4B - January 20, 2009 0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com TRYOUT: Coaching staff returns to campus for walk-on evaluations I From page 1B the competition. Many potential walk-ons rounded off cuts in post and corner routes or didn't actively fly back to.the ball on comebacks. The smallballs did provide some excitement, though. In the waning minutes of the hour-long session - cut down from 90-minute try- outs last year - Kinesiology junior Zac Baker ran a deep post route, dove and made a spectacular one- handed grab, barrel-rolling on the Onsterbaan Fieldhouse turf. The coaching staff erupted in "Yeah, Bakes!" cheers for Baker, a manager for the team the last two seasons. The catch must have made an impression on Rodriguez, because Baker, along with four others, was contacted yesterday and asked back for further evalu- ation and training. It was the first time in three auditions that Baker has made it past the first round of evaluations in Rodriguez's try- outs. John Guerriero, Patrick Collins, Jack Kennedy and Jordan Kovacs (who ran the fastest 40-yard dash at the tryout) are the other four. Unlike last year, when the walk- ons immediately went through academic and health checks and began working with strength and conditioning coach Mike Bar- wis, those who made the cut this weekend will be asked to continue working out on their own to get in shape for further evaluation before March. On the first day of spring prac- tice, the coaches will see what the walk-ons can do with a real foot- ball. And that's when this crop of potential Wolverines will be given a chance to make the 2009 roster. "That's a couple months, but it gives them some time to work on a couple things and get ready to go," Rodriguez said. "Today was just a small part of our walk-on pro- gram, but we're really trying to be more aggressive overall with it. "You know, identify guys throughout the state, throughout the country that maybe could be the next (redshirt sophomore full- back) Mark Moundros, who was an outstanding player who walked on here." After the tryout, Rodriguez emphasized that the most impor- tant thing about coming to Michi- gan - whether the students made the team or not - was earning a degree from the University. But talking to the tryoutees after- wards, Michigan football clearly held a special place with them. "The other (team) managers, they all feel the same way about this as I do," Baker said following the tryout. "This is our passion. This is what we grew up on. This is, like, Michigan football." For Kovacs, the opportunity is a dream come true. His father was a walk-on Wolverine when he attended the University. Kovacs was asked back after September's tryout but wasn't allowed to con- tinue after the coaches found out about a knee surgery Kovacs had in January. And if Kovacs continues to impress the coaches, he might even see the Michigan Stadium field on game day. "Once you're good enough to win with, you'll play," Rodriguez said. "Whether you're a former walk-on, a walk-on, a fifth-year senior or whatever, the best guys will play." 4 4 WILL MOELLER/Daily LSA freshman Jordan Kovacs was asked back by the Michigan football coaching staff to try out during the team's first spring practice. Kovacs, who tried out as a defensive back, ran the fastest 40-yard dash during the session. Thuener-Rego, Wolverines two-step to victory in Crisler Tumblers breeze to first in Windy City By JAKE FELDMAN For tbe Daily As the Michigan women's gym- nastics team rotated from the bal- ance beam to the floor for its final event Friday night, senior Tatjana Thuener-Rego stayed behind. She shook her shoulders, did a quick two-step and flashed a smile to the crowd. Then she jogged with an unmistakable swagger to catch up with her teammates. "You gotta play around and have fun," Thuener-Rego said. "That's how you keep everyone's spirits up and the energy up. You just dance." After an injury-ridden junior year, Thuener-Rego has become Michigan's most consistent gym- nast through three meets. She collected three event titles and the all-around crown as the Wolverines romped to a win in their home debut. Michigan posted a score of 194.325 to beat No. 25 NC State's 191.15 and Kent State's 193.525. The Wolverines (2-0 Big Ten, 6-2 overall) built a sizable lead after the second event, as four of Michigan's gymnasts earned scores of 9.8 or higher on the uneven bars. Junior Kelsey Knut- son's graceful performance on the balance beam earned a title and Thuener-Rego ended the meet with a nearly flawless floor rou- tine (9.825). "Tachi has really stepped up as a senior and she's had a great atti- tude this year," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. "I think it's great to see a senior still improving, still adding in difficulty. We've just gotta keep her body healthy to keep her in the lineup." Injuries have haunted Michi- gan throughout the season, and the team's future success may rely upon the development of its reserves. Junior Jaclyn Kramer Cameron takes all- around, pommel horse and rings titles at Invitational By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer CHICAGO - Senior co-captain Phil Goldberg stepped forward and accepted the glass, flame- shaped trophy, raising it over his head with a grin. The No. 6 Michigan men's gym- nastics team had won the season- opening Windy City Invitational. But before the Wolverines left the floor, they had one more task to do: Sing. As second-place Illinois and third-place Minnesota dispersed through the Illinois-Chicago P. E. Building, the sounds of The Vic- tors - written in 1898 after Michi- gan beat the University of Chicago in football - reverberated in the city where it was born. The gym- nasts on the floor pumped their fists. From the fan section, seven teammates and four members of the women's gymnastics team belted the song back at them. Michigan last won the Windy City Invite two years ago, when the Wolverines were ranked first in the nation most of the season. This time, the Wolverines post- ed a 346.10 score to comfortably beat their five opponents, which included No. 3 Ohio State and No. 4 Illinois. To cap the night, sophomore Chris Cameron took home the all- around crown, beating out Ohio State's Jake Bateman and Tai Lee and Illinois's Paul Ruggeri, with a score of 58.1. "It's the best feeling I've had," said Cameron, who notched career-best scores and event titles on pommel horse and rings. "We worked in the offseason to get that good, and now it's, 'We hit, we win.' "1 Michigan hit when it mattered, especially at the finish..Gymnasts may often say that event order doesn't matter, but on Saturday, it did. In the final rotation, Michigan was hanging onto the lead head- ing into parallel bars. Third-place Ohio State moved to the low-scor- ing pommel horse, effectively nar- rowing the race to the Wolverines and the second-place Illini. And all that mattered was whether Michigan's parallel bars team was better than the Illinois ring squad. The Wolverines didn't do it the easy way, absorbing misses on two of their first three routines. Then senior Ralph Rosso put together a routine marred only by several steps on the dismount. Junior co-captain David Chan, who had missed his vault in the previous rotation, more than made up for it with a 14.7 set and a sec- ond-place finish. Cameron's hit routine (14.65) finished the night. Illinois still had three ring men to go, but Michigan had already clinched it - and the Wolverines knew it. Fifth-year senior Paul Woodward lifted Cameron onto his shoulders as their teammates roared, "Let's go Blue!" "Illinois was good motivation," Chan said. "They were really going at it, and they didn't want us to do very well on (parallel) bars either. You could hear them from the sides.. I just wanted to stick it to them." But it was far from a perfect meet. Michigan had to recover from a shaky start on high bar, where it managed just two hit routines. Sophomore Ben Baldus- Strauss peeled off the bar early in his set and appeared to injure himself. He returned to the floor on crutches. The extent of his injury will not be determined until receiving the results of an MRI. Before the meet, Goldberg had declared that anything less than a win would be "unacceptable." But victory seemed far away after the first rotation, with Michigan in fourth place. The Wolverines got going on floor exercise, the next event. Rosso knocked out his leadoff set and his energy fed the rest of his team. Michigan ended up going five-for-six on the event, with sophomore Ian Makowske placing second overall with a career-best score of 15.3. "The wheels came off, but we had to put them back on and go," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "I think they were prepared to do that." Michigan began a steady climb up the rankings and moved into a tie for second with Ohio State going into the fifth rotation. Despite a less-than-stellar vault showing, the Wolverines sat in the top spot going into parallel bars. Once they had a hold on first, they refused to let go. Cameron wouldn't reveal whose idea it was to sing The Victors, but he promised it would become a regular feature at meets this year. "We hit, we win," he had said. "When we win," he added, "we sing." 4 4 I I Senior Tatjana Thuener-Rego kept the mood light in Michigan's win this weekend by dancing and making sure her teammates had fun during the meet. has competed in vault, beam and floor all year in place of injured sophomores Trish Wilson and Kari Pearce. After junior Sarah Curtis fell twice on the beam, Kramer maintained Michigan's lead with a season-high score of 9.7. "I just felt a little bit more con- fident going in, especially with the pressure, trying to pick up a fall," Kramer said. Added Plocki: "Beam is one of those events that is most affected by competition pressure. We try to simulate pressure situations in the gym, but there's nothing you can really do that simulates 2,000 people sitting there watching you and judges." With exuberant smiles and loose body language, Kramer and her teammates exuded confidence under pressure. "We want to be loose. We've got to go out there and perform and have fun," Plocki said. "This is our party." And despite the injuries, the Wolverines plan to keep dancing. I LINCOLN From page 1B exemplified in the following games. But that swagger has faded, and it needs to reappear for Michigan to win down the stretch. The Wolverines have to regain that good feeling. "We've got to come out and believe in ourselves right off the bat," freshman guard Zack Novak said, echoing Michigan coach John Beilein's message following Satur- day's seven-point loss. "We've got to do the little things better - come out for Penn State ready to go." But what are those little things? For one, the balanced offensive attack that picked apart the Bruins and Blue Devils isn't there any- more. In Michigan's last two losses, it has been Harris's second-half hero- ics that gave the Wolverines their best chance to win. Michigan's leadingscorer all sea- son, Harris previously shared that scoring burden with long-range shooters Novak, freshman Stu Douglass and redshirt freshman Laval Lucas-Perry. On any given night, those shooters can be on target, but the trio is 7-for-24 from 3-point range in the Wolverines' last two losses. It's not rocket science, but when Beilein's offense looks like a well- oiled machine, multiple players get open looks and sink their shots. That includes junior forward DeShawn Sims. A vocal leader, Sims's pregame and halftime speeches have moti- vated this team when it has faced a challenge. But it's Sims's agility in the post. that's irreplaceable and needs to shine. In the last two losses, Sims is 7-for-27 with just eight rebounds. That says a lot about a player who, before last Wednesday's loss to Illi- nois, led the Big Ten in rebounding with 8.7 rebounds per game and was third in scoring (16.5 ppg). The Nittany Lions (3-3, 14-5), the Wolverines' Big Ten cellar-dwell- ing companion last season, have improved greatly this year. They've played well at home, knocking off Purdue and nearly upsetting Michi- gan State. Talor Battle, the conference's leadingscorer, can control an entire game. It's clear from this young con- ference season that every game is competitive. It's a longseason, and the last two games could be just small blemishes on what can be a successful season. The Wolverines just need to real- ize that. - Lincoln can be reached at lincolnr oumich.edu BUCKEYES From page 1B game. He logged a season-low seven points in last week's loss to Illinois. Michigan's 1-3-1 zone proved ineffective against the Buckeyes (3-2 Big Ten, 13-3 overall).. Ohio State shot 55 percent from the field and hit 16 shots in the paint, includ- ing numerous dunks by center B.J. Mullens and forward Dallas Lau- derdale. It didn't help that Michigan (3-3, 13-5) had another slow start. The Wolverines trailed by as many as 11 in the first half and shot just 7-of-26 from the field in the first 20 min- utes. The loss gave Michigan its first losing streak of the season. The Wolverines lost 66-51 to Illinois last Wednesday. "This is really a tough stretch right now,"Beilein said. "Obviously I've been through it tbefore, but I don't remember this type of thing." In the next three weeks, Michi- gan plays seven games. Four will be on the road, and three will be against ranked teams, notably No. 3 Connecticut and No. 7 Michigan State. Losingto an unranked opponent at home won't bode well for the Wolverines' tournament hopes in March, and it only gets harder from here for the Wolverines. a 4 4 Junior DeShawn Sims was held in check by the Buckeyes' 1-2-2 zone defense, scoring a lowly 10 points. I