The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com January 28, 2008 - 3B Falls spell defeat for Michigan Strong invididual performances not enough in road loss to Oklahoma By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer NORMAN, Okla. - As the men's gym- nastics meet began in Oklahoma's packed McCasland Field House, the public address announcer couldn't hide the joy in his voice. "Men's gymnastics just doesn't get any bet- ter than this," he breathlessly told the crowd of 1,485. But for the two MICHIGAN 347.0 highlyranked teams, OKLAHOMA 351.4 No. 2 Michigan and No. 5 Oklahoma, it didn't exactly turn out that way. Though the meet was billed as a battle of powerhouse squads, neither team performed at its best. And while the Wolverines left the Field House knowing victory was within reach, the Sooners came away with the win. Okla- homa clinched the victory in the final two events, high bar and parallel bars, to win 351.4-347.0. "We had this meet in our hands," junior Joe Catrambone said, icing a bad ankle made sore again by a botched parallel-bars dis- mount. "There's some little stuff here and there that we can fix, but overall we are a better team than them. I think that they know that too." Catrambone had another solid meet, win- ning the high bar title, but his smooth, meet- ending parallel bars routine ended with a painful fall. Last weekend, Michigan took control of the final two events, coming from behind to beat defending National Champion Penn State in Ann Arbor. But away from Cliff Keen, it was a different team. "We didn't do that on the road," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "When the going got tough and we really had to buckle down, we really weren't the same team that we were last weekend." After falling behind on pommel horse, the Wolverines surged back during the floor rota- tion. Led by senior Dan Rais and freshmen Chris Cameron and Thomas Kelley, Michi- gan jumped out to a two-point lead. On vault, though, the Wolverines got themselves into trouble, with two gymnasts falling on their landings. But then sophomore David Chan, who earned All-America status on vault last sea- son, stuck his explosive handspring double M' rebounds from beam woes in win Blue continues 17-year streak against Spartans By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer Sophomore Kelsey Knutson leapt onto the balance beam Satur- day night with the memory of last week-_ end's fall MICH. ST. 194.550 fresh in MICHIGAN 196.750 her mind. But after calmly sticking her landing, Knutson flashed a smile and ran into the open arms of Michigan coach Bev Plocki. When. the judges displayed the event- high score of 9.925, the Crisler Arena crowd exploded in cheers. The No. 6 Michigan women's gymnastics team bounced back from last week's beam difficulties, sparking a victory over rival No. 24 Michigan State, 196.750 to 194.550. Last weekend, the Wolverines fell three times on beam, including Knutson's on her dismount. The Spartans. haven't beaten the Wolverines in a dual meet in 17 years. Culminating in its best team score in almost two years, Michi- gan dominated the meet from start to finish. "We want to try to hit all the routines - go 24-for-24," said fifth-year senior captain Lindsey Bruck, who also fell from the beam last week. Bars have been the Wolverines' strongest event this season but Saturday's meet showcased the team's depth on other events. Michigan posted season-high scores on both beam and vault. Knutson's beam title was the first individual event win of her career. After each routine, hundreds of fans waved the meet program, which featured the three Wolver- ine freshmen. Andsthe trio didn't disappoint. Kylee Botterman earned the top vault individual score, making her the second freshman this season to win an event - after Trish Wil- son took the bars title in her first collegiate meet on Jan. 11. Leading off two events, fresh- man Kari Pearce earned career- high scores on vault and floor, while Wilson put up a solid 9.825 on bars, her only scored event of the night. As she recovers from a bout of mononucleosis, Plocki plans to add her to more event lineups. Michigan dominated Michigan State from the first event. "We try to start off strong and just keep it going," Bruck said. "We know if we have high energy, we can last to the last event." Wolverines stood atop the podi- um for each event, and Bruck cap- tured her eighth career all-around title with a score of 39.325. The Big Ten Network televised the meet, just like last weekend's. But this time, the meet flowed quickly and the Wolverines were able to maintain momentum with- out scoring delays. The crowd of more than a thou- sand, including many Univer- sity of Michigan Dance Marathon members and local Girl Scout troops, was especially enthusias- tic. The student section was large and made its presence felt when it started cheers and waves in between routines. "When the crowd is into it, we get more involved and more excit- ed," Bruck said. "Our energy just bumps up another level." The Wolverines will travel to Ypsilanti Feb. 2 to compete in the State of Michigan Classic, where they will face four other Michigan universities. That's a lot of competition. But for Michigan, the goal is the same: 24-for-24. Freshman Chris Cameron muscles his way to a pomme! horse victory, earning a 14.75 score. It wasn't enough to carry the Wolverines toa road win over No. 5 Oklahoma. front to finish, and win, the event. His teammates engulfed him, with Cam- eron lifting Chan off the floor in a delighted hug. "That electrified us," said Cameron, who won the pommel horse title. "We really messed up vault bad ... but Dave did what he had to. He put that thing down perfect." Despite Chan's performance, Michigan couldn't translate the momentum into con- sistency on rings. And the Sooners caught fire when they moved to vault. Oklahoma surged into the lead, then pulled away as the Wolverines struggled through their high bar sets and the Sooners breezed through parallel bars. Catrambone and Kel- ley managed Michigan's only excellent rou- tines on high bar, finishing first and second in the event. With Michigan behind by more than four points going into its final rotation, parallel bars, it needed a miracle. Despite the efforts of junior Ryan McCarthy, who hit his routine in his first meet of the year, and sophomore Mel Santander, who finished second in the event, the Wolverines were unable to catch the Sooners. To the delight of the many excited grade- schoolers in attendance, Oklahoma contin- ued its home-arena dominance. Yet the Wolverines weren't convinced they lost to a completely superior team. As gymnasts so often say, it all comes down to which team can hit more routines on a given night. On Saturday, that team was Oklahoma. Young team feels growing pains Freshmen key in split success By RYAN KARTJE 11 Arizona State and perennial For theDaily powerhouse, No.7 San Jose State. But the Wolverines held their Coming into the Michigan Kick- own, losing by a total of three goals off this weekend, one third of the for both games, trading the lead Michigan women's water polo back and forth throughout. team had never faced any colle- In the weekend's final match, giate competition. So this week- coming off an impressive win over end's four matches, three of them UC-San Diego, the Wolverines put against top-ranked opponents, up a strong fight against San Jose offered the chance to answer ques- State, erasing a three-goal half- tions about their ability to succeed time deficit. with a team largely made up of With the game tied at eight with freshmen. one minute remaining, the crowd Consider those questions looked on as the Spartans got past answered in the form of17goals. the Michigan defense and scored The 18th-ranked Wolverines a nearly undefended goal, leaving kicked off the 2008 season with a the Wolverines with a nasty taste 2-2 split at Canham Natatorium, in their mouths. calming many doubts with their Putting the losses aside, the solid play. weekend was more of a statement Although a .500 record seems for the Wolverines as the new sea- disappointing, Michigan coach son also means new leadership and Matt Anderson called the week- 10 incoming freshmen. end's performance "exceptional," These first-year players made saying the team played "well the difference at the Michigan enough to win." Kickoff. Both of Michigan's losses came In the Wolverines' first match of to teams ranked in the top 15 - No. the season against Colorado State, HOCKEY From page 1B backhand pass from senior Chad Kolarik and wristed the puck into the net to give the Wolverines their first and only lead of the weekend. Five minutes later, all the momentum from Pacioretty's goal was lost after penalties to defense- man Mark Mitera and Rust were dished out 27 seconds apart. With the two-man advantage, the Spar- tans needed just 46 seconds to NOTEBOOK From page 1B during Saturday night's con- test, Michigan State found itself with a two-man advantage. Forty- six seconds later, the Spartans had tallied two goals and sent Munn Ice Arena into a frenzy. Even though the Michigan penalty kill was shaky at times, goalie Billy Sauer put the Wolver- ines in a position to win. Sauer made many near-impossible saves to shut down the Spartan pressure, especially in Saturday's score two power-play goals. Comley said the Wolverines were "fortunate" to escape with one point. But Rust felt Michigan clearly outplayed the Spartans at even strength Saturday, and Mich- igan coach Red Berenson seemed to agree. "We easily could have won the game," Berenson said. "I'm not thinking about the tie - more so the effort." In Friday's loss, in which the only goal was scored early in the first period on an ugly poke past overtime period. After a Michigan penalty less than a minute into overtime, Michigan State made a fierce charge in the Wolverine zone. Sprawled on his back, Sauer wheeled his body around, nar- rowly deflecting a sure game- winner. "(Sauer) has been unbeliev- able," Porter said. "To give up three goals in a weekend and still have a loss and a tie is unfortu- nate." NO CLOSURE:Inarivalry game as intense as Michigan-Michigan State, a tie doesn't relieve any of the freshmen accounted for seven of Michigan's goals in the 16-5 rout. Those seven goals were the most by any freshmen class in one game in program history. Freshmen Keller Felt and Alison Mantel lit up the stat sheet with impressive first-day hattricks. Mantel earned another hat trick on the second day. The only differ- ence? Mantel's second hat trick was in one period. It's no wonder Man- tel's nickname is "Magic." "With the freshmen we have, we're capable of a lot," said senior Michelle Keeley. Keeley had a milestone of her own this weekend, scoring her 50th career goal in the 6-5 win over UC-San Diego. "These freshmen just love to score," Anderson said, "They don't know how to do anything else." With a talented group of fresh- men improving with every game, it looks like it could be a "magical" season for the Michigan women's water polo team. Michigan goalie Billy Sauer, the Wolverines were outhit and out- worked in front of a raucous Yost Arena crowd. And for a team that has survived on gritty plays and occasional lucky breaks, Friday's disappoint- ment spoiled the weekend. "It's embarrassing, is what it is," Kolarik said after the loss. "This is our only home game against Mich- igan State this year, and we lose it. It's so frustrating. We talked about it all week that we had to win this one game, if anything." the pressure that builds up over the weekend. The fans, players and coaches were all left unhappy Saturday night after a stressful five-minute overtime period. "Obviously, it leaves a bad taste in our mouths," Michigan State coach Rick Comley said. "But it was a hard fought game, much different than (Friday) night." The Michigan locker room wasn't much happier. "Maybe that goal was lucky," Porter said of the game-tying goal. "But to come out with a tie, I don't feel lucky." By MARTY LAROUERE For the Daily The Michigan women's tennis team faced the reality of its youth movement. With four freshmen on its roster, Michigan failed to pick up a single team point at both No. 34 Kentucky and No. 16 Vanderbilt. Three of six singles matches went into third sets against Ken- tucky on Sunday, but Michigan was unable to pick up a win. Doubles play, however, was a bright spot. Solid play from junior Chisako Sugiyama and sophomore Tania Mahtani resulted in the only doubles victory of the weekend, as the pairknockedoffthe20th-ranked doubles pair of Carolina Escamilla and Christine Johnston, 8-5. Junior Lindsey Howard and freshman Denise Muresan grinded out their match, but were beat 9- 8(4). The loss prevented the Wol- verines from picking up their first team point. "We ran into two very good teams," Howard said. "These were our first two matches, both of them away.We had to work out the nerves and the younger players had to get used to the college atmosphere." The Wolverines again failed to win team points facing a talented Vanderbilt squad Friday. Sugiyama battled with Vander- bilt's Catherine Newman to take the match into the last set, but was GIANNOTTO From page 1B The most troubling part about the Wolverines' continued strug- gles is that they can execute what Michigan coach John Beilein is preaching. They've shown the ability to run his complicated offense, get- ting plenty of open looks. And Beilein's unique 1-3-1 zone con- founded Wisconsin and has been a successful change of pace on the defensive end. For Michigan, the problems come down to talent and effort. Simply put, there isn't enough of either. Low expectations or not, that should worry a team this late in the season. Too many times, the Wolverines run a set play well, creating an open shot, only to see it clank off the rim. defeated 5-7, 6-4, 6-3. Muresan showed some grit as she picked up a win in the second set of her match, but then was edged in the third by Commodore Taka Bertrand. The doubles team of Sugiyama and Mahtani battled but dropped a close one to Vanderbilt's Newman and Bertrand, 8-7(5). Michigan coach Ronni Bernstein said several factors contributed to the Commodores' sound victory over the Wolverines. "We just lost to a better team," Bernstein said. "It was our first match and we are very young, but that doesn't give us an excuse. We Before the season, Beilein worried about not having enough shooters - and his worst fears have been realized. No one on the Michigan roster - freshman standout Manny Harris included - has shown the ability to consistently knock down open jumpers. The issues on defense are even more frustrating. The Wolverines are last in the Big Ten in scoring defense, making things even hard- er on an anemic offense. "The defensive numbers are our biggest concern right now," Beilein said. "People are shooting a very high percentage against us. We're not getting fast-break points, and we're not getting the things that you would get from defensive stops." A few weeks ago, after Michi- gan's lone Big Ten win this season against Northwestern, I was cau- tiously optimistic about the rest BEN SIMON/Daily Junior Chisako Sugiyama brought veteran experience to the courts last weekend. just need to avoid costly errors, find ways to get the big points, and need the upperclassmen to step up." Howard, one of the few veter- ans on the team, acknowledged the team's youth and team's inexperi- ence. But Howard said the team's goal of winningthe Big Ten tourna- ment in April is still in reach. In order to get to that point, the Wolverines need to work on their mental approach and gain some confidence, Bernstein said. "There is definitely room for improvement," she said. "We just need to focus on the things that we can control, have pride, and believe in ourselves." of the season, having seen some small steps towards respectability. But it's become increasingly clear that victory was an anomaly. Beilein and the rest of the Wol- verines can talk all they want about how hard their schedule has been and how the goal is to keep improv- ing, but they are failing at the basic fundamentals of basketball. Going full-throttle on defense at all times and hitting open shots aren't things a Division I ath- lete should be struggling with. Even middle-of-the-road teams from the Horizon and Southern Leagues have players that can defend and hit jumpers. It's time we take a cold shower of reality. Until this program gets more quality players, the losses will continue to pile up. - Giannotto can be reached at mgiann@umich.edu.