BASEBALL The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, April 8, 1996 - 58 .olverines must cut down on errors to stay in 1st By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer They can hit, they can pitch, but defense is what will make or break them. Meet the Michigan baseball team, the leaders of the Big Ten. The Wolverines are now 9-3 in the *nference, two games in front of Ohio State and Indiana, after taking three of four from Minnesota over the weekend. After getting out to a horrible 1-13 start - falling to tough non-confer- enceopponents-Michigan has made a complete turnaround, winning I1 of its last 14 games. New Michigan coach Geoff Zahn haspreached an aggressive style, both the plate and on the basepaths. And it has worked. 'The Wolverines make music at the plate, chiming base-hits left and right from their aluminum bats. And when they get on base, the Wolverines work just like Energizer Bunnies. They keep going, and going and going. It's true that Michigan only tallied three stolen bases in the four-game Snference set. But that doesn't tell the whole story. Many times when the Wolverines reached base, Zahn called for hit-and-runs. Michigan didn't suc- ceed in any of them, but kudos for trying. This is an effective way of manufacturing runs. The Wolver- ines also capital- ized on the Go- phers' Il wild pitches in the se- ries. It seemed as if Michigan went every time the ball got by a one- foot radius from the catcher. In the first S victory in the opening game of the twinbill. With Wolverine pinch-hitter Bobby Scales on third base, Kirk Beermann popped to short-center field; the short- stop retreated to grab the pop-up, squeezing the ball for the second out of the inning. But Scales immediately tagged up and sprinted toward home, sliding in safely for the run. It was risky, but it was aggressive. And that's what the Wolverine are as a team. Michigan took advantage any time it had a chance to run. This could make it much easier for the Wolver- ines to get runs on the board. And this aggressive style gives their power- hitters more at-bats and good pitches to hit. Dransfeldt, Derek Besco and Mike Cervenak all benefited from good pitches. The threesome combined for five home runs, 12 RBI and 1I hits against Minnesota. The meat of the order is shap- ing up to be one of the conference's best. If they continue their hot hitting, opponents' pitchers better beware. Don't throw them any of that over- the-plate garbage because they will hurt you. "(The Minnesota starting pitcher) just made a mistake," Dransfeldt said, speaking of his second home run of the series in yesterday's 4-2 win. "He gave me a fastball high." Those high, down-the-middle fastballs are what the Michigan pitch- ing staff has avoided thus far. The Wolverine pitching staff has been all but brilliant in conference play. Led by J.J. Putz and Mark Temple, who both pitched seven-in- ning complete games Saturday in Michigan wins, the hurlers pile up strikeouts, can get out of an inning in crucial situations, and keep walks to a minimum. Against Minnesota, Putz, Temple and Brian Steinbach didn't have their best stuff. But they made the clutch pitch w h e n needed, a n d th at's what cunts in conference games. "I felt pretty good out there. but I didn't pitch too well," Putz said. "The team picked me up. "I got in some tough jams and got a ground ball here and there, and my- teammates turned a couple double plays for me." When the Wolverines were on, the Michigan fielders uere turning the double plays and backing up the Wol- verine pitchers with solid defense. Cervenak snagged balls hit his way at third base. Dransfeldt ran down grounders at shortstop and made strong throws to first base. Besco nailed a Minnesota runner at the plate from right field. And center fielder Brian Bush made a diving catch on a sinking line drive. But when Michigan was struggling, it was usually suffering from shoddy defense. Yesterday, Dransfeldt bobbled a routine ground ball right at him. The Wolverines' Mike Haskell was called for catcher's interference when his glove got in the way of a Gopher bat. Saturday, Bush overran a ball that fell in front of him for what should have been a single. His two-base error cost Michigan a run. If the Wolverines want to stay on top in the conference. they must cut down on their errors - physical and mental. After Michigan's four-game set against the Gophers, the Wolver- ines have a total of 54 miscues in 28 games. Dransfeldt leads the way with 13 errors. It is true that this is a young and inexperienced team. There are only six seniors on the squad. So some errors could be written off to the team's youth. "We're still doing some freshman things," Zahn said. "But they keep improving, and I think that this club will keep getting better." Yes, the Wolverines are improving -- their hitting and pitching. But their fielding needs a lot of work. Michi gan is in first place right now in the conference. But a first-place team usu ally supports its slugging and pitch ing with solid defense. If the Wolverines don't wtant to fall back to the middle of the pack, the "E" must stay off the scoreboard. If Michigan succeeds in doing this, it could be one happy and successful season for Zahn and the Wolverines game of the set, the Wolverines used this to their advantage. In the third inning, with Michigan's Kelly Dransfeldt on second base after his RBI double and Jason Alcaraz on third, Minnesota starter Justin Pederson threw a wild pitch that went back to the backstop. Alcaraz raced home for one run. Later in the inning, two more wild pitches - that weren't that wild - led to another run. This aggressive running style led to Michigan's go-ahead run in their 4-2 Besco brothers work double duty By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer He's so good-that you'd think that two of him are on the field. There are two of them on the field. Michigan's Derek and Brian Besco are identical twins. Derek bats and throws right-handed Brian is a left-hander. Derek is the Wolverines' right- fielder - Brian shifts between first base and designated hitter. But Brian can also pitch. The sophomore brothers from Westland have been a successful duo. Both have contributed greatly in Michigan's hot conference start. And both were a large reason why the Wolverines took three of four from Minnesota over the weekend, 7-3, 6- * 4-2 and 0-4. Derek came into the four-game set against the Gophers leading Michi- Sgan with his sizzling .385 batting av- erage, having stroked 10 hits in 26 at- bats. And against Minnesota, Derek went 6-for-12 with one home run and had two RBl. -Derek's dinger was just one-of- Shree in Saturday's 6-2 win in the cond game of the doubleheader. 'Michigan third-baseman Mike Cervenak belted two two-run homers 'ii the victory. Cervenak opened the sixth inning, crushing Minnesota pitcher Mike Diebolt's first pitch to the grassy knoll past the leftfield fence. And then stepped up Derek. "I followed Cervenak's home run, so it was a fastball right down the ,iiddle," Derek said. "I was going to ake advantage of it. I got all of it. It just happened at a good time. We needed a couple of more runs." -But Derek contributed in the field, too. He made two solid defensive plays that thwarted any chance of long in- nings for the Gophers. The second game of Saturday's twinbill is when Derek helped out in *le field. Minnesota third-baseman Rob Smith led off the fourth inning with a long fly ball to right-centerfield. Derek Was playing close to the rightfield foul line, but made a nice one-handed backhand catch on the dead run - saving a certain double. s And then three batters later with a runner at second and two outs, Go- pher leftfielder Troy Stein blooped a &it over Michigan first baseman Mike uir's head. Derek charged toward the bounc- ing ball, picked it up in stride, and fired a one-bounce throw to catcher Mike Haskell. Haskell tagged Minne- sota runner Craig Selander, who was attempting to score from second base, for the final out of the inning. No run, no harm, nice throw. "My arm has been feeling good," Derek said. "(Opponents) have been running on me and I'm just going to throw them out every time I have a chance." Brian has not been hitting as tor- ridly as Derek has. But it looks like he is breaking out of his slump. Before the Minnesota series began, Brian was hitting an ice- cold .173 on nine hits in 52 at- bats. The left-hander had two home runs and eight RBI. But Brian gave the Wolverines a lift in the first and final games of the series. Saturday, B r i a n went 2- for-2, a double and a triple, a n d knocked in a run. H e opened the fourth inning with a shot that hit the base of the wall under the 400- foot sign. Brian wound up at third base with a stand-up triple. The designated hitter knocked in a run in his next at-bat in the sixth with a line-drive double that raced by the leftfielder and centerfielder. But Brian contributed in another way yesterday. He was called upon by Michigan coach Geoff Zahn to relieve starter Mike Hribernik in the middle of the third. Brian pitched four and two-third innings and allowed just three hits, striking out three. The Besco brothers are more and more becoming crucial factors in Michigan's games. Derek's bat is a must in the fifth position ofthe batting order. Cervenak and Kelly Dransfeldt are going to be pitched around if they continue their hot hitting. Brian has somewhat regained his hitting stroke. But it's on the mound where he is going to counted on just as much as at bat. Now can't you distinguish between the two of them'? I Michigan searching for leadoff hitter By Will McCahill Daily Sports Writer From the results Michigan has been getting lately, it might come as a surprise that there is a weak link in the offensive chain. The Wolverines - who have won 10 out of their last 13 - are having problems getting production out of their leadoff hitter. Since the beginning of the season, coach Geoff Zahn has given a number of players the first chance at bat, including Chuck Winters, Brian Bush, Bobby Scales, Brian Kalczynski and Jason Alcaraz. Zahn attributes the lack of results partly on the fact that Michigan hasn't had enough games in which to tinker'with the lead spot. -,r "There's no question we're looking for some- ,asebone to lead off," Zahn said." "What we haven't been able to do is play the Notebook mid-week games to try different combinations out." Michigan has had mid-week contests against Eastern Michigan, Toledo and Western Michi- gan postponed or canceled due to inclement weather. "Hopefully we can play this week and do some things," Zahn said. The Wolverines have games scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, home against Hillsdale and at Detroit-Mercy, respectively and, of course, weather permitting. C'MON C'Mo wnILD THING: In this weekend's four-game series, Michigan and Minnesota combined to throw 16 wild pitches. Minnesota junior righthander Justin Pederson exhibited the least co- trol, getting wild five times in Saturday's first game. And costly it was for the Gophers, as Michigan scored twice amidst the wildness. Both runs came in the third inning on three wild pitches. The Wolverines won the game, 7-3. Gopher senior Brad Kearin was luckier with his wild pitches. He tossed three in Sunday's second contest, but none of them came back to haunt him, and he came away with a complete-game shutout of the Wolverines. Michigan's Brian Steinbach had two wild pitches, coming in the yesterday's first game. Fortunately for him and his teammates, neither ended up doing the Wolverines any lasting damage, as they won, 4-2. Minnesota's Mike Diebolt hurled two such pitches while taking the loss in Saturday's second game. Not that it should cheer the junior southpaw up any, but at least he gave up fewer wild pitches than home runs. He gave up three dingers, including two to Wolverine third baseman Mike Cervenak. Also tossing wild pitches over the weekend were Minnesota's Joe Westfall and Michigan's Mark Temple, Mike Hribernik and John Arvai. CATCHING wOEs: In addition to all the wild pitches, the two teams also combined for five passed balls. Most of those can be chalked up to Michigan's Mike Haskell, who had four in Saturday's second game. Unlike wild pitches, however, passed balls are counted as errors by the catcher. Ultimately, though, the errors mattered little in the Wolverine victory. A passed-ball error didn't hurt Minnesota's Matt Skovran in yesterday's second game, either, as the Gophers shut the Wolverines out. Skovran played this weekend in the place of regular backstop Bryan Guse. Guse has been suspended indefinitely by the University of Minnesota for an offense termed only "violating team rules." Guse was fourth on the team with a .351 average before the suspen- sion, and was leading the Gophers with 22 runs batted in. He had played in 22 of Minnesota's 23 contests. Skovran, meanwhile, had all of two at-bats going into the weekend. The Gopher freshman acquitted himself decently in Guse's stead, collecting three hits in nine trips to the plate while playing in all four games. THE LEADER OF THE PACK: Zahn said he is pleased by the leadership junior shortstop Kelly Dransfeldt has been showing of late, on the field, at the plate and in the clubhouse. "He's providing good leadership out there," Zahn said. "We have a young team, but the young guys are coming along (behind Dransfeldt)." Dransfeldt acknowledges his role on the team. "Basically. the other guys look up for leadership on the field," he said. "You don't really have to say a lot, because if you play hard on the field, they're going to play hard behind you. That's basically the leadership you need." Michigan freshman hurler J.J. Putz rares back to fire in the Wolverines weekend games against Minnesota. MARGARET MYERS/Daily LEADERS ontinued from Page 1B Temple struggled a little in the top of the seventh, allowing the Gophers to avoid the shutout. Three hits and two wild pitches gave Minnesota two runs, but it was indeed too little too late, and Temple short-lived, as the Wolverines roared out of the box in their half of the fifth. First baseman Mike Muir started things off for Michigan, grounding a double past Horton down the first base line. Freshman Bobby Scales, batting for centerfielder Brian Bush, drew a key walk after catcher Mick Kalahar flied out to right. Muir came around to score 'hen Selander in the top ofthe sixth, Michi- gan coach Geoff Zahn brought in closer John Arvai to protect the Wol- verine lead. Arvai gave up a single to Horton, but then canceled him out by picking him off almost immediately. Leftfielder Troy Stein knocked Selander in from third with a grounder to Beermann, but that was all for the shutting the Wolverines out, 4-0, for the victory and his first career com- plete game. The Minnesota runs weren't par- ticularly due to any potent offense, either. Three of the four came in the top of the third inning, as Michigan righthander Mike Hribernik had his control go by the boards. Gopher catcher Matt Skovran lined smacking a potential grand slam just foul overthe right field wall -walked to score Huls, and a Horton chopper to Beermann drove in Quinlan. Besco was able to get out of the inning without damage to his own earned-run average, as Stein hit a drib- bler back to the mound, which Besco tossed back to catcher Mike Haskell for the force-out at the plate. Besco The Wolverines are, on average, a young team, with great potential, and Zahn said there are no limits on how much they may improve over the course of the season. "I think that this club will keep getting better," he said. "The more this team plays the better they will get. The weekend leaves the Wolver-