2B- November ,2010 Keep a smile on and your glass halffull, Michigan fans The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Pair of top-10 runs* puts Wolverines in eighth at Big Tens or the last few years, I've watched my predecessors write this colunii and gripe at some time or another about how bad Michigan sports were during their time as the Daily's Sports- Monday col- umnist. And in some ways, I sym- pathize with them. Sports at the University, especially the three major RYAN revenue sports KARTJE - football, basketball and hockey - haven't lived up to many expectations in my four years in Ann Arbor. But I'm here to provide a shin- ing ray of hope, a reason to be optimistic, a reason Michigan's cup is half full. Because nobody likes a downer, right? So you aren't happy with the football team's recent loss at Penn State, I'm guessing. So let's talk about something else. in case you didn't know, basketball season starts back up again this weekend! And I may be going out on a limb here, but I'm going to say tht Michigan has a winning record after this weekend. But you never know, those Cardinals from Saginaw Valley State really know how to play ball. If they win, they'll be the first of the three major sports to finish a week above .500 in three weeks, so that's good news, right? That is, ofcourse, only if you count exhibitions as real games. But hey, why not?, The Wolverines should really be able to score this year, now that DeSbawn Sims and Manny Harris are gone. Clearly, they just hogged the ball away from the Wolverines' real scorers, Michigan basketball coach John Beilein g team opens its season this Friday with anE especially in the paint, where the team is loaded with experience in Jordan Morgan, Blake McLi- mans and Evan Smotrycz - com- bining for zero starts. But hey, you hear zero starts, I hear fresh legs. See! Glass half rimaces from the bench during a game agair exhibition matchup against Saginaw Valley S guaranteed to win half of the games every weekend, so that's better than watching the football team lately. Neither of those teams will replace your beloved football team though, will they? Well, I can't blame st Penn State last year. :ate at home. eOND/Daly :etball I full! And that's not even counting I have a sweet spot Tim Hardaway,. who might be for watching high- little ruste since --1 his time in the scoring games with NBA but... o defense Oh, it's Tim too. Hardaway Junior you say? Well ... LIInMm ... like father, like son, right? friend Coop in Nt Anyway, if you want a little pay for student tii more certainty in your life, I Big House. Trust suggest you head down to Yost wicked on a QB1 S for a weekend matchup to watch Denard. goaltender Bryan Hogan...errr... But I still have Shawn Hunwick...errr...someone Wolverines. After anchor the Wolverines from their best playerg between the pipes. Plus, they're in every single ga you. I have a sweet spot in my heart for watching high-scoring games with no defense, too. It just happens to be a whole lot cheaper to watch myself dominate my CAA 2011 than ckets at the me, I'm pretty weep with ing long stretches where Michi- gan fans are forced to hold their breath and pray. It's not like Rodriguez basi- cally admitted his secondary's incompetence after the Penn State game and justified it because six months ago, half of them were in high school. And it's not like the team is looking at a bowl as embarrass- ing as the Little Caesars Pizza, Pizza Bowl where Marshall beat Ohio in a barnburner last year. Either way, they'll probably play a MAC team if they make it to Detroit, and that's always gone well, right? So no need to worry. See! Put a smile on! All will be well! The grass is always greener! You know, I don't know why the guys before me were such downers. This glass half full thing is a piece of cake. By EMILY BONCHI Daily Sports Writer After two Michigan men's cross country team members finished in the top 10, it looked like the Wolverines would repeat history and take a high position at this year's Big Ten Champion- ships. In the past 20 years, Mich- igan has placed outside of the top two just six times. The youth of Michigan's three-to-five slot runners proved too much, however, as the next Wolverine to cross the finish line came more than a minute later - in 53rd place. The Wolverines took eighth place on Sunday at the Big Ten Championships in Madison, fin- ishing with a score of 185. Wis- consin took the number-one spot for the 12th consecutive year. "The execution on race day is really where our big improve- ment is going to have to come," Michigan coach Alex Gibby said after the race. "We've got some guys running hard, certainly, but they're not racing and there's a little bit of a difference there." Junior Bobby Aprill set the pace for the Wolverines for the second time this season, previ- ously crossing the line first for Michigan at the NCAA Pre-. Nationals on Oct. 16. Aprill fin- ished with a time of 23:50.9, earning him seventh place in Madison. It was a personal best in the 8,000-meter event, shav- ing 32 seconds off his previous time. "Over the past few weeks you could see him taking a step for- ward physically," Gibby said of Aprill. "And now he's starting to form mentally at the level he's been training at, in a competitive sense." Redshirt junior Craig Forys crossed the finish line just seven seconds after Aprill, captur- ing the final slot in the top 10 with a time of 23:57.6. It was the 12th time that Forys finished in the top 15 during his collegiate career at Michigan. "Bobby and Craig were tre- mendous; they really did a very good job," Gibby said. "Bobby earned his first All-Big Ten hon- ors, and Craig, after a layoff last year due to -injury, was able to return to form." The Wolverines could not keep up their fast pace as several other schools pulled ahead with numerous finishes over the next minute. The next two Michigan run- ners to finish took 53rd and 55th place. Freshman Sean Bone fin- ished with a time of 25:02, and freshman Morsi Rayyan fol- lowed him in shortly thereafter, finishing in 25:07. "We had good races out of Sean Bone and Morsi Rayyan, who are two walk-on freshmen, but they're just not ready yet to be at that Big Ten level," Gibby said, "We just need to get a lot better production out of our sophomore class right now. They're not com- peting at a level that will help us move forward." Michigan boasts a young team, and Gibby said that though the freshmen will be much better in the future, the Wolverines are currently going through some growing pains. "What I see as the key to our success at the regional level are the performances by sophomores like Derek Henning, Zach Orne- las and Dallas Bowden," Gibby said. "In practice, they're run- ning respectably close to what Craig has been doing and pretty close to what Bobby's been doing. The racing results just haven't reflected it yet." The Wolverines will take next weekend off as they prepare for the NCAA Great Lakes Regional in Rochester, Michigan on Nov. 13. hope for the all, it's not like -Kartje drank his half-full glass gets banged up this weekend in State College. He me, often miss- can be reached rkartje@umich.edu. Blue impresses in Madison as Big Ten runner-up Led by Tauro, five Michigan runners finish in top 30 By EMILY BONCHI Daily Sports Writer Prior to Sunday's 6,000-meter race in Madison, senior Dani- elle Tauro had set the pace for the Wolverines in all five of her appearances this season. The Big. Ten Championships proved to be no different, as Tauro was the first Michigan women's cross country team member to cross the finish line, clinching fourth place with a personal-best time of 20:20.1. "This was her highest perfor- mance ever in a Big Ten cham- pionship," Michigan coach Mike McGuire said after the race. "Our goal going in was that we felt she could be in the top five, so she achieved that goal. She's led the team across the line, but she's also led the team in a lot of other things. " I think her best running is still ahead of her." No. 21 Michigan had five runners finish in the top-30, capturing second place in the conference. The Wolverines earned a season-best 88 points - just 14 shy of Big Ten champion Michigan State. "We're back knocking on the door," McGuire said. "Obviously there's a degree of disappoint- ment in not winning the cham- pionship, but there's not any disappointment in the effort we put forth." Tauro was not the only one responsible for the Wolverines' runner-up finish, as Michigan's next four runners finished with- in 43 seconds of her time. Sophomore Jillian Smith clinched 12th place with a time of 20:44.0, just three seconds shy of her personal-best time in the 6,000-meter event. "I also felt we got a really good race from Jill and (sophomore) Becca (Addison)," McGuire said. "Jill was 38th last year as a fresh- man and 12th this year as a soph- omore, and Becca moved up a few spots as well. I actually think the depth of the field is better this year, looking at the quality of the athletes in the field. We're going in the right direction." Smith joined Tauro in earning All-Big Ten Second Team honors. Addison was the third Wol- verine to cross the finish line, securing 18th place with a time of 20:52.5. Redshirt junior Kaitlyn Peale, a former All-Big Ten performer from last season, captured 26th place with a time of 21:00.1. This was Peale's first race since Oct. 2, as she missed the past two meets due to injury. "I think her best running is still ahead of her." "That's about what I thought we were going to get from Kait- lyn," McGuire said of her return.. "She's been running, but she's been doing a different type of running on an anti-gravity treadmill, and it's just not the same. She competed hard and we wouldn't have gotten second without her. "If we can merge her back into the group a little bit more over the last two championship races, I think we'll continue to get bet- ter." Sophomore Kaitlyn Patterson rounded out Michigan's scoring for the race, coming in 28th place with a time of 21:03.3. Michigan will take a two- week hiatus before carrying on with postseason competition on Nov. 13 at the NCAA Great Lakes Regional in Rochester, Michigan.