8A - Wednesday, March 18, 2009T nd The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 0 I S"OCKEY Rust's resurgence bolsters second line By GJON JUNCAJ tion of both me being so bad, you Daily Sports Writer couldn't possibly get any worse, and me getting a little bit more During the past 10 weeks, soph- confidence," Rust said. "Normally, omore Matt Rust has been the you go (to World Juniors) and you exception to a strange rule. play the best-of-the-best talent.... When the center on the Michi- I thought I got my scoring touch gan hockey team joined Team USA back over there, and was able to in December for the 2009 World carry it over here." Junior Championships in Ottawa, Rust's resurrected offensive Ont., he was stuck in the worst output has been linked to marked slump of his collegiate career. improvement in the circles. Rust In his 13 games prior to the has won a stellar 54.7 percent of international tournament, Rust his drawsathis semester, something had managed just two points, both he attributes to sharper focus, bet- assists. ter luck and his linemates reaching His offensive rut stemmed in in for pucks that result in a faceoff part from struggles in the faceoff win. circle, where the Bloomfield Hills Whatever the reason, Rust is native was converting an uninspir- defined as an offensive player by ing 48 percent of his draws. his success on the draw. In theory, taking a temporary "If you're stealing some points leavefromDivision-Ihockeywould and some goals, and you're not serve as a nice mental refresher. playing well (overall), then you're But Michigan coach Red Berenson really kidding yourself," Berenson said he has seen plenty of players said. "That's like winning games leave for the World Junior Cham- you don't deserve to win. Pretty pionships during winter break and soon, that'll catch up with you. My come back with bad experiences, whole thing with Rust was getting which can carry over once the sec- him to play harder and to be more ond semester begins. prepared every night to play well, But in Rust's case, the tourna- and to keep it simple." ment jump-started one of Michi- Rust's offense has been given gan's most impressive second-half a huge lift by sophomore wingers performances. In eightgames with Carl Hagelin and Aaron Palushaj, Team USA, including two exhibi- who also played alongside Rust last tions, Rust notched four goals and year. The three were reunited Jan. four assists. 23 against Michigan State, and the And Rust brought the surpris- line has since tallied a combined 19 ing offensive success back to Ann goals and 29 assists in 14 games. Of Arbor with him. In 17 games this those totals, Rust is responsible for semester, Rust has scored nine eight markers and four assists. He goals and five assists. attributes those stats to the line's His 14 points since January are chemistry that has developed over tied for third-highest on the team the last two seasons. in that span, and he's currently "Them knowing the type of in the middle of a four-game goal player I am, it makes things a lot streak. easier," Rust said. "I can have my Rust said his 180-degree turn head down and pretty much know for the better was inevitable. where both of them are on the "I think it was a combina- ice." Medical School Information Fair TODAY! 3-6pm at The Michigan Union Meet informally with M.D. and D.O. medical school representtaives Lemn about MD-Ph.D poramis Explore post-baccalaureate and special masters progrlams Visit our website for a list of schools r, schedudc ito attend Pecaus...one day oan make all the dferene! Fmare inforatin ontact w at: 3200 sa (7 )7 44eCareerCente AS' Strong pitching and defense key in Wolverines' blowout of Eagles By TIM ROHAN. performance was good enough to of the game. Cislo finished 3-for-5 defensive plays behind Sinnery Daily Sports Writer record his first collegiate victory. with two runs batted in and three which saved several Eagle runs Eastern Michigan freshman runs scored. from scoring. YPSILANTI - The Michigan pitcher Jordan Glover's day would "It was good to get that (big In the second inning, sopho- baseball team powered its way be much shorter as he worked inning) so that everybody could more shortstop Anthony Toth through its game against East- less than three innings and was feel good again, because we didn't made a backhanded grab on a ern Michigan in more ways than charged with all eight of the Wol- really feel good this past week- sharply hit groundball head- one yesterday afternoon. An 11-3 verines' third-inning runs (six end," Maloney said. ing away from second base. Toth win is impressive, but the devel- earned). Sinnery continued to remain in jumped and made a quick throw opment of a few pitchers could Michigan ended the game with control even though Eastern was to second base to save a run. pay dividends for the Wolverines junior first baseman and reliever getting on base. After a leadoff "The defense has to be a staple down the line. Mike Dufek on the mound. Malo- single in the bottom of the third, for us," Maloney said. "Reality is, This season, Michigan expects ney said he was glad to give Dufek Sinnery turned and picked off the we got to play good defense, and to be guided by its starting rota- some work and liked how hard he Eastern Michigan base runner. we got to pitch well. And today, tion. But it might be a freshman was throwing, but admitted the But in the fourth inning, Sinnery's we did those two things." and a newly converted relief junior wasn't as crisp as Maloney control faltered. After allowing a Bouncing back with a win after pitcher who make a surprising would have liked. Dufek allowed a one-out double, he hit the next last weekend's disappointment impact. single and walk to start the inning batter. A single and a sacrifice fly was important for the Wolver- The Wolverines (11-5) won eas- before striking out the next three later, Eastern had two runs on the ines. But Sinnery's performance ily at Eastern Michigan's Oestrike batters to close out the game. board. might have been just as important Stadium, sparked by an eight-run Last Saturday, Michigan was Sinnery said he had been work- as Michigan looks for its first-year third inning. the victim of a six-run third ing on his changeup recently, and players to continue to improve The matchup featured two inning against Arizona in the it seemed to be keeping batters off and settle into a starting role. freshman starting pitchers. In midst of being swept by the Wild- balance after he threw his fast- "I thought Brandon Sinnery five innings, Michigan's freshman cats in the three-game series. On ball. was excellent today, which was starter Brandon Sinnery allowed Tuesday, the Wolverines had a big "It was nice to have three pitch- very encouraging," Maloney said. just two runs and struck out three third inning of their own. es today instead of just (being) "Because we think he is a guy that batters, even though he had base In the third inning, senior tri- dominant with slider and fast- can really help us, and might have runners threatening in scoring captain Kevin Cislo had two dou- ball," Sinnery said. to do it sooner than later. ... We position throughout the game. His bles off of Glover to chase him out The Wolverines made solid needed that from somebody." Bregman rehabs after two season-ending injuries By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer On Jan. 30, senior Scott Breg- man stepped onto the floor exercise in a meet for the first time in almost 10 months. His right ankle was wrapped tightly in several layers of tape, and his left foot bore a scar resembling a pink centipede. Bregman saluted, ran across the floor, performed a perfect Arabian double pike and stuck the landing. The fans cheered, but his team- mates went wild. As if he has never left competi- tion, Bregman flowed through the rest of his routine, finishing with a tiny hop on his dismount. He earned a 14.85 score and the floor title in his first meet back. Behind Bregman's two minutes of triumph were the result of nearly two arduous years of rehab from a pair of separate, season-ending ankle injuries. For Bregman, just stepping on the floor as a competitor was a vic- tory that went against all odds. On Mar. 10, 2007, the then-soph- omore landed his competition vault short. A few days later, he stood in a surgeon's office, waiting for a diag- nosis that he knew might mean the end of his career. He had sustained a Lisfranc dis- location in his left foot, a serious tendon injury that usually prevents people from ever returning to the peak of their athletic career. The surgeon couldn't even look Bregman in the eye, staring at the floor as he informed the gymnast that he might never compete again. Gymnastics had been central to Bregman's life since he was a little boy, and all of a sudden, everything could be finished. Bregman held his emotions back as athletic trainer Bill Shinavier drove him from the doctor's office to practice. When teammate Jamie Thomp- son asked how the appointmenthad gone, emotions came flooding out. "It was the first moment that I had to really contemplate what it would mean to me," Bregman said. "I just broke down. It's not one of my strongest moments. I was liter- ally unable to form a complete sen- tence for about 30 minutes." His teammates soon surrounded Bregman, offering hugs and words of reassurance. "I think it's harder to hear that later (in your career)," Thompson said. "To hear that you're just going to have to be done, not by your own choice, not by your own timeline, takes a toll." But soon after, Bregman's innate stubbornness took over. Nobody was going to tell him when or how his gymnastics career would end. He threw himself into his rehab, and a few weeks into hisjunior sea- son, he was back at his peak. It was as if the injury hadn't hap- pened. Then came March14,2008 -just over a year since his first injury. At practice, Bregman decided to perform a second, full floor rou- tine, ending with his usual full-in dismount, even though he was a bit tired. His right ankle landed just before his face hit the carpet. "I saw his back handspring and I knew that it wasn't good enough to get two flips and one twist around," junior Evan Heiter said. "My initial reaction was that it would be hard for something not to be wrong." Bregman knew he was hurt, but he thought it was just a sprain. He picked himself up, limped to the training room, and almost casually, called for Shinavier. His ankle was broken, and his season, once again, was over prema- turely. And though a broken ankle didn't seem as serious as his earlier tendon injury, for the second time, Bregman's career almost ended. Though Shinavier and Breg- man's teammates just remember the Lawrence, Kan., native's wry humor and determination to come back, Bregman said he had serious doubts. "I just can't do this again," he thought after learning he would need surgery on his right ankle. He knewexactlyhowlongand difficult the road back would be - he'd been there before. "I thought a lot about not com- ing back," Bregman said. "But the truth of the matter is, you have to do the rehab if you want to exist as a human being. ... Then my body started to feel better and better, and I was like, 'Well, I've come this far, so I'll give it a shot."' Just as they'd supported him through his first injury, Bregman's teammates rallied around him. And the second time around, Bregman remembers, he milked it for all it was worth. "The second time, I'd be like, 'I can't move that, so you're going to have to,' " Bregman said. "I'd make (Heiter) drive me. ... I could drive with my legs trossed, but it was really awkward, probably unsafe, probably illegal, I'm not sure." Sophomore Ben Baldus-Strauss, who broke his ankle just a month and a half after Bregman, can empa- thize with the struggles of a come- back. "It's probably less than 50 per- cent physical," Baldus-Strauss said. "You're trapped. When you can't walk, you're dependent on everyone and it's mentally draining.... I don't know where I would have gotten the motivation to go through it all over again." Now, each day before practice, Bregman arrives early and stays late to get treatment and do main- tenance rehab for his ankle. Not including the time spent actually doing gymnastics, it takes about an hour and a half. But Bregman knew he couldn't ever cut corners in his rehabilita- tion. If Shinavier thought some- thing should be easy for Bregman, the gymnast would convince him- self it was. If the trainer asked him to do more repetitions, Bregman wouldn't protest. "He really exemplified what an athletic trainer expects and hopes for from an injured ath- lete," Shinavier said. "He was very diligent, always willing to do more. He worked hard, he never com- plained." He'll still be glad once April and the postseason arrive without an incident. After joking that he'd like to bubble wrap himself during the second week of March, Bregman sailed through the week with no problems, though he did tape both his ankles instead of just one. On March 14, he hit his floor routine in his final appearance at Cliff Keen Arena. It was exactly one year after his second injury, and in exactly the same scenario as his first - the Senior Night meet against Illinois. All through the monotonous rehab, Bregman had motivated himself with a mental image of sticking those floor passes. With his first pass against Iowa in January, it was as if everything had come true. And Senior Night made it even better. "To go out and nail it, tonail floor, was really good," Bregman said. "It was the moment that I'd been envi- sioning during my rehab." www.ca.rCMUaT.Umich.edu MMMOiS of iStmieWtffa