4B - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 23, 1996 BASEBALL Continued from Page 1B Michigan, Steketee worked five in- nings and gave up only one run on two hits. Michigan will try to avenge last year+'s 10-8 loss to Western Michigan in Kalamazoo. Right fielder-second baseman Brent Sachs poses the Grizzlies' biggest threat to Steketee and the Michigan pitchers. Sachs is hitting .419 (54-129) with 31 runs and 17 multi-hit games. Wolverine catchers had better be alert, because Western Michigan has stolen 34 bases over 36 games as opposed to Michigan's 40 steals in 40 games. The two squads have similar styles. They get on base and run, run, run. But that's how the Wolverines suc- ceed. They don't pride themselves in being a long-ball team. Michigan's strength is how active they are on base. "In order for us to win, we need to execute the little things," Michigan pitcher Brian Steinbach said. "We need to do the aggressive hitting and running to win. We don't hit many home runs, so we have to rely on our aggressiveness." Michigan players such as Mike Cervenak and Jason Alcaraz thrive on linedrives through the holegto move runners from first to second or first to third. %Cervenak upped his batting average over the weekend to .328 and leads the team with 29 RBI. Alcaraz is batting .348. with 27 runs and 24 RBI. These two are key in setting the table for the big boys - Kelly Dransfeldt (.352, seven home runs, 25 RBI) and Derek Besco (.403, four home runs, 16 RBI). If the Wolverines play their style of baseball, they should make it to the Big Tens. This is a different team from a year ago. And the way players are talking, Michigan has all it takes to make the Big Tens. "The biggest difference (between the this year's and last year's team) is the way the guys are playing together," Muir said. "Coach Zahn all year has been talk- ing about picking up other guys when they don't get something done at the plate or make an error defensively. It's a team, and we're there to pick each other up." Besides its remaining conference games, Michigan is home against Siena Heights for a doubleheader Sat- urday, at Notre Dame on May 2, at Eastern Michigan on May 7 and at Cincinnati on May 8. Zabn helps Michigan to turn around, By Will McCahill Daily Sports Writer Cellar dwellers.The lowest ofthe low. Last place. These are all terms that applied to the Michigan baseball team at this point last season. Twenty games into the Big Ten campaign a year ago, the Wolverines were hovering below the .500 mark with a 9-11 conference record, and 21-24 over- all. That's hardly a stellar mark; Michi- gan couldn't even see the sky from the dark cellar, much less the stars. This year, however, it's a whole new ballgame. Gone are the endless refer- ences to the team bringing up the rear of the Big Ten standings. The Wolverines are right up at the top,just ahalf-game out of first place, sporting a 13-7 conference record. The squad has already won three more conference contests than it won all of last year, and visions of the Big Ten playoffs (the top four teams in the confer- ence qualify) dance in the players' heads. "It's a different type of atmosphere," redshirt freshman John Papp said, com- paring this season to last. Anyone familiar with this year and last year must wonder how in the world Michigan's turnaround has come to pass. After all, seven starters from last season's lineup are gone, lost to graduation or the place - the dugout. major leagues. This year's team is young, with only four seniors on the entire ros- ter. Not only are there a bunch of rookies on the dia- mond, but there's also one in an even more important said Penn State coach Joe Hindelang Sun- day, after becoming the first Big Ten coach to win a series against the Michigan mentor. "I love the way (the Wolverines) play." - Hindelang points to the aggressive brand of baseball that Zahn brought with him as the key to Michigan's success. Under Zahn's direction, the Wolverines steal armfuls of bases, run the basepaths as though possessed when the ball is in play, and work the hit-and-run almost every time someone gets on base. "(Zahn and his staff) have done a mag- nificent job - and we certainly see it - with young kids," Hindelang said." think Michigan baseball has a tremendously bright future." Wolverine centerfielder Papp agreed, and said Zahn's offensive tactics are popu- lar with the players. "Everybody likes (Zahn's) philoso- phy," Papp said. Hindelang not only complimented the work Zahn has done with the Wolverine squad this season, but also took time to praise the rookie coach. "Geoff Zahn ... is a class person," the fifth-yearNittany Lion coach said. "When he walks into a room, he just brings tremendous respect and class, and wants to do what's best for the Big Ten and not just what's best for Michigan." Regardless of how the Wolverines finish the Big Ten season, Zahn has certainly done better with Michigank than anyone-with the possible excep tion of himself-could have expected A tough road still lies ahead for the team, including a four-game series May 4 and 5 with Ohio State, the defending Big Ten regular-season and conference tournament champs. But whatever the outcome, Zahn has brought the team quite a ways from where it left off last year. The future is indeed bright, not only for the next few seasonsj but perhaps even sooner. Maybe as soon as this season. With the Big Ten stretch run underway, the Wol verines are contending for a playoff spot and a shot at the conference title. At the helm of this surprising ballclub is first-year coach Geoff Zahn. In his college head-coaching debut, hehas taken a losing team filled with youngsters and molded it into a squad tobe reckoned with in the Big Ten. "I give all the credit to Geoff Zahn," GM Isiah gives Malone the Rap in Toronto The Associated Press TORONTO - Brendan Malone, his team having finished its inaugural season with a 21-61 record, was fired yesterday as coach of the Toronto Raptors because of differences with general manager Isiah Thomas. Malone, a Detroit Pistons assistant coach from 1988 until last season, was immediately replaced by assistant coach Darrell Walker, a former teammate of Thomas' who was signed to a three-year contract. The moves came one day after the expansion team completed what Thomas called a "great year." The collection of castoffs and young players beat Chicago, Orlando and Seattle this season, with home attendance at 950,000. Malone, who also had been an assistant coach with New York, was in the first year of a three-year contract reportedly worth $300,000 annually. "He was a tireless worker," Thomas said. "Everything that he did was about winning. "Unfortunately, as you all know, we had philosophi- cal differences about the way this, the organization, should run and where we should go in the future." Malone's departure had been expected forweeks after he and Thomas openly disagreed about which players to use and when to use them. "As Brendan more or less said himself, his competi- tive nature more or less made him shortsighted and wasn't able to see the big picture in terms of where we were trying to go," Thomas said. In separate news conferences, the Raptors and Malone called the parting amicable. Asked ifhe was fired-as sources earlier indicated- or if he resigned, Malone said: "Those are just words. It was a good parting. It's a fair package. And now it's time to move on." Walker, 35, takes over after just one season as an assistant. He came to the Raptors after a 10-year career as an NBA player in New York, Denver, Washington, Detroit and Chicago. Malone, 54, stuck with a core of veterans aroun4' prized rookie guard Damon Stoudamire, who played s much he was eventually sidelined by tendinitis. CONG RATU LATES MICHIGAN'S CLASS OF'96 BEST WISHES TO YOU ALL! STOP IN AND MEET 2 ADDITIONS TO OUR "FAMILY": Al 1 MI, 1 N, e o b CA03virwk 44 lio, tI / We've our back more... it's+ and Gradual Th-Sa *-USA expanded into room to give you quality activewear it's exciting! ion Week hours 4/29-5/5 io M-W 9-7 Atlantal996 t 9-9 Sun 9-5 * RESTAURANTiSPORTSAN 1220 South University 665-7m7 711 N. University 663-6915 i m