.1'he M chigan Daily - michigandail'y.com March 16, 2009 - 3B The Mich(gan Daily - michigandailycom.March 16, 2009 - 3B Ofili wins second straight national championship -nthe 60-meter hurdles ByAMY SCARANO DailySports Writer Four one-hundredths of a sec- ond was the. difference between an NCAA Championship title and *second place. 'i/Ji And Michigan senior Tiffany - Ofili was on the better end of that fraction of a second. With a season-best time of eight seconds flat, she captured her sec- ond 'straight NCAA Champion- ship' in the 60-meter hurdles at the NCAA Indoor Championships on Saturday. Ofili's fourth NCAA crown of her career - two of which were. 100-meter outdoor wins helped the Wolverines finish 11th at the .NCAA Indoor Champion- ships in College Station, Texas. Seniors Bettie Wade and Geena Gall both earned All-American honors. Wade came in fifth in the pentathlon with a season best 4,252 points,'earning four points for Michigan, and 'Gall came in sixth in the. 800-meter race, con-. tributing three points. - But Ofili was far and away -Michigan's bright spot. "Things that happened in prior cHRIS DZoMBAK/Daily competitions don't mean any- Senior Tiffany Ofii posted a season-best time of 8 seconds in the 60-meter hurdles. thing when you step on ihe line," "Such a'short race; over within - event, the cutoff point for collect- Ofili said. "I don't pay attention to eight seconds, everything must be ing points towards a team total. what happened ilithe past because perfect," Henry said "Everything .'SOur goal was to try to improve every time you race you have the must be right. The slight mistake over our best previous perfor-. chance to win or lose." could cost you the championship. mdnces," Henry said. "With the After an undefeated indoor.sea-.. It was impressive that she could competition and as a team, we son in which Ofili ran five 60-me- pull.it off knowing that everyone wanted to be top four or top six. ter hurdle races, she was ranked had their eyes on her." It turns out the competition was No. 1 in the nation heading into Aside from Ofili, no Wolver- stellar and we didn't have a great Saturday's race. Being the *favorite ine scored more than. four points day. We fell a little bit short, but I guaranteetl her nothing going into for the team. Only Wade .and Gall was happy with the kids' efforts the race, coach James Henrysaid. scored in the top eight in their and how they performed." Wolverines fall to Illinois by one point onSenior Night Pommel horse, high bar prove troublesome in loss By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer The niood was festjve before Saturday's Senior Night meet at Cliff Keen Arena. Michigan gymnasts, grinned at their friends in the stands dur- ing warmups and. parents hugged' gleefully. As the night began, nine seniors walked onto the floor with. their parents and accepted plaques froni tearful Michigan coach-Kurt Golder. After his usual.rendition of.the national anthem, sophomore Ben Baldus-Strauss led thecrowd in '.,singing ".Happy Birthday" too leg- endary coach Newt Loken,. who turned 90 on Feb. 27. Former co- captain Andrew Elkind, whose own Senior Night in 2007 featured a Michigan victory over. Illinois, joined his old teammates pn the hench for the meet. Butthe atmosphere deflated just a few hours later as No. 5 Michigan fell.to No. 4 Illinois 35490-353.90. Though the Wolverines endured a tough final rotation on high bar,' pommel horse was crucial in the loss. Even for hit routines - only one.Wolverine actually fell off the apparatus - Michigan received uncharacteristically low scores. The Wolverines had taken a lead' after opening on floor, but losing in pommel horse by almost two points, they couldnever quite catch up to the Fighting Illini. "We probably should reassess the (horse) lineup, because some of us just can't get the scores weneed tions, Michigan sat less' than a to be getting," said Baldus-Strauss, point. behind Illinois. On parallel who won the floor title and.hit all bars, senior John 'Sawicki, who his sets. "We can't have hit 'rou- 'has had few chances to compete, tines like that;and just go so low. and fifth-year senior Paul Wood- We clearly lost the meet on horse ward got -Michigan. started with alone, in my opinion." emotional hits: Woodward, who Despite trailing by 1.4 points" also had a clean pommel horse set, after two events, Michigan began said he felt it was the first complete putting together a comeback on meet he's put together all year. the still rings and vault, where it But with Rosso and all-around earned seasoti-high team scores. champion Cameron as the onlytwo After a' missed opening set, - hits in the next four sets, Michigan senior-Joe Citrambone got Michi- was shaky going into high bar.. gan back on track on the rings, The Wolverines tried to regroup before the final event, bellowing, "Our housel"- But' the Illini were T halready swarming: A chain in front They took of the Illinois bench area was no match for the Illini gymnasts, who slipped past it to gather near the Senior Night," events and cheer their teammates Goldberg said.' Baldus-Strauss and junior Mel *'Santander started 'the Wolverines with two hits, but it wasn'teenough; Santander eventually won the event but Illinois steamrolled to smoothly executing his revamped the finish, and Michigan stumbled, routine to notch a season-high suffering. major mistakes on its score of 14.75. His teammates built final four.routines. on the- hit. Senior co-captain Phil "We lost the meet," said senior Goldberg -and sophomore Chris Scott Bregman, who earned.a14.80 Cameron posted. matching 15.35 in his final floor set at Keen. "They. scores, the highest scores any Wol- didn't take it from us." verine has achieved this seasor-on It certainly wasn't the Senior. rings. Night the Wolverines hadudreamed And the momentum carried into of. But the seniors will have one vault. On the event that used to more chance to go out on a high cost Michigan two to three points note at home. Michigan will host in start value alone, no Wolverine 'the Big Ten Championships the scored lower than a 15.30. In fact, first weekend in April. four Michigan gymnasts set sea- .'They took away. our- Senior son highs,.with'senior Ralph Rosso 'Night," Goldberg said. "If your and.junior co-captain David Chan emotions aren't coming into play landing high-value'. handspring. after that, I don't know, you might double front vaults. . . not be a living being.::. This is it. Going into tle final two rota- This is our season." Michigan grabs spot in CCHA semis after sweep By CHRIS MESZAROS had a 21-0 shot advantage.- . DailySports Writer . . And it was the 21st shot that really mattered. Maybe the Western Michigan With just three seconds left in hockey team was simply hoping to the first period, freshman forward sneak out of the first period early David Wohlberg controlled aloose in both of - . . . _ puck, on the left side of Western its games WESTERN MICH. 2 Michigan goaltender Riley'- Gill. against MICHIGAN : 5 Wohlberg then deflected the puck Michigan off Gill's right skate and into the this week- WESTERN MICH. net to give Michigan the three- end. MICHIGAN.. 6 goal lead. In both . - . In the second -period, after the games of the CCHA Quarterfinal Broncos scored to cut the lead to series, the, Broncos' checked out .two, another lucky bounce broke just a few'seconds too soon. Western Michigan's back. In No. 3 Michigan's 5-2 win With 25 seconds -to play in Friday night and 6-1 victory Sat- 'the second,, sophomore. Aaron urday against Western Michigan, Palushaj skated-around the Bronco two last-second goals by the Wol- goal and tried to feed the puck to verines to close the first period sophomore'Louie Caporusso, who crushed the Broncos' CCHA Tour- was stationed next to the crease. nament upset bid. With the series Palushaj's pass deflected off the, win, Michigan advanced to the leg of a Western Michigan defend- CCHA semifinals next-weekend at er and slid into the net. Joe Louis Arena. After referees.reviewedthe play Saturday's first period was one to see if the puck went off Capo- of the .Wolverines' 'most domi- russo's foot, the officials upheld nating of the season. Not. only the goal. did Michigan (20-8-0-0 CCHA, "We' were good, but we were 28-10-0 overall) outscore Western lucky,"' Michigan coach Red Beren- Mnichigan 3-0 in the. first frame, son said. "We got the bounces. We, they also shutout the Broncos scored those last-minute goals - (9-13-6-2,14-20-7) in shots on goal. just about last-second goals - three By the end of the period, Michigan of them this weekend. And those are backbreakers. The third goal and the fourth goal tonight are killers in the locker room, when you've just been scored on." Remarkably, things were eerily simila'-the night before. Sophomore Carl. Hagelin notched a shorthanded breakaway goal off a pass from sophomore Matt Rust that gave Michigan a 3-0 lead with just 1.5 seconds remaining in the first period. "Rusty did all the work," Hage- lin said. "It was an easy goal for me. He beat his guy on our blueline and had a two-on-one. He made an awesome pass over to me and I missed the first shot but made the sure I got the rebound in." Besides scoring .timely goals, the second line of Rust, Hagelin and Palushaj simply dominated the Broncos. All three scored two goals each in the series; and the trio combined for 14.points on the. weekend. Rust and Hagelin also anchored Michigan's penalty kill, particu- larly on Friday. On two. separate penalty kills in the first and second .period, Hagelin and 'Rust teamed up not only to score the short- handed goal, but forechecked deep in the Bronco zone to kill the clock and 'penalty. Their efforts earned CLIF REEDER/Daily Sophomore Carl Hagelin heard theYost crow; chant his name for the-first time in his career as Michigan swept the-Broncos. the approval of the Yost crowd, and for the crowd." . the CCHA in points - for just one which started chanting 'Hagelin's It will take several similar goal on the weekend bodes well for name. efforts from the' all-sophomore upcoming games. "I have iever heard them cheer line if . the Wolverines want to - "They are a line that likes to be my name," Hagelin said. "But I win the CCHA Tournament this challenged,".Beie nson said. "They think when Rust and I are out weekend. But the way Michigan shut down Western's best line and there on the penalty kill, we try to shut down Western Michigan for- then they' outscored them. And get some energy-going for the team ward Patrick G4livan - who leads that is a tribute to them." RATKOWIAK From page 1B. season willbe'different. Just like last year, the Wol- ve-rines' starting quarterback situation is uncertain. But this time, it isn't as scary. Redshirt junior Nick Sheridan took the first snaps 'of.the spring, but listening to Rodriguez's glow- ing praise of early-enrollee Tate Forcier's workouts and seeing the freshman's smooth performance during the first part.of spring 'practice, Forcier will probably be even with Sheridan-iin tie starting.race by-the end of spring practice.. Forcier has been hyped as the quarterback Rodriguez was look- ing for all last season, and the coach didn't bother to hide his excitement over Forcier and the team's six other early enrollees. "The nice thing'about it is I think they've really blended into our program," Rodriguez said.,"They've not tried to be out front and brag about themselves. They know they have to earn the respect, and I think they've tried to do it. I'm tickled to death the way they worked so far." But'a quarterback can't be good without a solid offensive line, which was one of the Wolverines' -biggest issues last year. Rodriguez said Saturday he hopes to "at least to be able to pick up where we left off froni" offen sively. It already looks like they'll be able to do that. The.offensive line has one . more year of experienc. and last year's crop of redshirts are now. ready for action..Rodriguez said Saturday he might have 10 poten- tial offensive linemen - a drastic change from last year, when the line was constantly in flux with injuries and inexperienced play- And the sunny, 40-degree weather meant the Wolverines held their first practice outdoors for the first time in recent his- tory. Last year, the team didn't work outside until the last few.. spring practices. Practicing in the low-ceilinged Oosterbaan Field- house made itdifficult to work on special teams, and kick and punt. returns were one of Michigan's most embarrassing weaknesses last season, This spring, Rodriguez said he thinks the Wolverines can hold outdoor practices for the first three or four sessions-- .,and that up to half of practices may be spent working on special teams. In just the first half'hour of Saturday's practice, the Wol- verines worked on kick returns, punt returns and blocking punts. Last yearstarting from that first spring practice, it often felt like Rodriguez and some of the other coaches were just putting on a happy face during press confer-: ences. That quickly vanished during Michigan's five-game midseason losing streak. The difference this year is that it doesn't already feel likea facade. $ure, not everything will he rosy this season..But it.definite- ly won't be as painful, either. - Ratkowiak can be reached 'at cratkowi@urnich.edu. r H 25 C 3 N _F4 nE CA 512F .WiI1za x(734) 663-3379 LIMITED TIME OFFER For Our Frie'nds at The U CUSTOMER'APPRECIATION Lunch Euffet M-F 11-2pm $2 OFF our Lunch Buffet 'rith Bverage Included Just Present Your.U of M .D. Offer Valid: 03/16/09 - 04/17/09 opby foT a tour onapply thesame'day.andwe II WAIVE YOUR $150 SERVICE FEE! Sign a;lease for a.2 or 3 bedroom apartment within 24 hours of applying AND RECEIVE $300 GIFT CARD a