4B - January 21, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Can't stop Coon: Freshman stays unbeaten M Nc As match Michi a roll. that th would Yet crowd Sunda Ten, 7 upend for a previo Wit standi Michi and ty champ firm g line. A score sendin ichigan upsets "Gettingthe win right off the start there was big," McFarland D. 2 Minnesota said. "It got the crowd going right away, and helped boost the confidence of some of our By ZACH SHAW other guys." Daily Sports Writer After sophomore Rossi Bruno's three-point loss to No. winners of four straight 9 David Thorn, Michigan's es, it was clear the improbable run began in earnest. gan wrestling team was on Junior Stephen Dutton, senior But few could've predicted Eric Grajales and freshman Brian ie 19th-ranked Wolverines Murphy defeated the No. 5, No. topple No. 2 Minnesota. 2 and No. 8 wrestlers in their in front of a near-sellout weight class, respectively. at Cliff Keen Arena on With each victory, the crowd y, the Wolverines (3-0 Big grew louder. When Murphy '-2 overall) did just that, scored a two-point takedown in ing four top-ten wrestlers the final seconds to seal a come- 19-14 victory over the from-behind 5-3 victory, all usly undefeated Gophers. 1,300 fans erupted and gave the h the entire crowd Wolverines a standing ovation ng and chanting, for earning a 13-3 lead and all gan freshman Adam Coon the momentum heading into the wo-time defending NCAA second half. ion Tony Nelson locked "Murphy had a great win rips with victory on the to send us into the break," after the third round, the McFarland said. "That got a lot was tied at one apiece, of energy going in the locker ig the nation's top-two room and put the momentum on our side. I think that helped our last five guys hang tough even though we had some tough opponents coming up." As the match resumed, a victory by senior Dan Yates gave Michigan a nearly insurmountable 13 point lead, but Minnesota (3-1, 7-1) still had four top-ten wrestlers left. And the Gophers had previously defeated four Big Ten teams - three in the Top 25 - by a combined score of 124-24, so winning the final four matches was well within reach. One by one, Minnesota wrestlers looked ready and able to do just that, winning three straight matches by a combined score of 41-13 and setting up the deciding heavyweight matchup between Coon and Nelson. "We needed a moment like this," McFarland said. "We keep hammering this home: If you go out and believe in yourself and compete and your effort is there every time, good things are going to happen." Hundreds travel to watch Coon By BEN FIDELMAN Daily Sports Writer Freshman Adam Coon stared at his feet as he paced the side of the gym just moments before his match Sunday afternoon. The top-two heavyweight wrestlers in the nation were about to clash, and Coon had some special fans contributing to the raucous atmosphere at Cliff Keen Arena. Scores of supporters from Coon's hometown of Fowlerville, Mich., made the 45-minute trip south on US-23 to cheer on their top-ranked hometown product. Fowlerville has a population of just under 3,000, and around 200 of them made the journey to watch their hometown hero compete on one of the biggest stages the sport has to offer. In a crowd that one would expect to comprise almost entirely maize and blue there was another color dominating the stands: purple. That's Fowlerville's school color, and there was enough of a presence in the building to add a significant hue to the near-sellout. The Fowlerville contingency contributed to a final attendance that rested at 1,354 and helped inspire what multiple Michigan officials called one of the best wrestling atmospheres in years. Michigan (3-0 Big Ten, 7-2 overall) was leading the match 16-3 heading into the 174-pound weight class, but things took a turn for the worse for the Wolverines, and they led just 16-14 heading into the final match of the evening: heavyweight. Coon and his opponent, Minnesota fifth-year senior Tony Nelson, were pacing their sidelines for minutes as the previous weight class came to a conclusion and the time finally came to decide the dual. "I was really focused, and then saw all the purple and thought. 'Wow, there's a lot of people supporting me,"' Coon said. "It threw my focus a little, which was good. I was getting a little too keyed up, so it helped me to get a little relaxed and realize that there was a bunch of hometown support here." As Coon took the mat the crowd cried "Coooon," and the match began. The match ended up being a low-scoring one, and it eventually wound up in a third overtime period tied, 2-2. By that point, the anxiety in the crowd was palpable. Coon sensed it and began to take more and more chances, eventually landing a two-point takedown to win both the match and the dual for the Wolverines. "The place erupted," said Michigan coach Joe McFarland. "I couldn't hear myself think." For the Fowlerville residents, their love for Coon runs deeper than his on-the-mat success. "He's the first high-profile wrestler to come out from Fowlerville in a while," Burma said. "It's given the area someone to stand behind and rally for. It creates a lot of talk in the restaurants and barber shops and the schools all mention when he's going to be wrestling." According to Fowlerville residents, whenever Michigan has some time off, Coon is back home working with the wrestling youth of Livingston County. "Ithascertainlyhelpedthenext generation of wrestlers, especially the middle schoolers," said trip coordinator Mindy Burma. "He's quite an idol to them. Another nice thing about Adam is that he is very intelligent, so he talks to them a lot about working hard on their academics as well." Coon is in his first year of collegiate wrestling, and is already one of the sport's biggest stars. In the post-match autograph session, Coon even had to have his own table and line, but to the visitors from Fowlerville he was just another friend. heavyweight wrestlers into overtime. In the third round of extra time, a failed attack by Nelson was countered by Coon, securing the triumph for the Wolverines and improving the freshman's collegiate record to 23-0, extending the mark for the best start in program history. "If you're a wrestling fan, you couldn't ask for a better finish," said Michigan coach Joe McFarland. "The place absolutely erupted at the end. I couldn't even hear myselfthink." The afternoon began with an early bang as Michigan freshman Conor Youtsey nearly pinned Samuel Brancale just 40 seconds in and dominated the first two rounds, Youtsey built up an 11-2 lead before late-match fatigue narrowed the margin of victory to 12-6. Despite surrendering the late takedowns, the electric crowd recognized the message: Sunday belonged to the Wolverines. The Michigan wrestling team seemed to havea stranglehold on Minnesota on Sunday, but a late Gophers comeback set up the decisive heavyweight competition. MEN'S TRACK AND FIELD Wolverines dominate in non-scoring competition n m Michigan sophomore CindyOfii took first place in the 60-meter hurdles, the 60-meter dash and the 200-meter dash. M' ominates invitational By DANNY VARGOVICK Daily Sports Writer The No. 13 Michigan women's track and field team accomplished exactly what it wanted to in its second non-scoring competition, dominating the Red Simmons Invitational, a meet named after the program's first head coach. "We wanted to get some good marks," said Michigan coach James Henry. "We wanted to get some good starts. For everybody, that was our first home meet, so we wanted to post some good marks, and I think we accomplished that." Michigan competed against Bowling Green, Concordia, Detroit Mercy, Eastern Michigan, Marygrove, Notre Dame and Siena Heights, as well as some club team members. The Wolverines, the top-ranked team in the Big Ten, had no trouble against their unranked opponents. Fifth-year senior Kiley Tobel finished first in the pole vault with a mark of 4.25 meters, breaking her previous school record of 4.22. Tobel's mark beat the second-place finish by 0.60 meters as Michigan took first, second and third in the event. Tobel was relieved to break her personal best and school record again. "Getting that mark out of the way takes a lot of the pressure off and gives me a little bit of confidence going forward," Tobel said. "I always want to set it higher and leave my mark here, so just getting that done, especially so early in the season already, makes me happy and makes me a little bit hungrier." Henry certainly couldn't be happier with the two-time captain. "If you looked for a Michi- gan Wolverine, there would be a picture of her, because she's a great kid, great individual, great student, great team per- son and great athlete, and that's what a Michigan Wolverine is," Henry said. Sophomore Cindy Ofili was the other key performer, tak- ing first place in the 60-meter hurdles, 60-meter dash and 200- meter dash. Her time of 8.27 seconds in the hurdles beat Jade Barber of Notre Dame by a mere 0.006 seconds, while her times of 7.56 in the 60 and 24.45 in the 200 won by 0.7 seconds and 0.93 seconds, respectively. Ofili's success was certainly notunprecedented. She took first place in the 60-meter hurdles and dash last week at the Grand Valley Open and found success in the preliminaries Saturday as well. Four of the eight qualifiers for the hurdles were Wolverines, and senior Erin Busbee joined Ofili as qualifiers in both the hurdles and dash. Michigan's bread and but- ter has been the mid-distance races, and it dominated the mile, taking the top four spots with the top three breaking the five- minute mark. Senior Megan Weschler finished first with a time of 4:54:50. Freshman Jaimie Phelan placed first in the 600-meter run with a time of 1:34:76, and three of her teammates finished fifth through seventh in the event. Freshman Erin Finn won the 3,000-meter run with a time of 9:15:82, with Wolverines also taking third and fourth. "We always can use youth with our veterans, so we're always excited about the young kids coming in and being able to contribute right away," Henry said. "We will need that to be in contention for Michigan State." After a dominant performance in the non-scoring portion of the schedule, the Wolverineswillget a well-deserved rest. Michigan won't return to action until Feb. 1 in its first scoring meet against Michigan State. For Claytc of th at Invita But and o maize The Claytc Michi squad progr to-last chami In for C long throw solid Lea throw redsh Riffle winni An redshi Ethan throw field it But D that a valid,' "ot we h Jerry Clayton being consistent," he said. "So to be able to come into the first cakes debut as meet and get all six throws as fair throws is something to be lichigan coach happy about." Both Riffle and Dennis take By MINH DOAN on responsibility as leaders of Daily Sports Writer the rest of the throwers, and on Saturday, the duo led by example. rmer Auburn coach Jerry "I think the best way to lead is on stood on the sidelines to lead by example," Dennis said. e Indoor Track Building "If someone sees you putting the Simmons-Harvey in the work and knows what it tional. takes to be at your level, I think instead of wearing blue that's just as effective." range, Clayton rocked a While many of the top and blue polo. Wolverine runners were not e non-scoring event was competing in the meet due to on's first meet coaching the the short gan men's track and field track, the as he looks to revitalize a long-distance am that finished second- team did Our goa t in last year's Big Ten well. It swept .b pionship. the podium estabhs a very successful meet positions in layton's Wolverines, the the mile and pattern4 distance teams and the placed first 'ing teams delivered with and third in performances. the 1000- ding the way for the meter race. 'ing team was captain and Junior long-distance runner irt junior shot putter Cody Jeff Sattler's performance stood , who won his event with a out in the mile with a time of ng throw of 17.38 meters. 4:15:62. other star performer was "Our goal was to establish irt senior weight thrower good patterns early," Sattler Dennis. His 20.32-meter said. "Being the first race of the blew away the rest of the year, we didn't want to take a n his first win of the season. step backwards." ennis seemed more pleased Former Michigan runner Jeff 11 six of his attempts were Porter, who graduated in 2007 legal throws. and participated in the 2012 ne of the biggest things Olympics, also made a return to ave been working on is the University in the 60-meter hurdles and the 60-meter dash. He participated as an unattached runner and finished with a time of 7.68 seconds in the hurdle finals, breaking the facility record. "Whenever Jeff Porter and I get a chance to race, it's always fun," said Michigan senior hurdler Herman Washington. Washington placed third in the 60-meter hurdles final and said that it was a mediocre performance by his standards. Though Michigan finished the meet with four personal bests and five wins, the first meet of any track season is usually less about wins and losses and more about the team l was to as a whole and individually. h g"First meets ,, regardless of -early program is just to give you a marker for where you're at," Clayton said. "These meets in January are for us to do a lot of evaluation of the team." While the Wolverines will continue to evaluate their performance throughout the rest of January, the coach explained that they need to continue putting in work leading up to the Big Ten championships in late February. "It's a beginning, not an end," Clayton said. "We just need to keep moving in a positive direction." IT'S GOING TO BE COLD TODAY Don't say we didn't warn you. SO STAY INSIDE AND FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @THEBLOCKM I I