* The Michigan Daily I michigandailycom I March 10, 2008 Blue savors taste ofvictory Wolverines crush defending champion No.1 Georgia By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's gymnas- tics team had all the ingredients for a feast. . "Our first event was the appe- tizer," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "The second was the soup and salad, followed by the main course and, of course, floor exercise was dessert. And I do love dessert." In front of more than 4,000 spec- tators at Crisler MICHIGAN 197.600 Arena GEORGIA 196.950 on Fri- day, the fourth-ranked Wolverines cooked up the sixth-highest score in pro- gram history to knock out three- time defending national champion and current No.1 Georgia, 197.600- 196.950. Michigan gymnasts took all four event titles, and sophomore Sarah Curtis won her third all-around crown of the season with a Big Ten and Michigan record 39.600 score. Two Michigan falls proved cru- cial in the meet, but neither fac- tored into the scoring. Comingintothe competition, the Wolverines knew their beam score would either give them a shot at the upset or crush that chance. Michi- gan has been inconsistent on the event all season. Michigan had a slight .275-point lead going into the third rotation, which was beam. The second gymnast in the line- up, sophomore Jordan Sexton, fell off the apparatus just seconds into her routine - an automatic half- point deduction. The four remain- ing gymnasts knew they had to stay on the beam and put up high scores so that fall wouldn't count. Enter Curtis. Fresh off a title-worthy vault performance and a top-five bars score, Curtis leapt onto the beam after her teammate's fall. With composure and a stuck dismount, Curtis posted a 9.900, which put the Wolverines back on track for a win. "I'm always nervous for beam right before I get on," Curtis said. "But I actually think her fall gave See GEORGIA, Page 3B Sophomore Sarah Curtis's 9.900 beam performance after a teammate's fall put Michigan back in position to beat the nation's top-ranked team, Georgia. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL 'M' quietly exits Big Ten tourney Season ends with "We just couldn't score," Michi- gan coach Kevin Borseth said. "We record low output couldn't find any rhythm, and what r r we do is just so predicated on hav- ing players that can create for them- By ANTHONY OLIVEIRA selves." Daily Sports Writer While the Michigan offense struggled to find a rhythm, the INDIANAPOLIS - The Michi- defense had trouble making stops ganwomen's basketballteampulled early. Whether it was Iowa guard off one of the biggest disappearing Kristi Smith scoring triples or for- acts in Big Ten Tournament his- ward Johanna Solverson driving tory. straight to the hoop, the Wolverines And it only took two possessions. couldn't handle the Hawkeyes' size On their opening possession, the and balanced attack. Wolverines used more than five Part of the problem was sopho- passes more Stephany Skrba's disappear- to earn MICHIGAN 37 ance. After picking up two fouls in their first IOWA 58 her first two minutes, she didn't see points, any action for the rest of the first courtesy half Borseth admitted he should of sophomore Krista Phillips. But have put her back in, and Michigan they became stagnant for the final missed her size on the boards. Iowa 39 minutes as Iowa rolled past gathered 14 offensive rebounds for Michigan, 58-37, Friday at Conseco 17 points on the game. Fieldhouse. The Wolverines' 37 Finding themselves with an points was a season low for Michi- 11-point deficit at halftime, the gan and the lowest point total in Big Wolverines changed their initial Ten tournament history. See HAWKEYES, Page 3B BASEBALL Uneven pitching leads to early losses PURDUE 72, MICHIGAN 58 A BITTER END By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer On Saturday night, a deflated Michigan baseball team headed back to its North Carolina hotel. It just couldn't win. In the first game of the day, when the Wolverines played hor- ribly, of course, they lost, 12-3 to Georgia Southern. Later on, when they played well enough to win against East Carolina, they lost, 6-5. "We felt terrible," Michigan coach Rich Maloney said. "We'd lost two games and didn't feel good because we expect to win every time we go out there." If it wasn't for redshirt junior Chris Fetter's mammoth pitching performance yesterday against Pittsburgh, which put the team at 1-2 on the weekend, the Michi- gan players would still be hanging their heads as they returned to Ann Arbor. In the first game of the Clark- LeClair Tournament on Saturday, Georgia Southern (6-6) plowed over the Wolverines. Michigan lost what Maloney calls the "freebie war," which includes walks, hit batsmen, errors and passed balls. The Wolverine pitchers hit four batters and allowed 10 earned runs, while the Eagles walked just two batters. "When you play bad and look bad, no one feels good about it," Maloney said. "We were embar- rassed." That evening, Michigan (5-5) attempted to rebound against a talented EastCarolina (8-4) squad. But unlike the Georgia Southern catastrophe, the Wolverines actu- ally played well. They held a 5-3 lead going into the bottom of the seventh until East Carolina freshman Trent Whitehead blasted junior Zach Putnam's pitch over the right field wall to tie the game, 5-5. Senior Michael Powers gave up a run in the eighth, letting East Carolina squeak by, 6-5. "It came down to us needing to make one or two more plays or one or two more pitches," Malo- See BASEBALL, Page 2B Freshman Manny Harris tries to drive past two Purdue defenders in Michigan's regular season-ending loss Sunday. Late Purdue run wraps up game One year in, whats changed? By H. JOSE BOSCH Daily Sports Editor While the Michigan men's basketball team's regular season passed like an eternity, Sunday's game wrapped up in less then a minute. The Wolverines dropped their 13th Big Ten game of the year, 72- 58, to No.15 Purdue. Michigan had a two-point lead with just under nine minutes remaining. Forty-four seconds later, the Boilermakers led by six. Following a Keaton Grant 3- pointer that gave Purdue a 51-50 lead, the Boilermakers stole the inbounds pass and converted it for two points. Thirty seconds later, Grant launched another 3- pointer to close out the scoring spurt. The quick turnaround began a 21-4 Purdue run to end the game. "It's not good," redshirt junior C.J. Lee said. "We play 32 min- utes of good basketball and then it comes down to the same stuff we've been doing all year long." Turnovers and poor shooting - the Wolverines' troublesome trademark all year - plagued them again in the second half Michigan committed 15 turn- overs and shot just 33 percent from the field. The Wolverines (5-13 Big Ten, 9-21 overall) couldn't stop the Boilermakers' hot shooting. Pur- due shot 58 percent from the floor and hit 55 percent of its shots from beyond the 3-point line in the second. Guard Keaton Grant, who knocked the wind out of Mich- igan's upset bid at Purdue in January, torched the Wolverines again with 13 second-half points and 17 points overall. "Sometimes things just don't go our way," freshman Manny Harris said. "This year it hasn't been going our way, and we haven't been playing all 40 min- utes of basketball." The second frame was a stark contrast to the first 20 minutes. Led by sophomore Ekpe Udoh, See BOILERMAKERS, Page 2B hen trying to describe exactly how this season will be remembered, I can't help but go back to what Michigan coach John Beilein said at his introductory press con- ference last April. Many have forgot- ten his prom- ise of the MARK fun, exciting GIANNOTTO - and even- tually win- ning - brand of basketball, brought with him from the hills of West Virginia. Well, in Sunday's 72-58 defeat to Purdue - the Wolverines'21st loss of the season - there was nothing entertaining about the 24 turnovers the team commit- ted, including 15 in the second half when the game was still up in the air. And it certainly wasn't excit- ing to watch the team miss 19 3-pointers and, for the 15th time this season, shoot below 40 per- cent fromthe field. It didn't help that Michigan allowed another opponent to have its way from the outside - this time it was freshman E'Twaun Moore and sophomore Keatan Grant going a combined 6-for-tO from 3-point range. So now that we're ankle deep in this program overhaul, has there really been that much improvement? Where was that fun-filled atmosphere at Crisler Arena yesterday? The Athletic Department even offered free tickets to students and still had huge pockets of empty seats in the upper deck. The bottom line is, the problems the Wolverines had from the start this season are still there, 21 losses later. They still can't shoot, they still can't defend and they still have no idea when either area will improve. See GIANNOTTO, Page 3B