Monday June-5, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com SPORTS 13 Blwo and Bar-bque ue owned by Commodores By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Editor The Michigan baseball team battled through the loss of its four top pitchers and three top hitters to go 11-7 to start the It battled through a 1-3 start in conference play to finish 23-9 and win the Big Ten regular-season title. And it battled back from a tournament-opening loss to Minnesota to win four straight and take home the Big Ten conference tourna- ment championship. s The Wolverines have battled all season long. But their final battle wasn't enough. Trailing Vanderbilt 2-0 in the bottom of the sixth inning of an elimination game in the NCAA Atlanta Regional, sopho- more Nate Recknagel pulled Michigan to within one run on a leadoff solo homerun. Then, after senior Jeff Kunkel's single, teammate Doug Pickens gave the Wolverines a 3-2 lead by smacking a two-run shot over the rightfield fence. It was the final time Michigan would hold a lead this season. The Wolverines fell to the Commodores, 5-4, in the double elimination NCAA tournament, ending their season after just three regional games for the second straight year. "We were happy we made it here, but we came here to win a regional and we didn't do that," Pickens said. "We had a suc- cessful season, but we still fell short of the final goal to win a regional, play in a super regional (and) win that super regional EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily (and) then to play in Oaha." Senior catcher Jeff Kunkel consoles teammate Paul Hammond on the mound. Sunday marked both Hammond and Kunkel's final game as Wolverines. Michigan's short-lived lead just lasted into the seventh plate to tie the game. That allowed Vanderbilt's Brain Hernandez to drive in the go- inning. "It was a little downer because they came back to tie the ahead run with a sacrifice fly. Vanderbilt's Alex Feinberg doubled the first pitch he saw game, but we definitely thought we were still in the game," The Commodores added another run in the eighth inning to and later appeared to have third base on a wild pitch. But Pickens said. go up 5-3, but the Wolverines' battling spirit refused to die. umpires ruled that Kunkel's foot had touched the top of the But shoddy pitching doomed the Wolverines. Sophomore Derek VanBuskirk scored Michigan's fourth third base dugout as he slid to retrieve the ball - turning a Following the wild pitch, Michigan gave up a double, inten- run in the bottom of the eighth when Feinburg threw the ball wild pitch into a dead ball - and awarded Feinberg home tionally walked a batter and hit another to load the bases. See VANDY, Page 14 uintet o Wolverines will be sorely missed AMBER COLVIN ON SOFTBALL Disappointment. It's a big black cloud that's been looming over Ann Arbor for a while now, especially when it comes to postseason play. And while team after team has made attempts to shoo the cloud away, there it sits, billowing and growing more daunting by the second. When the Michigan softball team made its postseason exit in the NCAA Super Regionals last weekend against Tennessee, it was only natural to feel disappointed. This was a Michigan team with promise - the defending national champs. The Wolverines were clicking at the right time, making the game look fun, never giving up and all those other sports cliches that come out around this time of year. Here was Michigan's chance for some sort of glory after a year of hanging our heads in shame. But this team didn't come through, either. As teammates lined up for hugs and tearful goodbyes following the hard-fought loss, whose heart didn't leap out to them? It had been a tough season, full of learning the price that comes with being a champion. To see the season end without at least a trip to the Women's College World Series just didn't seem right. Remember when you were a kid and something horrible would happen, causing you to cry and maybe kick and scream on the floor a little bit? Then your mom would come and try to soothe you by bringing out the positive in all of it, even though all you wanted to do was pout and revel in your sadness a little more. Well, that happens in softball, too. After the loss in Tennessee, I slowly headed down the grandstands, preparing myself for an emotional press conference. Halfway down, I ran into the mother of senior catcher Becky Marx, snapping photos of her daughter's last moments in a Michigan jersey. I stopped to talk to her and immediately was greeted with wisdom that mothers always seem to have. When I said it was too bad the season hadto end like this, Mrs. Marx just smiled and said that Becky already had everything she needed. She has Big Ten and national championship rings. She did what she came here to do. Just as so many had feared, that age-old adage really seems to be true: Mother knows best. Looking at the big picture, disappointment can't even be an issue with this team. It won a national championship last year that screamed,"look atus!" Not only did it put the Wolverines on the softball map, they yank the spotlight away from western teams like UCLA and Arizona. Before the 2005 Wolverines, a team east of the Mississippi River had never won a national championship. Now, even though Michigan is out, Big Ten regular season champion Northwestern is shaking things up at the WCWS. Though the 2006 Wolverines didn't make it to softball's version of the Big Dance,they certainly had the talent and the heart to tango with any of the teams still playing right now. Their Super Regional series battle with Tennessee could have been a national championship series. It was that intense, that high quality, that hard fought. The Volunteers may have won, but that doesn't mean Michigan didn't come to play. Case in point: pitcher Jennie Ritter. Disappoint- ment isn't even an option with this senior. The two-time All-American is the textbook definition of heart. She gives it all each pitch with determination written all over her face. After throwing hundreds of pitches against hungry Volunteer batters - some of the best in the country - she was clearly exhausted. But if someone had told her she needed to go out there and throw a hundred more for her team, she would have done it without a moment's hesitation. That's just who she is and how she plays. Looking at the record book, it's hard to explain just how much the Wolverines are going to miss Ritter next year. She's Michigan's all- time leader in strikeouts (1,205), shutouts (43), no-hitters (five), innings pitched (835), appear- ances (151) and starts (115). Aside from the num- bers, the talent and the drive, she has confidence, too. Her swagger in the circle made her the most consistent player on this team. Joining Ritter are four more standout seniors. There's second baseman Tiffany Haas, the strong leadoff hitter. Her batting was so dependable she often flew under the radar. Over at third is Grace Leutele, who probably wakes up with a smile on her face. Cheerful and agile, Leutele had a knack for turning up the heat in the postseason. Back in right- field is Stephanie Bercaw, the bottom-order batter who was always ready to surprise you by popping an amazing hit or making a huge catch. And then behind home you have Marx. Transfer- ring from Loyola her junior year, the newly crowned All-American had just two years to make her mark. See SENIORS, Page 15