8 - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Michigan's Mr. Dependable: Matt Freeman How the walk-on turned captain found his role By CAROLYN KODIS Daily Sports Writer Michigan men's gymnastics coach Kurt Golder was running out of time. Just an hour before his team's flight left for the 2011 Big Ten Championship, Golder was thrown a curveball: one of his gymnasts was sick and unable to compete, leaving him short a man for the meet. He went through the entire roster before his eyes finally landed on one name, and a walk-on at that: Matt Freeman. Four years ago, asa freshman, Freeman had only competed in two meets during the regular season and his scores weren't anything special. On this weekend, though, Golder couldn't accept any non-special scores - especially in a season where Big Ten competition was at an all-time high. One slip-up could be the difference between first place and second. Golder needed someone who could deliver a strong performance. With a potential Big Ten Championship on the line, the decision was made. Freeman had an hour to pack his things. His team needed him. He was having a bizarre day. Just hours earlier, he was expecting to watch his team compete at the Big Ten Championship from his couch. Now, he was on the roster presumably as a back-up. It was on the bus ride to the meet that he learned the truth: he wasn't going as a back-up, but instead would be competing. "It got a lot scarier," Freeman said with a laugh. Freeman's entire season played out in his mind. He had only competed twice, and his most recent rings performance at Arizona State ended poorly. What was coach thinking, giving him of all people, a chance to compete at the Big Ten Championship? "It was kind of nerve- wracking," Freeman said. It wasn't just an ordinary meet. Each movement was scrutinized now more than ever. Freeman earned a 14.55 on rings, an impressive score and, at the time, a career-best for the freshman. Michigan would finish second in the meet, and Freeman would find his role. One word comes to Golder's mind when he describes the current senior co-captain Matt Freeman: dependable. "He probably has one of the higher hit-percentages of all the guys on our team," Golder said. In a sport of constant scrutiny, where one slip-up can result in a major point deduction, dependability is everything. A high hit-percentage is a sign not of consistent excellence but rather of talent. Now, Freeman regularly competes in two of the most difficult events in men's gymnastics - pommel horse and still rings - where a strong performance can result in major points. During Freeman's sophomore year, he didn't suffer a single major deduction in a pommel horse routine all season. On pommel horse, it's notuncommon for even the best to slip off the horse every once in a while. But for Freeman, it's a rarity. This season, Freeman has competed in every meet on both pommel horse and rings, consistently scoring well. He also competed on the high bar - an event he seldom competes in. In a critical situation yet again, Freeman proved dependable even in a different setting. He scored acareer-high 14.25 against Nebraska. Dependability is a key component of leadership and of being a good teammate. And Freeman isn't just reliable on the mat, but also outside of the gym. If someone needs a ride to Meijer, he'll drive them. If they need to be dropped off at the airport, he'll take them. If they need a place to stay on Thanksgiving, his house becomes theirs. "He's been = the most dependable, most giving guy," Golder said. "Everybody knows that Matt has their back." When he first joined the team, Freeman didn't know if he belonged. It's hard to stand out in an incoming class of 11 freshmen, especially when you're a walk-on. Freeman wasn't the best at any particular event, so he decided that instead of trying to stand out, he'd try to fill in and help the team wherever he could. "I decided whatever event we / Senior Matt Freeman has come along way since entering Ann Arbor and has developed into a consistent force. needed, I'd work on, and that was (pommel) horse and rings," Freeman said. He didn't make his competitive debut until the end of his freshman season against Penn State, though. He got one shot: the rings. His 13.90 score wasn't stellar, but it was a start, especially in an event that he wasn't used to. "He's extremely hard- working, if not the most hard- working person on our team," said Freeman's co-captain Syque Caesar. "He came in his freshman year a little bit out of shape and then worked his way through the entire season and didn't compete a lot, but he always kept himself ready." But nothing could've prepared him for his jump to the lineup. The story of walk-on-turned- captain is not uncommon in Michigan athletics. Remember Jordan Kovacs, a safety on the football team? In the case of the gymnastics team, both of its current captains are walk-ons. Freeman isn't like most captains, though. His lead- by-example style trumps the typical, verbal-leadership rout. Freeman's work ethic helped him earn his spot as a captain. And now Freeman expects his team to work just as hard. Together, he and C that the hard workt to earn their spots trickles down to the team. "Matt's just a no c guy," Caesar said. has to be very indep on their own, but a time, also be very others and be ther people. Matt's that k He's a very straight-up kind of guy." It's the way Freeman carries himself both in and out of the gym that reminds Golder of a standard set for Michigan's student- athletes a long time ago - a phrase echoed throughout a athletics. "He'd fit in wel Schembecherler's, ' The Team. The Tear said. It takes a lot to st a team with two It takes a lot for s deliver consistent pe that push the team a competition. And it t lead a team to a perfe But Matt Freemat aesar hope a wayt they put in as captains *** rest of the to do just that. Inhis final meetofthe regular rap kind of season, Freeman found himself "Everyone back where he started: on the endent and rings. He held a handstand, t the same swung his body downward helpful to before releasing his grip on the e for other rings and doing a flip through kind of guy. the air. He then found his feet planted on the floor. For a "He's been m'"A" Crisler Arena the most held its breath. Freeman took dependable, a mom1ent Sbefore tmost giving saluting the judges. In the background, the crowd rose to its feet. His teammates celebrated on 11 Michigan the sideline. The judge raised a small green flag, signaling that I with Bo Freeman has stuck his landing, The Team. giving him an added .20 points m,'" Golder to his routine. His score lit up on the jumbotron: 15.15, a new and out on career best and enough to win Olympians. the individual event title. omeone to Freeman's journey has been rformances similar to his rings routine. head of the There have been ups, downs and akes a lot to a couple of swings, but he always ect season. finds his feet firmly planted on n has found the floor. ALISuN FARRAND/Daily Freeman has been just as dependable on the mat as he has been off of it. No longer timid, Donnal storms into next season By NEAL ROTHSCHILD year senior Jordan Morgan and Daily SportsEditor redshirt junior Jon Horford both fouled out. Six-foot-six Of the Michigan men's sophomore Glenn Robinson III basketball team's freshmen had to play the '5' in the final last year, each saw important possessions, and yet, burning minutes and had big moments. Donnal's redshirt never crossed Two of this year's three Beilein's mind, freshmen did too. That was the last game before Except for Mark Donnal. sophomore Mitch McGary was The 6-foot-9 freshman from ruled out with his back injury, Monclova, Ohio was redshirted and so it would be just Morgan, and rode the bench as his Horford and a dash of redshirt teammates moved on the Elite sophomore Max Bielfeldt in the Eight. frontcourt the rest of the season. Even the walk-ons that Donnal said the possibility entered blowouts late in the of a redshirt was never brought game became morerecognizable up when Beilein recruited him, than Donnal, the four-star yet, it still lingered in the back recruit who flashed a dynamic of Donnal's mind. When Beilein inside-outside game in high broached it to him early this school. season, he marketed the plan The as a chance to 240-pound bulk up (he newcomer gained 10 to is reticent "He's going to 15 pounds this and soft- year), become spoken, and make a really stronger and if there were get to learn the character big difference offense. traits that It sounds would keep for this team nice enough, him from but that blooming next year. also meant into a well- spending adjusted, the season productive watching from freshman, those were a few of the bench, down on the opposite them. end from Beilein, where the "Coming in, I was a little guys who wouldn't be of service timid," Donnal said. on a given evening were placed. The lack of assertiveness and It was something Donnal never the slow learning curve were had to do. It was tough for him, enough for Michigan coach John but he knew there was nothing Beilein to tag Donnal with the to do but soak in information. "redshirt candidate" label early "Jordan, especially in the season. In a December defensively,justgoingup against victory over Stanford, fifth- him, I'mlearningfromwhathe's doing when he's playing against me," Donnal said. Donnal was on the stout team this season, and by seeing the angles and nuances Morgan and Horford played with in practice, he was able to absorb the new concepts. "He's still learning the ins and outs of the game," Morgan said. "I don't even remember what I knew in high school, but he's learning." Donnal's not sure when exactly it was, just that it came around the middle of the regular season, but he turned a corner. He'd found success against Morgan and Horford enough in practice that he knew he belonged. "I started to pick up everything, and my game started to come back to me, and I'm getting in the flow of the college game," Donnal said. If it wasn't for the redshirt, Morgan and Horford might have had to worry about their job security. "He's becoming a force," Morgan said. "He's hard to guard down there in the post, and he's definitely come a long way. "Over the past couple months, he's just become really good. Really dominates, shoots the ball well." The tentativeness that plagued Donnal through the season's first couple months seemed to disappear. "Now that I have my confidence back, I know that I can play with these guys," Donnal said. The hallmark '5' of the John Freshman center Mark Donnal has used this season to mature into a force under the hoop and beyond the arc. Beilein offense is a guy that can hang with the bestbig men under the rim, but alsotake his defender outside to shoot the 3-pointer. West Virginia sensation Kevin Pittsnogle was the paradigm for the type of player Beilein wanted at that position. But since he came to Michigan, Beilein's '5' has looked less like Pittsnogle and more like, well, Morgan. The outside shot has never been a threat from Beilein's center in his Michigan days. With Donnal, though, that might change. "He's told me that he's excited to have a big man that can shoot threes," Donnal said. In a 50-minute open practice at Lucas Oil Stadium a day before Michigan's Sweet 16 bout against Tennessee, Donnal showed fans for the first time - outside of pregame warmups - what he could do. He had the most fluid jump shot of Michigan's big men, he finished around the rim with both hands and he had perhaps the most polished post game behind Mitch McGary. Asked if he's thought about what the team might look like if Donnal was on the court late this year, Morgan sidestepped the question, but made a point with authority. "I think about next year," he said. "I think he's gonna make a really big difference for this team next year." Looking for more? For all things Michigan athletics, checkMkg sy crn I I