The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 23, 2013 - 5A The ichgan ail - ichiandilyom WdnedayOctber23, 013- 5 Senior forward Nkem Ezurike, now the new Michigan career scoring record holder, has helped build the women's soccer program into a national contender during her four years in Ann Arbor. zurike: W t I have is greater than anythin else By JAKE LOURIM Daily Sports Writer Senior forward Nkem Ezurike sits on the-bench at the U-M Soc- cer Stadium, looking out at the field she dominates. Sunday, she became the greatest goal scorer ever to play at Michigan, in the greatest era since the 1990s, on perhaps the greatest team Michi- gan has ever had. It is dreary, quiet and empty, except for a groundskeeper on the field. The lights are off, the bleachers vacant. That will all change three nights later. It wasn't always like this, the confident dominance around the program. When Ezurike came to Ann Arbor, the rise of Michigan women's soccer was in its infan- cy. There was no stadium, no field and no bench. The uniform she wears did not exist, nor the nets she hits with every goal, nor the supporting cast alongside her. Ezurike is outside the lines of the field, so she is calm, unassum- ing and soft-spoken. When she is on the field, she is a terror, eager to beat anyone in the way of her journey. "It's really funny to me because. she's not like that at all off the field," said freshman forward Madisson Lewis. "She's such a jokester, and she's always so calm. She's a completely different per- son on and off the field." Ezurike sits here at the cross- roads of two journeys: one to become the greatest goal scorer in Michigan history, the other to take the Wolverines to the top tier of women's soccer. The first journey is over. The second? Well, that's just getting started. In 2008, Michigan coach Greg Ryan's first season, assistant coach Dean Duerst called Ryan from a college showcase tourna- ment in Canada with a message: There's a kid up here you're going to want to see. Her name was Nkept Ezurike, which is Nigerian, meaning "What I have is greater than any- thing else." She has lived up to that name. "If there's a player we need to try to get into our program as soon as we can, it would be Nkem," Duerst said. "She also was the right fit in terms of what we call a target player." In Ryan's first two years, Mich- igan survived on 1-0 wins and scoreless ties. The Wolverines won four games in his first season and six in his second, with just one in the Big Ten each season. He knew there was a ceiling for his teams as long as they kept playing like that. He needed a natural goal scorer, like he had in Abby Wambach when he coached the U.S. Women's National Team. In his first year, Ryan asked a fellow coach how many Big Ten- caliber players he had on his ros- ter. The answer was one. His goal was to rebuild the program, and he knew if he could nab Ezurike, that would be a start. The coaching staff promised Ezurike an immediate role on the team - there was no adjustment period. The journeyto the record started then. "I don't know if I ever put it in perspective of that," said senior midfielder Meghan Toohey. "But I knew she was going to be by far one of the best forwards this program's ever had. When she started scoring and scoring and thinking about the record, I knew, for sure that she was going to beat it." Ezurike is quiet about her individual impact on the team, but her teammates and coaches aren't. They know the differ- ence between Michigan with and without her. The truth is, the Wolverines go where Ezurike takes them - from nine goals in 2010 for an NCAA Tournament appearance, to 15 goals in2022 for a Sweet 16 berth, to 10 so far this year as Big Ten contenders. But Ryan knew he needed more than.a goal scorer. He need- ed a team of leaders and pure, die- hard competitors. Ezurike was that, too: when she steps inside the lines, a strange transforma- tion happens. She goes from quiet to loud, unassuming to assertive, shy to fiery. "She just becomes Nkem," Ryan said. "She becomes that other Nkem that everybody loves to see on the field." A referee ignores contact against her, and she yells across the field to him. Another player pushes her, and she gets into the player's face. She misses a shot, and she glares. Why? Because they have one thing in common: they're all in the way of Ezurike's journey. "In the previous years, all the seniors had that sense of urgency, like it was their last shot,"Ezurike said. "You definitely don't under- stand it until you're actually a senior. It's kind of like despera- tion, that urgency to do well and end on a high." Three years after she first stepped onto the field as a fresh- man, Ezurike is on her last go- round. There is no next season, no alternative to winning now. Ezurike's career has not been a smooth ride. Within every strik- er is the pressure to score goals and carry the team every game. Ezurike needs to be a contributor, and when she's not, it weighs on her. "I wouldn't say that it worried her pulling her confidence down,, but it definitely challenged her," Toohey said. "One reason Nkem is as good of a player as she is, is that she is hard on herself but doesn't put too much pressure on herself that takes away from scoring an easy goal." Ezurike said the hardest time of her career was her sophomore year, when Michigan returned the bulk of its 2010 NCAA Tour- nament team. Ezurike, of course, expected more, perhaps a further run into the tournament. Instead, the Wolverines took a step back: they finished just a shade over .500, won four Big Ten games and gave up three or more goals four times. Now, in the dark stadium, the empty field seems emptier when Ezurike thinks about those moments, the moments that test- ed Michigan's ability to rebuild. "We knew we had the poten- tial to be a really good team," Ezurike said. "Not being able to execute, that was difficult and hard to handle. We grew from it, we learned from it and then we went on to have a good season the next year." Ezurike's mother, Christie, knows her daughter. She knows how much pressure she puts on herself. "It was really tough because (Ezurike) is sometimes too hard on herself," Christie said. "When the team is not doing well, she gets really down. When that hap- pened, she was disappointed. She was a little bit hard on herself, but she bounced back." That was not Ezurike's last go- round. The next year, Ezurike missed the first four games of the season to play in the U-20 World Cup for Canada in Japan. When she returned from a 13-hourtime dif- ference to a new team and a new season, she struggled. She didn't score in the first four games - her longest drought since early in her other. sophomore season - and Michi- gan lost twice, including once in *** the last minute of regulation. Ryan said he went to lunch As with all questions about with Ezurike and talked with her herself, Ezurike is mum when to ease her frustration. He taught talking about the record. her to move onto the next chance She's scored so many times after she missed one. on this field, but she hesitates to In her fifth game, Ezurike talk about them. The other play- scored twice to lift Michigan to ers start to mill around, trickling a 3-0 win. She went onto score in into the stadium. Ezurike starts 11 of the last 15 games, including to credit them. the overtime winner in the first But the stats show Ezurike's round of the NCAA Tournament. impact: last season, the Wol- "Her freshman year was a verines won eight of 11 games in great year for her," Duerst said. which she scored and only four of "The next year was a good year. eight in which she didn't. But I think last year was kind of Sunday, Ezurike scored twice like Nkem coming out." to break the record. Ezurike claimed last week that * ** she wouldn't celebrate any differ- ently than any other goal, but it The lights are on and the was clear she knew what it meant. stands are full now at the U-M After the record-setting goal, she Soccer Stadium, a far cry from received a hug from almost every- when Ezurike sat there alone one else on the field with a joyful three days earlier. Michigan is smile. When the game ended, she playing Indiana to stay in conten- went over to the opposite side tion for .a Big Ten championship. of the field, where her mother, None of the players are math Christie, awaited after making majors, but they know this: there the trip from Nova Scotia. are 33 points possible in Big Ten Ezurike insisted last week that play, and they have already lost she wouldn't get swept up in the five of them. emotion, but she did. Ezurike knows this, too, so "I think it would mean a lot to when she misses a shot high in Nkem to achieve (the record)," the first minute, then again in the Ryan said last week. "She's such 12th minute, then wide right in a humble person that she will be the 14th and wide left in the 21st, the last to mention it. The way she she grows more and more impa- plays, she's in the limelight, but tient. that's not who Nkem is. I think it's In the second half, with the one of those things that she'll be game still scoreless, Ezurike very quietly proud of for the rest battles with an opponent in the of her life." box and gets called for a foul. The Mother and daughter met competitiveness in her simmers, again later, and Christie beamed and she yells a few words to the with pride. She knew how Much referee. went into that moment - all the But this is a different Ezurike hours of work, the frustration on than the one from three years the field, the phone calls home, ago, so Michigan is a different the talks with Ryan, every one of team. The 18-year-old Ezurike those 45 goals and even a 1,000- might have kept talking and been mile trip from Lower Sackville, given a yellow card. The young N.S. Michigan team might have fired "She's agreat daughter,"Chris- shots wide and high until the sta- tie said with a proud smile."When dium lights went off, falling to yet she comes home, you know she's another 0-0 tie. home because everything will be Instead, Ezurike says her taken care of." . words, then roams around the Every one of her 45 career final third for a few moments. goals has added something to the These moments make careers, Wolverines' program. Her 46th when players are struggling and will, too, as will her 47th. It may still find a way to help their team be her goal that clinches Michi- win. gan's first Big Ten championship She stands in one spot, catch- ever, or her goal that moves the ing her breath and checking her Wolverines along in the NCAA emotions. Then she cuts inside, Tournament. looking for a pass that can bring The numbers, at that point, are her one step closer to finishing irrelevant. Ezurike is chasinghis- one journey and continuing the tory, but not the number 44. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Transition year for Michigan By SHANNON LYNCH Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's basket- ball team performed far beyond expectations last season - it raced to the best start in program his- tory by going 15-2, tied a pro- gram record for wins with 22 and earned a spot in the NCAA Tour- nament, advancing to the second round. The Wolverines had a lot to be proud of, but even more to worry about. Michigan lost five seniors, who together accounted for 84 percent of the team's scoring. Beginning her second year as head coach, the ever-optimistic Kim Barnes Arico took to the podi- um Tuesday afternoon to address the media for the first time this season. Right away, she called this year one of transition and growth. Official practices started just 15 days ago; and with four freshmen, two transfers and only one return- ing starter, there are still a lot of unknowns about the team. The Wolverines were given a chance to play in Europe earlier this summer, which gave Barnes Arico and the coaching staff an opportunity to experiment with the lineup while also preparing the young group for the adjust- ment to college ball. "Sometimes for the freshmen, that's a big part chat's really dif- ficult for them is the speed of the game and the strength of the other players that they're going to face," Barnes Arico said. "A lot of these kids were coming off of ACL inju- ries in the last year and didn't get to play at all, so it gave them an opportunity to get back on the court before the official season started." The Wolverines will face an array of challenges over the com- ing weeks, and the coaching staff faces the task of preparing both their young players and their inex- perienced upperclassmen to face serious competition. UNTIMELY INJURIES: Sopho- more Kelsey Mitchell was a stand- out rebounder in Europe and one member of the team Arico was expecting to make an impact after missing all of last season with an anterior cruciate ligament tear. However, the forward recent- ly suffered a broken foot that required surgery and is expected to sit out three to five months. "That was obviously a horrible blow to our program when we lost her again, and I'm sure it's really devastating to Kelsey as well," Barnes Arico said. Mitchell wasn't the only Wol- verine who battled ACL issues last season - four Michigan play- ers were confined to the bench in 2012-13 with knee injuries. Senior forwards Val Driscoll and Ken- dra Seto both return to the court this year, but neither have had the chance to play for Barnes Arico in regular-season games. SIZING UP THE COMPETITION: A lack of size may be the biggest issue the team faces this season, with seven players listed at under 6-foot. But Barnes Arico has done work to combat the issue, includ- ing an atypical recruiting move to land junior forward Nicole Flyer. The story of Flyer's journey to Crisler Center is a bit unortho- dox. She's a junior walk-on, who was previously a varsity athlete at Michigan on the women's row- ing team. Barnes Arico laughed thinking back on how she sent her coaches out on campus to find a girl over 6-feet tall. "We were in a position with injuries that we needed somebody that had pretty good size, so I put my people on a mission," she said. "We did our homework on her, she came by the office, and she's been incredible." The team has also focused on channeling its other strengths to make up for the lack of height. "We really put emphasis every single day in practice on blocking out, being able to chase balls down and really doing a ton of drills to make sure that we're trying to work on that," Barnes Arico said. "Pretty much every contest we're going to be in this year, we're going to be the smaller team, so that's definitely a concern of ours."