The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.comh April 13, 2009 - 3B FIGHTING ILLINI From page 1B allowing three runs through two- thirds of the third inning. The relief staff was caught in the same funk as sophomores Kolby Wood and Matt Miller gave up seven runs in five innings. Their efforts cost the Wol- verines a one-run lead that they had held for the first five innings. In similar fashion, Maloney need- ed to use four more pitchers yester- day after none of his staff could stay consistent over multiple innings. Twenty hits later, the Wolverines (4-5, 19-13) left the field with their confidence in tatters. With the team's best reliever, sophomore Tyler Burgoon, and its clutch defensive catcher, junior Chris Berset, both out with injuries, Michigan couldn't find a rhythm. Even Maloney couldn't avoid the frustration. In the sixth inning of Saturday's GOLDEN GOPHERS From page 1B Taylor cruised through yester- day's first three innings, striking out at least two batters in each frame before running into trouble in the fourth. With the contest still scoreless, the Gophers' leadoff batter reached base on an infield single. The next batter, first baseman Malisa Barnes, smashed a two-hopper to the left side of the infield. Junior third base- man Maggie Viefhaus, ranging to her left, couldn't corral the ball as it caromed into short left field for another single. With runners on first and sec- ond and no outs, Minnesota (4-6 Big Ten, 21-24 overall) was primed for a big inning. Taylor had little margin for error. Just like pitch- ing to Strike Out, she had to hit her spots. Showing pinpoint control and overpowering movement, she did just that, striking out the next three batters to extinguish the threat. "Usually when runners get on base, I go into a different mode," Taylor said. "I really focus on shut- game, senior tri-captain Kevin Cislo was called out at second base, drawing thunderous boos from the packed house atRay Fisher Stadium. Maloney stomped out to contend the call and was ejected from the game after an extended argument with the umpire. Cislo said the ejection was moti- vating, but the momentum swing wasn't enough to overcome the four-run deficit that the Wolverines accumulated in the inning. "(Maloney's) showing how much passion he has for us to win," Cislo said. "He wanted us to win.... We just couldn't get over the hump." Maloney praised the efforts of Miller and junior reliever Alan Oaks, but he also acknowledged that their solid pitching was "too little, too late" after both couldn't counter huge offensive innings for the Illini. "We couldn't stop the bleeding," Cislo said. "If we could just stop those big innings, it's a completely different ballgame." ting down the batters." The performance also served notice to Michigan's offense. With Taylor keeping the Wolverines in the game, the onus shifted to the lineup to push a few runs across the plate. Junior catcher Roya St. Clair's leadoff home run jump-started a four-run barrage in the bottom of the fourth inning, and Michigan (6-2, 29-9) added three more runs in the seventh. But Taylor didn't need the insurance. She didn't allow a hit or walk in the final three innings. The win ran her season record to 12-4. Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said that she was pleased with Tay- lot's performancebut cautionedthat it will take more than just a couple games for Taylor to fully regain the form that made her an All-American last year. Michigan's lineup is potent at times, but the Wolverines' chances for a deep postseason run rely on a dominant one-two combination of Taylor and junior pitcher Nikki Nemitz. While honing her motion with Strike Out is a part of reestablishing that dominance, there is also a men- tal aspect to her technique. Former walk-on Fellows emerges as leader for Blue By CHANTEL JENNINGS Daily Sports Writer In the fall of 2004, then-fresh- man Kenny Fellows showed up to the open Michigan baseball tryouts hoping to take his career to the collegiate level. While Michigan coach Rich Maloney saw talent in the speedy young player, he didn't have enough room on his roster and had to cut him. For a year, Fellows worked out on his own and played catch with friends from his dorm to prepare. And in the fall of 2005, he showed up again to the varsity baseball try- outs, hoping to make the team and knowing that if he didn't, he would be back the following year. "I knew I had nothing to lose," Fellows said. "I had been play- ing baseball my whole life, and I basically made the decision I was going to keep trying out my whole career." While Maloney didn't offer him a spot on the team that fall, he did offer Fellows an extended tryout, where he could scrimmage with the team during their practices that fall. Fellows was given another chance to prove himself. That spring, Fellows was added to the Wolverines' roster but only saw action in four games, record- ing virtually no statistics. "He had no ar iwhatsoever, that's all everyone talked about," senior second baseman Kevin Cislo said. "But his improvement throughout the past two or three years has been remarkable ... And without him this year, our team would be very different." Now, as a fifth-year senior, the speedy Fellows has stepped out SAID ALSALAH/Daily Fifth-year senior Kenny Fellows has the Wolverines' second-highest batting average this season. of the walk-on spot and become a team leader. He's started all 32 games this season in the outfield, and he boasts the team's second- highest batting average at .345. Fellows, who bats in the second position, had a strong series this pastweekend against Illinois, going 5-for-12 from the plate and scoring two runs. His most notable contri- butions came in the Wolverines' losses, where he batted 4-for-7 and scored a run in each loss. He and the three other batters in the top half of the Michigan lineup did as much as they could in the team's two losses to Illinois. In both games, the quartet batted 7-for-15, while the bottom five hit- ters batted 3-for-20 in Saturday's loss and 6-for-20 yesterday. The top-heavy performance paralleled to many of the Wolverines' games this year. "(Fellows) had to prove to Coach that he could play here," Cislo said. "Then he proved to the entire team and now to this league and our opponents that he can play with. us." Fellows quietly leads by exam- ple, hoping others will follow in his wake as he makes himself bet- ter every day in the Wolverines' quest to be Big Ten Champions. "You have to have that resil- iency, that intestinal fortitude, because a lot of the other (schol- arship) players will get opportu- nities before you," Maloney said. "That's just how it works. You have to keep working and believ- ing in yourself, and I think Kenny has been a great testament of that." And in a season where the Wolverines are experiencing unexpected struggles, the strong resiliency of a quiet walk-on may prove to be more of an advantage than Michigan expected. Football fans flock to Alumni Field to see softball game Wolverines earn weekend sweep over Golden Gophers By AMY SCARANO Daily Sports Writer As 50,000 fans filed out of the Big House after the Michigan foot- ball team's spring game Saturday afternoon, many of them headed for Wilpon Sports Complex, where both the Michigan baseball and softball teams were scheduled NOTEBOOK for 3 p.m. games. The bleachers at Alumni Field filled up early in anticipation of another Michigan win. And the Wolverines served up the victory in a 4-1 extra-inning game to open their weekend series against Min- nesota. "The crowd today - wow," Mich- igan coach Carol Hutchins said Saturday. "They were fabulous. In all those innings where we were getting it going, you could feel it. It was electric. You feel a lot more pressure to win in front of all those fans, because you don't want to let them down." The contest was a pitching duel until the fourth inning and a tied ballgame until junior pitcher Nikki Nemitz's walk-off home run in the eighth sealed Michigan's victory. Yesterday saw fewer fans, as nany attended church and cel- ebrated Easter. But that didn't stop the Wolverines (6-2 Big Ten, 29-9 overall), who capitalized on a couple of hot innings in which they scored all seven of their runs, clos- ing out the game 7-0. The Wolver- ines finished the weekend against Minnesota with a nine-game win- ning streak. "I think we are getting right up to our peak right now," freshman centerfielder Bree Evans said. FEELING FRESH: Freshman des- ignated player Amanda Chidester has the highest batting average on the team. It is no surprise that pitchers do whatever they can to avoid throwing to the freshman, who is tied for first on her team with six home runs. Pitchers who tried to pitch around her ended up paying aprice. On Saturday, Chidester reached base after being hit by a pitch. Yes- terday, she hit a sacrifice fly that scored Evans. The Wolverines scored all seven of their runs yesterday in two innings, and another freshman had a large role in that run production. Freshmansecond basemanSteph Kirkpatrick asked Hutchins earlier in the year if it was in her plans for Kirkpatrick to hit. Hutchins responded that she would indeed be hitting as soon as she started to perform. "You recruit (freshmen) to come in and make an impact," Hutchins said. "I expected all three of them to be capable of that but that doesn't mean that it always happens right off the bat." After hitting at the end of the lineup earlier this year, Kirkpatrick was moved to the leadoff position where she found her groove. She tallied three hits yesterday and scored two runs. The two- inning, seven-run escapade was largely a freshmen job. But with the powerful trio of Chidester, Kirkpatrick and Evans, it may not be that surprising. "We can't believe that it's all three of us - that we are contribut- ing so much," Evans said. "But our upperclassmen are helping us so much. Theydon'ttreatuslikefresh- men they just treat us like a player on the team so we don't think too much about us being freshmen." DOING IT ALL: After Find- lay's hole-in-one home run into a trashcan just outside the fence last weekend, junior pitcher Nikki Nemitz followed suit Saturday. In the bottom of the eighth, she hit a walk-off homer right at the light post on the other side of the fence. The ball actually bounced off the post and back into the stadium, but it didn't matter. Nemitz and two baserunners jogged home to end the game 4-1. Nemitz had already struck out 14 players and allowed just two hits all game, but that wasn't enough for her. Working the count helped her get into prime position for the game-ending blast. "I was like, 'I'm going to hit this ball,' " Nemitz said. "I ended up get- tingto a3-1countwhichgets me even more pitches. I was like, 'I'm going to hit this.' Ijust took one and hit it." ROB MIGRIN/Daly Junior pitcher Nikki Nemitz dominated on the pitching mound and at the plate, hitting a game-winning home run Saturday. What, you honestly thought we'd leave you hanging for four months? Daily Sports will still be S here this summer. Check www.michigandaily.com. ABRA THIS But hurry - applications for summer programs are due WEDNESDAY (in 2 days!) Apply now at www.IESabroad.org IES Africa " Asia " Australia * Europe New Zealand " South America ABROADV