The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 30, 2012 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycomFriday, November 30, 2012 - 5 Volleyball holds off Vols 'M' heads to Big Rapids looking to snap streak By GREG GARNO Daily Sports Writer After cruising through its first two sets against Tennessee, the Michigan volleyball team ran to its locker room like children run- ning home for dinner. But when Michigan returned to play, there was a stronger, much different opponent waiting. The Wolverines managed to walk away victorious, MICHIGAN 3 overcoming TENNESSEE 2 the resur- gent Volunteers to hang on to their two-set lead and win a close five-set match, 25-22,25-17,22-25, 19-25, 15-10 in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament in Lou- siville, Ky. With the win, Michi- gan advances to the second round to play No. 9 Louisville on Friday. Thanks to a fast start in the fifth set, the Wolverines (24-11) were able to escape an early exit following a strong regular season. "I thought we did a good job of just letting those first four sets go, good and bad, and just play- ing that fifth set really well," said Michigan coach Mark Rosen. "I'm very proud of how they responded and looking forward to moving on." Michigan leaned heavily on its leading hitters - junior outside hitters Lexi Erwin and Molly Toon - to take control. The two accounted for more than half of Michigan's points. Erwin fin- ished with a game-high 26 kills while Toon added 20. The Wolverines came out strong early, catching the Volun- teers on their heels. Down 2-4 in the first set, Michigan went on a 4-0 to secure a lead. Tennessee had no answer to the Wolverines' momentum in the beginning of the game, unable to get a sideout when needed. For the rest of the set, Ten- nessee could only answer with Junior outside hitter Lexi Erwin finished with a game-high 26 kills as Michigan snuck past Tennessee in five sets. one point to every two points for Michigan, failing to stop the Wolverines' momentum. Strong hitting and a nearly errorless second set allowed Michigan to quickly head into the locker room: The Wolverines raced out to a 10-3 run behind the strong play of junior middle blocker Jennifer Cross. The Vol- unteers never figured out how to stop a team that hit at will, as Michigan finished with a .300 attack percentage and only one error. "Jen is a student of the game and loves to think through the game," Rosen said. "There were lots of times I could see her com- municating with other players and telling them what they're going to do and setting our team up to defend." But Tennessee - 8-3 in five- set games this season - was accustomed to taking its time to figure out opponents. The Volunteers had over- committed to one hitter by gambling on sophomore set- ter Lexi Dannemiller's decision to continue feeding Erwin and Toon. But Tennessee switched its scheme in the following sets, running two setters and a stron- ger offense. Michigan's hot hitting cooled off following the break, ending the set with a .108 attack per- centage. Ahead 13-11, Tennessee need only a 3-0 run to provide the momentum to pull away. The Volunteers mirrored the Wolverines' strong second set with one of their own in the fourth, taking advantage of a slew of serving errors - Michi- gan finished with nine serving errors on the night. Tennessee jumped out to a 10-4 lead, mak- ing several short runs to force the fifth set. "Even though Tennessee was making a good run at us, they were always coming from behind," Rosen said. "I think that still allows to be a little bit more controlled and more composed and know that we had the ability to play at that level." Added Erwin: "I think that it was the first-game jitters, so not everything was going as smooth as it has gone all season. I think we kind of just forgot the first four games and started new." Needing a sprint in the fifth set, the Wolverines managed a 6-3 on two service aces from Dannemiller. The Volunteers called a timeout hoping to respond, but Michigan extended its lead tot10-5, forcing yet anoth- er timeout. Ultimately, using two kills from Dannemiller, the Wol- verines closed the game on akill from Toon. Dannemiller finished with 57 assists, and 16 digs as part of her solid night. Freshman libero Tiffany Morlaes led the team in digs with 19, adding to her strong freshman campaign. "We had to learn as the match went on," Rosen said. "I think these guys, especially in the first two sets, I could see them mak- ing a lot of adjustments, just from what they're watching. It's something this team takes a lotof pride on, they're good smatt vol- leyball players, they're not just playing the system." By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Editor The Michigan hockey team returns to CCHA play Friday when it begins a two-game road series against Ferris State (5-3 CCHA, 6-4-2 overall). After play- ing home-and- home series Michigan at, with the Bull- FerrisState dogs the past few seasons, the Matchup: Wolverines will Michigan 5--1Ferris play a full week- State 62 end in Big Rap- ids for the first When: Friday time since 2006. 7:05 p.m.'y And because Michigan has Where: begun this sea- twiglehen Ice Arena son with an abysmal 0-3-1 TV/Radio: record away MGoBlue.com from Yost Ice Arena, the venue is perhaps more foreboding than Ferris State's sta- tus as reigning conference cham- pions. To neutralize the home-ice advantage, Michigan coach Red Berenson said the Wolverines (3-5-1, 5-7-1) need to get on the board first. "It's huge, especially at a place like Ferris State where it feels like the crowd is right on the ice with you," Berenson said. "For us to play well there, we've got to keep the crowd out of it." Coming off yet another embar- rassing loss, this time to Cornell at Madison Square Garden, Michi- gan also needs to return to the fundamentals. Missed defensive assignments led to too many Big Red goals in the 5-1 defeat last Sat- urday. "It wasn't that (Cornell) made great plays," Berenson said. "These were broken plays. We're not picking up sticks or doing sim- ple things like that." The Bulldogs sit in a tie for sec- ond place in the league, and one reason is because they've retained their stellar goaltending. Last year, sophomore C.J. Motte split time between the pipes duringhis with then-senior Taylor Nelson, but now the job is Motte's alone. He's posted a 2.20 goals-against average and a save percentage of .928. In order to begin a crucial four- game stretch of games leading up to the Great Lakes Invitational on the right foot, the Michigan offense needs to find its scoring touch. After scoring in bunches to start the season, the Wolverines have scored one goal apiece in three of their last four games. "Right now, goals for are pre- cious and goals against are killing us," Berenson said. , But as he does every year, Berenson recently looked back at the team's first 10 games to evalu- ate where it stands. What he found was that goals scored, power-play goals and shots against were all similar to their totals from a year ago. The main discrepancy came in goals against. The Bulldogs won't be the best offensive team the Michigan defense has faced all year, but they are still formidable. Ferris State ranks third in the CCHA, averaging 2.88 goals per game. "I think it's just our defensive- zone coverage that's struggling right now," said freshman defen- seman Jacob Trouba. "It's just something we need to keep work- ing on in practice." The defensemen have been slow-footed so far, but the burden also lies with the backchecking forwards. If Ferris State gets on the board first, the Wolverines will have a hard time digging out of the hole at Ewigleben Arena. Wolverines travel to Peoria in first true road game By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Editor Over the last week, the No. 3 Michigan basketball team played two games in the famed Madison Square Garden, won its first-ever NIT Season Tip-Off and beat its first ranked opponent of the sea- son. And all three of those games were on ESPN in front of a national audi- Michigan ence. at Bradley It's difficult to judge a team Matchup: when it plays Bra -0' opponents like Slippery Rock When: Satur- or Cleveland day, 4 p.m. State. Last Where: week, the Wol- Carver Arena verines went TV/Radio: unscathed in MGoBlue.com their biggest stretch of the young season, and it gets easier to judge them when they play teams like Pittsburgh and then-No.18 North Carolina State. But this weekend, Michigan gets a break from major-con- ference teams. On Saturday, the Wolverines travel to Peoria, Ill. to take on Bradley, a team that went 7-25 in the less-than-illustrious Missouri Valley Conference last season. It's Michigan's first true road game of the year - the preseason tournament last week was tech- nically at a neutral site - but Bradley has also never hosted a non-conference opponent with this high of a ranking in its his- tory. You'd have to go back to 1982 to find the last time the Braves played a team ranked top-three nationally. Bradley (5-1) finishes off the month tied for the most Novem- ber wins in program history, so it's not like the Braves are in the midst of a terrible season. Their entire starting five is averaging double-digits in points, and a sixth player is averaging close to nine. Still, Michigan is expected blow by this team without a prob- lem. It's the No. 3 team in the country against a team that has wins over Upper Iowa and Texas- Pan American among others. Ten points and a hat tip to anyone that can name those mascots. There is the possibility of a let- down game, just as there is a pos- sibility of a letdown game when any highly-ranked team plays a mid-major on the road. This is Bradley's biggest game ofthe year - you can count on the building being full and the Braves to come out with some energy. But Bradley, a private univer- sity with 5,300 undergraduate students, and Michigan, a public university with 27,400 under- graduate students, don't have much in common. The biggest similarity came from a common opponent from the middle of November - Indi- ana University-Purdue Univer- sity Indianapolis. Michigan won that game by 37, Bradley beat the Jaguars by seven. Michigan coach John Beilein and the Wolverines are off to a 6-0 start and are coming off a 79-72 victory over No.18 N.C. State at Crisler Center. FOLLOW DAILY SPORTS ON TWITTER It's a good time, every time. @THEBLOCKM @BLOCKMFOOTBALL @BLOCKMBBALL @BLOCKMHOCKEY 2012/13 Orren C. Mohler Prize Lecture Friday, November 30, 2012 " 7:00pm Feedback from Active Black Holes Andrew Fabian Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge fellow of the Royal Society How a central black hole can control a galaxy. 1210 Chemistry Bldg., 930 N. Univ. Ave. Sponsored by the Department of Astronomy http://goo.gl/Wd5D5 (734) 764-3440