6B - Tuesday, January 16, 2007 TUESDAY The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com M' claims win in Chi-town By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer CHICAGO - The Michigan men's gymnastics team opened its season on Saturday night, and the scene was a far cry from the team's final meet of last year. On the night of last season's team qualifiers at NCAAs in Oklahoma, the Wolverines sat dejected and silent, trying to absorb the fact that they wouldn't be competing for a team title in 2006. But on Saturday at the Windy City Invitational, the victorious Wolver- ines emerged to claim their award injubilant clusters rather than asin- gle-file line, arms over each other's shoulders, shouting, "It's great to be a Michigan Wolverine!" No. 8 Michigan outperformed the meet's five other squads with surprising ease, notching a total score of 212.75 - 1.05 points shy of last year's season high. Illinois was a distant second (209.75), with rival Ohio State even further back (209.5). What was different about this year? Start with sophomore Ralph Rosso. The Morganville, N.J., native competed in five of six events and never scored below an 8.0. His pic- ture-perfect vault scored an 8.75, good for third place. His teammates mobbed him before he could even return to the end of the runway. Once vault, Michigan's final event and a source of some trouble, was complete, it would have taken a miraculous score of 39 points (out of a possible 40) for Illinois or Ohio State to catch the Maize and Blue. Freshman Torrance Laury took fourth place on the still rings and parallel bars at his first collegiate meet. Finally, after Rosso's vault, he could look at the scoreboard. "(After vault) was when I found out for the first time that we had clinched it and won," Laury said. "It was such a great feeling. I couldn't believe it." Though Michigan finished first in every event but vault, no single apparatus went without a hitch. The Wolverines began the night on parallel bars, where two of the first three gymnasts did not hit their routines. The next three, with little mar- gin for error available, posted three straight scores above 9.0, boosting Michigan into first place, where it remained for the rest of the night. "I knew we were going to win when we finished parallel bars," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "I said to myself, 'This is just like '99, when we won the NCAAs.' So many times by the time we were halfway through an event, we'd have one foot in the grave and one foot on a banana peel, and we'd walk away with four good hits." The same pattern continued throughout the night, with the team perpetually following up missed routines with hit sets. "We were able to miss a routine and then get right back up and hit a good set," said sophomore Scott Bregman, who tied for second place on floor exercise with a 9.25. "I think one thing that's really dif- ferent this year is that a missed set doesn't mean ascore in the fives - it means a score in the low eights." There was at least one Wolverine in the top three on each apparatus, with senior co-captain Justin Laury winning pommel horse (9.05). Senior co-captain Andrew Elkind and sophomore Joe Catrambone shared the highbar title (9.1). Laury, in his first competition since 2005, looked like injury- marred 2006 had never happened, hitting all three of his routines. His pommel horse score was the only one to break into the 9.0 range. The victory to open the season provides a huge confidence boost to the young Michigan team. But the Wolverines will not lose the intense focus that has marked them ever since their disappointment in Okla- homa. "Obviously we're real excited tonight about our victory," Elkind said. "But we're not going to think that this has us set up to win the rest of the season." This way u p. Start at Ernst & Young, and your career is headed in the right direction. With our award-winning training programs, you'll have the resources you need to enhance your skills. It's an environment that promotes your personal and professional growth and success. So there's only one way to go-up. Visit us on campus or at ey.com/us/careers. FORTUNE 100 BEST COMPANIES TO WORK FORĀ° HOOSIERS From page 3B said. "I think it's happened to every swimmer once in a while. You just have to know what to do when it happens." No. 12 Michigan knew how to respond to the weekend's individ- ual and competitive challenges as it soundly defeated No. 19 Purdue, 153-90, on Friday. Michigan took first place in every swimming event against the Boilermakers. Sophomore Bobby Savulich and junior Alex Vanderkaay both had three first- place finishes, earning 29 points each. Savulich won the 100- and 200-yard freestyle and was a member of the winning 400-yard medley relay, while Vanderkaay had victories in the 1,650-yard freestyle, 200-yard butterfly and 400-yard freestyle relay. "The training hasn't stopped, but we're recovering and swim- ming better," said Savulich about the team's increase in individual victories. "Everyone's doing their job. We're figuring out where we are for Big Tens, and (Friday's meet) was a good confidence booster." Sophomore Kyle Schroeder fin- ished second in both the one- and three-meter diving events while earning a personal best and two NCAA Zone qualifying scores. The highlight of his performance was earning two 8.0s on an inward two-and-a-half pike, a dive that has challenged him all season. "I've been really nervous about doing that dive because I've actu- ally hit my ankles on the tower going inward and it freaks me out," Schroeder said. "It feels really good to get a good score on that dive, but it still needs a lot of work." SUGIYAMA From page 3B 12-8record in singles play, includ- ing a 6-1 performance against Den- ver. But the team has struggled in doubles play, finishing just 4-7.. InSunday's most excitingmatch, junior Allie Shafner rallied from a sizeable deficit to defeat Denver's LorindaBoothman. After dropping the first set and struggling at times in the second, Shafner regained her confidence and took the set in a tiebreak. "Allie is a ig-time competitor," Sugyama said. "Everyonesees how hard she works, and we can build off that. As a team we feed off of each other's energies." As her teammates circled the courts to cheer her on, Shafner began the final tiebreak in a dead heat with Boothman. Even though she dropped two crucial points, Shafner was not deterred, and her cheering teammates propelled her to winthe tiebreak 10-7. "The girls are constantly encour- aging each other while playing," Michigan coach Amanda Augustus said. "This can really help change the momentum of the match and is why we love to play at home." Shafner's mental toughness proved to be resolute, a character- istic that Augustus hopes all of her players will exemplify. To gain an edge, Augustus has implemented a mental training program to help players maintain their confidence during matches. "You can put two similar players on the court, and it's the mentally tougher one that's usually going to come out on top," Augustus said. CHECK OUT THE REST OF OUR WEEKEND COVERAGE ONLINE AT MICHIGANDAILY. COMe a a a erything We Do I 1