The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 25, 1995 - 15 Blue knocks off Spring Arbor, 1-0 By Susan Dann Daily Sports Writer Neither rain, nor wind, nor dark of night could keep the Michigan men's soccer team from delivering a defeat last night to Spring Arbor. The Wolverines beat their I-94 rival, 1-0, despite the bad weather. "The conditions are always a factor," Michigan coach Steve Burns said, "es- pecially if the wind is steadily going in one direction." Michigan battled to a 0-0 halftime standoff despite having the advantage of the wind and dominating play. "Everything was working as far as what we wanted to do," Burns said. "We weren't getting a lot of breaks, though." In the first half, senior Ryan Carriere fired a shot which hit the post and de- flected to senior Ian Kurth, who headed the ball in over the goalkeeper's head. The goal was called back, though, on an offsides call. Michigan regrouped at halftime and prepared to go against the wind. Tacti- cal changes in the lineup helped the Wolverines focus on an offensive strat- egy. Senior Bill Lanspeary replaced Kurth at sweeper, giving the Wolver- ines a spark in Spring Arbor's end. Michigan was also counting on a Spring Arbor mental lapse. "What (a game like this) boils down to is a one-versus-one battle," Burns said. "At some point in the second half, one guy is going to let down and say to himself, 'Well, I'm just going to cheat a little this time and not get in position to defend; I hope it doesn't cost me or my team."' Twenty-five minutes into the second half, Michigan exposed Spring Arbor's weak side. Junior Dave Colliver at- tacked from the left side. He maneu- vered around a player and crossed the ball. Driven into the wind, the pass was held up, causing the Spring Arbor goal- keeper to hesitate. Freshman Blake Novotny came strong toward the ball and connected with a left-footed volley. With nearly twenty minutes remain- ing in the game and Spring Arbor at- tacking with the wind at its back, the Wolverines did not back down. "With about five minutes left in a game when you are up 1-0, there are certain things you have to do and others to not do," Burns said. "We committed a few ofthose acts I thought we had learned to avoid, (like) not trying to do something too fancy in the midfield. "In this situation, what you want to do is play keep-away. We didn't recog- nize that this needed to be done. We caught on with about two minutes left in the game." FIELD HOCKEY NOTEBOOK: 'M' seniors honored before game Marquis Grissom is tagged out at third by Indanswonl SMurry's single in the CLEVELAND (AP) - Cancel that ,missing persons report. The real Cleveland Indians have shown up. Eddie Murray singled home the win- -ning run in the 1 1th inning Tuesday night and the Indians, masters of the :late-inning comeback, saved their sea- son-by rallying past Atlanta 7-6 and cutting the Braves' lead in the World Series to 2-1. - No team in baseball postseason his- tory has overcome a 3-0 deficit, and the Indians made sure they wouldn't ,have to either by winning the first World Series game played in Cleve- land in 41 years. Keyed by Kenny Lofton, who reached - base in all six of his at-bats, the Indians scored a run in the eighth to tie it 6-6. Then inthe 11th against Alejandro Pena, Carlos Baerga led off with a double, Albert Belle was intentionally walked 'and Murray hit a sharp single to center that easily scored pinch-runner Alvaro Espinoza. The win was the Indians' 29th in .their last at-bat this year and made them 22-2 in one-run decisions and 15=1 overall in extra innings. Cleveland stopped a six-game riddes! ropoff your picks for this week at The Building at 420 Maynard. Deadline is 4 p Steve and Barry's University Sportswear 1. Milpnesota at Michigan 2. Iowa at Ohio State 3. Michigan State at Wisconsin 4. Northwestern at Illinois 5. Indiana at Penn State 6. Boston College at Notre Dame 7. Kansas at Kansas State 8. Nebraska at Colorado 9. Southern Cal at Washington ยข,0. Florida at Georgia 1i. Arkansas vs. Auburn @ Little Rock, Cleveland's Jim Thome. The indians and Braves play Game Four tonight. AP PHOTO k overdime to top Braves 11th cuts Atlanta's series lead to 2-1 World Series losing streak dating to 1954. The Braves, meanwhile, had their seven-game winning string in this postseason snapped. The Indians will try to even the Se- ries tonight in Game 4. Ken Hill is likely to start against Atlanta's Steve Avery. Jose Mesa was the winner, pitching three innings in his second-longest stint of the season. Braves closer Mark Wohlers went 2 2-3 innings in his longest outing of the year before Pena took over to start the 11th. Pena tried out for the Indians in spring training but was not kept. The Indians, who led the majors in hitting, scoring and home runs, were limited to two earned runs and eight hits during a pair of one-run losses in At- lanta. But back at home, before the 58th straight sellout at Jacobs Field, they scored four times on six hits in the first three innings against John Smoltz. After Atlanta scored three times in the eighth for a 6-5 lead, the Indians struck back after a one-out walk to Manny Ramirez and a single by Paul Sorrento. Wohlers relieved Greg McMichael and gave up a tying double to Sandy Alomar, but following an intentional walk to Lofton, preserved the tie by striking out Omar Vizquel and getting Baerga on a grounder. Mesa kept it 6-6 in the ninth by retiring Chipper Jones on a grounder, picked up nicely by rookie first baseman Herbert Perry with two run- ners on. In the 1 0th, Baerga went behind second base to glove a grounder by Javier Lopez and throw him out to end the inning with a run- ner on second. Lofton was intentionally walked in the bottom of the 10th to put runners at first and third with two outs, but Vizquel grounded out. Lofton had three hits, walked three times and scoredthree runs. Indians starter Charles Nagy seemed to be fading, but manager Mike Hargrove stuck with him as he took a 5-3 lead into the eighth. The move almost cost Cleveland the game right there. Marquis Grissom led off with a double and, with a 2-0 count on Luis Polonia and the crowd groaning, Hargrove went to the mound. Again he stayed with Nagy and paid for it as Luis Polonia hit an RBI single. By Jed Rosenthal Daily Sports Writer The victory over Central Michigan yesterday was more than just a win for the No. 10 Michigan field hockey team. It marked the last time the current Wol- verine seniors would take the field at home. The coaching staff, players and fans alike honored five of Michigan's up- coming graduates before the game against the Chippewas. Coach Patti Smith presented Gia Biagi, Rachael Geisthardt, Sherene Smith and cap- tains Aaleya Koreishi and Jennifer Lupinski with flowers as a means of thanking them for their four years of devotion. "It's a good honor," Lupinski said. "We've put four years into the program and it's nice to be acknowledged." The last four years have proved to be a bit tumultuous for the Wolverines. "I think today marks how far this program has come," Biagi said. "When we started, we had a different field, a different assistant coach and different goals." Michigan has already surpassed last year's win total of nine with two regular season games remain. There is still the chance that the team can eclipse its all- time season best for wins which stands at 13, accomplished in 1982 and 1993. "When we started, I don't think the Big Ten Championship was in our goals," Biagi said. "It was a building program then. But I think the team has gone in the direction of my class. We established a strong foundation for the program." The Wolverines have a wealth of sophomores and freshmen on their roster and can only hope that these recruiting classes can continue the changes brought about by the depart- ing seniors. "When we came in as freshmen, we were the catalysts for change," Koreishi said. "We came in with the attitude, we were going to make a difference. We strongly made a difference." As for her reign as captain coming to a close, Koreishi remains humble. "Being captain isj ust an extra honor," Korcishi said. "It shows that your team- mates believe in you. It was a great year to lead the team and a great honor to have the title." SENIOR STRENGTHS: Four of the top six scorers for the Wolverines are se- niors. With one goal yesterday, Smith continues to lead the team in scoring with 17 goals, hitting the back of the net in 13 of the team's 18 games. Smith also leads the team in game winning goals and scored the first-ever tally at Ocker Field. Biagi and Lupinski reaped assists on Smith's shots and thus rank second and third respectively in team points. Lupinski leads the Wolverines with 15 assists and Biagi follows with 12. The duo has combined for 35 points. AND THEY KEEP ON FALLING: Michigan's team success has allowed many individuals to set records. Smith's 16 goals improved on last year's total of nine and is more than her previous three seasons combined. Lupinski's 17 points broke her per- sonal best of 10 points, set during the 1992 and 1994 seasons. With two tal- lies against Central Michigan, Koreishi broke her season total for goals and points, set in 1993. Koreishi now has eight goals for 16 points. Geisthardt has surpassed her season best forshutouts with six and has moved past Gillian Pieper for fifth on the all- time saves list. SHORT HOPS: Scoring four times in the first half yesterday, the Wolverines have outscored their opponents 23-6 in the opening half. Closing games seem tobe the problem, though. In the second half and overtime, they have been hit for 19 goals while scoring only 14 of their own. They have shutout their op- ponents seven times ... Michigan was ranked No.8 for two consecutive weeks this season, equaling its best position ever ... The Wolverines close out their regular season against Ohio State, Fri- day, and Penn State, Sunday. _.. . _._... _ - -- - _. ..W.W... 1 m ma I n .0". ". ,,