Series starts tonight in St. Petersburg, Fla., and most of this cam- pus doesn't care. But there are a few hundred die- hard Philly fans hanging around Ann Arbor, and each of us has died a little biteverysports season of our entire lives. It's been 25 years, exactly 100 combined seasons, since NATE one of the SANDALS four major Philadelphia professional sports teams won a championship. None of us have been to a parade down Broad Street, but we're pretty sure it would be awesome, because they show footage of old ones on the local sports channel all the time. None of us have a world cham- pionship hat or T-shirt lying in the bottom of a closet back home. None of us have had our fanati- cism rewarded with a title and falling short each season makes it a little harder to believe the dream could ever come true. Before you Cubs fans start light- ing stuff on fire, screaming about billy goats, black cats and Bart- man, consider this: Chicago has had seven championship teams in my lifetime. So have New York and Detroit. Boston has had six. Don't tell me Philly fans are whiners. So the World Series starts tonight and most of you don't care. But this column is for that small group of Philly sports fans on this campus. Some of you I know,,most of you I don't, but we're all in it together this week. The truth is, we've all been con- nected our whole lives, because the experience of being a Philly sports fan binds us in a way other common interests can't. We remember that October night, 15 years ago tomorrow, Mitch Williams hurled a fastball and Joe Carter smashed it over the leftfield fence to win the World Series. - It was the first time we had our dreams crushed, but it wouldn'tbe the last. I was six years old then, and cried that Saturday night and most of the next day. I eve' tried to get out ,of going to school on Monday. Despite my protests, my mom packed my lunch and dent me anyway. Then came/the Red Wings four- game sweep of the Flyers in 1997. The Sixers then offered a glim- mer of hope, winning game one of the NBA Finals in 2001 before the Lakers snatched it away with four straight victories - the last three on our home court. The Eagles were within a single win of the title in 2004 before running in to Superman himself, Tom Brady, in the Super Bowl. In many ways, those losses, that heartbreak, have hardened us. I don't get upset about sports as much as I used to. Maybe it's because I'm 21 and I know better, but I don't think so. It's probably because, after 100 professional seasons without a championship in Philadelphia, I'm actually starting to believe that if you flip a coin 100 times, it will land tails every time. Of course it could happen, but should it? I tell myself that one of these days Philly's card has to come up. But does the law of averages apply to sports? So tonight, a few hundred Philly sports fans and I will sit down in front of a TV somewhere on this campus and try to believe one more time. We won't all be in the same place physically, but we'll all be fighting the same internal bat- tle. Our minds will tell us this is a futile exercise, but our hearts will say this is the year. May our hearts be right just this once. -Sandals is looking for four Philly fans to split driving and gas for the road trip home for the parade. He can be reached at nsandals@umich.edu. Wolverines bounce back after weak showing at Notre Dame Invitational By JACK FERNBACHER Daily Sports Writer Heading into last weekend's NCAA Pre-Nationals, the goal of the No. 9 Michigan men's cross country team was to start running peak times as the postseason got underway. With a third-place finish in Terre Haute, Ind., the Wolverines did just that. Michigan will compete in the Big Ten Championships in Ann Arbor in less than two weeks, and after the team's solid performance last Saturday, the Wolverines are positioning themselves to come away with a conference title. "It was the best performance of the season," Michigan coach Ron Warhurst said. Six of the top 10 teams in the country competed in the race, including Michigan. But even though the Wolverines beat every Big Ten team in the competition, No. 5 Wisconsin, the conference- favorite, didn't race. The race was held at the same course as the season-ending NCAAChampionships, scheduled for Nov. 24. Michigan redshirt junior Ciaran O'Lionaird seemed to like the trail, finishing 10th in the 41-teamblue divisiontorecord his personal-best 8,000-meter time (23:50.6). Sophomore Craig Forys also posted a personal-best time and finished 14th (23:55.2). 0 The blue division set a blistering fast pace, with the leader finishing the first mile in an astonishing 4:28. Forys and O'Lionaird were ableto staywiththe packthrough- out, leading the Wolverines to a third-place finish in the division. Michigan fifth-year senior Jus- tin Switzer, a surprise entry who finished in 42nd place, caught Warhurst's attention. "I thought (Switzer) performed really well, and he ended up being our fourth guy today," Warhurst said. "He is an added incentive for us now." Switzer, a distance track run- ner, is working with the cross country team to train for the track season. The Pre-Nationals were Switzer's first race of the season. Seven Wolverines competed this past weekend, and each placed in the top 75 of the 276- person race. "It was a great team effort from top to bottom," Warhurt said. "We are goingto get rested up and sharpen up for the Big Ten Cham- pionship." 1 i Shop. Donate. Volunteer. Offering reusable household items, appliances, furniture, sporting goods, electronics and building supplies at affordable prices. Edwards paces j Summer 2009 in Paris I I A large selection of undergraduate, credit-bearing courses " One 7-Week Summer Term . Two French Immersion Sessions " International Studies - The Arts Email: summer@aup.edu www.aup.edU ww l THE Phone (734) 222-7880 2420 S. Industrial Hwy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 U SSĀ© www.recycleannarbororg RCOURS: Man-Sat 9-s San 10-2 NontE o pick-up avaiiabie. Caiifo ta ls Michigan with second-place finish Blue moves up three Susan Kuijken of Florida State finished first, 32 seconds ahead of spots in polls after Edwards. Edwards' performance helped lead the 11th-ranked Wol- strong weekend verines to a third-place finish behind Florida State and Princ- By ROGER SAURHAFT eton. Daily Sports Writer Edwards beat hustled a close pack to the finish line as four Nicole Edwards needed a other runners finished within boost. four seconds of her. With more than two-thirds . "I heard their coaches and of the 6,000-meter race at Terre teammates cheering for them Haute, Ind., completed, the fifth- and I heard people cheering for year senior didn't want history to me," Edwards said. "The ques- repeat itself. tion was, -who was going to come Last year, Edwards fell behind out on top? I was going as fast as after 4,000 meters on the same I could, because if I hadn't, there course during the NCAA Cross were a lot of people on my heels." Country Championships and Michigan coach Mike McGuire finished in a disappointing 59th saidhewaspleasedwithEdwards' place. race and is confident heading into On Saturday, Edwards was the final stages of the season. fighting for second place just "We're continuing to show steps behind Western Kentucky's some improvement," McGuire Janet Jesang with 1,500 meters said. "But at the same time, the remaining. Big Ten is going to be very com- "I just told myself, 'don't drop petitive. We beat some teams that off her,"'Edwards said. "Iwanted were nationally ranked ahead of to stay with her through 5k. It's a us, and we'll definitely improve mental trick. When there's only our national ranking." 1k left, I'm probably not going to Despite Michigan's solid per- drop off. There were times when formance, McGuire said the Wol- I wanted to ease up, but I just verines need to improve even kept telling myself to wait." more before the Big Ten Champi- 0 Edwards picked up her pace onships, which take place in less down the homestretch and fin- than two weeks. McGuire thinks ished second overall (20:20) - the team's top five runners need two seconds ahead of Jesang. to finish within a minute of each other for Michigan to have a shot at winning the conference title - something that didn't happen C3 ! N A L Saturday. The Wolverines' fourth and fifth-place finishers, redshirt e l n juniors Geena Gall and Kelly Sampson, finished outside the one-minute pace. (734) 663-3379 "We didn't get our gap under one minute for this race," Samp- son said. "I do think that we're VE OFFER setting ourselves up though, because we're running together ds at The U as a pack. By the Big Ten Cham- pionships, hopefully we'll be able to get this closer. Whoever is the best team that day and who- PRECIATION ever works together the best will Iii II BREWSTER KAHLE J Digital archivist Brewster Kahle will frame the debate between "privately held" and "open access" library Dohn resources at the fourth John Seely Brown Symposium Seely 0n Technology and Society sponsored by the University BPOWII B oswn ter of Michigan School of Information. an Kahle is founder and digital librarian of the nonprofit Tecnolo Internet Archive - one of the most allencompassing digital libraries of our time. This free After this provocative talk, Paul Courant, university program is librarian, dean of the U-M Libraries, and professor of open to all economics, public policy, and information; Jessica Litman, For details, see professor of law and information; and John Seely Brown, hi~eiljsh si.mich.edu/i s visiting scholar at the University of Southern California, 17341 547-3576. independent co-chairman of the Deloitte Center for Edge Innovation, and former vice-president and chief scientist of Xerox Corp., will discuss approaches to building library services in the Internet era. 3 p.m. Wednesday, October 22 Biomedical Science Research Building Auditorium 109 Zina Pitcher Place U-M Central Campus T 3- E C FC I 512 E. Wiliam LIMITED TIT For Our Frien CUSTOMER AP] Lunch B M-F 11 $2 OFF our Lt With Beverag Just Present You Sutet -2pm 6.95 - unch Buffet e Included rUofM I.D. I CHECK OUT THE NEW EPISODE OF 'THE BLUE 2' ON OUR BLOG, "THE GAME' michigandaily.com Offer Expires: 11/07/2008