Top sports moments of the decade

The 2000s had their share of ups and downs for U-M sports programs. Here is John U. Bacon’s list of the decade’s best. What do you think? What were the greatest, most memorable, most inspiring moments of the ’00s? Share your thoughts below.


Field hockey wins U-M’s first-ever women’s national title: November 18, 2001

With Ann Arborite Maureen Tasch in goal, the 2001 Wolverine field hockey team won eight shutouts on their way to the first national title for a U-M women's team ever. (Photo: U-M Athletic Media Relations.)

With Ann Arborite Maureen Tasch in goal, the 2001 Wolverine field hockey team won eight shutouts on their way to the first national title for a U-M women’s team ever. (Photo: U-M Athletic Media Relations.)

The Wolverines have won an enviable 52 NCAA team titles. But when the field hockey team won its title in 2001, it was not only Michigan’s first title of the new decade, it marked Michigan’s first women’s title…ever. The Wolverines had made it to the title game twice before, but the third time proved to be the charm. The seventh-ranked Wolverines made history thanks to a 2-0 shut-out in the title game by Ann Arbor native Maureen Tasch in goal, her record eighth shutout of the season. “Men’s program, women’s programs, revs, non-revs, it doesn’t matter,” said Head Coach Marcia Pankratz. “I’m just happy to bring another one home for the Wolverines.”


The softball team takes the NCAA title: June 8, 2005

Jennie Ritter (left) and Samantha Findlay proved an overwhelming combination for the Wolverine softball team. They led U-M to a 32-2 record and a national championship: the first ever for a softball team from a northern school. (Photos: Ritter courtesy U-M Athletic Media Relations, Findlay by Scott Galvin, U-M Photo Services.)

Jennie Ritter (left) and Samantha Findlay proved an overwhelming combination for the Wolverine softball team. They led U-M to a 32-2 record and a national championship: the first ever for a softball team from a northern school. (Photos: Ritter courtesy U-M Athletic Media Relations, Findlay by Scott Galvin, U-M Photo Services.)

After the NCAA started crowning champions for softball in 1982, not one team north of the Mason-Dixon line or east of the Mississippi had ever won the title—and with good reason: Northern teams don’t have as deep a talent pool, they have a harder time recruiting the best players, and they can’t even play a home game until midseason.That’s why Michigan head coach Carol Hutchins didn’t know how good her 2005 squad was until six trips to play warm weather teams produced 32 wins against just two losses—including a 6-2 victory over top-ranked Arizona—before they played their home opener in April. Relying on Dexter’s own Jennie Ritter, who pitched all but one game down the stretch, the Wolverines kept rolling right to the NCAA finals. There they faced perennial juggernaut UCLA, which had won 11 of the first 23 NCAA titles.The finalists split the first two games, then took the deciding third game to extra innings. With two on in the tenth, and the score tied 1-1, the tournament’s most outstanding player, U-M’s Samantha Findlay, stepped to the plate and delivered the shot heard ’round the softball world, a three run homer. Immediately after the teams shook hands, UCLA’s head coach Sue Enquist told ESPN that the Wolverines’ win might be bad for UCLA, but it was good for softball. That’s how big it was.


Kevin Porter wins the Hobey Baker Award: April 11, 2008

Kevin Porter played every shift as if her were still trying to make the team. His 33 goals and 30 assists in just 43 games earned him college hockey's highest personal award. (Photo: Wolverine Photo.)

Kevin Porter played every shift as if her were still trying to make the team. His 33 goals and 30 assists in just 43 games earned him college hockey’s highest personal award. (Photo: Wolverine Photo.)

With a tiny four-man senior class, no one knew what to expect of the 2007-08 Wolverines. But two of those four—Chad Kolarik and Kevin Porter—would earn All-American status that year for leading the team to a number one ranking most of the season. The Wolverines won almost everything in front of them, including the Great Lakes Invitational, the CCHA regular season and tournament titles, and the NCAA regional crown—but saw their magical season end in the NCAA semi-final with a 5-4 loss to Notre Dame. The next day, however, Captain Kevin Porter, who had played every shift, all season, like he was still trying to make the team, was awarded the Hobey Baker trophy—hockey’s Heisman. That made him just the second Wolverine to claim the award since it was created in 1981. “Kevin was a complete player, a dominant player,” said coach Red Berenson, “and just a great leader, on and off the ice. As a captain, he was as good as it gets.”


Elise Ray leads gymnasts to within a whisker of NCAA title: April 20, 2001

Elise Ray, U-M's most decorated athlete ever, won the NCAA all-around title in her freshman year. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

Elise Ray, U-M’s most decorated athlete ever, won the NCAA all-around title in her freshman year. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

Arguably no Michigan team had a better decade than women’s gymnastics, which took the Big Ten title every year but one—and that season, they made up for it by winning the NCAA regional. In a run of great seasons, however, 2001 stands out. That year the Wolverines missed out on winning their first NCAA team title by a razor-thin 0.125. Freshman Elise Ray scorched through the individual events and tied for national all-around champion. Ray went on to become U-M’s most decorated athlete ever, winning All-American status a whopping 14 times.


Lloyd Carr goes out on top: January 1, 2008

University of Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr is carried off the field by his players after winning the 2008 Capital One Bowl over Florida

Football coach Lloyd Carr is carried off the field by his players after winning the 2008 Capital One Bowl over Florida (Photo: Wolverine Photo.)

Just midway through the zeroes, it had already been a busy decade for Michigan football, with three Big Ten titles, and two ten-win seasons—but the roller coaster ride had just begun. The 2007 season, Lloyd Carr’s last, started with a stunning upset at the hands of Appalachia State, followed by a 39-7 whitewashing at home by Oregon. Few would have predicted Carr’s squad, hobbled by injuries to quarterback Chad Henne and tailback Michael Hart, would then rattle off eight straight victories to earn a bid to the Capital One Bowl. Fewer still would have bet the Wolverines had much of a chance against 12th ranked Florida Gators. The Gators were 10.5 point favorites, led by Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow. They held a 35-31 lead with less than six minutes to play, but Henne hit Adrian Arrington for an 18-yard touchdown, followed by K.C. Lopata’s 41-yard field goal to secure the 41-35 upset. Coach Lloyd Carr got a ride on his players’ shoulders—the first Michigan coach to be carried off after his last game since Fritz Crisler, exactly 60 years earlier.


Tiffany Ofili runs to five NCAA titles

Tiffany Ofili leaps over a hurdle at the NCAA track and field championships.

Tiffany Ofili leaps over a hurdle at the NCAA track and field championships. (Photo: Wolverine Photo.)

Women’s track and field head coach James Henry’s teams have won 14 Big Ten titles—indoor and outdoor—and his athletes have claimed 13 NCAA individual titles. The best of those, Tiffany Ofili, won five of them by herself. She outpaced all comers in the 60-meter indoor hurdles in 2007 and 2008, and in the 100-meter outdoor hurdles for three straight years—then entered Michigan’s doctorate program in pharmacy.


Steve Luke becomes national champion: March 21, 2009

Wrestler Steve Luke pushes down on the head of an Ohio State wrestler

Steve Luke, shown here in a match vs. Ohio State, won three straight Big Ten titles, then went undefeated as a senior and took the national championship. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

Big Ten wrestling has been so good for so long, that it’s possible to finish third in the conference and second in the NCAA—as Michigan did in 2005. The Wolverines have won 11 Big Ten titles, and finished in the NCAA top ten 42 times—but have yet to win an NCAA title, thanks to Iowa’s 22 titles over the past 35 years. But that has not stopped 39 of Joe McFarland’s Wolverine wrestlers from earning All-American status in this decade alone. Chief among them: Steve Luke, who won three straight Big Ten titles, and added an NCAA title in 2009 to cap his 32-0 senior season. A three-time Academic All-American, Luke is now a classmate of Tiffany Ofili’s in Michigan’s doctorate program in pharmacy.


2000 Sydney Olympics: September, 2000

205 Wolverines have competed in the Olympics for 23 countries, earning 133 medals among them, 65 gold (79, if you count Michael Phelps, who studied at Michigan while training at Canham Natatorium). But Michigan’s best Olympic performance this decade occurred in 2000, when the Wolverines sent 15 athletes to Sydney, eight of whom came home with medals.


Men’s Basketball returns to the NCAA tournament: March 15, 2009

University of Michigan basketball coach John Beilein cheers at Crisler Arena when his team is chosen for the 2009 NCAA basketball tournament

Basketball coach John Beilein celebrates at Crisler Arena after the Wolverines are selected for the NCAA tournament for the first time in 11 years.

The decade had been worse than mediocre for the men’s basketball team, and John Beilein’s tenure didn’t start any better, with a 10-22 record and a ninth-place finish in the Big Ten. But in his second season, 2008-09, his Wolverines upset UCLA and Duke—both fourth-ranked at the time—and 16th-ranked Purdue. The team’s highpoint, however, didn’t occur during a game, but the NCAA tournament selection show on March 15, 2009. The players and coaches sat in reclining chairs on the Crisler floor, with a few thousand faithful sitting behind them, all watching—and being watched—on national TV. They waited until there were just three slots left when the announcers finally announced “Michigan!” Crisler erupted.


Baseball’s back on top, 2006

University of Michigan pitcher Zach Putnam throwing a fast ball

Zach Putnam helped restore U-M as a Big Ten baseball power. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

Baseball is one of Michigan’s oldest varsity sports, and also one of its most successful, with 39 Big Ten titles, 21 NCAA berths and two NCAA crowns. But the program fell on hard times after Bud Middaugh was fired for NCAA violations in 1989. When Rich Maloney took over in 2003, however, he turned a cellar-dweller into a giant killer. In 2006, the underrated Wolverines won the Big Ten regular season, the Big Ten tournament and a berth in the NCAA tournament—and followed it up with an NCAA regional title the next year, and two more Big Ten titles. Michigan baseball was back.


Honorable Mentions:

Men’s Lacrosse’s two-year undefeated streak

A “varsity club” sport, men’s lacrosse posted two consecutive 20-0 seasons in 2008 and 2009, winning the national title both years. Not surprisingly, head coach John Paul earned national Coach of the Year honors last spring.

The greatest comeback in Michigan Stadium history: Sept. 8, 2008

Losing 19-0 to the 9th-ranked Wisconsin Badgers, the Wolverines scored 27 unanswered points to pull off the greatest comeback in Big House history—all during the stadium’s 500th game.


Comments

  1. Bryan H - 2006

    2005 Penn State game. “TOUCHDOWN MANNINGHAM!”

    Reply

  2. M W - 2007

    2003 against OSU, 2004 against MSU, 2006 until OSU slicked down their field in order to slow down our defense.
    And of course, making the dance for the first time in 11 years and beating Clemson. Baby steps. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJ50aVi2c54&feature=related

    Reply

  3. Jim Supance - 1969, 1972

    The volleyball team’s 3-1 (it wasn’t that close)victory over Stanford in the third round of the 2009 NCAA tournament on the Cardinal’s home court. This was Michigan’s first defeat of Stanford and the farthest advance ever in the NCAA tournament. Also, the volleyball team’s 2009 season opening 3-0 victory over Nebraska at Omaha was the first time Michigan had taken a set against the Huskers in program history. 2009 was a great year for Michigan Volleyball. Go Blue!

    Reply

  4. Ned DeGalan - 1978

    Thanks John, for an entertaining review. I look forward to many more great Michigan teams in the future and your insight.

    Reply

  5. Austin Gibbons

    What about Men’s Rowing’s back to back National Club Champions, much like lacrosse. They compete on the same level as most Varsity Programs in the country and have been doing so for 10-15 years. I think they deserve some recognition.

    Reply

  6. Former Wolverine

    You mentioned one of the great Michigan wrestlers in Steve Luke, but forgot about arguably the best in 4-time All American and 2-time National Champion Ryan Bertin. When he won his first title in 2003, he became the first Michigan wrestler to win a national title in 17 years! The most recent champ before that was current Head Assistant Kirk Trost who won his national crown in 1986.

    Reply

  7. Peter Krauss - 2008

    Great list, I may have added the triple overtime game versus MSU when Henne started tossing balls in the general direction of Braylon.
    I like the lacrosse team shout out. The team is ready to be varsity and hopefully will be able to find the ear of Dave Brandon. The future of lacrosse at Michigan is bright.

    Reply

  8. Barry Beach - 1980

    Nice job, John. I can\’t argue with your picks too much, but being at that Wisconsin football game was a very special feeling after what seemed like 29 years of losing whenever we fell behind by 10 points or more at home.

    Reply

  9. Another Grappler - 1992

    Another vote for Ryan Bertin. Any national champion should be automaticaly on the list.

    Reply

  10. Leo Abrams - 1994

    I second the Manningham moment:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofg5EiHxaX8

    Reply

Leave a comment: