The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - 7 * 'M' will rematch with Cornell at MSG Teams finalizing deal to play at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 24 By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Editor To conquer the CCHA in its 33rd and final season in the league, the Michigan hockey team will need to go through defending conference cham- pion Ferris State - four NOTEBOOK times. A CCHA source confirmed Monday that the Bulldogs will be a part of the Wolverines' "pod," or group of CCHA teams that play four times instead of the usual two. Ferris State is coming off unprecedented runs to the CCHA regular-season crown and the national title game. Bos- ton College finally put a stop to the best season in Ferris State history on Saturday night with a 4-1 win in the NCAA champion- ship game. Michigan managed a sweep of the Bulldogs in the two teams' lone series during the 201-12 season. The October meetings saw the Wolverines dominate Ferris State, posting a 9-2 vic- tory in the aggregate. The defending national runner-up won't be the only difficult foe in the pod, how- ever. Joining Ferris State will be Western Michigan, Notre Dame and perennial pod mate Michi- gan State. All but the Fighting Irish finished in the league's top-five teams this season, though that's hardly to say Notre Dame wasn't formidable. Michigan split the series in South Bend, before needing a double-overtime thriller to help sweep the Irish in the CCHA quarterfinals at Josh Furman suspended amid legal trouble Michigan safety will go on trial on April 23 with three charges against him By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor Josh Furman has been sus- pended from the Michigan foot- ball program after the coaching staff learned of a trio of charges being brought against the red- shirt sophomore safety. According to court records, Furman has been charged with three offenses - domestic vio- lence, assault, and breaking and entering - that occurred in the football program. The court records show the location of the offenses as 600 E. Madison Street - better known as South Quad. As first reported by Sam Webb of GoBlueWolverine.com and later elaborated on by the Detroit Free Press, Furman was in a dorm room with two women and received a threatening text from another male. "Mr. Furman got up and they thought he was going to try to find the man so the two females jumped on him," Furman's attor- ney, Gerry Mason, told the Free Press. "The only person injured was Mr. Furman, who had a dreadlock pulled out ofhishead." Furman has since shaved his head. And Mason expects that a thick head of ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily Freshman forward Alex Guptill crowds a Cornell forward in Michigan's first-round loss to the Big Red last month. Yost Ice Arena. Western Michigan and Mich- igan State joined Michigan and Ferris State in this year's NCAA Tournament field of 16. How- ever, both the Broncos and Spar- tans were pitted against No. 1 seeds and suffered first-round exits, just like the Wolverines did despite their top seeding. During the 2011-12 season, the Wolverines were a combined 9-3-1 against the three teams they will play four times in their CCHA swan song. Michi- gan will depart for the Big Ten Hockey Conference following next season. The entirety of Michigan's schedule has not yet been released. BIG RED REMATCH: Just over two weeks after Cornell knocked Michigan out of the NCAA Tournament, the Cornell athletic department is just a few formalities short of announcing another meeting. Instead of a sparsely popu- lated Resch Center in Green Bay, Wisc., where the Big Red ended the Wolverines'season in March, the game is slated to be played at New York City's Madi- son Square Garden. Though Cornell has yet to sign a finalized agreement with the venue, sources tell the Daily that the game will likely be played on Nov. 24, the Saturday following Thanksgiving. The game will potentially conflict with the Michigan-Ohio State football game, scheduled for the same day in Columbus. NOTE: Bowling Green offi- cially released its 2012-13 sched- ule on Monday. According to BowlingGreen Sentinel-Tribune writer Kevin Gordon's Twitter account, Michigan will play two midweek games against the Fal- cons. One of the midweek affairs will take place on Nov. 21, with the second meeting scheduled for Jan. 8, 2013. The two teams were origi- nally slated to play a series on Thanksgiving weekend, but a change was needed to accom- modate the Wolverines' date with Cornell at Madison Square Garden. early morning hours of Feb. 11. Furman is scheduled to appear before District Judge Elizabeth Pol- lard Hines on April 23. "Josh was suspended indefinitely from team activities as soon aware of the repo gan coach Brat statement. "The allegations. We judicial process t before making a f tion on his statu gram." No timetable h Furman's returnt hair will be the only price his "Furm an got up client will have to pay. and ... was going Mason told the Free Press to try and find that the whole the man." situation had been blown out of proportion. Hoke will speak with as we became reporters on Tuesday during a irt," said Michi- conference call, where the mat- dy Hoke in a ter will be approached for the se are serious first time since defensive coor- will allow the dinator Greg Mattison averted o run its course the question last week in a press inal determina- conference. s with the pro- Furman appeared in 12 games last season and tallied 10 total ias been set for tackles, though most of his action to the Michigan was on special teams. Maloney left with tough decisions in midweek tilts SIDNEY KRANDALL/Daly Sophomoreleft fielder Nicole Sappingfield has been an integral part of Michigan's offensive explosion lately. Michigan eyes Broncos By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer Michigan softball coach Carol Hutchins will have no choice but to smile if her team can repeat its success from this past weekend, when its swept Ohio State. The 20th- ranked Wol- verines took WMU at all three con- Michigan tests against the Buckeyes Matchup: in Columbus, Mich gan 27 riding offen- sive explo- When: Tues- sions from day 6 P.M. junior second Where: baseman Ash- Alumni Field ley Lane and TV/Radio: sophomore left MGoBlue.com fielder Nicole Sappingfield. In addition, the team had a sea- son-high 16 hits in the second game of the series. "They came to play all week- end," Hutchins said on Sunday. "That third game got a little ugly - too many errors, too many lit- tle gifts. I thought in general we were competing, we were play- ing to win." Michigan (8-1 Big Ten, 27-10 overall) hopes to continue its offensive success when it returns home to play Western Michigan (4-2 MAC, 17-12) on Tuesday. "Our offense is our strength right now," said junior shortstop Amy K lineup can hit can ge going t If th thing,i the Wo to Conti Mic at hot includi with games have th inn. we. "We selves, one in keep m With Tuesda tinue 1 Hutchi "We our pa said. " ue." At t Knapp. "Everyone in our son, the Wolverines looked can get a hit. Everyone uncomfortable when they were someone in and everyone at the plate, but the team's new- t on base. This success is found confidence has guided o continue." them to wins in 10 of their last its season has shown any- 11 games. it's that Knapp is right - Before playing its first home olverines' success is going game on March 21, Michigan inue. had a .249 batting average, but is higan is undefeated now at .292. me through five games, "(Recently), I think we've lng four mercy-rule wins. been pretty comfortable," three of their next four Hutchins said. at home, the Wolverines "It's a team effort, (so) it takes he recipe for success. all of us to win. We're not a superstar team, (but) when our whole team comes and plays for each other, we're a very solid We play one team." In addition to the offensive ing at a time, power, the pitching from fresh- man left-hander Haylie Wag- keep moving ner and freshman right-hander Sara Driesenga has helped pull forward." Michigan out of their midsea- son slump. The Wolverines will need to rely on their pitching to handle can't get ahead of our- the Broncos' offensive stars, " Hutchins said. "We play senior pitcher Meredith Whit- .ning at a time, (and) we ney and senior outfielder Court- oving forward." ney Rousseau. h the Broncos next up on over the past week, Rousseau ay, Michigan will con- has been hitting well, batting the one-pitch focus that .471 over the last six games. ns has stressed all year. With offense a strong area for did our best when we had both teams, Michigan hopes to atient hitting," Hutchins see Wagner and Driesenga stifle Hopefully it will contin- Western Michigan's momen- tum in the 2011 NCAA Regional he beginning of the sea- rematch. j By LIZ NAGLE Daily Sports Writer Michigan baseball coach Rich Maloney likes to take it one step at a time. On Sunday, after posting two conference wins and a 13-inning loss in a week- end series BGSU at against Michi- gan State, Michigan Maloney didn't Matchup: have any ideas BGSU 11-20; for what steps Michigan 15-17 came next. When: Tues- Michigan day 6:05 P.M. (2-3 Big Ten, 15-17 overall) Where: tay will host Bowl- Fse tdu ing Green (2-7 TV/Radio: MAC, 11-20 MGoBlue.com overall) today and Toledo (4-5,13-18) tomorrow, both of which look like plausible wins for the Wolverines. But the outcome will depend on two of Maloney's decisions. Decision 1: Starting pitcher The day before every midweek contest, Maloney asks himself who will start on the mound, and there's rarely a definitive answer. Consideringthe pitchingstaff's lack of reliability, Maloney has little to choose from. While some of the young hurlers have begun to step up recently, others have fallen short of expectations. Though junior right-hander BenBallantine andredshirtjunior left-hander Bobby Brosnahan started the season with promising production, they have stumbled to find their footing as of late. On March 21, pitching coach Steve Merriman praised Brosna- han, Ballantine and senior right- hander Brandon Sinnery, butwith a caveat. His words were foretell- ing. "Nothing has been etched in stone," Merriman said. "Those guys are competing, they're all competing for that opportunity. And you know what? That could change two weeks into the Big Ten season." Brosnahan's inconsistency per- suaded Maloney to start fresh- man left-hander Trent Szkutnik and replace him with sophomore right-hander Alex Lakatos - two PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Junior pitcher Ben Ballantine will start against Toledo on Wednesday. youngpitcherswho have emerged from the struggling bullpen - against Michigan State on Sat- urday. Earlier this season, they seemed like probable candidates for midweek starts. But their combined 142 pitches render them unavailable for the upcom- ing contests. In Ballantine's last two starts against Minnesota and Michigan State, he gave up five earned runs, eight hits and four walks in just 3.2 innings of work. After pulling Ballantine off the mound, Maloney had to rotate through four relievers, including freshman right-hand- er Matt Ogden, who threw for five innings. Last weekend put a noticeable dent in the list of prospective midweek pitchers. So Maloney will start freshman right-hander James Bourque today against Bowling Green and give Ballantine another opportu- nity to redeem himself in tomor- row's start against Toledo. Bourque earned a 7-3 win last week against Central Michigan with three strikeouts in three innings, giving up only one earned run. But Ballantine has to show Maloney he deserves anoth- er chance. Decision 2: Batting order It seems that Maloney has finally found something that works - freshman shortstop Dylan Delaney in the two-hole. Delaney was always placed in the eighth or ninth spot of the batting order. But last week- end, Maloney bumped him up in the lineup, and he notched five hits, three RBIs and a home run against the Spartans. Though Michigan lost sopho- more right fielder Michael O'Neill to a left-hand injury, a number of unlikely players stepped up at the right time. Maloney had to use freshman Zach Zott, who entered the Michigan State series with a .179 batting average, in right field to compensate for the loss in the lineup. He went 3-for-9 with two runs and three RBIs. It is unclear if Maloney will continue experimenting with the batting order. But before he posts the starting lineup, he'll need to take a few things into account. Bowling Green has eight play- ers batting above .300, led by outfielder Andrew Kubuski's .389 average on 44 hits. But since the Falcon pitching staff posts a mediocre 4.63 ERA, the matchup is bound to be an offensive show. Toledo has just one consistent starter batting above .300 and lingers at the bottom of the MAC in all facets of the game. Though the Rockets appear to be an easy win for the Wolverines, it will all depend on Maloney's decisions. "We just haveto make sure we play to the same level that we play higher teams," Delaney said. "We can't take them lightly." I