6A - Wednesday, October 10, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 6A - Wednesday, October10, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom * Blue wins 14-inning marathon against U-18 Ontario Blue Jays Michigan earns win despite errors, sioppy performance By LIZ NAGLE Daily Sports Writer New Michigan baseball coach Erik Bakich and the Michigan baseball team got their first taste of competitive action at RayFish- er Stadium on Tuesday, but no one was impressed. The Wolverines littered the field with errors en route to an unsatisfactory 8-5 win against the under-18 Ontario Blue Jays in a 14-inning _ exhibi- ONTARIO 5 tion. (To MICHIGAN 8 remain in compliance with NCAA rules, the extended game serves in place of two seven-inning con- tests.) Michigan's ho-hum effort showed just how much prepara- tion it needs this off season. The Blue Jays maintained a narrow 5-4 lead in the 13th inning, but the Wolverines start- ed a rally with luck on their side to mark a four-run frame. Sophomore middle infielder Eric Jacobson advanced to first base on a walk and second base on a passed ball. Junior right fielder Michael O'Neill tried to sacrifice bunt, but reached on Ontario's throwing error and batted in the tying run. The Blue Jays' pitching staff handed Michigan the lead - Ontario right-hander Sean Rat- cliff intentionally loaded the bases before sophomore Kyle Jusick found contact, singling up the middle. The Wolverines capped the night's scoring on a pair of bases- loaded walks. But both bullpens pitched poorly. Michigan hurlers combined for a torrent of wild pitches, six walks and a trio of earned runs. "The errors we made tonight were unacceptable," Bakich said. "That'll never be acceptable because pitching and defense win championships. ... I don't think that was up to Michigan standards tonight." Though nearly every hurler in the arsenal saw some time on the TERRA MOLENGRAFF/t Junior right fielder Michael O'Neill, pictured here last spring, and the Wolverines beat the Ontario Blue Jays team at home on Tuesday. mound, two experienced right- handers remained in the dugout. Senior Ben Ballantine and sophomore Matt Ogden were both unavailable to play fall ball. Ballantine is resting his arm through the offseason and will likely be the ace this spring after tossing 74.2 innings with 41 strikeouts last year. Ogden is recovering from a mild injury after being hit in the head with a baseball. Though he rarely started last year, the Auro- ra, Colo. native came to be a reli- able source in relief. In his rookie campaign, Ogden earned three saves in 40.1 innings of work. With last season's graduated seniors, Michigan has a handful of spots to fill in the lineup. At this point, starting slots are up for grabs, and a freshmen trio - Travis Maezes, Jack Sex- ton and Jacob Cronenworth - looked promising in the infield. "You can probably expect some of them to step in," Biondi said. "I'm not exactly sure which role they'll have, butI think you'll see them contribute." But it's the veteran outfield duo that carried Michigan to the win over Ontario, notching familiar numbers and creating timely hits. Biondi and O'Neill combined 4-for-10 with four runs, an RBI and two walks. The odd man out, however, was sophomore left fielder Will Drake, who remains inactive due to slow quadricep recovery. He swung a hot bat early and often at the start of last season, but on April 11, he buckled running down the first- base line against Toledo. "(He) needs time to heal and needs time to get back to a hun- dred percent," Bakich said. "He's rehabbing very efficiently with our training staff and he'll be fine." A few missing keys on the field and a slew of mental mistakes nearly led Michigan to its first loss against Ontario in four years. The Wolverines posted lopsided victories against the Canadians in 2010 and 2011, outscoring their opponent by a combined score of 51-2. But after its woeful exhibi- tion performance, Michigan is actively searching for a spark. After suffering two-straight injury-prone years in the bottom of the Big Ten, a change is much needed. Which is why the Bakich and his highly touted staff hope to give the team a lift with their gung-ho approach. "The new coaching staff has been great for our program, a lot of energy every day," Biondi said. "I think it's something the whole team has really welcomed in and has really bought into their phi- losophy." Essentially, an exhibition means little. But for a team in its rebuilding stages, ready to climb the conference ranks and take home a title, it means something a little more. "It just gives us a glimpse when we can turn the lights on and play against another shirt," Bakich said. "We obviously have a lot of things to work on and a long way to go." By DAVID WEINFELD For the Daily Erik Bakich's young son Colt rushed onto the infield grass and to his father's side, tugging on the -first-year Michigan baseball coach's pant leg. Bakich looked down, smiled and spun Colt around. Even though Michigan beat the Ontario Blue Jays 8-5 in Bakich's first game in Ann Arbor, it was hard for him to maintain his festive mood. Bakich wasn't satisfied. During the 14-inning exhibi- tion on Tuesday, the Wolverines made seven errors and had four wild pitches. The Blue Jays, an under-18 team that showcases Canada's top young baseball tal- ent, scored two of their five runs off of the mistakes, helping them control a lead until the bottom of the eighth inning. In the third inning, with a runner on second base, a throwing error by fresh- man second baseman Jacob Cronenworth brought in Ontar- io's first run. In the fourth inning, the left side of the infield faltered. Freshmen third baseman Travis Maezes made a throwing error on a softly hit ground ball. The next hitter dribbled a potential double- play ball to shortstop, where it snuck through the legs of sopho- more Dylan Delaney. Luckily for the Wolverines, they escaped the inning without giving up a run. In the fifth inning it was more of the same. A wild pitch and a throwing error were charged to junior right-hander Alex Lakatos. Two more errors ocured in the top of the 10th inning, one on a throw by junior pitcher Logan McAnal- len, and another on a dropped line drive by sophomore second base- man Eric Jacobson. The sloppiness was a common theme throughout the game. The Blue Jays capitalized on Michi- gan's litany of mistakes, scoring two of their five runs on wild pitches. "We obviously have a lot of things to work on and a long way to go," Bakich said. "It gave us a good idea of things to focus on. It was tentativeness, and you could sense it in batting practice because it's our first game. Guys are nervous, guys are anxious. They didn't look comfortable or confident. I could get that feel just by their body language." Senior center fielder Patrick Biondi echoed Bakich's assess- ment, saying that the Wolverines were nervous and "played really tight." "In normal practices we have been playing really clean baseball. I think you can see it in some of the young guys' eyes, and even the veterans, that we weren't relaxed and we weren't as confident as we should be. It's just a matter of get- ting those guys to come out with a little more swagger and confi- dence." Despite their defensive woes, the Wolverines were also able to capitalize on the Blue Jays' mis- takes, turning Ontario's - three errors and four wild pitches into four runs of their own, resulting in four of Michigan's eight runs. The Wolverines said they'll know that they will need to clean up their game, as the Blue Jays are well below the average level of a Big Ten team. The veterans and the new- comers have a sense of optimism about the team and its future. Bakich's methods and style have meshed well with the Wolverines, by all accounts. Bakich is focused not only on this teams success but on the program's future. "The players are buying into the enthusiasm and the style that we bring," Bakich concluded. "Our program will have an identi- ty, we don't have an identity right now, but I think all great organi- zations know exactly what they stand for." Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmall.com RELEASE DATE-Wednesday, October 10,2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS DOWN 30 *lndobr antenna 51 Start a hole 1 Aphid's meal 1 Managed 31 Lotion addition 53 Variety 4 Marsh bird 2 So far 32 Gibson 54 Big name in 9 Neil Simon's 3 *Protection for 33 Diagnostbotest raingear Suite" jousters 34 Comic strip 55 Picnic side 14 Communication 4 "Mangial" possum 56 One helping after at Gallaudet U. 5 Geneticspioneer 36 Beetle juice? a crash 15 Concertvenue Mendel 41 Lather again 57 Cad 16 Bonalfide 6 Derribre 44 Flu fighter's 59 Cass's title 17 'Role in the films 7 2001 bankruptcy episode 62 "Spare me the "Wichita and filer 49 Seizes details,"in brief 'Tombstone 5 Brew source unlawfully 63 Backpacked 15 pposite o1apr uns 3 y 50 Renaissance beast 3Plcorn documentary chapeau whose first ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 21 Miracle- eisodewas 22 Get-up-and-go "FomPole to LAM AS FE T A S D A K 23Operafeaturing Pole A L A M O A R A L P A C E lago 10 Videogame MO T I F C A N AD A D R Y Lint colector stage B U S F A R E B I R D I E se27 a tcyesetor 11c BAT t MAm vN Y D S 29 Glowing, perhaps 12Crrbcrzewrth P H A S E R C O M E S 30 Cleaning closet rs E T R A D E H E A D L O C K 33 Nautical pole 13 EMOTAJ empEee PEP L E 3Sp t58 We want tohearPLA9BALL IMPALE 37lWlSmith title the story R 0 L EtO O UT F OX role 22Devil's work L I P N B C N E W S 38Fnchnoble 24*Oneuwho was L A t M A I L 5 A 5 39 Trail behind held up, most T I B H T R AGCE C AR5L A 40 rape-growing ikel M A M E T I E R A V A I L 42 Backwhen 28Mozambique E D Y S O R L Y L A T T E 43 Put to shame neighbor xwordeditor@aol.com 10/10/12 45 Mutineer 1 2 3 4 8 s 9 10 11 12 13 46 Nether mate 47 Noispquarrel 14 15 16 48 "Hotel Rwanda" tribe 1 $1 50 Compote s 21 s ingredient 52 Fired on 2m a5 s a 55 oft ibraltar 58 Source oftlean 27 u so o31 32 red meat 60 Pertaining to as34 as an 37 planes 61 Popehafter 3 8s on or Sergius It 62 Rip to pieces, and a hint to 4 47 4 4s what's hidden in the answers to so 1 52 sa 540 this puzzle's starredclues s as s57 5 55 60 64 Lexuscompetitor 65 Malady with s 10 t6 swelling656 66 "Norma" 67Potters apparatus 68 "Count me outf 69 Part of DOS: Abbr. 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