-SPORT Q The Michigan Daily - Monday, May 22, 2006 -15 A Rosey finish, 'M'-Nine wins title 1 By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Editor On Saturday evening, with the shadows 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 stand- ings and needed the Wildcats to split their doubleheader with Purdue for a chance to clinch with a sweep on Saturday. When it was announced Northwestern fell to the Boilermakers 3-0 in the second game of that doubleheader, the Wolver- ines knew it was all on them. "Coach preaches to us a lot to take care of our business and we'll determine our success," junior Eric Rose said. "But when P 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 Hawkeyes' 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 sin- gle and moved to second on a sacrifice hunt. 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 Kunkel said. "After the second game, everybody just went nuts (because) we had it outright. It's just a great feeling J Blue now in a league of its own -0 . There is no crying in base- hall. This game is about toughness. Mental toughness,physi- cal toughness and if you've ever tried to chew the old gum they used to put into baseball-card packs, even dental toughness. So it's only natural to believe there is no cry- ing allowed. Baseball is domi- nated by legends such as Ruth, Cobb, Gibson and Koufax. Think they ever H. J cried? No way. BOS But looking into The B Michigan coach Rich Wat Maloney's eyes follow- ing Saturday's doubleheader, there was something in there besides the intensity that has helped raise this program from the dead: tears. And never was that more appar- ent than when Maloney emerged from the celebration to find his wife along the third-base line to give her a hug and a kiss. She had tears in her eyes, too. "It's so hard to put into words," Maloney said of winning his first Big Ten championship. "Four years ago I had an opportunity to realize a dream. To be able to come back home and coach at Michigan, which is an honor, and to cast a vision for the program on what we wanted to accomplish." In just one year, he took ateam that had a 20-32 record the year before to finish third in the Big Ten. In three years he won 40-plus games and went to Michigan's first NCAA Regional since 1999. And this season he's won a Big Ten regular season championship. The remarkable turnaround for the Michigan baseball program can be attributed to Maloney's tireless efforts to make this program one of the most respectable in the nation. When he had no chance to com- pete with Southern schools for the most prized recruits in the nation, he looked inward and recruited locally. Maloney has been able to recruit suc- cessfully top talent from the state of Michigan and other states in the Great Lakes region to help build his empire. If you want proof OSE just how good players :CH from the state of Mich- osch igan can be, take a ch look at the Wolverines' starting lineup for their championship-clinching game. Seven of the nine starters were from the state of Michigan. Right before the game-winning hit in Saturday's first game, the batter and both runners on base were from Michigan. And in senior Mike Schmidt's three-run homerun to seal the deal in game two, all three runs were scored by Michiganders. Maloney has proven that you don't need a multitude of players from below the Mason-Dixon Line to suc- ceed at the Division I level. And even those not from Michigan are from nearby. Senior Jeff Kunkel and junior Leif Mahler are fromlIllinois and Ohiorespectively, and sophomore Chris Fetter - the team's leader in ERA - is from Indiana. But recruiting isn't the only thing that Maloney has succeeded in. Over four years, he has been able to raise $8.5 million to build a new stadium. That's right, The Fish is getting a face lift. And the new stadium will go great with the lights that were See BOSCH, Page 16 Eric Rose scores the winning run in the first game of Saturday's doubleheader. anytime your team works as hard as we did and you pull it out and win a champi- onship. That's the ultimate goal." Michigan didn't waste any time notch- ing 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 Wol- verines' championship season in the fol- lowing 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 left- field to put Michigan up 4-0. Four runs were all freshman starter Zach Putnam needed to secure the win for his team- mates - he allowed just one run in six innings pitched. The Wolverines will now turn their attention toward the Big Ten conference tournament, which will be hosted in Ann Arbor from May 24-27. Even though an at-large bid for the NCAA tournament looks very possible, Michigan wants the guaranteed spot reserved for the tournament champion. "If we win the (conference) tourna- ment, we're a lock for sure," Rose said. 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