The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 22, 2012 - 5A Softball Preview 2012 Hutchins, Michigan return home gearing up for Big Ten run By ALEXA DETTELBACH DailySports Writer Maybe it was the 80-degree heat. Maybe it was the home crowd dressed in maize and blue. Maybe it was because it was the first home game. For whatever reason,the Michigansoftball team looked comfortable as it wrapped up nonconference play with a 10-2 win over Eastern Michigan on Wednesday night. In a tumultuous first half of the season, the 20th-ranked Wolver- ines (18-9) had games where their strengths were highlighted and other days where their weakness- es were exposed. Early wins in February against then-No. 22 LSU at the Tiger Classic in Baton Rouge, La. and then-No. 22 Kentucky at the FAU Kickoff Classic in Boca Raton, Fla., exemplified the great play and confidence that Michigan coach Carol Hutchins has brought to the program throughout her tenure. The Wolverines continued their hot streak at the Citrus Classic in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. with wins against No. 14 UCLA and No. 19 Auburn. Soon after, the team hit an offensive slump, losing four of six games and scoring just six runs during that stretch - including a 5-1 loss to Illinois State, a team ' they beat earlier in the season. "Our offense has been incon- sistent and hasn't done its part," Hutchins said. "We had a nice "Interestingly enough, our pitching has been pretty darn good, and our freshman have done their part," Hutchins said. "Com- ing into the season, that's not something everybody expected." Freshman right-hander Sara Driesenga joins Wagner as the other starting pitcher for Michi- gan. "I think the pitching staff has done a great job as a whole," Wag- ner said. "Whenever we get an opportunity to come in and do our part, we step up, and so far it is working and it is going to continue to work." With the pitching success ahead of schedule and the offense slowly getting back into a rhythm, the defense is the last component SIDNEY KRANDALL/Daily missing. "Our defense over the first part of the season has not done its part, potential, the Wolverines' slow but I think the defense is settling start was disappointing in," Hutchins said. "It's close. If "We were just trying to get the we want the chance to be a Big Ten (them) to understand that they are Champion we have to compete in trying too hard," Hutchins said. battle." "They are trying to be heroes, and As everything comes together they need to instead pick a pitch for the second half of the season, and get it. That's what the team the Wolverines have picked the needs." right time to heat up. The biggest surprise of the first "We have a group of seniors half of the season has been the that only know winning it, but pitching of freshman left-hander you don't get to win it because you Haylie Wagner, who has already won it-for three years. You don't won two Big Ten Pitcher of the get anything," Hutchins said. "We Week awards and one Big Ten have to come out and play softball. Freshman of the Week award We have to play team softball, while earninga 12-4 record on the because as a team, we're pretty mound and pitching a 1.26 ERA. good." Michigan coach Carol Hutchins is relying on a trio of young pitchers to lead her 19th-ranked Wolverines. nighttonight offensively, but some nights are going to be tougher. But the key is to stay within ourselves as a team." Wednesday night's victory against the Eagles brought back the confidence Michigan had at the beginning of the season, and the team is lookingto work off this momentum as they enter into Big Ten play this weekend. "We play a really touch sched- ule in the preseason and we can't just come in there thinking, 'Oh, just because we play Big Ten and always do well at that, that we're going to do well this year,' " said senior first baseman Amanda Chidester. "We have to come in and keep competing and keep playing to our best ability in each game. It doesn't matter if it's Penn State (or) Louisiana-Lafayette, we have to play our game." As they transition into the sec- ond half of the season, the Wol- verines will first look to Chidester, senior center fielder Bree Evans and junior second baseman Ashley Lane to lead the team offensively. It is no coincidence that all three were named to the Watch List for the 2012 USA Softball Col- legiate Player of the Year award. Chidester leads the team with 23 RBIs and 24 hits and is sec- ond on the team with a .289 bat- ting average. Evans is tied with Chidester with 24 hits and leads the team with 15 runs, with a .273 batting average. Lane leads the team with seven home runs has 13 RBIs. The Michigan offense doesn't end with the upperclassmen trio. Freshman catcher Lauren Sweet leads the team with a .296 batting average and has 21 hits. "Everyone has their own little thing that they need to focus on, and if we all focus on those things then we are going to be success- ful," Chidester said. With all of their offensive Freshmen have m iln ifor Jordo Replacing a senior leader is not an easy task in any port. It's even harder if you lose an National Fastpitch Coaches Association All-Amer- ica second- team pitcher COLLEEN who led your THOMAS squad with a 31-5 record, On Softball 1.51 ERA, 12 shutouts and 340 strikeouts last season. That player is current Team USA member Jordan Taylor. That's the task the Michigan softball team has faced all sea- The Wolverines brought in two star pitchers - 2011 Michi- gan Miss Softball Sara Driesen- ga and a top-40 lefty in Haylie Wagner. Right off the bat, Dri- esenga made an impact, garner- ing Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors in the first week of the season. Driesenga made her case to be the replacement for Taylor - Michigan wouldn't have to go through a transition year. That changed quickly, as her fellow freshman stepped into the spotlight. Wagner earned Big Ten Pitcher of the Week honors for two straight weeks, putting up absurdly good num- bers for a freshman - she went 4-0 with a .36 ERA in her first four starts and tallied a season- best 11 strikeouts against Penn State on Feb. 12. Wagner also proved she was more than just a pitcher. The El Modena, Calif. native hit her first home run against then-No. 22 LSU the first tournament of the season. Both pitchers showed prom- ise to step up. But once the sea- son progressed, the freshman duo faced tougher competition. Each tournament featured at least one ranked opponent, and when Driesenga struggled to control her release, Wagner had to come in relief. Wagner continued to pile on wins - she currently sits at 12-4 on the season - while Driesen- ga faltered, and it became clear who was number one. But one dominant pitcher isn't enough for the Wolverines to have the kind of success they want. And that dominant pitch- er being a freshman is less than ideal. Don't get me wrong - the softball team will continue its success in the Big Ten and the postseason. But if the Wolver- ines want to avoid an early exit in June, it won't be the hitting or the defense that will falter at the end. The difference ... will be its freshman pitching." The difference between a good Michigan team and a great one will be its freshman pitch- ing. Wagner and Driesenga have shown that they can perform at an exceptionally high level. But they both have exposed their vulnerabilities. Dries- enga hasn't been able to fol- low through in her release for most of the season, and Wagner ajor task rn Taylor shows frustration when she's behind in the count - signs that both of them still have room to develop into confident, domi- nant pitchers. That confidence won't devel- op immediately. But if the Wolverines want to win the conference title and earn a spot in the Women's College World Series, the freshmen duo will have to learn to gain that confi- dence soon and eliminate those freshman mistakes. The rest of the team trusts Wagner and Driesenga in the circle, and Michigan coach Carol Hutchinstbelieves the pitchers are on the right track to develop their skills. But it's not about what the rest of the team thinks or how much faith the coach has. It's all about how Driesenga and Wag- ner perform - and that's how the Wolverines' softball season will turn out. It may sound like a lot riding on the shoulders of an eighteen- and nineteen-year-old, but if Michigan wants to play ball into June, the freshmen duo will be the key. STAFF PICKS The Daily softball beat makes its predictions for the season These writers guess whether Michigan can win it all and who may step up this season for the Wolverines. 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