6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 11, 2006 Wolverines bounce back a ter impressive weekend A vCU Continued from page 11B attempt at fortune telling turns out to ring true, the newcomer's goal proved to be at least one thing yesterday - the game- winner. Michigan (3-3) had all the offense it needed to edge the Rams 1-0 and to be declared the Michigan Invitational winner. The Wolverines, who also defeated Butler on Friday 3- 1, took the Invitational trophy based on a tiebreaker. Michigan was deemed the winner over Michigan State, which also went 2-0 on the weekend, because of the number of goals tallied on the weekend. The Wolverines barely squeaked by the Spar- tans' point total, four goals to three. Virginia Commonwealth certainly did not give Michi- gan a free pass to victory. Neither team ever completely held momentum as a result of a competitive tactical battle between the two squads. Burns said that the Rams did a good job of sitting in and trying to play off the counterattack. As a result, he tweaked his team's strategy. "We made a change where we stepped up our outside midfield higher up the field to pressure their back four," Burns said. "It really upset their rhythm. That seemed to be that one piece we needed to move in the chess game to make the game really come out our way." The change frustrated the Rams, who never managed to get on the scoreboard. Another key to Michigan's victory rested largely on physi- cal toughness. The referees' whistles were constantly blow- ing as players on both sides made hard tackles. "To me, you look at the uni- forms and there's a lot of dirt, grass and blood on them," Burns said. "That's the effort we expect every game." Three yellow cards were div- vied up between the two teams, and senior co-captain Kevin Hall was one such recipient. "I think Michigan always likes to play physical, and Vir- ginia Commonwealth did a good job matching our physicality," Hall said. "I think that's the way we like it. Anytime we can play physical, we think we have the upper hand." Currently posting a .500 record, the Wolverines seem to have bounced back from a rocky 1-3 start to the season. But neither Burns nor the players ever thought the Wolverines needed to turn the season around drastically. "We were never off track," Hall said. "We were always playing good soccer. We just needed to mesh the freshmen with the seniors and get used to playing with each other in game situations. It's starting to show now, and we are getting our wins." 4 Seniors Kevin Hall and Kevin Savltskle celebrate freshman Per Marosevic's goal in the 1-0 win over Voted the Best Bank/Credit Union and #1 in Customer Service in Ann Arbor E / Keep your school name on your checks when you join A she University of Michigan Credit Union! * Free checkingx * No annual fee VISA credit card and VISA check card " Free online banking and na-suan geATM and cash machines locted throughout campus * Saturday hours at 305 E. Eisenhower We have 4 offices Ann Arbon. cennrcamus as333SastWianam I North Campus in the Pierpont Bring this coupon to any; common MC ofeandwe 30.5.tEisenhower anvey'a mmbeshpfen itiaifa ~ you pe n oura a * d, a a 734-662-8200 a kA(RED IT mcuor UIV N___N '- _ _ SPIKERS Continued from page 1B coming into the match with Michigan (10-0), Rosen was excited about the team's potential. Before the match, he believed the Tigers would come together sometime during the season and really take off. Fortunately for the Wolverines, it didn't happen Saturday. Several times during the match Pacific showed signs of clicking, but one Wolverine or another, often junior Lyndsay Miller, stepped up to slow the Tigers. "Everyone on our team is like 'We're going to get this point back. We're going to stop them, set me the ball,' " Miller said. "Everyone is very confident in themselves, and we have a lot of confidence in each other, so everyone's saying 'You can get me the ball and I'll get you a kill' or 'I'm going to make this pass and it's going to be great.' " Pacific looked no better than when it fought back from a 28-20 deficit to make it 29-26 in the third game after taking advantage of two net violations and few attack errors. The final error was committed by junior Katie Bruzdz- inski, but she finished off the Tigers with a kill on the next play. "I kind of put that on myself a little bit because I had a little trouble putting the ball away in the last game," Bruzdzinski said. "But we know we're going to get it done no matter what so I wasn't worried about it. I knew we were going to win the game." The end of the match Saturday was similar to the end of Michigan's win over Virginia. The Wol- verines held an 18-10 lead when play was stopped due to a Cavalier injury. By the time the match was over, Michigan had justbarely managed to eke out a three-point win in game three. "I think we stepped back a little bit," Rosen said. "Right when the girl got hurt on their team there was a little bit of a break. I felt like our kids probably felt like 'We'll just kind of last this game out' and I thought we stopped attack- ing them. We stopped being aggressive. We kind of sat back on our heels on defense. "All of a sudden they started to feel comfort- able because they're getting easy side-outs in a row, (and) I think it takes pressure off the team. Now all of a sudden they feel comfortable. Now they'll make a couple great digs, make a couple great plays." Normally a coach would be concerned by those late-match slip-ups, but Rosen said he realizes his team is playing very well and was just playing down to their opponents. "I feel like the teams we played were tough, but ... we're kind of ready for that next step, that next challenge," senior Megan Bowman said. The next step probably won't happen until Big Ten play starts two weeks from now. Next weekend Michigan will host the Michigan/ Nike Challenge and play Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne, New Hampshire and Rice. Rosen said he will probably use the matches to get his younger players playing-time. HERMAN Continued from page 3B Robert said police inAnn Arbor aren't too bad - much better than those at Comerica Park in Detroit. But still, he said he doesn't support the idea of them meddling with his business. "They shouldn't bust a person for selling a ticket," he said. "Even over face, it's between you and the guy buying it." Some sellers are starting to avoid the issue by moving off the streets. A number of scalp- ers have traded pounding the pavement for the Internet. A man named Buford, for instance, gets tickets from corporations like General Motors or Ford and then packages them into large groups sales on eBay (the Athletic Depart- ment frowns upon all scalping, even over the information superhighway). He comes to the games just to drop off tickets to buyers and sell a few he has left over. Sellers see this asa growing trend. Eventu- ally (and asa newspaper man, I can relate), the Internet might kill the scalping star. "Everybody's switching to computers," Buford said. "You don't even have to come out, you can just do it from your living room." And if it means avoiding the despair of the open-air marketplace on days like Saturday, it might just be for the better. - Herman can be reached atjaherman@umich.edu. I I 4 At Huron our people are our greatest asset We invest in your developmenttfrom technical expertise to your personal and professional development. We help you enable your current abilities and develop them to reach your highest potential. As an employerwe value personal growth. And we know you will continue to grow with us. Huron Consulting Group helps clients effectively address complex challenges that arise in litigation, disputes, investigation, regulatory compliance, procurement, financial distress, and other sources oftsignificant conflictor change. The Company also helps clients deliver superior customerand capital market performance through integratedstrategic, operational, and organizational change. Huron provides services to a wide varietyof both financially sound and distressedorganizations, including Fortune 500 companies, medium-sized businesses, leading academic institutions, healthcare organizations, and the law firms that represent these various organizations. I I 0 I Please visit our web site and recruitment feature for in depth information about Huron. www.huronconsultinggroup.com/careers We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package that includes medical/ldental/vision, 401(k), stock purchase, and a generous vacation and personallsick plan. Huron Consulting Group is an equal opportunity employer. We recruit, employ, compensate, transfer, promote and train without regard to race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, pregnancy, disability, sexual orientation, veteran status, age, FMLA status or any other basis protected by law. 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