I The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com January 20; 2009 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom January 20,2009 - 3B. Free throw woes doom Blue Senior Chisako Sugiyama beat Duke's and Vanderbilt's top singles players in this weekend's home opener, the Michigan Invitational. Sugiyama rattles ranked opponents By MARK BURNS and CHARLES CLINTON Daily Sports Writers Those who have played tennis against senior Chisako Sugiyama know how frustrating she is to compete against. The way she makes her opponents run, uses her skillful backhand and withstands long matches make her a tough foe. And Duke's Ellah Nze, the nation's 43rd-ranked singles play- er, found that out the hard way. After losing in straight sets (7-6, 6-4) to Sugiyama Sunday, Nze took a tennis ball, whipped it at the back wall of the Varsity Tennis Center and slowly walked to shake hands with Sugiyama. "I knew (Nze) was going to be a good player," Sugiyama said. "I knew I still had work to do on my shots and still be better in the sec- ond set to beat her." Sugiyama's showing was one of the bright spots for the Michigan women's tennis teamthis weekend during the three-day Michigan Invitational, a non-scoring tour- nament. The Wolverines faced off against No. 12 Vanderbilt, No. 24 Tennessee and No. 9 Duke. She also able to upset 21st- ranked Jackie Wu of Vanderbilt in straight sets (7-5, 7-6) on Satur- day. On Sunday, the second day of the tournament, sophomore Rika Tatsuno and Sugiyama were the only singles players to beat the Blue Devils. Yesterday Tatsuno and sophomore doubles partner Whitney Taney took on Nze and Reka Zsilinszka in a hard-fought, back-and-forth match. The Duke duo took a 7-6 lead and needed to win one more game to take the match. Tatsuno and Taney won three of the remaining four games to take the match 9-8 and give the Wolverines their sixth win in the nine doubles matches. "We've been doing really well at breaking serve and returning (so) I told our players we have to get better at holding serve," Michi- gan coach Ronni Bernstein said. "We've had some excellent com- petition this tournament and we feel that we're ready for the dual match season." Tatsuno was the top singles player of the invitational with 20 points. The Ranchos Palos Verdes, Calif., native placed ahead of Sugi- yama, Wu and Caitlin Whoriskey of Tennessee. Taney lost badly in the first set of her singles match against Maria Sorbello, but dominated the sec- ond and third set to take the match from Tennessee (1-6, 6-3, 6-2). "After the first set, I decided to refresh and start over and came into the second with a new strat- egy," Taney said. "When you lose the first set 6-1, you have to have a sense of urgency. Coach Bernstein helped me get through it." As a result of the top-notch competition in the invitational, Bernstein believes the Wolverines are poised to make a run to the NCAA Tournament in May. "We are going to take every- thing match by match," Bernstein said. "The preseason rankings are nice, but they don't mean anything now. Where we rank in May is what is goingto matter." By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Writer They are called free throws, right? The Michigan women's bas- ketball team tried to win the hard way: by not taking a single free throw against Minnesota. Michigan (2-5 Big Ten, 9-9 over- all)fell52-46 tothe GoldenGophers (5-2, 13-5) at Williams Arena Sun- day, a loss that was atcleast partially due to the team's inability to get to the charity stripe. After falling to Michigan State on Jan. 15, Michigan coach Kevin Borseth said the team's poor free- throw shooting (41 percent) was the"whole game." MICHIGAN 46 He said MINNESOTA 52 the same thing Sunday. Sunday marked the first time in the Borseth era that Michigan failed to shoot a single freebie. Minnesota was a solid 12-of-15 from the line. Even though the Gophers didn't exactly shoot lights-out from the field, their 12 points from the line were the dif- ference. The Wolverines sprinted to a 10-2 lead out of the gates and held Minnesota without a basket until nearly five minutes into the game. Michigan's defense forced turn- overs and missed shots early in the game to help build its quick lead, and the Wolverines' 3-point shoot- ing also contributed to the run. Michigan shot 54 percent (6-of- 11) from behind the arc in the first half and 50 percent from the field. The deep ball helped build an eight-point lead at the break. But the accuracy didn'tlast. In the second half, Michigan watched its lead disappear as it shot a dismal 14 percent (2-of-14) from 3-point range and 35 per- cent overall. The Gophers grabbed their first lead with 6:48 left in the game in front of the home crowd. Thanks to the Wolverines' ice- cold shooting, Michigan couldn't finish down the stretch and was outscored 11-4 in the final five min- utes and 30 seconds, once again failing to win its first conference road game. Minnesota kept going inside, something Borseth wishes his team would have done. "We're not scoring," Borseth said. "We're not putting the ball where we need to be able to put it. We're not aggressive enough in the scoring zone ... Right now, the only way we are going to win games is to shut teams right out. That's our only hope." The Wolverines didn't get the ball inside in the paint, some- thing Borseth said would have led to more points. Getting the ball inside also helps to draw fouls and more free-throw attempts. Michigan's defense has been solid as of late, but Borseth said the Wolverines won't win games unless they start scoring. The Wolverines continued their recent trend of starting games with hot shooting but falling short as the game wore on. Sophomore guard Veroni- ca Hicks led Michigan with 15 points. Minnesota center Ashley Ellis-Milan scored a game-high 19 points and converted nine of ten free throw attempts. Now riding a three-game los- ing streak, the Wolverines host the Indiana Hoosiers (5-1, 12-3) at Crisler Arena Thursday. The Hoo- siers come in tied with Ohio State for the conference lead. "We are doing a good job of keeping the other teams in check," Borseth said. "Teams get a little more determined late in the game. You have to get stops, we haven't. ... It would help if we (score) more points." SAID ALSALAH/Daily (TOP) Sophomore Veronica Hicks poured in a team-high 15 points in Michigan's loss to Minnesota. (ABOVE) Michigan coach Kevin Borseth still cannot explain the Wolverines' road woes. Michigan has yet to wina conference road game this season. ICE HOCKEY Gan Blue pull it together? FALCONS: Sauer finally gets '0' support With a disappointing weekend split against Bowling Green, Michi- gan sits in sixth place in the CCHA standings. And 24 games into the season, the Wolverines remain their own worst enemy. During the first period Fri- GJON day, Michigan JUNCAJ looked nothing like a team that On Ice Hockey had outscored opponents 30-6 in its six previous games. The Wolverines were uncharacteristi- cally sluggish, struggling to get to the net and pressure Falcon goalie Jimmy Spratt. By the end of the first frame, the Wolverines had just four shots on goal and matched their second-low- est output in a period this season. Michigan woke up after the intermission. In the final five peri- ods of the weekend, Michigan out- shot Bowling Green 64-33, but just one of those shots found the back of the net. "We had good scoring chances," sophomore defenseman Chad Lan- glais, who scored the Wolverines' only goal of the weekend, said after Saturday's 1-0 victory. "I wouldn't call them quality. I think we only had a few quality ones. We did enough to win, I guess." That was against a Falcon team that is next-to-last in the confer- ence in scoring defense. Bowling Green is ninth in pen- alty-kill percentage, but Michigan went scoreless in 13 power play opportunities. Spratt entered the weekend with a.882 save-percent- age. Against the Wolverines, he stopped 67 of 68 shots. be on the team to tell there was something wrong," Summers said. "Whether it was guys being too loose or talking about the wrong things, it's a combination of a lot of different things. "It's kind of a personal thing. Some guys still have to be loose before the game. No matter what you do, you have to do it. Not every- one was ready." Summers said he hoped Fri- day's loss wasn't due to simply overlooking an inferior opponent. He acknowledged the possibility that the team was still riding high from its sweep of Miami (Ohio) last weekend and that "maybe we were a little loose in practice." Whatever the reason for the Wol- verines' performance Friday night, it's clear they haven't completely solved their problems regarding mental preparation. And there's not much time left for introspection. Michigan has 12 games left in the regular season, six against teams above them in the confer- ence standings. Just five points separate the Wolverines from second-place Miami. Despite their puzzling sea- son, Michigan is still in excellent position to nab a first-round bye in the CCHA Tournament in March. But with two-thirds of the sea- son behind them, the Wolverines still have plenty of questions to answer. Have they finally learned their lesson? "I hope so," senior goaltender Billy Sauer said Saturday. "I think everybody gets the picture. And whether we do what we say, we'll find out next weekend. I think we will. I think it really opened our eyes this weekend." From page 1B Though Sauer faced just 19 shots and didn't make the jaw- dropping saves that Spratt made on the other end, Sauer's workman-like performance was enough to keep Bowling Green off. the scoreboard. And when Bowling Green (5-10-1-0, 8-13-3) had a power play in the final minutes, Sauer made the stops to secure the win. In the waning seconds of the game, Sauer stopped a shot right off the faceoff, displaying his awareness for the situation and helped him earn his first shutout of the sea- son. "I felt very into the game," Sauer said. "I felt nervous, but an excited nervous. I didn't ever feel like I was out of the game just because I wasn't seeing a lot of shots. I hadn't played in two months so it was tough getting out there, but I ended up feeling pretty comfortable." While Hogan showed some flaws Friday, Berenson says that Hogan is still his top man. "Bryan Hogan has done a great job," Berenson said. "I would tell you that he's still our No. 1 goalie. But I think it was a time where you needed to put the other goal- ie in and challenge your team and challenge him. "Billy has looked good in prac- tice. He's worked hard. He's not played poorly, he just hasn't been able to win. Finally, the team scored a goal for him." The Wolverines weren't at their best for either game, partly due to the phenomenal play by Spratt. Michigan also missed some key opportunities. Sophomore Louie Caporusso missed on a rebound chance with Spratt out of position Saturday, and Tim Miller had a goal taken off the scoreboard by the referees Saturday. In Hogan's shutout loss Friday, the team looked out of rhythm and failed to generate opportuni- ties against Spratt. "We just couldn't get the puck in the net and ... it is about men- tal preparation," sophomore for- ward Carl Hagelin said. "If we were ready to go, we would have popped a couple (goals) in dur- ing the first period. This was the worst first period we have had all season." The series was similar to Michigan's series against West- ern Michigan earlier this season. After losing to a team much fur- ther down in the CCHA stand- ings. Michigan had to come back on Saturday to salvage a split. The Wolverines particularly strug- gled on the power play and went 0-for-13 in a weekend where 46 total penalties were assessed. But this weekend's difference was that instead of Sauer coming up on the short end of the stick, he received enough goal support to get the win. While Michigan didn't have any puck luck around the net last week- end, there was a noticeable differ- ence in intensity levels between games. The Wolverines statistically dominated Saturday and forced the Falcons to scramble in their own zone all night. All the energy the Falcons spent diving in front of shots and fighting for loose pucks along the boards seemed to drain them. Bowling Green had a 6-on-4 man advantage for a 70-second stretch the final moments but only mustered two shots. Berenson and Langlais said physical one-goal victories on the road can only help the team, and that's absolutely true, no matter the opponent. But Saturday's hard-fought win remains overshadowed by Friday's shutout loss. From the players' standpoint, the better team did not show up for Friday's opening faceoff. "I don't think you even have to i 1