The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, November 6, 2013 - 7A b The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, November 6, 2013 - 7A rnone, tra sl n has een pitc Throughout high school, the phone would constantly ring in, Michigan redshirt junior mid- fielder Tyler Arnone's Hicks- ville, N.Y. home. His mother, Linda Rogus, would answer, the voice on the other line asking if Tyler could come to a local try- out. Rogus would respectfully decline, like she always did, cit- ing that Tyler only played for fun. She would hang up, shaking her head. "Who was that?" Arnone would call to his mother from another room. "Your jazz band teacher," she'd yell. "He wants you to audi- tion for a spot." "Again?" Arnone would shout back, feigning disbelief. He was good at the trumpet, and he knew it. He was second chair in his school band despite never practicing. His mother would repeatedly tell him to pick up his instrument, but he was so natu- rally gifted, he rarely had to. Arnone understands music well - the nuances of it, the harmonies that sound best, the intricacies that distinguish good from great. He has an enormous appreciation for all types of music, much like his value for all aspects of soccer, from the beau- tiful, fluid buildup to the rough, choppy finishes. A team captain this season, Arnone is both the conduc- tor and soloist on the field. He holds together the team the way a melody does a song. Connect- ing passes and swinging the ball from side to side, he keeps the offense in sync. He plays with an untamed passion which reflects much of where he came from. He grew up playing street soccer where the old playground adage, "no blood, no foul," dominated games. Hicksville is a quiet blue-collar town on Long Island, the type of place where thick family ties and old-fashioned values run deep, where simplicity reigns supreme. Despite Hicksville's minute, 6.8-square-mile size, its musical contributions include guitarists Denny Dias of Steely Dan and Al Pitrelli of Megadeath and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. In the locker room two hours before a recent match, Arnone blasted his hometown's most famous native son, Billy Joel. "I love 'River of Dreams,' " Arnone says. "He talks about Hicksville alot." Arnone grew up next door to Joel and admired more than just his music. Arnone, whose father is a physical education teacher and mother a gymnas- tics coach, didn't come from for- tunate means. After his parents divorced, they worked hard to support him and his older sis- ter, and when times got tough financially, Arnone would read articles on Joel and try to com- pare his mentality to that of his music idol. "(Joel) made the best of a not- so-good area," Arnone said. "So. why couldn't I?" Arnone began playing soccer at 4 years old, and it's been an everyday thing since. He didn't score a goal during his first two years competing, but on his sixth birthday, with his team losing 5-0, Arnone finally recorded his first career tally - six of them, leading his team to a 6-5 win. "I remember it vividly," Arnone said. He pauses, laughs. "My mom has it on video." Arnone relied heavily on his mother during his early child- hood, and he considers her his greatest influence. After his par- ents split, she drove him to prac- tice, made sure he kept on the right path, picked him up when he was down and attended all his matches. Since the time Arnone first began playing, his father, while local, has seen his son compete in fewer than five games. Arnone keeps in contact with his father often, but the disappointment of not having his support on the field forced Arnone to fill that void elsewhere. "(My father) talks to me on the phone, he's always there," Arnone said. "But because my parents divorced, it's not that I sought a father figure, but (my coaches) kind of took that place for me." The Wolverines coaches this season have been using the phrase, "Entitled to nothing, grateful for everything" around their players, a motto Arnone has taken to heart. There are nights when Arnone will lie on his bed and look around his room - which is littered in Michigan apparel - in awe, and count the opportunities afforded to him. "(I wasn't) poor, but lower- middle class for sure," Arnone says. "So then to come to a place play Division I soccer." It's the end-of-the-year play- ers-and-coaches meetings in 2010, and the St. John's staff is blunt with Arnone, who had redshirted his freshman season despite being healthy and will- ing to play. Arnone - who had passed on Michigan to stay clos- er to-family - was watching his college soccer career evaporate before it ever started. Arnone decided to transfer and put Michigan on his schol- arship release papers. The Wol- verines former coaching staff, led by former coach Steve Burns, reached out to him the next day. "They said, 'We want to make this happen. How can we make this happen?' "Arnone recalled. has tallied 29 points on nine goals and 11 assists in two-plus seasons, earning 2012 first-team All-BigTenhonors alongtheway. How Arnone plays the game separates him from other good center midfielders. He's willing to do the dirty things - to track back defensively, sell out his body. on a tackle. Arnone also has atre- mendous soccer IQ, and uncanny feel for the game. His speed of thought is on par with the best at the collegiate level and he's often two steps ahead of his defenders by the time he receives the ball. That intelligence might just lead to a professional contract after graduation. This past summer, Arnone trained with Sporting Kansas City and the Philadelphia Union of Major League Soccer, spend- ing a week with both clubs. His workouts were not official trials, but he gained professional expe- rience playing alongside the likes of United States National Team members Graham Zusi and Matt Besler. "I would love to be in the MLS," Arnone said. "I'm a big family person, and I don't know if I want to go overseas and leave my family and friends." He paused, reconsiding what he's just said. "But don't get me wrong, if the opportunity pre- sented itself, I'm going." Back in the Michigan locker room, Arnone has just finished putting on his cleats. His head is bobbing to Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire." He's no longer playing music in the tangible sense, butwith the way he orchestrates the Michi- gan offense, he might as well be. He turns up the volume in his headphones, feeling the music course through him. His body is loose, light. His mind circles back to what an old coach once told him after a game, that he was only as good as the last match he's played. "You're only as good as the person you are today, too," Arnone said. "Today's a new day. Time to get better." Softball releases 2014 schedule By CLARENCE STONE For the Daily The Michigan women's softball team released its 2014 schedule Tuesday revealing a slate includ- ing three 2013 Women's College World Series teams. The Wolver- ines are coming off a strong year in 2013 that featured a Big Ten title and an appearance inthe 2013 Women's College World Series. The 2014 squad looks to be just as good, if not better, than last year's team with the return of second-team All American short- stop sophomore Sierra Romero and classmate Sierra Lawrence - both of whom played for the USA Junior National team last season. Michigan is scheduled to open its season at the USF Wilson- Demarini Tournament in Tampa, Fla. The Wolverines' first game is against Florida, another partici- pant in the 2013 WCWS, followed by another tough game against South Florida. After that, they'll go back to Lafayette, La. to play in the Ragin' Cajun Invitational. Last year, the Wolverines beat Louisiana-Lafayette twice in two highly-contested games. "You go into every season with the end in mind, and the purpose of the preseason is to prepare for a run at winning it all," said Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins. "I'm excited about it." But, the difficulty of the Wol- verines' schedule doesn't stop after the first two tournaments. On March 6, they'll play in the Judi Garman Classic, where they'll have the chance to play two other WCWS participants, Texas and Washington. The Huskies eliminated Michi- gan from the WCWS in the second round lastyear. Hutchins, though, isn't looking past game No. 1. "We focus on ourselves and we don't focus any specific oppo- nent," Hutchins said. "Our goal is to play the game, and the game doesn't know who's playing, who's ranked and who's supposed to win." When Michigan returns for its first home game at Alumni Field against Bowling Green, it will be greeted by some upgrades includ- ing a new AstroTurf field. "The biggest excitement with AstroTurf is that it may give us more practice opportunities," Hutchins said. "Being outdoors is very important, and we will get to go outside more often. We were able to get most of our games in last season with the field we had, but the conditions were some- times too wet for practices. The new turf will give us more prac- tices and I'm excited for it." The 2014 season for the Wol- verines begins Feb. 9. PAuLSHMN/aooly Arnone has 29 points on nine goals and 11 assists in two-plus seasons. like Michigan, where you have the bestofthe best, for some peo- ple it's easy to lose appreciation for it, but that quote is something I value every day. Just being here and going to school at Michigan, playing sports here, it's unbeliev- able." Coming out of high school, Arnone was on cloud nine. His high-school team had just won the state championship. His club team went to the national cham- pionship. He was a top recruit headed to St. John's in nearby Queens, N.Y. on a full scholar- ship. But all the accolades, all the promise, would be short-lived. "You're not good enough to Arnone had never needed to put the hours in to improve at the trumpet. But on the soc- cer field, there was much to be done - skills to polish, people to impress, a spot to earn. Burns and the coaching staff tran- sitioned Arnone, who was an attacking midfielder in high school, to a more defensive role, but at just 5-foot-10, 160 pounds, he was considerably undersized for his position. Getting stron- ger was his top priority to keep pace in the Big Ten and to have a legitimate presence on the pitch. He put on nearly 15 pounds of muscle last offseason and hopes to add more. Nearly three years have passed since his transfer, and Arnone Finn flies to Big Ten Championship By MAX BULTMAN Daily Sports Writer For 5,800 meters at Sunday's Big Ten cross country champion- ship, freshman Erin Finn refused to letherselfthink she could win. But with 200 meters to go, she could no longer ignore the lead she had on Michigan State's Leah O'Connor, or the fact that she was about to become Michigan's first individual women's cross country conference champion since 2006. As a team, the 14th-ranked Wolverines finished second to No. 6 Michigan State. Junior Megan Weschler and sopho- mores Shannon Osika and Taylor Manett took home second-team All-Big Ten honors. The trio fin- ished in 10th, 11th and 14th place, respectively.' While the Wolverines were unable to defend their team championship, Finn made sure there was still a trophy to bring back to Ann Arbor. "Even though we didn't win as a team, I feel like my individual (title) is really a team win," Finn said. "I could not have done it without their help." Finn said her teammates have helped her in the tough adjust- ment to college, and that few peo- ple were happier for her than the people she worked hard with all season long. Redshirt junior Tay- lor Pogue, ateam leader and key contributor, missed the champi- onship meet due to injury. "It was definitely hard men- tally and in the team results, but we knew we had to do what was best for her," Finn said. "We went in with the mentality of, 'Let's race for Taylor."' Without Pogue to bolster the Wolverines' scorecard, the Spar- tans ultimately came away victo- rious in a meet that came down to Michigan, Michigan State and No. 16 Minnesota. Before the race began, Finn had accomplished more than many runners on the starting line. She was a national record- holder in the 5,000-meter race in high school, an All-American and a member of Team USA before stepping foot on campus this summer.- With all of her pre-collegiate success, many expected Finn would challenge for an all-con- ference spot, and once the gun sounded, her killer instinct took over. "We knew she was going to run'out in the first wave of lead- ers," said Michigan coach Mike McGuire. "She made the decision to leave the chase pack and ven- ture out on the leader at the time. "(As she ran by) she literally just said to me she felt great," McGuire said. "I said, 'Just go for it, then.'" Finn then showed off another gear, as she established an eight- second lead at the three-kilome- ter point and held that margin until she finished in 20:48.3. "I was extremely excited, but mostly shocked," Finn said. Finn's win also continued Michigan's three-year run of having the conference's fastest freshman. McGuire and Finn both credit the team-first mentality of the Wolverines' program and team leadership for the recent success of Michigan's young runners. "It's a quantum leap up to this level," McGuire said. "The best resource a young (runner) will have is their teammates." Added Finn: "It's different than in high school, where I felt like a lot of my wins were real- ly individual. This one was so team-based." Still, Finn found herself alone in the final stretch of the race, far separated from her teammates and most of her competitors. At that point, she talked herself through the finish. "I just told myself 'push.'" Finn said. "Push hard, and you're going to be the Big Ten cham- pion." EVER HAD A CONCUSSION?? 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