Webber commits to Michigan * Fellow prep star Rose also commits; Fisher lands nation's by Matthew Dodge Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - The myth of Michigan's most prominent prep basketball player is over. Chris Webber is coming to Ann Arbor. Webber, a 6-foot-10 forward from Detroit, announced his feverishly awaited decision Saturday, hours after his Detroit Country Day team romped to its third consecutive state championship, a 68-57 win over Albion. "Next year I'll be a Michigan Wolverine. If I make the team," Webber joked. "I made the decision last week. I felt in my heart that Michigan was the place for me," he said. "Academically, I had to choose Michigan. I just don't want to be seen as a 'dumb jock."' Webber brought to a close the avalanche of media attention over his choice of schools. But the programs he passed over - Michigan State, Detroit Mercy, and Duke - would have preferred him to think about it a little longer. Webber seriously considered attending each of the three, and praised each program and coach. But the overriding factors in his deci- sion were academic quality and proximity to home. Duke has the academics, and Michigan State and Detroit have the proximity, but only Michigan has both. "In the last six months, I've changed my mind 30 to 40 times," Webber said. "But I have three brothers and a sister. The reason why I cut the schools down is because I want to watch them grow up. "This is a big weight off my shoulders. But I had to be selfish and do what is right for me." Webber - who has passed all Prop 48 re- quirements - will matriculate along with three heralded Wolverine recruits who signed letters of intent in November. Jalen Rose from Detroit Southwestern, a close friend of Webber's, also committed to Michigan on Saturday. The chance to play with such talent helped lure him to Ann Arbor. "I knew who they had coming here, and that played a big part," Webber said. "But I'm not worried about who's going there. I'll go there with the goal to have fun and play ball." best class ever Michigan coach Steve Fisher's style also appeals to the highest-rated prep player in the nation. "His personality fits best with mine," Webber said. "Some people say he was soft, and that he was not a good coach. But I saw what he did. Michigan did not have a good year, but even after the losses, he encouraged his players. And I play my best when I'm en- couraged." The verbal commitments of Webber and Rose, along with November-signees Juwan Howard, Jimmy King, and Ray Jackson, give Michigan the best recruiting class in the na- tion, possibly the best ever. Complete recruiting coverage on Page 4. Sports Monday Trivia Which 1991 Final Four basketball teams won the NCAA Championship the last time they appeared in the Final Four? (Turn to Page 2 for the answer). Inside Sports Monday 'M' Sports Calendar 2 Fraternity & Sorority Standings 2 Athlete of the Week 2 Q&A 2 Gill Again 3 Men's Basketball 3 Ice Hockey 4 Softball 6 Baseball 6 Women's Basketball 6 Gymnastics 7 Men's volleyball 7 Women's swimming 8 i i''j,. The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday March 25,1991 Terriers bounce M' out of postseason party V.. *, 4 by John Ni vo Da BOSTON - Maybe if the games had been in Hollywood... A place where stars are born. A place where even the most outlandish dreams can be realized. Then, maybe the outcome would have been different. Instead, Michigan's hockey team travelled to Walter Brown Arena in Boston this weekend for NCAA Quarterfinal action. Like an aspiring screenwriter with script in hand, the Wolvernes were looking to add another chapter to their magical tale of # success. But the Terriers, now headed for the Final Four / in St. Paul, took the liberty of writing the conclusion for them. ~ ' " All good things must come to an end, we are told, and with Boston University's 8- victory Saturday night, Michigan's season did just that. It ended. The ..~> script thrown out the window, along with a lot of hopes and dreams. Wait 'ti next year, guys. You're a young team, with more trips to the NCAA's ahead. tea Hollywood producers would have laughed at this ending, though. Too anticlimactic, they would have said. Too uneventful. Where's the drama? And why did you make Michigan lose? They were the underdog. The program making a comeback - returning to the elite status it once held - with coach Red Berenson leading the way. A team that had won yover fans ad a university, drawing huge crowds like never before. Why them? Okay, fine. Let them lose Friday if you want. But they should win Saturday and Sunday and return home JOSE JUAREM champions. After all, this is a team that had bounced Boston University sophomore center David Sacco celebrates with a jubilant crowd after See ENDING, Page S his team whipped Michigan in the NCAA Quarterfinals in Boston. 8-1 Boston victory ousts Blue icers from NCAAs by Matt Rennie Daily Hockey Writer BOSTON - Pop the balloons. Take down the streamers. Turn out the lights. The party's over. The Michigan hockey team's enchanted ride back to the top of the national polls came to an abrupt end this weekend, as Boston University swept the Wolverines in two games. The Terriers put Michigan's back against the wall with a 4-1 victory Friday night, and refused to let up. Michigan coach Red Berenson replaced Friday's goaltender, Chris Gordon, with Steve Shields, but the latter's stay was short-lived. Sophomore left wing Petteri Koskimaki greeted Shields with a hard slap shot just 3:23 into the game. The shot got through Shields' pads, and the Terriers were on top again. Darin MacDonald added to the BU lead when he knocked home a pass from Doug Friedman with 7:13 left in the period. Meanwhile the Wolverines were unable to get anything started offensively. "Last night, we got behind early so we were hoping for a better start tonight," Michigan co-captain Don Stone said. "They checked just as hard tonight as they did last night." The Terriers broke things open in the second stanza. David Tomlinson scored three minutes into the period to give his team a 3-0 edge. After a roughing penalty to David Harlock gave the Terriers a man advantage, BU capitalized, as Tony Amonte scored the power- play goal. Berenson replaced Shields with Gordon one minute after Amonte's goal, but Gordon experienced a similar fate. "I don't think our goalteding was as good as it could have been," Berenson said. "We're not looking to blame anyone though." The Terriers erased any doubts as to the outcome of the game and the series, by scoring three times in 1:03. Ed Ronan, Tom Dion, and David Sacco all notched goals, and the Terriers began making their reservations for St. Paul. "I thought our team came out and played hard, but they still got ahead," Berenson said. "Once the penalties started (in the second period), they took us out of the game or we took ourselves out." In the first game of the series, BU had to play without their head coach Jack Parker, who was serving a one-game suspension, which he incurred in last year's tournament against Michigan State. Assistant coach Don Cahoon filled Parker's role. The Terriers showed no signs of being rusty after a I1-day layoff. They jumped all over the Wolverines, scoring three times before the first intermission. Senior center David Tomlinson See ICERS, Page 5 Women swimmers flounder at NCAAs RENAISSANCE by Andy De Korte Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - When the Michigan women's swimming team won its fifth consecutive Big Ten Conference Championship earlier this month, last year's graduation of four All-Americans seemed man- ageable. However, when the squad travelled to Indianapolis for the NCAA Championships, the losses and key disqualifications proved in- surmountable. By the second day of competi- tion, Michigan coach Jim Richardson was already calling the meet, "the woulda, coulda, shoulda meet." The Wolverines, who had hoped to finish in the top 10 for the fifth consecutive year, never cracked the elite list, finishing 15th with 55 points. Stanford trailed defending champion Texas closely for two davs. hut the Lnnghorns nulled loss of between 33 and 38 points, were magnified by a rash of 17th, 18th, and 19th-place finishes. All-American Lisa Anderson led the hard-luck pack, finishing 17th in the 100 back to add to her disquali- fication. The freestylers suffered acutely from "17th-place syndrome." Karen Barnes finished 17th in the 500 free, and 32nd in the 200 free. Kathy Deibler finished 29th, 19th, 25th in 100, 200, and 500 free, respectively. "It seems like in one year we've had everything happen to us that could have gone wrong in the previ- ous four years." Richardson said. As half of the first-year breast- stroking duo, Tara Higgins forged the path to the championship plat- form, finishing 8th in the 200 breaststroke, the only Wolverine to place in the top eight. Her team- mate, Val Hyduk finished 22nd and 20th in the 10 0and 20 hrest. by MNatthew Dodge Daily Baseball WNriter ?Date Holdren is the Michelangelo of Michigan sports. He is ajack of all athletic trades. His life reminds you of a Nike commercial. The only difference is that Nate's life doesn't display any pro uniforms. Not yet anyway. His apprenticeship this year began under the football tutelage of:Gary Moeller, and will end under the base- ball guidance of Bill Freehan. Both coaches see pro drafts in Nate's crystal ball. The only question is which one - football or baseball. As a diaper dandy in two sports in abig time college program, Nate faces a constant dilemma: Which sport should I concentrate on? Which one do I prefer? He doesn'tknow. Sointhe mean- time, he'll justbide his timeby settling for stardom in both games, even if he does get worn out now and then. "I think it wears on him,"|Robert Lukson, his father, says.|"He was really Petting sick and exhausted." both baseball and footb MAN and talent to play both sports," Moeller says, "but he is capable of all doing it." On January 1, 1981, little nine- year old Nate Holdren sits in the family room of his home in Richland, Wash.In alife quickly steering toward athletics, he is doing what he loves best: watching sports. On this day, through the cryptic workings of a young mind, Nate falls in love with Michigan football. And he falls hard. With no rhyme or rea- son, he is rooting for the Wolverines to beat the local Washington Huskies in the Rose Bowl, Following Michigan's 23-6 vic- tory, the people in Ann Arbor rejoice as Bo Schembechler wins his first Rose Bowl in eight tries. They are thankful for what the win does for the Wolverine program. They do not know how very right they are. Nate Holdren is coming. "I've always wanted to go here," Nate says. "I knew nothing about the place, but I always wanted to go here * F ' VI.