2B - April 9, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com The 2012 Schefters: Chronicling Michigan's resurrection 7u've probably heard plenty about resurrection lately. As Easter Sunday passes and thoughts turn back to the semester's final week of classes, take a moment to reminisce and dream along as we delve back into the year that was - through the STEPHEN J. lens of Michi- NESBITT gan athletics. It was cer- tainly a year of resurrection - of Michigan football, of Michigan basketball and of the Michigan brand. With that in mind, we offer you Daily Sports' second- annual awards - The Schefters. Named after ESPN personal- ity Adam Schefter, one of the Daily's most esteemed alumni, the awards honor the best of Michigan athletics in the last year. Schefter worked as a Daily Sports Editor in the late 1980s and currently serves as ESPN's NFL insider. The single rule is simple: An athlete can win only one cat- egory. Beyond that, it's no holds barred. Without further fanfare, here are the 2012 Schefters: Best Cinderella Story: Shawn Hunwick, ice hockey Michigan's fifth-year senior goaltender never really lost the title, even after winning it in last year's edition of the Schefters. Exactly a year ago - April 9,2011 - the 5-foot-7 Hunwick took the Wolverines into over- time of the NCAA Championship Game before surrendering the game-winner to Minnesota- Duluth's Kyle Schmidt. It was his 24th birthday. Then, in his fifth-year senior- season, Hunwick carried a young Michigan team to a No. 2-over- all seed and into the program's 22nd-consecutive NCAA Tour- nament, where they lost in the first round. Instead of his unlikely career ending there, Hunwick received a surprise call from the Colum- bus Blue Jackets on the morning of March 28. Hunwick was going to the NHL. Wearing a No. 31 Blue Jackets sweater over his Michigan equipment, Hunwick sat on the end of the bench in Columbus' 4-2 victory over the Detroit Red Wings - the team he idolized growing up. On Friday, Hunwick played the final 153 seconds of the Blue Jackets' last game of the season. The shrimp who came to Michi- gan asa third-string practice goaltender had made the NHL. Today is his 25th birthday. And his Cinderella story lives on. Breakout Athlete of the Year: Fitzgerald Toussaint, football Entering fall camp, the Michi- gan football team was looking at a handful of candidates for the starting tailback spot. The argu- ment seemed a moot point - the Michigan running game would undeniably be run through junior quarterback Denard Rob- inson. So we thought. Toussaint took the starting role early in the season and bolt- ed for 1,041 yards last season as a redshirt sophomore. His average yards per rush (5.57) was better than Robinson's (5.32), and the pair became the first Michigan tandem to break the 1,000-yard plateau since Rob Lytle and Gor- don Bell in 1975. Best single-game perfor- mance: Junior Hemingway, foot- ball, in the AllState Sugar Bowl Rarely will two receptions for 63 yards earn you a place in Michigan lore. For Hemingway, a fifth-year senior wide receiver, those two receptions couldn't have come at a more opportune time. They came at the Mercedes- Benz Superdome in New Orleans. Hemingway scored both of Michigan's touchdowns in a 23-20 victory over Virginia Tech. And if his miraculous play on the field didn't seal the deal, his postgame speech atop the win- ner's podium did. "It shows our heart. It shows our determination. It shows everything we've been through, because we've been through a lot," Hemingway said through a stream of tears, cheers and con- fetti. "People don't understand that, but to come out here and win this bowl game with the people I've worked so hard with from day one feels so good. Ain't nothing like it." Game of the Year: Under the Lights: Michigan vs. Notre Dame This category can't be argued. What better to signal the res- urrection of Michigan football than the program's first night game at Michigan Stadium? And it was a classic. Yellow pom-poms flashed through the record crowd of 114,804 in the Big House. Just a few ticks before mid- night, Robinson completed Michigan's furious comeback by floating a pass against the night sky to wide receiver Roy Roundtree in the corner of the endzone. The end result was a 35-31 Michigan victory. The end result was the unquestioned Game of the Year. Team of the Year: Michigan men's basketball With the sting of a first-round loss to Ohio in the NCAA Tour- nament still present, this might seem like a foolish pick. Trust me, it's not. Under Michigan coach John Beilein, the team that lost star point guard Darius Morris to the NBA a year ago bounced back to win a share of the Big Ten regular-season title. It sounds impressive. It's more than that. Freshman point guard Trey Burke - an unheralded recruit - propelled the overachieving Wolverines to their first confer- ence championship since 1986. It ended badly, and Burke may be headed for the NBA, but what that program displayed this past year was something none of us expected. Coach of the Year: Brady Hoke, football Hoke arrived last Januaryto replace former Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez, who went 15-22 in three seasons in Ann Arbor. Twelve months later, Hoke had carried a team loaded with eDA M G'A Senior wrestler Kellen Russell is a four-time Big Ten champion a nd two-time national champion at 141 pounds. Rodriguez's players to a victory in a BCS bowl and an 11-2 season. Hoke was named the winner of the first Hayes-Schembechler Trophy, given to the Big Ten Coach of the Year. He brought countless adjust- ments to the Michigan football culture, including (1) a rule ban- ning the color red from Schem- bechler Hall, (2) referring to Ohio State as simply "Ohio," (3) referring to his team, Michigan's 132nd in history, as "Team 132" and (4) bringing player numbers back to the winged helmet. Most of all, he brought win- ning back to Michigan. Forget everything else. That's enough. Female Athlete of the Year: Emina Bektas Bektas has taken the women's tennis scene by storm. The freshman sensation is ranked No. 10 and fills Michi- gan's top singles spot. Boasting a 25-6 overall record, as well as a sterling 14-2 doubles record, Bektas is a four-time Big Ten Athlete of the Week honoree. The Indianapolis native will lead Michigan into the Big Ten and NCAA Tournaments in the next month. Male Athlete of the Year: Trey Burke, men's basketball There were several deserving student-athletes in this category. It could have been filled by Hunwick or by wrestler Kellen Russell, but you'll have to look elsewhere for their names. It could have been swimmer Dan Madwed or football center David Molk. But Burke takes the cake. As a freshman, Burke aver- aged 14.8 points and 4.6 assists per game. Considered a step down from Morris as the season opened, Burke proved every doubter wrong. While the host of starters struggled down the stretch and into the postsea- son, Burke was a complete floor general. He didn't just live up to Morris's billing, he surpassed it. In the Big Ten Tournament opener against Minnesota, he dropped 30 points to give Michi- gan the overtime victory. Whether or not he returns for a sophomore season, Burke gave Michigan one heck of a season to remember. Career Achievement Award: Kellen Russell, wrestling There's not a lot left to say about Russell, who won consecu- tive national championships at the 141-pound level. You could give him nearly every one of these awards. He was Michigan's only individual national champion in 2011-12. In a year that was defined by resurrection, Russell didn't have to change a thing. He finished his career at Michigan with a 134-12 record. Only one grappler beat him in his junior and senior seasons. The three-time All-American also became the first Wolverine wrestler to capture four consec- utive Big Ten championships. On Saturday, it was announced that Russell was given one of the final two free- style wildcard selections for the U.S. Olympic Team Trials in Iowa City at the end of April. Russell has left his mark on Michigan, but his legacy will extend long past the confines of the Bahna Wrestling Center. Because he'll leave the only way he knows how - as a champion. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu and on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt. Wolverines' road ends at NCAA Regionals in Auburn 6 By GLENN MILLER JR. Daily Sports Writer There will be no Cinderella story for the Michigan women's gymnastics team in 2012. The senior-less team, which has been riddled by injuries all season, had an opportunity to prove their doubters wrong during this week- end's NCAA Regional Competion, but the glass slipper just didn't fit right. The 21st-ranked Wolverines promised all season that they would put together their best per- formance at the NCAA Tourna- ment, and they didn't disappoint. After tallying a season-high 196.325, Michigan (16-10) watched its season come to an unexpected end on Saturday at the hands of Oregon State. The Beavers' Les- lie Mak, who leads the nation on beam, hit a 9.925 routine to edge out the Wolverines by .125 points in a battle for second place. Geor- gia, who defeated Michigan on March 9, finished first in the Auburn regionals and will join Oregon State in the NCAA Cham- pionships. "I am proud of them for a lot of reasons,"said Michigan coach Bev Plocki. "We fought through a very difficult season. A lot of people came up to me after the meet and told me how incredibly impressed they were with how we performed and how we finished the season. Everyone knew what we were going through. That's nice and great to hear, but losingby.125 is a little hard to swallow." Despite falling short of their 20th NCAA Champion- ships berth, the Wolverines will send junior Katie Zurales and sophomore Joanna Sampson as representatives at the NCAA Individual Event Finals. Zurales' 39.375 as an all-arounder earns her the top score of the non-qual- ifying team's, while Sampson tied for the regional title on vault with a 9.925. "I'm not going to lie, I am really sad that my team isn't going to be there with me, but I am really excited that Michigan will be rep- resented at nationals," Zurales said. "I can't wait to go out there and represent them well. I want to bring home something for Michi- gan, because we deserve it with everything we've been through. I'm going to put it all out there and do it for the block 'M."' The night looked promising for Michigan, as it opened the meet with a 49.300 on vault. Zurales and Sampson led the way competing from the heart of the lineup with a pair of 9.925s to tie Zurales' career-high. Sopho- more Reema Zakharia debuted a new routine that earned a 9.850, followed by freshmen Sachi Sugi- yama's 9.825. The event's first two competitors, sophomore Stepha- nie Colbert and freshman Annette Miele, also contributed with scores of 9.750 and 9.775, respec- tively. The momentum continued on uneven bars, where the Wolver- ines totaled a 49.050. An impres- sive 9.850 from sophomore Shelby Gies headlined the event for Mich- igan, along with Zurales' 9.775 to start the rotation. A disappointing 9.550 from Miele amplified the pressure for the rest of Michigan's lineup. After a pair of 9.800s from Sugiyama and Sampson, the Wol- verines turned to junior Brittnee Martinez for support. Martinez, who returned to action for the first time since injuring her ankle on March 2 at Penn State, delivered a 9.825 and preserved Michigan's score. The Wolverines' 98.350 score at the halfway point of the meet was just half a point behind Georgia, which held the lead throughout. In its third rotation, a few wob- bles on balance beam resulted in a 48.750 for Michigan. Zurales' team-high 9.850 tied for third place, followed by a leadoff score of 9.800 from Gies. Contributions from Sampson's 9.750 and Miele's 9.700 placed the Wolverines in a good position, but a slipped dis- mount from Sugiyama earned a 9.650. Colbert rounded out the lineup with a 9.500, but it was not counted in Michigan's final score for the event.. Georgia finished off its evening during the Wolverines' bye round, which put the battle for second between Michigan and Oregon State. The Beavers' 49.300 on bars put them ahead of the Wolverines heading into the final rotation by a mere four-tenths of a point. Another late rally seemed to be in the makings as Michigan prepared itself for the floor exer- cise. A career-high 9.875 from Sugiyama earned fourth place for the event, while Sampson and Zakharia added a pair of 9.850s. Another set of identical scores, this time from Zurales' and Col- bert's 9.825, deepened the Wol- verines' push. Despite a total of 49.225 on the event, Michigan's score just wasn't enough to top Oregon State's impressive perfor- mance on beam. "I thought we started and fin- ished the meet like we were the champs," Plocki said. "On beam, we made some silly errors, and we're sitting at home by .125 because of it. It breaks my heart for this team because I felt that with the season we had, I was hoping it would be the Cinderella story ending." For only the second time in the past 21 seasons, the Wolverines' have missed out on the chance to qualify for the NCAA Champion- ships. Additionally, Michigan has finished below third only one time in the program's history, when it placed fourth in 1993. The Wolver- ines will add to the record books this season, though, as Sampson and Zurales' performance gives Michigan 54 NCAA Regional event titles in its history. While they will have to wait until next year to compete for a national championship, the Wol- verines are loaded with potential. Michigan will return its entire squad, including junior Natalie Beilstein, who missed the major- ity of the season with an injured Achilles tendon. In addition to a slate of impressive recruits, Mich- igan's lineup could be one of the best in the nation after Miele and Sugiyama train for an entire off- season. U Campus Mind Works Groups FREE drop-in education and support groups for any U-M student with Depression, Bipolar, or Anxiety Managing Social Anxiety When: Tuesday, April 10 from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Where: Chrysler Center, Room 165, North Campus Visit www.campusmindworks.org for more information. Presented by the U-M Depressionr Center in collaboration with: 14 the College of Engineering and Universityof Michigan Psychological Clinic. Depression Center the STORAGE CHEST STORAGE SE ES FREE HALF MONT 3033 WEST LIBERTY ANN ARBOR, MI 48 10 (734) 663-6443 A