Tuesday, May 31, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 9 Muresan, Bolender doubles pair slip in NCAAs By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer Michigan senior Denise Mure- san and freshman Brooke Bolender ended the Michigan women's tennis team's 2011 campaign the only way head coach Ronni Bernstein could ask for - together. And even in their last defeat, the disappointment couldn't erase the countless Wolverine triumphs. Playing in the NCAA Individual Championships in Palo Alto, Calif., the two remaining Michigan com- petitors were bounced from tourna- ment play in the first two rounds of singles and doubles action. Muresan's week started with a victory in the opening round of sin- gles competition, but it didn't come easily. After dropping the first set to Wake Forest's Martina Pavelec and trailing 5-4 in the second, the situa- tion seemed as bleak as the weather which caused two delays during the set due to rain. But for Muresan, the prospect of ending her season without making a statement at the tournament wasn't one she would even consider. "I went in there a little nervous, a little tight at the start of the tourna- ment," Muresan said. "In the third set, I relaxed and played well." In the decisive set, Muresan uti- lized two service breaks to advance to the next round where Chelsey Gullickson of Georgia awaited her. After grabbing an early break, Muresan then held serve in the first set to get the early advantage. But two 6-3 sets later, Gullickson was through to the round of 16 and Muresan's singles career as a Wol- verine was over. "For individuals, we wanted to go further than we did," Muresan said. "We worked really hard but it just didn't pan out that way. It was a great year regardless." But there was little time to reflect for Muresan, as she and Bolender were slated to open up their play in the doubles draw just hours later. One of the faces across the net was familiar to Muresan - Gullickson was again the opponent, this time partnering with fellow Bulldog, Kate Fuller. The Wolverine duo lost key ser- vice games throughout the match, leading to its elimination as Georgia advanced 6-3, 6-2. It was an upset- ting way for the pair's partnership to end, as they had accumulated an impressive 25-7 record this season - a year that neither partner will soon forget. But while Bolender will con- tinue her Michigan career in just a few months when the fall season begins, Muresan has donned Michi- gan's maize and blue for the last time of her competitive career. And although she would have enjoyed a better finish down the stretch, she speaks of her time in Ann Arbor with unparalleled enthusiasm. "I think a lot of things made it such a great experience," Mure- san said. "Our team is really close. Michigan has so much to offer and that's what made it such a great experience." With the season in the books, the Wolverines hope next year brings them closer to their goals, including a better showing at NCAAs and a Big Ten Tournament title. King earns All-American status, drops doubles with Jung By ALEX STEINHOFF Daily Sports Writer Sophomore Evan King and senior Jason Jung of the Michigan men's tennis team made plans to stay in Palo Alto, Calif. for Memorial Day Weekend. They also had their sights set on traveling to New York in early September - the location of the U.S. Open - where the winner of the NCAA Individual Championships earns a wild-card spot. But those plans were cut short. King reached the Sweet 16 in singles - something not done by a Wolverine in 19 years - before fall- ing to the No. 5 seed, but not with- out earning All-American status. In doubles, King and Jung also reached the Sweet 16, before bowing out to the No. 5 seed as well. In the first round, King upset No. 12 Tim Puetz of Auburn, but Jung failed to do the same against defend- ing champion and No. 9 Bradley Klahn of Stanford, the school play- ing host for the tournament. After several hours of a rain delay, King jumped out to an early 4-1 lead, breaking Puetz's serve early. But the Auburn Tiger fought back to trim King's lead to just one game. At 4-3, King suddenly turned on the jets. He cruised to win the next two games, before winning all six games of the second set. The sophomore's victory gave * Michigan its first win in the NCAA Individual Championships since Matko Maravic won his first-round match four years earlier. King, the No. 21 seed in the tournament, would next face Gonzalo Escobar, a player ranked five spots below him. Michigan's captain Jung was unable to reach day two of the tour- nament in singles with King. Against the NCAA singles defending champion, Jung rallied off three straight games in the first set to take a 5-3 lead. But Jung was unable to close out the set twice and Klahn pushed the set to five games apiece, before closing out the set in a competitive tiebreaker which fea- tured spectacular shots from both sides. But once the second set start- ed, Klahn kept the advantage. Klahn broke Jungto go up 3-2 before cruis- ing through the next three games to eliminate Jung from the singles draw. King kicked off day two of the tournament with his singles match in the morning. King dropped the first set 6-3 and was broken to open the second set. But King responded with a sec- ond-set victory, pushing the match to a decisive third set, in which Michigan's sophomore sensation never looked back, completing a six- game rally to win the match. The win propelled King to the Sweet 16 and officially earned him ITA All-American status - an honor a Wolverine hasn't had in four years. Just over two hours after King won to reach the Sweet 16 in singles, he stepped on the court to do the same in doubles. Originally slated to play the No. 1 doubles team from national cham- pion USC, King and Jung caught a lucky break, as the Trojan pair pulled their names from the doubles draw. Instead the Wolverine duo played the No. 32 pair in the country from UCLA, Adrian Puget and Alex Brigham. Despite droppinga tough first set, King and Jung found their stride winningthe second set before cruis- ing to a three-set victory 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. The win over the UCLA duo sent King and Jung to the Sweet 16 for the second time as a doubles team, despite not playing together since April. Day three of the tournament started off with King's third-round singles match against rival No. 5 Blaz Rola. Rola claimed the lead early and eventually took the first set. Rola broke King again two games later to take a 3-0 lead and a strangle-hold on the set and the match. With the match seemingly in con- trol, Rola pushed his leadto 5-0 with stellar serving and solid returns of serve before closing out the set with- out dropping a game and closing out the match in straight sets. "In this tournament, Evan kind of made three steps forward and one step back," Michigan coach Bruce Berque said. "He lost to a very good player, but unfortunately it wasn't his best tennis today." The loss ended King's singles sea- son, but King's final 30-9 record was the best by a Wolverine since 1998. King later took the court with Jung for their second-round dou- bles match against No. 5 Roberto Maytin and John Peers from Baylor. Maytin and Peers played the majority of the first set from behind, but broke King's serve to knot the set at five, before holding serve to Freshman Evan King became the first Wolverine to reach the Sweet 16 in 19 years. take a 6-5 lead. But the Wolverines Bears. responded to send the set into a At 5-2, No. 5 Baylor was serving tiebreaker.Despite fighting off one for the match. Jung missed a fore- set point, the Wolverines dropped hand into the net at break point, a back-and-forth tiebreaker to lose missing a golden opportunity to the first set for the second time in get back into the set. At deuce, the the tournament. Bears quickly won the next two "We had a chance to serve out pointst o clinch the game, set, and the first set but were unable to the match, 7-6, 6-2. do so, and that was a big turn- As disappointing as the loss was ing point in the match," Berque for King and Jung, Jung ended his said. "We had execution problems Michigan tennis career with 89 with first serves and finishing out doubles wins - just one win shy of some points, and then we got into the all-time record - while King a tiebreaker and one or two points ended his season with tournament changed the match." experience and All-American hon- But unlike the first round, King ors in singles. and Jung's opponent jumped out to "(King will) be coming back an early lead, as they broke the Wol- as one of the better players in the verine pair in the first game of the country and I'm sure he's going to second set. improve over the summer," Ber- Later in the set, as King and Jung que said. "I'm looking for him to were trying to claw back, they were be a great player for us next year at broken for the second time in the the top of the lineup in singles and set, surrendering a 4-1 lead to the doubles."