The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.cam Friday, March 16, 2012 - 9 The ichgan ail - m c h i a n d il y cm ~ r d a y ,Marh 16 202 - Michigan heads out to Coastal Carolina Tourney Winger off the mound By ISABELLAACHENBACH Daily Sports Writer Statistically, the Michigan baseball team (7-9) hasn't been playing its best. The team has lost five of its the past six games - most of which were winnable, according to coach Rich Malo- ney. But the team refuses to lose spirit when looking ahead to the Coastal Carolina Tournament this weekend. "This past weekend, we actu- ally played really well," Maloney said, referring to the LSU Tour- nament in Baton Rouge, La. On Sunday morning, they ended their five-game losing streak with a nail-biting 6-5 win over Notre Dame. "I took a lot of positive signs from this last weekend," said senior righthander Brandon Sin- nery. "We actually pitched pret- ty good." Sinnery started the weekend on the mound for the Wolverines and allowed no walks in eight innings during Friday's LSU matchup. But the Wolverines didn't fare well earlier in the weekend. Michigan lost to LSU, 6-0, on Friday; to Notre Dame, 2-0, on Saturday; and again to LSU, 6-4, on Saturday. "I don't think we're as far off as it might seem," Maloney said. Despite the 'tough competi- tion, the Wolverines tallied 11 hits and three home runs in the second LSU game. "Even though the game wasn't a victory, I think we prob- ably should have won the game," Maloney said. "We deserved to win the game. But I was pleased with the way our guys played." The team is hoping all of their "almost-wins" will be real wins this weekend, when they head down to South Carolina to play against Coastal Carolina (9-6), Alabama-Birmingham (12-5) and Connecticut (6-8). "(Coastal Carolina is) a very well-coached team," Maloney said. "They're an outstanding program, so we've got great By LIZ NAGLE Daily Sports Writer Brett Winger once stood on top of the mound. Standing at 6-foot-3 with a powerful arm, he made pitching look effortless. There were always high hopes for Winger to excel as a right-handed pitcher. Starting at the age of five, Winger spent much of his pre- college preparation perfecting his delivery. But he couldn't do it all on his own. Enter coaches Frank Viola and Randy O'Neal. Beginning in eighth grade and extending through his career at Olympia High School in Orlando, Fla., Viola and O'Neal guided Winger through the mechanics of pitching. Both coaches had the experi- ence and credentials that even- tually led Winger to hurling Olympia's first no-hitter in school history. Before coaching Winger, Viola was a left-hander for five different major league organizations - he boasts a Major League Baseball World Series MVP award (1987) and American League Cy Young award (1988). And O'Neal was a right-hander that debuted with the Detroit Tigers and threw 248 strikeouts in his MLB career. Absorbing the wealth of knowl- edge his coaches had to offer, Winger claimed a few titles of his own. He was named to ESPN RISE Magazine's All-Area Cen- tral Florida's top players list in 2009 and selected as a 2010 Pre- season Baseball Factory/Under Armour All-American. With an accomplished back- ground and promising future, Winger committed himself to the Michigan baseball team. "Brett has good size," Michi- gan coach Rich Maloney said a lit- tle more than two years ago. "He has a good fastball with life on it and the makings of a very good slider. I think the best thing about Brett is that he is extremely com- petitive and is very projectable as a pitcher." Little did he know, Winger's fastball would never reach Ray Fisher Stadium's home plate. Though he was recruited as ERIN KIRKL AND/Daily Sophomore first baseman Brett Winger has taken his ha cks across the diamond. Senior righthander Brandon Sinnery took positives out of last weekend. respect for them." The last time Michigan faced off against Coastal Carolina was in 2010, and Michigan lost in both games. This year, theWolverines will get two chances at redemption - once this weekend and once again May 8-9 at Ray Fisher Sta- dium in Ann Arbor. Last year's game against Con- necticut also ended in a loss, 16-9. When the Wolverines played against Alabama-Birmingham in 2006, they lost 5-4. The team definitely has its work cut out for it this weekend. Sinnery's solid and reliable pitching this season is keeping him in the starting lineup for Friday's game. Sophomore right-fielder Michael O'Neill's outstanding season hit a bump in the road last Friday when the LSU pitch- ing staff snapped his 10-game hitting streak. The Wolverines are focusing on the fundamentals in prac- tice, but Maloney tweaked this week's practices to cater to the playing styles that they'll see this weekend. "We know that Coastal likes to steal and they like to bunt so we're working a lot on defense," Maloney said. This week's practice has boosted the players' confidence going into this tournament. "I like the attitude of the team and the way they keep trying to learn and get better," Maloney said. "They're just a play,- a pitch, a hit away from having three or four more wins." pitcher, Winger stepped down from the mound. He's now bat- ting in runs and rounding the bases. He is labeled asa first base- man, and maybe that's where he belonged all along - at-bats and fielding ground balls were not unfamiliar territories to Winger. It was always a lingering possi- bility. He felt comfortable hitting and maintained a high batting average in high school. So when he became a Wolverine, Winger hoped to get the chance to do a little bit of both. He intended to redshirt his freshman year, but when the team was struggling at the plate, Malo- ney tested out an experiment on Winger, who made his collegiate debut as the designated hitter. It was March 27, 2011, and Wing- er hit a seventh-inning double against Michigan State. Maloney saw him as a power hitter and utilized that skill in the middle of the batting order. Last year, Winger posted a .294 batting average and .314 on-base percent- age in just 25 games in which he saw action. "I guess he's a hitter now," Maloney said with a laugh. "He's a super hard worker, very pro- fessional in his approach, mean- ing he just works and works and works and works, tireless worker. And you gotta like those kind of guys." Last summer, Winger played in the Great Lakes Summer Col- legiate League for the Lake Erie Monarchs, batting .301 with 17 RBIs. He also pitched in a hand- ful of games, but his game log displayed mediocre pitching sta- tistics. With a .328 batting average, 13 RBIs, three doubles and a .365 on-base percentage this season, it seems that Winger really is meant to be a hittingthreat. At the start of his recent eight- game hitting streak, Winger recorded home runs in consecu- tive games against Ohio State and Chicago State. He went 3-for-6 with three RBIs over the Cougars. The switch from the mound to the plate seems as if would be a challenge, but Winger was a natu- ral. "I'm very happy with the tran- sition," Winger said. "I've been starting every game. ... They gave me a chance to hit, and it really worked out." Winger's current Big Ten con- ference lead with 146 put-outs shows that he not only commands a forceful bat, but also plays solid defense at first base. "They always said I would be ... a pitcher," Winger said. It turns out they were wrong. HEART OF TEXAS From Page 8 He could turn a spot with Honey Baked into a spot on the United States National Develop- mental Team, which send a few players to Michigan every year. The USNDT is based in Ann Arbor and consistently feeds play- ers to top college programs. If he was going to play on a team in high school, this was the one to play on. But first, he had to get on the junior team. Krohl had Chris travel to Toronto with his Honey Baked team to play in a top-prospect camp, which was essentially a try- out for the team. Chris scored seven goals in that tournament, and his spot was cemented. But for all this to unfold, Chris had to leave Texas. At age 15, he had to leave everything he had ever known and move to a city where he knew no one and to a culture he knew nothing about, living with a family he had never met. Chris would have to learn things by himself that ordinary teenagers do with their parents, such as how to manage money or how to drive a car. The decision was made for itself. "I put it in my head that if this is something you want to do, you have to make a commitment now and decide this is what you want to do for the rest of your life," Chris said. Facing the prospect of having her eldest child leave the house at 15, Candice said no. He was too young to be living on his own. But after Chris told her she was the only one against him leav- ing, Candice relented, saying she wouldn't be the one to hold him back from his dreams. "It was terrible," Candice said. "Besides the death of my mother, putting him on that plane was the hardest thing I have ever done." Chris still claims that regard- less of whether it is sunny or cloudy, Candice wears sunglasses when she is driving him to the air- port. It could be the darkest day of winter, but if she is driving Chris to the airport, those sunglasses are going down. To this day, more than six years later, dropping Chris off at the air- port makes Candice cry. So Chris started over in Michi- gan, living in Saline with a host family that Krohl had set him up with. Soon after, the USNDT team came calling, where he would be playing with future Wolverines A.J. Treais and Lynch. There was still an adjustment period. On his first day of class at Pio- neer High School, the Texan answered a question the same way he had his entire life: with a "yes, ma'am." His teacher stared Chris down, telling him not to call her ma'am. Chris answered with another "yes, ma'am." She sent him out to the hallway, where the confused newcomer got a lecture on why using "sir" and "ma'am" was disrespectful to a youngteacher. Click. Click. Click. Chris stopped at the second level of Yost Ice Arena during his sophomore year of high school, pausing to admire the arena of the team he had wanted to play for as long as he could remember. Then- Michigan assistant coach Mel Pearson continued, venturing to the club level seats that sit directly above the Michigan bench. Click. Click. Click. The cowboy boots slowly clicked as Brown maneuvered up the stairs of Yost, lifting his eye line up to the endless rows of ban- ners that adorn the rafters of the historic building. He sat down next to Pearson, who talked up the tradition and success of the Michi- gan hockey program, even though he didn't have to sell anything to the kid that watched that 1996 National Championship game. This meeting with Pearson was the first visit Brown had made to a university and the first time he had been in Yost. He also hadn't met head coach Red Berenson yet. So when Pearson offered a scholarship, Brown had to excuse - current N himself to call his parents back in Hagelin ha Texas. year - but ti Click. Click. Click. song and the "Chris told us, 'Dad, I have had The ado no interest in going anywhere something else, my whole life, but here,' " his interesting father, Chris, remembers. also the ma The phone call lasted less than and the trip: a minute. "For me,i play," said C brother, wh Michigan a hockey tea: The flag unfurls, covering the physical pl heads of at least 40 students in the people in. student section, called "The Chil- everyone els "My biggest goal grow Dallas was to play for th Tornadoes ... because t the goal for everyone. think I was ever going tc of Texas and play - Chris Brown lew York Rang d a Swedish fl he combination flag is. ration certain to do with1 background, I ssive hits, thes s to the penalty it's mostly hiss Chase Brown, er Carl ag last n of the ly has Chris's but it's scuffles box. style of Chris's depicts two crossed hockey sticks with flags draped over them. One flag is a combination of the Texas state flag and the American flag, and the other is a Michigan flag. His country and state split a stick, but his school gets its own. no is a freshman at Before the 2009 NHL Draftthe nd plays on the club Browns received a phone call they m. "He's more of a weren't expecting from the Phoe- ayer, and that draws nix Coyotes, who asked if either He is different than of Chris's parents were psycholo- e's typical player." gists or in the psycho-analysis field. A bit confused, the Browns said no. Why? Every NHL prospect takes a hockey IQ test before the draft, similar to the Wonderlic prior to the NFL draft. ing up in According to the Coyotes, Chris had received the best score the ie Texas team had ever given out. They hat was wanted to know if his parents had I didn't helped him with the test. The Browns assured them that get out Chris scored that on his own - so the Coyotes picked him early in the second round in 2009, 36th overall, as the fifth American taken. When he was a prospect, the biggest knock against Chris was his offensive repertoire, which scouts thought needed more refinement. The size, physicality and defense were always there, ration comes from but he hadn't tied everything e the one in the begin- together offensively. uary, when Michigan Flash forward to February2012. on Miami (Ohio) late With Michigan up 2-0 on te. Senior goaltender Miami, Chris got the puck in the nwick had been get- Michigan zone and took off, going attention than usual, from one side of the ice to the ion was mounting on other before getting to the Red- With a little more than Hawk zone. He leaned right while ft in the game, Chris sliding the puck in between the wk defenseman Will legs ofWeberbeforeshiftingtohis ped gloves and tried to left and recovering the puck. punches. Miami goaltender Connor as a big game against Knapp didn't have a chance. He tate the next week- didn't flinch until the puck was hting in college hockey past his left shoulder. utomatic suspension. The entire play took about five couldn't let anyone seconds. his goalie. His team- "I think he's come a long way more important than since the firsttime I saw him play," Treais said. "He was kind of raw importantly, it's the in the beginning. Everyone knew right shoulder, which he was going to be good because he was so big and he had a great shot, but he's out there making plays now and he's smarter with the puck." Chris has led everyteam he has ever played on in penalty minutes (he leads senior defenseman Greg Pateryn by one measly minute, entering this weekend), but those penalties are never high-sticking or hooking. They are almost always board- ing or cross-checking. A player who getshitby Chris is going to go a lot further than normal, which referees aren't used to seeing. The wrecking ball plays within the rules, but he tries to bend them as much as he can. "I'm in the game and I'm going to hit people," Chris said. "I think the coaches and everyone else knows that. I'm going to be physi- cal. If you happen to fall too far from the boards, I'm sorry, but that's how Iam going to play." More than six years after he moved, Chris is still every bit the Texan. Moving to Michigan and playing a sport that is so very un- Texan seemingly hasn't changed him atall. The ceiling for Chris remains to be found. After the season, he is a front-runner to be a captain next year, expanding the role he has filled in his whole career. "Brown's got a lot of respect on this team," Berenson said. "He's a classy kid, a serious student and a player who is getting better every year. "I like everything about Brown's game." After Michigan, who knows. He could see himself teaching kindergarten after hockey - how many future NHL players would say that? Chris will be welcomed in Phoenix, where he has the poten- tial to have a lengthy NHL career. He will be back in the desert, back where people will under- stand why he is wearing cowboy boots. The locals will understand the boots, but they won't under- stand the skates. Click. Click. Click. dren of Yost." Chris has just scored a goal, and the students are going crazy, the lone-star flag shaking like it's on a pole during a windy day. Shortly after, the crowd hears the song that makes Chris differ- ent from every other Michigan hockey player. That song is "Deep in the Heart of Texas," and it was the brain- child of Michigan Hockey Band director John Pasquale, who also hails from Texas. He started play- ing the song after the Children of Yost made a Texas flagthatbounc- es over the top of the student sec- tion after a Chris goal or big play, things that have happened with increasing occurrence. "The Texas flag is a nice thing," Berenson said. "Plus, I love the song." The flag is not unique to Brown The ado moments lik ning of Febr was up big in the gam Shawn Hum ting more and frustrat both sides. V a minute lei and RedHa Weber drops throw a few There wa Michigan S end, and figi earns an a Still, Chris mess withI mates arer anything. But most tattoo on his