The Michigan Daily - michigandailv.com Tuesday, April 23, 2013 - 7 The Michiean Daily - michieandailv.com Tuesday, April 23, 2013 - 7 Wolverines on a roll Ue --, By NATE SELL Daily Sports Writer The Michigan softball team has been untouchable in the Big Ten, and with a perfect 16-0 conference record thus far, it's in great posi- tion to grab the program's sixth Central straight confer- ence champion- Michigan at 'ship title. Michigan The Wolver- ines are cur- Matchup: rentl thebest Central 25-13; rently the best Michigan 39-7, offensive team in the Big Ten, When: Tues- leading the con- day 6 p.m. . ference with Where: Wil- a .349 batting pon Complex average, a .538 TV/Radio: slugging per- mgoblue.com centage and a .434 on-base percentage. They are also leading the Big Ten in nearly every other offensive category, including runs, hits, RBI, triples, home runs, total bases ond walks. The pitching has backed the offense up, averaging almost one strikeout per inning. Tuesday, No. 9 Michigan (16-0 Big Ten, 39-7 overall) will take a break from dominating confer- ence play to face Central Michigan (11-3 Mid-American Conference, 25-13) at Alumni Field. The Chip- pewas are coming off a heart- breaking 3-2 extra-inning loss to Toledo on Sunday, a loss that snapped a seven-game winning streak in which Central Michigan outscored conference opponents, 39-15, to climb into second place in the MAC. 'M' needs By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Writer It's resum6-building season for the Michigan baseball team. Not individually, though. Michigan coach Erik Michigan Bakich and a his players aren't leav- Michigan ing Ann Arbor Matchup: for anything Michigan besides road 22-16; East- games, but the ern 18-18 Wolverines When: Tues- are beginning day 6 p.m. to construct. an impressive Where: NCAA Tour- Oestrike nament rdsu- Stadium m6. "Every game from this point on, whether conference or non- conference, is critical, as we're putting together a resume not only to win a conference cham- pionship, but to earn an at-large berth into the NCAA Tourna- ment," Bakich said. Michigan (8-4 Big Ten, 22-16- overall) will travel to Ypsilanti, Mich. to take on Eastern Michi- gan (8-7 Mid-American Confer- ence, 18-18) on Tuesday in its next opportunity to maintain an already impressive slate. Monday, Bakich said soph- omore right-hander James Bourque will get the start for the Wolverines. Bourque has already established his role as a midweek starter, boasting a 3.51 earned-run average in 41 innings. Opposing batters are hitting just .263 against him. In a disappointing weekend at a rebound Northwestern, the Wolverines faltered when they had chances to extend the lead. Many hard- hit balls were pulled back into the park due to brutal weather conditions, but as Bakich said, loud outs aren't going to con- tribute to winning games. "We need to adjust to the ele- ments, and when the wind is howling in like it was all three games this weekend, we need to do a better job of hitting line drives and hard groundballs," Bakich said. Michigan left six runners on base in an extra-innings heart- breaker in game two of Sunday's doubleheader, and the inability to record hits with runners in scoring position continues to be the Wolverines' achilles heel. Still, the pitching has been stellar in the last few weeks and has been the base of Michi- gan's ability to win,10 of its past 12 games. Bourque will look to keep the Wolverines' recent success alive, and with another pitching performance like last week's - he didn't allow a hit against then-No. 29 Notre Dame in 7.2 innings - Michigan's chances are looking bright. Continuously adding tallies to the Wolverines' win column will only help the construction of their NCAA Tournament resume that already boasts five combined wins against Michi- gan State and Notre Dame, which sit at Nos. 26 and 27, respectively, in the RPI. With obvious work 'left to do, Tues- day's game, and every game after, is crucial heading into the Big Ten Tournament. PAULtSHERMA Freshman outfielder Sierra Lawrence won her first Big Ten Freshman of the Week award after a grand slam Sunday. The Chippewas are efficient offensively and don't leave many runners on base. Coupled with a strategy that includes aggres- sive base stealing makes them a hard team to play against. A key to Toledo's win Sunday was catch- ing Central Michigan in unlucky double plays and picking off its runners, so for Michigan to have success, its infield will have to dis- play the same discipline against crafty baserunners. Offensively, the Wolverines can steal bases, too, especially senior second baseman Ashley Lane, who is 7-for-8 in steal attempts. In addition to base running, Michi- gan will count on freshmen Sierra Romero and Sierra Lawrence to drive in runs. Lawrence claimed her first Big Ten Freshman on the Week award after batting .462 while having a hit and a RBI in each of Michigan's four confer- ence games. On Sunday, she hit her first-career grand slam against Iowa and tied her career-best with four RBI. Fellow classmate Romero has already received six weekly rookie awards this season, prompting teams to pitch around her. She has gotten on base each of the last 25 games, and has already hit 19 home runs. Behind the offensive firepower is a strong pitching rotation con- sisting of sophomores Sara Dries- enga and Haylie Wagner. Over the weekend, Driesenga struck out six batters on her way to her fifth shutout of the season. Meanwhile, Wagner won her 15th game behind five strikeouts and zero walks. When these teams met last year, the Wolverines earned a run-rule victory after six innings. The Chippewas were the first to score, but Michigan put up nine runs in the sixth inning and even- tually won the game, 10-2. Explo- sive innings like that have become common for the Wolverines, who've picked up 15 mercy-rule decisions this year. If their bats get hot, they could add another and extend their winning streak to 22. Their current 21-game win streak is the longest in the nation and their 16-straight conference wins make up the best streak since 2009, when they won 17 in a row. To make things even harder for Central Michigan, the game is in Ann Arbor, where Michigan is undefeated on the year. An early look into women's lacrosse and the birth of a program To g lacross a rathe State S ticket parkin Arena. look fo outdoo Trai It's the se knocker dents i on Fri ducting the we silver-t offices would' fortabl Thin letic d stick a jump the sev trailer. ent in The, feel. I: and-bl a larg machin inhabi head c assista The By THEO DUBIN ing a women's lacrosse program Daily Sports Writer from the ground up. Working day after day, they make recruiting et to the Michigan women's calls,, write the team handbook, e offices, you have to follow draw up the strength-and-condi- r strange path. Walk down tioning program and even create treet, past the athletic and a marketing book complete with offices, then right into the original team logos. g lot jusf before Yost Ice "Sometimes it's challenging Once in the parking lot, because you just want to get out r the last trailer behind the and work with the kids, that's r track. what we love to do," Ulehla said. ler? "We want to have that daily inter- 42 degrees and windy on action, coach the sport that we cond day of a storm that love and just watch individuals d out power for 1,600 resi- grow." living near South Campus Ulehla's passion for lacrosse is iday. Undoubtedly, con- immediately evident in conver- g an interview in one of sation. She lights up when talk- :ll-lit, winged-helmet- and ing about the girls she's bringing rophy-decorated athletic in and the program she wants to visible from State Street establish. ve been much more com- She was hired in 2011 by athlet- e* is director Dave Brandon because nking wistfully of the ath- of her experience as an assistant epartment's warm lobby, I coach at Florida from 2008-10. questionably executed long She was there, in Gainesville, as over a puddle and ascend the Gators started their women's ven wooden stairs in'to the lacrosse program from scratch. The atmosphere is differ- "It takes someone with a lot of here. perseverance, it takes someone trailer has a warm, homey with a vision, who can see beyond i's decorated with maize- the difficult times," Ulehla said. ue wallpaper and features "It's all part of having that build- e, silver Starbucks coffee er's mentality. To be able"to see ne. This trailer has been beyond the present to what the ted for nearly two years by future is goingto be like." oach Jennifer Ulehla and Vision is certainly a necessary nt coach Jen Valore. attribute for the task at hand. A thave spentthat time build- search of the team's official web- site shows an empty roster. Of the 28 recruits who will play in the Wolverines' inaugural 2014 sea- son, only one - junior Kelley Beck- er, a transfer from Ohio State - is even on campus. Becker has been on campus all year, the lone member of a team meant to be 30 deep, working out one-on-one with the coaching staff. The team's culture, style of play and work ethic will have to be cre- ated by agroup that has never lived in Ann Arbor, never taken college classes and, with one exception, has no college lacrosse experience. A quick look across the trailer at the men's lacrosse offices doesn't conjure many positive thoughts either. The men's program won its second game this past weekend, but it took until its second season to get it. Even at the mention of this troublesome fact, Ulehla refuses to waiver from her optimism. "(The men's lacrosse coach- es) took the club team over, and I'm starting this program from scratch," she says. "That was something I discussed with Dave Brandon in my interview. The importance of me being able to bring in freshmen that I recruit- ed, they have my mentality, they know what they are coming into, what the goals are. They are all on the same page, as opposed to tak- ing over a club team, which is a totally different mentality." "We want to use (the first year) describes. It's clear that she can't It's clear that she relishes the as a foundation going into our sec- wait to finally coach lacrosse again opportunity to build a program nd year, and then in that second and see her new recruits in the after watching someone else do year, we want to really elevate," flesh. it for three-years: Using the word Ulehla said. "When we get to But between now and then, she "daunting" to describe her job where we have the depth gnd the still has another couple months illicits an immediate shake of the experience we need, I want to play in the trailer. She has more plans head and a wry smile. a very high-tempo game. I want to make and more workout pro- "It's exciting," she said. "I to be able to play a high-pressure grams to design. At least, she has would not have taken the job if it defense. The midfield transition embraced her surroundings. was daunting, that's for sure." is quick, always looking to create "They make us very comfort- Michigan will be joining the man-up and fast-break situations." able in here," she said. "They give six-team American Lacrosse Con- She hopes to contend for a us everything we need to be suc, ference, a league with four top-20 national championship- by her cessful." teams, three of which rank in the third year. By then, she will have Outside, the wind blows bitter top six nationally. Still, Ulehla pre- had two recruiting classes and and cold. But inside, for now, it's dicts an above-.500 record for her enough seasoned players to play warm and calm. Maybe the trailer first season. the fast-and-furious style * she isn't so bad after all. Adroit Academics MAKE GREAT MONEY WORKING FOR AN INNOVATIVE TEST-PREP COMPANY! 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