The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com | April 5, 2010 Al Around Cameron defeats teammate and last year's champ Kelley By MICHAEL LAURILA Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - When junior Chris Cameron finished second at the Winter Cup Invitational in Feb- ruary and was named the second- best gymnast in America, that was only the beginning. This past weekend at the Big Ten Championships, Cameron won the all-around competition and floor exercise, becoming the sec- ond straight Wolverine to win the crown. He was named to the first team All-Big Ten for the second consecu- tive year, and was given the Big Ten Gymnast of the Year award. Even having accomplished all that, Cameron was disappointed, since the fourth-ranked Wolverines weren't able to bring home a Big Ten Championship on Friday night. "I just had a decent night," Cam- eron said. "Floor was definitely the best event I had. I don't think I've ever gotten into that mode before when I just felt like a piece of steel flipping around out there." And with the all-around win, Cameron, and last year's champion Thomas Kelley still have one more year of eligibility left. "I think (Cameron) just has an inner drive to succeed and become the best gymnast he can become," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "It's really hard to find, and we're fortunate at Michigan to have a guy that's driven that hard." Cameron is only a junior, yet he has accomplished more in his first three years than many Wolverines have in their entire careers. Cameron was a 2009 NCAA All- American, and has a good shot at "He goes the extra mile to make sure he's doing it right." repeatingthat honor when the Wol- verines compete at NCAAs in two weeks. "He's more dedicated than any other gymnast I've ever met," junior Thomas Kelley, last years all-around champion, said. "He's got that little extra drive and little extra confidence that I think a lot of us aspire to have in our gymnastics. "Just to go out, and know that you're going to hit no matter what. Chris doesn't waver. He's always rock solid." Cameron was also the runner-up on the stillrings and made the finals on Saturday on the parallel bars and pommel horse. Both Cameron and Kelley have one year of eligibility remaining. Not onlyis he particularly driven, but he also has a natural ability to push his teammates. He is a perfect model of one who leads by example. "He goes the extra mile to make sure he's doing everything right," redshirt senior Ryan McCarthy said. "When somebody would be tired and cash in and go to the showers, he takes that extra turn, even when he's tired. "He's really awesome to work out with because he's motivating for everyone. He holds everyone to a high standard and that's really good for our program." In two weeks, Cameron will try to lead Michigan to its first National Championship since 1999. When asked what the team will need to do, Cameron didn't chalk it up to simply getting better and hit- ting all of its sets. "We got to stop messing around and trying to minimize deduc- tions and stuff like that," Cameron said. "Minimal shouldn't be in our vocabulary anymore. Maximize score, maximize height and maxi- mize distance. "Everything we do has to be bigger, faster, and stronger." Junior Chris Cameron is now a two-time first team All-Big Ten gymnast after his championship performance this weekend. inishes second By MICHAEL LAURILA Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - Having shared the Big Ten Championship with Illinois last year, the No. 4 Michi- gan men's gymnastics team was looking to take the crown out- right this year when it traveled to St. John Arena this past weekend. Unfortunately for the Wolver- ines, after a disastrous pommel horse routine, plagued with falls, they were defeated Friday night by 1.55 points at the hands of the third-ranked Fighting Illini, fin- ishing second in the conference. Junior Chris Cameron won the all-around competition and floor exercise, along with the Big Ten Gymnast of the Year award. Usually, it's hard to blame one event in particular for a team's loss, but on Friday that was the case. Michigan lost 2.65 points to Illinois in that event alone. The Fighting Illini had a solid perfor- mance overall, but nowhere near perfect. "Illinois didn't hit every set," junior Chris Cameron said. "Our hit percentage was probably high- er but they had more champion- ship-level sets and their starting values were higher when it mat- tered. "We didn't hit pommels, and if we did hit pommels, it would have been a different story." On Friday, the Wolverines took part in the team competition, and on Saturday, the individual event competitions were held. The meet consisted of six Big Ten teams, five of them in the top ten in the country: Illinois, Michigan, No. 5 Ohio State, No. 6 Minnesota, No. 7 Penn State and Iowa. Even with all the tough competition, it was mostly a two- horse race between the Wolver- ines and Fighting Illini. When it was all said and done, the third-place Nittany Lions were 10.85 points behind Michi- gan. "I think it was clear all year that we were the two teams to beat and that there was a drop," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "My surprise is that I thought the drop would maybe be about five points, and we're looking at about ten or eleven." Other notable performances for the Wolverines were senior Mel Santander's second-place finish in the all-around competi- tion behind Cameron on Friday and his third-place finish on the parallel bars on Saturday. Santander and junior Thomas Kelley were also named to the All-Big Ten first team. All year, the Wolverines have struggled with putting together a full, poised competition. Before their last dual meet against Ohio State, when they set an all around school record, they had yet to do so. They are always trying to fin- ish the last two or three rota- tions strong, and hope to do so at NCAAs. "We have to make our fifth See BIG TENS, Page 3B EMILY CHIU/Daily Junior Thomas Kelley finished second in the All-Around and helped the fourth-ranked Wolverines to a second-place finish at the Big Ten Championships. No. 3 Illinois beat Michigan by just 155 points. WOMEN'S TENNIS Michigan beats Wildcats for first time in thirteen years SOFTBALL Offensive explosion propels 'M' By BRIAN MECHANICK Daily Staff Writer With the success the Michigan women's tennis team has been fighting, they might never want to come home. A weekend sweep of No. 4 Northwestern and Wisconsin gave the Wolverines their ninth- straight win, with the last seven coming on the road. No. 8 Michigan (5-0 Big Ten, 15-3 overall) defeated the Wild- cats, 4-3, and the Badgers, 6-1, giv- ing the Wolverines a 5-0 record in conference play. The Wolverines entered Sat- urday's match at Northwestern winless against the Wildcats since 1997. Northwestern had not lost in Big Ten competition since April 2004, a winning streak of 81 matches. The day got off to a strong start as the Wolverines swept doubles to take the pivotal first point. Wolverine junior Denise Mure- san dominated 13th ranked Maria Mosolova - the same player to whom she lost in the fall - 6-3, 6-0. "I saw her in the fall," Muresan said. "So I knew how she played and how Ihad to play. I was able to just play smart today, hit my shots and take my opportunities." But two straight Northwest- ern(4-1 Big Ten, 13-4 overall) wins tied the overall score, 2-2. No. 5 singles stemmed the tide, as senior Tania Mahtani got the cru- cial win. Down 5-2 in the first set, Mahtani rallied to win 7-5, 6-3. "I got off to a rough start," Mahtani said, "I was trusting my game, but I wasn't quite execut- ing in the beginning of the first set. I went down 5-2, 40-15, but I just kept trusting my game, stayed calm, and knew that I was going to be able to come back." Freshman Mimi Nguyen clinched the match for the Wol- verines with a straight-set win in No. 4 singles. "It shows the progress of the program," Michigan coach Ron- nie Bernstein said. "Northwest- ern is the team to beat in the Big Ten, so we've definitely caught up to them. The girls have improved a lot and it's just a good group. We work hard, and we believe in our- selves, so it really doesn't matter who we're playing." In Sunday's match at Wiscon- sin, the Wolverines again got off to a strong start as they swept doubles to take the first point. Muresan took No. 1 singles in dominant fashion to take the sec- ond point, but Wisconsin (1-4 Big Ten, 6-12 overall) made it inter- See WILDCATS, Page 3B By LUKE PASCH Daily Sports Writer You would be hard-pressed to find a weekend on the softball schedule as lopsided as last week- end was. The sec- WISCONSIN 0 ond-ranked MICHIGAN 15 Wolverines (3-0 Big Ten, 26-5 over- WISCONSIN 0 all) squared MICHIGAN 8 off against Wisconsin in their second Big Ten matchup of the season. And from the first inning on a drizzly Satur- day afternoon in Ann Arbor, there was little competition. Over the series' two games, Michigan tallied 18 hits, while Wis- consin mustered just two (one in each game). Michigan crossed the plate 23 times. Wisconsin never managed to do so, as the Wolverines won 15-0 on Saturday and 8-0 on Sunday. With the eight-run mercy rule in effect, neither game surpassed five innings. This was a fate the Badgers (0-4, 8-20) have met before - the last time they were shut out back- to-back was last April in Madison against the visiting Wolverines. Saturday's game featured a Michigan lineup that performed well from top to bottom. The only starter who didn't get a hit, senior catcher Roya St. Clair, still drove in a run on a sacrifice fly to right field that opened up the scoring for a 10-run second inning. Sophomore second baseman Amanda Chidester hit a two-run shot to left in the first inning, and senior third baseman Maggie Viefhaus smacked an oppo- site field three-run homer to left in the following frame. Senior centerfielder Molly Baush- er continued to prove her worth from the nine-hole in the lineup as well, as she hit a bases-clearing double to the wall in left center that blew open the second inning. "The nine-hitter is a very impor- tant role," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "To me, it's a place of honor. Her job is to have good at- bats, turn the lineup over and make things happen. And I have main- tained for the lasttwo years, at least, that when Molly Bausher is getting on base, we're winning games." Junior pitcher Jordan Taylor needed to toss just three innings to' earn her 14th win of the sea- son. Once the Wolverines went up by 15, Hutchins cleared the bench and replaced Taylor with freshman Stephanie Speierman, even though Taylor had a no-hitter in the mak- ing. "It was a chance for us to get Steph (Speierman) in the game," Hutchins said. "Jordan was throw- ing a no-hitter, but if Steph doesn't get some innings, it's going to be hard to develop her and hard to keep her motivated. It was too good of an opportunity to pass up." The freshman hurler seized the opportunity, as she struck out four over two innings of work. She did give up a bloop single to right with two outs in the fifth inning to lose the combined no-hitter, but she came back strong to strike out the next batter and end the game. See SOFTBALL, Page 3B ROAD TO CRISLER U Women's basketball coach Kevin Borseth has been successful everywhere he's been. Follow his journey from his hometown gym to Crisler's hardwood. Page 4B CANHAM'S TV DEBUT * Michigan water polo defended Ann Arbor in front of a packed house and its first-ever television audience as they beat arch-rival Indiana in a close match. Page 3B