2B - February 6, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Balance is goodfor Michigan-Michigan State rivalry WenMichigan State visited Crisler Center two weeks ago, you might remember that the 60-59 balgame was Michigan's third straight vic- tory in the rivalry. Or you might remem- ber specifics. .Maybe it was Trey Burke's dish to Stu Dou- glass for the STEPHEN J. game-win- NESBITT ning layup. Maybe it was the lockdown defense in the final 31.4 seconds. Maybe it was seeing the Spartans walk off the court with their heads bowed, dejected. But, more than likely, your lasting memory isn't something that happened on the court. It's Denard Robinson and Roy Roundtree bouncing up and down in the front row of the student section, donning maize shirts and dancingto the Blues Brothers. That was captivating. It's OK to remember that. Try to remember the guy standing, singing, jumping next to Denard. Not Roy - the guy on the other side. He had a maize No.1 jersey painted on his body. At first, people thought it was Lloyd Brady, then it wasn't. It was Zac Boyd, a senior Engi- neeringstudent. For one night, his face was plastered across Twitter and ESPN, as he was for- tunate enough to have been Rob- inson's bench buddy in a thriller against Michigan State. But that's not important. It's his backstory that brought him non Brown, Paul Davis, Drew Nietzel. You remember the win- ners. I knew Michigan football, though. Mike Hart, John Navarre and Braylon Edwards were a little more memorable (and somewhat less criminal) than Jeff Smoker, Charles Rog- ers and T.J. Duckett. That all has changed, obvious- ly. You'd be a fool not to notice that the tide has shifted. Michigan State has toppled Michigan four straight seasons on the gridiron. The Wolverines responded with three consecu- tive victories on the hardcourt for the first time since 1998 - wins that were later vacated after the Robert Traylor inves- tigation. The Spartans defended home court valiantly yesterday, downing Michigan 64-54 at the Breslin Center. It was a little ugly. Draymond Green tied the entire Wolverine team with 16 rebounds. It's OK. Really. Rivalries swing back and forth, that's the beauty of them. As the clock wound down at the Breslin Center yesterday, the Izzone shot one last barb toward the Michigan bench. "Where is Shoelace?" the stu- dent section chanted. He wasn't there. Neither was his bench buddy Zac. The night belonged to Sparty, but that's not the whole season. The fall doesn't belong to Michigan any- more, and the Spartans finally have competition in the winter. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu or on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt. Engineering senior Zac Boyd, standing alongside Roy Roundtree and Denard Robinson, cheers Michigan's Jan.17 victory against Michigan State at CI onto this page. Zac graduated from Grand Ledge High School a few years back. He went to school with Al Horford. He went to school with Jon Horford. He went to school with ... me. Zac played Little League base- ball with me. We were in French Club together. Still not important. He's from Spartan country, right smack dab in the heart of it. If you've never ventured near East Lansing, it's a Utopian place, where traditions are passed down from generation to genera- tion. It's the kind of place where every teacher is a Michigan State grad, where every grandpa doffs his Spartan cap at you on the sidewalk. It's the kind of place where every child has a trade- mark Michigan joke. "You've got a stain on your shirt!" Huh? "That big 'M.' I think you spilled something on your shirt." Sometimes it's a little less cryptic. "I like you, but I hate Michi- gan." Fair enough. It's a rivalry. It's about taking a punch and react- ing with a right of your own. If author and professor John U. Bacon has his facts straight, the "Spartans" moniker came as a response to Ann Arbor being dubbed the Athens of the West. Point. Counterpoint. In the first decade of the mil- lennium, the Michigan college sports scene was pretty struc- turally sound. Fall was football season. Football season was for Michigan. Winter was basket- ball season. Basketball season was for the Spartans. (We could stretch back into the 1990s and the trend holds, but then we'd be trudgingthrough my infancy.) No need to mess with success. Michigan has gone to11 bowl games - five BCS games - since 2000, but has only two NCAA Tournament appearances. Michigan State has seen eight bowl games - zero BCS - but hasn't missed the NCAA Tournament since 1997 and has reached five Final Fours since 2000. Rivalry games were tight, for the most part. (Raise your hand if you're willing to forget the Spartans' 114-63 win in 2000.) But by the end of the season, the sentiment remained: The state was painted maize in the fall, green in the winter. Football school versus basketball school. Neither knew success in the other's realm. I didn't know Michigan bas- ketball until I stepped foot on campus. I knew the Spartans. Mateen Cleaves, Mo Pete, Shan- Osika proves her mettle at Meyo Greenlee, Washington shine By MARYAM SQUILLACE For the Daily In a sea of hundreds of ath- letes, a modest freshman from Waterford, Mich. shined. This past weekend, the No. 23 Michigan women's track and field team attended the Notre Dame Meyo Invitational. At the event, Michigan wom- en's track and field freshman Shannon Osika proved that class standing is really just a label. Osika was one of the 14 Wol- verines that had top-10 perfor- mances this past weekend. She placed first in the Meyo Mile with the eighth-fastest time in the country and a personal best of 4:38.42. Osika also beat her personal-best of 4:41.31, which she set at the team's meet at Nebraska on Jan. 28. "It was her turn today, (Osika) was the freshest competitor, and we're hoping we'll get many good performances out of her. I know the other athletes will step up as well," said Michigan coach James Henry. Henry was also referring to teammates junior Jillian Smith, who placed second, and junior Rebecca Addison, who placed 12th. Osika also led the distance medley relay to place first, running the 1,200-meter leg, followed by senior Brittani Wil- liams, Smith and Addison. This was the team's first time com- peting in the distance medley relay this season, obtaining a first-place finish with a time of 11:04:30. Because of their score, the team is already NCAA Division- I qualified, having beaten the qualifying time of 11:03.50. Their time is the fourth fastest in the nation, and the best time of any Big Ten team so far. "It felt really good, really great for my confidence," Osika said. "It makes me excited for the future, for the future meets, and seeing what I can do for my team." The team also got good perfor- mances out of sophomore Taylor Pogue, sophomore Amber Smith and redshirt sophomore Kiley Tobel. Pogue placed third in the mile run, Amber Smith placed third in the 60-meter hurdles and Tobel placed fourth in the pole vault. The athletes had the upcoming Big Tens on their minds, and used this event to prepare themselves for the event, their most important of the sea- son. "I think I need to work on my speed a little bit," Pogue said. "I think my endurance was there, and I have a good base, but I need to work on my turnover at the end of the race. And I think I need to improve on my overall race strategy." Tobel has been hard at work this season with assistant coach Shean Conlon, perfecting her pole vaulting in light of the upcoming Big Tens. She tied in fourth place at Notre Dame after placing second at their meet at Nebraska. "There was a lot of good com- petition, so it was good jump- ing against some competitors in the Big Ten," Tobel said. "But I would liked to have jumped high- er today but I still am working on things and getting ready for Big Tens a couple weeks from now." The main thing on the girls' minds is preparing for the Big Tens on February 24th and 25th. The SPIRE Invitational is another opportunity before the Big Tens for the girls to get ready, both with their performance and their mentality. "Just got to keep moving ahead, and as I would call it stay connected," Henry said. "And by that I mean as the competi- tion improves, we must improve. As conditions change, we must change with the conditions. This was a big track, our first 300- meter track - 300-plus meter track - and we stepped up to the conditions. As the competition improves, it's important that we must improve." By GREG GARNO though, both set lifetime bests For the Daily in their respective events, the hurdles and pole vault, duringthe Michigan's men's track and weekend. field coach Fred LaPlante may Washington, who has con- have more depth on his squad sistently finished near the top this season than he originally of each of his races, had another thought. fantastic performance. His time At the Notre Dame Meyo Invi- of 8.00 seconds in the 60-meter tational on Friday and Saturday, hurdles was only hundredths of LaPlante and his squad walked a second better than his last, but away with a number of positives, hundredths of a second turns out including a surprise finish from tobe several feet in this event. a team of young runners. The Washington, though, did not distance medley relay team of begin the meet on a good note, as sophomore Nathan Karr, redshirt he barely qualified for his second freshman James Yau, freshman record-setting run. Washington Brian Snyder and freshman Dan wasn't pleased with his first per- Martin took second place with a formance, but realized that he time of 9:54 in a field including had bounced back nicely. Ohio State and Indiana. "I felt like my start (of the LaPlante rested redshirt soph- meet) was pretty bad, but then I omore Bradley James, redshirt ended up adjusting and was able sophomore Ethan Dennis, and to bounce back," Washington redshirt senior Craig Forys dur- said. "But I reacted well and I felt ing the non-scoring Notre Dame more comfortable on the steps in Invitational in preparation for the end." the upcoming SPIRE Invitational Washington is aware ofhow he in Geneva, Ohio. Agood indicator has maintained success through- of how the Wolverines will fare out the season though, and what against stiff competition from the he must continue to do. Big Ten and SEC, the Invitational "I feel my focus this year is requires a well-rested squad. more competing rather than run- "Next week is really a big deal ning for time," Washington said. for us, and we'll have all of our "When I think about trying to best guys competing," LaPlante run a certain time, there's a lot said. more pressure on me. I end up Sophomore Herman Wash- tryingto run faster, then I realize ington and junior Jack Greenlee that I'm trying to beat the person in the lane next to me." Greenlee, a junior pole vaulter, has also set multiple personal records early in the season, and his jump of 16 feet, 11 inches was another feat in a successful sea- son. Though for Greenlee, this personal best was somewhat bittersweet, as he was unable to reach his goal of 17 feet. LaPlante noted that despite Greenlee's inability to clear 17 feet, he is still proud of his work ethic and ability to finish against some strongcompetition. "I think he'svery determined," LaPlante said. "I like his attitude because he is atrue competitor. I don't think he fears anybody and I think he knows he has to work hard to do well." Greenlee is optimistic after Saturday's performance though, as he finds himself in prime posi- tion for this month's Big Ten Championships. LaPlante knows that every track meet is worthwhile though, even when his stars aren't com- peting. "Any time you go to a meet in the sport of track and field, something good always hap- pens," LaPlante said. "Somebody always has to do something well and sometimes there's not always a guy at the top of the heat, but there's always a way to build con- fidence. 0 0 Michigan tops Spartans for 35th consecutive season Michigan State hasn't beaten Michigan since 1977 By PETER BROWN For the Daily Entering Saturday afternoon's dual meet, the Michigan men's swimming team hadn't lost to Michigan State since 1977. That streak was kept alive, as the Wolverines defeated the Spartans 186-102 on senior night at Canham Natatorium in Ann Arbor. No. 4 Michigan (9-0, 4-0 Big Ten) dominated in its final dual meet of the season, sweeping Michigan State in all 16 events. Starting with a 100-yard back- stroke win by senior Jan Konar- zewski with a time of 49.69 seconds and finishing with a 200-yard freestyle relay win by Michigan's A relay team - con- sisting of Konarzewski, junior Miguel Ortiz, freshman Bruno Ortiz, and senior Dan Madwed (1:22.40) - the Wolverines treat- ed the meet as an opportunity to warm up for the Big Ten Cham- pionships. "Michigan State's not too good," Madwed said. "But they're always our last meet and they're a good tune-up to prac- tice the little things before we head off to Big Tens." Michigan coach Mike Bot- tom echoed Madwed's senti- ment, saying "we're just getting ourselves ready for the Big Ten Championships. That's going to be a tough battle with Ohio, and we'll see what comes of that. But these guys are ready, and they'll swim well." Along with the f victory, Madwed w vidual 200-yard fre time of 1:38.23 and butterfly in a time o Konarzewski, M Morrison, Casey Sreen- an and Dane Vanderkaay were all hon- ored through- out the meet - their last at Canham. Bottom had only glow- ing things to say about his senior class. "If you look at th what we're graduat we're not losing sot but the personaliti ership that they b reestyle-relay incredible," Bottom said. "Those von the indi- guys have led this team, and are estyle with a my first group here at Michi- the 200-yard gan. We have bonded and talked f 1:50.44. about what they want to create, adwed, Chris and you saw this group stick together. "Their aca- demics and "They had a community service are all lot of fun, and strong, and they all want that's half the to be Michigan men." battle, right?" Bottom gave the upper- classmen opportunities to shine on Saturday, going with ie points, and a more senior-heavy lineup than ing, you think he normally would. nething huge, "It was fun," Bottom said. es and lead- "Guys got to swim some differ- ring are just ent events. I tried to put some seniors into the events that they would do well in, and they did." Vanderkaay - the youngest of four Vanderkaay brothers, who have all left legacies at Michigan - placed first in the 500-yard freestyle, outlasting sophomore Ryutaro Kamiya and Michigan State's Pat Falconer with a time of 4:36.93. "It's something that my broth- ers and I can share as we get older," Vanderkaay said. "It's something that I always like to take pride in. "That was my first dual-meet win, so it was pretty exciting bringing the best for last. I'm going to miss this place a lot, and I'm glad I was able to win in my last meet." Other notable performers included sophomore Connor Jaeger, who won the 400-yard individual medley with a time of 3:59.16; junior Roman Willets, who won the 100-yard freestyle with a time of 45.04; junior Con- nor McCarroll, who won the 200 backstroke with atime of 1:50.60; and sophomore Kyle Duckitt, who won the 200 breaststroke with a time of 2:04.00. The Ortiz brothers also found individual success on Saturday: Bruno won the 200 individual medley and Miguel won the 100 butterfly. Michigan is looking to con- tinue its success at the Ohio State Invitational next week. Bottom is confident in his team's chemistry moving for- ward to the Big Ten Champion- ships in Iowa City, which begins on Feb. 22. "(Saturday's meet) got them together as a team, and they had a lot of fun, and that's half the battle, right?" Bottom said. 0 6