0 32 - The Michigan Daily - Orientation Edition 2006 4 SPORTS- l SOFTBALL Lady Vols end repeat bid Is Tommy A maker D By Amber Colvin May 28,t2006 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Rebekah Milian swung. But spectators at Tyson Park never heard the sound of the ball hitting the catcher's glove - the eruption of celebration from the Tennessee dugout drowned it out. And as the Volunteers acng to each other and jumped with delight,to their right stood a group of sweaty, dirty and worn Wolverines, silently consol- ing each other with tears. Facing a 1-0 deficit, Michigan had fought through the bottom of the seventh to stay alive. With the NCAA Super Regional crown, a berth to the Women's College World Series and the Wolverines' season on the line, each batter took their turn fac- ing All-American ace Monica Abbott. The 6'3" pitcher kicked off the bottom of the seventh by striking out senior third baseman Grace Leutele. As an upset utele left the plate, junior designated player Tiffany Worthy stepped up and dinged an infield hit to short. Seniortrightfielder Stephanie Bercaw followed by drawing a walk on five pitches. A groundout for freshman shortstop Teddi Ewing and an intentional walk for senior second baseman Tiffany Haas left Milian with the bases juiced and one very large weight on her shoulders. "That's what you live for" Abbott said of the two-out, bases loaded, bottom-seventh situation. And just like that, the Goliath in the circle ended -diichigan's hopes to return to the WCWS and to repeat as national champs. The 13th-ranked Wolverines entered the best-of-three series with No.5 Tennessee expecting a battle. And with three games in blistering heat, that's what they got. "When you have Michigan and Tennessee playing in a best- of-three series,that might as well be a championship series right there," senior catcher Becky Marx said. "It's two World Series- caliber teams that are going at it in the Super Regionals. This wjole weekend had championship quality all over it." Tennessee drew first blood on Saturday with a 5-3 victory. Home runs from Worthy and sophomore first baseman Saman- tha Findlay couldn't compete with the offensive prowess of the speedy Volunteers. But after almost 24 hours to simmer, the Michigan bats exploded in the first inning of game two. Haas set the tone first by slamming a perfectly placed single deep into rightfield. Home run leader Marx then brought in the first two scores of the game with a blast over the leftfield fence, her 13th this sea- son. When Findlay followed with a single, Abbott was replaced after just 1/3 of an inning. "We saw early in the game that Monica wasn't going to have her stuff that moment," Tennessee coach Ralph Weekly said. "So we elected to rest her and go with (Megan) Rhodes, know- ing we'd have Monica if there were another game." As Abbott sat in the dugout with a cold towel over her head, the Wolverines kept firing - including another Worthy home run - for an eventual 5-1 victory to force a decisive game three. The winner-take-all game brought out the inevitable All- American pitchers' duel the crowd had been waiting to see all weekend: Abbott versus Michigan ace Jennie Ritter. As spectators fanned themselves under the blistering Ten- nessee sun, Ritter and the well-rested Abbott fanned batters to keep the score locked at zero for five innings. The Volunteers finally broke through in the top of the sixth with the only run of the game coming off a bloop single from Tennessee rightfielder Katherine Card. "It's a tough game to lose because both teams played like champions today" Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. Out of the hundreds of pitches Ritter threw over the week- end, she managed 22 total strikeouts. "By the sixth inning when I was passing Ritter coming off the mound, she was gasping for air" Weekly said. "But that kid's got more heart than anyone I've ever seen." Said Ritter: "My focus in the postseason is just what- ever it takes. If it takes a thousand pitches, I'll throw a thousand pitches." The senior hurler ends her career with a slew of records,mak- ing her one of the most decorated pitchers in Michigan softball history. Also graduating are Haas, Marx, Bercaw and Leutele. When asked about the five departing seniors, the typically stoic Hutchins had tears in her eyes. "They won my heart," Hutchins said. "They won a national championship. I'll always be their coach." reauly mte ust a few weeks ago, Seton Hall J fired coach Louis Orr, who replaced Tommy Amaker when he left for Michigan. In the five years since Amaker changed schools, the two coaches produced very similar records. Orr: 80-69. Amaker: 86-71. But another statistic reveals a clear - and important - contrast. Amaker has yet to take Michigan to an4 NCAA Tournament, even though he just saw his first recruiting class graduate. Orr's teams have danced two of the past three years. JAC It's nice to know that HERM a 9,700 student, private Catholic university in New Ott T Jersey expects more out of its basketball program than a 39,000 student public school like Michigan. But let's just say you, like Bill Martin, can look past Amaker's poor coaching (see theIndiana game), poor teaching (see Courtney Sims) and poor recruiting (see the past two years). You'll be left with the one thing Amaker (purportedly) does well: presenting a clean face for the program. But is Amaker really the patron saint of basketball people typically make him out to be? Take a look atrAmaker's team - or as I like to call it, PT. Amaker's circus - before a game. You might notice a number of different things, including, but not limited to: ; His players wearing differently styled warm-ups. " Some of the most disorganized lay-up lines around. " Brent Petway, who will be a cap- tain next year, stretching apart from the rest of the team. These things may not seem impor- tant. But when you think of the troubles Amaker-coached teams have had down the stretch (of a game, of a season, etc.), it makes sense to believe that a little extra discipline could go a long way. I definitely can't imagine something like this happen- ing on Bobby Knight's watch. Let's move to the big things, starting with academics. Whereas Orr took a proactive approach - he once suspended a player seven games for academic reasons - Amaker has played the waiting game. Petway missed the first half of the season after being ruled academically ineligible. Amaker needs to make sure things like this don't happen. Look at the NIT Championship game in Madison Square Garden. The Wol- verines embarrassed themselves at least twice. On national TV, no less. Amaker raved like a lunatic after a goaltending no- call. Petway committed ashard intentional foul, one that many coaches would have justified asa reason to bench the junior for the rest the game. Amaker, however, sat Petway for just a few minutes. Go back to last year. As my fellow rtgrw guy' columnist Megan Kolodgy pointed out, it was absolutely absurd that Amaker, who starred in a SAPAC ad, wavered on whether or not to suspend Daniel Horton, who had just plead guilty to a misde- meanor domestic violence charge. And this begs an even more interesting question: M BASEBALL Welcome back: Blue wins first season title since '97 Why did anyone believe Amaker was really the answer to Michigan's basketball woes in the first place? Take the case of Eddie Griffin From the start, Amaker sacrificed principle for the chance to land the top recruit in the nation. Itwas pretty apparent that K if Griffin didn't go pro right AAN after high school, he wasn't going to be spending too 1P muchtime in South Orange (the home of Seton Hall). Still, Amaker took him. Just a few weeks before graduation, RomanCatholic High School in Phila- delphia kicked Griffin out after he fought with a teammate in the cafeteria. Still, Amaker took him. Then, after a game midway through his freshman season at Seton Hall, Griffin hit teammate Ty Shine in the face, resulting in three stitches under Shine's right eye. Amaker handed down a hefty pun- ishment: A one-game suspension. Shine nearly quit. Fans complained. Columnists criticized. Griffin punches a teammate in the face, and Amaker suspends him for one-game? Doesn't exactly sound like a guy who wants to build a great face from his program. So with a clean-cut image out the win- dow, one would assume Amaker lowered his standards in return for a few wins. But, as is the trademark for anAmak- er-coached team, the Pirates' season fell apart in impressive fashion. Ranked in the top 10by every major magazine to start the season, things quick- ly went downhill. The Pirates finished a 16-14 season with a loss in the NIT. And there you have it. In the end, Seton Hall had no results, no principles and a team in shambles. What was the response? Amaker left for Michigan. Griffin left for the NBA. And Seton Hall players, alumni and fans left their nice-guy per- ceptions of Amaker behind them. "We didn't think that he'd back out on us like this;' Seton Hall's Marcus Toney- El told the Newark Star-Ledger. There's a bit of betrayal." And now, once again faced with a lack of results, Michigan's coach has resorted back to the old Amaker gambit. This time, he's ready to sign certifiable head-case Alex Legion, who also happens to be ranked as the 15th-best player in the nation. Some people, Bill Martin included, just never learn. - Herman can be reached at jaherman@umich.edu. I I I 0 H. Jose Bosch May 21, 2006 On Saturday evening, with the shad- ows slowly creeping over The Fish, Iowa's L.J. Mims hit a soft liner toward centerfield. The Michigan baseball team rushed to the edge of its dugout and seemed to tug the crowd of 1,034 fans with them, waiting in anticipation. -First, the ball fell snuggly into a mitt. Then pandemonium. Junior Eric Rose's putout to end a 4- 1 victory over Iowa in the second game of Saturday's doubleheader not only marked the end of the game, but also the beginning of a new era: one of a Big Ten champion. In only his fourth season at the helm, Michigan coach Rich Maloney led the Wolverines to their first regular-season championship since 1997. Entering the day, Michigan was a game ahead of Northwestern in the Big Ten standings and needed the Wildcats to split their doubleheader with Purdue for a chance to clinch with a sweep on Saturday. When it was announced Northwest- ern fell to the Boilermakers 3-0 in the second game of that doubleheader, the Wolverines knew it was all on them. "Coach preaches to us a lot to take care of our business and we'll determine our success,"juniorlEric Rose said."But when we heard that (Northwestern) lost and all we (needed was) just one win to at least clinch a tie, it definitely motivated us." The announcement came just before Michigan's turn to bat in the eighth inning of the first game and it put a charge into the atmosphere at the Fish. Until then, the fans had witnessed a good old-fashioned pitcher's duel. The . Wolverines' Chris Fetter and the Hawk- eyes' Jeff Maitland traded zeroes on the scoreboard for seven innings before each was pulled for a reliever in the eighth. Iowa failed to push any runs across in its half of the eighth and left the door wide open for the home team to take its first step toward conference supremacy. Rose led the inning off with a single and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt. After an intentional walk and a strikeout, Michigan pulled off a rare double steal to put runners on second and third with two outs for freshman Adam Abraham. With a full count on him, Abraham flung the bat out at a tough pitch and hit a seeing- eye liner up the middle to score Rose from the third and put the Wolverines one win away from a championship. "We knew we had at least a share (of the title) right there and it turned into a little mini celebration," senior Jeff Kun- kel said. "After the second game, every- body just went nuts (because) we had it outright. It's just a great feeling anytime your team works as hard as we did and you pull it out and win a championship. That's the ultimate goal." Michigan didn't waste any time notching a run in the second game. Sophomore Nate Recknegal knocked in Rose with one out in the first inning for a 1-0 lead Then, Iowa sealed its fate and the Wolverines' championship season in the following inning. After freshman Derek VanBuskirk hit a two-out single, Hawkeyes second base- man Travis Sweet had a chance to end the inning but bobbled an easy ground ball off the bat of senior A.J. Scheidt. This led senior Mike Schmidt to drive a three-run homerun (his 10th) into leftfield to put Michigan up 4-0. Four runs were all freshman starter Zach Putnam needed to secure the win for his teammates. 0