Thursday April 15, 2004 sports.michigandaily.corn sports@michigandaily. corn OReTStidmin awat LOA - ---------- -- - Eastern has no answer for Blue By Jamie Josephson Daily Sports Writer YPSILANTI - With the bases loaded in the second inning, Michigan softball senior Jennifer Olds would not let Eastern Michigan off easy. Facing two outs early in the second game of yesterday's doubleheader in Ypsilanti, Olds drove a pitch to deep right-center field. E Olds was tagged out trying to stretch her hit to a triple, but not before three Wolverines crossed the plate to give No. 9 Michigan an early 4-0 lead. Michigan's defense took over after this offensive spark, as the Wolverines went on to win 5-0. The Wolverines took the first game of the doubleheader by the same 5-0 count, and Michigan used a familiar formula of nearly-flaw- less defense and early run production to extend its current winning streak to 18 games in the second contest. "I think some of the kids are pressing, and some of them are playing with a lot of confidence," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "I told them that going into the weekend, we just want to work on getting better every day ... just to execute and stay sharp." The Wolverines wasted little time getting on the scoreboard in the sec- ond game. After junior slugger Jessi- ca Merchant was intentionally walked, junior Nicole Motycka ripped an RBI single in the first inning with the bases loaded. In the fifth inning, Merchant got her revenge on a pitch she hit to deep right field, which was good enough See EAGLES, Page 12A Meet the Mets ... and to hell with the Yanks TREVOR CAMPBELL/Daily Michigan senior center fielder Meghan Doe bats during the Wolverines' win over Eastern Michigan yesterday. Doe garnered a hit during Michigan's 5-0 victory. 'M'pitchers move shutout run to.5 By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer DAN ROSEN Days of Thunder nstead of trying to sum up four years of college in one sitting, I thought I'd do something a little bit different for my final column. I only have about 750 words left with this paper to get my two cents into print. So what I'm going to do instead is write this last piece Gold- en Apple-style. This is my ideal final column - the one argument about sports that I think trumps them all. For a tragi- cally Mets-obsessed New Yorker, that can only be one thing: The Evil Empire. Come on, I had to do it. I've been itching to rip through some Yan- kees' pinstripes since, well, as long as I can remember. What's not to hate? Their fans are arrogant. Their players are ... well they're damn good. But, for crying out loud, they paid Roger Clemens. A team deserves to be torn apart just for that. It's not that the Yankees break the rules. They play, or should I say pay, straight by the book - as my roommate Mike has always made sure to tell me since he decided to root for them. That doesn't mean that I, or anyone, should support the Yankees, though. Believe it or not, I pity those that do. They have less fun. I can remember talking to all my Yankee-fan friends a few months into my freshman year here, when my beloved Mets made a Herculean run all the way to the World Series and lost to that team in pinstripes. It was a great October that I'll probably remember for the rest of my life. I still wake up screaming about Benny "The Hawaiian Punch" Agbayani (who I insist bears a stun- ning resemblance to the smiling, red cartoon Kool-Aid pitcher guy) burying a 13th-inning home run into the bleachers at Shea Stadium in Game Three of the Divisional Series against the Giants. Or Edgardo Alfonzo hitting just about everything that came out of a St. Louis Cardinals pitcher's hand into the gap for a double during the Championship Series. That guy was an incredible player before he got hurt. But all that the Yankees front- runners could think to say to me on the phone was that it must have been a miserable year to root for New York's other baseball team. No, it wasn't. It was ridiculously fun. That's the Yankee mindset, though. If your team doesn't win it all, it's misery. People get canned. Payroll gets doubled. They can't appreciate it at all - the magical season that you can't believe, when your team scratches out key victory after key victory; when 30th-round draft picks like the aforementioned "Hawaiian Punch" (who is playing for former Mets manager Bobby Valentine in Japan right now, by the way), that have no business making it to the playoffs, play like heroes for a few weeks. As a Mets fan, I've seen a year like that just once that I can remember: 2000. I like to pretend that I can recall the '86 Series and Bill Buckner - but I was four. What I know about that year, I've seen on ESPN Classic. (That said, I do like my dad's suggestion of turning the Ted Williams Tunnel in Boston into the Bill Buckner Tun- nel, complete with a statue of the first baseman preparing to receive a ground ball. That way, cars would drive right under his glove, just like Mookie Wilson's bouncer). See ROSEN, Page 13A 0 YPSILANTI - Fifty-five. That's the number of innings the Michigan softball team has played without allowing a single run. Yesterday, the Wolverines won both games of a doubleheader against Eastern Michigan by a 5-0 mark, extending the scoreless streak. Solid pitching has been the key to Michigan's success all season long. Yesterday, sophomore Jennie Ritter led the way with 15 strike- outs in the second game. She pitched a complete game shutout, allowing just two hits and four walks. "(The difference was) movement," Ritter said. "I have had prob- lems with my movement in the last couple of games." Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said that she thought it was one of Ritter's best games, admitting that she didn't even keep track of the actual number of strikeouts Ritter had. "Her ball was really biting, and therefore moving a lot," Hutchins said. "And she really had some good pop. I was pleased to see that. See PITCHING, Page 12A A TREVOR CAMPBELL/Daily Michigan sophomore pitcher Jennie Ritter struck out a career best of 15 against Eastern Michigan. 0 al IN 41 I- Oion tm1Itce. afalasrotstofifimato mao, ot 1 hensohee d withonion, mayou1 1mfib k V0 LVV