fF[., n s t1 l Z ' Wr r1 1 YFt W r hZ t flu h PIII Ili 114 c aide The Michigan Daily i michiganclaily.com March 19,2012 - BEAT(EN BY) OHIO Michigan 60 Ohio 65 By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor -, NASHVILLE, Tenn. - A faint redness showed in the eyes of Stu Douglass, an early trace of the tears that would soon be shed. For four years, those eyes - intense, perhaps, yet so unassuming, so innocent - seemed to promise to Douglass's opponents that the man who wore them was not a basketball player to be feared, lulling them into a false sense of security before Douglass suddenly drained a 3-pointer or surprised with an acrobatic layup. At this moment, those eyes, opened wide in Y-C & numbness, were locked on the shot clock above his team's basket. The red numbers read triple zeros, and they told Douglass that it had all come to an end. On Friday night, in an upset - which so typifies the NCAA Tournament - the four-seed Michi- gan basketball team fell to 13-seed Ohio, 65-60, in Nashville. The Wolverines exit the Big Dance in the second round without winning a game, the first time that has happened in the four tourna- y ment appearances during Michigan coach John Beilein's tenure. k "I was just trying to hold it in, make it to the locker room," Douglass said. "I was just kind of in a state of disbelief. I'm still in it." Call it a Cinderella-style upset if you want, but it was clear from the beginning that Ohio didn't see itself as an underdog by any stretch of the imagination. Star guard D.J. Cooper and Ohio took the fight ALDEN REISS/Daily to the Wolverines first, eventually establishing The Michigan men's basketball team was upset by Ohio in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. See OHIO, Page 3B Senior Kellen Russell, shown in a match earlier this season, took home his second-consecutive national championship in St. Louis this weekend. Russelc lms second By LIZ NAGLE you're not as strong or as fast as Daily Sports Writer your opponent, everybody sees it. If you quit, everybody sees it." It was the beginning of March But Russell didn't make him- Madness - the Michigan men's self vulnerable, nor did he let any- basketball team just fell to Ohio one witness signs of weakness or in the NCAA Tournament, and exhaustion. Of the 18,919 in atten- everyone donned Irish-green dance, notone would say they saw apparel in the spirit of St. Pat- him quit - Russell fought until rick's Day. the referee raised his arm in vic- Meanwhile, in St. Louis, Kellen tory. Russell was wrestling in his last "Most of these wrestlers today moments of glory. are expected to just tell them- On Saturday, the fifth-year selves, 'This is just like every senior stepped onto the mat for other match,' " said Anthony the last time in a maize and blue Robles before the finals on Sat- singlet. When he walked off, he urday. was a two-time national cham- Robles, who earned last year's pion. 125-pound national title, despite Russell's journey was long being born with only one leg, and physical. He spent count- continued, "but really, it's not like less hours training for a single every other match." moment. But in the last weeks of "This is what they train for his college-wrestling career, Rus- year round, what they dream sell made history, sought revenge about. So it's all about who can and passed on a tradition. come out tonight, perform under Russell is an irreplaceable the lights for one more match." puzzle piece. Without him, the But it wasn't just Russell's last Michigan wrestling team would match that mattered. not have been able to complete After three early wins, Russell its 11th-place finish at the NCAA squared off against Ohio State's Championships this weekend. Hunter Stieber in the semifinals. But with him, the Wolverines The Buckeye was Russell's only built upon their legacy and added loss in 72 matches over the last Russell's name to the short list of two seasons. Michigan's multiple-time cham- Russell reflected on that match pions. more than once. He knew his Just after Russell's final vic- focus wasn't there. But this time, tory, ESPN played a video about it was. the challenges that wrestlers Stieber struck firstafter scram- encounter. bling to keep a hold on Russell's "You make yourself very vul- left leg. But in the second period, nerable," said Oscar winner and Russell started in the down posi- former wrestler John Irving. "If tion and scored an early escape. you're tired, everybody knows. If See RUSSELL, Page 3B WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Oklahoma offense too much for Wolverines PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick made 22 saves in the CCHA final against Western Michigan at Joe Louis Arena, but Michigan lost, 3-2,to WMU 'M' edged in CCHA final By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor DETROIT - After a grueling, double-overtime affair against Bowling Green on Friday, an exhausted No. 3 Michigan hock- ey team said it wasn't looking toward the NCAA BGSU 2 Tourna- MICHIGAN 3 ment. Not yet. W. MICHIGAN 3 One MICHIGAN 2 large game against Western Michgian loomed, and this one wasn't just for the CCHA Tournament title, but also a chance for revenge after last year's drubbing at the hands of the Broncos in the semifinals. On Saturday, the Wolver- ines' actions spoke louder than words. For the second straight year, Western Michgian ended the Wolverines' hopes for a ninth CCHA Tournament Champi- onship at Joe Louis Arena, this time by a score of 3-2. "Let's face it, we're not that good," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "We're not any better than anybody else, but I don't think we're any worse than any- one else. We're right there." Western Michigan ordered a constant assault on Michigan fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick, and exploited the weakest part in his game. Mich- igan surrendered three unan- swered goals through the first two periods, and all three goals came off of rebounds. Late in the first period, Ian Slater tapped in a rebound on a shot by J.J. Crew to put the Broncos on the board. In the second, Dane Walters knocked in a loose puck after another rebound for a power- play goal. Chase Balisy added yet another rebound goal later in the second period to give the Broncos a commanding three- goal lead heading into the final frame. "(Hunwick) has a way of placing his rebounds, where he places them where he wants to, and I don't know if he did that tonight," Berenson said. "They got shots through, and he bat- tled hard. Let's face it, one of the reasons we're here is Shawn Hunwick." Western Michigan played like a team still fighting for a spot in the NCAA Tournament. With the win, the Broncos assured themselves of a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Michigan, meanwhile, played only for the hardware on Saturday. And coming off the double- overtime game that went late into the night on Friday, Michi- gan at times struggled to match the quickness of Western Michi- gan's speedy forwards. The Wolverines dug themselves a two-goal hole on Friday against Bowling Green, but used a late goal in the second period and a desperate third-period effort to force overtime. With more than eight minutes remaining in the third period against the Broncos on Satur- day, Michigan again captured some late momentum. After a highlight-reel shorthanded goal by sophomore forward Kevin See WESTERN, Page 3B By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's bas- ketball team under coach Kevin Borseth usually turns games into a grind-fest, focusing on long offen- sive pos- MICHIGAN 67 sessions OKLAHOMA 88 and defen- sive stops. But that's hard to do when your opponent scores 48 first- half points. The 11-seed Wolverines had a hard time stopping redshirt junior Whitney Hand and six- seed Oklahoma in the first half of their opening-round matchup on Sunday. Hand scored 10 and pulled down five rebounds in the half to give the Sooners a lead they'd never relinquish en route to an 88-67 victory. Oklahoma led by as much as 19 early in the second half, but Michigan didn't let the game get out of hand until the end. Senior guard Carmen Reynolds led the charge, scoring a season-high 20 points by hitting key 3-point- ers to keep the Wolverines in the game. Reynolds, who broke the program record for most 3-pointers in a career earlier in the season, added five to her total on Sunday. "Honestly, I would take back every single one of those threes if we would've got the (win) today," Reynolds said. She wasn't ready for her career to end, and neither was senior guard Courtney Boylan. Boylan added 12 points on 6-of-14 shooting and kept the team under control when things may have seemed to get out of See OKLAHOMA, Page 3B t CRUELTY OF MARCH For 63 teams in the NCAA Tourna- ment, including Michigan, March is maddening. Page 4B NO AVERAGE QB How Denard Robinson embraced the Maize Rage, and it embraced him right back. Page 2B