Monday, June 16, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SETTLING IN Academy reveals aperfect match "Do you have to be a Michigan man to be a Michigan coach? Gosh, I hope not." -Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez at his Dec.17 introduc- tory press conference Although Rodriguez didn't understand what the term 'Michigan man' meant when he was hired, his message was clear - he wanted - to do things his way.' There's been a give- DAN and-take FELDMAN between the- Michigan way and the Rodriguez way ever since. Rodriguez fired each of for- mer Michigan coach Lloyd Carr's assistants - point Rodriguez way. Then he rehired running backs coach Fred Jackson, - point Michigan way. Both were smart moves. Rodriguez needs his guys to teach his schemes, but keeping some continuity and a fine coach like Jackson is sensible, too. Now, six months in, the Rich- Mich. partnership is settling into equilibrium. Rodriguez was the offen- sive coordinator at Clemson in 2000 during the first Tommy Bowden's Ladies Football Clinic. Rodriguez told the women about the Tigers' plan to wear white jerseys at home to beat the heat, but their opponents had to agree to wearing dark jerseys. "There's one team that said they would do it - South Caroli- na," Rodriguez said of Clemson's biggest rival. "How stupid are they?" Clemson-South Carolina is a heated rivalry, but itcprobably needs a bit of stirringup every once in a while if it's to attract extra attention, and that's just what Rodriguez did. (By the way, the brouhaha led to Rodriguez sendingthen-Gamecock coach Lou Holtz a letter of apology. South Carolina wore white.) Rodriguez wisely avoided knocking his team's biggest rival this time around at the Women's Football Academy on Saturday. Michigan-Ohio State doesn't need any fuel added to its fire. People try all the time, but the rivalry doesn't need a push. In many ways, the same is true See FELDMAN, Page 12 SAID ALSALAH/Daily Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez helyed lead the 10th-annual Women's Football Academy an Satarday. New-coach continues clinic By DAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Editor After Lloyd Carr's retirement, new Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez didn't miss a beat. NOTEBOOK At least when it comes to the Women's Football Academy. The event, which Rodri- guez said he heard about soon after being hired and wanted to contin- ue, began under Carr. Originally a benefit for the Coach Carr Cancer Fund, it was held for the 10th- straight year Saturday despite a coaching change and construction on Michigan Stadium. The clinic raised more than $101,000 for the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center. The event was put together in just seven weeks this year. Usu- ally planning begins in November. Participants cycled between sta- tions run by position coaches and coordinators in Oosterbaan Field- house and Ray Fisher Stadium. They learned such things as how to run a pass route from wide receiv- ers coach Tony Dews and how to read a quarterback and break on See NOTEBOOK, Page 12 NE'S TRACK Blue's relay team turns heads with record-breaking run at Nationals By JOE STAPLETON For the Daily The Michigan men's track team got into just one event in the finals of this year's NCAA Outdoor Cham- pionships. But the team made it count. Michigan's 4X400-meter relay team took fourth place with a time of 3:04.64, surpassing the 28-year- old program record by more than a second. Accordingtoassociateheadcoach Fred LaPlante, the relay team's goal for the meet was to reach the finals. "Midwest teams just don't make the finals in the 4X400-meter relay, and we got fourth place," LaPlante said. "It was just a fantastic perfor- mance." Western and Southern teams, such as Florida State, which won its third straight national title, usually dominate sprinting events. "Other than the coaching staff and the four guys on the team, I don't think anyone expected us to get in the final," LaPlante said. Michigan's success in the event didn't just impress its own coaches. "I've never seen it in all my years of coaching, a 4X4 from Michigan look so good," said Tom Walsh, the middle- and long-distance coach at Southern California. "I think the coaches at Michigan are really unbelievable, the way they've taken their talent and developed it at such a high level. It's just amazing to see." The impressive showing at Nationals capped a great turn- around for the Wolverines after a rough start to the season. After fin- ishing sixth at the Big Ten Indoor Meet and losing the outdoor version of "The Dual" at Ohio State, they finishedstrong, winningthe BigTen outdoor title in May. It was their first title under Michigan coach Ron Warhurst and end a 15-year title- less drought. The 4X400 team's finish was even more surprising, considering it was ranked 15th heading in to the finals. The relay team included fifth- year senior Stann Waithe, who was the Wolverines' lone individual competitor at the NCAAs, running the 400-meter dash. Waithe failed to qualify for the finals Friday, com- ing in 15th overall and eighth in his heat. "I talked to my parents for like an hour," Waithe said. "They kind of calmed me down. I was frustrated with the way the result went." He had to put the disappointng finish behind him quickly to ge ready to run in the relay Saturday. "He was able to block that race out, even though he was very disap- pointed," LaPlante said. "Great ath- letes in all different sports are able to do those kinds of things. Things don't go your way, you just got to forget about it and go onto the next See TRACK, Page 12