8A - Thursday, February 18, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Blue gymnasts ready for top talent. Wolverines face two top-five teams in coming Weeks By MICHAEL LAURILA Daily Sports Writer For the No. 3 Michigan men's gymnastics team, the schedule doesn't get much more intimidating than it is in the next three weeks. On Saturday Michigan will face No. 2 Oklahoma, followed by No. 4 Stanford and top-ranked Illinois the weekend after. In 2007, the Wolverines were in a similiar posi- tion, yet were unable to sustain suc- cess late in the season, in part due to injuries. "We're just going to have to be on top of our game and stay healthy," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "We do have enough depth, so if we do experience sickness or injury, we should still be able to overcome anybody. The teams are so close that when you're in the top three or four teams anyone could win it. I think we have a little advan- tage because of our depth, but that remains to be seen." That depth that was evident last weekend. With top athletes such as juniors Chris Cameron and Thomas Kelley resting after their two-day performance in the Winter Cup Invitational, the Wolverines still beat the No. 11 University of Illinois at Chicago. Barely graduating any seniors after last season's NCAA runner- up finish, Michigan has an arsenal of battle-tested veterans on its side. "I think experience does play a huge role in winning meets," Cam- eron said. "The best thing about this team is that it's so fresh. We're really coming to realize the level of gymnastics that we're doing is more than it was back in'07,'08, and even last year. That's why we're so con- fident in winning. We're using that past experience to make us way bet- ter right now." Cameron is currently nursing a hand injury, which will not hinder him from competition, but he will compete in different events from his usual slate. After his perfor- mance at the Winter Cup, he is cur- rently the second-ranked gymnast in the nation. Even with several talented ath- letes accustomed to the national stage, the Wolverines are not flaw- less. "We still have to improve," Gold- er said. "We're not good enough right now to win a champion- ship, but were certainly pointed in that direction and we can be good enough. We're not a good enough team where we can just coast from this point on." Two years ago, Oklahoma visited Michigan at about the same time in the season, in an almost identical position as well. In front of 1,760 fans, the Wolverines won by a mar- ginal three points. "It was the most fun meet I've ever competed in," redshirt senior Kent Caldwell said. "We sold out Cliff Keen and there was really good energy there. "Hopefully, all those things will come together again for a really good meet." Along the stretch, not only will the Wolverines' experience come in handy, but also the camaraderie they have developed. "We know what to expect and how to encourage one another," Cameron said. "We also know little ticks that people have so we avoid those. It makes everything really smooth. There's a trust there that you develop with teammates over time." Junior Chris Cameron sat out last week's meet against Illinois-Chicago after qualifying for the U.S. Nation Cup Invitational two weeks ago. Over career, Curtis emerged as leader in Maize and Blue Fuzetti takes his talent from . Ann Arbor to Kansas City By STEPHEN NESBITT Daily Sports Writer Senior Sarah Curtis stood up, smiled to the crowd, accepted a bou- quet of flowers and hopped onto the awards podium last Saturday. She had completed that routine four con- secutive times, beaming with each announcement. In her final home Big Ten meet for the No. 16 Michigan women's gymnastics team, Curtis took the all-around crown, placing in the top three spots in three events. "She puts 100 percent of her- self into everything that she does," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said of the senior. "She is a very passionate gymnast. When she walks into the doors of the-gym she puts everything into her gymnastics. She also puts all of herself into her academics." For Sarah Curtis, it was the aca- demics and gymnastics program at the University of Michigan were enough to make her to reject other top-notch schools like Stanford, UNC, Alabama, Arizona and Oregon State - most of which were closer to home - and choose Ann Arbor. "I chose Michigan for it's great combination of everything that was important to me," Curtis said. "I'm huge on academics, and this is obvi- ously one of the most prestigious universities, and there is also a very good gymnastics team. They really had the whole package, unlike every otherschool that I was looking at." The day before former Michigan assistant coach Joanne Bowers came to visit her in Reno, Curtis received a call from her front-runner, Stanford, saying the university had insufficient funds to offer her a scholarship for her freshman year. When Bowers invited her to visit the University of Michigan that August, Curtis who was interested in Michigan's pharmaceutical pro- gram accepted. And Michigan's call- ing card for her academically was the pharmaceutical program. "When Joanne came I wasn't really thinking about Michigan too much," Curtis said. "But in light of what Stanford said, I told her, 'Sure, I'll take a trip there.'" To make things easier, she took a call from Oregon State - the univer- sity she followed growing up - the day before stopping at Michigan. They said that they only had one scholarship left, and that she needed to make a decision soon so the money would not be wasted. Resenting the, added pressure, Curtis stepped away from the offer. Finishing her stretch of East Coast visits, she stepped onto the Michigan campus. "It was just one of those things where I really could already tell that I fit here in Ann Arbor," Curtis said. "I felt that I was really here, right where I was supposed to be. It was a hard decision to make, but I finally made the call." After arriving at Michigan for her freshman year, Curtis jumped right into a position in the all-around .behind then-junior Nellie Kippley, taking third in her first two meets and surpassing Kippley for second place in her third meet. But disaster struck as Curtis took a tumble and ruptured her Achilles' tendon during warm-ups for a home matchup against Denver. The injury required surgery, effectively ending her season and leaving her future as a gymnast in question. "How do I describe my freshman year? Turmoil," Curtis said. "Not being able to compete when I could have been a stronger contributor to our team was disappointing, but it kind of let me find my niche on the team." The highly touted prospect recov- ered from an unsuccessful freshman campaign to set her high marks as a second-year gymnast and was named the team's co-most valuable gymnast. She now carried a new mentality. "Every time you put on the block 'M' leotard, you never take it for granted," Curtis said. "You never know what's going to happen." Curtis was named team captain as a junior, and currently ranks seventh in team history with 23 all- around scores posted over the elite 39.000 mark. "I think Sarah has matured into a real leader of this team," Plocki said. "She isn't an extremely vocal person, butshedefinitelyisalead-by-example type of athlete. She is one of the hard- est workers, doesn't ever complain, she competes like she practices, and she practices like she performs." Curtis earned a spot on the All-Big Ten first team after her sophomore and junior years. For a career full of gaudy results, the team element has risen above her own feats: in her ten- ure Michigan has gone 32-2 in BigTen performances, the two losses coming duringherinjury absence in 2007. "My goals coming here were to do well in school here, enjoy school, and still participate in gymnastics at the same time," Curtis said. Just as the team's motto is "Mis- sion: Possible," with Curtis's success- ful career, her personal maxim could read, "Mission: Accomplished"' By BRIAN MECHANICK For the Daily It was 5:22 p.m. on Jan.14. Some Michigan students were in class, some were studying, and some were sleeping. But one Michigan senior sat anxiously on his com- puter as he found out his dream had come true. Mauro Fuzetti had just been drafted by Major League Soccer's Kansas City Wizards. Fuzetti's journey began in Rio de Janeiro, where he was born. The son of a former Brazilian profes- sional soccer player, Fuzetti found his love of the game in the futebol obsessed culture. Fuzetti modeled his game on Brazilian superstars Ronaldo and Ronaldinho. However, it was in his move to Houston where Fuzetti became a star in his own right. At Stratford High School, Fuzetti was a playmaker and three-time team MVP. After choosing to play collegiately at Michigan, Fuzetti began a stellar career, in which he was a four-year starter for the Wolverines, garner- ingAll-Big Ten honorsin his junior and senior seasons. As his time in Ann Arbor came to a close, his attention turned towards the 2010 MLS draft. Luckily for Fuzetti, he had a friend to help him through the process. Peri Maroievic, Fuzetti's teammate for three years at Michi- gan, experienced the same process the previous year. He was drafted No. 5 overall by FC Dallas. "We talked alot about the whole process," Fuzetti said. "Every- thing I was going through he had gone through. Step-by-step he was giving me advice with the agents and the combine." The MLS combine, which took place Jan. 9-12 would prove piv- otal in determining Fuzetti's MLS prospects. More than 60 of the best prospects came together to demonstrate their skills and scrimmage against one another fighting to prove their draft stock. "It's different than playing for your college team," Fuzetti said. "On a college team everyone is a good player, but they are still on certain levels, being freshmen, sophomores and upperclassmen. But at the combine everyone is at the same level of quality, so the speed of play and the level is just a little bit higher. It's a lot more fun to play and it's a lot better quality soccer." Coming out of the combine, Fuzetti caught the Wizards' eye. "At the combine we wanted to address a couple of our needs," Kansas City assistant coach Kerry Zagavin said. "One of them beinga good, solid midfield player. Mauro at the draft looked to possess some of the qualities that would make him attractive within our team." And while he hadn't been one of the most heralded players going into the combine, Fuzetti held his own against the best in the nation. "He makes good decisions on the ball," Zagavin said. "Some guys play more with athleticism and some guys play more with their intelligence within the game and I think Mauro bringsthe latter of that. ... Mauro is good with his right foot and his left foot but his timing coming out of midfield and ability to get himself involved and integrated into the game is pretty good." With only two days between the end of the combine and the MLS Draft, Fuzetti was left with noth- ing left to do but wait for his name to be called. On draft day, Fuzetti had to wait through forty picks until he was drafted 41st-overall in the third round. "Only the first round was shown on ESPN," Fuzetti said. "So after that you had to follow it on your computer, which is even worse. You have to wait name by name to pop up on the computer, but once you finally see your name it's the best feeling ever." The elation over being drafted was short lived however, as he was soon off to Kansas City to partici- pate in training camps and fight for a roster spot. Looming over the league, however, are labor negotia- tions that have threatened a lock- out this season. Fuzetti admitted that he does think about a poten- tial lockout, but as it's outside of his control, he tries to prepare for the season as best as he can. The Wizards' experienced players like Josh Wolff and Davy Arnaud, both U.S. National Team members and MLS veterans - have provided leadership for Fuzetti, making the adjustment to his new team easier. "I've actually had a chance to have dinners with both as a group," Fuzetti said. "It's nice to have people like that who are will- ing to share information with you and try to make you more success- ful." After only the beginning of the preseason, Fuzetti has experi- enced a level of soccer far more difficult and intense than he expe- rienced at Michigan. Zagavin says that Fuzetti has shown himself well so far in camp. Still, neither Fuzetti nor Zaga- vin can make any guarantees for his MLS future. As a middle-round draft pick, nothing is a given for Fuzetti. The whole Wizards orga- nization understands that in an MLS where over 80 percent of its players have non-guaranteed con- tracts, player will be cut if he stops producing. Fuzetti has an opportunity though, playing for a Wizards team that was third worst in the MLS last season. Zagavin admit- ted that the Wizards are going through a youth movement and are looking for rookies to contribute. "Just getting some playing time as a rookie," Fuzetti said when asked about his goals, "establish- ing some sort of role on the team where I can come in and make an impact in the game." But, even though he is taking a pragmatic approach to this season, that does not mean he doesn't have bigger goals for the future. "As far as my highest goals go," Fuzetti said. I probably am looking to play in the MLS three, four, or five years and then depending on how well I do, be able to go play in Europe somewhere." @" " 2010 sE#tuwer Fatcial Aid App1'c s: PLANNING TO REGISTER FOR SPRING/SUMMER CLASSES -f, nOW is the time to apply for financial aid. To be considered for all aid programs, be sure that: " you register at least half-time during your appointed enrollment time, and o the Office of Financial Aid receives all of your Spring/Summer application materials/information by: Friday, March 12, 2010. 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