The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.c©m Wednesday, February 9,2011 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, February 9, 2011 - 7A International addition making strides for'M' Male practice players help Blue prepare for stronger opponents By MATT SPELICII For the Daily In recent years, there's been a major influx of international stu- dents into collegiate men's tennis. This year, the top three teams in the preseason - Virginia, USC and Tennessee - each boast a roster nearly half filled with top- tier international players. With the exception of Antarctica, every continent is represented among these international additions, all wielding rackets. While the Michigan men's ten- nis team has traditionally been comprised mostly of Americans, this year the Wolverines made an international addition of their own - New Zealand-born freshman, Barrett Franks. Though Franks has provento be a strong addition to the team, win- ning four of his last five matches, Michigan coach Bruce Berque still has confidence that his team can remain competitive with mostly American players. "The problem is that a lot of the international players are border- line legit when it comes to ama- teurism," Berque said Monday. "A lot of them are older, failed profes- sionals who come to America to use this system to get an educa- tion. I feel there are enough good players in this country, and if you are willing to take the time to work with them, they can learn to be competitive at a high level. "When we recruit internation- ally we look for the best players that are also true amateurs, and Barrett fits that perfectly." Playing tennis at Michigan has given Franks the opportunity to study economics and to get a taste of life in America, which for him almost exclusively revolves around the Green Bay Packers. Franks has been a cheesehead since the Pack- ers' playoff win over the Bears in 2008, during his first visit to America. But he is adamant about not being called a bandwagon fan, especially after Sunday's Super Bowl win over the Steelers. Outside the Packers and his eco- nomics homework, Franks's life is all about tennis, a sport he has been playing since the age of four. But in his hometown of Christ- church, men's tennis is relatively obscure in comparison to rugby, New Zealand's premier sport. While Franks is the first to admit that he's not built for rugby with his 6-foot-4, spindly frame, he says he didn't seek out tennis as an alternative. His start in the sport was actually quite an acci- dent. "My dad loved playing squash, but he realized that it was too hard of a game to play at four years old, so in the meantime he decided to introduce me to tennis until I could grow up and play squash," Franks said. "I'm pretty positive he also did it to tire me out. But overall, the more I won, the moreI began to really love the sport." Unable to find suitable com- petition in Christchurch, Franks joined the junior national team to "The more I won, the more I began to really love the sport." fill that void and compete in the international circuit. "Being on that team allowed me to see the world," Franks said. "As I grew older, I would travel farther and farther away from home for tournaments. It was a great expe- rience that both made me more competitive as well as more trav- eled." Despite Franks's early success in the preseason, Berque has been helping to improve some critical elements of his game to get him ready for the regular season. "Coming from New Zealand, where he was probably the best player in his area, it's good for him to be out here competing against people as good as him every day," Berque said. "We're currently working on his backhand and how he handles adversity dur- ing a match ... but he has already improved a great deal. He is just scratching the surface of what he can do here at Michigan." By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Writer Michigan women's basket- ball coach Kevin Borseth holds a tryout at the beginning of each year - but it's most likely not the type of tryout most people think of when they think women's bas- ketball. It's a tryout for male players who are interested in helping out at practice, running drills against the team. "Guys give you a look because they're quicker, stronger, more athletic," Borseth said after prac- tice on Tuesday. "We're just look- ing for players that understand basketball, that have some skill. We might need a big guy to stand behind (our players) and defend, or maybe some little guards who can penetrate." Playing against bigger oppo- nents has become the norm for the undersized Wolverines (7-4 Big Ten, 14-9 overall), whose tall- est starting player, sophomore forward Rachel Sheffer, is only 6-foot-1. Having practice players around to imitate players like Ohio State's 6-foot-4, three-time defending Big Ten Player of the Year Jan- tel Lavender or Michigan State's rebounding machine Lykendra Johnson, has paid dividends this season. Michigan has beaten a multi- tude of bigger teams this season, and part of that success has to be credited to the effort of Borseth's practice players. Phil Wendland, the team'sgraduate manager, is in charge of the practice players. "(Borseth) scouts the upcom- ing opponent, and he'll see if there's a girl who drives left, (for example)," Wendland said Tues- day. "If she can drive left, we have some of our practice players come in and drive left. They're important to simulate other players on other teams." But Borseth hasn't always been an advocate of a male practice squad. During his first year as coach at UW-Green Bay, his team started off the year 3-8. After the eighth loss, he decided to get rid of the prac- tice team. The Phoenix went on to fin- Sophomore forward Rachel Sheffer is Michigan's tallest starting player at 6-foot-t. ish 19-10 that year and earned a berth to the NCAA Tournament. "I was never really a major advocate of using men's players, because I thought that it came at the expense of your other play- ers," he said. "I think (that year with UW-Green Bay) is really where my opinion came from. "You want your players to get as many reps in practice as you can get, and sometimes when you have male players, they don't get that." But this year, with a depleted squad that now features just 10 active players on the roster, a male practice squad is about as important for the Wolverines. Borseth and his staff have found 12 male players who rotate days throughout the week in which they practice with the team. The players are asked to perform different roles in prac- tice, depending on who Michigan will be playing in its next game. "We use them for individual workouts, skill drills," Borseth said. "We'll put them in to defend five-on-five, and sometimes we'll run the otherteam's plays. We use them in alot of capacities." But the players are more than just robots doing what they're told on the court. For many of them, playing on the practice squad gives them the opportunity to continue playingthe sport they grew up with. All of the players played varsity basketball in high school. "They bring so much more to practice (with) their intensity," Sheffer said. "They shove me, they push me, they're not afraid to get at me. They're not afraid to hurt you or do anything to you - and that makes you a better player." And there might be a little extra motivation for the guys,too. "I think their mindset coming into practice is a lot different than a girl's (mindset)," Sheffer said. "(To) them, going against girls is just like, 'Well, we can't get beat.' "So just knowing that they don't want to get beat, we want to go at them hard." Defensive stalwart Plunkett explodes on offensive end Senior earns CPWA Player of the Week honors after 11-point weekend By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Writer Her teammates call her Grandma. But during Michigan's six- game sweep at the two-day UC-Santa Barbara Winter Invi- tational tournament, senior Ryley Plunkett didn't exactly 1 conjure up the image of a sweet old lady. Instead, she was an offensive force, racking up five assists and six goals, including the game-winner against San Diego State. Her efforts earned her the CWPA Western Division Player of the Week title. Not too bad for a defender. Forgive her teammates if they sound a little surprised at Plun- kett's offensive explosion. "It was crazy because she really is ... a great defender," senior Lauren Orth said. "But then she literally just came right out of her shell and was scoring goals left and right." Plunkett has always been an * important piece of the puzzle for the Wolverines. Her contributions, though, have almost always come in Michigan's half of the pool, not in the offensive zone. According to Michigan coach Matt Ander- son, Plunkett is the team's best defender. In three seasons with the Wolverines, Plunkett has played in over 40 games each of her sea- sons at Michigan, and totaled a career-high 12 goals last year. She produced half of that total in just two days in California. So what happened at the Invi- tational? "She's a senior, and I think she realizes that she wants to be out there not just for defensive purposes only," Anderson said. "Showing that she's not afraid to score the ball will allow me to play her more." According to Anderson, she showed her willingness to score before the team played then-No. 11 San Diego State on the second day of the tournament. The day before, Plunkett recorded her second career hat trick against UC San Diego. With time wind- ing down and the team going on a power play, Anderson called a timeout. Then, he decided to do something he had never done before. He kept Plunkett in the game for the power play. "In the UC-San Diego game ... she stepped up and scored that first goal, and ... we had the (UC-San Diego) coach yelling for them to go guard (Plunkett), which opened up our other players," Anderson said. "That showed enough confidence that against San Diego State, when I called a time out with 2:30 left, I had (Plunkett) in for the power play. The previous three years that wouldn't have been the case." The decision paid off, as Plunkett netted the game-win- ner that gave Michigan a 12-11 victory. According to Orth, Plun- kett actually has one of the best shots on the team. But for an Anderson-coached team, defense always comes first, and Plunkett best serves the team when she is defending. "(Plunkett) definitely puts the team first no matter what she does," Orth said. "Every- thing she does in the water is to help a teammate or to cover for a teammate, and she's always thinking about the team." Some of her teammates, though, might ask her for just one more thing: a later bedtime. During freshman year, when practices ended at nine, Plun- kett would be in bed as soon as possible, earning her "grandma" moniker. "Riley would be in bed, cov- ers - she wears an eye sleep- ing mask too, so she'd have that on - sleeping by 10," Orth said. "Every night. She would never hang out late with us." The nickname caught on and spread throughout the team. And how does Plunkett feel about being called "Grandma?" "I just got used to it and it ended up as just a big joke now," Plunkett said. "I like it. It's a funny nickname." But Plunkett said that she didn't always feel so positive about the moniker. She was worried that people would think she's boring. But with the way she's been keeping busy on both sides of the ball, that shouldn't be a problem. 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