It’s been a while since the Ohio State men’s gymnastics team suffered the taste of defeat.In fact, their last loss was Feb. 4, 1995, and with the team bus stopping in Ann Arbor this weekend, coach Peter Kormann isn’t ready for his team’s winning streak to come to a halt.’Michigan is our rival,’ Kormann said. ‘We don’t want to lose to them.’Winning the National Championship last season and starting this season 9-0 has not given the Buckeyes a big head. As the Big Ten Championships approach, Kormann wants to keep his team focused.’We’re taking it one meet at a time,’ he said.Both Kormann and assistant coach Miles Avery agree that the main concern right now is consistency.’We are where we want to be right now,’ Avery said. ‘With no meet last weekend, we had an extra week to really get better. We needed these two weeks to prepare for this next, more competitive phase of the season.’Leading the Buckeyes recently has been senior Drew Durbin, who two weeks ago tied the OSU record on the parallel bars with a score of 9.90 at the Windy City Invitational in Chicago. ‘That routine felt good and tight,’ Durbin said. ‘But I didn’t think my score was going to be that high.’If Durbin feels that he can improve on his school record-tying performance in an event that isn’t even his specialty (he is the two-time defending national champion on the pommel horse), OSU better be using erasable ink in the school record book.Also giving a strong performance for the Buckeyes has been sophomore Doug Stibel, who won the high bars at the Windy City Invitational.’Doug is one of the best there is on the high bar,’ Avery said.The Buckeyes compete against Michigan in Ann Arbor this Saturday at 7 p.m.