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0I

6A - Thursday, November 10, 2011

The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com

Shutout ends 'M' season early 84th-minute score
By STEVEN BRAID drops Wolverines

The Michigan men's soccer
team opened the first round of
the conference tournament hop-
ing to resurrect the magic of
2010.
The defending Big Ten Tour-
nament champion Wolverines
were con- _
fident WISCONSIN 2
they could MICHIGAN 0
repeat as
champions, according to fresh-
man midfielder Tyler Arnone.
Despite their struggles dur-
ing the regular season - which
stemmed from their inability to
score - they believed that they
had the ability to surprise every-
one but themselves.
But this wasn't the same high-
octane Wolverine team of 2010,
and it showed.
Struggling to convert on scor-
ing opportunities the whole
game - much like they did dur-
ing the regular season - the Wol-
verines lost to Wisconsin, 2-0, as
their season came to an end.
Early on, the inclement weath-
er greatly impacted play. With
howling winds, cold tempera-
tures and sporadic rainfall, nei-
ther team was able to maintain
possession of the ball for lengthy
periods of time in'the first half.
The winds created havoc for both
defenses.
"The wind in the first half
was a huge factor," said senior
midfielder Adam Shaw. "No one
wanted to take any risks, so we
just wanted to get the ball up the
field. But when we kicked it up
the field, it got stuck in the wind
so it seemed like we were in our
half (of the field) alot."
Despite playing against the
wind during the first half, Michi-
gan (1-5 Big Ten, 5-14-1 overall)
was still able to create scoring
chances. In the 31st minute,
redshirt sophomore midfielder
Noble Sullivan outran the Wis-

MACKENZIE BEREZiN/Daily
Redshirt freshman Adam Grinwis had seven saves and alowed two goals in Michigan's Big Ten Tournament loss.

consin defense and retrieved
a pass at the top of the box. But
with Badger goalkeeper Max
Jentsch coming out of goal to
challenge the play, Sullivan was
unable to get a clean shot at
the net. Minutes later, Arnone
received a pass in the middle of
Wisconsin's box. With another
golden opportunity, Arnone fired
just left of the goal.
Though both teams had mul-
tiple scoring chances, neither
the Wolverines nor the Badgers
(4-2, 10-7-2) could convert as they
entered halftime in a scoreless tie.
.As the wind died down at the
beginning of the second half,
Wisconsin played much more
aggressively. It attacked relent-
lessly and pressured Michigan's
defense, creating scoring chances
from the first minute of the sec-
ond half. Its attack, though, was
initially stifled by redshirt fresh-
man goalie Adam Grinwis.
Grinwis was instrumental in
keeping Michigan competitive

throughout the game, especially
in the second half when he rou-
tinely made sliding and diving
saves.
In the 58th minute, it looked
as if midfielder Joey Tennyson
would give Wisconsin the lead
with what appeared to be a per-
fectly placed shot at the top left
corner of the goal. But Grinwis
corralled the ball after making a
full-extension save.
"For 84 minutes, Grinwis
managed the game really, really
well," said Michigan coach Steve
Burns. "He made things look easy
in a couple of very dangerous sit-
uations."
The Wolverines, though, con-
tinued to struggle with convert-
ing scoring chances. With less
than 11 minutes left in the game,
junior midfielder Latif Alashe
sent a pass towards Arnone in the
middle of the box. Arnone barely
missed deflecting the ball into
the net, as it sailed just passed his
outstretched leg.

Moments later, Wisconsin
took the lead when midfielder
Nick Janus took a pass from fel-
low midfielder Tomislav Zadro
and knocked the ball into the left
corner of the net from the top of
the box.
Arnone and freshman forward
Matt Rickard had chances to tie
up the game in the 85th minute,
but they couldn't convert their
shots from within the box. With
less than two minutes remaining
in the game, Wisconsin scored its
second goal of the game. Pushing
up the field for additional offense,
Grinwis whiffed on a kick - Wis-
consin took control of the ball
and scored on the empty net.
Despite Michigan's struggles,
Burns was encouraged by what
he saw on the field as his team
enters the offseason.
"All in all, I thought where we
were lacking - with our killing
instinct - the young guys are
starting to come around and they
will be around next year," he said.

By MATT SLOVIN
Daily Sports Writer
The Wisconsin men's soccer
team plays its home games on the
banks of Lake Mendota, where
a biting wind sweeps off the
water. So the wind that whipped
through the University of Michi-
gan Soccer Stadium Wednesday
night was nothing new.
The Badgers had just watched
a major upset when Penn State
defeated No. 2 seed Ohio State
earlier in the day. They knew
that in the Big Ten Tournament,
everyone was vulnerable.
Wisconsin also remembered
the Wolverines' remarkable run
through the 2010 Big Ten and
NCAA Tournament that ended
in a heartbreaking 1-0 loss in the
semifinals to Akron. So it knew
that Michigan coach Steve Burns
coaches his teams to thrive in do-
or-die situations.
The Badgers finally broke
through in their 2-0 victory.
The first goal was a rocket from
near the top of the box that red-
shirt freshman goalkeeper Adam
Grinwis couldn't keep from find-
ing nylon. It was clear Wisconsin
knew what it was getting from
the scrappy Wolverines, and
when push came to shove - with
about six minutes remaining in
the match - the Badgers made
sure there would be no fanfare,
no magical run, no last-minute
goals as they defeated Michigan,
2-0.
In fact, it seemed that Wiscon-
sin was prepared for anything
that came its way in Wednesday's
Big Ten Tournament first-round
match - weather, an upset bid or
a hot goalie.
For 84 minutes, Grinwis
played like an All-American goal-
keeper.
Then, he gave up the go-ahead
tally, followed quickly by a whiff

as he was preparing to boot a ball
away. An eager Badger easily fin-
ished on the empty net to put the
match out of reach.
Several times in the first half,
Grinwis needed to fully extend
to prevent Badger shots from
scoring. Wisconsin came into
the game with a more aggressive
style than in the previous meet-
ing and it showed. But Michigan
held on for as long as it could,
waiting for a counterattack strike
that never came.
"They know what we're all
about," Burns said. "The game
played out the way both teams
probably thought it was going to
go. One team was goingto pounce
on the other team's mistake."
And though the southerly
wind was stalwart for the full 90
minutes, that's hardly to say the
momentum followed suit. Both
teams found real estate in the
other's box multiple times in the
first half. But just like in Wiscon-
sin's 2-1 victory over the Wolver-
ines on Oct. 9, possession favored
the Badgers.
"I think they tried to play in
ourhalfalot morethan lasttime,"
said teary-eyed fifth-year senior
midfielder Adam Shaw after the
loss. "We could've done a bet-
ter job of pressing them, which
would've keptthem in theirhalf."
But Wisconsin's combination
of size and speed proved lethal,
even after added time seemed
imminent. And because the first
Wolverine letdown took so long,
when it finally happened, it was
crippling. The wind picked up
even stronger and Shaw and the
rest of the seniors realized their
Michigan careers were ending.
The Badgers' preparation over-
whelmed the Wolverines down
the stretch. But Burns was quick
to point out the team's bright
future, saying his young guys are
"starting to come around."

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