6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsTuesday - September 6, 2005 Spikers can't shuck Hu skers By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's volleyball team had its best performance of the season Saturday night, but that wasn't enough to defeat No. 1 Nebraska. The Wolverines fell to the Cornhuskers in three games (30-22, 30-19, 30-21) at the Sports Imports Invitational in Columbus dropping to 0-3 for the season. Michigan proved resilient against the nation's top team, evident by its unwilling- ness to back down when trailing. Down 2-0 in the match and 18-8 in the third game, the Wolverines rallied back - thanks to senior Megan Bowman's five kills - before eventually losing 30-21. The Wolverines fell behind early in the second game and trailed 20-10 at one point before sophomore Lyndsay Miller's three straight kills sparked a 5-0 Michigan rally that helped pull the team within seven, 23- 16. But a 7-3 Nebraska run put an end to any chance of a Wolverine comeback. The beginning of the match was promising for Michigan. The Wolverines surprised the Cornhuskers out of the gates and led throughout the first half of the first game until Nebraska tied it up at 18. Thanks to a .409 hitting percentage, the Cornhuskers ran away with a 12-4 run to fin- ish it off. Junior Danielle Pflum led the team in kills with her season-best of 12 while Miller added nine of her own. "(Michigan coach Mark Rosen) said he did this for a reason and (the game) showed us how (good) we can be," junior Danielle Pflum said. "If we play how we played against Nebraska, specifically in the Big Ten tournament, the title is ours." Michigan fared better against the Cornhuskers than two of its Big Ten counterparts. No. 6 Min- nesota and No. 12 Ohio State have both lost to Nebraska and neither team was able to score 20 points in a single game. On Friday night, the Wolverines dropped their first game of the tournament to No. 24 Long Beach State. Sophomore Katie Bruzdzinski had a team-high 13 kills while Miller tacked on 10 kills in the three-game N WOMEN'S SOCCER Blue squeaks out tie in double-OT game 0 By Scott Bell Daily Sports Writer1 After all of the excitement following a Friday night thriller, it was hard to imagine a scenario where the Michigan women's soccer team could outdo itself on Sunday. But it did just that. Just two days after a back-and-forth 3-2 winl over the visiting Texas Longhorns (2-1-0), the unranked Wolverines topped themselves with a comeback against a top-tier team, eventuallyI tying No. 6 Texas A&M 1-1 in a double-over- time game that was not for the faint of heart. "It was exciting. It was end to end," Michi-l gan coach Debbie Rademacher said. "The girls fought really hard. It was a tie, but it was a posi-1 tive result. We came back, so it's a positive." ; After a first half where they were visibly out- matched and outhustled by the favored Aggiesi (2-1-1), the Wolverines (1-0-2) finally got the1 spark they needed in the 62nd minute. Senior for- ward Therese Heaton capitalized on a rebound on Michigan's sixth corner kick of the match1 to score the tying goal. Junior midfielder Judy] Coffman took the kick, serving a left-footed ball to the head of sophomore midfielder Jamie4 Artsis. Artsis's shot was saved by Aggie keeper Julie Spearink. But Spearink couldn't cleanly save the ball, resulting in a rebound. The carom was quickly corralled by Heaton, who finishedE the ball into the open part of the net. "(That was a) Therese Heaton-type of goal," Rademacher said. "She seems to be in the right1 place at the right time. She gets in physicallyj and knocks balls in." Physical play and aggression were certainly1 major components in Sunday's contest. Texas A&M (2-1-1), which had only allowed one goala in its previous three games, came out with a veryi aggressive gameplan. The Aggies grabbed an early lead in the fourth minute when MadisonI Gates - Michigan's freshman keeper who wasI making her collegiate debut - failed to securei a high ball in the box. The ball proceeded to roll ~ NOTE Young and old compete forj harriers in season opener The Michigan men's cross country team 1 began its season on Monday at the Michigani Open, an impromptu race on the Michigan outdoor track.I Former Michigan star and current assis- tant coach Nate Brannen won the race with a time of 19:35. Michigan freshmen Lex around in the box where Texas A&M players fought for possession and fired it into the open net. Gates saved the first two attempts, but it was Aggie forward Ashley Pistorius who broke the tie, making their third shot the charm. By taking the lead, the Aggies were also able to take control of the pace of play early on. The larger and much more physical Texas A&M squad - which collected seven yellow cards and one red card during the contest - seemed to overmatch the smaller Michigan team. But after Heaton's goal, everything changed. "They are very physical, and we don't play like that," Artsis said. "We are more of a con- nect and possession type of team. We just tried to stay calm, stay composed and play our game and play around their physicality." The remainder of the game was a back-and- forth affair, with both teams' keepers making big saves to keep their respective teams in the game. Gates - who didn't allow a goal in the final 106 minutes of the game - made back- to-back reflex saves in the second overtime to keep her team alive in sudden death overtime. She finished the game with five saves, and the defense grabbed two more saves of its own for a total of seven. "(Gates) really held strong," Rademacher said. "To get scored on early, as a freshman, it is easy to get shaken and have your confidence get waned. But she held tough." It was junior keeper Megan Tuura who got the win in Friday's contest, as a record 1817 fans packed Varsity Field for the first night game in school history. Sophomore forward Melissa Dobbyn grabbed three points on the night with a goal and an assist. She scored the first goal of the game and assisted on a Heaton goal, add- ing to her impressive early-season point total, which now stands at five. Freshman midfielder Danelle Underwood scored the game-winning goal - her first collegiate score - a finish inside the box off a pass from Artsis to seal the deal for Michigan. Williams and Justin Switzer both finished 14 seconds behind Brannen to take the next two spots. The three all raced unat- tached. Top finishers for the Wolverines were Andrew Bauer and Victor Gras, who finished fourth and fifth, respectively. They both clocked in at 19:50 for the four-mile race, 15 seconds behind Brannen. Seth Thibodeau, who led the race at the two-mile mark, finished in seventh place, with Andrew Ellerton and Rondell Ruff rounding up the Wolverine runners who finished in the top 15. Senior Megan Bowman's five kills couldn't save Michigan in its three-game loss to No. 1 Nebraska. loss (30-20, 33-31, 30-25). In the second game of the match, Michigan trailed early, but Pflum's seven kills helped the Wolverines take a 28-27 lead after a Bowman block with help from senior Erin Cobler. Michi- gan had an opportunity to win the game, but the 49ers tied it up at 29 and would eventually take the game 33-31. The Wolverines looked to be on track to win their first of the season until they lost the lead at 15-14 and never gained it back. The Wolverines are far from the same start they had last season - Michigan won its first eight games and 14 of its first 16 last year - but Rosen believes that the team is much better than what its record indicates. At the same time, Rosen is a lit- tle disappointed that his team hasn't been able to win games. "Certainly I'm not pleased with not win- ning matches," Rosen said. "From that standpoint, I'm disappointed. Because I think our team is very good, and I think we'll be able to compete with anybody as the year goes on. - "We're a very young team, and we have to keep that in perspective. So I'm a little torn both ways: I do like the direction we're going and the progression we've made, but I'm not satisfied by any means." Minutemen march past Mic By Jamie Josephson and Anne Ulble Daily Sports Writers EAST LANSING - Fall is the season for transitions, and the Michigan men's soccer team (2-1) is no stranger to this lesson. After suffering a 2004 season scattered with devastating setbacks - including injuries and forma- tion changes - the Wolverines have experienced the sometimes-harsh reality of adjustment. Michigan suffered its first loss in the regular season to Massachusetts at the Michigan State Invitational in East Lansing yesterday afternoon, falling to Minutemen 3-1. "It's a transition from where we were last year as a team, and, with that, it unfortunately takes some time for a team that plays that way to find its form," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "Early in the sea- son, you can make a couple of mis- takes and lose games like this. We don't want to make anymore, that's for sure." The Wolverines entered the game confidently after defeating Denver in the first game of the tournament on Sunday, 1-0. Michigan came off on the attack right away against the Minutemen, employing a strong midfield to cre- ate several early scoring opportuni- ties. At 42:02 in the first half, fresh- man Jake Stacy served the ball from the right side to senior Ryan Alex- ander, but his shot on goal missed wide to the left. Though the Wolverines created several openings to the net early in the game, they were unable to con- vert. By the end of the first half, Michigan had attempted 16 shots on goal. "I thought we carried the run of play and had more dangerous chanc- es," Burns said. "(Massachusetts) finished their chances early out in the beginning of the game, (and we didn't)." At 6:49, the Minutemen's Oral Bullen led the team's first offen- sive attack of the game. Bullen ran the ball down the right side of the field and served it to junior Michael Donnelly, whose shot sailed over the outstretched arms of Michigan goalie Peter Dzubay. While Michigan continued to control its offensive end of the field, the Minutemen were able-to sneak in another successful conversion on just their second shot on goal. Mas- sachusetts' Stuart Wagner broke away from the Michigan midfield, sending the ball to Bullen, who snuck the ball in the lower right cor- ner of the Wolverines' net, bringing the score to 2-0. "Bullen had a great second goal to be able to score on a toe poke in stride like that," Burns said. "Whenever you're shooting and it's unorthodox with your toe the goalie is never set. Here, he was on the full run, and it was a nice finish." Hoping to turn around the flow of the game, Burns made several sub- stitutions. Junior Bobby Trybula entered the game with just a few minutes remaining in the first half and was able to take advantage of fresh legs, putting Michigan on the scoreboard with under a minute left to play before halftime. "The ball was played into my feet," Trybula said. "I turned into the defender and brought it into (senior captain) Adam Bruh, and he just laid it back into the space, and I took the shot." Heading into the second half down by just one goal, Michigan hoped to rely on its ball movement to even the score. "We felt real comfortable espe- cially after Bobby scored that goal," Burns said. "We are a team that is going to be effective when we play within our system and move the ball quickly. We are a more technical team that isn't reliant upon special players to break the game open." But none of the Wolverines, their 10 second-half shots on goal found the back of Massachusetts' net. Sit- ting on a one-goal lead, the Minute- men were able to secure the win by adding an insurance goal at 78:42. "In the final 12 to 13 minutes of the game, we were just hoping and praying that we could pick balls up that were dropping,". Burns said. "But they did a better job picking them up, and the game was theirs at that point." With new faces on the Michi- gan squad replacing familiar ones, Burns acknowledged that the team is undergoing a transition that will take time - more than anything else - to develop into its new form. "(Massachusetts) scored its goals on a couple of breakdowns and lack of discipline with our overall team shape early," Burns said. "They did the smart thing-they tried to sit on a two-goal lead and they did it, and we weren't able to crack them." Even with the loss, Burns is con- fident that the team can bounce back from this early defeat. "We are a young team that has to learn from its mistakes," he said. "We'll have to learn from the experi- ence of dropping a game like this." 0 TOMASSO GOMEZ/Daily Michigan's Kevin Hall fights for a ball in the Wolverines 3-1 loss yesterday. . . . ;i .$ vt A nif --. I SLxury Discounts by VatiDonVati v ' . N ::ri. ..4.:. '{{rii 's l:..o... .,....uw$.,. 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