21 Thursday, June 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, June 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11 Detroit Beat: Perspectives from policy conference Leaders emphasize link between Detroit and Michigan By SAM GRINGLAS Daily News Editor MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. - Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan may have been the most talked about guy on Mackinac Island last week. Early in the annual Mackinac Policy Conference's second day, Duggan was weaving down the main promenade of the island's Grand Hotel, fresh from his pri- metime conference keynote the day before. Up and down the hotel's sweep- ing porch and Media Row, jour- nalists and business leaders were angling for face time with Detroit's chief executive. People were talk- ing about Duggan - and they were talking about Detroit. Most every speech that followed his keynote called out the mayor by name. Duggan, who took office earlier this year after a write-in campaign propelled him to victory in November, is often seen as the face of Detroit's resurgence. "He has a sense of urgency," author Malcolm Gladwell said in his lecture atthe conference. "He's in a hurry." Duggan's prominence at the conference signals an increased spotlight on the city of Detroit, even at a conference organizers say was designed to more broadly emphasize statewide issues com- pared to previous years. Brad Williams, vice president of government relations at the Detroit Regional Chamber, said his organization tried to build a conference that was also relevant to the entire state. However, he said conversations surrounding Detroit wielded new energy this year. "This year I think it was dif- ferent in that what's happening in Detroit is so impactful to the state of Michigan, particularly this bankruptcy portion," Wil- liams said. "That has an impact statewide. So I think that's why you heard so much more conver- sation about Detroit this year and because we have a new mayor, new council leadership. There's lots of energy and interest around the city." During the four-day gathering, speakers made the case over and over again that the state's future is intertwined with Detroit's. "It's not about Detroit ver- sus Michigan," Gov. Rick Snyder (R) said to a hall packed with the state's most influential business and political leaders. "I hope 94eMicign 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M148109-1327 www.michigandaily.com IAN DILLINGHAM SIMONNE KAPADIA Editr inChi2 Bsnes anae itfdi1(amichigondailyvcom ikpamcia ndaicom CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom ofiehours 734763-24soopt.3 News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters o the Editor tothedalyao cianda~ om or visit michigandailycom/etters PhotoDepartment photo@michigandal.scom Editorl Page opiion@"m ""ig'daily." m Sports Section sports@michigndaly com Magazine statement@michigandaiycom Advertising Phone: 734-418-4115 Department dailydisplay@gmail.com Highlights from the 2014 softball season Mayor Mike Duggan during an interview with the Michigan Daily at the Mackinac Policy Conference Friday. By MAX BULTMAN Daily Sports Writer When the 2014 season began, feelings on the Michigan softball team could have been described as "Women's College World Series or Bust." In the end, the Wolverines didn't make the Women's College World Series, but they weren't a bust, either. The Daily looks back on some of the best memories and perfor- mances from 2014. MVP: Sierra Romero The sophomore shortstop entered the season already boast- ing a Big Ten Player of the Year award and a spot on the preseason All-America team. Romero made sure to end the season with far more, earning nods as an All- American, finalist for National Player of the Year and Big Ten Player of the Year, the latter for the second straight year. She had the nation's second- highest batting average, .491, and led the country in on base percent- age at .633, all while smacking 18 home runs and 72 RBI. But Rome- ro's real value to the team was her knack for coming through when it seemed no one else could, with the plays only she could make. Michigan coach Carol Hutchins lauded Romero for her "swag," admiring the way Romero carries herself at the plate, in the field and in the locker room. Best win: Regional final over Arizona State No one would have blamed you if you buried your face when Ari- zona State catcher Amber Freeman hit what appeared to be a walk-off homer to beat the Wolverines in the regional final. But, if you did, you missed senior center fielder Lyndsay Doyle's leaping catch at the wall that sat atop SportsCen- ter's Top 10 Plays for days to come. Doyle said assistant coach Bon- nie Tholl told her to "jump the wall" just moments earlier, and she followed the advice, rising up to end the game and propel Michigan into the Super Regionals. That catch came minutes after sophomore outfielder Sierra Law- rence and senior designated player Taylor Hasselbach hit back-to-back home runs to tie the game and take the lead, respectively. Worst loss: 10-2 loss at Illinois The Wolverines found them- selves in plenty of mercy-rule contests this season, but only once were they on the wrongside of one. That came on April 25, when lowly Illinois trounced Michigan, 10-2,in six innings. Driesenga started the game in the circle, but gave up six runs on nine hits in 3.2 innings before yieldingtoWagner,whowasn't any better, giving up five hits and four runs in 1.2 innings of work. From the plate, the Wolverines were just as bad, mustering just five hits themselves, two of them off the bat of Romero. The game was indicative of a larger struggle Michigan was fac- ing, part of a streak in which it lost four straight series openers to conference foes. While no confer- you're ready to stand up for the settlement for Detroit, Michigan." Snyder, who called for the appointment of an emergency manager, has been a vocal advo- cate for state support of the city's rejuvenation and bankruptcy pro- cess. on the heels of the conference, he joined state and city officials in calling on legislators in Lansing to approve the city's "grand bar- gain" - a deal that would provide $195 million in state aid to the city. The contribution would be cou- pled with funds gifted by Detroit Institute of Art benefactors and local philanthropic organizations, allowing the city to settle debts with its pensioners and avoid the sale of DIA art. The package was approved by both houses of the legislature Tuesday and now awaits the gov- ernor's signature and a vote of approval by the city's pensioners. Support from legislators across the state - not just in the Metro area - was necessary for the package of bills to pass both houses. More than ever, the city of Detroit is shaping conversations across the state and it's doing so in new ways. "I don't think we knew exactly where we would be at this point in history, but certainly as we got closer (to the conference), we knew the city would be a focal point of the conversation," Williams said. Jeanette Pierce, director of community relations for D:hive, a Detroit organization that provides resources for people who are con- sidering moving into the city, said she noticed the discussion's addi- tional emphasis on Detroit. In previous years, Pierce said she was frustratedby panel discus- sions that brought in practitioners from out-of-state. She said 75 per- cent of the projects those speakers touted were already going on in Detroit. "I think too often we kind of look outside instead of looking inside and I think the mayor ham- mering that stuff home was really part of that," she said. Like D:hive, Duggan said his administration's top priority is to retain the city's existing popula- tion and attract new residents. "We get up everyday and we focus on what we can do to reverse the population decline in the city of Detroit," he said in his keynote address. "It governs every single decision we make. We do not have a future if we don't start growing." Though thebmayor touted a growing number of technology jobs, Detroit-based artisans and a burgeoning downtown and Mid- town housing market, he said he was not "under any illusions" about the city's challenges. Dug- gan said the city lost 12,000 in population last year and the unem- ployment rate remains two times the state's average. "I'm going to show you why it's not hopeless," he told the audience at the start of the address. A major part of Duggan's plan is revitalizing blighted neighbor- hoods, rather than solely demol- ishing abandoned homes. In the presentation, Duggan highlighted one neighborhood where 39 homes were slated for demolition. He said a new initiative - one that would allow the city to seize and auction abandoned homes if their owners didn't get them fixed up and occupied within six months - has already jumpstarted tan- gible changes in that neighbor- hood. Now, only nine homes will be demolished. Continue reading online at www.michigandaily.com ence loss was a good one, this flop against a bottom dweller has to be considered the worst because of the lopsided drubbing Michigan received and the hopelessness it exuded in the final innings. Top freshman: Megan Betsa With two strong junior pitchers returning in right-hander Sara Dri- esenga and lefty Haylie Wagner, pitching was far from a concern for the Wolverines entering the season. That didn't stop Betsa from earning a significant chunk of play- ingtime. Betsa finished the year 18-4, posting a 2.25 ERA and a team- high 150 strikeouts in 130.1 innings pitched. Though she struggled with confidence and composure early in the season, Betsa worked hard, sometimes on her days off, to earn her playing time. She threw a no-hitter against Detroit and ulti- mately beat out Driesenga for the No. 2 slot in the rotation. Imm EDITORIAL STAFF Stephanie Shenouda Managing Editor Shoham Geva Managing News Editor "ENI"" EWS EDIO: Allana Akhtar Aarica Marsh EditorialPageEditor opinioneSitors@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: Michae htSchramm Jake tourim ManagingSports Editor Daniel Feldman Giancarlo Buonomlo ManagingArts Editor gbuonomo@michigandaily.com SENIOR ART=S EDITORS: Adam Theise"n Allison Farrand and Ruby Wallau Managing Photo Editor photo@michigandailycom d Emil " Shmr Managing Design Editor Meaghan Thompson Managing Copy Editor copydesk mch a"ai-y"c The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published every Thursday during the spring and summer trms y students is atlhnierityeof chguallOneadeos. is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office f1r $2. Subscriptions or fa ll lte, starting in Seytemher, sia U.S. nail are $110. Winter term (anuary through April) is $115, yearlong (September throughlApril)is $195. University affiliates ate suhject to a teduced suhscriytion tate. On-campus suhsctipisuns rIo ull teni are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. Grading the Michigan softball team in 2014 By JAKE LOURIM ManagingSports Editor The 2014 Michigan softball sea- son opened with a 4-0 seventh- inning lead that turned into a 9-4 extra-inning loss against the eventual national champions. It closed with a walk-off home run in the deciding game of the Super Regionals. In between, there were 22 run-rule games, 21 of which the Wolverines won and many of which could have been a lot more lopsided if Michigan wanted to run up the score. But the season still had a flair for the dramatic. The Daily breaks down how they stacked up overall. Offense: A Michigan's most effective unit this year played a large role in its success. The Wolverines were among the best nationally in every category: fifth in batting average, second in on-base percentage, ninth in scoring and 16th in slug- ging. They had speed, with senior slap hitters Lyndsay Doyle and Nicole Sappingfield setting the table at the top of the lineup. And they had power, with sophomore shortstop Sierra Romero and senior designat- ed player Taylor Hasselbach lead- ing the team in home runs. Michigan lost five times in the last three weeks of the regular sea- son, and in those losses, it scored just 13 runs. But after splitting the Big Ten title with Nebraska, the Wolverines heated up again, mov- ing to the brink of the Women's College World Series. Defense: A- Michigan's defense made the most significant strides from last year, when it was the team's weak- est unit. Of course, the biggest highlight- reel play was the one that ended up on the highlight reel - SportsCen- ter's Top 10. With two outs in the seventh inning of a decisive region- al game, senior center fielder Lynd- say Doyle made a leaping catch at the wall to rob a would-be game- winning home run. The Wolver- ines finished eighth in the nation in fielding percentage and will return three full-time starters in the infield next year. Pitching: B+ At times during the first half of the season, this looked like Michi- gan's strongest unit. Junior left- hander Haylie Wagner kept her earned-run average under 1.00 for most of the season, returning to top form after an injury limited her down the stretch last season. Late in the season, however, the pitching was not on the elite level it needed to be. Wagner carried the load and was solid, but in the end, she couldn't match zeroes with Waldrop in the deciding game, a 4-2 loss. For most of the season, the Wolverines' staff of three good pitchers was their strength: They usually started one game each weekend and kept them fresh. In the NCAA Tournament, Michigan needed one tostep up and be on top ofhergame, and none ofthemtruly was. Final Grade: B+ When Michigan brought back seven starters plus Driesenga, last year's ace, from a team that went to the Women's College World Series last year, expectations were high. For most of the season, the Wolver- ines lived up to them. They knocked off five ranked teams in the non- conference season and strung together a dominant 20-game win streak that put them in the driver's seat in the Big Ten race. But then they stumbled a few times. A loss to Minnesota in the Big Ten Tournament final shipped them off to Tempe, Ariz. for the regional round of the NCAA Tour- nament. There, Michigan took care of business, winning two one-run elimination games to advance in thrilling fashion. But they couldn't get further. Shut down by Waldrop to the tune of two runs in two games, Michi- gan's season ended in Tallahassee, Fla. Though it featured many high- lights, the Wolverines took a step back from last year, leaving some business unfinished in 2014. BY THE NUMBERS Michigan Softball 7 Consecutive Big Ten titles won, including this year's split with Nebraska. Nationalrankin on-base percentage, led by Sierra Romero, the individual leader. 4:37 Total gametime of theltwo Super Region- al losses thateliminated Michigan. Detroit emergency manager Kevyn Orr during an interview with the Michigan Daily at the Mackinac Policy Conference Friday. wrl,