8A - Thursday, February 13, 2014 The Michigan Daily - miohigandaily.com 8A - Thursday, February 13, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Daley locks up nation's No. 2 class Seven recruits, including No. 12 overall, join Wolverines By MINH DOAN Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach Chaka Daley has preached changing the cul- ture of his team from a good pro- gram to a Division I powerhouse. Withthe No.2 recruitingclass inthenationfor2014,determined by TopDrawerSoccer.com, that goal might become more attainable for the Michigan men's soccer team. Wednesday, the Wolverines welcomed seven freshmen - four ranked among IMG Acad- emy's Top 150 players - and one junior transfer to the program next season. The seven freshmen - for- wards Nathan Kohl and Ahin- ga Selemani, midfielders Jake Duska, Tristan Jacob and Hans Lee, defender Billy Stevens and goalkeeper Evan Lauro - hail from five different states (Michi- gan, Ohio, New York, New Jer- sey and Minnesota) and one from a different country (South Korea). Michigan also welcomes William Mellors-Blair into the PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Michigan coach Chaka Daley's second recruiting class in Ann Arbor was ranked No. 2 by TopDrawerSoccercom. program after two seasons at Georgia State. "We're going in the right direction with our culture," Daley said. "Now that our once-young tal- ent is now older, we're bringing in another group "Theyc won't to h enviroi do a better job to make sure the new guys hit the ground running on the field a little bit quicker." Originally from Nottingham, England, Mellors-Blair trained at the Manchester United Acad- emy before signing a profes- sional contract with Walsall FC. Mellors-Blair, who's already enrolled at the Univer- c i sity, was rt1La~iIIy the No. 49 be new recruit when he entered ostile Georgia State and tallied nnents."' six goals and 12 assists during his tenure. Mel- lors-Blair will be primarily used as a wing- er in the Michigan offense. "(Will) gets the benefit of being with us early and getting acclimated with the program," Daley said. "He's gotalittle bit of everything. He's got good pace, excellent quality, can score goals and can certainly set up people as well." Selemani headlines the freshman group after playing for the U.S. U-18 National Team. The No. 12 recruit Selemani recently traveled to Spain with the national team to play for the Copa Del Atlintico and competed for the United States in the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, scoring one goal. An Ann Arbor resident, Selemani ultimately decided not to venture too far from home when he made his decision. Michigan wasn't his first choice - he was an early verbal commit to play at Division I power UC Santa Barbara before changing his decision to Michigan late in the recruiting process. For a team that only scored 1.23 goals per game and lacked a pure scorer last season, Selemani will push the team's veteran forwards for playing time next season. "He's a technical, hard- working center forward who makes excellent runs," Daley said. "He's very quick and dynamic on the ball and will add some scoring punch to our offense. He's also going to stretch defenses and allow our midfielders to dictate play." Lauroisthe No. 2goalkeeperin the 2014 class tut ofthe vaunted New York Red Bulls Academy system. Lauro also competed with Selemani in the 2013 CONCACAF Championship. While Michigan has a stalwart in fifth-year senior and captain goalkeeper Adam Grinwis at the back, Lauro will battle with freshman Grant Mattia for the right to be Grinwis' backup. Kohl and Stevens round out the rest of the group ranked in IMG Academy's Top 150 players. Six of the seven recruits come from soccer academies where they played for highly competi- tive and well-coached teams that should prepare the recruits for the life and schedule of a college soccer player. Four out of the seven freshman recruits will also have time with the U.S. National team under their belt. "They've competed with the best players in the country since they were 14, 15 years old," Daley said. "They'll have experience playing against top players all around the world in all kinds of different environments. They certainly won't be new to hostile environments which will bode well for their development." Coming off of a season where the Wolverines were bounced from the first round of the Big Ten Tournament and did nof", make the NCAA Tournament, the new crop of recruits may be just what Michigan needs to come back from a lackluster season. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL 'M 'gets rematch with Nebraska By LEVFACHER rotation - juniors Hailie Sam- Daily Sports Writer ple and Emily Cady. Michigan's undersized starting lineup is When Siera Thompson ill-equipped to deal with three shoots well from 3-point range, size-advantaged forwards, the Michigan women's basket- potentially creating a mis- ball team usually wins. Unfor- match for 5-foot-11 junior for- tunately for the Wolverines, ward Nicole Elmblad. that isn't always a guarantee. Taller forwards like junior The freshman - guard went Cyesha Goree and senior Val 2-for-3 on Feb. 1 against Driscoll have struggled with Nebraska, making her the foul trouble at various points program's all-time leader for this season, which could pose single-season 3-pointers made a problem if they can't stay by a freshman. on the equrt. Their ability to The Cornhuskers, though, play physically in the paint were completely unfazed by without picking up cheap the record, draining 11 treys of fouls early on is, by and large, their own en route to an 84-51 the Wolverines' only chance victory, by far Michigan's larg- at staying competitive with a est margin of defeat this year. team that holds an advantage The Cornhuskers shot 53.3 over them in terms of size, percent from the field and athleticism and experience. managed to hold Thompson Despite the on-court dis- and junior guard Shannon advantages, Michigan finally Smith - the two leading gets to enjoy the benefit of a scorers - to 10 points each. But non-taxing travel itinerary this the difference will be where week. The Wolverines' sched- the two teams play as Michigan ule, as it has been throughout returns to Ann Arbor with the season, remains unfor- redemption on its mind. giving. The rematch with the Thursday, the Wolverines Cornhuskers is Michigan's (6-5 Big Ten, 15-9 overall) get second straight contest against another crack at Nebraska, a ranked opponent - the Wol- but returns to Crisler Center verines fell to No. 25 Purdue on haven't always been kind to Sunday, 65-56. Michigan is 1-3 Michigan this season. The against teams in the AP Top 25 Wolverines opened three Big poll this season. Ten home-and-home series "Our schedule has been with wins at Wisconsin, Ohio crazy," Barnes Arico said to State and then-No. 22 Purdue, WTKA. but only against the Badgers did This week is the first since Michigan manage to take care the beginning of the semester of business on its home floor. that the team's travel schedule "Nebraska plays exception- hasn't forced her players to ally well at home," said Michi- miss class. gan coach Kim Barnes Arico Thursday's contest is to WTKA radio on Tuesday. Michigan's third and final "They're a great team led by an weeknight home Big Ten All-American in Jordan Hoop- game this season. In contrast, er, but her supporting cast is the Wolverines have been great as well." forced on the road during Limiting Hooper, a 6-foot- the week five times, and the 2 forward, will be key to the travel hasn't always been easy. Wolverines' success this time After last week's 70-68 win around against Nebraska (7-3, at Northwestern, Michigan's '17-5). She accounted for much team plane didn't land inAnn of the 31-point margin on Feb. Arbor until after 2 a.m. 1, scoring 25 points on 9-for-13 But it will all seem worth- shooting. while if it can redeem itself for The Cornhuskers include a series of rough stretches with two other 6-footers in their an upset win on Thursday. to compliment that older group. A combination of the two groups, if they hit the ground running, should nationally acclaim some success." After seeing the success of freshman defenders Rylee Woods and-Lars Eckenrode, as well as' un'ortransfer midfielder Marcos Vigfe, Daley hopes this incomingclass will also make an impact early on. "I think Rylee and Lars grew as the season went on," Daley said. "And I think we're trying to Morgan leads rebounding effort against OSU ( in B' Th towar guard bounc Bucke fifth- Morg collec back Th the ne ffensive glass up the rest of the night ahead for Morgan and the Michigan men's oosts Michigan basketballteam. After their first win in second half of Columbus in 11 years, the Wolverines flipped the script road victory from what happened the y DANIEL FELDMAN last time the Daily Sports Writer team took cai the court. shot clock wound down After getting enoug rd zero and freshman outrebounded I Derrick Walton Jr.'s shot by nine what ced off the rim. With a against Iowa eye standing on each side, on Saturday, orga year senior forward Jordan Michigan an rose at the basket, reversed its ted the ball and flipped it at the hoop. e attempt didn't fall through t, but the sequence summed Offensive rebounds in19 minutes for Michigan fifth-yearsenior forward Jordan fortune versus No. 22 Ohio State on the boards. "I thought we came in with great commitment," said Michigan coach John Beilein, "and I don't know if we win the game, but we were going to be in it for 40 minutes no matter what the score was. "But one thing this team can do is sit and watch film and they can pick up on things." Though, statistically speaking, Michigan's leading rebounder was Walton - posting a double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds - its real leader on the glass was Morgan. Collecting eight rebounds, including six on offense, Mor- gan provided more than just his veteran savvy in the tough road battle, bouncing back from a one-rebound performance against the Hawkeyes. After sitting out almost 10 minutes in the second half, Mor- gan returned as Michigan's six- point lead shrunk to one. And just as before, with his first tip, Morgan once again found him- self under the hoop as a Walton shot came flying in. Unlike in the first half, the ball didn't hit the rim. Instead, with the shot clock down to n't say six, Morgan ab ut caught the h about airball and banged it off Jordan the backboard for the score. n did." "I can't say enough about what Jordan Morgan did on the backboards today with his offensive rebounds," Beilein said. His offensive rebounds didn't just consist of scoring attempts on a put-back or tip either. Two possessions after his initial offensive rebound, Morgan found himself again underneath the basket, though, this time with four Buckeyes alongside him in the paint. Morgan bent his hand as the ball ricocheted off the rim toward the free- throw line. As he continued to fade backward, his open palm tipped the ball to a cutting sophomore forward Glenn Robinson III who banked in the layup. Following his putback to give No. 15 Michigan (10-2 Big Ten, 18-6 overall) a late three- point . lead, Morgan found himself in the position to get the Wolverines a second chance on their next possession. 5.4 Rebounds per game for Morgan since starter Mitch McGary's back surgery. PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Fifth-year senior Jordan Morgan grabbed six offensive rebounds in19 minutes in Michigan's 70-60 win over Ohio State. This time, it came off a "We had guys in there that game." missed 3-pointer by sophomore probably shouldn't have been Morgan's last performance guard Nik Stauskas that Morgan in there, they should have in the regular season against swatted back to sophomore been back in transition, but we the Buckeyes transcended the guard Caris LeVert - who came up with some loose balls stat sheet, representative of his was credited with an offensive and really fought for a lot of tenure at Michigan. He wasn't rebound. LeVert eventually rebounds that could have went a standout on the box score, passed the ball to Walton, who either way," Morgan said. "And but a driving force on the court swished a 3-pointer. that made the difference in the nonetheless. A WILD GRIZZLY BEAR LIVES IN THE NEWSROOM. Follow us on Twitter @theblockm. Then send help. A A 4