Sport is The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 24, 2013- 7 Wolverines forced to earn the right to play WOMEN S CROSS COUNTRY For Finn, it's always been 'M' By DAVID GRANADIER For the Daily It's easy to spot Michigan ath- letes around campus: uniforms, jackets and the gear they wear. But the 148th Michigan baseball teamhas chosentotake a different approach. Michigan coach Erik Bakich wants his team to earn every- thing it is given, so he gave each of his players one $2 white, cotton T-shirt and one pair of the worst blue mesh shorts he could find to work out in. It was their uni- form until the coaches felt they deserved everything the school has to give. They couldn't even go into the locker room until Bakich felt the team had earned that right. "These first couple weeks of school, part of our training is instilling the culture we want, a championship mindset, by reinforcing how privileged and fortunate we are to be a part of Michigan and Michigan athlet- ics," Bakich said. For the Wolverines, everybody is equal. Whatever they earn, they earn it as a team and not as indi- viduals. When Bakich feels that the team as a whole has performed well in workouts and practices over time, they are granted these privileges. "It's much bigger than an indi- vidual player earning a maize T-shirt," Bakich said. "The team will all get the gear, the team will all move into the locker room together." Even the coaches, trainers and faculty take part. "It's big, too, that all the coach- es and all the sports staff who are part of the team wear the exact same stuff that we do every day," said senior catcher Cole Martin. PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Michigan coach Eric Bakich is entering his second season running the show. "So they're in their same white T, same blue shorts, and they're right there with us in the trenches." After the first couple weeks, the team was allowed to use the locker room but is still earning the privilege to staythere full time. As of now, it's only a place to change, like avisitor's locker room. This is Bakich's second year at the helm of the team, so this is the second year the team has adopted the policy. Many of the players see the unique tradition as symbolic of a new era of Michigan baseball and have gained a new perspective because of it. "It definitely helps you appre- ciate everything because my first two years here, we kind of got everything, no questions asked and last year was the first year earning the locker room and earn- ing workout clothes," Martin said. "It makes you appreciate what you're getting - not everyone gets what we have - and it also makes you gain a respect for (Bakich) and a respect for your teammates because they're earning it with you." For Michigan, building a pro- gram goes far beyond the funda- mentals. The athletes participate in leadership training twice a week and "mental toughness training" once a week. It's all part of Bakich's plan to create a team that's strong on and off the dia- mond. "It's so much more than hitting, catching, bunting and fielding," Bakich said. "It's all about the team and instillingcore values." Even though the purpose of the identical shirts and shorts is to make everyone equal, the team is still finding ways to put its own personal touch into the routine. "As we move forward with the white T-shirts, we're actually beginning to write on them," Cole said. "Writing what we believe in, whether it be 'God, family, baseball' or 'Team 148,' that gets us pumped up or our teammates pumped up. I think that's actually a really cool thing." By REBECCA DZOMBAK. For theDaily When she was in high school, Erin Finn looked up to current Michigan cross country run- ners Brook Handler and Shan- non Osika. Now, after setting a national indoor 5,000-meter record in 2012 and almost repeating the feat in 2013, she is their teammate - and she's off to a blazingstart as a Wolverine. Finn, who placed fourth in her collegiate debut at the Purdue Invitational on Sept. 13, arrived at Michigan with a phenomenal cross coun- try background. As a junior at West Bloomfield (Mich.) High School, she took the 2012 national indoor 5,000-meter title with a time of 16:19.69 after having kicked the race off with a blistering 5:07 first mile that was described as "reckless" by the runner-up. Then, in her senior year, she crossed the same finish line in 16:18.02 in a head-to-head finish and was announced the win- ner with a new national record. But a few minutes later, a voice boomed over the public-address system to say that the runner-up had in fact won by .01 seconds. "That was very tough to take," Finn said. "But it just motivated me to keep working, and it's still motivating me now." That motivation has proved useful. Before the Wolverines' preseason camp at the end of August, Finn developed plantar fasciitis in one of her heels. She But as her experience at camp arrived at camp disappointed had shown her, working with and upset but said that because such a strong, cohesive team of the immense support and had its benefits. Finn stuck camaraderie of her new team- right with Pogue, Handler and mates, camp was one of the Weschler for the duration of the greatest experiences of her life. race to form the front pack. Duringhigh school, she'd sim- "Finishing in the pack gave ply been too fast for the other me so much confidence," Finn women on her team, so she ran said. "I know I have a lot of with the men instead. Michi- work to put in, butI know I have gan's camp was the first timeye. a really decent starting point and that I'll just keep forging ahead." Finn's usual racing strategy is "It's W yal ays to start off strong and fast to set a demanding pace, but she rec- been 'Go Blue. ognizes that making the transi- tion from 5,000 meters to 6,000 meters will require some adjust- ments. When she hit the 5,000- had the opportunity to run with meter mark at Purdue - her first women at her pace. 6,000-meter race ever - her "Shannon Osika was one of the body "froze," she said, unused only girls I was ever able to run to having to run an additional with," Finnsaid. "Shelived pretty 1,000 meters. close to me in high school, so we'd She acknowledged that her do off-season training together. fast first-mile strategy is a Brook (Handler), too. I always strength only as long as she's looked up to them, and now Im smart and tactical about using on the same team as them. It's it, especially while she's making definitely an honor. ... I've always the distance switch. been a Wolverine at heart. It's "I know I'll learn a lot about always been 'Go Blue.'" running tactically from coach Camp provided her with Mike (McGuire), and I think the support she needed to get that as a distance runner, I'll through her injury and recover adjust to the (6,000-meter) dis- enough to race well at Purdue. tance and like it more." ' With her recent bout of plantar If her past performance is fasciitis, was she nervous? any indication of how she'll per- "Oh, definitely," she said. form this season, it seems clear "With my foot, I wasn't sure if I'd that after years of running to even be able to run, or to run fast get here, Finn will have an out- enough to be in the top seven." standing career as a Wolverine. Michigan finishes third at Invitational By MICHAEL KESSLER For the Daily Sophomore Chris O'Neill got his season off to a sizzling start at the Wolverine Invitational last week with a second-place finish. So how would he top that effort in the Michigan men's golf team's second event of the year? He topped it by not only playing injured, but also winning in domi- nating fashion as his tournament- winning eight-under-par 208 led the Wolverines to a third-place finish at the Windon Memorial in Lake Forest, Ill., on Monday. O'Neill sprained his ankle in warmups at the team hotel before a practice round, yet he showed no ill effects from the setback. Playing with a taped-up ankle, he shot under par in each of the three rounds and saved his best for last: a three-under-par, bogey- less back nine in the final round Monday that helped catapult Michigan into the top three after briefly falling into eighth earlier inthe day. The third-place performance was a marked improvement over the past two years of participating in the event, in which the Wolver- ines failed to crack the top eight. "(O'Neill) is really mentally tough, and he manages the course really well," said Michigan coach Chris Whitten. "I don't think he hit it or putt(ed) it the best he's ever done, but he just knows how to manage his game, and he keeps eliminating shots that hurt his round or that stop momentum. I think he just hit the best shots when he had to this week." Michigan has been a main- stay in the 16-team event, which included perennial top 30 pro- grams like host and first-place finisher Northwestern, Kent State and Arkansas this year. O'Neill's top score continued an impressive run of individual performances at the Windon Memorial for the Wolverines recently, with a Michigan golfer now winning the Michigan coach Chris Whitten said his team is "capable of a lot better." individual title in three of the past four years. In addition to O'Neill's strong performance, fellow sophomore Brett McIntosh finished in a tie for third overall with a four- under-par 212. "The course played well for me out there," McIntosh said. "I just had to stick to my game plan, and for the most part, I did. There were a couple shots I wish I had back, but overall it was great." Though the season is still in its early stages, the sophomore duo of O'Neill and McIntosh has already established itself as both the present and future of Michi- gan men's golf. "We're both really competi- tive guys. We definitely push each other, we definitely talk about it amongst each other," McIntosh said. "It's just great that whether it's in practice or at tournaments, we're always pushing each other and the whole team as well." O'Neill and McIntosh have provided early-season fireworks for the Wolverines, but the rest of the youth-laden roster has yet to impress. None of the other three Michigan golfers at the Memo- rial finished in the top 40, and the team has just one upperclassman on the roster. But Whitten isn't worried, and he feels his team will only get better as the season goes on. "It's not concerning because I know that the other guys - including the players at home that weren't on this trip - are more than capable of contributing and playing at a really high level," Whitten said. "We just need really good competition at home to make it feel like a tournament when we're in practice, and then we'll be ready the next time out." Nonetheless, coming off a mostly disappointing season last year in which Michigan fin- ished 10th at the Big Ten Cham- pionships, the coaches are very encouragedbythe team's opening play this year. "I think it was a good start," Whitten said. "I think we can play better for sure, but I think Chris and Brett will keep getting better, and I knowthat our third through seventh players ... are capable of a lot better." 4