The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 14, 2010 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 14, 2010 - 7A M' snaps out of rough first half, secures win By BRIAN MECHANICK Daily Sports Writer At halftime of Wednesday's match against Valparaiso, Michi- gan men's soccer VALPARAISO 2 coach MICHIGAN 4 Steve Burns thought he had seen the worst half of soccer out of his team all season. Looking for what to say on a cold, wet night against a non-conference opponent sandwiched between key " weekend conference games, Burns turned to the history of the sport. "I told the guys at the half, the game of soccer hasn't changed in 120 years," Burns said. "The team that passes best is the team that's going to win, so we need just to connect." The Wolverines passed and con- nected well in the second half, as the team exploded offensively in a 4-2 win over visiting Valparaiso. After playing narrowly in the first half with a 4-4-2 formation, a switch to a 4-3-3 formation gave the Wolverines the width to attack the gaps in the Crusader defense. The Wolverines (2-1-0 Big Ten, 8-2-3 overall) started off the scor- ing in the 58th minute. with a Valparaiso own-goal generously credited to redshirt senior Matt Schmitt, who now has a three- game scoring streak. Schmitt had no qualms about the goal's credit- ing. "I count it," Schmitt said. "For- wards are always going to count that as their goal. Defenders want it to be an own-goal, goalies want it to be an own-goal, and forwards count it as a goal. I'm counting it as a goal." The main threat for the Crusad- ers on the night was redshirt junior Stefan Antonijevic. The tower- ing 6-foot-6 forward stood four inches above the tallest Wolverine defender. He certainly punished Michi- gan. Frustrated by an earlier yellow card that saw him subbed out of the first half, Antonijevic answered back with a scoring header in the 72nd minute on a cross from Adri- an Ortiz. Antonijevic's goal proved to be the spark plug for an offensive explosion, as three goals followed in the next six minutes. Michigan freshman forward Soony Saad was next to score, unleashing a low strike into the left corner to help Michigan regain the lead. Senior forward Justin Meram then followed with the play of the game, as he dribbled in from the left wing through three Vaparaiso defenders before laying off the ball to a waiting Schmitt, giving the senior two goals on the night and four goals in three games. "Justin is an ankle-breaker," Burns said. "He's a guy who can turn you inside-out and just cork- screw players." The dissatisfaction of a tough first half off his back, Meram pulled out his dancing shoes to cel- ebrate his sweet play. "That's my style," he said. The satisfaction of an insurance goal was short-lived, though, as the Crusaders responded two minutes later with another goal. Senior Jake Freisinger slotted a ball through the legs of the Wolverines' redshirt junior goalkeeper Chris Blais. But Soony Saad would not be stopped, as the dynamic freshman scored a brace of his own, hitting a shot from outside the box into the low right corner to secure the win. The Wolverines now eye a week- end trip to Bloomington to face a talented Indiana team, with Big Ten pride and a four-game win- ning streak on the line. Senior setter Lexi Zimmerman registered a triple double in the Wolverines' upset of Illinois last week before registering another one again tonight. Zimmerman also surpassed the Michigan program record in career assists this season. Zimmer-mgan explodes for another triple double in win over Michigan St. Schmitt continues hot streak from bench in in By CAITLIN SMITH Daily Sports Writer The Saad brothers have carried the scoring load for the Michigan men's soccer team for much of the season, but after the Wolverines' 4-2 win over Valparaiso Wednes- day night, it might be time to adopt a new member into their goal-hap- py family. Redshirt senior Matt Schmitt tallied his first goal of the season just a week ago against Cincinnati. But after getting a taste of success against the Bearcats, he was hun- gry for more. Schmitt went on to score the game-winning goal in Sunday's Big Ten matchup against Wisconsin. Then, the Muskegon, Michigan native hammered in two goals . and added an assist in the Wol- verines' midweek contest against Valparaiso. After a scoreless first half, Schmitt got the ball rolling hy playing a dangerous hail into the hox, which deflected off a Cru- sader defender and into the net, creating a three-game consecutive scoring streak for the backup for- ward. During Schmitt's first two years of eligibility, he saw action in 40 games and had 33 starts. But as younger recruits joined the team, Schmitt was relegated to the back burner. Still, he is a modest player who has grown to embrace his position on the team. Unlike some competitors who strive for the limelight, Schmitt, who went on to score again against Valparaiso, said he won't be looking for additional playing time after his outstanding perfor- mance, unless of course the team needs him. "I think that I've proven, not * just this year but in years past, that when I come in, I can change the game," Schmitt said. "So it's whenever the coaches need me to play and help the team, I'm there." WAN NA WRITE FOR DAILY " SPORTS? Join the club. * NO SERIOUSLY, EMAIL RKARTJE@UMICH.EDU By ROYA ZAND accuracy. For thADily The first two sets, though, were dominated by junior outside hit- "I think you can sum up our ter Alex Hunt, who recorded 11 record into two words, and that is total kills, eight digs and two ser- 'Lexi Zimmerman,' "said Michi- vices aces. Zimmerman also made gan volleyball coach Mark Rosen a major contribution, providing after Wednesday night's match six kills and 18 assists. against Michigan State. "She is The Wolverines fell to the carrying us like a quarterback Spartans in the third set 27-25. for a football team, a shooting During the intermission, Rosen point guard for a basketball team, echoed a sense of calm urgency. a pitcher for a softball team. She "The biggest thing you have to can change the game." do is stay calm," Rosen said after But unlike Michigan football's the game. "You have to stay the star quarterback Denard Robin- course and be a little urgent ear- son against the Spartans this past lier. In game three, we weren't as weekend, Zimmerman found a urgent earlier in the game." way to lead her team past the in- Entering the fourth set, the state rivals in Ann Arbor, 3-1. Wolverines were not in control Zimmerman, a senior setter, of the game, playing more defen- recorded her third career triple- sively than they had all night. double, tallying 38 assists, 11 kills When Michigan fell behind 18-14, and 10 digs in the four-set win. the team began "second-guessing She led her team the way she has themselves," according to Rosen. all season, taking command of But the Wolverines turned on the court and taking advantage their offense and rallied to tie of open balls with precision and the game 21-21. Pivotal kills by Hunt and freshman outside hit- ter Molly Toon took the game to match point, when Zimmerman promptly served an ace to secure the win. Hunt entered the Michigan record books during the game, recording her 1,000th career kill and becoming only the 12th Wol- verine in history to eclipse the mark. "I didn't know I was going to break it, but you can't really think of stats during the game," Hunt said. "I definitely like getting more hits and doing anything to really help the team." She had a total of 11 kills and was just two digs shy of her first career double-double. "Alex is going to get termina- tor points," Rosen said. "This year is certainly more on her because we don't have the depth around because we have a lot of young players. She's a great competitor in a silent, adaptive kind of way. We couldn't do it without her." SALAM RIDA/Daily Redshirt senior Matt Schmitt has been on an offensive tear as of late, scoring four goals since last week's matchup with Cincinnati. But the Wolverines (2-1-0 Big Ten, 8-2-3 overall) have prov- en that they do need him. In last week's contest against the Bearcats, both the Saad brothers were on the bench and Schmitt stepped up. And later, it was Schmitt's goal that proved to be the deciding factor againstthe Badgers. Schmitt may have had a slaw start to the season, but he has found his rhythm. "It's a great story," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "He's a fifth-year senior that's taking a part-time load because he wanted to finish his Michigan career as strong as possible, with as strong of team and as strong of personal performance. He comes off the bench and adds that immedi- ate impact to our team. He really raised the level of this game here." Although Schmitt remained modest about his five-point game, he was not afraid to hoast on one account. When asked if he was going to continue his scoringstreak against Indiana this upcoming weekend, he had one word. "Absolutely." 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