4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - April 10, 2006 FULL COUNT 6 SOFTBALL PLAYER OF THE WEEK Grace Leutele Michigan The senior slugger was solid on both sides of the ball this weekend. She posted a hit in all four games including a homerun on Friday. She collected three RBI and three runs as well as a solid defensive performance, with four assists Saturday. NOTABLE QUOTABLE "We put ourselves in a hole." - Michigan coach Carol Hutchins on the challenges of coming back after going down 5-1 to Purdue in the third inning. BY THE NUMBERS Runs scored by Michigan in the second inning of game one against Purdue. 'M' STAT LEADERS Friday's Game p INDIANA 2 ) LP: Bogado (11-5) MICHIGAN 4 WP: Ritter (12-4) Saturday's Game INDIANA 0 LP: Roark (6-9) MICHIGAN 4 WP: Wilson (10-4) V - Sunday's Game 1: PURDUE 0 LP: LaRiva (8-9) MICHIGAN 14 WP: Ritter (13-4) Sunday's Game 2: PURDUE 5 WP: Burns (3-1) MICHIGAN 4 LP: Wilson (10-5) Hometown Favorite Bercaw, Michigan enjoy extra fan support Home runs Runs Becky Marx Alessandra Giampaolo 10 28 Hits I Giampaolo 137 RBI ~ Marx j35 Average Samantha Findlay .337 BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Big Ten Overall 1. Michigan State 6-0 27-11 2. Michigan 5-1 25-10 3. Northwestern 6-2 25-10 4. Ohio State 6-2 24-14 5. Iowa 4-2 13-24 6. Purdue 3-5 23-21 7. Indiana 3-5 18-17-1 8. Illinois 3-5 16-22 9. Wisconsin 2-4 15-14 10. Penn State 1-7 21-11 By Amber Colvin Daily Sports Writer In the top of the first in game one of yes- terday's doubleheader split with Purdue, the day's story had yet to be written. Pur- due's first batter, Staci Falzon, was ready to write the first lines. Falzon nailed the ball high to rightfield, and it looked like the Boilermakers were going to kick off the game with a home run. But senior Stephanie Bercaw didn't like Falzon's script. She jumped up and reached over the fence to snatch the ball. "Bercaw definitely stumped their momentum by catching the ball at the fence," senior Grace Leutele said. Berclaw, a Wooster, Ohio native, con- tinued to serve as the game's author, set- ting the tone with her offense as well. Bercaw led off the second inning with a hit - a well-placed bunt to third. Sopho- more Angie Danis followed with a single, as did junior Rebekah Milian. When a pitch hit freshman Teddi Ewing, Bercaw scored. Her run was the first of the inning - an inning that would prove to be explo- sive. The Wolverines kept their bats firing throughout the inning. Moving through their entire batting rotation, Bercaw stepped up to the plate for a second time that inning. Her slice up the middle sent Purdue shortstop Tricia Lilley diving for the ball. But it was just out of her reach, scoring senior Becky Marx and allowing Bercaw to reach second. A Danis double brought Bercaw in for the score, the eighth of the inning. Michigan notched a total of nine runs in the second. "We were just really aggressive," Ber- caw said. "We weren't letting (Purdue pitcher Brooke Baker) throw it over our plate without us being aggressive and going at it. I thought we had a really good approach and really good demeanor at the plate." Bercaw scored her third run of the game in the fourth inning. After drawing a walk, she advanced to second on an error and scored on a double from sophomore Lauren Talbot. Her three scores were the most of any player in the 14-0 shutout. And for one section of the bleachers in particular, her play did not go unnoticed. Bercaw had her own personal cheering section inethe stands: a high schooltteam clad in green and white. Although it may seem strange for fans in green and white to cheer for the Maize and Blue, the team was from Smithville High School, a neigh- boring school of Bercaw's alma mater, Hillsdale. "I know their coach through softball and through my dad," Bercaw said. "They're just real big fans of softball. It's really great to see them out here." The group continued to root for its player throughout the heartbreaking game two. Bercaw set the tone again, though not the one her cheering section was hoping for. She struck out in the first inning, a good reflection of Michigan's scoring woes that game. After being hit by a pitch, Bercaw reached first at the top of the sixth. Advancing on a wild pitch and then on a walk from Danis, Bercaw stood on third ready to score to start a Michigan come- back. But true to the theme of the game, the inning ended before Bercaw could cross the plate. Bercaw reached third base again, with Michigan behind by one run in the seventh inning. But once again the inning ended before she could attain the equalizer. 11. Minnesota 1-7 12-21 AROUND THE BIG TEN Friday's results: MICHIGAN 4, Indiana 2 MICHIGAN STATE 8, Purdue 2 Northwestern 1, PENN STATE 0 IOwA 2, Minnesota 0 OHIO STATE 8, Illinois 7 Saturday's results: MICHIGAN 4, Indiana 0 MICHIGAN STATE 1, Purdue 0 Northwestern 3, PENN STATE 0 OHIO STATE5, Illinois 3. IowA 3, Minnesota }0 Sunday's results: MICHIGAN 14, Purdue 0 Purdue 5, MICHIGAN 4 MICHIGAN STATE 1, Indiana 0 MICHIGAN STATE 2, Indiana 0 OHIO STATE 2, Northwestern 1 OHIO STATE 3, Northwestern 2 Illinois 5, PENN STATE 0 Illinois 7, PENN STATE 5 IOWA 4, North Dakota State 0 IOWA 6, North Dakota State 1 WISCONSIN 3, Minnesota 2 Minnesota 4, WISCONSIN 2 *Home teams in caps "HUTCH"-O-METER The Michigan Daily softball writers break down this weekend's games by category. The smiling face of coach Carol Hutchins measures perfor- mance, with four faces being the best. BtN SIMON/Daily Senior Stephanie Bercaw came up big in front of her hometown fans in yesterday's 14-0 win, PURDUE Continued from page 1B inning. The second game was the antithesis of the first. Michigan spotted Purdue (3-5, 23- 21) a 3-1 lead after the first inning, and the Wolverines didn't put up a fight until the last two innings. Purdue pitcher Melissa Burns deserved much of the credit for Michigan's offensive struggles in game two. She consistently threw first pitches for strikes and kept Wolverine hitters con- fused by mixing up her pitches. "She had a great change-up," senior third baseman Grace Leutele said. "She got us a few more times than we would've liked, but I think that we got better as the game went on." Michigan's offensive improvement didn't show until the sixth inning, when the Wolverines loaded the bases with one out, but failed to score. Down four runs, Michigan mounted a seventh-inning rally. Suddenly, the bats came alive. The Wolverines scored on an RBI dou- ble by sophomore Samantha Findlay and RBI singles by seniors Becky Marx and Stephanie Bercaw. Those runs trimmed the Purdue lead to just one run with two outs and runners on second and third. Hutchins turned to junior Tiffany Worthy to pinch hit with a chance to take the lead. After fouling off the first pitch, Worthy made solid contact on a fastball on the inside half of the plate. The ball screamed off her bat and shot past the infield. Unfor- tunately, Purdue centerfielder Staci Falzon was in perfect position. Without moving, the ball settled into her glove, and the Boilermakers erupted having sealed the program's second win over Michigan in twelve years of competition. Despite the loss, Michigan took some positives from the seventh-inning rally. "All I can think about is how well we finished," Leutele said. "That's all my energy is going towards is how well we finished." After victories over Indiana (3-5, 18-17- 1) on Friday and Saturday and the game- one blowout, the loss kept Michigan from a perfect weekend. Hutchins boiled the difference between the two Purdue games down to poise - or a lack thereof. "The one thing we did (in the second game), which I was very pleased with, is we had a lot of poise in the seventh inning," Hutchins said. "Why not have poise the whole game?" But even after the painful loss, the group from Smithville waited in the stands to greet her with smiles. While her team- mates got ready to head home, Bercaw ERRORS Continued from page 18 errors in the game, but neither led to Purdue runs. "We appeared to have no focus;" Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins said. The five defensive errors, though poor, didn't fully encompass Michigan's defensive woes. Purdue had two easy steals that were poorly defended by the Maize and Blue, and no errors were recorded on either play. In the opening frame, senior catcher Becky Marx threw her first putout attempt over the head of senior third baseman Grace Leutele. Two innings later, Lilley stole third base without a throw. No one covered third on the steal, so Marx was left helpless with the ball at the plate. Damage wasn't done, but Michigan's focus was clearly shaken. Another key defensive play came in the first inning. Haas fielded a groundball with a baserunner charging from third. Instead of taking the easy out at first, Haas threw it home. The throw was late, a run scored and the Wolverines failed to record an out. Purdue's two unearned runs proved to be the difference as Michigan came up just a base hit short of a tie. "We didn't play good enough softball to win," Hutchins said. SUNDAY, GAME 1 Michigan 14, Purdue 0 Michigan (20-9, 2-0) Minnesota (11-18, 0-4) stayed and signed autographs. "It's great to know you have all this sup- port and people are going to love you no matter what," Bercaw said. BROKEN STREAKS: Several streaks came to an end at this weekend's softball games. Most notably, Michigan's 12-game win- ning streak came to a screeching halt with Sunday's loss to Purdue. And despite beating Indiana 4-2 on Fri- day, the Wolverines's six-game shutout streak was snapped as well. A two-run blast by Hoosier Sarah Padove put her team on the board in the fourth inning. Coming into yesterday's doubleheader, Wilson had built up 42 1/3 straight innings of scoreless softball. She added 1/3 of an inning in game two but conceded three runs to end the streak. AMAZING GRACE: With a swing of the bat on Friday, Leutele took sole ownership of the second spot on the Michigan all-time home runs list. Her solo shot over the cen- terfield fence was her 29th in a Michigan uniform. She trails former All-American and current Michigan assistant coach Jes- sica Merchant by 16. BATS ON FIRE: In game one of Michi- gan's doubleheader with Purdue, the Wol- verines put up a season-high 14 runs off of an impressive 12 hits. The Maize and Blue scored at least one run in each inning, including nine in the second. Eleven players collected hits, and each of Michigan's four pinch hitters reached based. I DEFENSE Sure the Wolverines posted two shutouts this weekend, but the defense looked flus- tered yesterday, giving up two unearned runs in a 5-4 loss. When you lose a contest like that, two heads is your reward. David VandeVusse I PITC HING Michigan gave up its first run in six games Friday. Lorilyn Wilson, riding a personal 40-plus inning scoreless streak got through just 1/3 of an inning in game two on. Sunday. When it goes Nate Sandals down like that, don't expect more than two Hutch heads. 99 4 FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 4, Indiana 2 SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 4, Indiana 0 Michigan (24-9, 4-0) Minnesota (18-5-1, 3-3) SUNDAY, GAME 2 Purdue 5, Michigan 4 Michigan (23-9, 3-0) Player AB R H Indiana (18-4-1, 3-2) H BI Player AB R H BI Player AB R H BI Player Haas 2B 3 1 1 0 Hamilton ABR H BI 2 0 0 0 Player AB R H 81 Player Haas 2B 2 Giampaolo CF 4 Findlay 1B 2 Marx C 3 0 0 1 0 00 00 10 00 Hamilton LF Bogado P Huddleston 3B< Hines RF 41 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Giampaolo CF 4 Findlay 1B 2 Marx C 2 Leutele 38 4 Worthy DP 3 0 1 1 Bettenbrock PH1 0 0 0 Haas 2B 2 2 1 3 Winter PH 1 0 1 2 Kidman PH 1 0 0 0 Falzon CF Krcelich LF Stone B Lilley SS AB R HBI 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 Bogado DP 3 0 0 0 Huddleston 3B 3 0 1 0 Hines RF 3 0 1 0 Michigan (20-9, 2-0) Player AS R H B Haas 2B 4 1 1 0 Minnesota (11-18, 0-4) Player ABR H BI Falzon CF 2 1 0 0 4 Findlay 1B 1 0 1 1 Leutele 3B 2 1 1 1 DiNallo PR 0 0 0 0 Weatherdon PH 10 0 0 Peterson C Giampaolo CF 4 1 2 0 Krcelich LF Findlay 1B 3 1 1 1 Stone 18 Marx C 3 0 1 1 Lilley SS Weatherdon PRO 0 0 0 Johnson DP Leutele 3B 2 1 1 1 Peterson C Bercaw RF 2 0 0 0 Curtis3B Danis DP 3 0 1 1 Miller 2B 3 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 OFFENSE The Michigan bats held steady through the first two games of the weekend, only to explode in game one yesterday for a season-high 14 runs. It seemed like everyone got a hit - except for when they really needed them in game two. CROWD Bercaw RF Kidman DP Milian LF Worthy PH Ewing SS Ritter P 3 2 2 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Richards CF Terry1B Watt CF Hohs PR Olson DP 3 2 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Richards CF 3i 0 1 0 Bercaw RF 3 1 0 0 Terry C 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pelerito SS 3 0 0 0 Amber Colvin Totals 26 4 7 4 Indiana Michigan Padove 28 3 1 1 2 Deaven C 0 0 0 0 R H E 000 020 xxx 2 5 2 Kidman DP Worthy PH Milian LF Ewing SS Wilson P Total Michigan Indiana 2 0 0 0 Hohs PR Marx C Worthy C Leutele 3B Bercaw RF Danis DP 2 1 0 0 Miller PR 2 0 1 1 JohnsonDP 2 1 1 1 Mitchell 3B 2 3 2 1 Zaworski RF 3 2 1 2 Devich 2B 0 1 2 2 1 1 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Olson 18 Page PR Padae2B Pellerito SS Roark P 2 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Milian LF 2 1 1 0 LaRivaP 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0 0 Deaven C 0 0 0 0 26 4 7 4 Total 2504 0 R H E 010 021 Oxx 4 7 0 000 000 Oxx 0 4 1 Kidman PR Milian LF Worthy PH Ewing SS Talbot PH 1 1 1 1 Baker P 0 0 0 0 Ewing SS 2 1 1 1 RitterP 0 _ 000 0 Total 24 141214 Total 15 0 1 0 R H E Purdue 000 00- 0 1 4 Michigan 191 3X - 14 12 0 E - Mitchell, K.; Devich, L.; Baker, B. 2. DP - Purdue Talbot PH 2 0 0 0 Wilson P 0 0 0 0 RitterP _ 0 0 00 Total 28 4 8 4 Total 0 0 0 0 Trauger RF 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 Burns P 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 2 2 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26 5 4 5 210 302 xxx 4 4 0 E - Huddleston(6); Terry(2). LOB - Indiana 5; Michigan 7. 28 - Terry(6); Findlay(7). HR - Padove(2); Leu- Michigan Purdue R H E 100 000 3 - 4 8 5 302 000 x - 5 4 0 Iddibb, E - Pellerito(4). DP - IND 1. LOB- Michigan 10; Indi- -- I