ate , .h. ,.-. ss;. lip r 3 t { F All its ~rT' w F r. ' 6 3 't? GOPHER BROKE Michigan rebounds from Friday loss, takes two of three against Minnesota By KELLY HALL Daily Sports Writer Freshman right-hander Megan Betsa wasn't surprised to find that she was starting for the Michigan softball team in Sunday's MINNESOTA 1 rubber match MICHIGAN 0 against No. 12 Minnesota. MINNESOTA 1 Despite MICHIGAN 3 having two older pitchers MINESOTA who have experience against the Golden Gophers, Michigan coach Carol Hutchins made her decision to start the freshman Saturday night after Minnesota evened the series. Betsa's confidence was on display throughout all seven innings. She allowed just two hits - both solo homers - to lead her team to a 7-2 victory over Minnesota. Betsa got some help in the fifth when senior first baseman Caitlin Blanchard followed the intentional walk of Romero with a three-run double and Sweet hit a three-run homer. Betsa's 11 strikeouts were just as essential. "I thinktI've beencthrowingpretty well lately, and for (Hutchins) to just throw me out there gave me high confidence in myself," Betsa said. "I knew they had confidence in me, so I was kind of expecting (to start)." All year, Michigan has scored runs in bunches. The pattern held when junior catcher Lauren Sweet followed up Blanchard's hit with a three-run homer. Nine hitters came to bat in the bottom of the fifth to score six runs. The game was all butover for Minnesota(11-5 Big Ten, 33-8 overall). But Betsa didn't have thatArun support to start off the game. After two scoreless innings for both teams, sophomore shortstop Sierra Romero lined a home run to dead center field. The Wolverines (14- 1, 36-7) had a chance to boost the lead when Blanchard followed with a double over left fielder Sydney Fabian's head, but the inning abruptly ended when Fabian stole a hit from sophomore left fielder Sierra Lawrence with a diving catch. After an uneventful fourth, Betsa struck out the first two batters in the top of the fifth, but then No. 9 hitter Sam Macken surprised the Wolverines with a solo homer. The inning closed when Blanchard stretched for the throw from Romero to get the runner out at first. Michigan responded to the run with intensity. After freshman second baseman Abby Ramirez reached on a botched grounder, Doyle singled through the right See MINNESOTA, Page 2B LUNAANNA ARCHEY/Daily Top: Lyndsay Doyle threw out a runner at home plate Saturday to swing momentum in the weekend series. Bottom: Caitlin Blanchard hit a go-ahead three-run double Sunday as 'M' took control of the Big Ten. On softball: When the momentum swings unior Lauren Sweet got up Meyer started home to score center on a line. Sweet made the drew walks, Doyle drove make it a race, the Wolverines And Saturday, forced onto from her catcher's stance the go-ahead run in the fifth tag, and the series was never them both in with a two-run maintained their stronghold on its heels for the first time in as a fly ball sailed toward inning Saturday, a day after the the same. double to the gap, and Wagner the Big Ten. six weeks, Michigan needed straightaway center field. The Gophers won the series opener, Junior left-hander Haylie slammed the door with six Michigan could only prove just what Sweet gave them: runner at third was ready to run 1-0. The momentum Michigan Wagner, whose first pitch ended straight outs - giving her eight so much by pounding the first a momentum swing that home, and built during a 20-game winning with that double play, pumped outs against seven batters faced. half of their Big Ten schedule energized Alumni Field for the Sweet was streak was hanging in the her fist and shouted. The entire Michigan needed another into submission. Without a rest of the weekend. preparing balance - a second straight team rushed out of the dugout. swing Sunday in a1-1 game. decent showing against No. "We were just building up for a tag that loss would have brought the The crowd came to its feet. This time, it was senior first 12 Minnesota this weekend, all that energy," Wagner said. no one in Gophers within a game in the One day after its first test of baseman Caitlin Blanchard, a dozen beatings of weak "We were very fired up from the stadium Big Ten standings with one Big Ten play, Michigan wasn't who smacked a three-run opponents wouldn't have meant the beginning, and we were - not more to play. going anywhere. double to left-center. Again, the much of anything. waiting for something big to Michigan But Sweet stood her ground. "It felt like we won the crowd rose to its feet and gave The Gophers are the kind of happen. Once it happened, we softball JAE "Controversial or not, Sweet game," Sweet said. Even in a tie Blanchard a standing ovation team the Wolverines will see in just exploded." coach Carol LOURIM blocked the plate," Hutchins . game, even though Minnesota when she exited for a pinch- the NCAA Tournament. A one- We learned more about Hutchins, said. "We've given away the had the momentum before the runner. run pitchers' duel is the kind of Michigan this week than we did not center plate a few times, and your job double play, it still felt like the The explosion followed three game it will see. Sara Moulton, the previous five. fielder Lyndsay Doyle, not even is to not let them touch our game had been decided. batters later when Sweet hit who ranks just behind Wagner Since March, we learned the Sweet herself - thought she plate. That's your job." The rest of the game flowed a three-run homer to dead- in the Big Ten in earned-run Wolverines were capable of could make. Sweet did her job, and Doyle from there: Sweet and freshman center, and for all the effort average, is the kind of pitcher it utterly dominating any weak Minnesota runner Erica whipped the ball home from pinch-hitter Kelly Christner Minnesota used trying to will see. See ON SOFTBALL, Page 2B 11111131\.a3V 4K1 .1,11119.1 uiiVK ... .t. p... ,... ... .,... ., .. ., x - - AFTER FOUR YEARS, SAYING GOODBYE Zach Helfand and Everett Cook, former Co-Managing Sports Editors of the Daily, pen their goodbye columns, writing that they'll miss the memories they made at 420 Maynard. Both will intern at the Los Angeles Times this summer. SportsMonday Columns, Page 3B