8A - Thursday, March 29~ 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 10 8A - Thursday, March 29,, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michieandailv.com 6 I ocki team have special on By ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer Michigan women's gymnastics coach Bev Plocki is one of the most successful gymnastics coaches of all time. During her 18 years in Ann Arbor, Plocki holds a .775 winning percentage and a .847 winning percentage in Big Ten competi- tion. Her teams have advanced to the last 14 NCAA Championships and have won 13 of the last 15 Big Ten titles. She has also been named Big Ten Coach of the Year eight times and was named NCAA National Coach of the Year in 1994. But that's not the most impres- sive testament of Plocki's coaching career - it's the relationships she develops with her gymnasts "She's not just a coach," senior Lindsey Bruck said. "She's part of our team." Said senior Clare Flannery: "She's a motivator. She cares about every girl on the team as if she was her daughter. You know if anything would happen to you, she would have your back." Plocki's ability to create strong relationships with her gymnasts stems from her capacity to under- stand their mindsets. "If they've been training for 17 to 18 years with other people, they are not going to come into my pro- gram, and I'll just be able to snap my fingers and they will automati- cally adapt to me and to the way that I coach," Plocki said. "That means I have to be able to learn about them and be perceptive about what they need from me." Her strategy for the past 18 years is more similar to a mother figure than a coach. "It's a lot of talking," Plocki said. "There's a lot of hugs, and there's a lot of emotional talks about gym- nastics-related things as well as personal related things." With such a solid relationship, it's nearly automatic for the gym- nasts to trust Plocki. So her gym- nasts respond when she tries to push to the next level. Earlier in Plocki's career, she wasn't considered a great coach, but rather as a coach that har- bored great gymnasts. If there was any reason to believe that was still true, this year has put that myth to rest. As the season began, the team was excited. Michigan was a tal- ented, veteran group, including two-time All-American Bruck. But before the team could even witness its potential on the mats, Bruck went down with an ACL injury. Soon after, freshman Jordan Sexton and Sarah Curtis went down with similar injuries. All three were all-around competi- tors and were lost for the season. The future looked bleak. But on Feb. 12, about a month into the season, Plocki had the Wolverines ranked ninth in the country. Plocki was pleased after the early success. "I was excited about our season now for different reasons," Plocki said. "You really kind of change your perspective. We haven't changed our goals at all, but we've kind of changed the way we are looking at the season in perspec- tive." Then came the Utah meet on Feb. 23, where Plocki's ability to make an adjustment was put to the test. The Wolverines traveled to take on the Utes and scored a season- low 193.800. The team had hit rock bottom - but the answer came from the top. With a now-overachieving freshman- and sophomore-led team, Plocki turned her team's season around. Following the meet, the gym- nasts all had theirheads down and the locker room was quiet when, Plocki addressed the team. "I told them, 'Our problemis notf- " that we're not trying hard enough, or that I don't think you guys careM enough," Plocki said. Our problem this season is that you guys are trying too hard, you're trying to be too perfect. You need to relax and be able to go out and just do in competition what you do for me in practice every single day.'" Plocki took own her words to heart and made her team's first priority simple - have fun. "After Utah, we didn't have our best meet," Bruck said. "She brought us back to life. Now when we go out there and have fun, we just enjoy what we're doing and get into the crowd. That's when we have our best meet. That's what she's trying to instill now and it's working a lot." Although Plocki was reluctant to take any credit for her team's success, it's clear that with a team that has gone through such adver- sity, there must be something spe- cial about the coach, especially since the team is still ranked 11th in the country. "Gymnastics is a very mental sport and she has mentally kept us all together and motivated," Flan- nery said. "We would not have been as successful without her." Michigan coach Bev Plocki has a close relationship with all the BERENSON From page 5A years in the minor leagues." He doesn't see that happening with Johnson. Johnson has already reg- istered for spring classes and plans on completing his Michi- gan degree over the next few years. "He's coming back; he's going to get a degree from Michigan," Johnson, Sr. said. "That's the No. 1 thing, too. He promised Red he will graduate." It's often said Berenson takes more pride in how his players fare off the ice. When Berenson played hock- ey, most professional careers lasted just a few years. He con- tinuously looked to the future by earning both a BBA and an MBA from the Michigan Busi- ness School. His personal experience may contribute to his unyielding commitment to his players' edu- cation. After winning the 1965 Stan- ley Cup with Montreal, Beren- son drove back to Ann Arbor through the night to be in his MBA class the next morning. "He knows that as he's sit- ting there, his name is being engraved on the Stanley Cup," Bacon said. Long car rides have been pin- nacle moments in Berenson's life, and he passes that symbol- ism onto his players. When he thinks one of his players is ready to go to the NHL, he offers to drive them to the airport. It's become a rite of passage. He never had the chance to drive Jack to the airport because he was already in Denver. "Maybe, I'll pick him up from the airport," Berenson said. "I told him that. He wants to take me up on that." BASEBALL Freshman catcher makes instant impact for-Blue 0 By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer He may work in the dirt, but he's aiming for a rock. One of freshman catcher Chris Berset's first memories with the Michigan baseball team came this fall during a ceremony honoring last year's accomplishments. "All the guys had these big dia- mond rings for winning the Big Ten (championship)last year," Ber- set said. "I definitely want to be a I big contributor to that. Right now, been expected to make an immedi- that's my goal." ate impactbehind the plate. After the departure of catcher And during the team's spring Jeff Kunkel, who was an instru- trip, he did just that - with both his mental part of lastseason's champi- glove and his bat. onship run and was drafted by the "He's done a good job so far," Detroit Tigers, the freshman has Michigan coach Rich Maloney said. "It would be best for him to wait a year, especially because, physically, he'll be so much stronger next year, but we've had to throw him into the fire because we didn't have much -- - - -- depth." While a sophomore in high school, Berset moved to catcher and learned to switch-hit. Though he is a natural right-hander and initially had difficulty hitting left- handed, Berset is 4-for-9 on the left side and 0-for-4 on the right side this season. His first collegiate hit, a double that brought in two runs, came on March 11 against Oklahoma and helped Michigan to erase a 2-0 deficit. "I was working the count, the bases were loaded, and I knew he was coming with a fastball," Berset said. "I was just on it. It definitely was amazing. It was kind of a lucky hit, but hey, I'll take it." Berset and junior Doug Pickens have caught for the Wolverines this season, but Pickens has also played second base and right field to com- pensate for early-season team inju- ries. With Pickens covering open infield positions, Berset has found himself behind the plate early in his career. During his few appear- ances, he said he has been strongest at receiving and blocking the ball, defensive traits that Maloney is looking for in both of the Wolver- ines' catchers. Need more Daily? "The pitchers need to be able to have trust that, when they throw the ball in the dirt, the catcher's going to sacrifice his body for the good of the team and make sure that the runners don't advance," Malo- ney said. "We just don't want the catching position to be a negative for us. We want tobe where people respect us behind the plate." And with the departure of one catcher, two mightbe necessary for success this season. "I think that there's always going to be a need for two catch- ers, with especially as many games as we play and playing a four game series in a weekend," Pickens said. "He's throwing the ball and con- trolling the run game extremely well. I think he's done a great job of stepping up and being our other catcher." 6 Check out our blog at michigandaily.com/thegame. OPr 1104 S. University 734.665.2244 Free soft drink with any entr6e Free soft drink with any sandwich after 2pm SUNDAY Michigan Theater 7pme $' students $8 adults tIL ickets at the door or at MUTO: 734ap 63.TKTS ebte$ at eO Ose. http://www.umich.edu/~uac/mpo Shwarma, falafel, grape leaves, baba ghanouj, U hommos, tabbouli and fattoush. Smoka If you live in Ann ArboYO; ~ lie i Annher1113 S. 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