8 - Friday, April 17, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Paulus still mulling over football options By RUTH LINCOLN, COURTNEY RATKOWIAK and ANDY REID Daily Sports Editors Former Duke point guard Greg Paulus said in a conference call yes- terday that he has been offered an opportunity to join the Michigan football team and compete for play- ingtimeatquarterback,accordingto ESPN.com. He has not been offered a scholarship, school officials told the Detroit News yesterday. The ESPN.com report on Thurs- day morning was unclear whether the offer was fora scholarship or just to join the team. Because it's techni- cally a recruiting issue, a spokesman fortheAthleticDepartmentdeclined to comment when contacted by The Michigan Daily. Michigan early-enrollee quarter- back Tate Forcier told The Michigan Daily he saw the report yesterday morning and talked with quarter- backs coach Rod Smith about the situation. "I've been talking to coaches all morning, and my position coach, Coach Smith, he told me specifically that they have not offered him - they don't know why he would lie," Forci- er said Thursday afternoon. "They said, 'We'll let you'll know what's up,' because right now, their specific words were, they haven't offered." When asked how he would react if Paulus did indeed join the team, Forcier said that "if it happens, it happens." "I'm not worried about it," Forci- er said. "A kid like that was good in high school, but it's nearly impos- sible to come back to this level and play. It might be possible, but not in the quarterback position. You have to know too much, you have to know the speed of the game." Forcier's olderbrother Jason, who missed the 2007 season per NCAA eligibility rules after transferring to Stanford from Michigan, saw the Paulus situation similarly. "Football might be the hardest sport to come back from a layoff and play," Jason said to The Michi- gan Daily. "If you look into different sports, professional leagues, you've got minor leagues for baseball and basketball. The NFL doesn't have any of that. "It just doesn't materialize because that's how hard it is to stay competitive." Paulus attended Tuesday's final spring practice to talk with Michi- gan coach Rich Rodriguez about joining the team, according to FOX- Sports.com. Jason said Tate's understanding was that Paulus arrived at Tues- day's practice unannounced and the coaches weren't aware of his arrival. Paulus was a highly touted dual- threat quarterback in high school, passing for 11,763 yards and 152 touchdowns. Michigan isn't the first place Pau- lus has looked to play football. On Wednesday, Duke coach David Cut- cliffe offered Paulus a tryout at wide receiver, according to ESPN.com. "He's a quarterback at heart, but there was no way he was going to be able to compete and play quarterback for us," Cutcliffe said to ESPN. But Paulus told reporters ina con- ference call Thursday morning he is only interested in playing quarter- back, according to ESPN.com. "The chanceto competeforastart- ing job is important," Paulus said in the conference call. "With me only having an opportunity to play for one year, the chance and the opportunity to compete at a high level is impor- tant. There is an opportunity to do that at Michigan." On the Dan Patrick radio show Thursday morning, Paulus con- firmed that he worked out with the NFL's Green Bay Packers last week. He said he talked with a Big Ten and a Big East team, as well as other schools. Paulus also was interviewed Thursday on ESPN's "Pardon the Interruption." "What he's doing is generating great interest, and that's smart on his part," Jason said of Paulus. "If he's considering himself a product, that's really good marketing. It should be a snowball effect, whatever school takesunoticeof it." Paulus played four years of bas- ketball at Duke. But under NCAA rules, he has a fifth year of eligibility should he choose to use it in a sport other than basketball. Every student- athlete has five years of blanket eligi- bility and can play four years of one particular sport. The NCAA released a statement yesterday considering Paulus's situa- tion. Itsaidthat if an athlete wants to compete immediately as a graduate student, his school will have to apply for a waiver. "One of the factors our members have determined is appropriate for a graduate student waiver is if the transfer is academically motivated," the statement read, according to ESPN.com. Paulus had garnered various aca- demic awards in his career, including a third-team ESPN The Magazine 2007-08 Academic All-America selection. If Paulus joins the Wolverines in the near future, he would compete with Tate Forcier, incoming fresh- man Denard Robinson and redshirt junior Nick Sheridan for the Wolver- ines' starting quarterback spot. "The next step is to keep learn- ing about the different opportuni- ties that are out there," Paulus said on the Dan Patrick radio show. "Whether it's a university or the workouts with the NFL teams ... basketball is an option as well. Just trying to learn about each opportunity." ARIEL BOND/Daily Sophomore Ben Baldus-Strauss scored a 15.6 on vault in the NCAA qualifiers last night. He matched his best score of the year. wolverines surge past Cal for second place in NCAA qualifier By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS - When the final rotation of the NCAA men's gymnastics team qualifiers began, the No. 4 Michigan men's gym- nastics squad stood in third place, just .65 points ahead of No. 8 Penn State. Less than 30 minutes later, junior co-captain David Chan came racing back to the sidelines after hitting his handspring double front vault. He pumped his fists and practically skipped back into the arms of his teammates. The Wolverines had not just left the Nittany Lions in the dust - they also surpassed No. 5 California to secure second place in the session with their best score of the season, 358.30. Michigan has made it to NCAA team finals in the last two seasons by the skin of its teeth, sliding into the Super Six in sixth place both years. This year, Michigan quali- fied fourth overall for tomorrow night's Super Six team finals, giving the Wolverines fourthpick of which event on which to begin the night. Few other than the Wolverines themselves would have predicted their finish after one rotation of competition. Michigan opened the session on parallel bars, its worst event atthe BigTen Championships, and didn't do much better than two weekends ago. Freshman Syque Caesar led the Wolverines off with a hit set in his first appearance since partially tearing his meniscus. But his team- mates couldn't build on it. Senior co-captain Phil Goldberg called the rotation "atrocious." After that, the Wolverines pro- gressed slowly but steadily through the rankings, posting consistenthits through the next five events. Just like at Big Tens, sophomore Thomas Kelley earned Michigan's top high- bar score in the anchor slot, putting the team on a roll. On floor, the energetic, fiery atmosphere that manifested at Big Tens returned with a vengeance. Sophomore Ben Baldus-Strauss, who is often ribbed by his team- mates for looking dissatisfied after every performance, even gave a fist pump while he ran off the floor. Senior Scott Bregman, who missed his set at Big Tens, hit every pass in Minnesota's Sports Pavilion as his teammates went crazy. Kel- ley and sophomore Chris Cameron anchored the rotation with Michi- gan's two highest floor scores. Most teams dread the pommel horse rotation - it is widely regard- ed as the most difficult event in gymnastics and the easiest on which to make a major mistake. Michigan, on the other hand, welcomed the challenge. Goldberg got the Wolverines started with a 14.60, his high- est score of the season. Redshirt freshman Adam Hamers smoothly executed his set for a 14.90, a sea- son high, and Chan and Cameron finished it off with two huge 15.15 scores. "I was joking with the coaches that I was going to break a 14.50 today, but I didn't actually think I was goingto do it," Goldberg said. Though No. 1 Stanford pulled away, eventually winning the ses- sion with a 361.10 score, the Wol- verines were still within striking distance of Cal as they headed into the two highest-scoring events of a gymnastics meet, still rings and vault. And Michigan had all the momentum it needed. When Cameron followed Gold- berg's near-perfect 15.15 rings set with Michigan's top rings score (15.35), his father beamed from ear- to-ear in the stands. Cameron's spe- cialties are usually pommel horse and parallel bars - and last night, he competed through intense pain in his right shoulder. "(Cameron's) doing an excellent job," Kelley said. "He's just such a tough kid. He's giving all he's got for this team and he's making sure that his routines are the best that they can be." In the final rotation, Michigan didn't look back at Penn State, even though the Nittany Lions trailed close behind. Instead the Wolver- ines had their eyes on the Golden Bears - and second place. Baldus-Strauss and Chan were the final Wolverines to vault. For Baldus-Strauss, it was the one-year anniversary of breaking his ankle on the same event. To make mat- ters worse, he had to wait through a lengthy judging conference regard- ing senior Ralph Rosso's vault. Finally, he got the signal to go and tied his season-high with a 15.60. "It was probably one of the best meets I've ever had, and it's such a good feelingto peak rightat the end," said Baldus-Strauss, who had about 20 family members and friends at the meet. "And we're seeded so well - we almostgave Stanford a run for their money, and we have room for improvement." Like Baldus-Strauss, anchor Chan has also been teased for not celebrating. He made up for it Thursday night. Never before had the junior shown such emotion in a meet as when he landed his vault and took a small hop forward. "After Big Tens, I just told myself, 'You've got to find the landing. It's there, I just have to find it,' " Chan said. "I found it today." Berset, Burgoon finally back By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Writer Most kids have a teddy bear, an action figure or a blanket to make them feel safe. The Michigan baseball team has junior catcher Chris Berset. Michigan's safety blanket returned to action yesterday dur- ing the Wolverines' doubleheader against Eastern Michigan. The whole pitching staff, aside from senior Chris Fetter, has strug- gled of late, allowing an average of 8.7 runs over the last 10 games. In six of those contests, they allowed 10 or more runs, including Wednes- day's 11-5 loss to the Eagles. Berset played in his first game since breaking his thumb on his throwing hand in February against Jacksonville.And he's alreadythink- ing about turning things around. "It feels great just tobe out there with the guys and to help them out," Berset said. "We're going through a tough time right now and I'm just trying to help them out any way." He went 1-for-4 against the Eagles with a double and one RBI. Berset also was 1-for-2 on prevent- ing stolen base attempts. Beyond the scatsheet, the Wolver- ines will welcome back Berset's abil- ityto handle their pitchingstaff. "It's tough," Berset said. "I tried to battle with some of the pitchers. I mean they're missing spots right now, and pitching is all about locat- ing, changing speeds. And rightnow we're not doing a very good job of it. So we need to pick it up. And some- one's got to go down, dig deep for us. That's what we need." Berset could be the guy the pitch- ers need to help them "dig deep" in tough situations the rest of the year. Michigan coach Rich Maloney and Berset both said the junior would have to shake the rust off after missing six weeks, and he said he still needed to get his "groove" back. Once he settles into that groove, his effectiveness as a catcher could make Sophomore Tyler Burgoon has a 3.24 ERA for the Wolverines this season. the pitching staff that much better. Along with Berset's return, the pitching staff got a boost from soph- omore pitcher Tyler Burgoon, who injured his shoulder against Oak- land on Mar. 31. He entered the first game of the doubleheader in the sixth inningwith Michigan down by one. The Eagles had tworunnersonbase and Eastern was poised to extend its lead. When Michigan needed someone to shut down the Eagles, Burgoon delivered. With just nine pitches, Burgoon efficiently pitched 1.1 innings. He got Eastern Michigan's Jim Gulliver to fly out to end the scoring threat in the sixth. In the seventh, he induced a double play to end the game and improve his record to 3-0. "Being back from an injury like that, it was scary at first - never know what's going on in there," Burgoon said. "But it felt like forever just sitting out watching the team." The sophomore reliever is now tied withsophomore Matt Miller for the most appearances as a pitcher this season with 13 and is fourth on the team with a 3.24 ERA. Burgoon pitched to Berset Wednesday and acknowledged the importance of having his battery- mate back from injury. "Havinghimback, I think, instills a lot of confidence," Burgoon said. "He knows my pitches. He knows where it's going to go.It's great." Burgoon and the rest of the pitch- ing staff are looking for positive while trying to reverse their recent slump. Maloney was also looking for bright spots to take into this week- end's three-game series against Michigan State, which starts this afternoon with game one at3 p.m. "Chris Berset, it was good to see him back out there," Maloney said. "And the team feels so much more confident with him there, which is very encouraging. "And the other thing is, Burgoon pitched an inning. We didn't want to pitch him more, because we need him against Michigan State.... It's really encouraging to see him back on the mound. So that's a positive." Ambassadors to the game of lacrosse Y..u.MSir t 'r b it4 , 9 ,, u ~~~ ,wwQ N ,l,ncrlfr & mlererlmes4 T 9S,.ai,9-_ By JAKE FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer "Sick lax." Like a baby's first words, it was repeated over and over: "Sick lax." For six Japanese lacrosse players, the phrase definedtheirlthree-week spring vacation in Ann Arbor. The players lived with senior midfielder Nick Standiford and other members of the Michigan lacrosse team. It was all about experiencing the life of an Wolverine lacrosse player - the grueling practices, the long hair, the glamorous gear, the par- ties and the undefeated record. "Sick Lax is a clothing company that my roommate started," Stan- diford said. "And (the Japanese players) got T-shirts, pink T-shirts. They're pretty cool. And it's also a term to describe good lacrosse play, so the first thing I taught them was the phrase 'Sick lax.'" Michigan hosts players from the University of Tokyo each spring as part of an initiative to help fuel the sport's rapid growth, especially in Japan. The country has around 100 teams compete on a collegiate level. And Michigan coach John Paul visits the University of Tokyo each summer to facilitate the develop- ment of its growing program. Few Japanese high schools have lacrosse teams, and most players are new to the sport when they come to the collegiate level. College students coordinate the teams and fill their coaching slots with for- mer players. The Blue Bullets at the University of Tokyo are one of the best teams in Japan and excel at an academically oriented school. "University of Tokyo has very weak sports, because we always studied in high school," Bullet mid- fielder Tokeiji Michitoshi said. "In Japan, (we) all start lacrosse in col- lege, so we have no disadvantage, and we are not so weak compared to other sports." Despite their lack of experi- ence, players are expected to learn "There's no party like America." the game quickly. When Paul first arrived on the scene, the young Jap- anese team routinely held five-hour practices each morningbefore class. Players and coaches spent much of their time discussing strategies and simulating game situations through conversation. But now, their prac- tices are much more efficient. "I think having eight years of involvement, especially with the Tokyo team, we've had a lot of influence on how they do things and what they do," Paul said. "Tac- tically, they run a lot of the things we run, so they learn a lot of their systems from us." In the last three weeks, the Jap- anese players practiced with the Wolverines. Their lacrosse skills surpass those of an average lacrosse player, a testamentto the focus and dedication of the Tokyo team. Michigan coaches also gave each player individual coaching ses- sions outside of practice. They held weight-lifting sessions, form-shoot- ing drills and game-speed exercises as part of their training program. "I stay'in touch with their coach- es throughout the year, and a lot of their alumni, and I hear a lot that coming here really influences a lot of their players," Paul said. "Espe- cially when they send us over some of their better players. A lot of those guys can take a big leap after play- ing here for a few weeks." Standiford and junior midfielder Svet Tintchev also coordinated a social schedule to complement the strict lacrosse instruction. Michi- gan players gave Michitoshi and his teammates the opportunity to drive on the right side of the road, attend a Detroit Tigers game, go bowling and experience Ann Arbor's nightlife. "Every year, they get more and more excited about living the life- style of a college lacrosse player, which they love," Tintchev said. "They think it's so cool that we go to class, have a social life, play lacrosse, and just so easygoing compared to their lifestyle, which is justway more strict." When asked how he would describe the experience to his teammates back home, Michitoshi responded with a big smile. "Very fun. There is no party like America." I 4 6 6