ahbe Aidijun i ilg SPORTS . . . March 24, 2003 SECTION B Champion! Bertin is the one By Eric Chan Daily Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Michigan wrestling coach Joe McFarland couldn't have been more excited to see tears streaming from the eyes of his 157-pounder, Ryan Bertin. On Saturday, Bertin became Michigan's first NCAA Champi- on since current assistant coach Kirk Trost accomplished the feat in 1986. "I was in a rhythm all weekend," Bertin said. "Things were flowing - I can't really explain it. Everything just fell into place." Bertin couldn't have taken the crown in a more exciting fashion. The redshirt sophomore, seeded sixth in the tournament, upset the Nos. 2 and 3 seeds to reach No. 9 Alex Tirapelle from Illinois in the finals. The Fighting Illini fresh- man had upset defending national champion Luke Becker of Minnesota in the semifinals. "I knew (Tirapelle) was having a good tour- nament, but I felt like I was really in a good rhythm," Bertin said. "I've wrestled him before, so I was confident that if I wrestled seven min- utes the way I wanted to, that I would win, and that's what happened." Tirapelle beat Bertin earlier in the season, but the Wolverine avenged that loss at the Big Ten Championships. This time around, their match- up would be in a larger venue, with much more on the line. In front of 16,436 fans at Kemper Arena, the two unlikely national finalists stepped out on the mat. Seconds into the match, Bertin made the first move, attacking with a single leg. Tirapelle quickly countered with a whizzer, tying up Bertin's arm. The referee called a stalemate, and both wrestlers walked back to the center of the mat. Tirapelle attacked with a single leg and Bertin sprawled on top of him. The Michigan 157- pounder spun behind and scored the first take- down of the national final match. Bertin added a second takedown in the middle of the second period, firing a double leg that the Illini wrestler couldn't defend. Bertin secured the match in the third period, with a quick single-leg takedown. When the buzzer sounded, the scoreboard read 7-3 in favor of Bertin. Normally a quiet and reserved young man, Bertin couldn't contain his emo- tions, falling to the mat and breaking down in tears. See BERTIN, Page 6B THE BERTIN WALL Ryan Bertin was difficult to bring down Satur- day, as he became Michigan's first individual wrestling champion since Kirk Trost in 1986. Here's a look at his push for the title. For extended wrestling coverage, turn to page 68. Round 1- pins Robert Beville (2:01) Round 2- dec. No. 11 Nate Wachter, 6-2 Quarterfinals - dec. No. 3 Shane Roller, 3.1 Semifinals - dec. No. 2 Keaton Anderson, 5-4 Finals - dec. No. 9 Alex Tirapelle (Illinois), 7-3 AP PHOTO Michigan's Ryan Bertin beat Illinois' Alex Tirapelle 7-3 in the 157-pound championship match this Saturday In Kansas City, Mo. to become Michigan's first Individual national champion in 17 years. Michigan's super six Icers follow captain Ortmeyer's lead, step up in tourney DETROIT - Michigan coach Red Berenson told Michael Woodford he needed him to play like Jed Ortmeyer Saturday. What did that mean? It meant elevating his game in the playoffs. It meant finding a way to score. It meant being there when his team needed a spark. And it meant lifting a trophy when it was all over. Ortmeyer, the Wolverines' captain, did all those things against Ferris State. But just as importantly, Woodford did as well. Ortmeyer scored twice and showed why he was named the CCHA's Best Defensive Forward. He also walked away with CCHA Tournament Most Valuable Player honors. His first goal broke a 1-1 tie in the second period, giving COURTNEY Michigan the momentum it needed LEWIS to stay on top for good. And when Ferris State's Chris Kunitz decked Full Court Press Dwight Helminen after Helminen scored an empty-netter to ensure Michigan's victory, Ort- meyer was the first guy to rush to Helminen's defense. But Ortmeyer's performance alone wouldn't have been enough to give Michigan its sixth CCHA Tournament title in 10 years. Michigan needed guys like Woodford to step up just as Ortmeyer did. Woodford hadn't found the net in almost two months, and Berenson said, "If you would have told me he would score the winning goal, I probably would have questioned you." Being Michael Woodford wasn't working all that well, so the sophomore forward took Berenson's advice and gave being Jed Ortmeyer a try. With Ferris State within one goal, and threatening to send the Wolverines into one of those third-period collapses that have been all too familiar with, Woodford broke his goal drought and gave Michigan a cushion big enough to hold off the Bulldogs' super- charged offense. When Ferris State's Matt York scored later in the period, Woodford's goal became the difference. "If your top guys are playing well, then everybody plays well," Berenson said. "The seniors set the tone, and I think the young players responded." The whole team responded to Ortmeyer and the rest of the leaders, playing much different games than when Michigan faced Ferris State and Ohio State in the regular season. The last time the Wolverines played the Bulldogs (Feb. 1 in Big Rapids), Ferris State blitzed Michigan for four goals before the Wolverines had finished lacing their skates. This time, Michigan came ready to play from the start, and it played lockdown team defense, holding Hobey Baker candidate and CCHA leading-scorer Kunitz to just two shots on goal. See LEWIS, Page 5B6 photos by TONY DING and RYAN WIENER, Every Wolverine, including coach Red Berenson, joined the celebration Saturday night after Michigan beat Ferris State 5& to win its second-straight CCHA Tournament title. Wolverines win sixth CCH By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Editor DETROIT - The score was 4-3. Ferris State was down by one. Less than 29 seconds left. Michigan failed to clear the neutral zone as Ferris State's Derek Nesbitt knocked _ER____$TATE___ down an airborne puck and began to skate in uncontested from the blueline. The third-largest crowd in CCHA Tournament history rose to its feet, as it would be Nesbitt versus Michigan goaltender Al Montoya for the CCHA Title. Then, as if being spit up by the ice, a yellow streak crashed into Nes- bitt's stick, knocking the puck away and bringing the Mason Cup back to Ann Arbor for another year. Junior defenseman Andy Burnes was that yellow streak, and a ray of sunshine for Montoya and the Wolverines' faithful. "(Eric) Nystrom had the puck, and he backhanded it, and both Rogers and I thought it went down," Burnes said. playoff title "We were looking down ahead of the ice - we'd thought he'd iced it. Then we saw the puck coming down on a breakaway, and obviously that's the scariest thing ever, coming down with 20 seconds left. I just dove and tried to knock the puck away, and just not let him get a shot off." Montoya said of Burnes' lunge: "You can't teach something like that. It's not skill, it's just hard work and will. It's just something that Andy Burnes thrives off of, and when you see a player like that do something that See BULLDOGS, Page 4B Brackets busted all over campus; students no better than Andy Katz There are a lot of people out there who profess turing some of Bristol University's best, Katz is to know a lot about college bas- inlast place. ketball. The mistake many of Not only that, but Katz is in those people make is assuming the bottom 4 percent of the that this knowledge will somehow nation. Still, all is not lost for transfer into successful NCAA the prodigy, who does have all Tournament brackets. In the end, t of his final four teams still in this false confidence only causes the tournament. But that isn't them to drop like canaries in a tough to do when you affirm poisoned coal mine. the NCAA selection commit- And there is no poster child tee's decision by predicting all better for this epidemic better of the No. 1 seeds to advance than .SPN'sAndy Katz. The ana- to the Final Four. time to dedicate to his college basketball studies, he was able to correctly pick each of the 32 first round matchups in the MichiganDailycom/Pizza House Challenge. Unfortunately for Anderson, Louisville fell victim to Butler's Lee Harvey Oswald-like sharp shooting. Anderson isn't the only one cursing Rick Piti- no's luck. Illinois apparently impressed a lot of people in Ann Arbor with its two wins over Michigan and its capturing of the Big Ten title. Unfortunately, the Illini couldn't sober the Fight- ing Irish - who were a missed layup away from falling to Wisconsin-Milwaukee on Friday night. babies as it tore up their brackets when it sent No. 2 Wake Forest back to North Carolina. Flori- da didn't do much more do prove themselves worthy of its No. 2 seed by getting beaten up by Michigan State. And as bad as Katz is doing in his poll, The Michigan Daily was able to find worse. Doug Constantine, an engineer from Portage who man- aged to one-up Katz in the first round by picking 21 games right, showed his Big Ten pride when he picked Illinois, Purdue and Wisconsin to make it to the Final Four. And while this pride in his hometown confer- could beat No. 1 Oklahoma or that No. 9 Gonza- ga could topple No. 1 Arizona is ludicrous. Fur- ther, after four days of basketball, Constantine only has two teams (Kansas and Wisconsin) remaining in the tournament - all but guaran- teeing a last-place finish. Either Constantine was letting his dog pick his teams or he was trying to throw the pool worse than the 1918 White Sox. So, if like Constantine, you find yourself as far from winning your pool as the Tigers are from winning the 2003 World Series, there is only one thing that they should do - sit back, relax and allow yourself to go crazy when Drew Nicholas