2B - April 6, 2009 The.ichian aily-m.higndaiyco The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wolverines should aim for Spartan -like fan base 4 Sophomore Kylee Botterman was one of just three Wolverines to qualify for NCAAs. Blue's Nationals streak ends at 16 By AMY SCARANO Daily Sports Writer It was a rite of passage to get to Nationals. It was a hurdle the No. 16 Michigan women's gymnastics team cleared for the last 16 years. But this season was different. The Wolverines tripped up in their race towards Nationals with a less-than-perfect performance at the NCAA South Regional Championships on Saturday. They finished third behind first-place Stanford (196.200) and second- place Arkansas (196.300). The top two finishers advance to the NCAA Championships. This year's team - with a roster down to 12 after four seniors grad- uated last season and no freshmen came in - was more deserving of a trip to Nationals than previous years' teams, according to Michi- gan coach Bev Plocki. Six of this year's returning gymnasts had surgery to correct injuries before the regular season. Plocki said some of her athletes couldn't train until November, meaning that they lost two and a half months of practice this sea- son. The Wolverines couldn't put their best lineup together until the Big Ten Championships on Mar. 21. "During the season, we were able to get people back and put together our best possible lineup for Big Tens, and we hit and it was great," Plocki said. "And I know we brought that confidence from Big Tens with us, but I don't know if because everything that this team has been through if they wanted it too much, if they tried too hard." The squad tackled a handful of obstacles to finish the season with a 10-0 Big Ten record, despite its earlier-than-anticipated end to the season. But in the end, Michigan missed second place and a trip to Nebras- ka by five-tenths of a point. Going into the final event, Michigan and host Arkansas were neck and' neck for second place, and both teams knew it all came down to the last event. Michigan was on the balance beam, the most difficult event in women's gymnas- tics, ahead by one tenth of a point. Arkansas finished up on floor. Teams generally prefer to begin meets on vault, because it's a fast event which is easier to do under the influence of early-meet adrenaline. A rotation beginning with vault automatically ends on floor. It is toughest to begin or end on beam, because there is too much adrenaline at the beginning of the meet and it often comes down to the performance in the last event. "You can equate (the five-tenths of a point) to the fall on balance beam," Plocki said. "But I can eas- ily find other places were we could have got those points. It is very easy to say it was our last mistake that cost us that trip to Nation- als, but we could have got that five tenths back if one person stuck on vault." When two Wolverines fell off the beam in their last rotation, they knew it was over and that their dream of competing in their 17th consecutive NCAA Nationals had disappeared. Sophomore Kylee Botterman, who will move onto Nationals as an individual after a phenomenal floor performance at Regionals, fell for the first time all year on beam. "I can't tell you what happened," Botterman said. "I haven't fell on beam all year and I'm disappoint- ed, but it's a team sport. This is not how we thought we were going to end, but we're looking to next year and how we can do everything better." In addition to Botterman, senior Becky Bernard (uneven bars) and junior Sarah Curtis (all-around) will travel to Nebraska to partici- pate in individual competition. "The fact that we got this far, it breaks my heart that we had to end this way," Plocki said. "I feel like this is one of the most deserving teams that I have ever coached in terms of their commitment level. It is heartbreaking, devastating to get this far and to have our season end prior to the national champi- onships." DETROIT - I've never seen so much green and white in my entire life. Drivingthrough downtown Detroit on Friday before the Final Four teams held open practice, I saw what looked like a Spartan pil- grimage to Ford Field. I also realized that most Michi- gan fans would consider so many Spartan fans massing together in a major metropolitan area a sign of the impending apocalypse On the way from the parking lot to Ford Field, I heard "Go Green, Go White," the entire way. From the moment I stepped inside the stadium :. moment I left, it felt like the Michigan State NATE fight song was SANDALS on repeat. (I used to only know the opening line, "On the banks of the Red Cedar." I know much more than that now.) But as difficult as it was for the Michigan student in me to take in that whole scene, stepping back, I had to admit it was pretty cool. It was pretty cool that 20,000- plus Spartan fans skipped work and school on a Friday just to watch their favorite teamrun a 50-minute walk-through. It was pretty cool that local fans had a rooting interest in the Final Four, though it couldn't have been planned when Detroit was awarded the event six years ago. It was pretty cool that the Spar- tan fans had the chance to jump on the bandwagon. Bandwagon fans are usually a negative part of any team's title run. They tend to be less knowl- edgeable and more obnoxious than the diehards. But Friday's practice was the perfect time to let those bandwag- on fans yell and shout and try to cover for the fact that they knew very little about Michigan State basketball. But those fans have that right, because the team they're loosely affiliated with is having a great season. The Michigan men's basketball 4 4 4 Twenty-thousand Michigan State fans converged at Ford Field Friday to cheer on the Spartans, even though it wasjust a practice. team should hope to have so many fans may have been sucked in just gram. 4 bandwagon fans sometime soon. enough to stick around, to learn Michigan State's foundation is The more bandwagon fans you more about the program and solid. If it wasn't, there wouldn't have, the better you must be doing become season-long fans. have been so much green and white that year. John Beilein has a long way to in Detroit this weekend, proximity The Wolverines saw their band- go in building this program before of East Lansing to Detroit aside. wagon fill up a little bit when they he catches Tom Izzo's behemoth. Beilein is still building his foun- made the NCAA Tournament. And (Even longer after the Spartans' dation in Ann Arbor. But he has it got even more crowded after run these past few weeks.) But it proven at all of his stops he knows Michigan knocked off Clemson in starts and ends with winning. what he's doing. the firstround.Followingthelossto Izzo and Co. have been winning So don't stop dreaming of the Oklahoma, most of those fans prob- for what seems like forever, and each day 20,000 fans in maize and blue ably jumped right off, not planning successful year builds on the last. attend a Final Four open practice. It to think about Michigan basketball No team is going to win the might not be that far away. again until the next big win or the National Championship every year, next trip to the Big Dance. but even one down year can put - Sandals can be reached But a few of those bandwagon a dent in the foundation of a pro- at nsandals@umich.edu. M' remains undefeated with sweep 4 By JAKE FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer For most of Saturday night's- first quarter against No. 8 Colo- rado State, it appeared as if the Michigan men's lacrosse team's perfect season might be in dan- ger. With 5:50 remaining in the frame, the Wolverines' high-pow- ered offense still hadn't found the cage against the Rams' zone and the game was tied 0-0. It was just the calm before the storm. Ten minutes later, No. 1 Michi- gan had taken complete control of the game, pouring in nine unan- swered goals. "Any time you face a zone, which you don't see that often, it takes you a little time to kind of feel it out and see where the seams are," Michigan coach John Paul said. And luckily for the Wolverines (11-0), they had plenty of time to resolve the confusion. They domi- nated the possession battle, win- ning 51of 80 groundballs en route to a 16- victory. The defense held the Rams (8-4) to just 10 shots on goal and excelled tremendously in the transition game. Colorado State had scored at least five goals in eachgame before Saturday night's thrashing at Oosterbaan Field- house. "The one thing that I didn't feel like we've done all year was put together a complete defensive game, and tonight we really did that in all facets," Paul said. "Our defense played the lockdown style that we want, (sophomore goalie Andrew) Fowler played great in goal and we did a great job of clearing and handling the ball." At the beginning of the sea- son, Wolverine defenders often extended pressuretoo far fromthe cage and were beaten by speedy attackmen. Under the leadership of senior captain Zach Elyachar, the talented unit has adopted a more disciplined approach and is seeing the results. "It's great that we played with this much confidence against a great team like Colorado State," Elyachar said through the Ath- letic Department. "I think we've had confidence all season, but this was the game when we put it all together; the offense had very lit- tle turnovers, we executed great and our defense really buckled down." Junior attackman Kevin Zoro- vich led the Wolverine offense with five points on two goals and three assists. Sophomore attackman Trevor Yealy notched a game-high four goals and out- scored the opposition by himself for the second straight game. On Friday night, Yealy broke the Michigan single-game scoring record, netting 11 goals in an 18-10 win over Minnesota Duluth. "I just kept moving around, try- ing to find open holes and seams, and my teammates kept finding me," Yealy said. And at six-foot-three, he's dif- ficult to miss. His tall frame and soft hands make him a prototypi- cal crease-man, since he provides his teammates with a big target and releases the ball very quickly. He moves very well without the ball, is highly capable of dodging from the outside and has quickly emerged as one of the best finish- ers in the league. Yealy leads the Men's Colle- giate Lacrosse Association with 4.9 goals per game, despite strug- gling for much of the six-week practice season last fall. Paul still expected a great sea- son out of the lanky sophomore, but was shocked by the perfor- mance againstthe seventh-ranked Bulldogs nonetheless. "We never foresee someone 4 scoring 11 goals in one game," Paul said. "That's pretty unheard of." You'll find it in Aldine! deI 4