The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 11, 2006 - 3B 'M' can't get gorilla off back, suffers tough loss Senior Lindsey Bruck embraces a teammate following a meet last year. She hopes an infusion of new faces can help the team tackle its difficult schedule and erase the memories of last season's bitter ending. New faces, sam-e goals for Tum-blers By ANTHONY OLIVEIRA Daily Sports Writer For much of Friday night, the Maize and Blue faithful were quieted by Cen- tral Michigan. But after a Michigan comeback from 9-0, a guy in a gorilla suit waving a Maroon and Gold flag would be the final sight at Cliff Keen Arena, as the ninth-ranked Wolverines fell to No. 11 Central Michigan, 21-12. Despite its early struggles, Michigan still had the chance to at least pull out a tie. The home-opener came down to the heavyweights: the Chippewas' seventh- ranked Bubba Gritter and Michigan's redshirt junior Omar Maktabi. Given Central Michigan's three-point lead and Gritter's ranking, it appeared that most people were ready to write off the Wol- verines. But a scoreless first period opened some eyes. With the Maktabi starting the second period on top, Gritter escaped quickly for a point. It seemed it was only a matter of time until Central Michigan drove away with a victory. But inside 30 seconds, Maktabi wrapped around Gritter's ankles and pulled him down for two points. Even after Gritter knotted up the bout with an escape, the crowd at Cliff Keen Arena grew loud knowing a Michigan escape in the third period would pull off the upset. Maktabi started the third period on the bottom to chants of "Let's go Omar." The chants got louder after Gritter foiled Maktabi's early crawls. The Wolverine found his chance to gain a one-point advantage with 1:37 remaining in the bout. All Maktabi needed to do was stay on his feet. With the crowd also on its feet, Gritter aimed aggressively for Maktabi's knees. Mak- tabi stopped Gritter twice, but couldn't do it a third time. With the two wres- tlers locked up with 30 seconds left, the crowd held its breath, hoping Mak- tabi could escape the struggle. But they would exhale disappointedly just 18 seconds later when Gritter pinned Mak- tabi, giving Central Michigan the 21-12 win. "Omar put together a nice match," Sophomore Steve Luke was taken to two overtimes before defeating Central Michigan's sixth- ranked Brandon Sinnott. Like the rest of the Wolverines, Luke felt he could have performed better. By ANTHONY OLIVEIRA Daily Sports Writer Fresh faces. Fresh start. This is the best way to describe the five freshmen on the Michigan women's gym- nastics team. After a frustrating finish last season, the sixth-ranked Wolverines look to plant their feet on top of the Big Ten and fight back into the Super Six of the NCAA National Championships. "When we have been as successful as we have been, to have a year where we fall short of some of goals is disappointing to the girls," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "They take that very seriously. Last year was last year. And this year is this year. That's all we really care about right now." Even though the Wolverines nailed a first- place performance at the Northeast Regional earlier this year, they've had their struggles. A fourth-place finish at the Big Ten Champi- onships marked the first time any team dur- ing Plocki's tenure has failed to stand on the podium, snapping a streak of 15 consecutive top-three finishes. New assistant coach Louis Robinson Jr. will help Michigan return to glory. Robin- son replaces Joanne Bowers, who took the head coaching job at Washington University. Although Bowers will be missed, Robinson will bring his experience from Florida and Ohio State to make sure Michigan isn't left empty-handed. "It's hard losing Joanne," Plocki said. "Louis has brought a different bonus pack- age: his technical mileage and his spotting ability. It will help us through the season. He's also just a positive and motivating kind of a coach. He gets the athletes to want to work hard." Added senior co-captain Lindsay Bruck: "Louis is a great motivator and adds a lot to our team. He's a great all-around coach and willing to take the extra effort." Bruck, along with junior co-captain Nellie Kippley, willlead the teamthrough a difficult schedule, which includes meets against nine ranked teams, according to the preseason GymInfo 2007 Coaches Poll. The Wolverines will have to be near-perfect in away meets at No.1 Utah and No. 2 Georgia. Plocki said Michigan's performance is only as good as the teams it faces. This year will be atrue test: The teamtakes on more preseason ranked teams than it has in four years. But the Wolverines are hungry to face the best. "My whole team is probably in the best physical shape thatthey've been in as a whole for a number of years," Plocki said. Bruck pointed out that like any other sport, Michigan needs to avoid injuries to succeed. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, senior Carol McNamara is still recovering from a fracture of her fourth metatarsal foot bone. Plocki said the injury is more signifi- cant than it would be to a football or basket- ball player because a gymnast's foot isn't padded with a shoe. And just a week ago, sophomore Tatjana Thuener-Rego suffered an ankle sprain. McNamara and Thuener-Rego missed this weekend's intrasquad meet, but look to get back in action as the season begins. Last weekend's Maize and Blue Intra- squad meet at Crisler Arena was the first action the freshmen saw as Wolverines. Despite an all-around victory by Blue's Bruck, the Maize overcame the deficit in the final rotation to take the win, 115.725- 115.125. Freshman Sarah Curtis of the Maize finished third in the all-around, but performances by Kippley and freshman Jordan Sexton put the Maize on top. With a strong start on Friday, the freshmen have started the tall task of replacing seniors, like three-time NCAA All-American Lau- ren Mirkovich and 10-time All-American Jenny Deiley. But Plocki believes they won't have trou- ble filling the gap. "I don't think we're going to have diffi- culties," Plocki said. "We really out-gained what we lost. Yes, you're replacing experi- enced seniors for freshmen, so that's a roll of a dice there. But as we go through this year, we potentially won't have lost much from a performance standpoint." There may be new faces in the crowd, but the mentality still remains the same. "Our goals are pretty much the same," Plocki said. "We wantto win the Big Ten and qualify for Regionals. But our ultimate goal is to win a national championship." Michigan coach Joe McFarland said. "Unfortunately, it didn't end the way we wanted it to end. But I thought up until then, he competed well and it was a great effort. It's just unfortunate he got in a scramble situation and got caught. It ended a little sudden." The Chippewas (4-1) struck early, taking the first three bouts at the 125-, 133- and 141-pound weight classes. But Michigan (1-1) crept back into match and tied the score at 12. Central Michigan regained a three-point lead, when No. 8 Wynn Michalak took down Michigan's 12th-ranked Nick Roy in the final 20 seconds. The Wolverines realized they weren't aggressive enough, and the Chippewas took full advantage. "We just didn't compete well," McFar- land said. "The guys were hesitant, we weren't going out and setting the pace and we 'weren't taking advantage of scoring opportunities. We made plenty of mistakes tonight. But Central (Michi- gan) did a good job of feeding off that. I've got to give those guys a lot of credit, even some of the guys who didn't win. They set the pace. They controlled ties. They were nice tonight." The longest match of the night belonged to No. 7 Steve Luke. Despite winning his bout in double overtime against Central Michigan's sixth-ranked Brandon Sinnott, the redshirt sopho- more knew he could have finished busi- ness much earlier. "I felt fine conditioning-wise," Luke said. "I felt like I could go 15 more match- es. I needed to get more aggressive. I wasn't taking shots. I knew I could take that kid down." The nine-point loss was, Michigan's largest dual match defeat since Jan. 22, 2005 when the Wolverines fell to Oklahoma, 24-13. Last year, Michigan dropped its home-opener to Nebraska, 18-16. CARR From page 1B port for a 16-team playoff system - which University President Mary Sue Coleman expressed strong opposition to last year. Carr predicted the eventual implementa- tion of some form of playoff was "inevi- table." "We're in a phase of discontent by some people," Carr said. "There are still alot of people who do not want a playoff. But I think it's growing, the number of people who do want one. And I think it will hap- pen." The BCS wasn't Carr's only target. He called CBS announcer Gary Dan- ielson's side-by-side analysis of Michigan and Florida's schedules "disingenuous." He joked about Ohio State coach Jim Tressel's notable abstention in the ESPN/ USA Today Coaches' Poll, saying that coaches "obviously don't have to vote for somebody." He expressed confusion about the inconsistent implementation of the hel- met-to-helmet hit rule against quar- terbacks, after a Southern Cal defender wasn't whistled for a hit nearly identical to Michigan linebacker Shawn Crable's critical personal-foul penalty against Ohio State. But Carr declined to elaborate on his decision not to campaign publicly for a National Championship berth. "I don't really want to get into that," Carr said. "I did what I thought was right for our team, for this program and for the University of Michigan." NOTES: Junior running back Mike Hart didn't make the trip to New York for Dec. 9's Heisman Trophy presenta- tion. But Heisman voters still noticed his 1,515-yard, 14-touchdown regular-season performance. The Wolverines' star rusher finished fifth with 214 votes, including five first-place votes. Hart finished behind Ohio State quarterback and Heismanwin- ner Troy Smith (2,540 votes), Arkansas's Darren McFadden (878), Notre Dame's Brady Quinn (782) and West Virginia's Steve Slaton (218). GOING TO MISS DAILY SPORTS OVER BREAK? CHECK OUT OUR BLOG AT MICHIGANDAILY.COM. Student Housing Inte-Coopratie ul I Student Owned Democratically Run Since 1937 4 & 8 Month Fall/Winter Contracts $475/mo. 2 & 4 Month Spring/Summer $200-425/mo. Call 734-662-4414 Lts AnelI.-kier3tilnd Aitpott-Seoth Special Rates for Wolverines Fans! 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