Wednesday April 6, 2005 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com PR i TSiTan a@ 8 . . . .. ....... . ......... . . . . ......... ........ 'M' duo fields success By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Writer Feb. 19. The Michigan softball team - trailing Florida Atlantic 1-0 heading into the fourth inning - needed a spark. Sophomore Rebekah Milian stepped up to the plate with two outs and runners on second and third. She laced a run-scor- ing base hit to start a five-run rally and launch Michigan to a 12-3 win. A month and a day later, it was junior Stephanie Bercaw's turn to spark the Wol- verines. In the second inning against then- No. 1 Arizona, Bercaw broke open the scoring with a three-run homer. Michigan went on to win 6-2. While clutch hits might warrant a starting position, Bercaw and Milian rotate.......TO because of the solid lineup ; that No. 1 Michigan (3-1 MI4h> Big Ten, 35-2 overall) brings C.tnt.1I to every game. 2 p When Milian starts, she The Softb plays in leftfield, moving senior Michelle Teschler to rightfield. But when Bercaw starts, she patrols rightfield and Teschler stays in leftfield. "In general, we pretty much rotated them," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "There's been several games where we felt one might hit pitching better than the other." With Bercaw and Milian, the Wolverines get two contrasting styles of hitting. Bercaw brings speed to the team and causes havoc on the base paths. While regulated to pinch running in her first two seasons with the Wolverines, Ber- caw has taken advantage of her chance to play - even if it is on a rotated basis. Already this season, she has smashed two homers and is batting .339, well above her career average of .200. But after never starting a game in prior Best team in the nation also manages to have some fun AMY DRUMM/Daily Junior Stephanie Bercaw earns congratulations after a home run against Illinois. g 11 seasons, Bercaw has adjusted well to play- ing in the field on a more consistent basis, already starting 21 games this season. "It's definitely exciting to play in the field," Bercaw AY said. "Playing in a game is different than playing in << >< practice. We try to practice at anhx game speed and game inten- sity, but there's just something Comp1kx different about games." At the other end of the spectrum, Milian started in 49 games and both of the Women's College World Series games the Wolverines played in last year. But this season, she has started off slowly while Bercaw's improvement has led Hutchins to give both of them a chance to play. When Milian - a slap-hitter - is up to bat, her batting stance looks like the Seattle Mariners' Ichiro Suzuki. As the pitcher releases the ball to home plate, Milian shuffles forward in the batter's box and tries to "slap" it into the ground. Then, using her speed and forward momentum, she can reach first base faster than if she had stayed back in the batter's box. "My role when I'm up to bat is just to make things happen and then try to beat out the throw or advance the runners," Milian said. "I'm pretty quick on the bases; I just try to make things happen." Milian has started the season batting .213. She has started 18 games and is work- ing on an improved approach to the plate. "With my swing, I'm looking to alter it," Milian said. "I was watch- ing the Arizona slappers in the Cali- fornia tournament, and I've been working on running through the ball. Before I was hitting and then running - now I'm trying to stay through to the pitcher." In the series last weekend against Iowa and Illinois, Bercaw started all four games and hit the ball well - connecting on a wind-aided home run Sunday. Although the rotation might have caused a rift between two other players on a differ- ent team, Bercaw and Milian take a positive attitude to the diamond every game no mat- ter who is starting that day. "I always prepare like I'm going to play, and I just keep a good attitude and stay posi- tive," Milian said. "If I play, I play my best, and, if I don't play, then I'll be fully behind whoever's playing and be ready to go in and pinch run or pinch hit." According to Bercaw, the friendly com- petition can only help them improve. "We're all friends," Bercaw said. "We compete to make each other better, but it's not like we're not friends or buddies. It's more of a'You push me and I'll push you and we'll get better that way' kind of attitude." W alk around the athletic campus, and, if you don't know where Alumni Field is, you may never find it. After all, it's practically hidden, boxed in by Yost Ice Arena, The Fish and Oosterbaan Fieldhouse. And that's too bad because the Michigan softball team has already had a special year, and its home and conference season has just begun. First of all, the Wolverines are currently ranked No. 1 in the country. To understand how remarkable that is, take a look at their travel itinerary. Michigan's season began in Las Vegas on Feb. 12 (back when those shorts you've been wearing lately were SHARAD MATHTU buried in your closet). In the Mattu fast, Mattu furious following weeks it traveled to Florida, Georgia, Florida (again), California and Kentucky. During that stretch the Wolverines played a total of 32 games and, after losing the season opener, won 31 straight. That takes us to last Monday, March the 28th, when they practiced ... outdoors ... in Ann Arbor ... for the first time this season. Until then, the team had been practicing in Oosterbaan Fieldhouse. While the players don't use it as an excuse (about half the team is from the Midwest and doesn't know any better), the white walls, artificial turf and fly-ball-inter- rupting roof sure don't make things any easier. Yet for nearly two months, Michigan criss-crossed the country and beat teams that could roll out of bed on Christ- mas and have a practice in the same weather that has us currently celebrating. "I'm not even sure what teams do outside all the time," said shortstop Jessica Merchant, who holds Michigan's career home run record. "Practicing inside, we can't hit fly balls or scrimmage or things like that. But we spend three months working on fundamentals, and that seems to work." Michigan's current No. 1 ranking and record (35-2 after losing the home opener and then bouncing back to win the next three) doesn't quite do justice to the team's dominance. The Wolverines have outscored their opponents 221-42, a ratio of over five to one. They have bashed 55 home runs, which already sets a school record with 22 regular-season games to go. They have three No. 1 pitchers in Nicole Motycka, Jennie Ritter and Lorilyn Wilson, who have struck out a combined 333 batters and have a collective ERA of 0.86. Coach Carol Hutchins has been winning here for over 20 years and recently became just the eighth coach in Division I history to win 900 games. Though winning certainly helps, the softball team - unlike any other Michigan team I've seen - always seems to be enjoying itself on the field. Whether it's Grace Leutele sheep- ishly smiling after strong winds turned a sure flyout into a double or Stephanie Bercaw literally skipping around the bases after hitting a home run or the entire infield high-fiving at the mound after each out, the players are always relaxed. "That's always been a mark of a Michigan team," Hutchins said. "I think it helps us win - sometimes we win because we have fun. I think it's important. It's when they start to get uptight they struggle." Unfortunately, not all the news is good. If you weren't at last weekend's games, you may have missed your chance to see the team play. The Wolverines don't play any more home games until exam week, and, while they'll probably host the Big Ten Tournament and an NCAA Regional, most of the student body won't be around. Don't worry, though, because the team has plenty of support, whether it's from the players' families, the people who are my grandparents' age (they come out in full force for this team) or the families with young daughters. There's even a pep band that makes appearances from time to time. But now, if there's a national championship trophy in Ann Arbor when you come back in the fall, you don't have an excuse not to know. 6 0 0 Sharad Mattu can be reached at smattu @ umich. edu. 0 BASEBALL Opening Day divides Blue By Matt Singer Daily Sports Writer For any baseball fan, Opening Day is one of the most eagerly anticipated afternoons of the year. When the teams trot onto the diamond to begin The Tigers' 11-2 victory, in front of a sold-out crowd, made for a spectacular afternoon. "I've been to a lot of games," Petry said. "But it was the best atmosphere I've seen in the new stadium. It was a great experience." 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And although the Michigan baseball team has already played 23 games of its own, the return of the boys of summer is still cause for excitement. Tolmy A rt Midv igt > owl. Although Petry and other Michigan natives on the team root for Detroit, not everyone bleeds Tigers Blue and Orange. Since the Wol- verines roster features players from all over North America, the club- house features sharply divided loyalties. Among the out-of- towners is sophomore "Opening Day is always special for me," coach Rich Maloney said. "My dad used to take me there, (to Tiger Stadium). I remember watch- ing Mark "The Bird" Fidrych with 50,000 screaming Tiger fans. As a boy, my dad didn't tell me he had tickets. He came, got me out of school and took me over to the ball- park. I was like a kid at the candy store, saying 'Go, Bird, Go.' " While Maloney waxed nostalgic about his childhood Opening Day experiences, some of his players were creating memories of their own this week. Redshirt freshman pitcher Matt Petry - whose father earned a World Series ring with the 1984 Tigers - made the trip downtown to watch Detroit's opener on Monday. outfielder Brad Roblin, the lone Mas- sachusetts native on the team. Need- less to say, he was disappointed with the Red Sox' 9-2 opening-night drub- bing at the hands of the Yankees. "(Sunday night), we were on the plane (coming back from Minnesota)," Roblin said. "I called home and got a message from my roommate who said it was 1-0 Sox. He told me Manny had beads in his hair, looking like an idiot. So, I was thinking, all right, good start. I get home, put on SportsCenter and see nothing but Yankees knocking the ball around Yankee Stadium." While Roblin is the only one of the Wolverines with a true Mas- sachusetts upbringing, most of the team rooted for Boston during its miraculous World Series run. "Everyone kind of jumped on the Red Sox bandwagon last fall," Roblin said. "You always got to root for the underdog." His teammates admitted pulling for the Red Sox but differed on their motives for the decision. "I liked to see the Red Sox break the curse so I didn't have to listen to Rob- lin whine all the time," junior pitcher Derek Feldkamp said. While the Curse of the Bambino died last fall, the Chicago Cubs' World Series drought lives on. Tigers fans make up a majority of the Michigan clubhouse, but Cubs fans are a vocal minority. "There's a lot of rivalries between the guys from Detroit and the guys from Chicago," Petry said. "We're always talking about how the Cubs are no good. They say how the Tigers are awful." Eternally optimistic, the Chicago fans believe the Cubs' 16-6 opening day win is a sign of things to come for their beloved boys in blue. "We're gonna win it all," redshirt junior catcher and Oak Forest, Ill., native Jeff Kunkel said. "I've been saying it since I was five." Of course, the Wolverines still have their own games to worry about - they host Central Michigan today at 3 p.m. But when they return home after the game, the players and coaches will finally be able to flip on the TV and watch curveballs, home runs and sto- len bases flickering across the screen. "I love having pro baseball back," Maloney said. "In fact, I'm going to watch some tonight, guaranteed." 04 *I