12 Tuesday, May 27, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SOFTBALL From Page11 all season the next day. "When things don't go our way, I look to the coach first," Hutchins said. "I make the decisions. You make decisions, and when they work you look brilliant, and when they don't - that's the way it goes." She may have been protecting her players, but there were few Wolverines with much to celebrate Sunday. Freshman first baseman Dorian Shaw had her first hit of the week- end, a solo home run once the final game was out of reach. But that still left four Michigan starters hitless in the three-game series, including senior Samantha Findlay. Findlay hoped to help the fourth- seeded Wolverines (52-8) avoid their third straight super regional loss. But Findlay and fellow senior co-captain Alessandra Giampaolo will have to settle with just one trip to the Women's College World Series, when the then-freshman duo and Michigan won the auuaihK a iir na mpsunssspr. I Winner will receive two free burritos from Rio Wraps. Try to find the fake advertisement in this week's paper and throughout the month. If you think you've found it, e-mail your name, the page number of the ad and the ad caption to dailydisplay@gmail.com (subject: fake ad contest). One winner will be chosen at the end of each month and will be contacted by e-mail. 2005 National Championsip. "My seniors have estab- lished careers, and they were part of our greatest moment," Hutchins said. "It wasn't meant to be for them this year, He H H y H , Posiutron V Nern and they took us awful close." And the fact that Michigan tied a season-high with four errors dur- ing its 1-0 loss in game two didn't help the cause either. The Wolverines' defense was nearly flawless in Saturday's win, but the consistently crisp throws and solid catches were nowhere to be seen Sunday. Key defensive contributors like second baseman Findlay, junior shortstop Teddi Ewing and sophomore catcher Roya St. Clair stumbled. "The key to (Saturday) was play defense," Hutchins said. "Defense starts on the mound ... Our defense let us down, and it hurt us." Meanwhile, the unseeded Hokies had more to enjoy. Virginia Tech coach Scot Thomas and three of his play- ers filled the chairs behind the same table Hutchins had just occupied alone. The Hokies rejoiced and recollected how it felt for a team of walk-ons and passed-over recruits to upset Michigan. Tincher pitched all three games, allowing just two runs in 19 innings and struck out 15 in game two, the most the Wolverines have been struck out in a game in three years. "She seemed to have a dif- ferent approach for each bat-. ter," Hutchins said. "She didn't give us anything to get on. "I thought we needed to continue to get better and lay off some pitches. I didn't feel we made adjustments, and that's on us." FELDMAN From Page 11 high school freshman, splitting innings with a senior. "The senior's already had three years of experience and has already set her place," Taylor said. "It's just weird coming in and breaking into the lineup. "It always just a little awkward because you can't joke around with a senior pitcher." Taylor chose Michigan over Okla- homa and Tennessee, both of which pushed the idea of being the star. "I didn't want to do that," Taylor said. "Iwanted tobe part of the team. I didn't want to have all the pressure on just one person. It's not right." The pressure wasn't on just Nemitz or Taylor on Sunday, but the day didn't go right for them. So it comes back to that question: What went wrong in the circle? I don't think anything in particu- lar. It just wasn't their day. When Baylor bounced the Wolverines in a super regional last year, it was like a power struggle for the pitcher's cir- cle ended at the deepest point of the tournament Michigan could reach. With two talented pitchers who work well together in and out of the circle returning for two more years, having the same finish as last year isn't nearly the downer it was then. Now, every player from the 2005 title team is gone. But it shouldn't be long until the next generation makes its mark in Oklahoma City. - Dan Feldman can be reached at danfeld@umich.edu 0 4