4 Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 21, 1986 Martin QTiruniides By A dam Martin xii MSU GUARDS KNOCK 'M' FROM FIRST State blasts Blue, 74-59 Skiles proves human.. . I . . but it doesn't matter T HIS TIME Scott Skiles only scored 20 points, almost seven below his season average. The once fallen, now angelic Spartan killer hit only six of 16 shots from the field, and nailed eight of nine from the free throw line. But this time it didn't matter. Despite Antoine Joubert's confident predictions for a Michigan victory, the Michigan State Spartans dumped the Wolverines, 74-59, last night at Crisler Arena. But no need to hail (or hate) Skiles; the man who slashed Michigan for 40 points almost a month ago could only play a role in his club's season sweeping victory, and it was hardly divine. Instead, those other Spartans - the ones who usually watch their Plymouth, Indiana teammate sink bomb after bomb - combined to shut down Michigan's inside game and simply outrun the Wolverines. The Spartan defense forced Michigan to the perimeter, and in the second half when the Wolverines needed to hit the rainbows, everything turned green, East Lansing green. "We got a lot of fast break baskets last time at home," said Skiles, "so I thought we could come out and run with them." once the Spartans started running, they never stopped. Michigan could only convert .333 percent of their shots in half two, and as often as Michigan missed, the Spartans pulled out the whips. Before Michigan could pull together and swing the momenutm, Michigan State had a 46-43 lead, courtesy of a lightning transition game. When Skiles threw a blind, over-the-shoulder bomb to junior Darryl John- son for an easy layup, State held a five-point lead. The next 15 minutes were only painful for Michigan. "They're so good in transition," said a dejected Bill Frieder, the Wolverine coach. "They made us shoot it, and we didn't shoot it in." Surprisingly, neither did Skiles. The senior guard was 4-of-11 at half- time after forcing up several poor efforts. Skiles was quick to credit Gary Grant for his defense, and the double-team Michigan used against him. The sharpshooter then quickly deferred to his teammates, who rose as Skiles turned human. The rest of the guys were playing so well," explained Skiles, the media's latest prey. "I just tried to give it to them, and let them do it." Hardly the words of a man who has led the Spartans in scoring in 19 of 23 games this season, including splurges of 40, 45 and 36. Then again, words are insignificant, at least according to the latest group of Spartans. "We don't talk with them," Johnson said of Joubert's fruitless omen. "We let our performance do our talking." Suffice it to say, the Spartans talk with their feet. State coach Jud Heathcote considers his club's shooting percentage (fourth highest in the history of NCAA basketball) a decided advantage, but when there is no defense to shoot over, the Spartans are even more deadly. "Quickness really bothers us," said Frieder. "If we go with size, they outquick us, and we've got problems." The problems came in all shapes and sizes last night. The most notable was the smallest. Teh 6-2 Johnson poured in 26, including several fast-break layups, and created havoc for Michigan by penetrating and dishing off. More important, it was Michigan State, not Michigan, which pumped itself by outrunning the opposition. If the Wolverines looked flat, they were trampled. This time State fans couldn't invite hatred. Some were seen relieving themselves on the corner of Tappan and Hill before the game, but it makes no difference. The farm jokes just don't apply. As for the Scott Skiles raucous party material, forget it. Two losses to Michigan State hardly make a pleasant Spring Break, no matter where you spend it. By BARB MCQUADE No dominating inside game. No conistent shooting. No transition defense. The three elements Michigan needed to win last night never materialized, as the Wolverines were slapped in the face with a 74-59 loss at Crisler Arena at the hands of Michigan State. "OUR ABILITY to hold our own on the boards was probably the differen- ce in the game," said MSU head coach Jud Heathcote. the smaller Spartans matched Michigan with 33 rebounds, but poun- ded more than the glass. MSU's collapsing zone defense kept Wolverine center Roy Tarpley in check all night. The 6-11 senior finished with a respectable 15 points, but just six in the second half. "We made a couple of adjustments at halftime," Heathcote said. "We said to (MSU center) Barry Fordham, 'you have to work harder. You have to get around in front of Tarpley an- dnot play behind him, and he did a fantastic job. It never looked like the pass was open, even if it was. "WE WERE surrounding him," Heathcote continued. "I thought they were a little reluctant to throw him the ball." So instead of going with the bread and butter, Michigan resorted to the cold leftovers. The Wolverines forced poor shots in the second half, shooting just 33 percent from the floor. "I think we played one good half of basketball," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder whose 10-4 Wolverines dropped to second place in the Big Ten. Unfortunately, you have to play two. The second half we jus didn't shoot well. We make four or five more baskets, it takes away four or five of their transition stuff. They're so good in transition." THE WOLVERINES were no match for the Spartan running game. MSU guard Scott Skiles had 200 yards passing, hitting backcourt teammate Darryl Johnson all night with long bombs on the fast break. Johnson was the game's high scorer with 26 points, 18 on layups. On three straight plays, Skiles fed him with court-length passes, including a blind one over his shoulder. "I saw that Scott had the ball, so I just ran downcourt and tried to beat everybody down there," Johnson said. "He just made a spectacular pass. ALFORD CANS 24 "That was the particular game plan. We got a lot of those fastbreak baskets back in East Lansing." The Spartans sped past Michigan in their first meeting of the season, when MSU ran to a 91-79 victory, a margin of 12 points. The Wolverines lost by 13 last night on their own court. "WE REALLY have problems with quickness," Frieder said. "With our size, we're not nearly as quick. The quickness really bothers us." the big Michigan squad usually relies on winning the battle under the boards, but last night, MSU's perimeter players snatched more than their fair share off the glass. Vernon Carr pulled down 10 rebounds and Larry Polec nabbed nine to spark the Spartan attack. "The key to our success is if we can get a rebound and get the fast break going," Polec said. THE STERLING Heights native had 13 points in the contest on six-of-11 shooting. Skiles managed 20 points despite being held to six-of-16 from the floor. Michigan could be proud of holding the avid scorer to half his point total from the last time the two teams met. "I thought defensively Gary Grand did a good job on Skiles," Frieder said. "At the half Skiles was four for 11." GRANT WAS all over the 6-1 Skiles in the first half, feuling Michigan to a 37-36 lead at intermission. The Wolverine guard shined brightly on offense for the first 20 minutes with 10 points, but was brilliant on defense to "hold" Skiles to 11. The Canton, Ohio native had two blocks and three steals, two of which he converted into dunks. A tired Grant dropped to three-of- nine shooting in the second half, though, and the rest of the Wolverines with the exception of Glen Rice, fared no better. Rice tallied 11 points on five-of-seven accuracy. Michigan guard antoine Joubert gave the Wolverines their one-point halftime lead on a six-foot jumper with five seconds on the clock. Just 2:32 earlier, the 6-5 junior had scored his 1,000th career point, only the 23rd Michigan player on the list. Wolverine forward Richard Rellford reached another milestone, breaking the Michigan record for most games played with 117 ap- pearances. I I Big Ten Standings Conference Overall Indiana....... MICHIGAN ..... Michigan State . . Purdue ......... Illinois........ *Iowa......... Ohio, State..... Minnesota ...... *Wisconsin ...... Northwestern ... W 10 10 9 9 8 6 6 5 2 L 3 4 5 5 6 6 7 8 11 W 18 22 18 20 17 12 12 15 10 L 5 4 6 7 8 10 11 11 13 q I 2 12 8 16 1 *Does not include last night's game. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Robert Henderson fights for a loose ball with Michigan State's Larry Polec. Polec scored 13 points to help up-end the Wolverines. Johnson magic MICHIGAN STATE MinFG/A FT/A I R Polec..........3 Carr ............3 Fordham........ Johnson ......... Skiles ..........., valentine ........ Izzo ............. Walkerb........ Brown ........ Team Rebounds . 36 39 36 40 39 3 4 2 1 6-11 4-7 2-3 12-19 6-16 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 1-2 0-0 2-2 8-9 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 9 10 4 3 5 0 1 0 0 1 A 1 5 0 8 6 0 0 0 0 PF Pts 3 13 0 9 4 4 1 26 1 20 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 MICHIGAN MinFG/A FT/A R Reilford..........18 2-3 2-2 2 wade............ 24 1-5 0-0 11 Tarpley.........40 7-13 1-1 10 Joubert .........28 4-12 00 3 Grant........... 34 8-19 0-0 3 Rice ............. 26 5-7 0-0 2 Thompson ....... 18 1.6 0-0 0 Henderson ...... 12 0-0 0-0 0 Team Rebounds. 2 A PF Pts 0 2 6 0 2 2 0 2 15 5 5 16 1 3 10 1 2 2 1 0 0 Indiana edges Illinois, 61. -60 4 CHAMPAIGN (UPI) - Steve Alford scored 24 points and No. 14 In- diana moved into first place in the Big Ten with a 61-60 victory yesterday over Illinois. Indiana, which did not score in the final five minutes of the game, in- proved to 18-5 overall and 10-3 in the conference. Indiana is one-half game ahead of Michigan, which lost to TOTALS.........200 28-65 3-3 33 10 18 59 Michigan State last night. ILLINOIS fell to 17-6 and 9-6. Indiana, which also did not score until nearly four minutes had expired, led 53-44 with less than nine minutes to play. Illinois, which trailed 61-54 with 4:50 to play, cut the lead on two field goals by Tony Wysinger and another by Glynn Blackwell. Wysinger's jumper at the buzzer was off. Indiana, trailing 8-2 with four minutes expired into the game, took a 9-8 lead on Winston Morgan's layup and free throw. Ken Norman, who led Illinois with 20 points, tied the game at 13 and 15, but Indiana got seven straight points and went up 22-15 on Alford's 18-foot jumper with 8:13 to play. Alford hit another 18-footer as time expired at the half for a 34-28 lead. Wysinger finished with 14 points and Bruce Douglas added 11 for TOTALS ........ 200 31-57 12-15 33 20 9 74 Halftime score: Michigan 37, Michigan State 36. Attendance: 13,609 (sellout) GLAMOUERSs T0 STRATEGIES TO BE YOUR PERSONAL BEST AUTO QUIZ 1) Can You Lease A New Car Without Credit Experience Or A Cosignor? 2) Where Should You Go To Get Prompt Service For All Your Auto Needs? (answers inside paper) Illinois. Indiana travels to Purdue tomorrow before hosting Minnesota and Iowa next week. Purdue 85, Ohio State 79 WEST LAFAYETTE (UPI) - Troy Lewis scored 18 points, including four in the final 18 seconds, to lead the Purdue Boilermakers to an 85-79 Big Ten basketball victory last night over Ohio State. Purdue rose to 9-5 in conference play and 20-7 overall, clinching its eighth straight 20-win season. Ohio State fell to 12-11 overall and 6-9 in the conference. LEWIS HIT a basket and two free throws and Everett Stephens added4 four free throws in the final 1:12 to seal the victory. Purdue trailed 42-38 at halftime but opened the second half with a 15-6 run to take the lead. The Buckeyes relied on Brad Sellers for all their points over a seven- minute span ending midway through the final half. Purdue outscored the 7- foot senior 20-11 for a 64-55 lead with 9:30 to play and pulled the margin asq high as 68-57, with 8:41 to go. THE BUCKEYES then went on a 14- 3 run to tie the game at 71 with four minutes to play. Ohio State led by as many as 10 points in the first half. Dennis Hopson scored 27 points, 16 in the first half, to lead Ohio State., Sellers finished with 22. Doug Lee added 15 for Purdue and Mack Gadis finished with 12. Todd Mitchell and freshman center Melvin McCants each added 11 for Purdue. PIZZA HUT Now accepting applications for Cooking and Waiting day- time and evening help. WR- nna . 'I -.V-- r im . h:" ATTEND OUR CAREER SEMINAR TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 6:30 P.M. SECOND FLOOR, ANN ARBOR i The competitive edge...in your relationships, in your career. You want it. Learn how to acquire it. During our 4-part seminar with Glamour's Elizabeth Brown, listen to a motivational presentation on setting professional goals. Preview a fashion show for special wardrobe-building tips. Test your strategy with a "Competitive Attitude" quiz. And speak with a panel of successful businesswomen from your community. Elizabeth Brown, Glamour Join us for an investment in your Fashion & Beauty Merchandising Editor future. Competitive Edge '86 tickets are $10, which includes a gourmet box dinner. To make your reservations call: 769-7600. 'C SEND FOR YOUR OFFICIAL * T-SHIRT COMMEMORATING THE GREAT MICHIGAN EARTHQUAKE.) ORDER NOW! - LIMITED TIME OFFER. These shirts are guaranteed tryUho fvn 0^. t rv vN fs~2i S" to Se treeD . " SPREADS ? SUBDUCTIONS " COLLISIONS " ACCRETIONS 0 HOTSPOTS " & OTHER GEOLOGICAL FAULTS If it does not say 'QUAKE, and have the 5.0 Richter scale reading, it is not Official! To ensure authenticity we will enclose a registration card stating the shirt's official serial no. for your protection!! == 9 Mail check or money orders to: REREE NTRPRISE P_0 n nw O->Q1 I ; ; MI AQ1mi I