10A - Wednesday, April 4, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Blue pitchers bounce back By DAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer This couldn't have been what Michigan softball pitcher Lori- lyn Wilson wanted at all. The Salem, Ore., native walked the day's leadoff hitter in the first game of the Wolverines' double- header yesterday on four pitches. Then her walk of the Bron- cos' cleanup hitter two outs later prompted a visit to the mound from pitching coach Jennifer Brundage. Michigan coach Carol Hutchins also had advice for her starting pitcher. "I told Lorilyn after her first two walks, 'Don't accept that. We don't accept that you're going to walk two hitters in the first inning. So why would you?' I told her to just commit to being great," Hutchins said. "She's so close." How the senior responded is exactly why Hutchins thinks Wilson can be great. Wilson struck out the next six batters. She didn't stop there. Wilson set down the next 12 batters - five by strikeout - to keep her no-hitter going until there were two outs in the sev- enth inning. But Western Michigan pinch- hitter Lauren Fuller hit a sharp bouncer past shortstop Teddi Ewing. The crowd waited anxiously for the scorer's decision. When a hit was put on the scoreboard, the call was met by a number of groans. Having lost the no-hitter, it looked like Wilson would take the loss after she gave up a home run on the next pitch to give the Broncos a 2-1 advantage. But freshman rightfielder Angela Findlay's grand slam in the bottom of the seventh gave Wilson the win. "I only care about one out- come, and it's the win," Hutchins said. "And the game's not over until it's over. Did she think it was over? I don't know. "Had she gotten a no-hitter, it certainly would've been a nice thing. But I think she was capa- ble of getting it also. She let that opportunity get away." Wilson still finished with an impressive line: two earned runs on two hits, two walks and 13 strikeouts. But she wasn't the only pitcher who excelled yesterday. Freshman Nikki Nemitz start- ed game two. Like Wilson, she had problems with the first bat- ter, giving up a single. But also like Wilson, she was great the rest of the way. Nemitz followed up the hit with four no-hit innings before giving way to sophomore Stacey Delany after four innings. Nemitz's only blemish after the leadoff hitter was a one-out walk in the third. The southpaw, who entered the game averaging just fewer than five strikeouts per seven innings, struck out nine of the 14 batters she faced, including the last three. "It was a boost of confidence," Nemitz said. "It was like, 'Wow, I actually can strike some people out.'" Delaney picked up right where Nemitz left off, striking out her first four batters. She finished the game with eight strikeouts and allowed just one hit. Delaney was injured at the beginning of the season and didn't make her season debut until early March. She had just pitched 3.2 innings this year before yesterday. "All I knowis when Staceygets the innings like she got today, she needs to show us that she's going to help us compete," Hutchins said. "And if she does that, yeah, I think her innings will go up. "She showed she stayed very composed, which is probably BY THE NUMBERS Runs Michigan scored in its first six nings Runs Michigan scored in its final seven innings Batters Michigan pitchers struck out been the one thing she needed to do." Hutchins credited Delaney with keeping her riseball in the strike zone, noting good teams won't swing at it when it's high. Delaney said she also worked in her new curve ball early in the count before going to her riseball for strikeouts. I RODRIGO GAYA/Da iy Sophomore Stacy Delaney struck out eight batters and allowed just one hit in relief work during the second game of yesterday's doubleheader. A 4 I A 4 0