The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com November 12, 2007 - 3B Blue pair to meet in semis By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer There will be a Michigan ten- nis player in the finals of the men's Big Ten Singles Championship today. This morning's semifinal match will determine who it is, but because Michigan freshman Jason Jung takes on Michigan senior Matko Maravic, a Wolver- ine will make the championship. The Varsity Tennis Center hosted the annual tournament this weekend, which included a 64-player main draw and a quali- fying draw on Friday. Tournament directors gave eight Wolverines spots in the main draw, including three play-. ers seeded inthetop 10. Two more stormedthrough the qualifyingto enter the main draw. Jung and Maravic emerged from the pack, each winning four straight matches to reach the tournament semifinal. Jung's path to the semifinal was relatively smooth - he didn't drop a set. His results this week- end add to the success of his fall season, where he went deep into other tournaments. This fresh- man is not a typical freshman. "The success doesn't really sur- prise me," Michigan coach Bruce Berque said. "Jason came in as arguably the top recruit in the country, certainly one of the top few. He's played internationally and has a lot of big match experi- ence. He's a very good player and a very mature competitor for his age." Jung's, quarterfinal match exemplified his maturity. After winning the first set 6-4, Jung looked poised to cruise to the next round. But his opponent, Indi- ana's Dara McLoughlin, came out strong, breaking Jung once to take a 3-0 lead in the second set. Jung stayed calm and stuck to his own gameplan. - "I wasn't trying to think about the score too much," Jung said. CLIF REEDER/Daly Senior Lucia Belassi played in her final game asa Wolverine yesterday, a 3-2 loss to Wake Forest in the NCAA quarterfinals. CLUF REEDER/Daily Senior Matko Maravic will face his teammate, freshman Jason Jung, inthe semifinals of the Big Ten Singles Championship. "I just tried to keep playing my game. I finally got my shots down, and it felt a lot better once I got a few points." Berque said the team works extensively on the mental chal- lenges of closing out games in situations like Jung's. "They're always supposed to show a strong competitive pres- ence regardless of how they feel," Berque said. "A lot of times they have to fake it. "There's also temptation to rush and finish things quickly, but that won't work. They're supposed to stay disciplined and play the way they're supposed to play. They always need to play aggressively." Maravic used this approach to fight through his three-set quar- terfinal match against Purdue's Branko Kuzmanovic. Maravic won the first set in a tiebreak, 7- 6 (7-5), after being down an early break. Kuzmanovic applied pres- sure and broke Maravic twice to win the second set, 6-3. Maravic changed his shirt before the third set began, signi- fying a shift in mentality. From the first point of the set, he knew he was going to win it. His yells were so loud that even the chair umpire laughed at them. He won the third set handily, 6-1, to advance to the semifinal. The two teammates face off today to earna spot in the Big Ten Singles Championship final. In three-and-a-half years at Michigan, Maravic has never played a teammate in a tourna- ment. "I think it's going to be tough because it'll be hard to get fired up if I'm playing someone I practice with, and that's such a big part of my game," Maravic said. Said Jung: "Matko is a very consistent player. I just need to get one more ball back than he does." Both players have a lot of respect for each other. But it's still teammate versus teammate, freshman versus senior, newcom- er versus the defending Big Ten Singles Champion. "He knows me well; I know him well," Maravic said. "We know our strengths and weaknesses, so it's going to be an interesting match." RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS 16 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! 734E971y2828 Equal ouasing Opportunityp CLUE SPORTS Club soccer hopes to reptaschmpo repeat as champions S LE Only available through the Computer Showcase F/ 8http://showcase.itcs.umich.edu By'DANIEL BERMAN For theDaily As the varsity team awaits the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee's decision, another team has already booked its place in another tournament. After finishing 8-2-2, the club soccer team will be defending its National Title this week when it travels to Florida for the NIRSA Collegiate Sports Club Champion- ship tournament. The Wolverines secured its bid to the national tournament in the regionals. In a highly competitive division where every game mat- ters,nothinglessthanwinningthe region outright was good enough to earn that bid. "In previous years, we have had ,automatic bids to nationals, so in the past, the regional tournament hasn't meant as much," senior Brad Murphy said. "Not having that bid didn't allow us to relax. It was a do-or-die situation." Faced with that predicament, Michigan buckled down. After a drawinthe firs game ofhe round robin stage of the tournament, the Wolverines went on to string together three consecutive wins against undefeated teams to win the tournament. Senior defender Brent Medema, who scored the lone goal in the 1-0 victory over Wisconsin-Milwau- kee in the regional final, thought the team couldn't have chosen a better time to hit its stride. "The (semifinal) game against Indiana was some of the best soc- cer we've played all year," he said. Murphy and Medema, both members of last year's National Championship squad, feel that the upcoming tournament is a chance to solidify their program's elite status in the nation. To ensure that continued excel- lence, the Wolverines will be rely- log on Murphy and Medema to provide leadership and quality on the pitch, but both are quick to downplay their performances to sing praises of their teammates. "I like the glory of scoring and leading the team to victory," Medema said of his free kick goal in the regional final. "But we have a greatteam, and everyone is step- ping up big time." As defending National Champs, Michigan will surely enter Pen- sacola with a target on its back. However, after the obstacles the Wolverines have overcome to get where they are so far, it is clear that the team thrives off the pres- sure. "Our teams the last few years have been the kind that play the bestunderpressure,"Murphysaid. "Hopefullywe'lltake advantage of our situation and do it again." 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