0 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, April 14, 2011- 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, April 14, 2011 - 7A Rockets silence Wolverines'bats SOFTBALL Taylor tosses one- hit shutout for M' By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach Rich Malo- ney looked towards Toledo's dugout after the Rockets' .3-1 victory over the Wolverines and saw what his team should be. Toledo (7-2 MAC, 18-15 over- all), after all, got off to a poor start, just like Michi- TOLEDO 3 gan. The MICHIGAN 1 Rockets sat at just 7-15 before taking off on an 11-game winning streak. "We just watched that team right there, they've won 11 in a row," Maloney said Wednesday. "At some point, they started correcting some of those things that we're still having - that big inning. That's what (Toledo coach) Cory (Mee) was talking to me about prior to the game ... Their offensive stats are the same as ours." The inconsistencies, though, continued for the Wolverines on Wednesday. Michigan (2-4 Big Ten, 9-22 overall) is now more than halfway through the season and still appears schizo- phrenic. One day, like in Tues- day's 13-3 shelling of Bowling Green, the team looks great. The next, like against Toledo, it barely musters four hits. The pitching staff threw 23 great innings against Purdue, but it allowed three or four crip- pling frames. On Wednesday night, the second inning was the dagger. Freshman right-hander Jake Engels surrendered four hits and a walk, and the Rockets capital- ized for three runs. The cushion was more than enough for the Toledo staff, led by sophomore right-hander Jared Locke. "That's the story of our sea- son," redshirt senior second baseman Anthony Toth said. "It's one inning a game a lot (of times) has killed us. It's just been one inning. Today is a per- fect example." The Michigan bats, which looked so potent just a day ago, were lifeless. Aside from junior designated hitter Coley Crank's third-inning home run with the bases empty, the Wolverines barely had any scoring opportu- nities. Locke, whose only mistake in seven innings of work was the pitch to Crank, kept the Michi- gan batters guessing. In the sev- enth, he struck out freshman right fielder Michael O'Neill with a pitch on the outside of the plate. O'Neill didn't like the call and let home plate umpire Gene Klotz know it. Klotz immediate- ly tossed O'Neill, who became the first Wolverine to be ejected from a game this season. It has been a frustrating year, and an especially frustrating game for the lineup, considering how well it performed Tuesday. "I was hoping that after we got those runs yesterday, I was really hoping that today we'd have came out and just beat them," Maloney said. "That would have been a great thing for our confidence. But noth- ing's been easy for this group." Michigan actually put a small rally together in the eighth ByMATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer Following the Michigan soft- ball team's 3-0 victory over Cen- tral Michigan Wednesday, senior hurler Jordan Taylor said her secret is to "stay even-keeled." Judging by her calm and col- lected reaction to her one-hit shutout in which she CMU 0 complete- MICHIGAN 3 ly over- whelmed the Chippewa lineup, it's safe to say her secret worked. Taylor struck out nine, keeping her team in the lead despite a lack of offense. "I thought Jordan Taylor had an outstanding game," Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins said Wednesday. "She was on her game, and thankfully because the rest of us weren't." The Wolverines pushed across an early run, after a single from junior center fielder Bree Evans scored senior designated hitter Alycia Ryan. It was just the latest in a string of productive at-bats for Evans, who was 3-for-3 on the evening. Michigan (5-1 Big Ten, 37-3 overall) clung to its 1-0 advantage as its bats went quiet for several innings. But Central Michigan fell completely silent. Just two Chip- pewas reached base - via a walk and a single - off Taylor, who spun another gem for the Wolver- ines. "I wouldn't say it was my most dominant (appearance this sea- son)," Taylor said. "I try to keep the approach the same." Michigan found some insur- ance in the sixth inning when Ryan crushed a two-run home run over the right field fence. Any chance that the Chippewas (5-3 MAC, 20-13 overall) could touch up Taylor virtually vanished. The win was the Wolverines' fourth in a row and came against a formidable non-conference foe. "Central's a good team," Hutchins said. "They're having a great year. After the game, I told (Central Michigan coach Margo Jonker) this was some of the best enthusiasm her team's had. They came to play and I was really impressed with them. "I could see us pressing and trying to meet expectations, but I urged themto get into our process. The season gets harder. It's going to keep getting harder. That's why you need to rely on your process." This weekend, Michigan trav- els to Champaign to take on an Illinois team that boasts a 6-2 Big Ten record. Taylor will be called upon to start at least one of the two games. If she remains as dependable as she strives to be, it may very well be another success ful weekend for the Wolverines. "It seemed easy (last weekend against Purdue), but it wasn't at easy (Wednesday)," Hutchins said. "In softball, you rely on your pitching and your defense because hitting is hard. Taylor's been con- sistent. We rely on her." MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Junior designated hitterColeyCrank provided Michigan's only offense of the game, a third-inning solo home run to left ceoterfield. inning. With two outs, Toth, who has been mired in a deep slump, singled to right field and received a supportive ovation from the crowd. "It was a relief, it was a relief," Toth said. "There's no hold- ing back or sugar-coating it - I've obviously been struggling beyond any point that I've ever struggled before. So it felt good, and hopefully it's a sign that I'm coming out of this little funk that I'm in." A walk to sophomore center- fielder Patrick Biondi put the tying runner on base for red- shirt sophomore second base- man Kevin Krantz. For a moment, Krantz's liner seemed destined to go over sophomore left fielder Tyler Grogg's head and off the wall to tie the game. But it was just for a moment. Grogg barely had time to react but made a last-second leap backward to come down with the snow-cone grab. "(Krantz) scorched that ball and the guy makes a heck of a play," Maloney said. "It was scorched. That's the way it's been. Even when we have a chance, most of the time it just hasn't worked out." Kicking game 'a work in progress' for Hoke By TIM ROHAN DailySportsEditor Brady Hoke may as well be standing by the side of the road wearing an orange apron and a hard hat, with orange cones sur- rounding his kicking game. "It's a work in progress," he said Wednesday. Aside from Will Hagerup at punter, Hoke is still figuring out many special teams positions, from minor details to gigantic ones - like who his kicker is going to be this fall. "From the mechanics of snap- ping the ball to the mechanics of punting the ball," Hoke said of what still needs to be worked out. "(Hagerup) has a tremendous leg on him. We've got to keep work- ing on consistency. We're still working on who the long snapper is going to be. So those guys are competing on a daily basis. "From a placekicking stand- point, that's a huge competition with four guys in there. Who the holder is - there's so many things and elements that have to go into it. We have a lot of work to do in that area and really find out who that per- son's going to be." Brendan Gibbons, Seth Broekhuizen, Jeremy Ross and Kris Pauloski are the four kick- ers competingfor the spot. Last year, the trials and tribulations of the Michi- gan kicking game were well * documented, as Gibbons and Broekhuizen shared the duty. Gibbons earned the start- ing nod in the season opener against Connecticut and pro- ceeded to miss his first field goal of the year - a 43-yard * attempt early in the second quarter. Maybe it was an omen of what was to come, as Gibbons also missed an extra point that game and finished the season with three more missed field goals - ending 1-for-5 on the season. His replacement, Broekhui- zen, didn't fair any better, finishing 3-of-9 on field goal att mpts last season. Afnd Ross and Pauloski have never kicked in a game for Michigan. "I can't tell you who's where," Hoke said of where they stack up against each other. "We chart everything, every day. And at the end of spring, we'll look at it a little bit and see the accuracy, the mechanics of snap to kick and all of those things." During the spring game Sat- urday, Michigan fans will get their first look at the competition that didn't look so promising dur- ing last year's spring game either. Hoke said he hopes that through the natural progression of the game, his kickers will be placed into situational roles. If not, he said he will take time at the end to put them through those types of drills, to "see how they handle it." Even though the kickers have had only one chance to kick in the Big House this spring, Hoke is more worried about continuing to work on the details of the game, rather than how they handle inclement weather - Saturday's forecast includeswind gusts up to 22 mph and an 80-percent chance of rain. "It becomes a difference, how much wind and where the wind's coming from and those kind of things," Hoke said. "But as far as the mechanics of where the plant foot's going to be and how you're going to swing your leg through, that's got to be consistent." Last Saturday, when Hoke had his team practice in the Big House for the first time this spring, he said they kicked 14 or 15 times during the team's competition. But location might not matter if the kickers are still working on fundamentals. "I looked into Glick (Field- house) and the posts were the same height and the hashes are in the same place, so it really doesn't matter," Hoke said. One kicker who spectators won't see this Saturday is incom- ing freshman, Matt Wile. The San Diego native was set to play for Hoke at San Diego State before Hoke took the job at Michigan. Then Hoke and his assistants were able to convince the 6-foot- 2,200-pound kicker to change his commitment and follow them to Ann Arbor. There's certainly room to add him to the mix. "Sure, sure, every freshman has a chance to compete," Hoke said. "The opportunity is there." MAX COLLINS/Daily Redshirt sophomore Seth Broekhuzien, shown here punting in the loss to Ohio State on Nov. 27, 2010, missed six of the nine field goals he attempted in the 2010 season. I $2.75 Pitchers Ofr $ Off All Sandwich Plotters $Killians/ Coors Lig h Pr app Hor5-7 Mld $t. ~ ,9 ummuu It