Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday- February 19, 1990 Women hoopste Streaking Wolverines up by Phil Green rs take two on road set Wisconsin, Northwestern Daily Basketball Writer EVANSTON - Upsets are things dreams are made of, and Sunday afternoon was a dream come true for the Michigan's women's basketball team. The Wolverines came back from a 10-point halftime deficit to defeat the No. 15 Northwestern Wildcats, 70-68, in overtime at Welsh-Ryan Arena. This win, coupled with Michigan's 61-56 victory at Wisconsin Friday night gives the Wolverines a record five-game winning streak. During the first half of Sunday's game it looked like the nationally-ranked Wildcats would be too much for Michigan to handle. After four minutes the Wolverines trailed 9-2 and after ten minutes Northwestern was in the bonus and going to the foul line with every Wolverine foul. After twelve minutes Michigan was down, 23- 10. It looked as if the Wolverines were in for another shellacking like the 92-62 loss Northwestern handed them at Crisler Arena in January. However, by halftime Michigan had cut the deficit to 10, 35-25. As unlikely as it seemed, if the team came out hot in the second half, it could get right back into the game. They came out more than hot - they came out on fire. Four Michigan trips down the court, four baskets. The Wildcat lead was down to six, 39-33. "We've beaten them by thirty at their place and had taken them pretty easily in the first half," Northwestern coach Don Perrelli said. "It was probably a little complacency, but it was more Michigan than it was us." After the teams traded baskets, the tough defense and an excellent job on the boards helped Michigan go on a 12-0 run over the next 5:25. The Wolverines had not only gotten into the game but they had taken the lead, and taken it big, 49-43. "The whole thing is defense, we just feel like we can stop people," Michigan coach Bud VanDeWege said. The next four minutes were intense as Michigan's lead stayed between five and seven. However, with 3:38 left, the Wolverine's first half foul trouble came back to haunt them when first-year center Trish Andrew (5 blocked shots) fouled out. Less than one minute later, senior Joan Rieger joined her on the bench after picking up her fifth foul. The Wolverines missed those two greatly. Michigan allowed the Wildcats to score the last seven points of regulation, including a fifteen foot jumper by Jeanine Wasielewski as time ran out to tie the score at 59. "Overtime could have been something that normally deflates teams playing on the road," VanDeWege said. "The home team traditionally comes on in the overtime and that's why I'm so proud of our team to not get down." During overtime neither team ever led by more than two and the lead changed hands six times. In the end, the Wolverines won it at the foul line, where they were seven for nine for the period. "They just realized that they could win it," VanDeWege said. "Our kids have learned how to win. They knew what to do and went out and got it done." The weekend had begun well for the Wolverines Friday night as they extended their 'The home team traditionally comes on in the overtime and that's why I'm so proud of our team to not get down.' - Michigan coach Bud VanDeWege winning streak to four against Wisconsin at Madison. However, at the game's outset things did not look good for Michigan. Joan Rieger got Michigan on the scoreboard first but the Badgers went on an 11-1 run over the next five minutes to take an 11-3 lead. Neither team shot well for the remainder of the half, enabling Wisconsin to take a 30-24 lead into the locker room at halftime. The teams traded baskets during the second half's opening minutes with the Wolverines finally knotting the score at 38 with 13:38 remaining. Michigan upped its shooting percentage to 50 percent, led by Leslie Spicer, (6-9 in the second half, 20 points total) and Carol Szczechowski (3- 4 in the second half, 13 points total) while the Badgers barely raised their shooting percentage from their atrocious first half. The Wolverines proceeded to outscore Wisconsin, 37-26, for the half and pulled out a hard-fought 61-56 victory. OHIO STATE continued from page 1 Vaught, and by playing a consistent tempo. Yesterday, both of these game plans were lost somewhere in he Ohio flatlands between Ann Arbor and Columbus. The Wolverines equalled their Big Ten high of twenty-one turnovers against Northwestern. Ohio State scored fourteen points off Michigan's errors while the Wolverines could only muster four on nineteen Buckeye turnovers. Michigan's sometimes poor shot selection resulted in their lowest shooting percentage (42.4 percent) of the season except for an early season win against Boston University. Fisher's inside game plan was lost when Mills and Riley picked up fouls quicker than a Dustbuster sucks up crumbs. Mills found himself in early trouble, saddled with two fouls in the game's first five minutes - just as he had in Thursday's game with Minnesota. Both times Fisher stuck with him. But the deja-vu ended there as Mills was called for his COHEN continued from page 1 Cagers didn't have any tricks left up their sleeves "It was a game we should have won, could have won, but didn't," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. Added Michigan guard Michael Talley, "I felt that Ohio State played a real good game. We fought real hard, we just made a few more critical mistakes." Indeed, Even though Michigan committed 21 turnovers, the Buckeyes threw the ball away 19 times. But OSU, buoyed by a boisterous crowd which has helped them to nine home victories out of 11, outscrapped and outhustled the Wolverines. The Buckeyes, who scored 14 points to Michigan's four off of turnovers, stole the ball thirteen times to Michigan's three and blocked four shots to Michigan's none. After a loss the mistakes of the losers are scrutinized. But the maj- ority of the time, pure chance plays a role as well. The first example of the fickle finger of fate came after no fewer than four minutes had expired in the contest. With 15:42 remaining in the first half, Michigan center Terry Mills picked up his second foul. And though only three days earlier ag- ainst Minnesota Mills had played thirty consecutive minutes after picking up two fouls in the first five minutes, Mills was only to play another 63 seconds before heading to the pine with his third foul. Michigan had won ten of its last twelve games against OSU, in- cluding the last four in a row. But third with 14:39 still remaining in the half. Mills spent the rest of the half on the bench. The center from Romulus contributed some big baskets before fouling out with 4:27 remaining with 8 points and 5 rebounds. The fifth foul on Mills actually appeared to be committed by Robinson "He didn't foul either," Mills said, "he hit all ball. I was just there watching. I can't believe the call. I don't believe a lot of calls made on me today." "I just can't understand," the beleaguered Mills continued. "A lot of calls came that I didn't have anything to do with. I'm going to have to watch the films and It'll probably be more frustrating once I watch it on film." "I don't think it was their strategy (to get the big men in foul trouble). My fouls weren't based on pounding the ball inside. They werei fouls off the ball or in transition." Mills played fifteen minutes and Riley saw twenty minutes of action before fouling out with 9:10 left, two rebounds and six points. Jackson led the Buckeyes with 16 points, Jamaal Brown scored fifteen points, and Perry Carter tossed in 10. Michigan coach Steve Fisher could not, as Mill's stress-inducing third foul indicated, expect to leave St. Johns Arena without serious heart- burn. Even without Mills, Michigan was able to finish the first half with a 31-30 lead. The Wolverines were able to weather the absence of Sean Higgins in their four previous vic- tories, and the absence of Mills, who finished with only 8 points and fouled out with 4:27 remaining. In addition, the loss of back-up center Eric Riley with nine minutes left in the game wasn't the telling blow in the game. "Coach told us to box out be- cause they are prone to go over the back," the Ohio State center said about the Buckeyes success in get- ting Michigan in foul trouble. Talley counted that claim by saying, "I don't think we're prone to go over the back. I think the referee could call it differently." Whether or not Michigan's own mistakes, chance, or Ohio State's tenacious play placed Michigan in that position, Michigan still bounc- ed back. Robinson, despite hitting only five of 15 shots, was there in crunch time for Michigan. In the final minutes of the game, Robinson managed to steal a three- point shot and dish an assist to Loy Vaught with 26 seconds remaining. But Vaught missed a foul shot, keeping the score at 61 all. With fourteen seconds left, Michigan intentionally fouled Mark Baker. And though the strategy paid off when Baker missed the second shot, Buckeye super-frosh Jim Jackson's tip-in gave Ohio State a 64-61 advantage. Robinson's desperation three- pointer bounced off at the end, proving that the Wolverines were skinned in many ways yesterday. Blue wins Spice up Press 1 Big Ten standings fit ' 0 by Ryan Schreiber Daily Basketball Writer EVANSTON - After Michigan's stunning upset of Ohio State February 11th, Wolverine coach Bud VanDeWege said the win for his women's basketball team was, "the biggest win of his career." He was wrong. Yesterday, Michigan defeated No. 15 Northwestern, the Big Ten's first- place team, 70-68, in an overtime thriller that left the crowd of 499 at Welsh-Ryan Arena sitting on the edges of their seats. Entering the weekend, Michigan had never won more than three' consecutive conference games. With the 61-56 win over Wisconsin Friday, their streak now stands at five. And the key to the weekend's games? Without a doubt, senior forward Resume Packages " Quality Thesis Copies - Course Packets - Fax Service " Term Paper Copies " Collating/Binding * Passport Photos " Color Copies Leslie Spicer. Spicer led all scorers in both Friday's and Sunday's contests, chipping in 20 and 22 points, respectively, to pace the Wolverines. "She should get Big Ten player of the week," VanDeWege said. "With back to back wins on the road and having 42 points on the weekend, she was just spectacular. "Leslie Spicer is playing the best basketball of her career." Spicer attributes her top-notch play of late to age more than anything else. "My senior year is the most important for me and the team," she said. "We have a lot of seniors on the team this year, and we just want to go out with a bang. "We're on a roll and we want to stay that way." Until this season, Michigan never earned the respect of teams on the road. In fact, three years ago, the Wolverines only managed two Big Ten wins on the entire season. "To tell the truth, I was actually scared when we came in here because we lost to them by 30 points at home," Spicer said. "But then I knew once we got out there, I thought, 'this team is not 30 points better than us and we are not that same team that we were in Ann Arbor.' "So with us beating this team, it gives us a little more hype and it lets us know that we can beat a team like Purdue and Iowa. It gives us confidence that we can beat a ranked team." Michigan now stands at 8-5 in the conference, 16-7 overall and staring an NCAA bid in the face. NOTICE A TEAM OF CONSULTANT-EVALUATORS FROM THE COMMISSION ON INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION OF THE NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS WILL BE VISITING THE U-M FEBRUARY 19-21, 1990 AS PART OF THE PROCESS TO RENEW THE UNIVERSITY'S ACCREDITATION. THE TEAM WILL FOCUS ON THE UNIVERSITY'S STRATEGIC PLANNING EFFORTS. OPEN MEETINGS--AT WHICH STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF CAN ADDRESS THE TEAM--HAVE BEEN SCHEDULED AS FOLLOWS. NO RESERVATIONS ARE NECESSARY. kinko's the copy center 99 C Binding i Offer applies to any of our binding styles with card stock cover at participating * Kinko's Copy Centers. Does not include copies. Not valid with any other offer. One U coupon per customer Good through April 31, 1990' Open 24 Hours Open 7 Days Open 24 Hours ' ' 540 E. Liberty Michigan Union 1220 S. 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