6A - Wednesday, October 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com 0'1 6A - Wednesday, October 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 0 After hot start, reality check at Erin Hills Collegiate Michigan finishes eighth out of 14 at Wisconsin course By MICHAEL KESSLER Daily Sports Writer Two top-three finishes to start the season for the Michi- gan men's golf team was an ideal start, especially coming off a disheartening last sea- son. The talented sophomore duo of Chris O'Neill and Brett McIntosh was off to a fantastic start, leading a young Wolver- ine squad that looked poised to compete for the Big Ten cham- pionship. Those expectations haven't evaporated by any stretch, but a disappointing performance at the Erin Hills Collegiate may give those aspirations a sobering pause. The Wolver- ines fell back to reality with an eighth-place finish this week in Hartford, Wis., shooting a 29-over-par 893. Though Michigan started relatively well, shooting its best round of the tournament in the first round and finishing the day in sixth place, it slipped to eighth after a rough second round on Monday that was ham- pered by strong, gusty winds. Scores across the board spiked in the round, but despite an improved final round, the Wol- verines were unable to make up any ground and settled for eighth place in the 14-team field. "We were capable of bet- ter," said Michigan coach Chris Whitten. "The golf course was challenging and was really penalizing poor shots. This will leave a little bit of a bad taste in our mouths." The subpar performance was in part the doing of a strong field, which ino eualre highly ranked teams lik isplace finisher No.10 Stanford, runner-up No.4 UCLA and Oklahoma. Addition- ally, the recently-opened Erin Hills G serve a U.S. Op gate. TI be mor compet served igan's u "We difficul son," w course: courses Ten CI a reall that pe O'Ne er of I "T al bac led the ing a o good f finish. throug wedge contrib vidual son. The unable none o gan go 30. "I ti perfors "No on special golf. W improv * Silve hard to ines, b ,second ing Big Wiscor - whic gan's c ,olf Course, which will the Big Ten Championships. s the home for the 2017 "We want to have a very ten, was not easy to navi- strong Big Ten record, and we he course was adjusted to want to have a high seed going 'e playable for collegiate into the Big Ten Tournament ition, but it nonetheless at the end of the year," Whit- as a strong test for Mich- ten said. "So it's good to see the pcoming events. Big Ten competition early in are going to play very the year like this and see how t courses in the postsea- we stack up at this point in the Vhitten said. "I think this season." is a good preview for the Additionally, while O'Neill's s we will play in the Big scorecard may have ended up hampionships, so it was better than his performance y good experience from would indicate, fellow sopho- rspective." more Brett McIntosh flipped eill, the undisputed lead- the script. Michigan's young squad, His scoring didn't stand out, and his best round was a medi- ocre two over par, but his play on the course showed clear his will leave improvements. "I think Brett had a real- ittle bit of a ly good ball-striking week. Probably the best he has all I taste in our year, and just from a scoring perspective, I don't think the mouths." score showed as well as he played," Whitten said. "Chris and Brett have different things they need to work on, but there team once again, shoot- were lots of encouraging things ne-over-par 217 that was to see out of both of them." for a top-15 individual For a team with just one But O'Neill struggled upperclassman, inconsistency hout the event with his should not come as a surprise, and short games, which and that inexperience finally uted to his worst indi- reared its head at the Erin Hills performance of the sea- Collegiate. ' But for O'Neill and the rest rest of the team was of the team, one mediocre event to pick up the slack, as doesn't change expectations f the other four Michi- going forward. lfers finished in the top "As a team goal, we said that we wanted to try and finish in hink we turned in a 'B' the top three of every event, mance," O'Neill said. and this week that wasn't e really played anything accomplished," O'Neill said. , just kind of average "Individually, I feel like this Ve have a lot of room to year I have a shot to win every 'e after this week." time I tee it up. If I play my best rr linings may have been golf, I think I'll be right there in come by for the Wolver- contention." ut the team still finished The Wolverines won't have out of the four compet- much time to dwell on their Ten teams - ahead of performance, as they will be nsin and Michigan State back in action over fall break h bodes well for Michi- Monday in the AutoTrader.com hances as it hones in on Collegiate Classic. " PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Junior forward Alex Guptill is serving a team-sanctioned suspension, his second such suspension in as many years. Without Guptill, 'M' adjusts for BC Call: #734-418-4115 Email:dailydisplay@gmail.com ord Puzzle ewis AFen O iio eii iii n By ERIN LENNON Daily Sports Writer For the No. 10 Michigan hock- ey team, Thursday night's home opener against No. 4 Boston Col- lege just got even more daunting. Coming off a losing season in which the Wolverines missed the NCAA tournament for the first time in 23 years, the pressure will no doubt be on in Yost Ice Arena for Michigan's first regular-sea- son matchup. To make mat- NOTEBOOK ters worse, this young team will skate without junior forward Alex Guptill, who will serve a team-sanctioned sus- pension, on Thursday before he returns to the lineup Saturday against Rochester Institute of Technology. Last season, Guptill led the Wolverines in nearly every offen- sive category with 36 points, 16 goals, 144 shots and three game- wining goals. A third-round draft pick by the Dallas Stars in 2010, Guptill also finished second behind then- freshman forward Boo Nieves in assists and power-play goals. After Guptill sat out the exhibi- tion game Sunday, Michigan coach Red Berenson announced Tues- day that he would miss the home opener as a result of an undis- closed incident that occurred over the summer. "It just happened to be a big game," Berenson said. "This isn't something I like, but it's the right thing to do. It's not something he likes either. It's a big game, it's a home game and it's a tough game to win." Guptill stayed in Ann Arbor for an away series in December against Ferris State lastseason due to a similar incident. But for the time being, Berenson isn't worried about a pattern of behavior. "I'm seeing more (maturity) now," Berenson said. "That'sgood. So we're making headway." Without Guptill on Sunday, Michigan managed 35 shots against 22 for Waterloo - a sign the offense is as strong as prom- ised. But the Wolverines went 0-for-5 on power plays - one of Guptill's specialties. The offense will have to convert on extra-man opportunities against the mighty Boston College defense to prevent playingfrombehind. SWITCHING IT UP: Nine of Michigan's 10 freshmen saw time on the ice in Sunday's exhibition. Despite a strong showing both offensively and defensively, Berenson favors familiar pairs on offense heading into the regular season. He expects to put Nieves back with junior Phil Di Guiseppe and partner freshmen JT Com- pher and Tyler Motte in an effort to increase power-play conver- sions. "I just didn't see enough of the lines that I think we can do bet- ter with so we just made.a couple of changes," Berenson said. "I'm interested to see how three of our lines jell. We have a lot of young players, and you're looking for that young player to do what you need." On defense, Michigan's pen- alty kill, which featured three freshmen, was near perfect against Waterloo. While fresh- men Michael Downing and Kevin Lohan looked particularly strong, Berenson is uncertain as to which to lineswill appear infrontofBos- ton College's trio of top scorers. Berenson plans to keep the three freshmen defensemen on their respective lines Thursday. AN EYE ON TROUBA: For- mer Michigan defenseman Jacob Trouba seems to have settled in nicely into his new home in Win- nipeg, Man. Troubamadehis NHL debut for the Jets last Tuesday, contributing one goal and one assist. In a single year at Michigan, Trouba netted 12 goals and 17 assists en route to a first team All-American selection. As a freshman, Trouba led all fresh- men defensemen nationally, con- tributing six power play goals. The Rochester, Mich., native was named Michigan's Hal Downs Most Valuable Player and first- team all-CCHA, while winning a gold medal with the U.S. National Junior Team at the 2013 IIHF World Junior Championship in Russia. As former teammates, senior captain defenseman Mac Bennett and junior alternate captain for- ward Andrew Copp were watch- ing on Tuesday. "I played with him last year," Bennett said. "He's a very special player. You could seethat last year. Obviously he's ready for the next level, and he played like nothing's changed." Added Copp: "Topping Mac, I played with Trouba for nine years. He's a confident kid, and those sit uations don't bug him at all" RELEASE DATE-Wednesday, October 9, 2013 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossw Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols L ACROSS I10% donation 6"12Angry Men' actor 10 redittcard bill 14 Lucy's landlady 15 _ code 16 Sodium hydroxide, ona chemtest 171949 Olivia de Havilland film 19 Kahy of HBO's "Oz" 20 Dermatologist's concerns 21 Rowboat propeller 23"Where _ sign?" 24 Cold drink brand 25 Home oflthe Clinton Presidential Library 29 White House tween 31 Delightfultime 32 inger Shore 33 Pope of 901 35 Van Clef &. 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ANNOUNCEMENT CANNABIS UNIVERSITYTM & Cannabis Engineers Grand Opening= Cookout Oct 12, Gallup Park, Ann Arbor Call 734-355-3178 By LEV FACHER injury was initially thought to be Daily Sports Writer less severe, but surgery became necessary once she re-injured the After tearing her ACL prior to foot while running. the Michigan women's basketball "You feel for her because she team's 2012-13 season, sophomore worked so hard to get healthy forward Kelsey Mitchell didn't after tearing her ACL last year," see game action during her fresh- said Michigan coach Kim Barnes man year. Arico to MGoBlue.com. "She She's now injeopardy of suffer- was going to really help us on ing the same fate this year, after the rebounding end this season. injuring her foot while running I know that she will work just as laps during a preseason workout. hard this time around to get back She underwent surgery to repair on the court. the injury on Oct. 7 after an x-ray "She's a local kid, she's a great revealed a fracture. kid," Barnes Arico said. "That's Mitchell hasn't seen action in pretty tough." NCAA competition, but she aver- Losing players to injury is aged 9.3 points and 10 rebounds hardly an unfamiliar experience in three games during Michigan's for Barnes Arico, who saw five summer tour of Europe., players, including Mitchell,,fall Mitchell first injured her foot victim to torn ACLs last season. on that European trip, but the Mitchell's injury leaves the Wolverines with one less option at an already-depleted forward position. There are four other forwards on the roster, but only junior Cyesha Goree saw game action last year. Goree's participa- tion was extremely limited, too. She appeared in nine games, aver- aging 1.1 points and 2.7 minutes. The other three forwards - redshirt senior Kendra Soto, senior Val Driscoll and sopho- more Rebecca Lyttle - missed all of the 2012-13 season due to injuries. "That took a toll on us," Barnes Arico said, who cited inexperi- ence as a concern leading into her second season as Michigan's head coach. "We thought we were going to have everybody coming back into this season. We went to Europe with everyone healthy." Mitchell out with broken foot By GerryW ienberg (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 10109/13 i I