8 - Tuesday, February 22, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 8- Tuesday, February 22, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Lack of 3-pointers doesn't mean lack of offense for Blue BASEBALL New bat rules could lower home run total By LUKE PASCH Daily Sports Writer. Nearly three weeks ago, in Columbus, the Michigan men's basketball team shot 19 3-point- ers in a 62-53 loss to then-No. 1 Ohio State. It was the first time since mid-December and just the third time all season the Wol- verines attempted fewer than 20 shots from beyond the arc. Then, in the four subsequent games - against Penn State, Northwestern, Indiana and Illinois - the team shot 19, 15, 15 and 18 triples, respectively. But in Saturday's 75-72 win at Iowa, Michigan returned to its shooting-happy form, firing 20 3-pointers. Every team knows the rap on Michigan coach John Beilein's offense - be wary of his shoot- ers. He runs a guard-heavy sys- tem, and the only player hesitant to launch one from 3-point terri- tory is his center. And at the beginning of Big Ten play, that seemed like the perfect offense for the Wolver- ines. As an undersized, under- experienced and relatively unathietic squad, it provided the opportunity for upsets. If the team was shooting well on a given night, it had the potential to beat pretty much any team in the nation. Better yet, the system gave Beilein's frontcourt contingent - one of the youngest groups of forwards in the nation - time to develop. The big men were used sparingly enough that they weren't consistently pres- sured to score in the paint, but they were active enough for the offense to avoid becoming com- pletely one-dimensional. So, why the sudden change lately? Well, against the Buckeyes, the Wolverinep didn't haveamuch of a choice. Ohio State coach Thad Matta drew up a master- ful defensive gameplan, and his players executed it well for 40 ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Redshirt freshman forward Jordan Morgan has been an important part of Michigan's success in the paint this season. By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Writer They say chicks dig the long ball. The chicks, then, must have loved when former Wolverine first baseman Mike Dufek hit a walk- off solo home run last year against Northwestern to complete one of the most improbable comebacks in Michigan baseball history. Down 14 runs after three innings, Michi- gan rode four home runs to a 15-14 victory. The comeback was shock- ing, to say the least. What's equally as shocking is that had the game been played a year later, Dufek's blast might never have left the park. Effective this season, the NCAA has imposed strict new standards for the metal bats used in colle- giate play. According to sophomore centerfielder Patrick Biondi, Mich- igan coach Rich Maloney told the team that the NCAA expects home run totals to be cut in half. The standards, announced in 2008, are partially in response to an increase in offensive numbers in the past five years. The NCAA citeda41-percentincrease inhome runs per game from 2006 to 2009 as evidence that bat technology has beenimprovingtoo rapidly.. According to a news release on the NCAA's website, "The goal is for non-wood bats that meet this new standard to perform similarly to wood bats." The main issue the NCAA's Batted Ball Coefficient of Restitu- tion certification addresses is the trampoline-like effect of modern metal bats by measuring and limit- ing a bat's "bounciness." Normally, when a baseball meets a bat, the ball compresses and in the process loses some energy. Butnewer com- posite bats only have a thin outer layer of metal that compresses instead, springing the ball forward like a trampoline. Michigan is ateam with little power to begin with. Aside from junior designated hitter Coley Crank, who had 14 home runs last year, the rest of the team's return- ing players totaled just 13 home runs all last season. The Wolver- ines don't have much power to lose. But their lack of dependence on home runs can actually be an advantage. Unlike teams who rely heavily on the long ball, Michigan does not stand to lose much offen- sive production from the new bats. "These bat standards couldn't have come at a better time," senior second baseman Anthony Toth said. "We are a small-ball team. Coach has always preached that. It really plays into our hands really well. We have a lot of speed, we have good defense, we're going to have solid pitching, and the bats are going to play intoour favor." Even for a small-ball team, the new bats require an even more intense focus on fundamentals. Maloney said the team has put in extra work this offseason on things like bunts, steals and hit-and-runs. With more emphasis on funda- mentals, the Wolverines will have to clean up their play in the field. While normally solid defensively, Michigan committed six costly errors in three games during the Big Ten/Big East Challenge last weekend. The average of two errors per game almost doubles the Wol- verines' average from last season. But the team can look to improve as they get more game experience outdoors. Of course, the overall formula for success in baseball remains unchanged: timely hitting, defense and, most importantly, pitching. Redshirtsophomore pitcher Bobby Brosnahan said he doesn't plan on changing the way he attacks hit- ters. "You've been doing it your whole life, you pitch the same way," Brosnahan said. "But I think pitchers are goingto be able to get away with more. Hanging curve- balls aren'tgoingto be hit500 feet. It's still going to get out of the yard, but ldon't thinkyou'regoingtoasee as many balls fly outcof the yard if they don't really square it up." The chicks may not dig that, but the pitchers certainly will. minutes of basketball. "They had a great gameplan to try and take our shooters away from it and try to sag off our big men," sophomore point guard Darius Morris said after the game. "(Ohio State forward Jared) Sullinger was at the hole just waiting for me if I did break down the defense. And then, they had good ball pressure on me. They really wanted to take our shooters out of the game and make us dribble drive." The Wolverines were caught off guard and mustered just 53 points against the Buckeye defense. Beilein knew that teams would start watching the game film from Value City Arena ear- lier this month. As opponents started keying in on the perim- eter shooters, his post players would have to grow up quickly, and the guards would have to start penetrating instead of swinging the ball around the perimeter. They did just that. As defenders spread out to the arc, lanes started opening up inside. Junior guards Zack Novak and Stu Douglass, and even sophomore Matt Vogrich, started executing on backdoor cuts to the hoop. And if they were ever stopped in the key by a post defender coming up from help-side, redshirt freshman center Jordan Morgan was often left open in the paint. Indeed, Morgan has benefited on the offensive end - he's aver- aged nearly 14 points over the five games since that matchup in Columbus. "A lot of times, offensive suc- cess comes from the game plan from the opposing team," assis- tant coach Bacari Alexander said after Morgan scored 27 points against Northwestern. "Today, we saw a situation where Jordan Morgan was rolling to the basket and they elected to stay with our shooters. What ended up hap- pening was Jordan was open with so many opportunities at. the rim." Perhaps most surprising was the success Michigan found underneath at Illinois last week. Though the Wolverines lost, 54-52, they actually outscored the Fighting Illini in the paint, 36-34. And considering some of the home team's premiere frontcourt talent - 7-foot-1 senior Mike Tisdale and 6-foot-9 seniors Mike Davis and Bill Cole - that feat should not go unno- ticed. It's possible, then, that Beilein now is feeling bittersweet about getting swept by the Buckeyes this season. It never feels great to lose to a hated rival, but thanks to Ohio State, this Michi- gan squad has learned to balance its outside shooting and driving much more effectively. With three games left in the regular season and an NCAA Tournament berth on the line, Beilein and his team found that balance atjust the right time. Better defensive play would get 'M'to St. Paul WRESTLING Wrestling through adversity, Biondo pursues championship Just over a month ago, I wrote a column about the Michigan hockey team's irrelevance on the national scene. It was sitting in second place behind Notre Dame in the CCHA, but it still hadn't shown me anything. If you wantedto have a conver- MARK sation about BURNS the Wolver- ines possibly competing for a national title this season, Iwouldhavetoldyou, "Sorry, butcthisteam just doesn't have it in them. Maybe next year Red Berenson will win his third NCAA title." "You hope to peak atthe right time," senior forward Louie Capo- russo added on Jan. 13. "You want to stay positive obviously, and you want to say thatthe team is head- ed in the rightdirection. I mean, that's the obvious answer. "The real answer will lie in what we do from here on out. I mean, you can speculate and you can predict that you think your team is going inthe rightdirec- tion, but it's notgoing to do much if you're not making that happen." Following those comments, Michigan swept four of five con- ference series - three of which have come in the friendly confines of Yost Ice Arena. During that stretch, Berenson has received stellar goaltending from senior Shawn Hunwick, and barring any season-ending injury, it looks like Michigan will ride the Sterling Heights, Mich. native forthe rest of the season. Some of Michigan's big guns have also resurfaced, with the likes of sophomores Chris Brown and Kevin Lynch combining for Michigan coach Red Berenson has Michigan ranked second in the CCHA. eightgoals in that time span. So, in a sense, Michigan is going in the right direction. But there's just one slight issue - defense. Don't get me wrong. At times this season, Michigan's team defense has been pretty solid. Just ask the world-record setting crowd in attendance at The Big Chill. The Wolverines currently rank 10th nationally, allowing just 2.38 goals per game. But despitethe their success in the past six weeks, it seems that during every press conference, the comments aboutplaying better defensively surface. This past Friday, after Michi- gan's 6-3 win over Western Michi- gan, Berenson called a few of the Broncos' goals "too easy," and added thatthe team mighthave been a little too relaxful in its own end. And it's not just coming from the coachingcstaff - the players are beingcandid and calling a spade a spade. "We emphasized tightening it up a little bit," junior defense- man Greg Pateryn said following Friday's game. "We were too loose after the second period. They got 17 shots there in the second, and we wanted to focus on defense and keep as many chances out as we could." You could pinpoint other areas of the Michigan hockeyteam and possibly say, "Hey, the power play has been hit or missfor most of the season. That's where the Wolver- ines need the most work." Or how about, "They still don't have a super-star player who can take over any game at the drop of a hat." No, the fact still remains: more attentionto detail in the defensive zone and abetter awareness of the opposing players on the ice will bring Michigan into national contention. The Wolverines are clearly headed in the right direc- tion. To sayanything else would be downright wrong. A few tweaks here and there with the defensive mindset of the team, and you could be purchasing just a few more postseason tickets. The road's paved, and the car's gassed up and ready to go. Now it'sjust time for Michigan to point it north to St. Paul, Min- nesota. - Burns can be reached at burnmark@umich.edu By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer On November 19, 2010 in Bethlehem, Penn., the final 10 seconds were ticking away in fifth-year senior captain Antho- ny Biondo's match. Michigan wrestling was trailing Lehigh, but things looked bright for Biondo - then ranked No. 8 - who was leading 14th-ranked Joe Kennedy. Coming off a season in which he finished just a win shy of All- American status, both Biondo and the young Wolverines could see greatness right in front of them. But inside Biondo's 197-pound frame, things weren't okay. And suddenly, things on the mats weren't either - Biondo's body gave way with just three seconds remaining. "I was feeling horrible," Bion- do said Monday. "I prpbably shouldn't have wrestled, but I wrestled and I was winning, but I just fell apart and the kid came back and beat me in overtime." Showing the grittiness and drive that earned him captain status this season, he pushed through the ensuing weeks until he was forced to withdraw from the Cliff Keen Invitationals on Dec. 4. His forfeiture drew him 8th place, afar cry from Biondo's usual success - he had moped up to No. 2 nationally by then. Biondo visited a specialist, where he learned he was suffer- ing from colitis - a disease that causes the colon to swell. "It felt like I had a really bad sickness and I wrestled through it all the way through the (Cliff Keen Invitational)," Biondo said. "For a couple of weeks, I was having some really bad perfor- mances ... I was diagnosed with colitis. That was really tough." As if receivi ering, nativec '"For of the after a Joe M constar him he good j though For would' the exi for his But not "I hoi I w: 1w "I ca high e nationa Americ tally, Ir little bi but (m nitely like in what h if I ac March. I'm not struggl Afte matchl Wolver overall to ma play. T ships b March "It's that wasn't enough, after Biondo said. "There's been a ng treatment and recov- couple times when I lost, but the the Clinton Township team still won. You never want caught the flu. to lose, but if the team's doing most of the first half well, it still makes you feel a lit- year, it's been one thing tle better. That's one thing I defi- nother," Michigan coach nitely wanted is to have a good, cFarland said. "It was a competitive team my last year nt struggle trying to keep and it's been awesome." althy. I thought he did a And now Biondo is feeling ob of battling through it, better and beginning to return ." to last season's stature. Now some, the struggles ranked No. 11 after slipping in ve been enough to erase the polls, he's won six of his last pectations Biondo had set nine matches dating back to Jan- nself prior to the season. uary 16. Biondo. As his collegiate career winds down, Biondo has one final chance to chase his dreams of being a national champion. And was feeling his coach stands behind him, fully expecting to see a final rrible ...) but push out of his senior leader. "The best for him is still restled and I ahead of him," McFarland said. .i n." "Anthony's a great kid, he really iS win ng. is. From the time he's gotten here, he's been really focused on his wrestling and on his aca- demics. He's done just a tremen- ame into the season with dous job at balancing those two. S 'xpectations of being a He's never given us any problem al champion and an All- at all. He's one of the guys that an," Biondo said. "Men- dips his nose to the grindstone might've doubted myself a and keeps working hard. He's a it when I was not healthy, neat kid and I think everybody's y preseason goals) defi- going to miss him." haven't changed. Just Biondo can now wipe his slate any sport, it just matters of 105 career wins clean as he appens in the end. And heads into the postseason. But complish what I want in the memories he forged between really, this past season, all those wins - and losses - t going to remember (the will never be forgotten. les)." "I feel like it's cliche, but just r not winning a Big Ten the friendships, the experiences last year, the 11th-ranked with the guys, whether it's trav- ines (5-3 Big Ten, 11-5 eling or bus trips, a good win, ) are in prime position or just after practice goofing ke noise in postseason around, I'll look back at it at the the Big Ten Champion- end of the day, and those are the egin the first weekend of things you can never recreate," in Evanston. Biondo said. "That's the stuff I'll helped me persevere," miss the most." A