Tuesday, May 3,2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'M' swept with back-to-back walk-off finishes By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - Some members of the Michigan baseball team col- lapsed to the infield dirt at Ohio State's Bill Davis Stadium on Satur- day. Others just put their MICHIGAN 2 hands atop OHIO STATE 7 their heads with expres- MICHIGAN 6 sions that OHIO STATE 7 seemed to indicate they had seen this MICHIGAN 3 before. OHIO STATE 4 Theyhad. In all three games of the Wol- verines' series against Ohio State (9-6 Big Ten, 19-18 overall), Michi- gan jumped out to a lead in the first inning. In all three games, the-Wol- verines let the Buckeyes get right back in it After losing Friday's opener 7-2, Michigan (6-9, 13-28) fought back after falling behind or squandering a lead in both games of Saturday's double header. They lost both con- tests - 7-6 in the first, 4-3 in the nightcap. Both in extra innings. It was dsja vu. The defeated expressions on the faces of the players and coaches said it all. It was the look of a team that had victory within its grasp twice in the double header Saturday, only to watch its archrival sprint onto the field in celebration two different times. The sweep was Ohio State's first over Michigan in 15 years. "I don'tthink many people can say that they've lost in extras on walk- off plays like that," redshirt senior Anthony Toth said. "It's just heart- breaking because there's no one that was here today that can question anybody's heart or passion." An infield single wasthe dagger in the first game Saturday. Sophomore shortstop Derek Dennis made an acrobatic diving grab on a grounder by redshirt senior third baseman Matt Streng, but he had no chance at a throw and the winning run crossed the plate. Had the hit been a foot more towards Dennis, the inningwould have ended. In the-nightcap, just a few inches decided the game. Greg Solomon smashed a double in the tenth inning, just out of the reach of sophomore center fielder Patrick Biondi. Biondi managed to knock the ball down, but was inches away from a spectacular catch. The next batter grounded to Dennis, who threw to third instead of getting the out at first. The throw was wide of junior third baseman John Lorenz, and Solomon came around for the Buckeyes' second consecutive walk-off. "I thought Derek Dennis played a marvelous shortstop," Michi- gan coach Rich Maloney said. "It's unfortunate he was playing to win, tried to make a play. My instinct, and I'm a shortstop, was the same instinct that he had." But Michigan had plenty of opportunities to win. After surren- dering a one-run lead in the eighth inning of the first game Saturday, the Wolverines capitalized on two of Ohio State's six errors and went ahead 6-3 in the ninth behind junior left fielder Coley Crank's two-run home run. They gave all three runs back the next half inning. After the deflating loss, Michigan was quiet for much of the nightcap but came back from a two-run deficit in the eighth to tie the game at three apiece. The Wolverines looked like they would do what the Buckeyes did to them earlier that day: steal one they should have lost. Michigan had all the momen- tum. Freshman right fielder Michael O'Neill made a game-saving play when he threw out redshirt Buckeye right fielder Brian DeLucia at home plate in the eighth inning. In the end, none of it was enough. "It hurts real bad if you're a Mich- igan man," Maloney said. "It hurts to lose period, and it hurts to lose three games to your rival. On top of it, los- ing the way that we lost." Freshman first baseman Josh Dezse paced the Buckeyes the whole series. His three-run home run in the first inning in Friday's 7-2 Ohio State victory was the difference in the game. Dezse went 6-for-10 on the series with six RBI, and Michigan inten- tionally walked him twice. On the mound, Dezse also struck out every batter he faced. He pitched an inning on Friday and recorded the win in one inning-of work in Sat- urday's first game. "He's killingthe ball," O'Neill said of Dezse, his high-school teammate and friend. "That's the best I've ever seen him play." Just don't expect O'Neill to take much solace in the fact that his friend is the one celebrating a series victory that could have easily gone to the Wolverines. "It's-going to be 'a long bus ride home," O'Neill said. "When you lose two games in extra innings, when you're one hit away, one play away from taking the series, and then you just got swept ... it sucks." 4 Trio of losses a harsh homecoming for three Michigan players By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - This weekend had been circled in red ink on Michi- gan's calendar for a longtime. It wasn't just a series with the capability of becoming a turning point to separate two teams tied for fourth in the congested Big Ten standings. It was Michigan and Ohio State. The rivalry. But for three Wolverines, it wasn't just about facing their bitter rivals; it was a homecoming. And given Michigan's outcome, it made the losses - two of which came in back-to-back double-header fashion in extra innings - that much harder to swallow. "It sucks, especially to those guys," freshman rightfielder Michael O'Neill said of the losses. Fifth-year senior captain and second baseman Anthony Toth - a native of suburban Cleveland - was a lifelong Buckeye fan until the Wol- verines offered him a chance to play college baseball, something Ohio State didn't offer. Sophomore shortstop Derek Den- nis was born in Ohio and grew up a Buckeye fan until moving to Michi- gan when he was seven. But neither was as excited to returnto their home state as O'Neill. O'Neill, who grew up in the shadows of the Ohio State campus, has been talking for weeks about returning home to play in front of friends, fam- ily and most notably, against his best friend: Buckeye freshman first base- man and pitcher Josh Dezse. But it was a Dezse-led Ohio State squad that got the best of the Wolverines. Dezse went 6-for-10 with six RBI, including a three-run homer over O'Neill in right field. He also closed out two games, striking out all six batters he faced. "(Dezse) had an unbelievable weekend, so props to him," O'Neill said. "He played phenomenal. That's the best I've ever seen him play." Added Michigan coach Rich Maloney: "You've got to give Josh Dezse a tremendous amount ofcred- it. If he's not the (Big Ten) Player of the Week, then I don't know who is." Though O'Neill hit just 2-for-13 on the weekend, things weren't all bad for the right fielder. His fifth-inning single in the first game of the Saturday double header evened the score at two, and he later scored the game-tying run in the eighth inning of the nightcap. Then in the bottom-half of the eighth, a two-out single into right field prompted Ohio State's manager to send home his lead-off man, Brian DeLucia, from second. But O'Neill showed off his rocket-for-an-arm, gunning down DeLucia at home for the final out of the inning. But when O'Neill reached base in the 10th inning of the same game, he was caught stealing to end the inning with junior catcher Coley Crank - the Wolverines' most pro- ductive hitter - left standing in the batter's box without a chance to play hero. Ohio State scored the next inningto complete the sweep. Toth - playing in his last career series against the Buckeyes - made two of his team-leading nine errors on Saturday. An error in game one of the double header led to an unearned run by Ohio State in a game it went on to win by one. Junior third base- man John Lorenz fielded a grounder and threw to second to try to get the lead runner, but Toth dropped the ball. The runner later scored, allow- ing the Buckeyes to tie the game enteringthe ninth. But no one struggled more than sophomore shortstop Derek Den- nis. Dennis was just 1-for-13 from the plate with eightstrikeouts, while leaving seven men on base. "Yeah, that was rough," Maloney said. "He did struggle." But the most notable moment from Dennis over the weekend didn't come from the plate. It came from the shortstop position, where he was otherwise spectacular. With one out and a runner on third in the bottom of the 10th inning in the series finale, Dennis fielded a routine grounder. Instead of throwing to first for the second out, he rushed his throw to try to get the lead runner out at third. The throw went astray. Moments later, the Buckeyes were celebrating on the field while a stunned Dennis was left sitting, hanging his head to avoid watching the celebrating that ensued from his error. For the three players that hail from Ohio, they couldn't leave the state any sooner. But the outcomes of three games have the ability to turn a three-hour drive into an eternity. "As much as it sucks, this is going to be a long bus ride home," O'Neill said. 4