4B -- The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 2, 2001 ----- SEASON REVIEW Michigan has dominated the Big Ten the past six years and the 1999-2000 season was no differ- ent. Here is a recap of what you may have missed: Sixteen-game winning streak: The Wolverines won 16 consecutive games leading up and including the beginning of the Big Ten sea- son. The streak included wins over No. 4 Arizona State and No. 22 Notre Dame. Michigan lost just one game in the month of March. Stellar play of Marissa Young: Then-freshman Young showed no signs of intimidation as she accumlated a 18-4 record to go with a 1.14 ERA. Young was named All-Big Ten second team All-Great Lakes region first team. In addition to pitching, Young was the first Wolverine to hit two grand slams in a career when she hit against Auburn and one against Central Michigan. Hutchins leads all-time wins list: Michigan coach Carol Hutchins became the all-time wins leader with a 1-0 victory over Indiana. She currently has a 675-292-4 record. Big Ten Tournament champs: After succombing to Iowa in the Big Ten conference race, the Wolverines defeated the Haweyes in the final to capture their fourth Big Ten Tournament title in six years. Stumped by DePaul: In hosting the regiqnal, Michigan was beaten by the Blue Demons in the first round and were eliminated by them in the final. The loss marks the sec- ond consecutive year that the Wolverines were unable to get past the NCAA regional. Michigan lost to Notre Dame in the 1999 regional. BIG TEN STANDINGS Conference Overall Team W L W L Michigan 2 0 14 11 Penn State 3 1 21 11 Wiscbnsin 3 1 20 13 Iowa: 3 1 19 13 Northwestern 2 1 9 12 Illinois 2 2 30 ;d4 Ohio State 1 2 21 11 Purdu~e 2 2 25 10 Minnesota 1 2 22 11 Indiana 1 2 11 21 Michigan State 0 2 12 24 TEAM STATISTICS Through April 1, 2001 Player G BA AB RBI HR Taylor 24 .439 82 5 0 Kollen 26 .306 85 9 0 Moulden 26 .284 81 16 4 Doe *22 .283 60 3 0. Volpe 24 .267 60 4 2 Tune 26 .250 80 8 1j Mack 16 .250 4 0 0 Young 23 .241 58 2g Bugel 15 .217 23 0 0 Schock 22 .212 52 4 0 Betley 12 .208 24 & 0 Churchill 17 .188 16 4 1 Garza 21 .181 44 3 0 Elsner 4 .143 7 3 0 Conner 11 .000 7 0 0 Murdock 3 .000 2 0 0 Prichard 2 .000 0 0 0 Barda 2 .000 0 ' 0 ERA leader (12 innings pitched) Barda 1.15 Strikeout leader Young 73 Save leader none REMAINING SCHEDULE Queens of the . __..__.. .. ___._. Big Ten Kosanke's graduation leaves Blue troubled with changng lneus S. BRAD QUINN/Daily Junior Stefanie Volpe, an Al-America Designated Player last season, will try her hand at third base this year. Volpe won the job over freshman Angie Churchill. By Nathan Linsley Daily Sports Writer CHAMPAIGN - From 1998-2000, Michigan softball coach Carol Hutchins did not have to ponder who would be the Wolverines' third base- man. The hot corner was occupied by Pam Kosanke, who was a four-year starter - three years at third base. Kosanke was a career .300 hitter and Michigan's MVP in 2000. When Kosanke graduated, Hutchins needed to choose between two possible replacements: Junior Stefanie Volpe and freshman Angie Churchill. Volpe, an All-America selection a year ago, was primarily used as a desig- nated player, and Churchill was expect- ed to fill the defensive void left by Kosanke. Before this weekend's road trip to DePaul and Illinois, neither one had filled the hole. "I'm constantly searching for a third baseman," Hutchins said. "It's tough for the kids to come in and play in that situation." The obvious choice for Hutchins was to play Churchill at third and keep Volpe in her role as designated player, but defensive lapses and a lack of offense forced a change. In the first game against DePaul, Churchill garnered her coach's wrath by not covering her base on a routine grounder, allowing a Blue Demon to advance to third uncontested. "Church hurt us (Friday)," Hutchins said. The door was open for Volpe to play third base in the second game against DePaul and in the games against Illinois, and for now, she has taken advantage. "Volpe has had a better attitude and has worked harder," Hutchins said. "I told her the only reason I put her in was that I felt she wanted to play third base. For a couple weeks there, I didn't think she wanted to." "It's not that I don't want to be out there, it's just that I was struggling with my offense and everything was affect- ing everything else," Volpe said. "I just lost a lot of confidence out there." In the first game against Illinois, Volpe fielded five chances without an error, while going 2-3 at the plate with 4 RBIs. In the second game, she strug- gled with her offense but was still able to help the team with error-free play at third. Hutchins was enthused about the play of her All-American. "Volpe is working to win the posi- tion, and I'm pleased to see that," Hutchins said. Volpe believes that her age and her time working with Kosanke gives her the edge over Churchill. "Pam Kosanke - I learned every- thing about third base from her. So I just try to take after her," Volpe said. "Plus, being a junior, I kind of deserve that position." With the designated player spot open, Hutchins could find another hit- ting specialist to insert into the lineup and inject life into the Wolverines' inconsistent attack. Michigan had been rotating its catch- ers, with senior Kim Bugel and fresh- man Monica Schock splitting time. With Volpe at third, Hutchins put Bugel behind the plate and had Schock hit for her. Schock hit the ball well in the first game against Illinois, driving in two runs, and Bugel had some key blocks on wild pitches in the rainy weather. Only a freshman, Schock is the Wolverines' catcher of the future. "Mo is a great catcher, and she's going to be one of the very best, I think, in the country," Hutchins said. But Bugel adds experience and lead- ership to a team that is looking for both. "As we get into the Big Ten, experi- ence counts and Mo is going to get* some more experience, but right now I have to say that I like Bugel behind the plate," Hutchins said. "She gives us that calming edge we need." "It's my position," Bugel said with a smile. "I know when I go back there, Hutch is like, 'Bring the spunk out there.' (Monica) is a freshman - she needs to learn. She's getting there. I'm trying to teach her." Since Marissa Young is the only Wolverine pitcher who also hits, using Volpe at third, Bugel catching and Schock as the designated player will not work when Marie Barda or Kates Eiland pitch. In those situations, Bugel and Schock will probably both hit, with Bugel spending the majority of the time behind the plate. Having a set lineup for even one. game in three will allow the Wolverines to build confidence and consistency. If the new lineup produces the same kind of offensive outbursts it did in the 10-2 win over Illinois on Saturday, the Wolverines should compete for a Big Ten title with their solid pitching and defense. "Offense hasn't been our strength, so you have to soar with your strengths, and pitching and defense have been our strength the whole season," Hutchins said. BRAD QUINN/Daily Michigan looked to senior backstop Kim Bugel for experience and leadership after the team had problems with defense and passed balls against DePaul. ILLINI Continued from Page 1B With Volpe's two-run homer in the sixth, Young only had to control the slippery ball after the Illini's two runs in order to end the game with the slaughter rule after the sixth inning at 10-2. Michigan's efforts on Friday were much less valiant. By the time the second game rolled around, the Wolverines looked like they'd had enough fun in the sun. DePaul capi- talized on Michigan's lax defensive efforts, and the Wolverines couldn't only manage two run scored in the bottom of the seventh inning. "I'm very disappointed because defense and pitching are our strengths. Offense hasn't been our strength, so you have to soar with your strengths," Hutchins said. "They goofed up first-third plays that we needed to make - just sloppy crap. That is absolutely unacceptable." Michigan came out strong against the first game against DePaul with a 2-0 lead, but it gave up four runs in the third inning. The letdown dominated the players' attitudes and per- formance. "It has not been our strength the last couple of years to come in and be the fighters because the scrappy team wins here," Hutchins said. "Really, I don't want to take anything away from them, but I don't think they're that much better than us. But their attitude is better than ours, and their scrap- piness is better than ours. We need to be the toughest team on the field, and our kids, a lot of them, are learning that." Although this is the first year for Illinois to play in the con- ference, the Wolverines didn't look past its talent. The team was prepared and pumped after two confidence-shattering losses against the Blue Demons. The difference showed, and Michigan was able to split the road trip and emerge victori- ous its Big Ten opener. "It's important for us to win any games right now because we're working on, among other things, getting our confi- dence to where it needs to be," Hutchins said. "It's when we are in a tough game and they come up with the bases loaded and two outs that we need to execute by not throwing wild pitches, by staying ahead in the count, and coming back strong after we walk a batter, after we hit the batter. That's where you get your confidence." THE LINEUP Meghan Doe _ Melinda Moulden Chrissy yGarza s Xx- Meissa aylor Marissa Young v Stefanie Volpe Angle Churchill KelsyR 'eecca Tune Marie Barda Kate Eiland Meghan Ritter Marissa Young Kim Bugel Monica Schock ollen D April 3 April 4 April 7 April 8 April 1 April 13 April 14 April 15 April 20 April 21 April 22 April 27 April 28 April 29 May 2 May 5 May 6 May 10-12 May 17-20 May 24-28 Opponent Oakland (2) at Bowling Green Purdue (2) Indiana Indiana Central Michigan at Minnesota at Wisconsin at Wisconsin at Penn State (2) at Ohio State at Ohio State Northwestern (2) Iowa Iowa Time 3 p.m. 3 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2p.m 2 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 1 p.M. Captains lead with different styles at Eastern Mich. (2)3 p.m. at Mich. State 2 p.m. Michigan State 1 p.m. Big Ten Tourn. TBA NCAA Regional BA World Series TBA By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Writer When Kate Eiland and Melissa Taylor were named as the captains of the Michigan softball team, Eiland was shocked. "It is a great honor - it was 100-percent unexpected," Eiland said. Why shouldn't she be? After seeing very limited action last year due to injury, Eiland's appearances have again been limited this season because of injury. Her on-field performance could not be judged and many of the underclassmen had barely seen her play, if at all. Her career record is good - 14-5 with a 1.46 ERA - but she has not seen the action that she needs or wants. She has appeared in just 31 games in her career so far, forcing her , ,, ,I , - - -- While Eiland was glad to see the field again, she knew that her game showed rust. "My reaction time is really off," Eiland said of her error against the Broncos: As a junior, Eiland is in rare territory as most captains are seniors who have played for three seasons. By contrast, Taylor has had a healthy career and an impeccable season so far. She is cur- rently hitting .439 with an on-base percentage of .467. She also leads the team in stolen bases with six. "I've been focusing a lot on my short game," Taylor said. "I feel really fast, a lot faster (than last year) - they aren't throwing me out." Taylor leads with her performance on the field, which she has been on since she arrived to Michigan. She has started in 203 of the 205 games she has played in - No. 7 on the career 1; 't oA c1,n oc ,,-AetPah. o ._ c .,n team for the rest of the season. "People really respect her on the field and I think people respect me off the field," Eiland said. In addition to being captains together, they also have a good relationship off the field. "We have a great relationship - we are good friends," Eiland said. Eiland and Taylor are confident in their abil- ities, but Michigan coach Carol Hutchins does- n't think that they have perfected their tech- nique just yet. As Michigan got off to a bit of a shaky start at 14-11-1 - its worst start in six years - Hutchins believes that the captains must share some of that responsibility. "Our leadership is not good enough," Hutchins said. Taylor remains hopeful about the rest of the season. "a anhvii din't Weak ea rlyad one. E NFCA TOP 25 As of March 28, 2001 first-place votes in parentheses Team Record Pts Pvs 1. UCLA (27) 35-0 675 1 2. Arizona 36-2 645 2 3. California 39-1 619 3 We