Monday, May 12, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thrice as nice: 'M' dominates Big Ten By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer The No. 19 Michigan baseball team clinched the Big Ten regular- season title yesterday. With four games to spare. While the Michigan players spilled out of the dugout to celebrate the 12-8 win, which completed a sweep over Minnesota and the program's third straight conference championship, Wolverine coach Rich Maloney quietly walked across the field to shake hands with leg- endary Minnesota coach and friend John Anderson. "The classy guy that he is, he con- gratulated us," Maloney said. "We respect each other far more than the baseball game itself." No trophy presentation for Malo- ney. Just a handshake. But this year's championship is a little more special than the previous two. It's the first time in the stretch Michigan (23-4 Big Ten, 38-11 over- all) clinched the title before the last weekend of the regular season. "I don't know if it has really sunk in yet because we've been planning and expecting to win all year," Pow- ers said. "But to go out every year that I've been playing and come home with three championships - it's something you don't see every- day in the Big Ten." The Wolverines have already tied the mark for most conference wins in program history and are just two wins from tyingthe Big Ten record. "We're having one of the best seasons in the history ofthe league," Maloney said. "And that's really special considering all the great coaches and players that have been in this league." The Wolverines swept the Gold- en Gophers (8-19, 18-33) without starting pitcher and designated hit- ter Zach Putnam, who is recovering from a severe case of strep throat. "Do we want Zach in the lineup? Are you kidding me? No question," Maloney said. "But the flip side of it is, the guys went to Minnesota and just took three from them. A lot of guys really stepped up" One of the players who came up big was sophomore Mike Dufek, who until Tuesday, had yet to homer as a Wolverine. This week he has blasted three over the fence, including a crucial grand slam to center field in the sixth inning of the first game of yes- terday's doubleheader. Dufek was also key in a six-run ninth, adding an RBI single that propelled Michigan to an 11-5 win. The Scottsdale, Ariz. native con- tinued his hot streak in the second game, blasting another home run and driving in two more runs. "I had an opportunity to be in there day in, day out this week," Dufek said. "Every time you see pitching on a consistent basis, you definitely start to get into a groove and see the ball better." To cap everything off, Dufek pitched two innings of relief to earn the save. Dufek fanned three batters See BASEBALL, Page 15 Sophomore Mike Dufek hit his first three career home runs this week. Blue aims beyond Big Tens MEN'S TRACK Wolverines poised to contend at Big Tens Senior second baseman Samantha Findlay's leadership and enthusiasm has the Michigan softball team ready for a run to the Women's College World Series. Michigan wins the region, they will also host the Super Regional. Thursday's loss was a matter of confidence, and the Wolverines simply couldn't find theirs. Their usually' potent offense and solid pitching failed to pull through. And in the single-elimination tourna- ment, all it took was one loss and Michigan boarded the bus looking forward. But the good news is the Wolver- ines can look ahead to double-elim- ination tournaments all the way to Oklahoma City. Michigan has yet to register back-to-back losses this season, a feat accomplished just one other time in program history - the 2005 National Championship season. "Every kid on this team is capa- ble and has all the confidence we need them to have," Hutchins said. "They need to trust it. Trust and confidence are the most important things we have going into the Tour- nament." Heading into its opening-round game against Wright State on Fri- day, Michigan has the intangibles of a top team. Turn to pitching, and the num- bers speak for themselves. The duo of freshman Jordan . Taylor (27-3) and sophomore Nikki See SOFTBALL, Page 15 By ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer Inlastyear'smen'strack and field Big Ten Championships, Michigan came in second in the 4x100-meter relay. The team of then-redshirt sophomore Shakir Edwards, then- senior Jeff Porter and then-sopho- mores . Andre M Barnes 1 See a photo and gallerywith Adam this article Har- wwwmichigandai/y.com ris fin- ished more than half a second behind Wisconsin. This year, the Wolverines could flip that result. At day two of the non-scoring Len Paddock Invitational in Ann Arbor, the Michigan coaching staff spiced things up by putting Barnes in the second leg and fifth-year senior Stann Waithe in the third. The move resulted in a first- place finish with a time that would've topped the Badgers by more than half a second at last year's Big Tens. "Obviously it appeared to make a difference, as we ran almost five- tenths of a second faster," Michi- gan associate head coach Fred LaPlante said through the Athletic Department. "I know that the guys are really excited. We have a strong team, we just weren't hitting the markswe thought we were capable of hitting, so it worked well." Michigan's time, good enough to qualify for the NCAA Regional, is the best in the conference and fifth fastest in the region. In just its second time running the relay together this season, the team fell just .28 seconds away from the school record. Redshirt sophomore Chris Bald- win took fourth place in the pole vault with a career-best 15 feet nine inches. And after winning the 400- meter hurdles last week in Colum- bus, redshirt junior Dan Harmsen ran the second-fastest time of his career (51.19 seconds) to finish sec- ond in that event. "It was a good race for Harm- sen," LaPlante said through the Athletic Department. , After he set a personal record See TRACK, Page 15 By RUTH LINCOLN On softball A first-round exit from a con- ference tournament might fluster many of the nation's top teams. But the No. 6 Michigan softball team, which lost to Michigan State 2-1 in Evanston, isn't going to let Thursday's upset get in the way of its bigger goals - like hosting its eighth-straight regional tourna- ment this weekend and reaching the Women's College World Series for the first time since 2005. "We're going to get over the loss and move forward," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "We have much more important things to do." This team has too much deter- mination to dwell on a tournament that Hutchins referred to as "the least importantwe play all year." Even without claiming the Big Ten Title, Michigan (18-3 Big Ten, 48-6 overall) secured itself an at- large bid in the 64-team NCAA Tournament. As a No. 4-seed, the Wolverines will play Wright State in the Ann Arbor region that includes Notre Dame and Kent State. If