Sports 8A - Thursday, October 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom *I Offense finally snaps long scoring drought By MAX BULTMAN For theDaily After a 245-minute scoreless droughtthat spanned nearly three games, the Michigan men's soc- cer team finally broke through less than a minute into the second half Wednesday against Western Michigan. The last;goal scored by the Wol- verines, a golden goal five min- utes into overtime two weeks ago against West Virginia, was falling further and further from memo- ry. But Michigan redshirt junior midfielder Tyler Arnone fired a shot into the bottom left corner from just outside the 18-yard box on the right wing. The goal not only ended the drought for the team, but it also started an offen- sive explosion in the second half for the Wolverines, who piled on three goals from 21 second-half shots to beat Western Michigan, 3-1. The 21-shot eruption was a far cry from the two Michigan mus- tered in the first half, which came as a bit of a surprise coming off a very strong showing just a few days ago against No. 7 Northwest- ern. One reason for the slow start was the absence of senior mid- fielder Dylan Mencia, who missed the game with an ankle injury. "I thought Dylan was our best guy against Northwestern," said Michigan coach Chaka Daley. "We missed his presence, his competi- tiveness, his leadership. Hopefully we can nurse him back to health quickly." Replacing Mencia at midfield was senior Fabio Pereira, who dropped back from forward to fill the spot, while senior T.J. Roehn got the starting nod at forward. Junior TJ VanSlooten, Michi- gan's leading scorer this season, came off the bench and assisted the drought-breaking goal to start the second half. "We had a good combination play up the field, the ball popped out to me and I looked toward the top of the 18-yard box to Tyler and he slammed it home," VanSlooten said "I started out the season well, and then went through a bit of a slump. It felt really nice to get on the statsheet tonight." The whole team has been off the statsheetlately,so it was a wel- come change when it fired 10 of its 21 second-half shots at Western Michigan sophomore goalkeeper Chase Rau. Daley credits the second-half breakthrough to a change in men- tality. "Just to kind of focus in," he said. "Where we are in our season, we still have a ton to play for." If the Wolverines can continue to get contributions from players like Arnone, who netted his first goal of the season tonight, they may be able to put all the talk of their offensive struggles to rest. In fact, none of Michigan's goal scorers tonight had scored prior to the game. Along with Arnone, senior forward Malcolm Miller and junior midfielder Marcos Ugarte got their first tallies of the year. "We talked a lot about being relentless," Arnone said "Usu- ally it's a lot about tactics, but today it wasn't about tactics, it was about work ethic and having pride. Today, he kind of fired us up instead of going over tactics." Daley, though, said that he gave his team "just a few words" between halves. Whatever he said, it worked, as the Wolverines looked like a dif- ferent team afterthe break. "I don't know if we were partic- ularly flat, but we weren't as good as we were in the second half," Daley said. "I think in the second half we demonstrated a little bit of North- western...with goals," he contin- ued, referencing the Wolverines' failure to capitalize against the Wildcats despite an impressive showing. Michigan (0-1 Big Ten, 3-3-3 overall) will look to replicate its level of play from the second half on Sunday, when it travels to Columbus to take on Ohio State in a game Daley described as "not a difficult one to get motivated for." VanSlooten certainly seems up tothe challenge. "Come Ohio State, you'd better believe we'llbe ready forthatone," he said. 0 0 VIRGINIA LOZANO/Daily Redshirt junior midfielder Tyler Arnone broke Michigan's 245-minute scoreless streak with a goal in the second half to put Michigan on the board and tie the game. A tale of two halves in win over Western Michiga By MINH DOAN For the Daily The men's soccer team took a break from its Big Ten schedule as Western Michigan WMICHIGAN 1 (3-6-0) MICHIGAN 3 traveled across the state to take on the Wolverines. But Michigan also seemed to take a break from the first half of the game. It took a lifeless first 45 minutes before the Wolverines rallied with three second-half goals en route to their 3-1 win. Any progress that the Wolver- ines made during their previous game against Northwestern on Saitrday, when they dominated possession, was stunted in the first half as Michigan was out- hustled by the Broncos. Mainly, the Wolverines lacked passion and energy ina very listless first half. Michigan seemed to not have the final pass to goal and had little offensive production because of it, exemplified by its two shots, both off target. "(The halftime talk was) about work ethic and having pride," said redshirt junior mid- fielder Tyler Arnone. "A con- versation you don't really want to have because it's expected at Michigan." Western Michigan, on the other hand, showed more life in the first half as defender Connor Furgason scored his first goal of the season to the delight of the large Western Michigan crowd on hand for the game. The ball was whipped in on a free kick by midfielder-Edu Jimenez and Furgason beat his defender and struck a vicious header that hit the bottom of the crossbar. The shot was just out of reach of red- shirt junior goalie Adam Grin- wis before crossingthe goal line. "We weren't as sharp as we in the locker room," Arnone said. "For me, I wanted to instill some positive energy." The Wolverines continued to press and rattled off three more shots in the next two minutes before the Broncos could even get down the field. . Redshirt junior midfielder' Colin McAtee received an assist in the 65th minute when he weaved his way past two Bronco defenders on the goal line before playing a low hard cross across the goal mouth. The cross was thought could redirected be," said Mich- into the back igan coach " v y e of the net by Chaka Daley. Everyones senior for- In the sec- head ward Mal- ond half, s were colm Miller, though, some- down in the his first goal thing turned of the season, on for the Wol- locker room " and the even- verines, and * tual game they came out winner. of the gate fly- After the ing. Just 23 second goal, seconds into the half, Arnone Michigan seemed to be in the collected the ball from junior clear, but Western Michigan midfielder TJ VanSlooten out- wouldn't go down without a side the 18-yard box and rifled a fight. shot into the lower left corner of The 67th minute saw action the goal. It was just out of reach for the Broncos when Jimenez of Broncos goalie Chase Rau and made a run down the right flank gave Arnone his first goal of the and crossed the ball into the season. The goal was Michigan's box. Grinwis punched out the first in 245 minutes. ball, but it was not far enough "Everyone's heads were down and Western Michigan forward Matheau Rogers got a foot on it. But the shot went wide. Just a minute later, Furgason - the Broncos' goal scorer - had a golden opportunity to tie the game when he found himself wide open on the farsd e of the goal after a cross tree again, Western Michigan was not able to put the ball on frame, and Michigan came out unscathed. The Wolverines added anoth- er goal in the 80th minute when junior midfielder Marcos Ugarte tapped in a rebound off a shot from sophomore forward James Murphy. "I thought Marcos did very well and scored a really good goal," Daley said. Overall, Michigan played a better second half and outshot the Broncos 21-5 in the frame. The hustle and energy, missing in the first half, was evident. The game served as a good reminder for the Wolverines that they have to play a complete game if they want to do well the second half of the season. How- ever, the offensive outbreak does give Michigan some confidence as it heads into its first road Big Ten matchup against Ohio State on Sunday. "We still have a ton to play for," Daley said. "We want to. be a consistently competitive team." 0 TRAcYKO/Daily Junior midfielder TJ VanSlooten collected an assist Wednesday against West- ern Michigan, and he is the team leader in goals scored, with three. MEN'S BASKETBALL Michigan adds four-star forward Kameron Chatman By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor The Michigan basketball team's run to last year's Nation- al Championship game was supposed to solidify the Wol- verines on an entrenched posi- tion amongst the elites on the national recruiting trail. But despite continually find- ing itself in serious contention for several top prospects in the 2014 recruiting class - players set to come to campus next year - Michigan repeatedly found out that like the title game, com- ing up close doesn't quite cut it. Finally, the commitment drought ended Tuesday night, when the Wolverines secured a verbal pledge from four-star 2014 MICHIGAN VERBAL COMMITS -Ricky Doyle, C 6-foot-9, 225 pounds -Kameron Chatman, SF 6-foot-7, 200 pounds -Austin Hatch, SF 6-foot-6, 210 pounds forward Kameron Chatman - their first since three weeks before appearing in Atlanta. Chatman, aversatile, 6-foot-7 wingman, is a consensus top-30 player in the nation. The Port- land, Ore. native is regarded as a tremendous rebounder for his size and position, something Michigan will certainly ben- efit from, especially if the team loses its starting wing, sopho- more forward Glenn Robinson III, to the NBA Draft following the season. Chatman joins three-star center Ricky Doyle in the Wol- verines' current haul, which hopes to capitalize on the newfound momentum. Michi- gan is looking to compliment the incoming frontcourt play- ers with a prolific shooter out of the backcourt. The team is currently in the mix for shoot- ing guards Devin Booker and James Blackmon Jr. - a former Indiana commitment that took an official visit to Ann Arbor last weekend. Booker, who many analysts believe is leaning towards attending Kentucky, is planning to make his own official visit to Michigan for this weekend's football game against Minnesota. Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ michigandaily 'A i I