10 Thursday, June 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, June 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3 Baseball: Report Card Baseball prospects await draft fates By ZACH SHAW Daily Sports Writer The final opinion of Michigan baseball's 2014 campaign is com- pletely in the eye of the beholder. There was a second consecutive winning season, the first 30-win season since 2010 and an under- classman core that looks to lead the program for years to come. But there were also excruciat- ing losses in every way imaginable, another season middling in the Big Ten and a sixth straight failure to make the NCAA Tournament. The Daily makes sense of the highs and lows of the season, hand- ing out final grades for the Wolver- ines. Offense: B- The bats proved to be the Wol- verines' biggest weakness most of the season. Hitting just .256 as a team and scoring just 4.42 runs per game, the offense wasted many solid pitching efforts - nine of Michigan's 29 losses came when the team allowed three runs or fewer. There were highlights, of course, as the Wolverines tacked on 10 hits or more 16 times and piled on 18 runs against Northwestern on May 3, and ranked second in the Big Ten with 81 stolen bases. But when it came down to it, the inability to keep innings alive (Big Ten-leading 355 strikeouts) or score against top pitching (just 2.92 runs per game in series-openinggames) led to Mich- igan's demise. Defense: B Freshman outfielder Jackson Lamb made SportsCenter with his diving catches, sophomore Jacob Cronenworth flashed the leather all over and juniors Eric Jacobson and Kyle Jusick solidified the right side of the infield withzero errors in 439 chances. The Wolverines were solid on defense for much of the season, tying for fourth in the conference with a.972 fielding percentage. But the errors Michigan did make proved to be costly. Five errors in its opening doubleheader Feb. 14 caused the Wolverines to blow leads in back-to-back losses. Three late-game errors cost Michi- gan a game against Minnesota April 4. And six errors commit- ted against Notre Dame on April 9 marked infamy unlikely to be matched by any Wolverine team past or future. Pitching: A- Michigan's greatest strength, the pitching staff, was third in the Big Ten with a 3.21 ERA and tal- lied 30 more strikeouts than any other team. Showing the ability to contain even top offenses, the Wolverine pitchers kept their team in many games it had no business being in. The freshmen led the way, going 12-3 with 2.73 earned-run average in 112 innings. In total, Michigan will return its top nine pitchers in earned-run average next season, providing promise for another strong year on the mound. Overall: B This team was not expected to win a national title, nor was it expected to be below .500 until May 11. Consistency proved to be a major problem for the Wolverines, but the talent showed up frequently enough to tie for fourth in the Big Ten. The expectations will be higher with another top-20 recruiting class and up to 27 of 32 players returning next season. But for now, being the fourth-best team in the Big Ten can only be seen as a minor disappointment. Szkutnik, Bourque, Glines top juniors with draft hopes Thursday By BEN FIDELMAN Daily Sports Writer As the Michigan baseball sea- son comes to an end, the program is going to have to face a nagging issue: Which draft-eligible play- ers are going to leave to play pro- fessionally? Including graduating players, there are 16 members from the 2014 team that could be selected in the MLB Draft, which takes place on Thursday. Eligible play- ers include graduating high- school players, those who have completed their junior season in college and players that have used four years of eligibility. Michigan's top prospects to leave early are junior left-hander Trent Szkutnik and junior right- hander James Bourque. Each has qualities that stand out in big-league systems, but they will have to weigh the pros and cons between returning for their senior years and starting their professional careers. Szkutnik is believed to havethe highest draft potential. Boasting a low-'90s fastball, a bevy of off- speed pitches and a stellar pick- off move to first base, he started some games this season in front of more than 10 scouts. He put up a solid 3.38 earned- run average and led the Wol- verine pitching staff on a late tear to finish with a 3.21 team ERA. Accompanying his on-field results were visible leadership traits on a team that was short of senior leaders. The other pitcher who is get- ting attention from scouts is Bourque. Scouts kriew his name coming into this season after he struck out 53 hitters over 58.1 innings in his sophomore cam- paign. This year, his ERA went down by nearly a point, and the strikeout rate held fairly con- stant. With a fastball topping out at around 96 miles per hour,. Bourque's is considered one of the top arms in the program. Another possible loss for the Wolverines' roster is center field- er Jackson Glines. The junior posted a .332 batting average, which was the best on the team and good for seventh in the con- ference. This was his first year playing Division I baseball after he transferred to Michigan from Fresno City College before this season. ~ As the threat of losing key players from this year's fifth- place team in the Big Ten looms, the Wolverines have to begin to look toward next year. On the mound, Michigan will return at least three of its four starters from the Big Ten Tour- nament, including the righty- lefty freshman combo of Keith Lehmann and Brett Adcock - which combined to go 11-5 with a 2.82 earned-run average with 93 strikeouts in their first season. Joining them will be sopho- more left-hander Evan Hill, who rounds out a weekend trio. If Szkutnik decides to return for his senior season, all four will combine to form a solid rotation heading into the 2015 campaign. In relief, the Wolverines bring back their top nine pitchers in earned-run average and will reintroduce junior right-hander Matt Ogden to the staff. Ogden, who missed the entire season due to injury, led the 2013 squad with an 8-1 record and a 2.28 earned- run average. In the field, things look equal- ly promising. The only starter graduating is catcher Cole Mar- tin, and Glines is the only other position player who might enter the draft. That leaves 14 play- ers who appeared in at least 20 games, and roughly 80 percent of total offense will be back next year. After the draft, there will be a better picture of what the roster will look like next season, as it will be clear which players will be leaving for professional ball along with the announcement of the incoming recruiting class. Looking for draft updates? Check MichiganDaily.com throughout the weekend FILM From Page 1 for his own individual directorial projects, which he plans to pursue in the future. The SAC department's empha- sis on writing grew with the acquisition of the Orson Welles and Robert Altman collections, Burnstein said. The Sayles collec- tion will be joining both of these archives. Phil Hallman, Film Studies field librarian and curator for the Screen Mavericks at Michi- gan Collection, said he hopes to expand the archives. Includ- ing Sayles' work in the collection marks a significant step in this direction. "The hope is to create a center for the study of independent film- making at the University of Michi- gan," Hallman said. "All of these filmmakers have worked outside of the traditional Hollywood sys- tem." Students from Professor Mark Kligerman's American Inde- pendent Cinema (SAC 455) class viewed numerous Sayles films. Their next assignment was to organize his work in a way that would be accessible to scholars - a hands-on endeavor they pursued throughout the duration of the Winter 2014 semester. Screen Arts & Cultures junior Katherine Sherry, a student in SAC 455, addressed the audience, dis- tinguishing her experience from that of other classes. "So many times, you do the paper, you turn it in and it's a checkmark," Sherry said. "This has been an opportunity to really learn and it's been kind of what education should be. The actual primary documents is something far more important anything that we see in a lecture or textbook." Melissa Gomis, an Instructional Technology librarian at Hatcher, played a large role in organizing and designing the exhibit and fre- quently met with both students from 455 and Hallman to discuss progress. Gomis said the project itself, given the time span allowed for completion, was very ambitious, but its universal message will make the effort worthwhile. "Whether you're doing some- thing that's visual or more textual, you're trying to tell a story and I think the story he's (Sayles) tell- ing has a lot of universal appeal," Gomis added. "There's a lot of humanity in them and I think that's something that you don't always see in films and it's some- thing I wasn't expecting to see." SLUT-SHAMING From Page 1 Psychology Quarterly that focused on slut-shaming. Some of their findings aren't shocking: money-related factors like income, debt, social con- nections and parental financial assistance hugely altered future success. More surprising was that economic factors skewed how the women interpreted each others' sexual activities and attractive- ness, as well as their overall values on sex. Armstrong and Hamilton found that the three pathways and other financially-related fac- tors influenced the girls' views on sex and each other. While they asked direct questions and inter- viewed all of the 53 girls, they also learned through observing argu- ments, gossip and late-night talks. Economic inequality was often a basis in the ways girls judged each other's sexual pursuits. Label- ing someone a "slut," which was often combined with accusations of meanness or unattractiveness, seemed to be the worst insult. Although Armstrong's research involved dividing the women into two groups of higher and lower income, this seemed to happen naturally because of expensive and divisive social activities like Greek life. At the unnamed Midwestern university, Greek life was "a really big thing," Armstrong said. Soror- ity rush was competitive, based heavily on affluence and appear- ance, and Greek life was also expensive. "A girl was in a very good soror- ity and she said, 'Yeah, this poor girl got in and was all wrong,"' Armstrong said. "'She deactivated of course because she didn't fit, and she wasn't cute, you know? She didn't belong."' A lower-income student told Hamilton and Armstrong, "Soror- ity girls are kind of whorish and unfriendly and very cliquey. If you weren't Greek, then you didn't really matter." The study did not find that all affluent women could fit into these worlds - studious, "nerdy" girls didn't fit in either even if they were from well-off families. "The social groups were very, very divided by class," Armstrong said. Armstrong also noticed differ- ing attitudes between the groups in regards to sex. The wealthier viewed casual sex in a negative light only when it involved vaginal intercourse, yet casual ofal sex and kissing outside of a relationship were acceptable behavior. Less affluent girls equated slut- tiness with the materialism and cliquey behavior they thought wealthier students embodied. Women in the lower-income group were unaware that the affluent students' definition of hooking up excluded vaginal intercourse and believed that sex and hookups belonged only in a steady relation- ship. However, the lower-income girls were associated with the very traits that higher-income girls thought were "slutty," suggesting that, in reality, it was the inability to appear as if they were from a high social class. Halfway through college, none of the 53 girls in Armstrong's study had close friendships with those of a different socioeconomic status. Slut-shaming was everywhere, but no one had concrete defini- tions of what exactly a slut was, or real evidence of the slutty behavior causing this label to be put upon girls. "One of the things I think is good that we found is that a slut label didn't stick in a real kind of long term way," Armstrong said. "The sexual reputations weren't very stable. There wasn't really anyone who got permanently labeled the floor slut or anything like that. Among these women that just didn't happen." Armstrong said for the label to have long-term consequences, it would have to have more perma- nent implications. "It was combined together with a lot of other factors related to social class that had pretty major consequences," Armstrong said. @(iMIC~IGANDAILY -- 05K U Detroit Beat: Funding, optimism abound Buy 1 sandwich, get 1 FREE! Limit One offer per customer with coupon. ml Cannot be combined with any other offer Valid at Barry Bagels Ann Arbor location ONLY BAGELSI Barry Bagels Westgate Shopping Center 2515 Jackson Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 (734) 662-2435 www.barrybagels.com Expires: June 12, 2014J -- ------- -----------.---------------- 7 5 2 4 8 6 3 8 9 2 Downtown, Midtown flush in attention, while neighborhoods are still in progress By WILL GREENBERG Daily News Editor It would be easy to think most people wouldn't put their money on a place going through bankruptcy, declining population and massive blight problem. However, optimism for Detroit refuses to quit as I 7 8 9 2 1i- 1- 1r- -1 1-r-T 8 9 5 the city see through the struggles and find a wealth of opportunity. People like QuickenLoans founder Dan Gilbert have already been heavy contributors to the rebuilding efforts of the city, working toward creating a stable economy and fully' livable town. Just last month, JP Morgan Chase announced a $100 million investment into the city. The money is divided amongseveral categories, the largest of which providing $50 million to community development and $25 million to addressing the city's blight situation. The full plan illustrates abroad initiative banking on a prosperous future for the city. "We believe in Detroit," John Carter, president of the JP Morgan Chase Michigan Middle Market, said. Carter said the money is intended ' to serve the city in the long term and is part of the company's effort to be a "good, corporate citizen." "For us, the return truthfully is down the line," he added. "It will be measured by an improved Detroit. We'll have more residents, more businesses, more consumers and, as a bank, ultimately we're goingto benefit in that environment." Carter said much of the money is philanthropic, not an investment in the sense of an expected dollar amount. As for the companies that can't afford to wait for a full city recovery, Carter said there's plenty to be excited about in Detroit. In fact, the distribution of the $100 million touches upon most all of the major areas Detroit has to be excited about. There are $12.5 million going to strengthening the workforce and job training, $7 million going to small businesses and $5.5 million towards future economic growth, all areas the city is working toward bolstering in the effort to create long-term economic stability. Continue reading online at www.michigandaily.com _ L._ 1 1 I 1 9 4 2 members of both the priv 2 8 public sector see the city a bet for investors. 3 5 6 Since declaring bankrul summer, Detroit has been n national stage as economicE 3 media outlets and the r themselves wondered w future would hold for t These days though, many 'ate and s a good ptcy last on the experts, esidents hat the he city. around