Page 6-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- April 12,1993 Once an athlete, always an athlete WolerinepitcherEric Heintsciel aontniues his hfelong obsession KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/ Dai/ Senior shortstop Scott Winterlee takes a cut last week against Siena Heights. Winterlee has 16 hits in his last 32 at bats for the Wolverines. itters eCape streak, split th Penn State by Antoine Pitts Daily Baseball Writer Sooner or later it had to end. Going into yesterday's double- header at Penn State, the Michigan baseball team had lost eight consecu- tive conference games - a school record for one year. Counting the end of last year the Wolverines had lost 11 in a row, also a school record. Michigan (1-9 Big Ten, 7-24 overall) dropped the first game of the twinbill to Penn State (2-8, 10- 13), 3-1, but the Wolverines fought back to triumph, 8-0, in game two to end the streaks. The Michigan victory featured the pitching performance of the year for the Wolverines. Ray Ricken (1- 4) went all seven innings for Michigan's first complete game this year. Ricken gave up just three hits and struck out seven en route to his first career shutout. Pitching has been a problem all season long for coach Bill Freehan's team. "It was great to get good pitch- ing," Freehan said. "Ray did an out- standing job for us today." Ricken had great run support from the start. Five consecutive hits to open the game by the Wolverines chased Penn State starter Denny Bair (1-2) before he could notch a single out. Singles by Rodney Goble, Scott Timmerman, Brian Simmons, Scott Winterlee and Nate Holdren gave the Wolverines a quick 4-0 lead. The Wolverines scored again in the fifth inning on a two-out run- scoring double by Winterlee. The senior shortstop's 3-for-4 game gave him 16 hits in his last 32 at bats. Michigan scored its last three runs in the seventh on hits from Holdren, Scott Weaver, Matt Copp (triple) and Goble. Ricken finished things off by retiring 12 of the last 13batters that he faced, the last two on strikeouts. The first game of the afternoon saw the two teams play opposite roles. The Nittany Lions got a complete game from their pitcher, Justin Craig (2-1), and limited the Wolverines to three hits. For the Wolverines, Heath Murray (2-4) did not allow a hit until the fourth inning but the hit led to Penn State's first run. In the next in- ning, Murray hit a batter just before giving up Kirk Rentschler's seventh homer of the year. Michigan's lone run in the game came in the final inning from two Wolverines making their return to the lineup following injuries, Timmerman and Holdren. Timmerman doubled and Holdren brought him home with his first hit of the year. Holdren had not yet played this year because of a knee injury he suf- fered during football season. Timmerman missed the last five games with a broken thumb. "We've been hoping to get Holdren back because he's been our leading homerun and RBI guy for a couple of years," Freehan said. "He's still limited in what he's able to do, but he had a good day. "Timmerman will not be 100 percent for three weeks," Freehan continued. "We figured we'd throw those guys in and see where we go. There's not a whole lot of tomor- rows in this Big Ten race for us." The doubleheader split kept the Wolverines in last place in the Big Ten, one game behind the Nittany Lions for ninth. The Wolverines remained in State College a night longer than was originally expected. Saturday's doubleheader at Beaver Field was rained out, forcing Michigan to stay around to play those games begin- ning at noon today. Eric Heintschel and Ron Hollis will pitch today for the Wolverines. by Michael Rosenberg Daily Baseball Writer It was in church. In Toledo. In the winter of 1975. Mass was ending, and the priest, getting ready to bless those who had braved the weather and shown up, raised his hands. In the congregation, three-and- half-year-old Eric Heintschel knew what this meant. "Touchdown!" he yelled. Everyone laughed. That was it. That was when Rich Heintschel first realized his son was an athlete. Two years after the church incident, when Eric was five, he told his father he wanted to play tee-ball. "Anything reasonable Eric wanted to try, we let him try," Rich says. But when Rich went to sign Eric up for tee-ball, he found out that the minimum age to play in the local league was six. Rich signed him up anyway. If Eric wanted to play, why shouldn't he play? He played. Nobody noticed he was younger than everyone else. From then on, no one could tear Eric away from sports. Wherever he was, he would find a ball. Usually, he would also find someone to play with. When the Heintschels would meet family friends on family occasions, Eric would find someone who wanted to play with him. Always. And so it was for the next seven years: Eric would play, Rich would let him, and sometimes they would play together. As much as Eric was consumed by sports, sports were consumed by Eric. He played from 11 a.m. till dark. Every day. He never got bored. He knew nothing else. "Growing up, all my friends, I met through sports," Eric says. "That's all we did. Play sports." In the Little Leagues, Eric played shortstop and batted third. Sometimes, when the team needed it, he came in and pitched. But for the most part he was content to play shortstop. "Usually there was someone on the team who could pitch better than me," he says. "I didn't mind. I kind of liked playing shortstop. I got to bat a lot." Of course, the playing was not limited to organized games. "We would usually stay after a (Little League) game and play again," he says. "And then I would go home and drag my dad outside to play catch." But eventually, the father would no longer play catch with the son. The relationship had worn on the two, especially the father. It started to hurt just to play catch. "It got to the point, in seventh or eighth grade, where my father stopped playing catch with me," says Eric. "He said that I was throwing too hard, that I was breaking blood vessels in his hands. As Eric grew up, he began to see sports as more than just an innocent way to have fun and hang out with friends. He watched sports on television, and he thought, I can be like them. "My idol in baseball was Roger Clemens, and in football it was John Elway," he says. "I liked to model myself after them." He was no longer Eric Heintschel pitching to John from down the street. He was Roger Clemens striking out 20 against Seattle. His touchdown passes became more than just throws to an open reciever. They were bullets to a streaking teammate. It is a fact of life that with success comes popularity, and with failure comes alienation. Heintschel should know. In his last year of Little League, eighth grade, his team finished in third place, with a 12-6 record. Eric was 0-6. "It was a six-team league, and we played every team three times," Eric says. "It's the only league I've ever been in when everything worked out exactly the way it was supposed to. There were no upsets. It was incredible. "The first-place team went undefeated (18-0.) The second-place team went 15-3, losing only to the first-place team. We went 12-6. We got swept by the top two teams and beat everyone below us." Heintschel, the team's best pitcher, threw against the top two teams. That's where the 0-6 record came from. Eric's teammates would not accept the tough competition as an excuse for his record. "They were really getting on me," Eric says. "They would say things like 'We'd be undefeated without you,' and that kind of thing. They were serious. I mean, I was losing 1-0 and 2-1 to the best teams in the league, and they were getting on my case. Your teammates aren't supposed to do that." By the time Heintschel was in the ninth grade, his athletic skills were no longer something to poke fun at. He excelled at basketball, baseball and football. "Basketball was just a sport to stay in shape," he says. "I did decent in it - I played forward - but nothing spectacular." Heintschel liked football, but in his hierarchy of favorite sports, baseball was clearly No. 1. However, when he tried out for the team in his freshman year at St. Francis H.S. in Toledo, he was cut. He did not take it well. "I was heartbroken," Eric says. "I couldn't understand why I didn't make the team. After they announced the cuts, I went up to the coach and asked him why I got cut. I'll never forget it. He said, 'I don't think you have a strong enough arm to pitch high school baseball." Heintschel transferred to Clay H.S. in his hometown, Oregon, Ohio. It was there that he exacted revenge. Heintschel would often ask his coach if he could skip his spot in the rotation to pitch against St. Francis. "Every time I pitched against (St. Francis), I'd beat them," he says. "I shut them out every time I played them except once, when we won 8- 1." Despite a lifetime of practice, Heintschel really didn't blossom until his senior year. In 11th grade, he was the No. 2 starter on the baseball team and the third-string quarterback in football. Heintschel's father was close to Eric's success. Some would say too close. Rich was an assistant principal at Clay. "It never really got in the way," Rich says. "Nobody ever took it out on Eric when I punished them." "It wasn't a problem because everybody liked him," Eric says. Rich never had to discipline Eric at school. In fact, he almost never had to discipline Eric at home. "I felt Eric should have his priorities in order: academics first, athletics second," Rich says. "Eric always understood that. Maybe he could have done better than he did, but when you have a kid with a 3.4 GPA and a 30 composite on ACT, he's doing pretty well." Eric had a much more diverse group of friends in high schol then he had had during his childhood. "I had as many friends in the band as I did on the sports field," he says. When it came time to choose a college, Heintschel went with his 'My whole family was just ecstatic to find out I was coming to Michigan.' - Eric Heintschel heart. He wanted to be a pilot, so he went to Air Force. The experience was not as pleasant as he had hoped. "After a while, with the defense cuts and new requirements - they were making it so that you had to stay five years instead of two after graduation - it became obvious I wasn't going to become a pilot," he says. Heintschel decided to transfer. Eric was set on attending Bowling Green when one of his assistant coaches at Air Force contacted Michigan assistant Dan O'Brien, whom he had known for some time. The Air Force assistant recommended Heintschel to O'Brien, and the pitcher decided to transfer to Michigan. "I was thrilled to come to Michigan," says Eric, who was born in Ann Arbor. "My whole family was just ecstatic to find out I was coming to Michigan and that I would play baseball here. We've always loved Michigan." Ifeintschel arrived in the middle of his sophomore year. He was not subject to the usual hazing and practical jokes that incoming players receive. "They didn't do that to me because I wasn't a freshman," Eric says. "So I got to do it to other people but they didn't do it to me. I guess I was lucky." Last year, Heintschel's grades slipped, a development he attributes to concentrating too much on baseball. Perhaps because a part of him still thinks of himself as the next Roger Clemens, he heightened his own expectations about his Major League prospects. He was extremely disappointed when he was not chosen in the June draft. "The coaches were very surprised I wasn't drafted," he says. Will Heintschel turn pro if he is drafted this year? "I don't know," he says. "I just changed my najor from mathematics to general studies, and I won't graduate until the end of next year. My scholarship money will be extended through next year. I realize that if I leave, I may be giving up a diploma from the University of Michigan, which is a main reason I came here." One of the first players Heintschel met when he arrived on campus was reliever Todd Marion. The two became fast friends. "It was real easy," Marion says. The pitchers decided to room together last year, and they live together this year as well. Not that the relationship is without its problems. "I've blown a few leads for him," Marion says of Heintschel. "He really gets mad at me for that." Heintschel says that they get mad at each other about once a week, and they get in a "big fight" about once a month. "When you practice with someone, hang out with them, and live with them," Heintschel says, "they get on your nerves. You get sick of them." "Yeah," says Marion. He points at Heintschel. "Would you want to spend all of your time with this guy?" Sometimes, if Marion and Heintschel have gone a while without getting into an argument, Marion will take it upon himself to annoy Heintchel until they fight. "I know exactly what buttons to push," Marion says proudly. "He gets really mad until he realizes I'm just messing with him. Then he laughs." Years from now, when Eric Heintschel looks back at his life, he will likely divide his life into two parts. The first half, dominated by athletics, will almost certainly end this spring. The second part will start Sept. 4, when Heintschel exchanges wedding vows with his girlfriend, Cindy. "We met originally when we were real young," he says. "We played with each other on one of those family outings. But we really met again when we were about 12 or 13. we started dating with one month left in high school. The rest, as they say, is history." The pitcher insists he is not apprehensive about the wedding. "I'm not nervous," he says. "I'm excited." 0 0 Stormy weather haunts crew team by Brian Hiliburn Daily Sports Writer Bad weather seems to follow the Michigan crew team no matter where it goes. This past weekend the Wolver- ines drove all the way to Washing- ton, D.C. to race on the Potomac River in the George Washington In- vitational. As has been this sea- son's pattern, inclement weather tracked the Wolverines down and forced the regatta to be called mid- way through the meet. Rain was the lone standout of Saturday's regatta. Some of the boats started out their day by rowing their qualifying heats in the rain. Then, just before the final races were about to begin, torrential rain and wind stormed in and swamped the boats which were about to race. The regatta was called off at 5:45 p.m. The Invitational featured some of the best teams in collegiate rowing, including Georgetown, George Washington, George Mason, Navy, Temple, Virginia and Cincinnati. The Wolverines expressed frustration out of not getting a chance to finish out the meet against the high caliber of competition. "It was disappointing because cer- tain crews didn't get to race their fi- nal race," senior rower Fletcher Jones said. "But everybody was glad, because nobody wanted to have to perform in that weather." "The day started out good, but then it went to hell. We were wet, rainy, and cold all day," junior rower Monica Maiorana added. The cancellation comes a week after Michigan was forced to com- pete in mini-races with Cincinnati due to bad weather. Since the origi- nal site of the Bearcats' regatta froze over last weekend, the teams had to compete on the tiny Huron River, which is too small to accommodate a full-length race. Although the Wolverines were not allowed the satisfaction of com- peting in all of the finals, they took consolation by performing well in their qualifying heats. The women's varsity boat provided the Invitational with one of its most exciting races. The women's heat featured Navy, Virginia, and Temple - all teams that the Wolverines had not fared well against in the past. Michigan See CREW, Page 8 The Michigan crew team faced some bad weather once again over the weekend that canceled their regatta. 0 0 S I I I -uI_____________________ PERSONAL SECURITY NON-LETHAL SELF DEFENSE WEAPONS. FLORIDA SALE!!! ORLANDO (RT) fr. $139 TAMPA (RT) fr. $159 SAR A .QfTA (RT .f 1 79 ONE WAvS For students with outstanding academic records: Informational meeting about Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships for two years of graduate study at a . i SATURDAY, APRIL 17 corner of Hill & S. Forest FROM