The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 9, 2001 - 5B Call of the game "I don't question myself at all. Amen." Indiana coach Bob Morgan on his decision to pull starter Matt Rice in Sunday's game. Rice had thrown 7.1 shutout innings. The Hoosiers went on to lose, 3-2. SERIES SCORE Indiana 0 SMichigan4 SUNDAY 'S GAME Idar 2 Mihan 3 Player of the series Nate Wright Over the four-game series, the first baseman went 7-for-14 at the plate with five RBIs. Three of those came in yesterday's game, accounting for every Michigan run, including a walk-off single in the tenth. Defense ensures final win in series MICHIGAN 6, INDIANA 2 I MICHIGAN SWEEP Continued from Page 13 Indiana had loaded the bases in the 10th innng and catcher Gibran Hamdan was at bat. He lined a Jeff Trzos fastball toward right fielder Brandon Roberts. Roberts caught the ball and in a fluid motion fired it fo1e. ndi- ana designated hitter Blake St. Clair, who had taggcd up from third, was still five feet from the plate when the throw arrived. Michigan catcher Alex Coleman put the tag on and the rally was killed. Just a .225 hitter over the season, Roberts knows that his defensive abilities are highly valued. "The right fielder is supposed to have one of the strongest arms on the team.," Roberts said. "The bul wasn't hit too deep. I had a lot of momnu:m in in and I had a lot of adrenaline. In that situation they have got to be tagging." The play put the Wolverines on an emotional' gh. "That play that Roberts made was do or di . Any ro that nails the guy at home plate is a great throw," an sid. "That was a huge play it really picked us up and it is deflating for the other team." Michigan's pitching, which has been excellent all y -r, came through Sunday. Starter Rich Hill threw eght innings allowing seven hits and two runs in his irs liig Ten start of the year. He set a new career high wih I I strikeouts. After a two-out rally resulted in a 2-0 Indiana lead in the top of the first, Hill settled down for seven scoreless innings. "That was a long first inning," Hill said. "I got two OUt: right away. All I needed was a groundball and I just lost it for a second there. I felt good after that." Trzos threw two scoreless innings to get the win in relief. The team obviously feels good about themselves hav- ing won the last six games. "Winning gets contagious and you start to believe that there is no way that you can lose," Zahn said. Player AB R H BI Player 4 Tcusa 2b 4 0 0 0 Haegele 2b Cantalamessa If 4 2 2 0 Evans dh Koman 3b 4 1 1 0 Blakeley ss wright lb 3 2 3 1 St. Clair cf Sokol dh 3 1 2 1 Spanos 3b Ghannamcf 3 0 1 0 Maharlf Fox c 4 02 2 Calkins rf Roberts rf 4 0 0 0 Hardan lb Jominy ss 4 0 1 1 O-brien c Sadler ph Totals 336 12 5 Totals INDIANA 4 100 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 40.20 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 302 5 1 E- D. Haegele (4), Mahar (2), M. Calkins (5). DP- Indiana 2, Michigan 3. LOB - Indiana 2, Michigan 8. 2G. Hadman (8), Cantalamessa (9) ,B. Jomiy (3). SH-C.. hannam (3), SB-u. Haegele (13). CS. Jominy (2). IP H R ER BB SO Indiana Nick Otte (5-2) 4.0 10 5 4 1 1 Vitielliss 4.0 2 1 1 3 5 Michigan Korecky 9 5 2 0 4 UmirsLen Brickens (home plate), Jonto Yonto (first base), Tim Calton (second base), Jay Lyons (third base) At: Ray L. Fisher Stadium Attendance:275 Start: 3p.m. Time: 2:09 BRENDAN O'DONNELL/Daily Firstbaseman Nate Wright starts a sweep tag on an attempted pickoff. Michigan successfully swept Indiana in a four-game series. $ weep boosts Blue in- Big Te n standingrs The rotation recap No.I BoBBY KoRECKY IP H R ER BB SO0 9 5 2 0 1 4 Y Korecky (4-2, 1.99 ERA) pitched his fifth complete game of the sea- son, allowing no earned runs in al 6-2 victory on Friday. No. 2 NicK ALEXANDER IP H R ER BB SOdy 4.1 7 6 3 2 1 Alexander (1-3, 5.60) was pulled inthe fit fer surrendering a walk and a triple. He had a no decision in Michigan's 11-7 win. IP H R ER BB SOf _.>. With five scoreless innings, Lev- ;:.::.::<.::: eue (2-1,0.34) won game two of Saturday's doubleheader, He's allowed one earned run in 26.1 innings.9 No. 4 Rici'iHiLL P H R ER BB S4 The sophomore Hill (2-2, 3.27) pitched for a win in his first Big Ten game, setting a new career BRENDAN ODONNELL/Daily high in strikeouts with 11. Sophomore Tim Leveque is third in Michigan's weekend rotation. Player j Tousa 2b Cantalamessa If Koman 3b Wright lb Ghannam cf/ Fox dh Coleman c French rf Jominy ss Sokol ph LaRosa pr/ss MICHIGAN AB R H BI Player 2 2 1 2 Haegele dh 4 0 2 1 MaharIf 3 2 2 1 Blakeley ss 3 1 1 0 St. Clair cf rf4 3 2 1 Spanos 3b 2 2 2 2 Hamdan lb 30 2 1 Calkins rf 401 1 Wargoc 1 0 00 Evans ph 0 00 00 OBrien c 0 1 0 0 Bestler 2b Sadler ph Minor 2b 26 11139 Totals INDIANA AB R H B 32 1 0 3210. 3 21 0.o 3 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1000 28794 MICHIGAN 11, INDIANA 7 Totals E - M, Calkins (6), Cantalamessa (4), N. Wright (4), B. Jominy (6), 8. LaRosa (8). DP - Indiana 1, Michigan 2. LOB - Indiana 3, Michigan 10. 2B - K. Mahar(4),V. Spanos (2), G Hamdan (9), Canta- lamessa (2). A. Coleman (1) SB- S. Tousa (7), CJ. Ghannam (4), B. LaRosa (8). CS - B. St. Clair (3), M. Calkins (2), Cantalamessa (1), 8. LaRosa (1). IP H R ER 66 SO Indiana, Edwards 2.2 6 4 4 2 3 Pegg .2 3 3 2 1t 1 Kemp 2.2 4 4 4 4 2 By David Horn Dall Sports Wrter OnRay Fisher Stadium, pennants of each Big Ten school are displayed on flagpoles along the outfield wall in order of standings, from left to right. The Michigan pennant began the week- enld flying in right field but jumped poles twice in two days, as this week- end's four-game sweep of Indiana earned the home flag a spot in left-cen- ter and the team a fifth-place ranking in t conference. The top six teams quali- or the Big Ten tournament. The sweep was the first Michigan has accomplished in two years and the first sweep at home in four. T he Wolverines entered the series tied with Northwestern for ninth place, after being swept by Penn State last week- end. The Hoosiers were in eighth place, 1.5 games ahead of Michigan. ur conference record was "down to after Penn State, and we were strug- gling a little bit," Michigan junior Mike Sokol said. "We set out to win all four gimes this weekend." 'Wolverine ace Bobby Korecky took the mound Friday for game one. He allowed five hits but no runs through eight innings, then took the mound with a six-run lead for what proved to be a challenging ninth. An error was charged to first base- Nate Wright on a hard-hit ball * n the first-base line by second base- man Dan Heagele. Wright's dropped ball allowed a run in from Indiana first baseman Gib.ran Hamdan, who had ddubled to lead off the inning. Haegele took two bases on the error. '-Shortstop Eric Blakeley then singled to right, driving in Haegele. Korecky managed his way out of the inning, (pleting the game without the aid of the bullpen. On Saturday at Ray Fisher, the Michigan flag was hoisted on the third pole from the right, rather than the sec- ond stating that the team had advanced into sixth place. The Wolverines over- took Illinois, which had lost to confer- ence-leading Ohio State, and Michigan State. The Spartans had just dropped their Friday game to Minnesota. To make the next shift - across the centerfield wall to the third flagpole from the left - the Wolverines would need to take both seven-inning games against the Hoosiers. In game one, Michigan hurlers Nick Alexander, Bobby Wood and Jeff Trzos combined for the 11-7 win, in which there were four lead changes in the abbreviated game. In game two, Tim Leveque pitched five shutout innings for the Wolverines. His ERA was lowered to 0.34, as he has now thrown 26.1-straight innings with only one earned run. Sunday finally saw the home team's pennant in leftfield, putting the Wolver- ines in fifth place in the Big Ten. Michigan was poised for the sweep, but got into early trouble as sophomore Rich Hill, in his first Big Ten start, gave up two runs in the top of the first. In the bottom of the eighth, Wright more than made up for his fielding blunder that cost Korecky the shutout by driving in Jordan Cantalamessa and Brandon Jominy with a single to left. In the bottom of the tenth, Wright added his third RBI of the game to seal the sweep for Michigan. Winning all four games "certainly helped," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn said. "Coming in, we felt we had to take three out of four at least. Taking four out of four is much better." Michigan's Big Ten record now stands at 5-3, good enough for fifth in the conference, just a half game behind Minnesota. The Wolverines will face the Golden Gophers in a four-game series beginning next Friday in Min- neapolis. Michigan does not expect to sweep against its opponent. But each win pushes that flag farther towards leftfield. Winning three of the games "would have been satisfactory, but only to a certain extent," Michigan sophomore Mike Sokol said. "Getting four is going to give us a lift because we're going to Minnesota. So this is going to give us some confidence going into Minnesota, because it's going to be a battle next weekend." Michigan Alexander Wood Trzos 4.1 1.2 1.0 7 1 6 d 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Umpires-Joe Yonto (home plate). Tim Caton (first base), Joe Lyons (second base), Len Brickens (third base) At: Ray L. Fisher Stadium Attendance: 531 Start: 1 p.m. Time: 2:42 survives bses-o By Benjamin Singer Daily Sports Writer When the linescore of a baseball game reads mostly zeroes, it's a safe bet good defense played a major role in the game. For Michigan, a couple of twin- killings erased bases-loaded threats, allowing them to continue on to a 3-2 victory. The first came in the sixth on a 5-2-3 doubleplay of Brock Koman to Alex Coleman to Nate Wright. The 10th inning ended when right fielder Brandon Roberts caught Gibran Ham- dan's fly ball and threw out Blake St. Clair who was tagging from third. "It was very big," Coleman said. "Doubleplays can shut down a big inning. We came up key. Rich hit his spots and came up with a big ground- ball there that shutdown what could have been a very serious bad inning for us." By managing to stay within striking distance, the Wolverines handed the game over to their bats. Michigan was in need of a rally that eventually came in the eighth with a two-run single from Wright. In the previous three games of the series, they had seven multi-run innings. "We know we can come back any- time," designated hitter Jake Fox said. "Our bats were just phenomenal this weekend. And we know coming into any inning we can get two, three runs an inning." Leading 2-0 in the top of the sixth, Indiana began to mount a rally. Insur- ance runs for the Hoosiers looked imminent with runners at every base and nobody out. But doubleplays are known as a pitcher's best friend, and Michigan starter Rich Hill knew how to call on his companions. He threw a changeup away to Kevin 0'Brin. the ninth spot in the order, to induce the grounder to Koman at third base. "We wanted to get (O'Brien) to hit a groundball," Hill said. "It just worked out perfect vt was a es(me. Right after that, I knew we were going to roll." Indiana's leadoff bater Dan Haegele then ended the rally with his groundout to Scott Tousa at second. The threat was gone, and whei all was said and done, the Wolverines were still in the ballgame. The Hoosiers didn't have to hit Hill very hard to create traffic on the basepaths. A walk, error and bunt loaded the bases. Indiana couldn't get the ball out of the infield, but Hill assisted the Hoosiers with that prob- lem. Aft, -is wak to Nick Evans, he fielded a Mark Calkins grounder and threw it into centerfield as he tried to start the 1-6-3 doubleplay. "I just didn't set myself right," Hill said. "It was just a h'd play on my part. I didn't use fundamentals at all. I had plenty of time to throw the runner out at second." Michigan coach Geoff Zahn wasn't surprised to see that Indiana's only ided jams way of stirring up trouble for Hill was with station-to-station baseball. "If you look at his games, that's kind of what happens," Zahn said. "He doesn't give up many hits. Walks and things like that get him into jams, but he finds a way out of it. He either strikes a couple guys out or, like today, guys made good plays." Good plays continued for the. Wolverines. Down by one run, they found themselves in another bases- loaded jam in the 10th inning. A hit- batsmen and back-to-back singles against Jeff Trzos set up the big play for Roberts to preserve the 2-2 tie as he threw out the tagging St. Clair at home to end the inning. The throw went straight from Roberts' hand to Cole- man's glove without a bounce. "It was a perfect throw," Coleman said. St. Clair "came in pretty hard and I just wanted to make sure I had the ball so we got that guy out, but it was a great throw by Brandon. Once I saw Brandon release it I could see it was going to be right at me. It was pretty shallow in the outfield. He made a good accurate throw." Roberts' throw was not indicative of his recent warm-ups. The rightfielder said he has been struggling with toss- ing the ball around. "As of late I've been throwing the ball terribly in the infield in pregame (drills)," he said. "I've been throwing really bad. Luckily today I was able to get off a good throw in a key situa- tion." Player Tousa'2b Cantalamessa If Koman 3b Wright lb Sokol dh Ghannam cf/il Fox c Roberts rf LaRosa ss Totals MICHIGAN AB R H 6 3 22 20 f 2 0 2 1 3010 3 00 0 2 0 0 0 266 10 6 I S. Player 1 Haegele 2b Evans 3b St. Clair cf Spanos dh Mahar If Blakeley ss Colkins rf Hamrdan lb O'Brien c Totals INDIANA AB R H S 4 0 2 0 30 0 0 4201 2 0 1 0 283 8 2 INDIANA 3, MICHIGAN 6 E - Ghannam (1). OP - Michigan 1. LOB - Indiana 9, Michigan 6. HR - LaRosa (1), Cantalamessa (2). Indiana Cary (a-1) Smith Michigan Leveque (2-) Pistilli Wood IP H R ER B SO 4.0 8 S5 5 2 4 2.0 2 1 0 0 1 5.0 1.0 1.0 4 4 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 4 1 0 4 0 0 Umpires. Tim Catton (home plate), Jay Lyons (first base), Len Brickens (third base). At: Ray L. Fisher Stadium Attendance: n/a Start: 4:20 p.m. Time: 1:53 Ll MICHIGAN 3, INDIANA 2 (10) INDIANA Player AS R H BI Tousa 2b 4 1 2 0 Cantalamessa t 4 1 1 0 Koman 3b 2 00 3 Wrighti1b 5 02 0 Ghannam cf/i 3 00 0 Fox dh 4 0 20 Coleman c 4 0 0 0 French rf 1 0 0 0 Rutkowski ph/cf 1 0 0 0 LaRosa ss, 2 0 1 0 Jommy ph/ss 2 1 1 0 Totals 323 93 Player j Haegele 2b Blakeley ss Mahar If St. Cllair cf Spanos dh Evans 3b Calkins rf Hamdan lb O'Brien c Totals INDIA AB RH 81 5 0 2 0 4 1 0 5 0 11 5 0 1 0 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 52 102 E - Hamdan (5), Coleman (2) Hill (2). DP - Indiana 3r Michigan 2. LOB-Indiana 12, Michigan 10.28-St. Clair (10), Tousa (2). IP N4 R ER 68 SO ndiana Rice Vitielliss Pegg (3-3) Michigan Hill Trzos (1-0) 7.1 0.1 1.1 4 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 0 2 5 0 1 Si* "' " Nl0 t.rai U 8.07 2 2 4 11 2.0 3 0 0 0 0 By David Horn Daily Sports Writer This weekend's sweep, in conjunction with two non-conference victories last week against Bowling Green, on Tuesday and in Ypsilanti at Eastern Michigan on Wednesday, is the first time the Wolverines have won six-straight games since 1998. That year, Michigan began the run with a victory in the tail-end of a four-game Ohio State series in Columbus, followed by two non-conference wmIs against Bowling Green and Oakland. Thy hen pro- ceeded to knock off Minnesota in the lriday gam' of a series at Ray Fisher Stadium, then took both ends of the Saturday doubleheader. The Wolvcnns wll They also wore the blue yesterday to close out the series. "There's one on order," Sokol said of his white jersey. "But it hasn't come in yet." Sokol had a pinch-hit walk in Saturday's first game and started as the designated hitter in the nightcap. ROCKY MOUNTAIN HIGH: Three Michigan players who hail from Colorado led the way in Saturday's doubleheader. Sophomore Brock Koman went 5-7 in the two games, including a home run in the first game that tied him with Nate Wright for a team-best five home runs on the season. Fellow sophomore Jordan Cantalamessa had two extra-base hits and three RBIs in the two games. But the real "mile- Umpires- Jay Lyons (home plate), Len Brickens (first base), Joe Yonto (third base), Tim Catton (third base) At: Ray L. Fisher Stadium Attendance:619 Start: 1 P.m. Time: 2:40 BIG TEN STANDINGS Conference Overall Team W L W L Purdue 8 2 15 14 Minnesota 7 2 19 12 Ohio State 6 2 23 7 Penn State 7 3 16 17 Michigan 5 3 16 12 Illinois - 4 6' 15 15 Iowa 3 6 12 12 >. I