4B - March 23, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 Baseball Preview 2009 a 777 l , _ ,gym rr tr The Ace of Michigan's staff By RYAN KARTJE Daily Sports Writer Don Lund had never before been to a championship. During the 1945 Major League Baseball season, Lund sat appre- hensively in an office in New York City. It would be his first contract negotiation with a professional team, and he struggled over num- bers in his head to settle his con- tract. Across from Lund sat Branch Rickey, former Michigan baseball coach and then-general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Rickey offered the former Mich- igan star outfielder his first profes- sional contract with the Dodgers' Triple-A team, the Montreal Roy- als. Joining Lund on the Royals was another man who was gaining the scouts' and the nation's atten- tion. It was in the 1947 season that both would be called up to the major leagues, and Lund would watch his teammate - Jackie Rob- inson - break the color barrier. That year, the Dodgers earned a spot in the World Series to take on their cross-town rivals, the New York Yankees. But Lund wasn't there. Since he had spent some time on the Dodgers' minor league St. Paul team, he hadn't been optioned to the Major Leagues until after Sept. 1 and had to miss the Dodgers' shot at the pennant. Fifteen years later, as the head coach of the Michigan var- sity baseball team, Lund saw the chance at a championship that he had missed so many years ago sit- ting right in front of him. On June 16, 1962, at Omaha's Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium, Lund decided to use his best pitcher, Fritz Fisher, against Santa Clara in the final game of the College World Series. It was the first time the Wolverines had been there since legendary coach Ray Fisher's championship run in 1953. Fritz Fisher and the rest of the Wolverines had never seen a stadi- um like "The Blatt." It was a spec- tacle. But Fisher, the ace of Lund's rotation, wasn't shaken by his matchup with the Broncos. And Lund knew that he wasn't going to let this chance slip away. "He was our number one, our key guy," Lund said. The Michigan ace went nine innings, almost unheard of in today's college game, and kept the Wolverines' World Series hopes alive. But after regulation, Lund's team still had work to do. In the 15th inning, on the coat- tails of Fisher's first nine innings, the Wolverines' left fielder watched a pop fly soar toward him through the Omaha sky. The ball dropped into his glove, to give Michigan its second-ever National Championship. He lost his glove in celebration while Lund's team, steered by the resiliency of its ace pitcher, won its coach the champi- onship he'd been looking for. Forty-seven years removed from that game, the Michigan baseball program hasn't been back to the final round of the College World Series since. And in his seventh season as Michigan baseball's head coach, Rich Maloney knows that he needs a workhorse in the mold of Fritz Fisher to get the Wolverines back to Omaha. A PAIR OF ACES Last season, the stars seemed to be aligned for the Michigan pitch- ing rotation. The Wolverines boasted two All-Americans on the mound in then-senior Zach Putnam and then-junior Chris Fetter, both of whom Maloney said could almost guarantee a win in the weekend series' first two games. "We always felt like we had two Friday night starters last year," Maloney said. "We had two fan- TheMichigan Daily bas tastic pitchers that you knew on comingintotlie Big Ten any given day, the other team would have them starting on Fri- STAFF PICKS day night." But Putnam, Maloney's No. 1 The Daily baseball b in the rotation, was drafted by makes its predictior the Cleveland Indians in the fifth round of last year's MLB Draft. seaSon. That left Fetter, a 10-game win- ner last season, to fill the void of These writers look it Michigan's ace. future to guess who The position was one Lund was it all - and who wil all too familiar with. disappointing. Fritz Fisher wasn't slated to be Lund's ace pitcher until just Michigan overalrecod before the 1962 season began, Michigan Big Ten record when his original game- Mic Mae changer, Mike Joyce, Michigan Pitcher of the Year was signed to a pro- Michigan Freshman of the Ye a eball beat pored over the numbers and came up with the Wolv season. beat s for the nto the will win I just be Chantel Ryan Jennings Kartje r /ear fessional contract. It left Lund's team in the hands of an unproven leader. But it paid dividends. And this season, pitch- ing coach Bob Keller has no problem putting the rotation in the hands of his four-year starter. "Putnam was our ace last year," Keller said. "And r you don't often get a chance to work with that type of talent. But (Fetter) had to work harder to be where he is today ... He is going to go down as one of the winningest pitchers in Michigan baseball." CARMEL DELIGHT In 2004, Carmel High School baseball coach Greg Lentz learned how important having an established ace in your pitch- ing rotation is to a team's suc- cess. Against one of the top teams in the state of Indiana that year - Indianapolis Bishop Chatard - Lentz, Fetter's high school coach, put Fetter in one of the most difficult matchups of his career. It was Lentz's first year Big Ten Regular Season Champion Big Ten Regular Season Runner-Up Big Ten Regular Season Third Place Big Ten Tournament champion Big Ten Tournament Runner-Up ig Ten MVPA Big Ten Surprise Team Big Ten Disappointing Team Michigan Season Ends Here NationalChampion at the helm and the first time he completely put the game in one of his pitcher's hands. Fetter, a high school junior atthe time, responded by allowing just one hit, dictating the entire game from his place on the mound. "At that point, I knew he had the ability to be a pitcher who dominated the game," Lentz said. "When he was on the mound, he had the potential to completely dominate the opposing team." In the Wolverines' NCAA regional matchup against Arizona last season, Maloney put Putnam in the batting order as a designated hitter toshore up the offense. That left Fetter to take on the Wildcat offense in Michigan's most impor- tant game of the season. Through the first three innings, Fetter had allowed four runs and Michigan's offense hadn't contrib- uted. - But Fetter rebounded to allow only three hits the rest of the way, and in Fritz Fisher-like fashion, pitched a complete game. Although the Wolverines could manage just three runs and fell short of a come- 44-11 18-6 Ryan LaMarre Fetter Coley Crank Illinois Michigan Ohio State Michigan Ohio State Alex wimmers, OhioState Minnesota Northwestern Super Regionals Texas 45-10 19-5 Chris Fetter Fetter JohnLorenz Michigan Ohio State Illinois Ohio State Michigan Fetter Minnesota Northwestern Super Regionals North Carolina 43-12 19-5 LaMare Fetter Lorenz Michigan Otho State Illinois Otio State Michigan wmriers Minnesota Purdae Super Regionals cal StateFullerton I I back, the game served as Fetter's coronation as Michigan's ace for the 2009 season. In a rematch of that game this season, Fetter allowed just one earned run to Arizona and one unearned run on a passed ball. His 7.1-inning effort was one of his strongest of the season thus far, but the offense was shut out, handing Fetter his first loss of the season. When the offense is manufactur- ing runs like it did this past week- end against IPFW (17 total runs), Maloney knows that Fetter will set the tone of how his team pitches. "He's our leader on the mound," Maloney said. "It's going to be sig- nificant that he is good every Fri- day night. Call it what we will, but the bottom line is we've got (Fet- ter), and then we've got some other guys who we think can be good." Those "other guys" are Fetter's focus. "I've been through a lot of bat- tles here at Michigan," Fetter said. "I've seen countless games. So when a situation arrives that I've been through, I've got to take a guy under my wing and keep reaching out to the younger guys." He's spent much of this season adjusting to his leadership role, which Keller and the rest of the staff hope will translate into sig- nificant support behind Fetter in the rotation. "When you set the tone like (Fetter) does, that kind of thing becomes contagious," Keller said. "One guy learns from another, and you start multiplying leaders. That's what he's been able to do thus far." ESPN baseball expert Buster Olney recently made a list of Major League Baseball's indispensable players. And it's no coincidence that six of those 10 players were the aces of their pitching staff. "If you canhavethatgreat pitcher, someone to just get the ball over the plate whenever youneed himto, then you're doing quite well," Lund said. And 47 years after Lund's indis- pensable pitcher was the cata- lyst in the Wolverines' last World Series win, Fetter is the ace that Michigan needs to take the reins if they want to see the hallowed field in Omaha again this year. FILE PHO Behind strong pitching effort, 'M' Nine sweep IPFW 1 1 By CHANTEL JENNINGS Daily Sports Writer Michigan baseball coach Rich Maloney describes his team as a bunch of dirtbags. Respectfully. "(It's) someone who is willing for the good of the team to do whatever it takes to get it done," Maloney said. "Diving for a ball, taking it off the chest, getting hit by the pitch and running to first base ... doing what- ever it takes to lay his body in front for the good of the team - that kind of an attitude." And this weekend, as the team opened its home slate at Ray Fisher Stadium, the Wolverines' dirtbag attitude was on full display. Michi- gan swept away visiting Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne in a three-game series. Michigan improved throughout the weekend, winning 4-2, 4-1 and 9-2. But yesterday, the IPFW Mast- odons (15-10) took an early 1-0 lead over the Wolverines in the top of the third inning before Michigan junior first baseman Mike Dufek connect- ed on a two-run home run to put the Wolverines (14-5) on the board. Dufek shined inthe spotlight dur- ing the series, hitting 5-for-10, tally- ing two home runs and six RBI. "Mike's a special player and he's been waiting in the wings," Malo- ney said. "He's been groomed for this moment. So it's not by surprise. I thought that he'd hit really well." But batting was just one of the areas in which Michigan excelled during the series. Behind starting pitchers senior Chris Fetter, junior Eric Katzman and senior Mike Wil- son, Michigan slowed down IPFW and allowed just five runs during the series. Despite allowing numerous Mastodon baserunners, the Michi- gan defense stifled IPFW scoring threats. "(The pitchers) battled through some tough situations," Maloney said. "They kind of did the 'bend, don't break.' They had runners on and (IPFW) could have had a big inning, but we didn't allow it. They came up with a big pitch when they had to." Maloney relied on three sopho- more relief pitchers - Tyler Bur- goon, Matt Miller and Travis Smith - to pitch three innings in each game. And despite their inexperi- ence on the mound, the trio only gave up combined one run in Michi- gan's first home appearance. With Friday's win, Maloney improved to 7-0 in home openers as Michigan's skipper. "One thing we take pride in is protecting this house," senior Mike Wilson said. "We've been able to do a good job of that over the years. We're a very tough team to beat in general, especially at home." The Wolverines found them- selves down early in two of the three games this weekend. The Mastodons scored two runs Fri- day before Dufek hit a long double to bring in senior Kevin Cislo and sophomore Ryan LaMarre. But it was a familiar situation for the Wolverines. They have let them- selves fall behind several times this season, only to post comeback victo- ries. In Michigan's first game of the season, on Feb. 20, it trailed South Florida 3-0 before coming back to win 6-5. The very next day, the Wol- verines spotted Purdue a 2-0 lead before surging late to win 4-3. "We have found ourselves behind many times ... but we've had some success in coming back," Maloney said. "It's certainly better if we had a big lead early, it would certainly make me sleep better. Neverthe- less, that's a good characteristic of a team that they have a lot of fight in their battle, with a never-say-die attitude." And with only one game between now and the Big Ten season opener against Iowa next Friday, Maloney is confident that his dirtbags will answer the call. On Wednesday, Michigan hosts Eastern Michigan, a team that will be looking for revenge from last week when the Wolverines beat the Eagles 11-5 in Ypsilanti. "We know that we are supposed to win," Dufek said. "It's only a mat- ter of us focusing and playing well and we should be able to win the I game." GETTING TO KNOW THE CAPTAINS My favorite baseball player... one word that describes coach Rich Maloney... If I played another varsity sport, it would be... My childhood dreamjob... Expectations for this season... Tim Kalczynski, C Tigers 1B Cecil Fielder Passionate Basketball Doctor Win the Big Ten title Kevin Cislo, 2B Cardinals SS Ozzie Smith Passionate Football Orthodontist Win the Big Ten title and go to regionals Chris Fetter, SP, Giants P Randy Johnson Enthusiastic - Basketball Doctor Win the Big Ten title 0 A A