The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 27, 2014 - 7A r Faerber factor: Michigan's new weapon Rescued from death as an infant, sophomore making a splash for the Wolverines ByMAX BULTMAN Daily Sports Writer Timothy Faerber is flying through the air. While the rest of the Michigan men's swimming team goes to the locker room and ices its muscles, Faerber is still flying. One rotation, a tuck, an extension, and then Faerber enters the water. "Over! You're over!" shouts diving coach KZ Li from the deck, letting the sophomore know he rotated a few degrees too many. Faerber bobs back up above the water, paddling to the wall and propping himself onto the deck. He nods his head at Li, and then turns to a reporter, sitting two chairs down. "Is it OK if I do one more?" he asks, as if he's bound by the reporter's schedule and not the other way around. Faerber gets back up on the board and does another. He over- rotates again. "One more. I'm really sorry." This time, he hits it clean. His rotation is fluid and his splash is minimal. Michigan coach Mike Bottom isn't seeing any "Last ye of this. He's wrapped up focused in adjusting the strokes of trying tc the women fr swimming laps for m in the middle segment of the - pool. And that's not all that surprising. Old habits die hard, and diving hasn't been an integral part of the season for the second-ranked Wolverines. While their swimmers grace the covers of Swim World Magazine and dominate the conversation on online swimming forums, Faerber and the dive team fly under the radar. But that won't always be the case. Faerber's making sure of that. Ten days earlier, Faerber stood 10 meters above the water, at the same pool, preparing for his final dive at the Big Ten Championships. For once, his whole team was watching. With 32 feet of free fall between his feet and the water, the sophomore took a deep breath before jumping. "I'm still scared," Farter said later, laughing at himself. "I guess I'd be less scared if I had never messed up. But IShave." But he knows there's only one way down, and that's to jump. Understanding the natural dangers of a 32-foot fall, Faerber clears his head and takes the plunge. On this dive, he didn't mess up. When Faerber hit the water, the home crowd erupted instantly. That morning, Faerber had become the first Michigan diver in 11 years to make the finals in all three diving disciplines. And with that dive, he had just placed fourth in his second consecutive event, despite qualifying eighth at each height. That was a feat Bottom couldn't possibly miss. In his five-year tenure - which has included four Big Ten titles and a national championship - Bottom had never had a diver perform as well as Faerber. A year earlier, no one could have seen this coming. For Faerber, the journey to that moment on the 10-meter platform couldn't have had many more obstacles. On Oct. 25, 1994, Tim Faerber was dead. At birth, he inhaled bodily acid, which was dissolving his lungs as his umbilical cord strangled him. "Basically, I was born with buds for lungs," Faerber said, as if he had said it a hundred times before. Though he was clinically dead, doctors tied off his carotid artery and hooked - him up to an experimental ar, I was new machine in an attempt on just to circulate his do well blood. No one before him had self,, ever survived y} . the procedure without - complications. People had made it, but not without limitations. It was a miracle that he lived at all, let alone that, seven years later, he began diving competitively. It's clear in the way Faerber speaks about his unusual birth that it hasn't played a serious role in his identity. He's thought about it, sure, just like he thinks about what could or could not happen every time he stands atop the 10-meter platform. But in no way does it define him. Still, that didn't stop him from tryingto reconnect with the man who saved his life. The doctor who invented the experimental procedure - whose name Faerber doesn't even remember - now works at the University of Michigan Hospital. "When I came here for a recruiting trip, I actually sent him an e-mail," Faerber said. "I thought he would be interested in talking to me, but he never responded. I still would love to talk with him." When Faerber arrived at Michigan in the fall of 2012, Li saw a completely different man than the one who wowed the entire pool deck at the Big Ten Championships. "A lot of guys, when they get to university, theythink it will be easy. They don't want to work," Li said. "They want to have fun." That attitude, Li thinks, worked its way into Faerber's mind during his freshman year. Coming in, he had just qualified for the Olympic Trials straight out of the junior national diving circuit. At the time, though, he didn't have enough confidence in two of his nine dives off the 10-meter platform, leading him to skip the trials. He chose to miss the chance to compete against the nation's top talent. "Itwasthe fearthing," Faerber said. "I'll regret (not going) for the rest of my life." Once he got to Ann Arbor, he learned, the hard way, the importance of correcting his attitude - including the type of mindset that led him to skip the trials. He struggled to keep pace with tough engineering classes and missed a few early-morning practices. He didn't immediately find his place on the team. He misjudged the level of competition he was up against in the pool and out of it. "I forgot about the school part," Faerber said. "It was not a good year for me in a lot of ways. I came in thinking (diving) was going to be easy like it was in juniors. And it wasn't. There are people in college you've never heard of. I thought, having gone to all the national meets, I would have already heard of everyone." The Big Ten's loaded field of divers overwhelmed the still- maturing Faerber, who finished 24th, 18th and 10th in the 1-meter, 3-meter and 10-meter, respectively, at the conference meet his freshman year. Beyond that, physical exhaustion, coupled with atough transition period in the College of Engineering, made Faerber's first year at Michigan arduous. "We offered him, a few times, the chance to stop," Li s told him 'Hey, you've go life choice.' And every t said 'No.I wantto keep d. And even thoug persevered, the results show up right away. Despite an it performance from thel Championships, Faerbe to qualify for nationals. His team won the Championship last seaso he sat at home watching. Like the other challer sophomore has faced, a in attitude helped overc struggles and put himc right track. "Last year, I was just on trying to do well for Faerber said. "I think t a big part of why I didn well. This year, I've beco closer with the rest of th, The scene he faced at I was the embodiment Not a single Michigan s was looking away fro teammate on the platfort "It was awesome," said. "I've never expi anything like that." The fact that he n missed qualifying for Championships out nation's toughest zone change that he's the be the Wolverines have ho years. He broke personal bests in the 1-meter and the "It 3-meter events. He broke the I l drought of diving success re: at Michigan. He grew up. Halfway through his collegiate career, Faerber is in position. Next year, Faerber wi] of three returning Big Te to have qualified for f all three events. He pro finish top five in each di and could push the top tl aid. "We It a real ime, he oing it."' h he didn't nproved Big Ten r failed NCAA n, while nges the change ome his onto the focused myself," hat was 't do so )me a lot e team." ALISON FARRAND/Da y when diving wasn't a part of his life. Timothy Faerber said he can't remembei Big Tens At the rate he's progressing, to study movement science, of that. divingwillno longerbeso readily Faerber has worked through wimmer discarded from the highlights his kinks transitioning to the m their of Michigan swim meets. In a rigorous academic life. M. conference with powerhouses Through his engineering Faerber like Purdue and Indiana, Faerber classes, Faerber has learned a erienced has the Wolverines on their way thing or two about exponential to notoriety in the diving well. growth - enough to see it taking arrowly But he doesn't do it because place within himself, at least. NCAA he needs to win the Big Ten or "My studying's better, my of the dive at Olympic trials - though time management's better, I doesn't he very well could do both. First wake up better. Everything is st diver and foremost, he loves diving better," he said. ad in 11 and loves doing it well. With a better routine and "It's kind of all I know," better focus, Faerber has found Faerber even more time to devote to said. "I don't bettering himself as a diver. remember not "The other day, I was at the 's kind of all diving." library, and I ended up watching the European prelims for, like, Lnow. I don't *** an hour and a half," Faerber said. "Stuff no one would ever watch." m em ber not Today, While the Wolverines do their Faerber is in warm-up laps in Austin, Faerber diving. Ann Arbor, just will be in the pool at Canham like he was this - or maybe, in the air. ie's time last year. probably there right now. The rest "He can't get away from a great of his team is in Austin, Texas diving," Li said. "I can see it. He fighting for a national title, just can't quit if he tried." 11 be one like last year. So lie does one more. r'c O y n divers But as far as compar inals in that's about as similar a tjects to seasons have been for F scipline, While he hopest hree. into the School of Kit - isons go, s the two aerber. to move nesiology U RELEASE DATE- Thursday, March 27, 2014 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS DOWN 31 "Behind the 47 "You _ worry" 1 Gp. co-founded 1 Angiogram Candelabra" 51 "Rockin' Robin" by Victor Herbert image co-star chorus word 6 Bonkers 2 Take the helm 32 Like the Middle 52 Itty 10 Harbinger 3 Irish musical Ages 54 Peace Prize city 14 Cheri of "Scary ensemble - 35 Large quantity 55 On its way Movie" Woman 36 Account 56 Platte Rivertribe 15 "... _ the 4 Altar constellation 37 Company bigwigs 58 Leaves in a bag dreadful thunder / 5 Road trip 39 "Get it, daddy-o?" 59 Kubrick's out-of- Doth rend the refresher 42 Note next to a control computer region": "Hamlet' 6 _ lamp red F, maybe 60 Sigma preceder 16 Gossipy Barrett 7 Universal donor's 44 Green shade 61 2016 Olympics 17 Specific gravity type, briefly 46 Church VIP host Unparalleled coverage Check MichiganDaily.com throughout the week for more Call:#734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com HEPWANTED WORK ON MACKINAC tsland'his Summer - Make lifelong friends. 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M Take out2 3 1 31977 medical 33 34 novel 5 Time ofijour us t 37 39 40 7 Baa maid? 8 Classic 41 42 43 44 children's novel, and what to look 45aOt7 for in this puzzle's three5 other longest tt 54 ts 50 7 2 of Sandwich t as to o1 3 "This can't be happening!" 06 3 64 4 Script parts S Additionally s00 or 'rlEorG, eg. 7lA bit daftBy Pancho Harrison 03/27/14 (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC Sophomore Timothy Faerber is Michigan's best diver in more thanacdecade. A I i I