2B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMondav - April 3. 2006 1 1" CLUBSPORTSWEEKLY Love of the game drives program hlte ofthigane ail Athlete of the Week Name: Mike DePietro Hometown: Bloomfield Hills Team: Men's Tennis Class: Freshman By Jessica Asbill Daily Sports Writer The varsity baseball team kicked off its conference season this past weekend when it took on Northwestern. But it's not the only baseball team on campus looking to compete successfully in its conference. The Michigan club baseball team also prepared itself for the Great Lakes North Conference. Next weekend, it battles Michigan State in Ann Arbor. The game is important for gaining a top position in the conference standings. Senior Trevor Scott has come a long way from playing for a consistently top-1G program at Novi High School to finding his role on the club baseball team. When Scott randomly met Chris Joseph, Gabe Kloet and Matt Ransweiler at Michi- gan, he never would have guessed he would DANCE FLOOR Continued from page 1B Their collective hopes and dreams were smashed as both highly anticipated games ended up being blowouts. But this time, it was much worse than a mere disappointment. When someone finds out Santa isn't real, he at least has warning signs to see it's coming. Saturday blindsided sports fans and made the best NCAA Tournament in recent memory into another average sport- ing event in the matter of six hours. It would be like walking downstairs hoping to find Santa, only to see your parents having sex under the tree. It wasn't just disappointing; it was also shocking. The first 60 games of the Big Dance were exciting and heart stopping, rallying people around a sport that many felt was dying with the emergence of the one-and- done college athlete. Nobody thought Saturday would be any different. All four teams had incentive to play well. Somehow, each team felt disre- spected. soon collaborate with them to create a club baseball program. Joseph graduated last year, but Kloet and Ransweiler remain on the roster with Scott. Scott explained they founded a club team because of the lack of other options to pursue baseball at the collegiate level. They were unable to compete at the varsity level an didn't want to play intramural softball. Players join the team for various rea- sons. Some want to play in college but are unable. Others train with the hope of play- ing on the varsity in the future. Some just to have fun playing the sport they love. "A lot of guys use club as a way to train before trying out for varsity," Scott said. "Others are from the varsity but left because they weren't receiving the playing time they desired. Winning is always more fun, but the goal of most guys is just to have fun." As one of the co-founders, Scott took on All four teams were entering their respective games with luck on their side. Somehow, each team won a game that included a near-buzzer-beater scenario. And all four teams looked primed to take advantage of their time in the spot- light. Somehow, none of the Final Four participants were part of the pre-NCAA Tournament hoopla, and after flying under the radar, they hoped to grasp their time in the limelight. But just two teams showed up on Sat- urday, and unfortunately for the millions viewing from their homes, they were play- ing in different games. Big Baby Davis looked fatigued after jogging out for pre-game introductions. The combination of him absorbing the week long media attention and outweigh- ing UCLA's starting lineup proved to be too much for him to overcome. And George Mason seemed to be immobile on the court. After all, it's hard to move around on a broken slipper. So Saturday's games proved that a per- fect NCAA Tournament was, in fact, too good to be true. But the truth is, the Big Dance has still more responsibility than the average player, acting as pitcher, coach and club president. The team began their second season 2-1 after finishing last season 12-3. Last year was primarily a year for the team to develop. "I think the team has good chemistry this year" Scott said. "It is a lot of fun just being out there with the guys and hanging out on the bench together." Last season, the team had more experi- ence, but this year's team has more skill. More than 100 players tried out but just 27 made the team. The club recruit- ed from a much larger pool of skilled players than their first season. By adver- tising with banners at festivals and at the club sports forums, as well as by word of mouth, the team attracted a lot of quality and passionate players to the program. been uber entertaining. One bad day of games shouldn't sour fans toward the rest of the Tournament, especially if the lone game remaining is the final matchup. The two teams left are the teams play- ing the best right now, too, nobody can argue that. Florida's balance has carried it through the Tournament with relative ease. The combination of Al Horford and Joakim Noah on the inside and Lee Humphries's lethal outside shooting creates a pick-your- poison situation for opposing teams. UCLA holds arguably the nation's top defense. Coach Ben Howland has this year's Bruins playing John Wooden-like ball, and the perimeter attack of Farmar and Afflalo gives UCLA fans hopes of putting another banner on the already crowded rafters of Pauley Pavilion. So put the disappointment of Saturday's games behind you: Tonight is the perfect night for redemption. We all got over Santa not being real: I'm pretty sure getting re-energized for the last leg of March Madness isn't too much to ask. "We definitely have a good chance of winning (the) conference this year" Scott said. In order to advance to region play, the team must maintain a high standing as it competes against mostly Michigan schools, like Michigan State and Western Michigan. It plays each team in the confer- ence three times, and if it is ranked high enough, it advances to regions. If success- ful in regional play, the team can advance to nationals. "Sure, we want to win the conference ... but ultimately we just want to have fun," Scott said. So, as the saying goes, "Sometimes it is not whether you win or lose, but how you play the game." With this in mind, the team looks to win the conference, but only as a bonus to the fun it has just playing the game they love. 6 > NOTES Why: In his first career dual match, DePietro earned a 7-6(1), 6-4 victory over Iowa's Kyle Markham at No. 6 singles to help the Wol- verines defeat the Hawkeyes handily on Sunday. His victory sealed the deal for Michigan and propelled them to finish the weekend strong after a loss to Minnesota on Saturday. ' Schedule Date Event Location Time 4/3- W Golf Rancho Mirage, TBA 4/4 @ Northwestern Invitational Calif. 4/4 Softball Kalamazoo 3 p.m. @ Western Michigan (DH) 4/5 Baseball @ Central Michigan Mt. Pleasant 3 p.m. 4/7 Softball vs. Indiana Ann Arbor 4 p.m. 4/7 Baseball @ Minnesota Minneapolis 7:35 p.m. 4/7 M Gymnastics Norman, Okla. 8 p.m. @ Team and All-Around Finals 4/7- M Track and Field Austin TBA 4/8 @ Texas Relays 4/7- M Track and Field Durham, N.C. TBA 4/8 @ Duke Invitational 4/8 W Rowing vs. Columbus TBA Southern Cal and Tennessee 4/8 W Tennis vs. Purdue Ann Arbor 11 a.m. 4/8 Softball vs. Indiana Ann Arbor 1 p.m. 4/8 M Tennis @ Purdue West Lafayette 2 p.m. 4/8 Water Polo vs. Hartwick Ann Arbor 1:35 p.m. 4/8 Baseball @ Minnesota (DH) Minneapolis 3:05 p.m. 4/8 W Gymnastics @ Ann Arbor 6 p.m. NCAA Northeast Regional 4/8 Water Polo vs. Harvard Ann Arbor 6:30 p.m. 4/8 M Gymnastics Norman, Okla. 8 p.m. @ Individual Event Finals 4/8- M Golf West Lafayette TBA 4/9 @ Boilermaker Invitational 4/9 W Tennis vs. Illinois Ann Arbor 11 a.m. 4/9 M Tennis @ Illinois Champaign 1 p.m. 4/9 Softball vs. Purdue (DH) Ann Arbor 12 p.m. 4/8 Water Polo vs. Brown Ann Arbor 12 p~m. 4/8 Baseball @ Minnesota Minneapolis 2:05 p.m. Rowing collects first victories of the season The No. 6 Michigan women's rowing team grabbed its first wins of the spring season with sound vic- tories over No. 13 Michigan State and Duke in the ACC/ Big Ten Double Dual in Columbus on April Fool's Day. The win over the Spartans earned the Wolverines a Challenge Cup point. During the second race of the day, the first varsity eight lost in a pho- to finish to No. 3 Virginia on the Scotio River. The team started the spring sea- son with a last-place finish against Princeton and Brown last weekend. The Wolverines will return to Columbus next weekend for dual races against Tennessee and South- ern Cal. Floor exercise key to Blue's success By Colt Rosensweig Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's gymnastics team enters its biggest meet of the season as the underdog. And that's the way it wants it. "I don't think anybody expects a whole lot from us except us, and that can work out to our advantage" senior Luke Bottke said. "All it takes is for one of the teams ranked above us to take something for granted, and we'll knock them out." This Thursday in Norman,Okla.,the Wol- verines will battle five other teams, including No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 4 Illinois and No. 5 California, for three spots in the NCAA team finals on Friday. Michigan begins the meet on a bye rotation, before moving to the floor exercise, the best-case scenario. Michigan coach Kurt Golder was shocked when, as the fourth-picking team, he was able to choose the floor exercise for Michigan's starting apparatus. "I couldn't believe it," Golder said. "Usually floor is the first one to disappear. Floor will go, and then vault will go.... They were our first two picks." Michigan was confident before, but the announcement of the event order gave the Wolverines an extra boost. The floor exer- cise is Michigan's strongest event - it was ranked second in the country on floor as of March 28 - and should allow the team to begin on a high note. Starting on the floor also means the Wolverines will follow normal Olympic order, which, over the course of the sea- son, has yielded their best results. Weaker events, like the pommel horse and parallel bars, will be "hidden" between the team's strengths, and there will be no oddly placed bye rotation to derail the momentum. "In (the) Pacific Coast (Classic), it worked where we had the bye because we were trying to recuperate from high bar," freshman Kent Caldwell said. "But it kind of stopped the flow. I think it's going to be better to focus at the beginning and then just push straight through all the way to the end." The Wolverines are also optimis- tic about their upcoming performances on the pommel horse and parallel bars. Golder believes the Big Ten "debacle" on parallel bars, where four of the six com- petitors either came off the apparatus or fell on their dismounts, was a fluke per- formance. On the pommel horse, several gymnasts have reduced the difficulty of their routines, lowering their start values but increasing the likelihood that they will compete cleanly. Freshman Phil Goldberg, a key com- petitor on the pommel horse, believes that even with the lower start values, the Wolverines will be a force to be reckoned with. "It's been shown that you don't have to be an extraordinary pommel horse team to beat the best pommel horse team," Gold- berg said. "You just have to hit your sets. You don't even have to have a high start value. If you hit your sets, you'll be fine. You'll be in there with the top pommel horse team." Big Ten vault champion senior Drew DiGiore, looking to boost the team score with hit sets on both the pommel horse and vault, believes a positive attitude will be crucial to success on the often-trouble- some apparatus. "If you are trying not to fall, chances are you're going to fall," DiGiore said. "But if you're thinking about how well you're going to hit (your routine), you're going to hit it, and it's going to be good. You can't go in trying not to fall, because you'll be too tentative and that's how we've been swinging on pommel horse.... If we get Michigan hopes that starting on the floor exercise will propel them to victory. * 0 away from that, it will be good." Unlike many of the other qualify- ing teams, the Wolverines are generally healthy. Those gymnasts with nagging aches and pains are confident that once the adrenaline of competition kicks in, they will be able to perform at their normal high level. Every member of the team will need to bring his A-game because the fight for each spot in the finals will be fierce. The top three teams in each of the two sessions on Thursday earn a place at team finals on Friday. "Oklahoma will be very strong at home, and they've been national champs three of the past four years," senior Gerry Signo- relli said. "Illinois has got a few guys that do some really big sets, so they're going to have some high scores on certain events. And Cal - we've bumped them out (of the Super Six) before in my past three years here ... but they've been doing really well this year." As usual, the Wolverines are confident in themselves and their teammates. To a man, their most important goal is to put up big scores for the team, with any individual accolades coming as an added bonus. "I think because we're the underdogs, people aren't expecting us to make (team finals);' freshman Joe Catrambone said. "We have nothing to lose. We'll just go out there and do our best, and I think we're going to surprise a lot of teams by bump- ing the ranked teams that are above us." Students EXPERIENCE FOR YOUR RESUME. MONEY FOR COLLEGE. F y Cheaper F cC spring break, study abroad & more 9 x. 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