Tuesday, May 4, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11l Larkin honored during Blue's series win over rival Ohio State Michigan tested by UK, wins weekend series Wolverines take two of three from Buckeyes to claim a tie for first place in the Big Ten By: CAITLIN SMITH Daily Sports Writer With two Buckeyes on base, another at-bat and only one out, junior right- hander Tyler Burgoon knew he needed to make the upcoming pitch the final one of the game. Ohio State had climbed back from a four-run deficit against the Michigan baseball team and brought the series- clinchinggame towithinone in the top of the eighth inning. Before throwing the pitch, Burgoon was focusing on one thing. "Getting the ground ball," Burgoon said. "I mean, (Ohio State Ryan Dew is) not the best runner in the world, and with our middle infield, we'll eas- ily turn a double play. We've done it all week and throughout the year and I have so much confidence that we can get that job done." And the Wolverines delivered on Burgoon's guarantee to secure a 6-5 win and claim the weekend series. Freshman shortstop Derek Den- nis gathered the ground ball, sprinted across second base and threw the ball to senior first baseman Mike Dufek for the double play. The weekend started off with a freak injury to the Buckeyes two-year ace pitcher Alex Wimmers. Wimmers is one of the best pitchers in the Big Ten this season with a 9-0 record, which included a 1.6 ERA and 78 strikeouts in 67 innings pitched. Wimmers was named an 2009 All- American and Big Ten co-Pitcher of the Year in 2009 and has continued to live up to his reputation this sea- son. But after reportedly tweaking his TOREHAN SHAtMA/Daly Former Michigan baseball player Barry Larkin had his No. 16 jersey retired this yast weekend. hamstring during a pre-game stretch, he was unable to make it to the mound this series. Although the injury gave Michigan a sigh of relief, Ohio State was still first "It's definitely disap- pointing (to lose) . when we are retiring Barry Larkin's jersey to score during Friday's contest. But the Wolverines immediately respond- ed in the bottom of the second inning. with two consecutive doubles. Dufek led the offensive effort with a double down the right baseline that brought in senior catcher Chris Berset. Then, redshirt senior right fielder Nick Urban followed suit with a double to the opposite corner that drove in two RBI. As a result of strong pitching per- formances by senior left-hander Eric Katzman, redshirt junior Matt Gerbe, and Burgoon, this three-run rally proved to be the deciding factor in the 4-1 Michigan win. The Buckeyes were unable to pro- duce at the plate, going only 1-14 with runners on base, while the Wolverines pitched a combined one run and seven- strikeout affair. But on Saturday, the bats swung the opposite way. With former shortstop See OSU, Page 12 BY: ALEX HERMANN Daily Sports Writer For the first month of conference play, the No. 2 Michigan softball team pummeled the dregs of the Big Ten. But now the Wolverines are finding themselves in some of the most competitive matchups theey have had all season, including their two-game series against Kentucky this past weekend Though Michigan's struggles in both games were different in char- acter, the solutionto those struggles remained the same - timely clutch hitting, propelling the Wolverines to a pair of wins, 5-4 on Friday and 8-4 on Saturday. In the first game, those timely plays surfaced in the bottom of the sixth inning as Michigan (40-6 overall) trailed. Sophomore outfielder Bree Evans led off, garnering Michigan's first run of the game on a disputed play at home. Evans was originally declared out, but the call was over- turned when the third baseman was called for base-path obstruc- tion. The play was officially scored as a triple with an error on the third baseman leading to the score. "I was a little hesitant to bring her to third, even though I thought she had a shot at it because you don't want to make an out at third base and ruin your inning," Michi- gan coach Carol Hutchins said. "That was big, because for her to be out on that play, that inning would not have happened." From there, momentum car- ried the team forward as part of a four-hit,'five-run inning. Senior third baseman Maggie Viefhaus reached base on a double while senior catcher Roya St. Clair nailed a home run underneath the score- board in left field. The inning was capped off by senior pitcher Nikki Nemitz's dou- ble, driving in the game's tying and winning runs Up until the sixth inning, Mich- igan hitters had been stagnant at the plate. The Wildcats had built their 4-0 lead as the Wolverines managed just one hit - also from Evans, in the second inning - and reached base on balls just twice otherwise. "I told them before the sixth inning ... it doesn't matter if they get 100 runs - we don't have any," Hutchins said. "I got on them sharply and told them they need to have better one-pitch focus. We need to make her put the ball to the plate." The momentum from Friday's game at the plate carried into the next day against the Wildcats (29- 23). Clearly, with 12 hits overall and at least one hit in every inning but the first, getting consistent pro- duction at the plate didn't plague Michigan in the second game. But making timely plays as part of an explosive sixth inning remained one constant for the Wolverines. Michigan went into the bottom of the sixth inning down 4-3, need- ing to turn some of the hitting pro- duction at the plate into runs. And on the very first pitch of the inning, Nemitz came through once again, this time with a homer rocked into the top row of the right-field bleachers. "I'm a pitcher, so when I'm bat- ting I think like a pitcher," Nemitz said. "I knew she was throwing that curve ball in on me, either the first or second pitch, soI was actu- ally sitting on it. And it was the first, so I hit the first one - I was waiting for it." Junior outfielder Marley Pow- ers came to bat immediately fol- lowing Nemitz. The Owosso native received just her third start of the year as the designated player, and in the fourth inning, Powers had a home run of her own. In the sixth, she continued to spark the offense with a double. Nemitz's abilities at the plate, along with her start at the mound, allowed Hutchins to slide Powers into the eight spot in the lineup. "That was apparently brilliant," Hutchins joked, referencing the lineup change. Though the five-hit, five-run sixth inning gave the Wolverines a comfortable lead heading into the final inning, the game was hardly a comfortable win. The series sweep against Ken- tucky represents the second series in a row where the Wolverines have played in tough games, a significant change from the whip- pings they've put on sub-par Big Ten and Mid-American Confer- ence opponents the last month of the season. "You don't ever want to get too high after a win, or too low after a loss - you don't want to be on an emotional roller coaster," Hutchins said. "Some days you have to grind and that's what we've been doing." Wolverines lose in Big Ten Tourney finale BY: MATT KRASNOFF Daily Sports Writer It's been a storybook season for the Michigan women's tennis team this year, but after going undefeated in the Big Ten in the regular season, the Wol- verines fell just a little short in the con- ference tournament. No. 4 Michigan took its 14-match winningstreakon the road to Iowa City to face off in the Big Ten Champion- ships, and after ending Northwestern's 11-year reign as conference champi- ons, the Wolverines were awarded the number one seed for the tournament. As the top seed, Michigan received a bye in the first round, where it faced Wisconsin in the quarterfinals, and walked away a 4-1 winner. On Saturday, the Wolverines found themselves facing host team, Iowa, in the semifinals. The Iowa match marked just the sec- ond time this season that Michigan lost the doubles point. And while going into singles down one point is certainly a disadvantage, the team viewed it as an opportunity to challenge themselves. "We haven't been in that position for a while," Bernstein said. "We had our backs against the wall, so it was either See BIG TENS, Page 12