A 8A - Wednesday, April 9, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4 All business at last practice Senior Samantha Findlay's home run gave the Michigan softball team a solid 4-1 lead against Central Michigan yesterday at Alumni Field. The Wolverines went on to win 4-3, their 33rd victory oftthe season. RBI record in victory The team busses were parked outside Yost Ice Arena Monday, ready to take the Wolverines straight to the airport after practice. And while talkingto the media after their afternoon skate, their minds seemed to already be in Denver. Maybe that's . why Kevin ' Porter didn't realize Monday A was his last practice at Yost Ice Arena. COURTNEY "You know RATKOWIAK what, I didn't even think about it," Porter said, half-sur- prised, half-laughing. "Not until you said anything." Porter's last practice as a Wol- verine went largely unnoticed because all year, the team has refused to look back. All season, Michigan has accepted its Cinder-. ella story but refused to dwell on it. It started in the first game, the win against then-No. 2 Boston Col- lege, when a team picked to be one of the best fell to ateam with 12 freshmen. It started as soon as Louie Capo- russo, playing in his first game asa Wolverine, scored the game-win- ning goal in overtime to lift Michi- gan over the Eagles. It started with a 3-1 record and a No. 3 ranking heading into the home opener. "I don't think any of these kids will be outstanding," Michigan coach Red Berenson said about the freshmen at CCHA Media Day in October. "But if they're not notice- able, then they're playing well." Sixty-four fresh- DAY man goals and 117 COUNTDOWN first-year assists . TO DENVER later, it's obvious why lookingback seems a little silly. So instead of the season, and they've refused to seeing where this season at Yost let themselves stop, look back and began, let's see how it ended. reflect on how far'they've come. It was Monday afternoon, two The players went straight from hours before the team boarded a the arena to the bus to the airport chartered plane to Denver. At the Monday afternoon, and like that, end of practice, Porter stayed on their season on their home ice was the ice, shooting at third-string finished. After six months, it came goalie Shawn Hunwick. He and so suddenly it was hard to believe three freshmen were the only ones until the ice was empty. left. In his final Yost post-practice Porter sometimes plays best- interview of the season, Berenson of-seven shootouts with Hunwick deflected a question about what after practice. But on this last day the last practice meant to him by on his home ice, Porter scored just simply saying it was good to get out once. He stayed out a little longer on the ice and have a productive and tried to be a little better, but practice before the trip. still finished 2-for-12. Even with 24 years worth of "I guess he kind of beat me memories and ten Frozen Four today," Porter said. appearances, he wasn't looking That's probably one of the only back. times all season Porter could say And 10 minutes after most of the that about someone, and he said it team had left, Porter finally came with a smile on his face. He didn't off the ice and sat on the table near have a reason to say it after his the locker room stairs for the final unstoppable, five-goal weekend at time, wearing his light blue Michi- the NCAA Regionals in Albany. He gan practice uniform. won't be saying it Friday night at "It's my last time skating here, the Hobey Baker Award ceremony. practicing here as ateam," he said, And none of the Wolverines will repeating what he had just realized be saying it Thursday night. a few seconds before. Why? Because this team is He paused, but barely missed a too focused on the game to get beat. distracted by how well they've There was no time for reflection. played to get to the Frozen Four. "I guess it's pretty sad, but it'll The Wolverines refused to look be great going to Denver," he said. back at last season. They refused to buy into the hype when they were - Ratkowiak can be reached ranked first just a few weeks into at cratkowi@umich.edu. Two-run shot gives senior captain 156 RBIs for career By ANTHONY OLIVEIRA Daily Sports Writer Down 3-1 in the count, senior captain Samantha Findlay took a hard whiff. The crowd let CMIUG 3 out a loud M ICHIGAN 4 sigh. On the next pitch, she swung just as hard. This time she didn't miss. Findlay's shot barely cleared the fence in left-centerfield, bringing in two runs to make her the Wolver- ines' all-time RBI leader with 186. More importantly, she gave the Michigan softball team an insur- mountable 4-1 lead in its 4-3 win over Central Michigan yesterday afternoon. "I, didn't even know, to tell you the truth," Findlay said about the record. "It's great anfl I don't want to shun it aside, but I'm worried about winningthe game." Michigan's pitching almost gave them a reason to worry as sopho- more pitcher Nikki Nemitz strug- gled against the Chippewas. Despite striking out the side in the first inning, Nemitz couldn't keep that edge. Central Michigan (5-1 MAC, 13-12 overall) came out aggressive against the sophomore. And while the offense couldn't figure her out the first time around, it didn't take long soon after. Chippewa hitters combined to put up eight hits and three runs in her 4.2 innings. Even though Nemitz is one of the most composed on the squad, Hutchins said the sophomore didn't have that same thick skin yesterday. "Part of it was losing my edge, but a lot of that was that I was trying to guide my pitches," Nemitz said. "I wasn't trusting them, letting them rip and believ- ing that I could actually do it." Central Michigan took the early lead in the third when a grounder rolled through Nemitz's legs to drive in the runner from second. But luckily for Michigan (7-1 Big Ten, 33-4), the senior captains played longball. With a runner on second in the bottom of the third inning, senior Alessandra Giampaolo had the best at-bat of the afternoon. After foul- ing off four pitches, one to the left and three to the right, Giampaolo smacked the ball 10 feet inside the right foul pole for her first home run of the season. Other than the two home runs, the Michigan offense had just one .more hit the rest of the game. And as Nemitz continued to let runners on in the fifth, the lack of Michigan offense became a grow- ing concern. After getting two outs on back- to-back Chippewa batters, Nemitz allowed three straight singles and two more runners crossed home. Hutchins had no choice but to put freshman Jordan Taylor in the cir- cle. It turned out to be a good deci- sion Taylor threw a four-pitch strike- out with two outs in the fifth against the first batter she faced. But despite notching seven-strike- outs in 2.1 innings, she hit trouble in the seventh frame. Taylor allowed a one-out single to Central Michigan's Christina Novak. During the next at-bat, Novak stole second and advanced to third on a wild pitch without Taylor even knowing. But Taylor quickly recovered and struck out the next two batters to seal the win. Though Michigan came'out with the victory, Hutchins expects the Wolverines to come out today with more emotion against Bowling Green at 4 p.m. today. "I was most disappointed that we didn't have the passion and enthusi- asm thatyou need to havewhenyou walkout onto this great field in that Michigan uniform," Hutchins said. "We were fortunate with the win. We got the right people out at the right time, we hit the ball over the fence and got some bigRBIs." And none were bigger than Find- lay's. Coach reacts to recruiting jabs One-and-done without a title By IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Editor There seems to be a misunder- standing of what it means to be a gentleman in Big Ten coaching circles. Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, in response to a question about NOTEBOOK whether there is an agreement among confer- ence coaches not to recruit each other's verbal commitments, said last week, "I guess only between gentlemen." Yesterday, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez defended his recruiting practices. "If not being a gentleman is recruiting a guy 'til the end, 'til Signing Day, particularly after he visits - guilty as charged," Rodri- guez said. Tressel was reacting to com- ments Purdue coach Joe Tiller made on Signing Day about Rodri- guez recruiting players who had already made verbal commitments to the Boilermakers. Rodriguez denied knowing any- thing about such an agreement. "I didn't get a memo from the Big Ten or a handbook that says 'This is how you're a gentleman,' " Rodriguez said. "I feel pretty proud about how we recruit." He alluded to a situation involv- ing John Weinke, a quarterback prospect who had originally com- mitted to Michigan. After Rodri- guez was hired, Weinke signed with Iowa. "I didn't say that guy's not a gen- tleman," Rodriguez said. TOO SOFT: It might just be a spring scrimmage, but Rodriguez was not pleased with his team's intensity Saturday. "I thought it was soft," Rodri- 4 Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez addressed the media in the full team meeting room in Schembechler Hall after yesterday's spring practice. By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Editor At the beginning of the college basketball season, everyone was hailing it as the year of the fresh- men. The revolution began with Kevin Durant and Greg Oden a year ago, and now it's become a full-scale takeover. There was Derrick Rose, Kevin Love, O.J. Mayo, Michael Beasley and Jerryd Bayless,ojust to name a few. The NBA age-limit rule, put into effect in 2006, made it illegal for NBA teams to draft players unless they are one year removed from their senior year of high school. The rule made these wunderkind AAU players, who would ordinarily jump straight to the pros, take at least a one-year detour to a college campus. These 18- and 19-year-olds saw the promise of instant gratification in the form of a national champi- onship. Looking back on Kansas's third- ever national title, we all should have known better. The same scenario played out just last year. Oden, Mike Conley and the rest of Thad Matta's mega recruiting class at Ohio State fizzled against a veteran-laden Florida squad in the title game. Carmelo Anthony and Syracuse aside, this is what usually happens. It was not hard to notice how calm and collected the Jayhawks - whose rotation didn't includea one-stop freshman - were down the stretch, despite being down nine with just over two minutes remaining. There was senior Russell Rob- inson and his game-saving steal off an inbounds pass that set up a Sherron Collins 3-pointer. And then, of course, there was the shot of the tournament (sorry, West- ern Kentucky guy from the first DANCE FLOOR with Mark Giannotto round) by junior Mario Chalmers to cap off the Jayhawks' late-game heroics and send the game into overtime. On the other end of the court was the image of Rose. The fresh- man missed a crucial free throw in regulation and faded once over- time began. To be fair; Memphis had its share of veterans. Many of its key contributors, like Chris Douglas- Roberts and Joey Dorsey, were seniors with a lot of late-game experience under their belts. But the Tigers can't argue they didn't put most of their eggs into 4 the basket of an uber-talented freshman point guard who will likely be a top-two pick in the NBA Draft. And like most 19-year-olds under heavy pressure, Rose wilted. Though the NCAA's talent pool has expanded, experience still trumps all in crunch time. Players like Rose, Beasley and Mayo will likely have better NBA careers than someone like Dar- rell Arthur or Brandon Rush. But by committing themselves to the one-and-done theory that has seemingly "transformed" college basketball, they also won't win a national championship. The argument goes that the NCAA Tournament is the place where upsets are plentiful and the unexpected is the norm. Really, though, tournament success stems from being there before. The seniors on this Kansas team experienced first-round fizzles (losses to Bucknell in 2005 and Bradley in 2006) and then fell toa more experienced UCLA squad in the Elite 8 last year. Guys like Rush and Chalmers took their lumps in years past and ended up at the top of thecollege basketball world. Don't get me wrong: I love this new era of one-and-done college basketball. It's just that Kansas proved once again that when it comes to championships, age and experience still matter. guez said. "I don't think we hit anybody." It's a trend Rodriguez has noticed throughout spring drills. The team displayed much more passion in earlier workouts, butthat has diminished. In the fall when the team practices every day to prepare for games, Rodriguez said he won't accept that. "We have a lot more guys inter- ested in talking about how tough they are than showing it," Rodri- guez said. "We have to explain the difference to them." He recalled that, when he played for West Virginia, there were 20 practices in full pads during spring workouts. Now, teams are limited to 15 practices, three of them in shorts. *"You used to get T-shirts if you made it (through spring workouts)," Rodriguez said. "I hit for'20 (prac- tices), like a badge of honor." MANNINGHAM COMES CLEAN: Former Michigan receiver and NFL prospect Mario Manningham admitted to using marijuana while at Michigan, according to profoot- ballweekly.com. At the NFL Combine, Man- ningham told NFL teams he never tested positive for marijuana. But the report said Manningham sent a letter to NFL teams saying he failed two drug tests at Michigan. He added that he no longer uses mari- juana and has passed drug tests since quitting. Manningham was once pro- jected to be a first-round pick, but a sub-par performance at the scout- ing combine and off-the-field issues have many NFL teams worried. SPRING GAME PLANS CHANGE: Michigan typically concludes its springpractices with a spring game at the Big House that is open to the fans. Due to Michigan Stadium reno- vations, this year's final practice will not be at Michigan Stadium or open to the public. The team will run a 100-play scrimmage at Saline High School Saturday afternoon, but the event is closed to the public. 4 I Take our readership survey and stand to WIN A BRAND EW iPHONE! Other prizes include $20 PIZZA HOUSE VOUCHERS DON'availl T DELAY! SURVEY ENDS APRIL 11, 2008 Lucky draw for prizes will be held on April14, 2008 and the winners will be notified by email. I 4 CHECK ONLINE FOR BASEBALL AND MEN'S AND WOMEN'S GOLF COVERAGE Visit www.michigandaily.com