0 The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I April 4, 2011 The Pro You Don't Know Evan King By: Matt Rudnitsky // Daily Sports Writer We all know Denard Robinson. Just like we all know Mike Martin, Darius Morris, Tim Hardaway Jr. and every other Michigan athlete with a legitimate shot at becoming a successful pro athlete. They look the part, don't blend in and can't even walk through the Diag without turning a few nearby students into the likes of 12-year old girls at a Justin Bieber concert. But what most students don't realize is that there is a guy on campus who already is a professional athlete - sort of. That guy is sophomore Evan King, No. 1 singles player for the No. 22 Michigan men's tennis team. A guy who has been virtually everywhere that matters in tennis, from Michigan's own Varsity Tennis Center on State Street all the way to the All-England Club in the Wimbledon district of London, England. But nobody in Ann Arbor seems to notice. The funny thing is that before Evan King became the Wolverines' top-ranked singles player, he was in the spotlight. Now? Not so much. At a school dominated by football, hockey and basket- ball, a tennis star isn't exactly hounded all day by star- struck students, no matter how talented he is. "I'll run into a couple people (on campus) who played tournaments around the Midwest and ended up coming here," King said. "They're like, 'Hey, I'm a tennis fan, I know about you - you're a top recruit!' But it's extremely rare." But before college, King was featured on the cover of RISE magazine (now ESPN RISE) and even served on a committee supporting Chicago's 2016 Olympic bid. "It was just a bunch of hometown people who would have been the right age in 2016, in their prime, to be in the Olympics." King said. "It was a great experience because we got to speak in front of the Olympic committee, show off our skills just a little bit, kind of demo stuff around. "It was fun to meet a bunch of differ- ent world-class athletes that were my same age." While King might downplay the experience, it's pretty clear what it meant. At just 16 years old, the kid was considered a future Olympian. But in Ann Arbor, he's more anonymous than the guys who produced the "The Pursuit of Jappiness" video. Standing at the hallowed grounds of Wim- bledon, sliding across the fresh red clay of Roland Garros and patrolling the most famous courts in our country at Flushing Meadows would make any tennis player weak in the knees. It just doesn't get any better. But at 19 years old, Evan King has done it all. King, who before college was No. 1 in the USTA 18-and-under rankings and No. 14 in the ITF rankings, was at the forefront of junior tennis as a teen. That means King was ranked above every junior tennis player in the US and was ranked 14th internationally. With that came opportunities most teenagers could only dream of. He got to play at the 2008 Junior Davis Cup - tennis's version of the World Cup - in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, where he went 8-0, leading the United States to the title over Argentina. He got to play at three of the junior Grand Slams - Wimbledon, the French Open and the US Open - sharing a locker room with the game's biggest stars, marveling wide-eyed at Rafael Nadal's gargantuan biceps and Roger Federer's unmatched elegance. He got to do just what Nadal, Federer and the other professionals do every year - the only dif- See KING, Page 3B Accomplishments Has played at: Wimbledon, French Open and US Open Junior Grand Slams Before Michigan: -Ranked No.1 in the USTA rankings -No. 1 in ITF rankings BASEBALL, Krantz's two-run home run powers first Big Ten win Michigan loses first home game in nearly three years, splits series By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer When redshirt sophomore Kevin Krantz's moon shot land- ed well beyond the INDIANA 12 left-field MICHIGAN 5 wall on Saturday, INDIANA 2 it appeared MICHIGAN 3 to take the memo- ries of INDIANA 10 Michigan MICHIGAN 3 baseball's early-season woes with it. Krantz's homer lifted the Wol- verines over Indiana in the first game of a doubleheader in Ann Arbor, and Michigan's momen- tum spilled over into the night- cap with a two-run first inning. But soon enough, the mistakes that have plagued the Wolverines all season came back as quickly as Krantz's homer left the park. Michigan's seven errors this weekend proved costly as the Wolverines (1-2 Big Ten, 7-18 overall) dropped Friday's game 12-5 and won Saturday morning, 3-2, before an embarrassing 10-3 loss later in the day. In Saturday's second game, it was Indiana (2-1, 18-9) who was on the wrong end of the defensive miscues. A first-inning error led to an RBI from freshman right- fielder Michael O'Neil. Fifth-year senior second baseman Anthony Toth, who reached on the error, later scored on a wild pitch to put the Wolverines ahead, 2-0. But sophomore hurler Kyle Clark's day was skewed by errors as well - the first of which was an error of his own. Attempting to cover first on a grounder to See KRANTZ, Page 2B By EMILY BONCHI Daily Sparta Writer For the first time since 1993, Indiana left Ann Arbor with a win, snap- ping the INDIANA 1 Michigan MICHIGAN 2 softball team's INDIANA 5 almost MICHIGAN 4 three-year win streak on its home turf. "We had a game plan going in ... and I didn't feel we exe- cuted it," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "I don't feel our kids trusted it." The third-ranked Wolverines (3-1 Big Ten, 33-3 overall) faced the Hoosiers in a double-header on Saturday at Alumni Field for their first home conference matchup of the season. Michi- gan won the opener, but lost the second game in an extra-inning battle to split the series. The opening game remained scoreless through three frames, as both teams' mounds seemed to have control. Senior pitcher Jordan Taylor headed into the bottom of the fourth inning with seven strikeouts, and Indiana pitcher Morgan Melloh, who pitched both games, had already struck out four Wolverines her- self. After starting off its season on an offensive high, scoringhas become an issue for Michigan. In the beginning of the season, during tournament play, the Wolverines were averaging 8.1 runs per game, but since Big Ten games started last weekend, Michigan has cut that average in half, scoring under 3.8 runs per outing. Melloh was not making this issue any easier, as the All- American pitcher transferred to Indiana from Fresno State (the Bulldogs had handed the Wol- verines their most recent loss) for her senior season to give Michigan an ace to face. "(Melloh's) one of the best," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins didn't think her team was unified in its loss. Hutchins said. "She's one of the Wolverine to really capital- best we've seen. That's the kind ize against Melloh, breaking of pitching we're going to have the game open on her second at to beat to get where we want to bat. She lined one to the right be ultimately." field wall to score sophomore Freshman catcher Caitlin shortstop Amy Knapp and give Blanchard was the first See SPLIT, Page 2B DENARD UPDATE U Quarterback Denard Robinson is settling into Brady Hoke's pro-style offense, and impressing along the way. Greg Mattison has certainly taken notice. Page 4B ALL-AROUND FROSH Freshman gymnast Sam Mikulak has collected plenty of awards during his first year on campus and he made history on Friday in a big way. Page 2B A