The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 23, 2012 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thuraday, February 23, 2012 - 7A Freshmen pitchers dominate early on Senior guard Zack Novak said John Shurna, Northwestern's all-time leading scorer, deserves an NCAA Tournament appearance this season. Breaking down the Big Ten race 'M' registered four shutouts in five games in Florida last weekend By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer It looked like it was going to be a long weekend for the Mich- igan women's softball team when it was handed its first loss of the season in a 7-3 game against Maryland at the FAU Kickoff Classic in Boca Raton, Fla. It didn't end the way it began. The 11th-ranked Wolverines (8-1) ended the tournament with four straight shutouts, including one over then-No. 22 Kentucky on Saturday. After losing All-American right-hander Jordan Taylor to graduation last season, pitch- ing was not supposed to be a strength coming into the season. But, led by the team's freshmen pitching duo left- hander Haylie Wagner and right-hander Sara Driesenga, Michigan's pitching could not be stopped. "The pitchers on this team are' so different from each other," Driesenga said. "They lost Jordan lastyear - we aren't Jordan, but together we are all a little bit different and together we can be effective." Wagner led the way at the FAU Kickoff Classic, going 2-0 on the weekend while pitching 14 scoreless innings. Against LIU Brooklyn on Friday, she notched her first shutout, allow- ing just two hits while striking out four. She followed up that performance with an excellent outing agains the more impres- sive Wildcats. On Monday, Wagner was named Big Ten Pitcher and Freshman of the Week. "Our hope is (Wagner) keeps getting better and keeps devel- oping her pitches," said Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins. "She's going to continue to get opportunities to improve." Wagner's award marked the second consecutive week that a member of the Wolverine pitch- ing staff was honored by the Big Ten. On Feb. 13, Driesenga was awarded Co-Freshman of the Week honors after her five- inning no-hitter against then- No.22 LSU. Driesenga struggled. to pick up where she left off from her performance against the Tigers and gave up 12 hits and seven runs in a 7-3 loss to the Terra- pins this past Friday. But she found her groove on Saturday against Florida Atlantic, giving up just five hits and striking out two without allowing a walk. "(Wagner will) continue to get opportunities to improve." "In the first game, against Maryland, I was just slow," Driesenga said. "I wasn't really finishing up pitches as well as I should have been and that's what I fixed in the game on Sat- urday." Along with Driesenga and Wagner, junior right-hander Stephanie Speierman added to the pitching staff's momentum when she recorded her second- career shutout in a 4-0 rout of Wright State in the last game of the tournament. "We all have to step up," Dri- esenga said. "We have to have a one-pitch focus (because) every pitch matters. If we make a mis- take, it's going to come back and bite us." Who knows, maybe the Wol- verines will earn their third straight Big Ten pitching award when the weekend's over. By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer When Michigan State won a share of the Big Ten football cham- pionship two years ago, Michigan fans were quick to point out that NOTEBOOK the Spartans split the crown. Due to tiebreak- ers, Michigan State was sent to the Capitol One Bowl as the con- ference's No. 3 team, behind Ohio State and Wisconsin. But in two weeks, Wolverine fans may be on the other end of the joke from Spartan fans thanks to their school's basketball team. Michigan currently sits in sec- ond place in the Big Ten, tied with the Buckeyes and a game behind Michigan State. Following the Wolverines' win over Northwestern on Tuesday, most analysts have tabbed Michi- gan's remaining schedule the easiest of the three frontrunners. The team - which hosts Purdue on Saturday, before road contests at Illinois and Penn State - will likely be favored in each of its final games. The Spartans and Buckeyes will square off on March 4, mean- ing one of them won't win out. Michigan State will also be put to the test on Feb. 28 at Indiana. Ohio State still has tilts with the Bad- gers and Wildcats before heading to East Lansing. In the event that the three teams finish tied atop the stand- ings, Michigan will automatically lose the tiebreaker for the confer- ence tournament's top seed to the Spartans. Because the teams split their two matchups, the next pro- cedure states, "each tied team's record shall be compared to the team occupying the highest posi- tion in the ... standings." Wisconsin currently sits in fourth place, and since the Spar- tans swept the Badgers, they'd win the tiebreaker. Even though Mich- igan beat Wisconsin in the teams' only matchup, Michigan State's two wins would edge Michigan in the follow-up tiebreaker. If fifth-place Indiana finishes the season ahead of the Badgers, Michigan State will still win the tiebreaker. Should the Spartans beat the Hoosiers later this month, they'll have swept Indiana, which split its series with Michigan. If Michigan State loses in Blooming- ton, the next tiebreaker looks at the comparison of the two teams against the standings' next team, Wisconsin, which the Spartans hold the tiebreaker over. For those reasons, if the Wol- verines finish in a two-way tie for first with Michigan State, the Spartans would receive the No. 1 seed. If a tie were to occur, Michi- gan's best shot for the top seed would be to finish tied with just Ohio State. The Buckeyes also split with Indiana, so the deciding tiebreaker would come down to the Ohio State's matchup with the Badgers this Sunday. If Ohio State wins, it would be 2-0 against Wisconsin - better than Michigan's 1-0 record. If the Badgers win, the Wolverines' per- fect record would trump the split, giving Michigan its first No.1seed in program history. Regardless of how things shake out, the Wolverines are on pace to at least match their highest seeding ever, No. 3, which came in 2003. And barring a complete collapse, combined with vari- ous other scenarios taking place, Michigan will receive its second- consecutive first-round bye. BALL IN BURKE'S HAND: In one of the most crucial moments from Michigan's win on Tues- day in Evanston, the final play of regulation, freshman point guard Trey Burke missed a would-be game winner. It was one of the only times all night when he made a mistake. That's because, as he's done all season, Burke played with poise and control - limiting his turn- overs to just two. The Wildcats and their com- plex 1-3-1 defense have a propensi- ty for forcing turnovers, especially in recent home games. In its pre- vious two games in Welsh-Ryan Arena, Northwestern has forced, on average, a staggering 18 turn- overs. Though the rare defensive formation doesn't stifle Michi- gan like some others teams - the Wolverines also employ the 1-3-1 - a freshman playing 45 minutes in intimidating road conditions would be expected to have more than two turnovers. But he didn't, and Michigan turned the ball over just seven times all game. "A very good Minnesota team came in and had 21 turnovers the other day, and it was really the key to that game," said Michigan coach John Beilein, referencing the Wildcats win over the Golden Gophers. "You cannot turn the ball over against this team, and they're good at doing that against some teams, so I liked our poise - and Trey's obviously got the ball most of the time. "The seven turnovers is huge - that we only had that many." But even the stoic Burke came up rattled on that final possession of regulation. With Michigan inbounding with only a few seconds left in regulation, Beilein said Burke made the wrong read, forcing him to heave up a long, desperation 3-point attempt at the buzzer. "We wanted him to turn the corner and make something hap- pen," Beilein said. "He stopped. He should've just continued to go on to the other side, or throw back to Zack when they double-teamed him, and he missed both of them." But Burke didn't dwell on the error for long. The Columbus native re-established himself quickly, draining a three in the opening minute of overtime. The Wolverines never looked back. NOVAK EMPATHIZES WITH NORTHWESTERN: Even in the thrill of victory, senior guard Zack Novak expressed sympathy for the Wildcats and their star forward John Shurna. "I was talking to John after- wards and I just told him, 'We've been in this spot before,' where we had our backs against the wall where they're at and strung off a couple at the end and got in," Novak said. "That kid, he deserves toplayinthe NCAA Tournament." Northwestern has never made an NCAA Tournament, and with Shurna - the Wildcats' all-time leading scorer - due to graduate, this season may be the program's best opportunity in the coming years. "Being a senior, playing against him for four years, he does it the right way - really nice kid," Novak said. "Personally, for them, I hope they can go out and win the next three and get in the tourna- ment. I think they deserve that." WANT TO JOIN DAILY SPORTS? Go ahead. We'll make your day. FIRST MEETING AFTER BREAK IS AT 1 P.M. ON SUNDAY, MARCH 4 AT 420 MAYNARD STREET THE NEW LINE CHINESE CUISINE iagardfen "..', SPECIALIZING IN HONG KONG, TAIWANESE, '.- SZECHUAN & HUNAN STYLES 734-995-1786 116S.MAINSTREET (BETWEEN W. HURON AND WASHINGTON) - DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR -:a WWW.KAIGARDEN.COM Wolverines return to Florida for third warm-weather tournament Michigan faces four teams it shut out in last matchup together By DANIEL FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer For the second consecutive weekend, the Michigan softball team will travel to Florida to play five games. After suffering its first loss of the season against Maryland last Friday, the 12th-ranked Wolverines (8-1) reeled off four consecutive shutout victories, besting LIU Brooklyn, then-No. 22 Kentucky, Florida Atlantic and Wright State on the backs of a young pitching corps. "The pitchers have a part, their job is to contain the oppo- nent's offense," said Michigan coach Carol Hutchins. The last time Michigan recorded four consecutive shut- outs was in 2008. Competing it straight NFCA L the Wolverines b sive 53-17 recor the tournament Clearwater, Fla. usual location in In addition tc their opponent i games, the Wolverines recorded shut- outs in their most recent matchups with each of this weekend's opponents: Illinois State, Massachu- setts, Hofstra, No. 17 Louisiana Mississippi State. Pitching has 1 Michigan's succ son, with freshn er Haylie Wag right-hander Sa and junior right-I n their 16th eadoff Classic, oast an impres- rd. This year, will be held in instead of its Columbus, Ga. o shutting out n four straight nie Speierman - it has kept the team in several games while the offense has been establishing itself. In their last four wins, the Wolverines have averaged slightly more than three runs per game. A major reason for this has been the lack of extra-base hits. After hitting six home runs and eight dou- bles in its first uff e~rv~ne four games, everyone Michigan hit does their part, just two extra- base hits in last we have a great week's five- game tourna- chance to win." But Hutchins sees this issue as -Lafayette and more than just a lack of extra- base hits. been a key to "More than anything, ess this sea- I felt we didn't have qual- man left-hand- ity at bats," Hutchins said. ner, freshman "I feel like we got out of our pro- ira Driesenga cess. If we get back into our pro- hander Stepha- cess and quit trying to hit and follow the process of hitting, I think things will go a little bet- ter for us. We have the ability to hit for power." The game that will draw the most attention this weekend will be the Wolverines' matchup with No. 17 Louisiana-Lafayette on Saturday. The Ragin' Cajuns are 7-0 and are the highest-ranked team the Wolverines will have played so far this season. Though Michigan is in its 35th season and has an all-time record of 1,380-514-4 against 183 different opponents, Louisiana- Lafayette is one of the 19 schools that hold a winning record against the Wolverines. While the Ragin' Cajuns's 5-4 record against Michigan is a noteworthy and remarkable fact, Hutchins has other things on her mind. "We just want everybody to do their part," Hutchins said. "If everyone does their part, we have a great chance to win games."