The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 14, 2008- 5A Average Joes get their chance Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez will hold open tryouts today By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Editor Rich Rodriguez compares his first open tryout experi- ence to the movie "Invincible" - the story of Vince Papale, a bartender who tried out for the Philadelphia Eagles and made the team. "The first year I did it, I had about five or 10 guys show up NOTEBOOK who had never even played high school foot- ball," Rodriguez laughed. That was seven years ago. But in Rodriguez's last season at West Virginia, almost 50 ath- letes showed up for a chance to be a Mountaineer football play- er. This year, he's continuing the tradition - and possibly start- ing one at Michigan. Today at 4 p.m., Rodriguez will hold an open tryout for the Michigan football team. Interested ath- letes must undergo a physical exam before the tryout and have some high school or junior col- lege football experience. Regis- tration will begin at 3:30 p.m. at Schembechler Hall. As a student at West Virginia, Rodriguez walked onto the foot- ball team and eventually earned a scholarship. "I'm a big believer in the walk-on program," he said. "The opportunity's going to be there. If the guy can run around RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Senior Kevin Porter is making a strong case for the Hobey Baker Award, college hockey's MVP award, by leading the country in scoring as the captain of the nation's top- ranked team. The only other Wolverine to win the award was Brendan Morrison, who won it in 1997. H'H PEFUL a little bit and maybe looks like a potential contributor, we'll keep him." Rodriguez said he gave schol- arships to 25 walk-ons the past five years at West Virginia. He said the Michigan football team may keep four to five athletes after today's tryout. Making the cut doesn't guar- antee a roster spot next fall, but it ensures the players will be on the team through spring prac- tices. EVERYONE'S A ROOKIE: The Wolverines now have' 24 com- mitments for next season, but due to upperclassmen depar- tures, Michigan will not fill all 85 scholarships. Rodriguez can only give 25 scholarships per year, and as of Signing Day, he said the Wolver- ines had 26 or 27 scholarships because of players leaving early. When Rodriguez arrived at West Virginia, he said it took two or three years to make up for the upperclassman deficit resulting from the coaching change. "I'm hoping we won't lose any more of our upperclassmen, but I can't guarantee you," Rodri- guez said. "I'm not going to lock the doors from the inside out. We're going to be demanding." Rodriguez said his new sys- tem means "everybody's kind of in a rookie mode" - and he may not have a solid idea of where his team stands until two-a-days finish in August. "I don't know what we've got," Rodriguez said. "Heck, I haven't had a practice yet. I like winning too much to not adapt to our people, but I don't know See FOOTBALL, Page 8A OPEN TRYOUT: F NOT PRYOR, HOW 'BOUT YOU? An open tryout will be held offering students the chance to make the roster as walk-ons. WHAT: Open tryouts to walk-on to the football team WHO: Any undergraduate student with some high school orjuniorcollege experi- ence and a copy of a physical examform signed by a doctor. WHEN: Today, 3:30 p.m. WHERE: Schembechler Hall Senior captain the odds-on favorite to win college hockey MVP award By NATE SANDALS ManagingSports Editor Chad Kolarik doesn't get to vote for the Hobey Baker Award win- ner, but if he could, he'd already be committed to a candidate. "Kevin Potter - no question," the alternate captain said. Sure, there might be some bias in that vote. Kolarik and Porter aren't just linemates and Michigan's only scholarship seniors. They're also best friends and housemates. But even those who don't live with Porter agree he's putting together a historic season. "He's had a Hobey Baker career at Michigan, and now he's doing it right this year," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "If it weren't for him, where would our team be?" That's a scary question, consid- ering the impact Porter has had leading the Wolverines at both ends of the ice. Porter's defensive prowess is an important part of his Hobey Baker campaign. Being the nation's top scorer is no guarantee for a Hobey Baker award - it doesn't even guarantee a spot in the top three. Last season, Michigan senior T.J. Hensick had the most points in the country but was left out when the three finalists for the award were announced in late March. The slight came as a shock to many in the Michigan locker room, but maybe it shouldn't have. "I think it was our team that affected him the most," Kolarik said. "Our team wasn't that good. We were decent, but we didn't have a run like we're having now." Even more surprising, last sea- son's award went to North Dakota sophomore Ryan Duncan, which perturbed Berenson, who thinks a player's class status should be a consideration in voting. "This is Porter's senior year and it's his best year ever," Berenson said. "And look around the country, even if he doesn't win the scoring, look what he's doing for our team." There's no denying this year's team is returning the favor to Porter. As the best player on the nation's No. 1 team, Porter has a good shot at being Michigan's sec- ond-ever Hobey Baker winner. The other Wolverine to win the award, Brendan Morrison, won it in his senior season in 1997. For his successes, Morrison is a role model to many current Michigan players, including Porter. "He's had a great career in the NHL," Porter said. "He was a great leader here ... There's not a better guy to look up to." The Northville native can eas- ily rattle off what made Morrison a prototypical Hobey Baker win- ner: Great offensive numbers for four years, great leadership and a National Championship. The description sounds a lot like Porter, who is climbing his way up the list of Michigan's all-time great players. Kolarik is pretty sure he knows how Porter's Michigan story will end up. "I was telling Ports the other day that I had a dream he won the Hobey Baker and I was cry- ing when he was giving his accep- tance speech," Kolarik said. "It's a little weird, but that's something I strive for, for him to win the Hobey Baker." For Kolarik, who may keep play- ing with Porter after college since they're both' Phoenix Coyotes' prospects, an award for Porter would mean more than the hard- ware. "I'm his best friend. He's my best friend," Kolarik said. "We're linemates, and if he wins, I'll get a piece of it." RICH RODRIGUEZ Wright a go-go: Redshirt freshman emerges as team's reliable sixth man CHANEL VON HABSBURG-LOTHRINGEN/Da Junior Melinda Queen has put up season-high numbers against Northwestern the past two times the teams have faced each other. * With postseason play on the line, Blue hits the road Queen hopes for continued success against Wildcats in front of family By ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer For the first time since 2000-01, the Michigan women's basketball team is playing a meaningful game midway through February. Let that sink in. Michigan's record (6-6 Big Ten, 13-9 overall) speaks volumes to the team's improvement this season. Coming off four straight losing campaigns under former coach Cheryl Burnett, first-year head coach Kevin Borseth has turned the program around. And with six games left, Michigan has a chance to play beyond the Big Ten Tourna- ment. Luckily for the Wolverines, those six games begin at North- western (0-12, 4-20), a team on a Virginia native sparks Wolverine offense, plays solid on defensive end By H. JOSE BOSCH Daily Sports Editor To relax before every game, redshirt freshman Anthony Wright listens to Critical Condi- tion Band, a little-known Wash- ington D.C.-area go-go ensemble. Like the band, Wrighthasbeen performing in obscurity for much of the season. But to Michi- gan coach John Michigan Beilein'sdelight, the Sterling,Va., at IOWa native's offense Matchup: is becoming a Michigan 6-17; major piece in Iowa 11-14 the Wolverines' When: slow and steady Tonight, 9 P.M. improvement. Where: "It's really Carver-Hawk- important to eye Arena have that third TV/Radio: guy who can ESPN score," Beilein said. Beilein wants two scorers on the court as often as possible. Sophomore DeShawn Sims and freshman Manny Harris are the team's leading scorers and both are in the starting lineup. With Wright's continued success on offense, Beilein can rest Sims earlier and still keep two scoring threats on the floor. The boost off the bench has also helped Michigan avoid the first-half scoring droughts that plagued it for much of the season. "I've always been willing to shoot," Wright said. "But now the balls are just falling in, and my release feels great. So I'm just trying to be consistent with that now." Before his 15-point perfor- mance against Illinois, Wright failed to score in double digits for 14 straight games, going back to Michigan's second game of the season. Beilein attributed Wright's struggles to his deflating per- formance against then-No. 5 Georgetown, in front of family and friends. "That knocked him back a lit- tle bit," Beilein said. "He has his confidence right now, and that's really important." After that run of tough games, Wright has scored double digits in three of the past seven games. During the stretch, Wright has tallied seven points per game, four better than his average before the Illinois game. While Wright hasn't scored at the same rate as Sims and Harris, his first-half point bursts against Illinois, Michigan State and Penn State kept Michigan in the game and are glimpses of how valuable Wright can be as a sixth man. "It definitely helps for him to come off the bench and shoot at such a high percentage," fresh- man Kelvin Grady said. "He takes our team to a whole new level." His play hasn't just improved on offense. Wright has developed into a solid defensive player, too. Beilein trusted Wright's defen- See WRIGHT, Page 8A 13-game losing streak. And no Wol- verine is hap- pier than junior Melinda Queen about Michigan's upcoming game against the Wild- cats. Although she has not put up huge num- bers this season, Queen's track Michigan at N'westem Matchup: Michigan 13- 9; N'western 4-20 When: Tonight, ' P.M. Where: Welsh-Ryan Arena record against Northwestern is impressive. Last year, when Queen averaged just four points and two rebounds per contest, she had her best game of the season against Northwest- See WILDCATS, Page 8A CLIF REEDER/Daily Redshirt freshman Anthony Wright has scored in double-digit figures three of the last seven games. Next up: the Wolverines travel to Iowa tonight. &