2B - April 12, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wolverines get seven first-place finishes By JIMMY SHEN for improvement. For the Daily "We are looking for some more personal records," Liske said. After a rather disappointing "Expectations for ourselves are indoor season, the Michigan wom- pretty high, and I don't think any- en's track and field team is defi- one has met their expectation nitely happy to see such a smooth for the season yet. You just got to transition outdoors. remind yourself you know what "Usually the transition from you're doing and you do this every indoor to outdoor is kind of rough," day of the week. You come in and redshirt sophomore Allison Liske work your butt off and do what you said. "The sprinters are moving know how to do, and hopefully the a longer distance for the sprints, results will find you in the right and the throwers are moving from spot." one to three events, and some of us Day two of competition saw a from two to three, but so far, it's much better showing throughout been a pretty smooth transition." the roster. Redshirt junior Abbey The Wolverines packed their Breiedenstein took first place in bags for the 2,000-mile journey the pole vault, and junior Lauren out to California to compete in the Young took first place in the high three-day Rafer Johnson/Jackie jump - the first time in her col- Joyner Kersee Invitational. The legiate career. Freshman Kaitlyn weekend was full of championship- Patterson also impressed by taking caliber performances worthy of the second place in the 5,000-meter team'sburgeoning expectations. with a time of 17:14.27, improving Michigan saw some of its tough- her previous season low by 22 sec- est competition at this meet, but onds. Pendleton also set a new per- that did not seem to faze the young sonal record in the shot put, taking team, as they have already notched third place with a mark of 13.43 six first-place finishes and 22 top- meters. three finishes in the first three Despite the departure of the weekends of the outdoor season. strong 2009 senior class, this year's in day one of competition, fresh- team is not showing any signs man Erin Pendleton and redshirt of inexperience, especially with sophomore Allison Liske set new junior captains Danielle Tauro and personal records in the hammer Emily Pendleton, Emily's older sis- throw, placing fifth and eighth in ter, leading the way. In just three the event, respectively. But accord- days of competition at UCLA, ing to Liske, there is always room Tauro and Pendleton combined for four first place finishes. Tauro took first place in both the 800 meter run and in the mile run. It was her first time running the mile out- doors. "I need to continue to work my way up, and hopefully my progress will be moving at the same rate as the level of competition," Tauro said. Then hopefully my body will be ready to run faster at those plac- es. I'm just more interested in get- ting my body ready to run fast and peak at the right time, instead of peakingtoo early." Emily Pendleton also shined, showing off her strength by win- ning the shot put and discus event. Pendleton has now won the discus at all three invitationals she has participated in this year. "I'm just happy with how I'm doing and hoping to do better," Pendleton said. "I am ready to throw farther, and I got to keep being patient with myself and go for that." In the end, the team was able to rack up seven first-place finishes - three on the track and four in the field. "We're happy but never satis- fied," Liske said. "You just gotta say 'Hip hip hooray,' pat yourself on the back, and then move forward. It's going to take some bigger marks than what happened this weekend to place in the Big Tens and region- als and nationals as well." CLIF REEDER/Daily Sophomore quarterback Tate Forcier made his debut at the Big House in last year's Spring Game, which drew nearly 50,000 fans to Michigan Stadium. Forcier started every game for the Wolverines last season with Denard Robinson also getting time at the quarterback position. This year, the two, plus early enrollee Devin Gardner, are locked in a preseason quarterback battle. Why you should go to football's Spring Game 'M' finishes 12th while battling bad weather Thompson and Kim are bright spots for the Wolverines. By MICHAEL WELCH For the Daily The Michigan men's golf team went to Raleigh, North Carolina expecting great weather and good scoring conditions at the Wolf- pack Invitational. And they got them - in the practice round on Thursday. Unfortunately, when tourna- ment play started on Friday, the conditions were far from ideal. "The first day it was extreme- ly windy," said Michigan coach Andrew Sapp. "We'd gotten almost an inch of rain the night before the first round, so the ball wasn't rolling at all, so it made a long course even longer." With the poor weather, the Wolverines were unable to keep up with the pace set by North Carolina, falling 29 strokes off the lead and sitting in 16th out of 18 teams. The only real positive for the Wolverines was that both sophomore Matt Thompson and junior Lion Kim stood just three strokes off the individual lead. The three remaining Wolver- ine players, however, stood firmly at the bottom of the leaderboard, with freshman Jack Schultz and junior Alexander Sitompul tied at 84th and freshman Rahul Bakshi in 80th. With the course playing tough, Schultz, Sitompul, and Bakshi posted first round scores of 79, 80 and 81, driving the Wol- verines out of contention. "We're a good enough team where we shouldn't have three guys in the bottom 10," Kim says. With better weather for the final round on Saturday, Michigan improved and drew upon many positives after a tough first day. After a 18-over 36 holes, Sitompul shot a two-under 69 that includ- ed an eagle on the tough par-five first hole. Thompson continued his strong play with an even-par round that earned him a tie for third. If not for bogies on three of the four par fives, he could have earned the individual tournament win, a strong confidence boost during a tough outing for the Wolverines. "I'm glad to see Matt play well this week after not playing very well the last tournament," Sapp said. "It's good to see him getting his game back in shape near the end of the season." Overall though, it seemed like it was the same story for Michi- gan on both days of the tour- nament. Two players had good rounds and the other three play- ers' rounds hurt the Wolverines' team score. In the final round, Kim shot three-over, Schultz posted a four-over round, and Bakshi shot five-over. "We wanted to climb up five or six spots because we felt that there were five or six teams that (we felt) we could catch with a good round," Sapp said. With the Big Ten Champion- ships and NCAA regionals com- ing up, it will be important for the Wolverines to have every member of the team trusting each other to play good golf. Kim says a new attitude for the playoffs will help accomplish that. "It's game time, really," Kim says. "We're gonna go out there with a new mindset, with an atti- tude of, 'This is a new tourna- ment,' and just not worry about where we stand and play good golf." When I was in elementa- ry school, my dad used to pack the car one Sat- urday in April and drive me and a few friends down to Ann Arbor for the Michigan Football Spring Game. Back then, it was actually a pretty low-key affair. Lloyd Carr never opened the playbook - you know, just in case John Coo- per or JoePa happened to be at the Big ANDY House for the REID afternoon. Some years the "game" resembled a pregame warm-up stretch. Some years the offense and defense actually ran a few bare-bones plays on each other. And, for a youngster like myself, there really wasn't a whole lot to get excited about other than frantically trying to get players' autographs after the game. But last year wasn't your typi- cal Michigan Spring Game. The Rich Rodriguez-style is to go all out - that included a game that actually had excitement and, you know, the collective elements that comprise a "sporting event." It had the element of surprise; Tate Forcier, at that point just an enigma, a huge question mark and the team's most promis- ing sign of hope for the future, played the whole game and gave Michigan fans something to look forward to. There was also the amazing alumni game, which not only was fun to watch but it also helped quell some of the rumors and speculation that some former Michigan players were jumping off the RichRod bandwagon. And fans were treated to a tour of the locker room at the Big House, a very rare and treasured occurrence for the biggest maize- and-blue supporters. Oh, and don't forget about the 50,000-plus fans that came, by far the largest crowd ever at a Wol- verines' Spring Game. My point is this: Rodriguez has made this an event worth going to. I've talked to quite a few stu- dents who don't seem that inter- ested in going to the game. Maybe it's the team's subpar (a generous adjective here, I know) performance in the last few sea- sons, or maybe it's the fact that finals are rapidly approaching, but I'm surprised that there are so many students who seemingly plan on skipping it. I'm here to tell you to go. It was a great time last year, and, like then, you'll get a first chance to see an uber-hyped quarterback in his first appear- ance in a Michigan uniform. And if you, like me, are a senior, you've got no excuse not to at least check it out. I'm coming to the realization that this Saturday is probably the last Michigan sport- ing event I'll attend as a student of the University. That lends itself to some pretty mad nostalgia oppor- tunities. Whew. You may disagree with some of the changes Rodriguez has made in his time at Michigan, but the kinks he tweaked out of the Spring Game have really made it fun. And, at the end of the day, you're still a Michigan fan, because Michigan fans are not fair-weathered; come support the team. Andy can be reached at andvreidumichbedu Blue continues to roll Big Ten foes. Michigan comes up short in outdoor version of 'The Dual' New to their events, Forys and Strizich are two of six first-place finishers By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Writer After a 22-point loss to Ohio State in the indoor version of "The Dual" in January, the Michigan men's track and field team traveled to Columbus on Saturday with a lot to prove, underneath sunny skies and 65 degree weather. Coming into the meet, the Wol- verines knew they would need elite performances from all over the roster to beatthe Buckeyes. But those came few and far between, as Ohio State pulled away with the 116-84 victory. "We knew that if everybody on our team performed their best, we'd have a pretty good chance of winning," Michigan coach Fred LaPlante said. And after the first few events, it looked like the Wolverines had a good chance of earning a season split with their arch-rivals. Senior Sean Pruitt won the discus and the hammer throw, and sophomore Robert Peddlar won the triple jump as Michigan jumped out to an early lead. "We were tremendous for the early part of the meet, and I thought that was very good," LaPlante said. Junior captain Craig Forys was also a big part of that early success, making quite a first impression in the process. Forys ran the 3,000 meter steeplechase on Saturday for the first time in his career-and won it with a meet record time of 9:00.60, besting the previous mark set by Ohio State's Ian Connor. Consisting of 28 ordinary jumps and seven water jumps over the course of the race, the steeple- chase is not an easy event to get used to, let alone dominate. But Forys seemed right where he belonged, perfectly in his ele- ment. "Judging by how things went today, it feels like a really fun race," Forys said about the steeplechase. "It's definitely different." But unfortunately for the Wol- verines, they could not sustain any of that early momentum. Michigan won only six out of the 19 total events, and the Buck- eyes ran away with the win. "We had a few events where we rose to the occasion," LaPlante said. "But we also had a couple events where we felt like we had a chance to win and didn't, so that certainly changed the tide of things." One competitor who did exceed LaPlante's expectations was soph- omore Joe Strizich. Strizich, who is normally a decathlete, won the javelin with a throw of 193 feet-11 inches. The throw shattered his previous per- sonal best by nearly 30 feet. Strizich attributed his success to a slower approach to the throw and a different mental game plan. "I was trying to focus on hitting my positions, and just stay focused on competing and not necessarily how far the javelin goes," Strizich said. His new strategy worked, and his newfound confidence will be valuable as the Wolverines look to continue to improve in the follow- ing weeks, with the Big Ten Cham- pionships just a month away. "I know now that I can slow down and focus on my position," Strizich said. "So that's a really important thing to be comfortable with at this point in the season." By MATT RUDNITSKY Daily Sports Writer With Penn State and Ohio State traveling to Ann Arbor, the No. 3 Michigan women's tennis team needed wins against two of its most storied rivals in order to build a cushion on its Big Ten lead. Instead of coming up short in the big moments, the Wolverines (7-0 Big Ten, 17-3 overall) stepped it up a notch and are sitting atop the conference even more com- fortably now, after shutting out the Nittany Lions 7-0 on Saturday, and then dominating the Buckeyes 6-1 on Sunday. The two much-needed victories showed that Michigan is the clear- cut favorite to win the conference and potentially threaten for the top national ranking. "To be honest, I don't think that we expected to be in the top five," Michigan junior Denise Muresan said. "We knew that we had the ability to beat every team that we play, but we didn'tknow if we could put it all together. After these wins and beating Northwestern, I defi- nitely have the confidence in our team to win Big Ten's." Penn State didn't do much other than show up in the weekend's first matchup. The Wolverines domi- nated from the get-go, sweeping, the three doubles matches to take the first point. The Nittany Lions only man- aged to win four games in those three doubles matches combined. The Wolverines then kept their feet on the gas pedal, winning all six singles matches in straight sets. Penn State only saw a single set finish closer than 6-2. The next day, the Buckeyes at least made the Wolverines break a sweat. Ohio State opened the match firing on all cylinders, jumping up by an early break at No. 2 and No. 3 doubles, and by two early breaks at No. 1. But despite the early deficits and a surprisingly boisterous Buckeye cheering section, Michi- gan turned things around quickly, with juniors Whitney Taney and Rika Tatsuno taking No. 1 doubles, and Muresan and senior Tania Mahtani winning at No. 3, both by 8-5 scores. Freshman Mimi Nguyen and sophomore Michelle Sulahian couldn't pull out their match at No. 2 doubles, but it didn't matter, as the Wolverines took the doubles point and the early 1-0 lead. Michigan coach Ronni Bern- stein attributes much of the team's success to their strong doubles play. The Wolverines are 17-2 when winning the doubles point - a feat they have accomplished in 14 consecutive matches - and are 20-1 in Big Ten doubles matches. "I think it gives the girls con- fidence," Bernstein said. "We are really disciplined in our doubles play. They don't panic because we put them in so many different situ- ations in practice. When they are confident, like they are right now, it carries over into matches. We got really good starts on all the courts and just went from there." Despite the lopsided score, the singles wins didn't come without difficulty either. With Nguyen's match dead- locked at 4-4 in the first set, nei- ther team had taken control of the majority of singles matches. Nguyen then played an exhausting game lasting as long as an entire set, saving game point after game point, finally prevailing with the break and the 5-4 lead. The crowd erupted after Nguy- en's break, and she and the Wol- verines started clicking from that point on. She cruised to an easy 6-4, 6-4 victory - her 12th in a row - and was joined with straight-set wins by Tatsuno and Sulahian. Mahtani also came back from a set down to take her match. Muresan won in three sets - her ninth consectutive singles victory - improving her record to 30-10 on the year. With the victory, Michigan extends it Big Ten conference lead over Northwestern. The Ohio State triumph was the Wolverines' 100th victory at the Varsity Tennis Center and their 11th in a row. "We are playing so well because we're putting out a great team effort and battling on every single court," Bernstein said. "I can't attribute our success to any one player, but we really have great chemistry and that's a big reason why we are one of the top five teams in the country."