The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, October 26, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, October 26, 2010 Muresan moves, on to ITA finals By IAN SHEETS of Notre Dame. For the Daily Nguyen's run ended against No. 6 Maria Mosolova of North- Senior Denise Muresan has western. continued her tremendous play Bolender won three straight- after her semifinal run last set matches including a big win weekend at the ITA All-Amer- against No. 73 Zara Harutyunyan ican Tournament in California of Akron, to set up a quarterfinal by making it to the finals of the matchup against Muresan. USTA/ITA Midwest Champion- The match was character-' ships this weekend. ized by long baseline rallies and Along the way to the finals, fierce play by both Wolverines. Muresan, the twelfth-ranked The freshman got off to the better player in the nation, defeated start and took the first set, 6-1, but players from Notre Dame and eventually Muresan's big-match Northwestern, as well as fel- experience and consistency came low Wolverine, sophomore Mimi through as she took the next Nguyen, to set upa clash between two sets for a 1-6, 6-3, 6-1 win. It the tournament's top two players was the only set Muresan lost all on Tuesday in Ann Arbor. weekend. The rest of the Michigan wom- The singles final will pin the en's tennis team had a strong tournament's top two seeds showing over the weekend. against each other with Muresan Freshman Brooke Bolender and taking on the No.i seed, Kristy Nguyen both advanced to the Frilling of Notre Dame, at 10 a.m. quarterfinals of singles play. Tuesday at the Varsity Tennis Nguyen grinded out two tough Center. three-set matches, first topping Muresan also won three don- her teammate, senior Rika Tat- bles matches to reach the quar- suno, in the second round, and terfinals with fellow senior Kari then winning in a third-set tie- Wig before losing to Illinois in a break over Chrissie McGaffigan tiebreak, 9-8 (3). Ki'ng fallsin 1TA regIon's semiafinal- TOREHAN SHARMAN/Daily Sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson warms up prior to an Oct.16 game against Iowa. He has been cleared to play this weekend at Penn State. Campbell shows offensive potential, Robinson ready By TIM ROHAN to accurately grade how the changes Daily Sports Editor have panned out so far. Still, fifth-year senior offensive No matter what position he plays, guard Steve Schilling has high Will Campbell will probably be the hopes for both Campbell and Wash- largest in the bunch. ington, who isn't so small himself at Michigan football coach Rich 6-foot-4, 315 pounds. Rodriguez said NOTEBOOK "It was fun to get to see them during Monday's play on the other side of the ball," press conference that the 333- Schilling said. "I always thought pound sophomore defensive line- (Campbell) played D-line like an man worked on the offensive side of offensive lineman. He liked to fin- the ball last week and will continue ish us in practice sometimes instead to do so the first couple of days this of making tackles. ... Obviously he week, "to see if it sticks." hasn't played it since high school Rodriguez alluded to the pos- - it's been a few years. But he can sibility of Campbell moving to the be a really, really good offensive offensive line last Thursday during lineman. He's athletic, he's big, he's his weekly radio show. strong and when he learns what he's Rodriguez said redshirt fresh- doing, I definitely think he's going to man offensive lineman Quinton have some success. Washington also changed positions "Quinton, if he gets a head of for the time being, switching over to steam running at you and hitting defense. you, it's going to hurt. So for him Campbell had previously being on defense, I'm pretty excited approached him and the coaching to see what he can do against anoth- staff about the potential move and er team if he's running out there and it was decided that the bye week tackling some guys." would be a good time to test it out. Schilling said he thought both Rodriguez warned that just a changes could end up being for the handful of practices weren't enough better. Campbell, a former five-star recruit, struggled to see playing time on the defensive line outside of particular goal line situations and special teams. And Washington was stuck behind two entrenched start- ers at guard in redshirt sophomore Patrick Omameh and Schilling. Rodriguez said he thinks Camp- bell has potential. "We were really simple last week and his head will still be spinning for a while," Rodriguez said. "But I think he'll be a natural there at guard just based on a couple of days." ROBINSON IS READY: Sopho- more quarterback Denard Robinson said Monday that he is feeling 100 percent after leaving Michigan's 38-28 loss to Iowa early in the third quarter with a shoulder injury. To rehabilitate, he received treat- ment for the shoulder "almostevery day." Robinson, though, still partici- pated in practice last week. "I hate sitting out," Robinson said. "I hate watching my teammates practice and me not being a part of it. But I guess you try to get better and you shouldn't rush anything. Take care of your body first and every- thing else will fall in place." During Monday's press confer- ence, Robinson didn't attribute either of the interceptions he threw against Iowa to his shoulder injury, saying he justneeded to make better decisions with the ball. As for his rushing numbers, Rob- inson hasn't been racking up the yardage like he did earlier in the sea- son against the likes of Indiana and Notre Dame, but he said it wasn't due to his lingering knee injury. "I just made some bad reads and hesitated a little bit and it kind of messed me up," Robinson said. His 86 yards against Michigan State was a season-low and his 105 yards against the Hawkeyes was his third-lowest total. Buthis 1,096 total rushing yards still leads the country. INJURY UPDATE: Other banged up Wolverines include junior defen- sive tackle Mike Martin, redshirt junior center David Molk and junior running back Michael Shaw. All were "very limited" in practice last week, but Rodriguez expected the trio to be able to go this week in practice. All three should be able to play on Saturday against the Nit- tany Lions. By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer In a repeat of something Mich- igan fans have become all too familiar with, a Buckeye once again defeated a Wolverine. This time it was Michigan men's tennis sophomore Evan King, who, for the second time in as many weeks, narrowly fell vic- tim to Ohio State's Blaz Rola. Competing in the five-day USTA/ITA Midwest, Regional Championships in South Bend, Indiana, King won his first four matches. And with a spot in the championship on the line, Rola upended King on Monday in the semfinals, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5. King had a chance to serve for the match, but Rola came up with three winners to take the advan- tage. "The level of tennis was very good from both players," Michi- gan coach Bruce Berque said. "Even though (King) lost, I felt like he came a long way since that last time he played (Rola)." On Oct. 9 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, King and Rola squared off in a match that ended in a manner eerily similar to Monday's con- test. The Chicago native took the first set from Rola in each match but failed to put away his oppo- nent. "It was a really good, high- quality set," King said. "(The last set) was a pretty fun set. We were both hitting the ball hard, all the games were just grinds. At the end, he had one more good shot than I did." Rola, who King beat on the junior circuit, beat fellow Buck- eye Matt Allare in the cham- pionship match. After two consecutive losses to his coun- terpart, King is looking forward' to getting back on the court with: Rola, especially given the nature: of their schools' rivalry. "It's going to be a fun, little rivalry that we could see for the' next three years," Ring said:- "That guy was definitely the: favorite for the final, and I gave; See KING, Page 8' M' counters size with strategy against UNO Berenson, players comment on defensive adaptation in home weekend split By STEPHENJ. NESBITT Daily Sports Writer "It's like two kids in a sand- box," Michigan ice hockey coach Red Berenson said after practice Monday, reflecting on last week- end's series split. "It's not always the big one that gets the toy, it's the one that wants it the most." Facing off against then-No. 10 Nebraska-Omaha on Friday and Saturday at Yost Ice Arena, the fourth-ranked Wolverines (2-0- 0 CCHA, 3-1-2 overall) certainly were the little kids. Michigan knew it wasn't a match physically for the Mav- ericks - a group that boasts 15 players over the six-foot mark, led by 6-foot-8 defenseman Andrej Sustr. And after Friday's 4-2 loss, Berenson's team looked not only small, but bashed and broken. The defense was spread out by ice-length stretch passes, and its gaps were exposed and exploited by Nebraska-Omaha's nation- leading offense. Defensemen were outmanned, crowding around their own net for the majority of the night. Four shots slipped by senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick before the Wol- verines finally managed to score, but that wasn't until just six min- utes remained in the third period. Despite holding a 36-26 shot advantage, Berenson insisted that his team had been out-chanced, and the defense was the weak spot he wanted to focus on after the loss. Whatever he did prior to returning the following night was the perfect remedy for the defense. On Saturday, it was Nebraska- Omaha (5-1-0) that looked over- whelmed. Michigan scored eight sec- F onds in and didn't let up, as five that works for us, but we thought players scored and the team we could get away with too much coasted to a 6-1 victory. with them. The Wolverines' attacking "We realized that if we get strategy rendered the Maver- behind their defense, then we icks' size a non-factor, and senior could just move around them. defenseman Chad Langlais cred- They're a big defense, butthey're slow down low, and I think we exposed them on Saturday night." "I think We The offense penetrated the Maverick zone time after time, exposed them knocking a combined six goals past the Nebraska-Omaha goal- On Saturday tenders. But the forwards weren't just night. scoring goals - they played a major role in keeping the potent Maverick offense at bay. After the defense was left ited the turnaround to Michi- stranded on Friday night, the gan's adaption to its attacking coaches stressed the importance scheme, which was able to coun- of the forwards being two-way ter Nebraska-Omaha's size. players. "They have a big defense, and According to Langlais, the (on Friday) some of our forwards full team effort on defense was were trying to skate through a key to Saturday's resounding that," Langlais said. "Sometimes victory. Yost Ice Arena nrIfn & YOST BTB Burrito 0CE3Ar0 Scary Skate Thursday, October 28th 8:OO-9:SOpm Costume Contest - Pumpkin Curling - Ice Skating - Music FREE skate rentals when you come wearing a costume! www.umich.edu/yost I