0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Rg~ E Monday, April 2, 2007 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailv.com Monday, April 2, 2007 - 3B CHAMPIONS: Plocki leads Blue to 13th championship in 15 seasons From page 1B ning on vault, its most success- ful event. But a series of amazing routines reinvigorated the Nittany Lions and the home crowd. Penn State's Corissa Pirkl and Katie Per- ret stuck beautiful routines, scor- ing 9.900 each, but fell just short of Michigan. The win is an exclamation point inPlocki'sillustrious career andher most memorable championship. "I've been coaching 18 years, and there's no championship that's ever made my heart feel as good as this one." Plocki said. WEATHER From page 1B not even making it halfway down the first-base line. "We were kind of chuckling and then Abraham threw it across," first baseman Nate Recknagel said. "He r could have practically ran it over." AN ODD DOUBLE PLAY: In the top of the fourth inning, the Wolver- ines had sophomore Zach Putnam on third base with Abraham at the plate. Abraham hit a ground ball to third base and Putnam dashed home. The Wildcat third baseman fielded the ball and threw home. He got Putnam in a pickle and the Ann Arbor native was eventually tagged out. But somehow, it got worse. BASEBALL From page 1B hopes in the ninth, he finished the game 1-for-4 with three strike- outs. With the game getting tight- er than expected in the ninth, sophomore Adam Abraham took the mound to close out the game. The first Wildcat batter Abraham faced grounded to shortstop Jason Christian, and Michigan turned a double play to end the game. "I'm just glad they didn't call the game," Michigan coach Rich Maloney said. "The crew chief wanted to call it. ... I felt like if we played the whole game, we had a good chance." Michigan (4-0, 15-6) struggled through slow starts all weekend. Just 10 percent of the Wolverines' total runs over the course of the weekend came in the first three SOFTBALL From page IB bunts down ... We can't allow it." The Wolverines (1-1 Big Ten, 26-6 overall) took an early 2-0 lead with back-to-backhome runs by sisters Samantha and Angela Findlay in the first inning. Northwestern (1-1, 25-7) tacked on runs in the third and fourth innings to tie the score at two. In the bottom of the fifth, junior centerfielder Alessandra Giampaolo drew a one-out walk after falling behind 0-2 in the count. Three batters later, Angela Findlay made the Wildcats pay for the walk by singling Giam- paolo in. BIG TENS From page 1B Led by Rosso (9.65) and senior co-captain Andrew Elkind (9.5), the rings squad put on a show, with five of the six gymnasts notching scores over 9.0. And the vault team turned in another solid performance. Unfortunately for the Wol- verines, it wasn't enough. And because vault finishes so much faster than the other five events, they had ample time to watch the other Big Ten teams nailing sets around the Sports Pavilion. Amid the roars of the huge crowd, Michigan was a small island of silence. For the third year in a row, the Wolverines had to watch Ohio State gymnasts raising the Big Ten trophy. "Right now, I feel like last year, honestly," said Rosso, who turned in one of the best overall While Putnam was in his run- down, Abraham tried to make it to second base.:Unfortunately, the heads-up catcher threw down to second base and caught Abraham in a rundown of his own. A simple toss to the first baseman capped off the 5-2-4-3 double play. "We were going for a contact play." Maloney said. "Any ball that was hit, the guy runs." CALLED HOME RUN?: Senior Brad Roblin did something Sunday he had never done in his Michigan career - hita home run. It took four years, but on a 2- 1 count, Roblin got an off-speed pitch, turned on it and hit a shot to left field that flew right past the Ohio State flag. "That was exciting," Maloney said. "I'm happy for him to get that, it's something he'll always remember." Hitting your first career home run as a senior is one thing, but what occurred before is a nut- shell for a weekend that was full of wacky moments. During the rain delay, Roblin was talking with two friends who he used to play baseball with about the game. "We were just sitting there talk- ing during the rain delay and they were saying, 'This day is ridicu- lous, you're probably going to hit a home run,'" Roblin said. "Then I came out and it happened. I was just glad they were here." Maloney, although very happy for his senior leader, made certain the home run didn't get to his head. "I told him, don't be thinking of them (home runs), the wind was blowing out," Maloney said. DEREK BLUMKE/Daily Junior Samantha Findlay flashed her speed this weekend, stealing secnnd base against Nnrthwestern. Freshman bats spark offensive outburst innings. With the score knotted at one in the Big Ten opener on Friday, freshman Chris Berset hit a home run. As in every game this week- end, Michigan used one big offen- sive play to ignite its bats. "Chris Berset's jack was big for us," Maloney said. "When a fresh- man comes in and hits a jack like that everyone goes, 'Woo.' You know, it gets us over the top." Sophomore Zach Putnam showed why he's Michigan's ace, scorching opposing batters in all eight innings he pitched. ~ Although the Ann Arbor native would have liked to finish the game, Maloney wanted to save the sophomore's arm for more difficult series later in the season. Putnam allowed just four hits and one run in his fourth win of the season. With steady pitching through- out and the bats awake after Ber- set's hit, the Wolverines won 7-1. After Miller's blast Michigan had one more chance in the bot- tom of the seventh. Freshman third baseman Mag- gie Viefhaus led the inning off with a liner down the third base- line. Northwestern third base- man Darcy Sengewald extended, but was unable to keep the ball in her glove and Viefhaus made it safely to first. Freshman second baseman Molly Bausher popped up a bunt for the first out. Then Giampaolo walked on four pitches. With junior Michelle Weather- don pinch-running for Viefhaus, senior leftfielder Rebekah Milian lined out sharply to Sengewald at third. It appeared that Sen- gewald could've doubled Weat- showings of the meet. "This feel- ing, I thought it went away from our success this season, but obvi- ously it hasn't." Saturday night's event finals provided some measure of conso- lation. As the competition came to a close, the Wolverines could barely stay in their seats - and keeping their wide smiles hidden was out of the question. With The Victors blasting over the speakers, senior Aaron Rakes was announced as Big Ten high- bar champion. His teammates burst out of their chairs as if launched by cannons, their thun- derous cheers resonating around the arena. Rakes' high bar title - his first ever - was the cherry on top of a night that also saw Caldwell take third on floor (9.575), Rosso fifth on rings (9.4) and Elkind fifth on parallel bars (8.75). When Rakes posted a 9.475, victory was by no means cer- In the first game of Saturday's doubleheader, Michigan got the bats going in the third with two runs. With a 7-1 lead going into the bottom of the seventh, the game seemed to be a mirror image of Friday's contest, and in more ways than just the score. In both games, pitcher Andrew Hess struggled in the game's final inning. Stopper Ben Jenzen was called in to get the save. With the tying runs on first and third and Northwestern's power hit- ter, Antonio Mul4, up to bat, Jen- zen closed out the game with an emphatic strike out. The sweep puts the Wolverines in great position to make a run through the Big Ten regular sea- son. "What sweeps do for you is allow you grace at some point in the season, because you have four in the good pocket," Maloney said. herdon up at second to end the game, but she decided to throw to first. The throw was over the first baseman's head and Weatherdon advanced to third. With Samantha Findlay up, Northwestern pitcher Eileen Canney's fist two pitches missed and it appeared the Wildcats were pitching around Michigan's feared slugger. Findlay may have thought so, too, because the third pitch was left out over the heart of the plate, but she didn't swing. Still, Findlay walked to load the bases, bringing up her sister. The comeback effort ended there, though as, Angela Findlay grounded out to the shortstop on the first pitch to end the week- end. tain. Once Ohio State's Willie Ito missed his release and scored an 8.4, the Michigan gymnasts in the stands seemed confident that their teammate would win. After all, Ito was the last competitor - wasn't he? "We were all celebrating (after Ito)," sophomore Scott Bregman said. "Then there was another guy, and we (saw) another guy come walking over with his grips, and it was excruciating just watching, watching as they put up those nines and then (wondering) what the next tenth (was) going to be." The Wolverines had to wait on edge through three more sets after Ito, but Rakes had a stran- glehold on first. "I knew I was (in) first, but I didn't know until the last person went that I'd won," Rakes said. "It was awesome. It's been a while since I've stood on a podium in medal contention like this." By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Writer EVANSTON - It took12 innings for the Michigan women's soft- ball team to finally break through against Northwestern. In their matchup with the Wildcats last weekend at the Women4Women Invitational in Louisville, Ky., the Wol- NOTEBOOK verines man- aged just one run on two hits in the 2-1 extra-inning defeat. But once the third inning of Fri- day's game rolled around, No. 10 Michigan quadrupled their previ- ous run total against the eighth- ranked Wildcats. Northwestern was up 2-0 in the third inning and had yet to sur- render a hit. Then Michigan's young guns stepped up to the plate. In just minutes, freshmenAnge- la Findlay and Roya St. Clair had driven in three Wolverine runs and sparked a previously silent Michigan offense. In the process, the Wolverines added a fourth run on a wild pitch. All three RBI in the inning -came from freshman hitters. The only other Wolverine first-year in the lineup, Maggie Viefhaus, was on deck when the inning ended. After taking the lead for good in the third, the Wolverines put up another two in the fifth (forcing Northwestern ace-pitcher Eileen Canney out of the game) and five more in the sixth. "I thought we prepared them well for the pitching," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "The key is not just hitting, but it's timely hitting. Hitting with the runners in scoring position." The Wolverines were one run away from notching a run-rule victory (and ending the game early) against their toughest Big Ten opponent. It has been three years since Northwestern last gave up 11 runs. RBI SAINT: Hutchins has been looking all season long for some- one to step up and take the offen- sive burden off the top of the lineup. After this weekend's series, freshman catcher Roya St. Clair answered the call. St. Clair, who usually bats in the No. 7 or No. 8 spot, found herself in the No. 6 spot Friday behind the power hitting Findlay sisters and designated player Tiffany Wor- thy. Hutchins moved St. Clair up out of necessity because the hit- ters usually occupying that spot in the lineup (Viefhaus and Teddi Ewing) have struggled lately. But St. Clair proved to be more than just a fill-in. The Livonia native registered seven RBI (of nine team RBI) in four at-bats on Friday. "A timely hit is what Roya had all day, so that was probably the key (to the game)," Hutchins said. "We know she's an aggressive hit- ter. She needs to be in a power spot." St. Clair tallied the most RBI in a game since Samantha Findlay eight-RBI game against Minne- sota last year. All daylong St. Clair made solid contact with the ball. In her first at-bat, she blasted a long fly to center to lead off the second. After that, she went 3-for- 3 with two singles and a double, all of which were strong pings off the bat. "I definitely was seeing the ball, kinda slowed it down in my mind," St. Clair said. "It seemed like everything was right over the plate." SNEAKY BASE RUNNING: After a first-inning home run field on a 2-2 count, Samantha Findlay was intentionally walked in the third with two outs and first base open. But just because pitchers won't throw to the daunting power hit- ter doesn't mean she isn't a threat once she gets on base. With Findlay on first, junior Alessandra Giampaolo on third and Angela Findlay up at bat, Hutchins sent the signal for the older Findlay to steal second - but on-the catcher's lazy throw back to the pitcher and not on Northwest- ern pitcher Eileen Canney's pitch. "We had just been working on a play because Canney is a little afraidtothrowit,"Findlaysaid. "So we were just tryingto do a delayed steal to make her throw it." If Canney had thrown it to sec- ond to catch Findlay, the team's stolen base leader, then Giampaolo would have had the opportunity to steal home. 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