The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com scores season high in A March 11, 2013 - 3B DAILY DOMINANCE INDEX TEAM DOMINANCE E RATING 2.347 By CINDY YU Daily Sports Writer The No. 3 Michigan women' gymnastics team proved on Sun day why it has deserved to be ranked in the top three every wee 9 this season. The Wolverines scored a sea son-high 197.575 points at Paule Pavilion in Los Angeles to defea No. 6 UCLA, California and Iowa UCLA is one of only four teams - the other three being Alabama Georgia and Utah - to have eve won the NCAA team title. Michi- gan (6-1 Big Ten, 16-1 overall recorded its highest road score since the 2004 Big Ten Champi- onships, where the team scored a 197.800. Michigan junior co-captait Joanna Sampson, the No. 2 all- around gymnast in the country topped Bruin redshirt senior Van- essa Zamarripa, the No.1 gymnas in the country, 39.575-39.400 tt win the quad meet. Michigan began on the bal- ance beam, the most pressure- filled event to start out on. Senio Brittnee Martinez, sophomore Annette Miele and freshman Bri- ley Casanova led the team witl- * identical scores of 9.800. Because of strict judging on the event and UCLA recording its season-bes on vault, the Wolverines trailed the Bruins 49.375-48.925. Thei total marked their only sub- 49.000 beam score of the season. "I thought we did very well or beam,".said Michigan coach Be Plocki. "I just think the judging was tight. We control things we BOARDS - From Page 1B ateam we have to find a way tc get better in that area. "We block out every time in practice. We did not (on Sunday)." Though the Wolverines held the Hoosiers to a 35-percent clip from the floor, Indiana kept the game within striking distance at halftime by crashing the glass. Michigan had an 11-point lead late in the first half, but putbacks by guard Victor Oladipo and easy layups by forward Cody Zeller pulled the Hoosiers within three points at the break. Indiana had 13 offensive rebounds in the first frame, and despite how well Michigan was playing defensively, second and third possessions for the Hoosiers were where they kept the game close. REALITY CHECK From Page 4B have gotten to Saturday's blow- out. It helped a little that North- ern Michigan was hurting offensively after losing its top scorer to a broken leg last week (before this weekend, the Wildcats had gone 1-5-1 with- out senior Matt Thurber), but that's no excuse. You can bet that whomever Michigan faces in the subsequent rounds of the playoffs won't be relying on one single playmaker - every skater on the ice will pose a threat. At last, the Wolverines were cognizant of their shortcomings on Friday night. And whether it's the do-or-die playoff men- tality or the fact that Michigan is finally (dare I say it?) a decent team now, the Wolverines have gotten to the point where they can take a close game like Fri- day's and transform that into a blowout the next night. "I think it was a good time SPECIAL TEAMS From Page 4B verting on 18.5 percent of chanc- es. And while the Wolverines scored as many goals with an extra man as the Wildcats scored the entire series, the strong per- formance was more important for gaining momentum. Just 1:39 into the game on Saturday, sophomore forward Andrew Sinelli went to the box for hooking and left Michigan at an early disadvantage. But the Wolverines closed off the mid- dle of the ice, leaving Northern Michigan poor looks at the net, have control over, so I'm not con- cerned. It's not like we had a sub- par beam performance. I have no s worries. We're just going to keep - doing what we've been doing e because it's working." k On the floor exercise, Michi- gan narrowed its gap by deliver- - ing near-perfect performances to y score a 49.500. Sampson, ranked it No. 1 in the nation on floor, won working on the little details in the gym and I'm glad I was able to translate what I've been doing in practice onto the competition floor. We were really focused on each and every one of our team- mates' routines and fed off each other's energy." Michigan took a 0.200 lead over UCLA after the Wolverines scored a 49.550 on the vault, their scored a season-best 49.575, mark- ing the second highestbars total in program history. "It was great because when we went over to finish up on bars, UCLA was coming into floor, which we know is their best event," Plocki said. "We only had a two-tenths lead so we knew we had to hit bars really well and that's exactly what we did." Miele performed in the leadoff position and scored a 9.300 after falling on her Tkatchev release move. But, her teammates per- formed exceptionally well and her score wasn't needed. Sugiyama won the event with a career-best 9.950. "I just knew I had to put up a good performance to have Annette's back," Sugiyama said. "She had a rough time but we have a strong bar team and we just went up to rock it. I was a little nervous going in butI think I used that to my advantage." In a four-way tie for second, UCLA senior Monique de la To-re, Zurales, Martinez and Sampson each scored a 9.925, and junior Shelby Gies contributed a 9.850. "If somebody makes a mistake before them, it does not have any impact whatsoever on their abil- ity to go out there and perform," Plocki said:"They overcame a fall and hit five awesome bar routines, which shows just how resilient and tough this group of athletes is." If the Wolverines qualify for nationals, they will have the opportunity to return to Pauley Pavilion on Apr. 19. 1. FLORIDA NATASHA JANARDAN/Daily Junior Joanna Sampson defeated the No.1 overall gymnast in the country Sunday. with a 9.950, marking her sixth straight victory on the event. UCLA senior Alyssa Pritch- ett earned a career-high to tie Sampson for the title. A trio of Wolverines - senior Natalie Beil- stein, junior Reema Zakharia and sophomore Sachi Sugiyama - each scored a 9.900 to tie for third place. "My landings were the best I've ever had so far this year," Sugi- yamasaid. Added Zakharia: "I've been highestvault total since Feb.2008. Beilstein and Sampson recorded matching 9.925's. Rounding out the top five with two 9.900's were senior co-captain Katie Zurales, Zakharia, and Sugiyama. All five gymnasts stuck their vault land- ings. "We stuck more vaults tonight than we've stuck in any competi- tion this year," Plocki said., Michigan carried its momen- tum to the uneven bars, where it 3. LOUISVILLE 1.992 5. DUKE 1.819 7. KANSAS 1.701 9. CREIGHTON 1.493 9 11. SYRACUSE 1.414 13. BELMONT 1.365 15.OHIO STATE 1.363 17. MIDDLE TENNESSEE 1.281 19. COLORADO STATE 1.245 21. GEORGETOWN 1.213 23. WISCONSIN 1.104 25. MISSOURI 1.091 The second half followed suit. Zeller had two consecutive offen- sive boards, leading to six of his 25 points within the first two min- utes of the stanza, and for the rest of the half, the preseason Player of the Year kept finding ways around weak box-outs to crash the glass. And though Michigan had every opportunity to pull away in the final five minutes of the game, every sophomore guard Trey Burke floater or redshirt junior forward JordanMorganlayupwas answered by the Hoosiers with a putback by Oladipo or Zeller. Zeller easily outmatched Mich- igan's post players for most of the game, and Indiana took advantage of that, continually feeding Zeller the ball. Morgan, an undersized forward, had the most success defensively, but Zeller still pulled down 10 rebounds. Freshman Mitch McGary was more of a size match for Zeller, but early foul trouble in both halves forced him to sit for most of the game. Redshirt sophomore Jon Horford and redshirt freshman Max Bielfeldt, the third and fourth bigs off the bench, weren't able to handle a physical Zeller, either. But it wasn't just Zeller domi- nating the glass. Oladipo had two consecutive, easy layups for four points that shifted the momentum back in Indiana's favor with two minutes to go, and Zeller added another two points off an offen- sive board to cut Michigan's lead to a manageable three points with 38 seconds to go - a lead that ulti- mately disappeared thanks to a key offensive rebound by Indiana and missed free throws by the Wolverines to seal the victory for the Hoosiers. "Part of the rebounds come off penetration," Beilein said. "Two guys have to help the ball, so if there's two guys, somebody's going to be open. To find that guy is difficult, it takes time, and sometimes you can't even do it." And Michigan hasn't been a great offensive rebounding team this season, either. With under- sized and inexperienced post play- ers, the Wolverines don't have the personnel to match up against the Big Ten's stronger interior players. In many of its losses, rebounding has been a main factor for Michi- gan, but Burke believes the Wol- verines will improve before the Big Ten and NCAA Tournaments. "(We have to) just keep going at it," he said. "Just keep working at it in practice, do rebounding drills and things like that, send more to the glass. It's something we try to get better at. I think we've got- ten better at it. Indiana's a good rebounding team and they send a lot of players to the glass." for us to show that when we bear down and want to win _ a game, we can," said junior defenseman Mac Bennett. "For us to go out this game and com- pletely bury them, that feels really good, and I think that will definitely transfer over to next weekend." If Michigan makes it to Joe Louis Arena for the CCHA semifinals (even though that's still far down the road right now) it won't have the best-of- three series as a crutch. The Wolverines won't be sitting in the locker room on a Friday night after a narrow win or a loss, thinking about wlat they can do to completely bury the hatchet in the next game - at that point, it might already be too late. Michigan is running out of second chances. And the fact that it learned its lesson this weekend is the real highlight of the series. - Vukelich can be reached at elizavuk@umich.edu SWEEP From Page 4B When these two teams met earlier in the year, Michigan ral- lied for three goals during the first game's third period to tie up the game and ultimately win in a shootout. That wouldn't be the case again though, as junior forward Luke Moffatt's goal less than three minutes into the third period gave the Wolverines a dominant 5-1 lead and all but eliminated Northern Michigan from the game. After another penalty shot was called with under ten min- utes remaining, Copp buried it home through Coreau's five hole, making the score 6-1. Northern Michigan got a goal late in the game, but it was too little too late. The special teams, which were exceptional on Friday, played with a similar vigor on Saturday night. The power-play unit followed up Friday's impressive two-for- three performance with two more power-play goals on Sat- urday. Though the penalty killers didn't tally a short-handed goal like on Friday - one of senior Kevin Lynch's two goals - they did hold Northern Michigan's power play scoreless yet again. "I think that was the best game we've played all year. We started hot, finished hot, and we were great all around," Ben-. nett said. "I thought our special teams played really well. We dominated the game, and we knew kind of beforehand that we wanted to stick the dagger in (Northern Michigan) and we did." Michigan will be back in action next weekend, traveling to Western Michigan for the sec- ond round of the CCHA plavoffs. SENIOR DAY From Page 1B And who's to say the outcome on Sunday would've been differ- ent with someone on the court who was honored in Crisler before the game? The hard part is that leader- ship isn't something you can teach. Certain people have it, certain people don't, and for some, it's something that devele- ops over time. Last year's senior leader was Zach Novak, who's probably been a natural, vocal leader since he started playing organized . sports. He was in your face, aggressive and loud - it was very clear who was the heart and soul of the team. This year, the de-facto leaders were supposed tobe Hardaway and Burke. They are the two best players,therefore, they should be the team's leaders, right? It's not that easy. When asked after the game how he was plan- ning on helpingthe team forget about the loss and move onto the Big Ten Tournament, Hard- away didn't have an answer. He , couldn't think of anything. Novak would have had an answer. People forget that Burke is just a sophomore. He's 20 years old. He's not Novak yet, not someone who will get in people's faces and challenge them to rise to the challenge. This isn't to say the two are bad leaders - it's just not a strong suit; it doesn't come as naturally. Maybe that skill devel- ops by the time Burke and Hard- away are seniors - if they stay at Michigan that long - but right now, it's just not there. When Michigan is playing in the Big Ten Tournament next week, or the NCAA Tournament the week after that, look at who's stepping up and challenging guys during timeouts. See who looks in control during moments of peril. It's impossible to judge how much different the makeup of this team would be with a true senior leader on the floor, but on Sunday, it was very clear Michi- gan needed someone whose recognition didn't end before the game started. -Cook can be reached at evcook@umich.edu nnnmirc 1 tll{iJ V " .VM1 ll Vl 4111' Flllll i " <4 G/1 and then cleared the puck after rebounds to kill the penalty. And 30 seconds after the pen- alty ended, sophomore forward Alex Guptill scored to give, his team the early lead. The special-teams unit embod- ies a larger part of Michigan's improved play: the increased effort put forth and better looks at net. Senior forward Kevin Lynch's shorthanded goal on Friday night came after he played up the ice instead of waiting back. Lynch grabbed a turnover near the blue line and took the puck to the net where he gave himself a clear look. But the special teams don't require something special at practice. Instead of waiting for the perfect chance at the net, the. Wolverines are swinging freely at the net. "We talked about simplicity over the last couple weeks and getting pucks to the net and get- ting guys to the front of the net," Copp said. "Speaking for myself, my goal was a rebound goal, (Kevin) Lynch's goal last night was a rebound goal, so simplicity is really what we've been focused on. Ultimately, Michigan's special teams will only be special if they are good enough to create wins. Six straight wins at the perfect time qualifies as special. -+S Applications are'now being accepted for the Undergraduate Program Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE) Deadline is March 27. Visit www.isa.umich.edu/ppe for more information