Sbe ATkbigunf uiY Monday October 7, 2002 SECTION B Physical game can't stop Blue' s weekend sweep By Steven Shears Daily Sports Writer Michigan women's soccer co-captain Andrea Kayal laid flat on her back 12 and a half min- utes into the sec- OHIo STATE 0 and half. She0 had been dealt MICHIGAN 1 one of the many vicious tackles yesterday afternoon by Buckeyes' brutal style of play. Kayal picked herself up, walked off of the field, and remained confident that her team- mates would hold on to the 1-0 lead her goal had built. The Wolverines did not disappoint their captain as they exploded in the second half. With Kayal on the sidelines, Michigan shut out the aggres- sive, bruising Buckeyes (1-3-1 Big Ten, 3-7-1 overall) 1-0. "It wasn't pretty at all. They just played so physical you couldn't get anything going on. There wasn't much soccer going on: A lot of one touch, foul, one touch, foul," Michigan coach Debbie Rademacher said. This is the type of defense and play that had flustered the Wolverines in their losses to Georgia and Minnesota earlier this year. But the team had to match the stinginess of their opponents to keep this game in reach. "The key is all we need is one goal. But when we've faced aggressive defens- es, we've let up four goals against them. As long as we keep it zero on our defen- sive end, we'll work someway to get it," Rademacher said. That's exactly what the 13th-ranked Wolverines (4-1, 9-2) did. Working with a superb defense, the offensive unit creat- ed many opportunities on its side of the field, including 11 corner kicks. On the third corner kick, Amy Sulli- vant found Kayal wide open by the oppo- site side of the net. Kayal finished the assist with a header into the corner. "It felt great. I seriously work my butt off on the corner kicks to try and put in every opportunity," Kayal said. This was her second game-winning goal 'of the weekend. She also knocked in the first goal on Friday against Penn State on the same exact set play. "Sometimes people misjudge on cor- ner kicks, and they jump before the ball actually gets there. I wait until they jump and come down, and then I like to capi- talize," Kayal said. Kayal was also superb on defense, proving that she can be a strong force on both ends of the field. Even in her limit- ed playing time due to injury, Kayal, together with fellow defender Carly Williamson, stopped many of Ohio State's breakaways with sliding tackles and forceful turnarounds. "She was very solid on defense, and on Friday, too," Rademacher said. "She and Carly work hard together in the summer. They cover for each other, and step up for the big plays." Most importantly, the win against Ohio State keeps the Wolverines atop the Big Ten standings. "It feels so good because we have been working hard for the Big Ten Champi- onship," Kayal said. "This year it is our biggest dream right now to win it." TONY DING/Daily Michigan soccer freshman Therese Heaton (18) wrestles for possession of the ball with Ohio State's Palge Harrison yesterday. Fresh Start MICHIGAN 8, TORCNTO I Wolverines cruise as freshmen pour it on By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Writer Which of these things would constitute a rough night for a col- lege hockey team? Being outshot by 42? Giving up eight power plays? Or how about failing to hear your own national anthem. All of these things happened to the University of Toronto Varsity Blues Saturday night, when they came into Yost Ice Arena and were defeated by Michigan, 8-1, in the Wolverines first full-squad exhi- bition of the season. Michigan dominated possession and could have, if the puck bounced its way, scored into double digits as the Wolverines hit the post on multiple occasions and had a goal by sophomore Michael Woodford disallowed because the goal was knocked out of place. "We don't get a lot of opportunities for exhibition games," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "And we put our best foot for- ward. We generated a lot of chances, we didn't give up much, and we got a lot of players some good ice time." Michigan got on the board just five minutes in, when senior alternate captain John Shouneyia put in a rebound after shots by sophomore Eric Nystrom and Jeff Tambellini came up short. Toron- to then held strong, killing two penalties. But with less than six minutes to go in the first period, freshman defenseman Danny Richmond blasted a shot from the point off the left post and in. Thirty-five seconds later David Moss flicked another puck in from in front of the net. Toronto did score on freshman goalie Al Montoya early in the sec- ond period, when forward Ian Malcolm drove through the zone and beat Montoya. But Michigan scored less than two minutes later, when forward Andrew Ebbett found fellow freshman Brandon Kaleniecki. The night became a showcase for the Wolverines' underclassmen as Michigan finished the game with only two seniors and two jun- iors in the lineup. Shouneyia jammed his wrist in the second period and did not return. He received an MRI, but it is not believed to be a serious injury. Underclassmen accounted for every goal other than Shouneyia's, and each freshman picked up at least one point. Freshman right wing Jeff Tambellini, who played on a line with Shouneyia and Nystrom, picked up three assists on the Shouneyia goal in the first and on goals by Milan Gajic and Ebbett just 11 sec- onds apart late in the second period. Tambellini also had scoring chances of his own and hit a couple off the post. "When you hit four posts in one night, by the last one you kind of get a little antsy," Tambellini said. "It's fine as long as the chances keep coming, making things happen and creating things. When you're not getting chances, that's when you got to start worrying." Brandon Kaleniecki scored his second goal of the night, when he put in an Ebbett rebound from right in front of the net. Jason Ryz- nar then scored the game's final goal on a sweet feed from Gajic. The Wolverines took the ice in front of a crowd for the first time on Friday night when they played their annual Blue-White intrasquad scrimmage. The teams ended up tied 4-4. The white team took an early 4-1 lead thanks to two goals by Shouneyia, and one each from Woodford and Moss. But the Blue team came back when Gajic scored on a breakaway with 26 seconds left in the sec- ond period. Gajic and Henderson each tallied a score in the third to force the tie. Close call: 'M' falls in overtime By Kevin Maratea For the Daily BLOOMINGTON - Since 1995, no Big Ten has beaten Indiana during the regular season anywhere - espe- cially in Bloomington, where the Hoosiers have proven to be almost unbeatable over the INDIANA 2 years. But yes- ti MICHIGAN 1 (OT) terday, the Michigan men's soccer team traded blows with No. 4 Indiana for 98 min- utes, before the Hoosiers put the game away on a golden goal. "It sucks being so close game in and game out and losing," junior defender Kevin Taylor said. "We were playing well, but it's those goals, those game-winning goals that kill us." Indiana (3-0-0 Big Ten, 8-1-2 over- all) needed all the time it could get to earn the victory over Michigan (0-2- 0, 3-5-1). Sophomore forward Mychal Turpin ended Michigan's scoreless streak against Indiana with an unassisted first-half goal into the bottom right corner. "What that goal did for us is take away all the mystique of who and where we were playing," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "It gave us momentum coming just before half- time and we realized that this was a team that we could open up against." Tied 1-1 going into the second half, each team worked relentlessly for the go-ahead goal. With three yel- low cards, the game was agressively forced into overtime. "They took smart yellow cards to re-group and slow us down," Burns said of Indiana's cautions. The Hoosiers netted the golden goal when the initial shot was deflected off sliding Michigan keep- er Joe Zawacki and then rebounded into the net. "I'll give Indiana credit, they're not just lucky in terms of how they're always collecting second balls," Burns said. "It's effort and fighting spirit. They do a good job recruiting, training and getting the right players on the field." However, the players weren't so quick to give Indiana credit on the game winner. "I thought he was offsides,".Taylor said. "I haven't seen the film yet, but I'm almost 100 percent sure." As the final whistle blew, Taylor's dissatisfaction with the result was evident, as he threw the ball into the air and pleaded his case with the referee. "We felt we were going to win an athletic game. They got the fight, but we have the athleticism," he said. "We were physically more athletic than Indiana." Despite Michigan's record, the losses have been painstakingly close and with the exception of Dayton, all the rest have come against top- 25 teams. "We're not shying away from the top competition," Burns said. Michigan knows its luck in these close matches has to change. "We've got one more recruiting TONY DING/Daily Michigan forward Andrew Ebbett tallied a goal and two assists Saturday night in Michigan's 81 rout of Toronto. Golf places ninth at home tournament By David Van Howe For the Daily The Michigan men's golf team finished ninth out of a field of 17 teams in this week- end's Wolverine Invitational. The team put up a three-day total of 881, tying its best 54-hole score of the season. Although it was statisti- cally equivalent to the Wolverines' best tour- nament of the season, the team was frustrated at not being able to take advantage of playing in its own tournament on its home course. First-year Michigan coach Andrew Sapp couldn't help but feel a little disappointed with the final results. "We had some good scores," Sapp said. "A few guys actually had their career bests. We posted by redshirt junior Rob Tighe and redshirt freshman Mark McIntosh. Despite the low scores, Michigan found itself in 11th place and out of serious contention going into yesterday's final round. Redshirt junior Chris Kellogg also had a career-low round of 70 in Saturday's round. Redshirt freshman Jimmy Wisinski shot his career best total of 228, including a score of 69 in the final round yesterday. Tighe was Michigan's best overall individ- ual player of the Invitational and had the best tournament of his career, shooting a com- bined score of 5-over par 217 in the three-day tournament. Tighe finished tied for 12th place in the 90-player field. Nichols put up a score of 218, tying his career-low 54-hole score. tational a successful event. "It was a great weekend," Sapp said. "The weather held out after Friday. Two teams, Xavier and Michigan State, played really well. The course was in great shape and the low scores reflected that." The tournament certainly did not lack drama. Michigan State and Xavier battled yesterday and ended up tied for the team championship. The individual champi- onship was decided when Andrew Svoboda of St. John's defeated Ryan Swelin of Miami (Ohio) on the second sudden-death playoff hole. The Wolverines' next match is the Xavier Invitational in Cincinnati on October 14-15. I-----. i r. - 1 WAM ,;W 1 liw