Monday, May18, 2009 v' "i'g l The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com "SON i M BIG TEN BLUES By CHANTEL JENNINGS Daily Sports Editor Senior pitcher Chris Fetter felt his season end before it was actu- ally over. The Wolverines had just allowed the Wildcats to score six uncontested runs during the fifth and sixth innings. The Wolver- ines' lead had deteriorated into a 10-6 deficit. Then, after the sixth inning as Michigan (9-15 Big Ten, 30-25 overall) was headed back to the dugout, a voice came over the loudspeaker announcing that Purdue was comfortably leading Illinois 8-1 going into the sixth inning. Fetter's heart sank. The dugout went silent. Michigan baseball coach Rich Maloney said nothing. A Boilermaker victory meant there would be no Big Ten Tournament run, no four-peat as Big Ten cham- pions, no trip to Columbus. And as expected, Purdue went on to beat the Fighting Illini,12-8. Still, the Wolverines had to fin- ish Saturday's doubleheader, end- ing in 10-6 and 6-5 losses. "I was pretty hard for all of us FINALS From Page 10 while, even until my last putt." The Wolverines improved their score over each of the three days, performing best when it mattered most and fired an eight-over 292 in the final round. That was the lowest final round mark of any team in the field which featured nine ranked squads, including No. 5 Stanford and No. 8 Florida. Michigan heads to Toledo, Ohio for the NCAA Finals beginning on May 26 along with Florida, which won the event, Stanford, No. 17 Texas Tech and No. 24 Texas. Michigan's mental toughness and its depth were on display after the impressive final round score came despite a two-and- a-half hour rain delay about 35 minutes after play began. Its standing ranged from fourth to eighth throughout the back-nine. Although no player finished in the top-15, all five finished in the top-50. "We just wanted to make sure we didn't make any mental errors and that we executed the shots we wanted to play," Sapp said. because we've never really played a game where it didn't mean any- thing," Fetter said. "That was hard to sit there and watch that game and know that it didn't really count towards anything." Fetter had done all he could on Thursday night during the first game of the series. After pitch- ing three scoreless innings, Fetter allowed six runs during the fourth inning. But Fetter and freshman Brandon Sinnery were able to keep the Wildcats silent after that as the Wolverines used a nine-run sev- enth inning to claim the first game of the series, 16-6. At the plate, junior Mike Dufek led the offensive attack, going 2-for-4 with two home runs and four RBI., despite Northwestern's best efforts to slow the scoring surge with three pitchers in the seventh. For the past three seasons, the Wolverines hoisted the Big Ten Tournament title trophy, but this year they came two wins short of a postseason berth. -To read the whole story of the team's disappointing end to the season, go to michigandaily.com. "We did a good job of doing that, and that's why we're advancing to nationals." Michigan finished each of the first two rounds in seventh place. Senior co-captain Bill Rankin shot an 80 in the first round, but kept his team in contention by improv- ing his play by nine strokes in the second round with a tournament team-low, even-par 71. A private team meeting after the second round paid dividends for the Wolverines, as they out- played eight of the nation's top 50 programs, including two top-10 teams. Three of Michigan's final round scores were the players' lowest scores of the tournament. "We pretty much knew that we had nothing to lose (in the final round)," Kim said. "All of us felt like that we had another good round in us, and we knew that if we just stayed patient and committed to every shot that we would take advantage of the opportunity." While the Regional course in Texas was an unfamiliar one, Michigan will be familiar with the Inverness Club, the site of the finals in Toledo, having played a practice round on the course two weeks ago.