14A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 16, 1998 JOHN KRAFT/Daily Tammy Mika - here digging her way out of the batter's box - and the rest of the Wolverines will try to improve today upon a four-hit offensive performance in Tuesday's loss to Michigan State. Unusual Situation for M' Five errors might be one lesson for softball By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer Sometimes, the best lessons are the toughest to take. And the lesson Michigan's softball team learned yesterday at the hands of the Spartans was a particularly tough one. Michigan lost its first game since March 7 when it fell to Michigan State, 7-4, on Tuesday. After trailing 44. the Wolverines produced a three-run inning, and when Softball Melissa Gentile C'om'menary launched a lemon rocket ~ -~ -~----- almost to Jenison I eldhouse, looming in the distance beyond the left-field fence, the game was tied. Tvpical Michigan softball. The No. 2 team in the country seemed as t hough it couldn't he denied. It looked as if it were only a matter of tinme until they scratched out that cytra run. flat the Spartans stood their 1round, and when they came to the plate in the top of the sixth, they took back their lead right from under the Wolvrins' noses. Yes, the top of the inning. Doubleheaders in softball switch the home teams for the nightcap. Not that it mattered any for the Volerines. Their five-error perfor- mance transcended such triflings like the nominal home or away designa- tion. Regardless, it was the Michigan State fight song that blared when the on-the-road-in-name-only Spartans went ahead as Tiffany Yeager scored on a Carrie Carpenter single to right. Instead of the Wolverines breaking green-and-white hearts by slowly advancing runners around the bases, it wv as the Spartans who found a way to scratch out a run. I hen another. And another. Each rutn brought the entire team out of the du;gout to celebrate behind home plate. And when Michigan State pitcher Stephanie Noffsinger struck out Michigan's Stacev Judd to end the game, the Spartan leapt into the air and her teammates ran out to sur- round her. All the Wolverines could do was stand silentlv and watch. ()r was it? Michiman centerfielder Tammy Mika, vxlo had done so well in the first game w ith three hits and two runs batted in, contributed only an error in the second tame. And, in that first game, she came na FILE PH Sara Griffin didn't commit any errors against Michigan State this weekend, but teammates did while she was on the mound. e%~ - softball By Evan Braunstein Daily Sports Writcr Everything was going so well for the Michigan softball team. Riding a 17-game win streak after Tuesday's victory over Michigan State in the first game of a doubleheader, the No. 2 Wolverines (35-4 overall, 12-1 Big Ten) looked unstoppable. They had swept both of their conference series against Ohio State and Minnesota, and hadn't lost a Big Ten game since April 13, 1997. But it all came to an end in Tuesday's nightcap against the Spartans. In the 7-4 loss, the Wolverines committed five errors and managed just four hits. "We did not play well," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "In the past, we've been able to get away with not playing our best and still win because we're a great team. But when you make so many mistakes and only get four hits, you can't expect to win." Now, the Wolverines look to begin another streak, as they take Western Michigan today in a 3 p.m. double- header at Alumni Field. Today marks just the third homestand since the start of the season for the Wolverines. "I'm really happy to be home, and I know the kids feel the same way," Hutchins said. "Being on the road -bouncing back really takes its toll, both mentally and physically." Playing at Alumni Field usually spells victory for the Wolverines- as they have a .732 winning percent- age in the 16 years they have been playing there. Despite the less-than-stellar per- formance in the loss to the Spartans, Hutchins has confidence that her Today's games' Who: Michigan vs.:: Western Michigan Where: Alumni Field WVhen: a p.m. (DH-) Notables: the Wolverines find themselves in an unfamiliar position when they host this afternoon's doubleheader- trying to stop a losing streak (even if it is only a one-game losing streak). Complicating matters is the fact that Division I player of the week Sara Griffin is not scheduled to pitch for the Wolverines in either game. Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said Griffin "needs the rest". Jamie Gillies and Marie Barda will pitch instead.: team will b o u n c e back. "A sign of a good team is how it handles adversity," she said. "I think we'll handle this loss just fine and come out strong." The real test for the Wolverines will be han- dling the Broncos without star pitcher Sara G ri f f i n, three-win, 17-strikeout performance against Minnesota last weekend, Griffin is the backbone of tiis Michigan team and has been a key player in all of its victories. Hutchins, however, is opting to rest Griffin so she will be ready for the three-game series against Northwestern this weekend. Taking the mound today will be Jamie Gillies and Marie Barda, both of whom pit ched in the loss to Michigan State. While she is not overlooking today's games against Western, Hutchins said the conference gatles this weekend take precedence. "We need to get ready for Northwestern, and I really feel that Griffin needs the rest." she said. "Also, giving Jamie and Marie soie work will help them get ready for the weekend. We are going to need all three of them to pitch." Gillies brings a 9-2 record to the mound while Barda is 4-2. While not quite at the level o I Griffin, both pitchers have ERAs under 3.00 and pitched well in the Wolverine's last non-confercnce games. In the doubleheader against Central Michigan April 7. Gillies gave up one earned run while Barda shut out the Chippewas in a one-hit performance. within a softball's width of scoring a run as well. In the fifth inning, Carrie Carpenter, Mika's counterpart in center, threw her out at the plate by the slimmest of margins. Mika made a nifty move to try and reach around Michigan State catcher Margaret Hollis. But Carpenter's throw was dead-eye accurate and the score stayed tied until the fifth inning. But what might have been in the first game never came to be in the second. In fact, it just got worse. After the second game, Mika stared at her cleats as she traced cir- cles in the dirt with them. She chewed on her lower lip and it was a long time before she spoke. "We're gonna learn from it," she said. Some people stumble through life, missing all the subtle little signs, the lesson in nearly everything. Especially things that hurt.'Some people shrug it off. And learn from it. Good teams do, too. Some teams will let an insides- churner like Tuesday's get to them. They'll take their mistake to heart, and forget that the mistakes were aberrations. They'll let the mistakes define them. And some will try to take what they can from their failure, take a lesson, and use it to motivate them- selves. Maybe this is just what hey ed. A loss to sharpen their focu which, shortstop Rebecca Tut noted, might have worn a little d" during their 17-game win streak, "It's not like we were just cruisin but ...," Tune said. Tune explained how she and h teammates are "so used to maki the play," that when they don't its bit of a shock. But when they do, she said,'f miscue is quickly forgotten. Well, usually. Nothing was usual about Tuesda five-error conflagration. In Michigan State's three-run fift Tune and first baseman Traci Cor booted grounders. The gaffe w Conrad's first of the season. Tui followed with another in the six and then it was Melisa Taylor's as she inexplicably lifted her over Jacqueline Hall's routine. tw out grounder. Pam Kosanke rounded out t erring by sailing a throw to first ha well over Conrad's head. But cruising time was over, a learning time had just begun. And today's game will be the fi time they'll be tested, to see wl they've learned. But it's not M they're never allowed to make. error again. This test is open book. 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