2B - December 8, 2008 ortsM The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wolverines win college portion of U.S. Nationals Beilein's experience is key By RYAN A. PODGES Daily Sports Writer It's been more than a month since the No. 3 Michigan men's swimming and diving team last competed. Five weeks ago, they lost to No. 1 Texas. But after the U.S. Short Course National Cham- pionship meet this weekend, it was clearly worth the wait. The Wolverines easily won the collegiate divi- sion of the meet, beating 13 other teams in the field, including No. 6 Florida, No. 8 Auburn and No. 20 Florida State. The three-day meet in Atlanta at the Geor- gia Tech Aquatics Center included several 2008 Olympians, like gold medalists Ryan Lochte, Matt Grevers and Garrett Weber-Gale returning to U.S. swimming with their club teams. The Wolverines won four events and had sever- al impressive races in the finals. Michigan coach Mike Bottom said he was proud that the team was swimming better at this point in the season than they have the past couple of years. "It was fun to see everyone swim season bests," he said. "Many people swam lifetime-bests, from our seniors to our rising stars." Michigan started the meet Thursday by domi- nating the first individual event, the 500-yard freestyle. Six of the top eight swimmers in the prelims were either collegiate Michigan swim- mers or members of Club Wolverine. Senior co- captain Matt Patton won the event with a lifetime best time of 4:12.80, and sophomore Tyler Clary touched second. Patton was also the national champion in the 1,650-yard freestyle with a time of 14:50.34. "It was nice to see (Patton) transition from the Texas meet, where he didn't feel real great about his swims," Bottom said. "He had a little bit more rest before this meet, and he went back to work really hard after Texas, and he swam with alot of determination." In addition to the 500-yard freestyle, Clary also finished second in the 400-yard individual medley and the 200-yard backstroke. In the latter event, Clary broke Chris DeJong's school record but finished 2.36 seconds behind Lochte, the 2008 Olympic gold medalist and world-record holder in the event. Lochte also won the 200- yard individ- ual medley and freestyle. Michigan had two national championship relays. Juniors Chris Brady, Charlie Houchin, Alon Mandel and senior co-captain Bobby Savu- lich teamed upto winthe 200-yard freestyle relay. Juniors Andr6 Schultz, Adam DeJong, Houchin, and Patton won the 800-yard freestyle relay. "The thing that speaks most about our team is that we could have had any number of six or seven guys swim on the 'A' relay," Houchin said. "It happened to be the four that did swim, swam well. But you could have changed it with four other guys and had just as good of a perfor- mance." Despite a field of Olympians and NCAA All- Americans, Patton said the atmosphere at the meet was "pretty relaxed" and lacked the inten- sity and excitement of the Big Ten Championship meet. Teams like Texas, California and defend- ing national champion Arizona, which Michigan will likely face at the NCAA Championship meet, were spread around at other large competitions around the country. . The Wolverines will have another long break before their next meet on Jan. 3. Bottom said although there were several season-best times in the meet, there were still things that could be executed better. "As a coach any time you see someone lift their head up, or miss a turn or a finish, for a coach, those are exclamation marks for training," Bot- John Beilein admitted he was "a little bit stuck for words." The Michigan men's bas- ketball coach was addressing the media after his team's 81-73 upset of No. 4 Duke at Crisler Arena. It was a T momentous win, the kind that could kick-start a downtrodden NATE program's return SANDALS to the top. So it was understand- able that he was at a loss for words. But during the game Saturday afternoon, Beilein knew what he was doing and in coaching, know- ing what to do is far more important than knowing what to say. Eight games into his second season in Ann Arbor, Beilein has already proven himself the right choice to lead Michigan back to prominence. After losing a pro- gram-record 22 games last year, Beilein's Wolverines have already beaten two top-five teams this sea- son and have a legitimate shot at making the program's first NCAA Tournament since 1998. Big wins like the one against Duke come with the risk of the team (and its fans) getting over excited and struggling with higher expectations. With Beilein, that won't happen. After the game he was quick to remind the media that there were still be plenty of ups and downs this season. While there was plenty of great basketball to see at Crisler on Satur- day, there was great coaching, too. Deshawn Sims, Manny Harris and their teammates were the ones put- ting up the points, but it was clear Beilein was pushing all the right buttons. Beilein's quick turnaround of the Wolverines shouldn't come as a surprise. This is his 31st year as a college coach and he has succeeded at every level. But like any good leader, Beil- ein is quick to deflect the credit. "I think that we are gaining poise - we still had three timeouts at the end of the game," Beilein said. "The players kept their composure any time Duke would make a run." Beilein won't say it, but much of that poise comes from his steadi- ness in tense moments and the trust he puts in his players. With the score tied at 48 in the second half, Beilein had enough faith in his team to rest Harris and Sims for two-and-a-half minutes, preparing them for the final push. A less experienced coach might have hesitated to rest his stars with a big upset in reach. But Beilein knew the costs and benefits. He had coached in big games before, and he let that experience guide him Saturday. Beilein's coaching was all the more impressive when you looked at the opposite bench and saw Mike Krzyzewski roaming ina steel gray suit. Krzyzewski, now in is his 34th season as a college head coach, is even more experienced than Bei- lein. He has won three national titles, an Olympic gold medal and 12, Coach of the Year awards. Krzyze- wski is a master at gettingthe most out of the talent available to him. Entering Saturday's game, Coach K's teams had lost twice in Decem- ber - this decade. Most importantly, Krzyzewski knows how important it is to main- tain perspective. "These are all experiences and you build on them - positive, nega- tive, wins, losses," Krzyzewski said. "You play good people so that they put you in positions to have experi- ence." Beilein could have said the same thing, even though his team came out on the winning end Saturday. Beilein's greatest strength as a coach may not be his offensive scheme or his 1-3-1 zone defense. It might not even be his ability to recruit players that fit perfectly in his system (see the impact fresh- man guards Stu Douglass and Zack Novak are already having). Beilein's greatest strength is his experience - just as it is Krzyzews- ki. In the 31 years he's worked at the college level, Beilein has learned what ittakes to form a group of individuals into a team. He has learned how to deal with the highs and the lows of each season. Michigan might make the NCAA Tournament this year. Then again, it might not. Regardless of when this season ends, with Beilein's steady hand, the Wolverines will keep improv- ing. -Sandals can be reached at nsandals@umich.edu. a 0 Do you have Acne? o If you are 12 years of age or older and have acne you may qualify for a 12 week long research study at the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology. o If you are interested in participating, call the University of Michigan Department of Derma- tology to find out more. o Compensation may be provided. oThe number is: (734) 764-DERM University of Michigan, Hospitals and Health Centers IRBMED # HUM00020608 'M' can't scrap its way past Blue Devils 0 ByTIMROHAN Daily Sparta Writer The Michigan women's basket- ball team stole the basketball this weekend like Facebook steals col- lege students' time during exam week. Entering the weekend, Michigan averaged just more than six steals per game. They had 31 steals on the weekend, for an average of 15.5 per game. The defensive pilfering helped the Wolverines dominate North Carolina State, 63-52, at Crisler arena on Friday. But No. 14 Duke stole the show in the second half Sunday, beating Michigan, 60-45, at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Wolverines have been plagued this season with slow starts, but that wasn't the case this weekend. They started quickly at Duke, and against North Carolina State they jumped out to a quick 18-4 lead. After Friday's game, Michigan coach Kevin Borseth said his goal is for the team to get "13-plus steals a game" and limit its own turnovers to fewer than 13. Michigan had 20 steals on Sun- day, but still lostthe game. The Wolverines had success from long range early on at Duke, mak- ing four of its first six 3-pointers. Thatpulled Michigan to within one point just seven minutes into the game.A different player gotinto the act with each successful shot. The Wolverines hung with the Blue Devils in the first half thanks to their stingy defense. But when the second half began, Michigan allowed Duke to go on a 12-4 run in the first four minutes. The Blue Devils shot 60 percent from the field in the second half. Michigan sophomore guard Veronica Hicks had a career-high I JEREMY CHO/Daily Sophomore guard Veronica Hicks, shown here against Northwood on Nov. 8, scored 16 points, a career high, in Michigan's loss to No. 14 Duke on Saturday. 16 points, along with four assists, and four steals. Senior forwards Carly Benson and Melinda Queen also had four steals each. Michigan forced 30 Blue Devil turnovers, but the Wolverines scored just 13 points off of them. "You need to get easy baskets off of (steals), Borseth said. "We never got to the rim a whole lot. That made it difficult. But I thought our defense did a pretty good job. (They were) real scrappy, getting in pass- ing lanes and creating things. That probably kept us as close as it did." Duke's rebounding made up for the disparity in steals (20-8). After the game, Borseth called the Blue Devil squad a "rebounding machine." Duke finished with 46 rebounds (15 offensive) to Michi- gan's 22 (nine offensive). "We kind of strayed away from what we really wanted to do, which was to get it on the block," Hicks said. "We weren't really looking at the block all that much, and we weren't really flashing to the block like coach wanted us to. That kind of took our offense out of the game." The Blue Devils interior athleti- cism forced Michigan to generate offense from the perimeter, butthe Wolverines couldn't connect. That the statistics show a win at home and a loss on the road shouldn't come as a huge surprise for the Wolverines. On the season Michigan has outscored its oppo- nents by 16 total points at home, and have been outscored by a total of 28 points on the road. "I thought we competed pretty well with them," Borseth said. "Had it been at home, who knows, maybe we would have made some more shots. Maybe we would've had a little more energy. I know that the crowd sure makes a big difference." Michigan fails to defend Cliff Keen Invitational title By ROGER SAUERHAFT Daily Sports Writer Michigan was the defending champion of the Cliff Keen Invi- tational in Las Vegas and had taken the title in three of the last four years. But the 12th-ranked Wolver- ines placed sixth in the 44-team field despite injury trouble dur- ing the two-day event. Nebraska finished head and shoulders above the rest of this year's competition with 124.5 points. The Wolverines' score of 82.5 was just nine point short of second-place Cornell. Michigan was short on bod- ies for most of the tournament due to injuries. Fifth-year senior Tyrel Todd, the top seed in the 197-pound division, was forced out of the tournament after two victories because of an injury. The co-captain is ranked No. 2. in his class nationally. And 125- pound senior Michael Watts also couldn't compete because of an injury. The Wolverines managed to place sixth in large part because of the efforts of fifth-year senior Steve Luke. Luke, the nation's top-ranked 174-pounder, won the individual title for his weight class with a sudden-death victory over. Nebraska's second-seeded Bran- don Browne. "I hita single to his left leg and I came up," Luke said. "I lifted up with my leg, and I went down to grab his other leg then he turned into me and was coming up, so I grabbed his hip and got the take- down. "I just tried to keep pressuring into him and eventually was able to take him down in overtime." The co-captain's win capped off an impressive 6-0 weekend in Las Vegas. But few other Wolver- ines enjoyed similar degrees of success. No. 2-seeded sophomore Kel- len Russell finished third in the 141-pound class on Saturday morning, slipping past Virginia Tech sophomore Chris Diaz in sudden death, 3-1. Russell won the event as a freshman. Redshirt sophomore Anthony Biondo finished fourth [with a 5-2 record] in the 184-pound class. Redshirt sophomore Aaron Hynes was eliminated in the 157- pound class with a5-2 record. Five Wolverines failed to qual- ify for the second day of the Invi- tational. Although Michigan didn't repeat its past success in this year's Invitational, Russell said he was happy with the team's performance as a whole in light I of its injury problems. "I think we did a pretty good job with the guys we had going," Russell said. "It was the first time for a lot of them going wrestling in a big tournament like that. It I was good to get out there and wrestle some guys that we might not see until nationals and get them ready for the type of com- petition that you have in the Big Ten and nationals." A