Tuesday March 14, 2006 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com OReTigSn tiig 11 . . . ....1 1 Cagers try to focus on task ahead By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Editor It got to the point where he had to turn off his phone. After Michigan discovered it wouldn't be in the NCAA Tournament, senior Daniel Horton couldn't bear the phone calls. "I got a few calls, but after two or three from my mom and my dad, I just turned my phone off," Horton said. "When you let everybody call and have something to say to you, it affects you even more.... I just kept my thoughts and feelings to myself." Coming into this season, Michigan's ultimate goal was a bid to the Big Dance. Now, after their bubble burst on Sunday, Horton and the Wolverines must settle for the NIT. The team will face with winner of today's UTEP/Limpscomb game. But the Cedar Hill, Texas native isn't ready to let his time at Michigan come to an end quite yet. "Any time you have a chance to wear a Michigan jersey, that means a lot to us," said Horton, who was named the NIT's Most Valuable Player in 2004. "I don't think other people see it that way because every- body views making the NCAA Tournament as the end- all-be-all, but we feel like any time we have the chance to represent this school and this university out there on the basketball court, we are going to do it to the best of our abilities, and we're going to be happy doing it." For the Wolverine seniors, the NIT game on Thurs- day night may feel like deja vu. Two years ago, this group took. home the championship with a 62-55 vic- tory over Rutgers in the finals. The victory extended Michigan's already-succesful NIT record, which now rests at 20-5. The Wolverines have won three titles in its eight appearances. But the feeling of optimism surrounding that team hasn't been as widely felt this time around. Back then,the seniors were sophomores, and fans believed that with more maturity, Michigan could grow into a NCAA Tournament team. This season, it looked like the seniors would finally have the opportunity to experience March Madness. But a horrid finish in the last nine games ultimately did Michigan in. "I think that everybody was kind of disappointed, but like I said, we brought this on ourselves," senior captain Graham Brown said. "We lost a good portion of games the last couple games and that's a tough thing for us. But like I said, we'll have to build off it." The underclassmen echoed Brown's disap- pointments. "It hurt a lot," freshman Jerret Smith said. "We have seniors on the team, and they put it all on the line.... They're about to graduate, and they've still never made Blue-collar help on the way with return of Bailey By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Writer On Jan. 31, a chilling scene in the rink transformed the raucous Yost Ice Arena crowd into dead silent spectators. Just minutes after a Western Michigan player was laid out on the ice, Michigan freshman Jason Bailey laid motionless along the boards, the victim of a nasty hit from Bronco defenseman Chris Frank. The hit sidelined Bailey for five weeks and forced the forward to watch final four series from the stands. "It was extremely tough for me," Bailey said. "You have to try and stay positive and be a good teammate and cheer your team on and be ready for when you get back in the lineup." But Bailey finally returned to the lineup this weekend against Ferris State. In his first game back, Bailey didn't have an impressive stat line - he attempted one shot and col- lected four penalty minutes. And1 according to Michigan coach Red Berenson, the decision to play Bailey on Saturday night was a difficult one to make. Berenson saidahe was con- cerned he may have played Bai-1 ley too early, and worried that the team might suffer as a result of that decision. But his gut feeling1 was to play the freshman again because Bailey could only get better. "He's such a hardworking kidi and such a strong skater," Beren- son said. "And he gets up to speed pretty quick. Now his puck han- dling and his timing may not; be as good as some of the other players who have played every1 night (while he was out). But I don't think anybody is going to be quicker and faster and stron- ger as Bailey is now. Every game, you're going to see a little more (progress)." Bailey failed to notch a point in Saturday's game as well, but he looked more comfortable on the ice, and his intensity never dropped off. That physicality has been Bai- ley's trademark this season. He is more than ready to deliver a big hit along the boards or in the middle of the ice. "Hockey is a pretty physical game, and I'm putting my body out on the line for us every night," Bailey said. "I love playing the physical game, and injuries are a part of the game. So, if it hap- pens it happens. But I'm going to be playing that physical game for our team and bring some energy and help us out a little bit." Michigan will need that physi cal presence come Friday when it faces in-state rival Michigan State in the CCHA semifinals. The last time a game was decided by more than two goals was in the 20022 2003 season, when the Spartans beat Michigan 4-0. "Friday night is where it's at and Friday night is all that mat ters," Bailey said. "That's all that's in our heads." The nature of the rivalry means that Bailey's kind of play - the dirty work that doesn't show up on the stat sheet - will now be in the spotlight. But this unselfishness is noth- ing new for Bailey, who came into the season expecting to fill that roll on a team already loaded with scoring talent. "I've always played a physi- cal game, a high-energy gam and have been a power forwarti type player," Bailey said. "I was hoping I would come in here ans create some space for the more skilled guys. Just be a real good energy guy." *I I JIVIIV U M.) UIV fLuLany Senior Daniel Horton will help defend Michigan's homecourt on Thursday, where the Wolverines have an all-time 12-0 record in NIT play. it (to an NCAA Tournament). That's what will hurt me the most." Said junior Brent Petway: "I at least wanted them to make it to (the NCAA Tournament), especially since they were the first recruiting class (of Michigan coach Tommy Amaker's) to be able to go to the Tournament one time before they left. I just feel sorry for them." Amaker hopes the previous trip to the NIT won't hamper his team's motivation to end the season with a win. "I would hope that we want to finish better than the way that it's just ended for us," Amaker said. "I am hoping that we're going to have mature veteran seniors. They get a chance to have a different kind of feeling, hopefully, on the Crisler court than they did on Senior Day." For this group of seniors, the finished product never matched the potential. They stepped into a reeling Michigan program and started the rebuilding process in the post-Brian Ellerbe era. In their four years, the disappointments always waited around the corner. Still, the fight that they stepped onto the court with their freshmen year hasn't left them yet, even though the chance to play in an NCAA Tournament has. "I think that at the same time if you know me, if you know a few of the guys on this team, that we've liked this challenge - we wanted this challenge com- ing here," Horton said. "And it didn't work out. We didn't end up making it, but we've still done some good things here." Multiple injuries a blessing in disguise for embattled senior By Colt Rosensweig Daily Sports Writer Senior Luke Bottke is already the tallest member of the Michigan men's gymnastics team. But when the competition gets more dif- ficult, he seems to become larger than life. "Luke is a real good competitor," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "As you approach a championship meet, some people get bigger, and some people get smaller. And when the competition gets bigger, Luke gets bigger." Even as a 6-year-old, Bottke was intrigued by gymnastics. Not only did he watch as many compe- titions as he could on TV, he also enjoyed doing flips off couches and performed cartwheels in the backyard. Once Bottke began participating in organized gymnastics, he dis- covered his natural affinity for the floor exercise and vault, now his specialties. "I grew up with a trampoline in my backyard," Bottke said. "I know a lot of kids did, but I spent a lot of time on it. I've just always been pretty naturally acrobatic, somehow inclined for air sense and tumbling, knowing where the floor is underneath me, just having tim- ing for that kind of stuff. Vault and floor are related; it's the same type of thing." A less fortunate reason for Bottke's status as a two-event spe- cialist are repeated wrist injuries. The problem began with a stress fracture in his navicular joint that didn't show up on X-rays. Told by doctors he could prac- tice as much as he could toler- ate, Bottke almost broke the bone in half before having it checked again. "If I would have taken a little bit of time off (when the wrist was first injured), it would have prob- ably just healed, but I didn't know that's what I was supposed to do," Bottke said. "Now it's completely healed, (and) there's a screw in the bone. It's healed, (but) it's just never going to be 100 percent." Since suffering the injuries, Bottke has learned to make every- thing he does in gymnastics count. Because of his wrist, he can't per- form unlimited repetitions of floor routines or vaults in practice, so he treats each one as if he's in a com- petition. Additionally, by competing in just two events, Bottke can put more concentration into perfect- ing his routines than an all-around gymnast is able to. He usually focuses on just one apparatus per day. Consequently, he doesn't have much trouble with the pressure in meets. "I know that the team relies on me, but I use that as motivation," Bottke said. "I actually prefer to go up later in the lineup, to be the last one to go, because I like to go all-out and ... to know that I've been able to put up a good score for my team. If anything, I feel more confident than if I was doing more events, because I have the opportunity to work on perfection and work on getting all my land- ings down, rather than having to worry about all these other skills, on every other event." In early February, Bottke's confidence received a further boost at the Winter Cup in' Las; Vegas. Competing against some' of the best gymnasts in the coun- try - including some Olympians; - Bottke placed 12th on the vault and seventh on the floor exercise Michigan's highest finish by an individual. "It feels really good, knowing I can compete and be in the top 10 with these guys," Bottke said. "It takes a lot of weight off my shoul- ders for the rest of the season. It helps me build a lot of confidence for what's to come." FILE PHOTO Senior Luke Bottke has battled through injuries and still been successful at Michigan. w I * I Invest in Yourself (Celebrating 150 YEARS Master of Science in Financial Analysis USF introduces its MSFA Accelerated Program The MSFA Accelerated graduate program is designed for Economics, Business, Finance and other qualified students who want to pursue a full-time Financial Analysis graduate program. The MSFA i Master of Science in Computer Science USF introduces its MSCS with an Emphasis in Entrepreneurship America excels at entrepreneurship and USF claims one of the top entrepreneurial business schools. The MSCS with an Emphasis in Entrepreneurship blends a classic Master's Program in software development with MBA iK I I I