2B - April 11, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 After four tough years, it's time to let go Eighth-inning comeback sparks Blue's second Big Ten victory I'll be honest. On several occasions, in this column, I've lamented - whined even - about the last four years of Michigan sports. And at times, it has outright sucked to know that these last four years have rendered the football team a mess, the basket- ' ball team a mediocre suc- cess and the hockey team RYAN an incredible KARTJE tease. It's hard not to be upset. For those of us who have been here for four years, the first major sporting event we experi- enced as students was a loss to Appalachian State - the worst in the history of Michigan football. The last: Saturday's national championship loss to Minnesota- Duluth - one of the toughest losses in the history of Michigan hockey. Standing in the front room of the Blue Leprechaun on Saturday, I thought it would be avenged. It seemed this was a cruel joke, one that would deliver its we- were-just-kidding punchline when Shawn Hunwick raised the national championship trophy Saturday night. Alas, it was not meant to be. So I trudged home, absolutely ill from another tough loss. I was in Fort Wayne during Michigan's double-overtime regional loss to Miami (Ohio) last year, and I could only imagine this felt worse. But as I let the pain of this final tragic punctuation to the last four years hit me, I started to let go. Let go of Appalachian State. Let go Rodrig Let DeSha expect Evan T for tha buzzer Morris Let down. 30-sho Wayne I've always go. But ily pur to refle us to o low po T We pu star If th lachiar domin, victory his Gat favorit as muc wouldr same f, If th there w and the been n If th of Toledo. Let go of Rich If there were no Evan Turner uez. shot with 2.2 seconds left, maybe go of Manny Harris, this year's team would've never wn Sims and the sky-high had the same fire. Maybe Manny ations of 2010. Let go of would've stayed - and maybe urner's buzzer beater (and that wouldn't have been a good t matter, Josh Gasser's thing. beater). Let go of Darius If there were no Darius Mor- s's last-second miss. ris miss, then there would be go of Billy Sauer's melt- no enormous chip on the point Let go of Air Force's guard's shoulder - one we'll t deficit. Let go of Fort all see when the 2011-12 season . Let go of St. Paul. begins. always been an optimist, if there were no Billy Sauer pretty quick to let things meltdown against Notre Dame, these things weren't eas- there would've been no Bryan ged. That is, until I started Hogan. And if there were no ct on the things that got Bryan Hogan and his headcase r came as a result of those performance against Air Force, ints. there probably would've been no Shawn Hunwick. And if there were no Shawn Hunwick, you'd better believe hese things there would be no NCAA regional in Fort Wayne last season. And ren't as easily absolutely no national champion- ship hopes this season. t You see, all the pain and the disappointment and the letdowns rted to reflect. have made us, as sports fans, stronger and have yielded some of the happiest sports moments of the last four years. ere were no loss to Appa- So don't lament the last four n State in 2007, Michigan's years; instead, remember the ant Capital One Bowl characters and the moments that 'over Tim Tebow and would've never been if Michigan ors - who were massive beat Appalachian State or Billy es - would've never meant Sauer stood on his head in 2008. h to any of us. Lloyd Carr This downtrodden period may n't have gone out in the define our sports experience here ashion that he did. in Ann Arbor, but don't let that be ere were no RichRod era, a bad thing. And definitely don't could be no Brady Hoke pain yourself with "what if's." ere definitely would've Because, when you really take o Denard Robinson. a closer look, we've had one hell ere were no disappoint- of a ride. By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Writer With one out in the eighth inning against Purdue, the Michigan baseball team's night- mare season looked to only get worse. The MICHIGAN 0 Wolver- PURDUE 8 ines, down_ 5-1, were MICHIGAN 2 headed PURDUE 4. for their 10th loss in MICHIGAN 6 their last PURDUE 5 11 games. They hadn't scored more than five runs in a game for nearly a month and were about to get swept by a conference rival. Michigan would have fallen to 1-5 in the Big Ten, and a cou- ple more bad series would have effectively shut the door on its season. But then, the Boilermakers opened it back up. A one-out error by second baseman Eric Charles led to four unearned runs in the eighth inning, allowing Michigan to tie the game 5-5. Each of the runs scored with two outs. Two innings later, redshirt junior Garrett Stephens depos- ited Sean Collins's 0-1 pitch over the left-field wall to put Michi- gan ahead, 6-5. Freshman right-hander Alex Lakatos let two reach base in the bottom of the 10th inning, but he slithered out of the jam to give the Wolverines (2-4 Big Ten, 8-21 overall) a much-needed win in West Lafayette. "For the kids to come back today (after losing Saturday) and make plays like they did and get some big hits, it says a lot about them," Michigan coach Rich Maloney said. "It would have been easy to fold up shop and they didn't. That was an awe- some win for us." Though the offense finally came through to give the Wol- verines a chance to win, the defense kept it from losing the game. With the game tied, 5-5, in the bottom of the ninth inning and a man on first base with one out, sophomore center fielder Patrick Biondi made a spectacular run- ning catch on the warning track before throwingto firstto double up the Purdue third baseman Cameron Perkins. Had the ball dropped, Perkins would have likely come around to score the game-winning run. "Off the bat, I thought it was hit pretty well," Biondi said. "I opened up to my glove side and the wind was blowing straight toward left so I knew it was going to turn back over. And I turned back and whipped my head around at the last second and I was able to make the catch. The ball carried a lot further than I thought." Added Maloney: "It was truly one of the greatest catches I've seen." And in the 10th inning, Pur- due put runners on second and third base with one out. Stephens came home with Boilermaker shortstop David Miller's ground ball to gun down the potential tying run. After Purdue jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the second inning, junior pitcher Brandon Sinnery kept the Wolverines in the game by throwing 5.1 innings of score- less relief. Lakatos then tossed 3.2 more scoreless innings to pick up the win. Maloney said that Sinnery. would likely take Mills's place in the conference rotation after Mills was shelled for five runs in an inning of work. The victory was especially crucial consideringthat the Wol- verines let Satqrday's game get away. Behind a strong perfor- mance from redshirt sophomore Bobby Brosnahan, Michigan took a 2-0 lead going into the sev- enth inning. But the left-hander loaded the bases in the seventh and Lakatos could not limit the damage when he entered in relief Purdue (3-3, 10-11) scored four runs in the frame and kept Michigan hitless the rest of the way to get the 4-2 victory. On Friday, the Boilermakers pitching held Michigan to five hits in an 8-0 rout. But in a season in which Mich- igan has been hard pressed to find much reason for optimism, Sunday's win could make a big "It would have been easy to fold up shop, and they didn't." impact on team morale. "It's huge," Biondi said. "It would have been a really longbus ride home if we got swept. But everyone's pretty excitedthat we were able to get that win and it makes it a good bus ride home." Michigan hopes to ride this high into Ray Fisher Stadium as it takes on Bowling Green and Toledo during the week before hosting Illinois this weekend. "It shows a lot that we got down and we were able to hang in there and come back in the end," Biondi said. "That shows what kind of guys we have on the team and hopefully this will carry over and give us some momentum next week." I06 ment in Manny and DeShawn's last season, no one would've been that surprised by Michigan's incredible underdog run this year. - Kartje thinks Michigan basketball or hockey will bring home a national championship in the next four years. He can be 0 6 S