8 - Tuesday, January 23, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Caldwell makes art, on and off the mat * By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer Sophomore Kent Caldwell does something that no other male gymnast in the world does. But listening to him talk about his signature skill, you could be excused for thinking it's not that big a deal. Ironically, the quad - four com- plete twists in the air on floor exercise - is a natural progres- sion from the trouble he had 0 landing three and a half twists during his senior year of high school. "I tried a three-and-a-half, and I just sat it down, landed short," Caldwell said. "Then I figured if I was landing at that angle for a three-and-a-half, if I finished the four (twists), then I'd be standing up. It's easier to save." Caldwell, who was named to the 12-member preseason All-Big Ten team, was required to have the skill evaluated by judges before he could use it in competition - it wasn't even included in the Code of Points. He performs the quad in his first floor pass in every meet, and with each repeti- tion, it improves. "I've tried to do triple fulls, so one less twist than (Caldwell), and I can't even come close to doing it," said fellow sophomore Scott Bregman - another floor standout who took second place in the event at the Jan. 13 Windy City Invitational. "Four is unbelievable. (It's comparable to) maybe dif- ferential calculus, just something ridiculous, when people can do it whenever they want." As if excelling in gymnastics isn't impressive enough, Caldwell is also artistically gifted. Both art and gymnastics have been his pas- sions since he was about 5 years old. He will graduate with a degree in art (along with neuroscience), and is also involved with WeRead, a student publishing group. All the books the group pub- lishes are written, illustrated, submitted and edited by Michi- gan students. WeRead has a part- nership with a small publishing company that prints 500 copies of the winning book, chosen each year. The books are then donated to Detroit schools to build their library collections. Last year, Caldwell illustrated a book written by another student. This year, he is the program's lead illustrator. One of his abstract paintings even hangs in his teammates' house. But Caldwell is one of the last people who would let that go to his head. "I'm humbled by it," Caldwell said. "I think it's cool that they appreciate it enough to put - is also something of a mediator on the team. "As a person, I feel like he's real- ly good at being a moderator and being neutral," Bregman said. "If people are having impulsive reac- tions to something, he can calm you down, listen to both sides, and kind of make you see from the other point of view." Caldwell's season began well, with a solid performance at the Windy City Invitational followed up by a record-breaking rou- tine against Iowa (9.7). And with every meet, he should give new meaning to artis- tic gymnastics. 01 P0 Photo courtesy of Kentcaldwell Sophomore Kent Caldwell expresses himself in other ways than simply through gymnastics, While being the only - gymnast in the world to complete four full twists in the airon the floor exercise, he is also the lead illustrator for the student publishing group WeRead and will graduate with a degree inart. Sauer makes statement in sweep. UUNIONs* ForYour Best Choice in * New revolving student loan FinancialServices *M' checks . Free online banking 24/7 - ATMs on campus umcu.org - Three campus branches email:7umcu@umcu.org - StudentVISA credit card phone:734-662-8200 By IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Writer FAIRBANKS - It's said that you should pay attention to the writing on the wall. But for Michigan goalie Billy Sauer, it's all about the writing on the glove. The sophomore netminder inscribed a few key phrases onhis glove atthe beginningof the season that act as constant reminders when he's on the ice. "Watch the puck." "Square." "Depth." "It's just kind of something I live by," Sauer said. "I think most goalies, that's the first thing they get away from if things aren't going well. I'm trying to keep it simple, so that's been the biggest change." It took awhile, but the improvement has been evident. He's allowed two or fewer goals in the past five games after posting a 4.75 goals against average in the final eight games of 2006. This weekend, Sauer continued that trend as he allowed just two goals in each game of a weekend sweep that carried special meaning for the Walworth, N.Y., native. By sweeping Alaska on the larger, Olympic- sized ice at the Carlson Center, Sauer exacted revenge two-fold. He defeated the team that last season, dealt him his first career loss. And he handled the angles on the spacious rink like a grizzled vet- eran. "It was kind of a personal thing for me," Sauer said. "So to really come out here and have a good weekend was a good confidence booster." Last year, Sauer traveled into the Carlson Center in late October as the freshman goalie for the top-ranked Wolverines, playing on the bigger surface for the first time. The Nanooks put four goals behind Sauer. Michigan coach Red Berenson chose to play Noah Ruden in net the next night after Sauer's poor performance. This year was different, and Alaska coach Tavis MacMillan noted a dramatic change in Sauer's play. "This was as solid as I've seen Billy Sauer," MacMillan said after Friday night's game, where Sauer stopped 29-of-31 shots. "He looked like a much more mature goaltender tonight. He's handling his rebounds, taking the angle on the first shot. I thought he was much sharper." Overall, Sauer blocked 61-of-65 shots he faced this weekend. Of the few pucks that found their way into the Michigan net, it's tough to blame Sauer for any of them. "To win back-to-back games and play solid in goal, only give up two goals (a game), in a tough building, this was a good statement for Billy Sauer," Berenson said. Before this weekend, Sauer's last game on Olympic-sized sheet was an 8-2 drubbing at the hands of No. 1 Minnesota (Nov. 25). Unlike that game, where Sauer had just one practice on the larger rink before the puck dropped, the Wolverines traveled to Alaska on Wednesday morning, giving him three practic- es at the Carlson Center before Friday's game. Both Sauer and Berenson pointed to the extra ice time as the primary difference between the Minnesota game and the Alaska series. Following Saturday's win, the buzzword outside the Michigan locker room was confi- dence. "Obviously, when you put together games like this, your confidence is going to grow," Sauer said. But the key for Sauer is still controlling what's in his head and focusing on the funda- mentals written on his glove. I ,i MEN'S .A sTALL Sophomore Smith surprises squad with scoring on Saturday By DANIEL LEVY Daily Sports Writer Michigan found something in the second half of its 71-55 winover Purdue Saturday at Crisler Arena. or better yet, someone. His name? Jerret Smith. The sophomore guard sparked the Wolverines with eight points and three assists during a 19-7 run midway through the second half Smith's outburst turned an uneasy 34-28 Michigan lead into an 18- point landslide victory. He broke Purdue's spirits, and the Boiler- makers couldn't believe the source of the contributions. "He played really well tonight, and that's to his credit," Purdue guard Chris Kramer said. "When we played him at Mackey, he didn't play that well. ... We have to give that respect now next time we play him." Smith started off distributing the ball for three early assists. He found senior captain Lester Abram once and senior guard Dion Harris twice, all for 3-pointers. With Michigan leading by 50, Smith decided to display his scor- ing abilities. The sophomore started off by going coast-to-coast for an easy lay- up. on the next possession, Smith found the ball in his hands with the shot clock winding down. With- out panicking, the Romulus native calmly worked himself into the paintand showed offhispostmove.s with a baby hook for two more. Smith capped his run with back- to-back jumpers. One came off a feed from Harris, the other a tran- sition pull-up after a block by senior Brent Petway. Two late free throws gave him a finalstatcline of i1points, seven assists and six rebounds. After the game, Smith couldn't put his finger on the reason for the production. "I'm just trying to go out there, have fun and play my game," said Smith, who entered the game aver- aging just four points, three assists and two rebounds per contest. "I couldn't really tell you (the reason behind the outburst). I don't want to judge just one game." Smith was reserved in the locker room after the game. He spent most of the time crediting his teammates and his ownhard work in practice for his breakout game. But other players weren't so quick to dismiss Smith's efforts and how much he means to the Wolver- ines. "It changes our whole team (when Smith brings that effort)," senior Courtney Sims said. "When he plays like that we can beat any- body in the country." Added Petway: "Just being able to hit his shots, take his shots when he gets them and finding other people when he gets into the lane ... We're gonna need that from him the whole season." The Wolverines need Smith to continue to be effective when he's on the floor, because it makes them extremely difficult to defend. As a freshman last year, Smith had his share of growing pains. With superstar Daniel Horton shouldering most of the ballhan- dling duties at the time, Michigan could afford to let Smith learn from his mistakes during games. This season Smith is the second option at point guard. His minutes are up, and his ability to run the offense and give Harris a chance to catch his breath are vital to Michi- gan's success. On Saturday, Smith had arguably the best game of his young career. He grew more confident with each possession, which wasn't lost on Michigan coach Tommy Amaker, who raved about his sophomore point guard's development after the win. \"It was obvious that he had an energy and a bounce about him (Saturday) that was very positive," Amaker said. "It looked like he really grew up (Saturday)." 0 0 f