8A - Thursday, February 11, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com After a disappointing finish in '09, Blue looks toward upcoming year By CAITLIN SMITH Daily Sports Writer The Michigan baseball team spiced things up from the conven- tional peanuts and Cracker Jacks, kicking off its season with a "Meet the Wolverines Night," yesterday. The event consisted of a clown, free food, decorative balloons and young fans enthusiastically running from player to player to receive auto- graphs. "The meet and greet is about pro- moting and celebrating our great tradition in baseball," Michigan coach Rich Maloney said. "We have a nice festive time in preparation for the season and hopefully get people excited to come out and watch the boys play." As the team's veterans, junior Ryan LaMarre and senior co-cap- tains Mike Dufek and Chris Berset have experienced several meet and greets over their years as Wolver- ines. "This event shows that the sea- son is right around the corner," LaMarre said. "It gets the fans ready to go, and it lets the young guys who haven't done this before get their feet wet and sign some autographs." The players may be enjoying their stardom now, but they have yet to swing a bat in competition. Michigan's season opener is in just over a week against Jacksonville State in the Texas Tech Tourna- ment. The Wolverines will then continue their play on the road for more than a month. Michigan will face opponents Louisville, St. Johns and South Flor- ida at neutral venues, slightly easing the challenge of playing away from home. But a number of games will be held at the opponents' stadiums, toughening the competition. This should be expected by players as they represent Michigan - a state known for snow-filled winters. "It's hard to win on the road, first of all," Maloney said. "Then you factor in the statistic that the top 75 teams in the NCAA win 79 percent of the time at their home venue. So for our kids to travel, we're goingto have to be road warriors." Regardless of any on-the-road apprehension along the way, Michi- gan's ultimate goal is to make it to Omaha and compete for a national championship in June. But the team must first redeem itself after a disappointing finish last year. Michigan placed seventh in the Big Ten at the end of the 2009 season. While this could hardly be considered a disastrous finish, it knocked the Wolverines off their three-year pedestal as Big Ten champions. "We kind of got a little bit spoiled there," Maloney said. "But we want to get back, we want another taste of it. We have a very, very difficult schedule - the toughest by far in the history of Michigan baseball. But the good thing is, you learn things together, you battle through it together, and you grow as a team together." Pitching has been a key area of concern for Michigan in the offsea- son with the departure of ace Chris Fetter, but the team has a solid com- bination of speed and power. "We need to be more consistent all-around," LaMarre said. "Last year we had our pitching show up one night, our hitting show up another, our defense another. So, I think we are looking to put it all together and really show up every day." Michigan also has several fresh- men that will immediately enter the starting lineup, including short- stop Derek Dennis and outfielders Patrick Biondi and Ben Ballantine. Dennis was selected in the 10th round of the 2009 MLB Draft by the Tampa Bay Rays. He tuned down a professional contract signing bonus to be Michigan's shortstop this sea- son. "Dennis is a guy that was highly acclaimed out.of high school," Malo- ney said. "He is what football would call a five-star player. He turned down $700,000 to come to Michi- gan. So he is out there, very on the national scene. He is the guy every- body else wished they would have." Dennis could have been signing autographs in Tampa as a profes- sional athlete. Instead, he chose to represent Michigan, bear the inclement weather and sign team posters at a Wolverine meet and greet. 0 SA- ALSALAH/Daily Michigan coach John Beilein, in his third year at the helm in Ann Arbor, admitted on his radio show that the Wolverines may be in a rebuilding phase this season. Scoring attac..k of Gophers will challenge 'M' SAI)ALSALAH/Daily Senior co-captains Chris Berset (loft) and Mike Dufek (right) are two of the Wolverines' hey components after not making the Big Ten Touroament last season., By GJON JUNCAJ "He had a sophomore year just Daily Sports Editor like (sophomores) Zack Novak and Stu Douglass are having," Beilein There were goals - promising said of Hoffarber, who shot just 34 ones. Best of all, they seemed well percent last season after hitting 43 within reason. percentfrom downtown asa fresh- The Michigan men's basketball- man. "Kids just go through these team was on an accelerated course things." back to Big Ten relevance. Look- "(Minnesota) could make a run ing to earn its second consecutive right now. We're going to try to NCAA Tour- . get in the way. ... We're going to be nament berth, Mihigan a ready." the Wolverines With four days between games, appeared to Minnesota the Michigan coaching staff will have the pro- Matchup: have had ample time to address gram's founda- Michigan 11-12; several mismatches on paper. tion in place, Minnesota 14-8 The Golden Gophers are allowing one their coach When: Tonight opponents to shoot a league-low - John Beilein at 7 p.m. 39.7-percent, while the Wolverines - described at Wh Wil are next to last in shooting with a length in the hams Arena 41.1 percent rate. preseason. Since Michigan's 3-point After 23 TV/Radio: offense is likely to remain at or games, Michi- ESPN near the bottom of the conference gan (4-7 Big Ten, the rest of the way, Beilein figures 11-12 overall) has gradually fallen his team's best chance is to bring behind that curve. And for the the ball closer to Minnesota's first time publicly, Beilein hinted giant frontcourt - with caution, of that the Wolverines' goals for the course. remainder of this season have now Led by sophomores Colton Iver- morphed into something more son and Ralph Sampson III, the intangible. Golden Gophers are the leading "I had one of the recruits ask me shot-blockers in the Big Ten at 6.3 one time - he was born in 1990 ... swats per game. if Michigan was ever good in bas- "Your shot could end up in the ketball," Beilein said during his rafters when you're trying to take weekly radio show Monday. "That it to the basket," Beilein said. "Our just blew me away, for a guy who mid-range game - we've got to had watched all these great (Wol- pull up from 10-15 feet instead of verine) teams. We will get it back, taking it all the way to the basket but it looks like we're in a bit of a sometimes." rebuilding phase already in year outside of junior guard Manny three." Harris, however, no one on Michi- Contrast that realization with gan's roster has shown they can tonight's opponent - Minnesota consistently hit those mid-range (S-S Big Ten, 14-I), which has hit jumpers. And with the Golden an extended rough patch of its Gophers ready to throw a combi- own, having lost five of its last nation of man, zone and pressing eight games. defenses, the Wolverines will have But Minnesota, sitting at No. 62 to rely on execution more so than in the RPI rankings, is still in firm any innovative X's and O's. control of its destiny in its hope for With less than a month remain- back-to-back NCAA Tournament ing in the season, and the same invitations. And though they still recurring problems still at the have to play themselves off the forefront, Michigan seems past the bubble, there are plenty of signs point of any breakthrough adjust- pointingto abignight forthe Gold- ments. en Gophers. "We're a very small team," Minnesota leads the Big Ten Beilein said. "So it's very difficult in overall scoring (75 points per to go do things inside. ... (Big Ten game), largely because of guards teams) are goingto makeyou shoot Lawrence Westbrook and Blake it from the outside, and they're not Hoffarber, who are combining for going to letyou drive into the lane. 25 points on 51-percent shooting "For whatever reason, we have this season. Hoffarber has under- not been able to shoot the ball well. gone one of the most dramatic And as a result, they keep pack- improvements in the country, lead- ing it in.... It's not as schematic as ing the nation with a 50-percent people would think.Sometimes it's clip from behind the arc. just personnel." T HE H ON OR aoS OC IE TY O F PHI KAPPA PHI BLITZ WEEK! 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