The Michigan Daily - michigandailyrcom January 12, 2009 - 3B 'II finishes first ien Akron Every runner on part of the traveling squad." Senior team captains Tiffany roster gets chance Ofili, Geena Gall, Casey Taylor and Bettie Wade, along with pro- to compete viding strong support for their younger teammates, collected six By AMY SCARANO combined first-place finishes. Daily Sports Writer The four captains and other seniors have set out to establish There are 43 athletes on the themselves on the national level Michigan women's track and field this season, a feat Taylor and team - and all of them saw action' sophomore Allison Liske argu- in last Friday's Akron Quad. ably already accomplished on The Wolverines took advan- Friday. Taylor and Liske both tage of the fact that the meet met NCAA provisional marks in did not limit how many runners Akron, Taylor in the triple jump could participate, and the entire and Liske in the shot put. squad made the trip to Ohio for "The reason our captains were the meet against Buffalo, Pitts- picked as captains is because they burgh and Akron. The extra run- are leaders not only be example ners didn't slow Michigan down but in competition," Takacs- as it ran away with an impressive Grieb said. "They are trying to victory. perform on the national level and The meet gave younger mem- when we have a meet like we had bers of the Wolverines an oppor- on Friday, a starter meet, you are tunity to show what they can do trying to get a good baseline for for the team. After the first meet, your season." only 32 athletes are allowed The Wolverines' dominant to travel with the team for the performance - second-place remainder of the season. Buffalo finished 37 points back "There are standout people - is promising for the season to and people who are progressing come. and people who are just begin- "We have a really broad, suc- ning," Michigan assistant coach cessful team," Takacs-Grieb said. Anne Takacs-Grieb said. "So it is "We have people in almost every a chance for beginners or those event area, so we were feeling as who are progressing to see what if (the Akron Quad) was going to they can really do and become a be a win." LaP lante begins new era By ROGER SAUERHAFT Daily Sports Writer YPSILANTI - Fred LaPlante's Michigan head coaching career started this weekend with a trip across town to face off against his alma mater for the Eastern Michi- gan Invitational. LaPlante, who served as associ- ate head coach for 11 years, traded roles with nine-year head coach Ron Warhurst in September. LaPlante used his team's perfor- mance at the non-scoring meet as a warmup for next Saturday's home opener, "The Dual" against rival Ohio State. One of LaPlante's main objec- tives for the invitational was to "shake the cobwebs out," but after the Wolverines won just two of 35 events, he had mixed feelings about their success. "(The story of the meet was) how close we were to winning some events but not winning any," LaPlante said just before the team's two victories. "It shows we are competing, but next we have to get over the hump. Certainly, nobody can walk away resting on their lau- rels. There's work to be done." Redshirt junior Tony Nalli fin- ished first in the 3,000-meter run with a time of 8:24:87, seven sec- onds ahead of his nearest competi- tion. Michigan took the next event, the 4x400-meter relay, in 3:19:96 thanks to the efforts of junior Matt Wheeler, sophomore Carl Bucha- non, sophomore David St. Amant and fifth-year senior Dan Harm- sen. LaPlante noted the two pleasant surprises from the meet were in the outcomes of the 60-meter hurdles and weight-throwing events. The Wolverines finished second and third in both events. Sophomore Troy Woolfolk, a cornerback on the football team, also caught the eye of his coach. In the finals of the 60-meter dash, Woolfolk dropped four-tenths of a second off his qualifying-round time. The finish left him just three- hundredths of a second out of first place with a time of 6.86. Fellow sophomore Robert Peddlar fin- ished third, just .03 seconds behind Woolfolk. "I honestly owe this to football because Mike Barwis has such a good program," Woolfolk said of his improvement from last season. "He teaches us more explosion, so coming off the blocks, I feel more comfortable with my top speed." He added that he calls his father, Butch, a former All-American tail- back and Michigan track star after each meet, to tell him of his prog- ress. The younger Woolfolk says his goal is to break his father's 200- meter school record, but for the moment, he has his sights set on next Saturday's meet against Ohio State. "I'm real anxious about it," Woolfolk said. "Since they beat us (in football), this is my chance to make it even, even the score. So I'm going to bring something extra for that." CHRIS DZOMBAK/Daily Redshirt junior Tony Nalli finished first in the 3,000-meter run in Ypsilanti. Michigan routs top competition MAX COLUINS/Daily Senior Michael Watts, ranked 11th nationally, won his first match of the year. SWolverines fall in national duals Highly ranked opponents no match for Wolverines By RYAN A. PODGES Daily Sports Writer In its 87-year history, the Michi- gan men's swimming and diving team has never faced Tennessee in a dual meet. And judging from the Wolver- ines' 200-98 victory in their first- ever meeting Saturday, it might be a while before the teams swim against each other again. No. 4 Michigan expected better competition from the sixth-ranked Volunteers, but a Wolverine vic- tory was never in question. Michi- gan began the meet by winning five of the first six events, including a sweep of the top four places in both the 200-yard freestyle and butter- fly. By the end of the meet, Michi- gan's strong start was too much for Tennessee to overcome, and as the Volunteers failed to win a single swimming event. "We started off with great swims and that gave us an early advan- tage," Michigan coach Mike Bottom said. "Once we started to roll, they just didn't respond. And that hap- pens sometimes when you come in with high expectations and you get upset early." The meet was held at the Counsil- man-Billingsley Aquatics Center in Bloomington where the Wolverines also won their dual meet against No. 14 Indiana, 176-104. This was the second meeting between the teams this season and Michigan's second victory against the Hoosiers. The Wolverines defeated Indiana 227-151 on Nov. 1. Michigan's decision to wear faster swimsuits at the meet undoubtedly impacted the final score. The new suits are typically used for champi- onshipmeets attheendoftheseason, but Bottom said the coaches chose to have the team wear the suits at this meet to see what kind of technique changes are necessary before wear- No.17 Michigan disappointing against top-15 teams By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Writer The Sweet 16 was nothing but sour for the Michigan wrestling team. The 17th-ranked Wolverines participated in at the NWCA/ Cliff Keen National Duals this weekend. The Duals take 16 of the nation's top teams and pit them against each other in a tourna- ment bracket. But Michigan was relegated to the consolation bracket early in the competition after a 23-9 loss to third-ranked Cornell in the first round. "We've got to be more aggres- sive," Michigan coach Joe McFarland said. "That's one thing I think we need to make a big improvement on. We're not getting our shots off, and we're not going out there with the intent on scoring right away in some of our matches, and often times, that can be the differ- ence." The Wolverines tried to make the best of their drop to the con- solation bracket with a convinc- ing 29-10 win over host No. 21 Northern Iowa. But two hours later, their hopes of a comeback were dashed in a loss to Big Ten rival No. 14 Penn State. It was disappointing end for Michigan after finishing third at last year's tournament. The Wolverines trailed Penn State by as many as 12 points but stormed back to tie it at 18 heading into the final bout. An unnecessary roughness penalty in the closing minutes sealed Michigan's fate and the Wolver- ines left the tournament without placing. "We probably should have won that (last) match," sopho- more Kellen Russell said. "I think when we wrestle them in the Big Ten season, we'll be a lot more confident than we were maybe going into that match." Ranked fourth nationally in his weight class, Russell was one of the few bright spots for the Wolverines. Along with senior Steve Luke, Russell led the team with a 3-0 record. Russell also extended his overall win streak to nine. "The matches I lost (this sea- son) I shouldn't have lost," Rus- sell said. "So I think my win streak should be longer than that. I think it is just about being mentally prepared for all of our matches, just going out and get- ting the first takedown." The High Bridge, N.J., native's wins came in three close match- es. His widest margin of victory was just three points. Against Penn State's Frank Molinaro, Russell almost saw his win streak stop at eight. After an uneventful seven minutes, the match extended into over- time. Russell scored the pivotal takedown with just 12 seconds remaining on the clock. "I knew it was going to come down to a takedown," Russell said. "I knew if I got in on his legs, I was going tobe able to take him down. I was able to dive in on a shot and grab one of his legs and bully him over to get the kill." After losing two of the most decorated wrestlers in program history in Eric Tannenbaum and Josh Churella, this year's ver- sion of the team has shown some flashes but has come up just short a number of times. "We just don't have the same team as we did last year," McFar- land said. "We had opportunities to win that last dual. We lost two one-point matches. We lost an overtime match. We beat Penn State and we're in reach of third place. As disappointing as it was, we were right there at the same time." JEREMY CHO/Daly Senior Matt Patton won a pair of individual events, including the 500- and 1000-yard freestyle, in Bloonington yesterday. ing the suits again at the Big Ten Championships in February. Senior co-captain Matt Patton won both the 1,000-yard freestyle and the 500-yard freestyle (4:22.14) Saturday. His time of4:12.80 on Dec. 4th is currentlythe country's fastest collegiate 500-yard freestyle time this season. Sophomore Tyler Clary also had a pair of individual wins in the 200-yard backstroke and indi- vidual medley events. Michigan showed significant improvement in the breaststroke, one of the Wolverines' weak strokes. One of the more exciting races was sophomore Jared Miller's second- place finish second in the 200-yard breaststroke (1:59.77). Miller lost to Indiana's Heath Tameris by just 0.42 seconds, and Bottom said swimming under two minutes was a "big step" for Miller as a breaststroker. The meet came just one week after Michigan competed in the Orange Bowl Classic in Key Largo, Fla. where the Wolverines held a training camp. Freshman Dan Madwed, who won the 200-yard butterfly Saturday, pointed to the time the team spent together train- ing in Florida as a key to helping everyone come together as a team. "We really bonded a lot on our trip and instead of 29 individual guys we became one united team," he said. "Mike (Bottom) really understands the value of team chemistry and I think we're begin- ning to understand how powerful that can be when we get behind each other." Junior Alon Mandel, who won the 100-yard backstroke said the team has become more confident together and with first-year coach- es Bottom and Josh White. "We all really supported each other throughout the meet," he said. "When we swam Indiana the first time, we had just met Mike (Bottom) a few weeks earlier, but now we know him a lot better and our confidence has grown, as well as our physical abilities in the water." Bottom has also noticed a differ- ence as well. With the help of the captains, he said the team is in the right mindset and is now more sure of itself. "I think they're gaining an understanding of who they are, which is what we talked about at the end of the meet," Bottom said. "These guys are looking in the mir- ror and see that they are getting better and are capable of compet- ing at a high level." Teamwork & Teambuilding Group Facilitation Education Outdoor Leadership Ropes Courses Organizational Development Working outside HAVING FUN No Experience Necessary! Application Deadline Monday, February 2, 2009 visit www.umchallenge.org for more infmation REC email ezollweg@umich.edu SPRIS with questions or to request Cm AI an application eanesoa