6E - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 NEW STUDENT EDITION The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily On softball: Hutch's approach tried and true for M' softball By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer March 7, 2011 - When Michi- gansoftballcoachCarol Hutchins earned her 1,200th career victory Saturday - an 8-3 decision over Ball State that improved on the Wolverines' unblemished record - it seemed that the milestone may be just one of many reached this season. After all, it's no secret that No. 8 Michigan (22-0 overall) is very capable of a special spring, show- ing no signs of slowing down while traveling across Florida en route to a perfect trip over break. The team completed its tour of the Sunshine State with a 7-2 tri- umph over host South Florida on Sunday. Hutch, as she's affectionately known, doesn't like talking about her accomplishments and gives the credit for her success to vir- tually anyone who will take the spotlight from her. "I don't really keep track of that stuff," Hutch said of the milestone. "It just means I've had a lot of good kids in my program and a lot of good assistants." Of the 1,200 wins - many of them coming in convincing fash- ion like Saturday's 8-0 trouncing of Arkansas - 1,177 have come during her tenure in Ann Arbor, so it's clear that success in Maize and Blue is nothingnew to Hutch. But this year has a different feel to it. Different from last year's run to the NCAA Super Regional. Different from the 2009 trip to the College World Series in Okla- homa City - where the Wolver- ines hope to return this year. Even different from 2005 when Michigan completed its magical run, coming back to beat UCLA for the national championship, giving Hutch her ring. But anyone who knows her knows one title isn't enough to appease her will to succeed - a deeply rooted desire that she, in turn, lends to each one of her student-athletes. That's why nobody should be surprised when, after lead- ing Michigan to its best start in school history, after being named to the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame, after claiming 13 of the last 18 Big Ten regular-season championships, Hutch refuses to relent. I The words "day off" aren't a part of her vocabulary. She won't accept from her players anything less than their best. Settling for less isn't what brought the Lan- sing native from a two-sport athlete at Michigan State down I-96 to become one of the great- est coaches in college softball his- tory. And the Wolverines have been creeping up the national polls. While the schedule thus far hasn't been filled with national powers, some difficult challenges await Michigan. If it can over- come them, the ascend up the rankings will continue. But don't tell Hutch - she doesn't read them. "We don't care about the polls," Hutch said. "You play (the games) on the field. We'll get our opportunity." This weekend, the Wolverines will attempt to remain unbeaten when they travel to Louisville to play a pair against both the Cardinals and Western Ken- tucky. In order to remain one of the nation's few unbeatens, they certainly won't need to deviate from the sound fundamentals that Hutch preaches from the moment her players put on that uniform. "We're just tryingto get better because everyone in the country is doing the same thing," Hutch said. And she hasn't given us any reason to think otherwise. In fact, she has given us 1,200 rea- sons to believe. ED MOcH/Daily Lexi leaves legacy By MARK BURNS 64 assists and 13 digs in a five- Daily Sports Editor set victory against Hawaii in front of 7,500 fans, Rosen and April 13, 2011 - Not many the Michigan coaching staff Division-I athletes can claim knew they possessed a special to be named the best all-time talent in Zimmerman. player ina particular sport. "When it's crunch time, she But senior volleyball setter just finds ways to win. That's and Program in the Environ- the recipe, that's what you're ment concentrator Lexi Zim- looking for in players." merman will graduate in a few On Sept. 24, 2010, Zimmer- weeks as "the best all-time man became the program's player in the history of Michi- all-time assists leader. Fol- gan (volleyball)," according to lowing the completion of this volleyball coach Mark Rosen. past season, she tallied 5,903 "It's a really great honor," career assists. During her time Zimmerman said of being a stu- in Ann Arbor, Zimmerman led dent of the year. "I'm just real- the Wolverines to some of their ly proud to have represented most successful NCAA appear- Michigan for four years." ances as well, finishing in the When Zimmerman came to Sweet 16 twice and Elite Eight Michigan in the fall of 2007 once. from Barrington High School "There's no question that in Barrington, Mo., she was she's had the most impact on the nation's top setter. Over the elevating our program of any- past four seasons, Rosen has body in the history of the pro- been fortunate enough to have gram," Rosen said. the talent of Zimmerman, the Zimmerman is currently in 2006 Gatorade Player of the the process of compiling her Year. portfolio and studying for the "The majors for athleticism GREs. She's considering the - speed, agility, hand-eye coor- possibility of playing profes- dination, balance, explosion sional volleyball while attend- - all those things, she's off the ing graduate school at the charts," Rosen added, speaking College of Architecture and last fall about the three-time Urban Planning. American Volleyball Coaches "Michigan was very under- Association All-American. standing, and I was encouraged "She's got the intangible quali- by the conversation," Zimmer- ties. She's a great competitor, man said. "They really opened she plays great under pressure." my eyes, and I could try and do From her very first match on the two things I really want to Aug. 24, 2007, where she tallied do at the same time." King winsAll-American honors, falls in Sweet 16 in singles, doubles By ALEX STEINHOFF Daily Sports Writer May 13, 2011 - Sophomore Evan King and senior Jason Jung of the Michigan men's tennis team made plans to stay in Palo Alto, Calif. for Memo- rial Day Weekend. They also had their sights set on traveling to New York in early September - the location of the U.S. Open - where the winner of the NCAA Individual Championships earns a wild-card spot. But those plans were cut short. King reached the Sweet 16 in singles - something not done by a Wolverine in 19 years - before falling to the No. 5 seed, but not without earning All-American status. In doubles, King and Jung also reached the Sweet 16, before bowing out to the No. 5 seed as well. In the first round, King upset No. 12 Tim Puetz of Auburn, but Jung failed to do the same against defending champion and No. 9 Bradley Klahn of Stanford, the school playing host for the tournament. After several hours of a rain delay, King jumped out to an early 4-1 lead, breaking Puetz's serve early. But the Auburn Tiger fought back to trim King's lead to just one game. At 4-3, King suddenly turned on the jets. He cruised to win the next two games, before winning all six games of the second set. The sophomore's victory gave Michigan its first win in the NCAA Individual Champion- ships since Matko Maravic won his first-round match four years earlier. King, the No. 21 seed in the tournament, would next face Gonzalo Escobar, a player ranked five spots below him. Michigan's captain Jung was unable to reach day two of the tournament in singles wit}- King. Against the NCAA iglee defending champion, Jung ral- lied off three straight games in the first set to take a 5-3 lead. But Jung was unable to close out the set twice and Klahn pushed the set to five games apiece, before closing out the set in a competi- tive tiebreaker which featured spectacular shots from both sides. But once the second set start- ed, Klahn kept the advantage. Klahn broke Jung to go up 3-2 before cruising through the next three games to eliminate Jung from the singles draw. "The second setgot away from (Jung) a little bit, but what I saw looked pretty good," Michigan coach Bruce Berque said. "It was a tough draw, but most draws are tough draws in this tournament." King kicked off day two of the tournament with his singles match in the morning. King dropped the first set 6-3 and was broken to open the second set. But King responded with a second-set victory, pushing the match to a decisive third set, in which Michigan's sophomore sensation never looked back, completing a six-game rally to win the match. The win propelled King to the Sweet 16 and officially earned him ITA All-American status - an honor a Wolverine hasn't had in four years. Just over two hours after King won to reach the Sweet 16 in sin- gles, he stepped on the court to do the same in doubles. Originally slated to play the No.1 doubles team from national champion USC, King and Jung caught a lucky break, as the Tro- jan pair pulled their names from the doubles draw. Instead the Wolverine duo played the No. 32 pair in the country from UCLA, Adrian Puget and Alex Brigham. Despite dropping a tough first set, King and Jung found their stride winning the second set before cruising to a three-set victory 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. The win over the UCLA duo sent King and Jung to the Sweet 16 for the second time as a doubles team, despite not playing together since April. Day three of the tournament started off with King's third- round singles match against rival No. 5 Blaz Rola. The freshman No. 1 singles player from Ohio State met King twice earlier in the year, taking each match in three sets. Rola claimed the lead early and eventually took the first set. Rola broke King again two games later to take a 3-0 lead and a strangle-hold on the set and the match. "Rola was getting to him and Evan was making errors," Ber- que said. "If you make a few errors and allow yourself to get frustrated, it quickly translates to more errors, and today, he didn't manage his frustration too well, and I think that was the biggest difference between yes- terday and today." With the match seemingly in control, Rola pushed his lead to 5-0 with stellar serving and solid returns of serve before closing out the set without dropping a game and closing out the match in straight sets. "In this tournament, Evan kind of made three steps forward and one step back," Berque said. "He lostcto a very good player, but unfortunately it wasn't his best tennis today." The loss ended King's singles season, but King's final 30-9 record was the best by a Wolver- ine since 1998. King later took the court with Jung for their second-round dou- bles match against No. S Roberto Maytin and John Peers from Baylor. Maytin and Peers played the majority of the first set from behind, but broke King's serve to knot the set at five, before hold- ing serve to take a 6-5 lead. But the Wolverines responded to send the set into a tiebreaker. Despite fighting off one set point, the Wolverines dropped a back-and-forth tiebreaker to lose the first set for the second time in the tournament. "We had a chance to serve out the first set but were unable to do so, and that was a big turning point in the match," Berque said. "We had execution problems with first serves and finishing out some points, and then we got into a tiebreaker and one or two points changed the match." But unlike the first round, King and Jung's opponent jumped out to an early lead, as they broke the Wolverine pair in the first game of the second set. Later in the set, as King and Jung were trying to claw back, they were broken for the second time in the set, surrendering a 4-1 lead to the Bears. At 5-2, No. 5 Baylor was serv- ing for the match. Jung missed a forehand into the net at break point, missing a golden oppor- tunity to get back into the set. At deuce, the Bears quickly won the next two points to clinch the game, set, and the match, 7-6, 6-2. As disappointing as the loss was for King and Jung, Jung ended his Michigan tennis career with 89 doubles wins - just one win shy of the all-time record - while King ended his season with experience and All- American honors in singles. "(King will) be coming back as one of the better players in the country and I'm sure he's going to improve over the summer," Berque said. "I'm looking for him to be a great player for us next year at the top of the lineup in singles and doubles." 14 TOREHAN SHARMAN/Daily Michigan's Master" By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Writer April 13, 2011 - For most University students, spring marks a difficult time for jug- gling homework, preparing for exams and solidifying summer employment plans. But for Michigan men's golf captain Lion Kim, this spring has meant balancing the addi- tional workload of participat- ing in last weekend's most esteemed PGA Tour stop - The Masters championships at Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia. Kim, a senior majoring in general studies, qualified for the Masters by winning the U.S. Amateur Public Links Champi- onship last July. He finished his Masters debut at four over par and missed the cut by just three strokes. Though he didn't make it past the second round, Kimbeat nine former Masters champi- ons, includinghis playing mates Davis Love III and Jose Maria Olazibal. What spectators didn't see, however, is that his talent and work ethic translates to the classroom. "I think his work ethic is what really sets him apart from so many players that I've ever coached," coach Andrew Sapp said. "He probably works as hard or harder than anybody I've ever been around, and that's really what drives him." Preparing for the Masters - and missing a week and a half of school in the process - put Kim's time management skills to the test. But if there's anyone who can handle the challenge, it's Kim. "It's been a busy time of the year with papers and mid- terms and everything," he said in March, two weeks before the Masters. "It's been tough, there's no question. But I'm going to make sure that I divide up my practice and really use my time wisely." Kim, who will graduate in June with a bachelor's in gener- al studies, hopes to eventually turn pro. Right now, however, he remains focused on school and receiving his degree. Despite his achievements, Kim remains humble. "It's a great honor," he said of being selected a student of the year. "I truly think that if it weren't for my teammates who pushed me every day, I wouldn't be in the position I'm in."