The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 11,1990- Page 11 Women take on Hurons FU COURT Blue women not LL PRESS WI.;dealt full house by David Schechter Daily Basketball Writer In the last two games played, the Michigan women's basketball sam's train has derailed. The Wolverines hope to get back on track tonight against Eastern Michi- gan University. After opening the season with impressive play, Michigan has be- gun to slouch, dropping three games in a row. The Michigan offense is sputtering, while opposing offenses have begun to expose weaknesses on #e, other end of the floor. Tonight's game will be another test for the once-optimistic team, as the Wolverines aim to turn the tide against the Hurons. Eastern promises to keep Michi- gan guessing by throwing a variety of defensive sets at the Wolverines. "Defensively they give you full court pressure, half court pressure, and they'll come at you for forty 0 mutes," Michigan coach Bud anDeWege said. It was that type of varied pressure that gave the Wolverines such a hard time against Central Michigan and Youngstown State. "We're going to have to show our ability to come down the floor and break the press for some baskets, and get into a half court offense and be productive," VanDeWege said. 0 Offensively, EMU launches a consistent quick attack, utilizing ball movement and the offensive skills of point guard Tonya Watson (12.5 points per game). The Wolverines will need to implement stronger de- fense to contain the Hurons. Containment has been a problem for Michigan, and Saturday's game against Youngstown State demon- Wated that. "We just couldn't guard anyone against Youngstown," VanDeWege said. "That was one of our prob- lems." VanDeWege doesn't believe his team's slump is a result of poor play by any one player, but rather is a team problem. Defensively, he hopes for improvement from the point guard position, and the inside Defense. by Matthew Dodge Daily Basketball Writer During most Michigan women's basketball home games, Crisler Arena is empty. So empty that the Michigan athletic department tried to banish the team to the intimate confines of Varsity Arena. So empty that the total combined attendance for ev- ery home game over the last two seasons - with an average of 449 fans per game - would not fill Crisler Arena. So empty that most fans save the two bucks for a Coke by reaching over the bench to borrow the Wolver- ines' Absopure water bottles. Well, it's not that bad - but it often seems as if Michigan and its opponents have been quarantined as if they had some disease. The Wolverine women seem to have been shunned for having caught the epidemic of basketball, and that is quite a shame. Many basketball fans live in a cave of ignorance when it comes to the women's game. Regretfully, the preconceptions of too many fans claim that the women's game is inferior - so why bother seeing them play? Here are four reasons: To provide motivation. College women's basketball players have generally spent their careers accustomed to the silence. They have learned to accept the apathy. But this can make the oc- casional roar of the crowd seem that much more intense and exhilarating. "It just elevates the games," frosh guard Yeshimbra Gray said. "You really know you're being watched. It's just an emotional charge." Sophomore Trish Andrew agreed. "I get excited with a lot of fans. It doesn't matter if they're for or against you. At the NCAAs last year, all the fans were against us. But it was nice to know that they were there to sup- port women's basketball." To prove the athletic department wrong. This summer, plans were made to move the team to the cramped Varsity Arena. This eviction fell through because of several limitations - the greatest of which is size. The team would have had more room to play if it had cleared the tables and chairs out of the West Quad cafeteria and set up two Nerf hoops. Why should the women's team be forced to leave Crisler while the men - who have yet to sell out this year's MSU game - get the place all to themselves? The departmenit would have dragged the women's squad down Hoover Street anyway, except for one bu- reaucratic mishap. The maintenance crew had laid down the entire basketball court in Varsity Arena before it re- alized that there would be no room for an out-of-bounds area. Good thinking, guys. Almost as intelligent as the idea to move the team in the first place. "I am glad we didn't go to Varsity. I would have felt degraded," captain Carol Szczechowski said. "I want to keep working to fill Crisler. Other teams expect to play here, and this is our home court. So why change the setting just because we have less fans? It is degrading to put us in what is essentially a high school gym." To see a rising program. Last season, Michigan made its first-ever NCAA tournament appearance. This success would normally be expected to bring out hordes of curious, converted fans, but the experience has taught the Wolverines to wait and see. "I would only hope that because we are a better team, we'd get more people here," Gray said. "But I just don't know." As Michigan wrapped up its best regular season in memory last March, the fans stayed away. The atten- dance for the final two home games of the year were 384 and 423, which were close to the season average of 376. "It will be interesting to see if we get more this year," junior Leah Wooldridge said. "I'm sure winning will help." It is the right thing to do. "People have just not become interested yet," Szczechowski said. "The people are at home, but they are not apt to go out to the game. They have stereo- types. Women's basketball is not like it was in the past. But if they don't get out to see us, then they as- sume the stereotypes are true. "We are doing what we can to make it interesting. We can't dunk, and we won't be able to for a long time - and that is what attracts crowds. "You would think that older women who go to men's games would drag their husbands to the women's games. They should want to see the new opportunities that they never had. But they are just accepting the mainstream. They should be happy to see women's basketball. It has to start from there." And it has to start now. Wolverine Jennifer Nuanes chases a loose ball in last week's game against Central Michigan. Michigan travels to Eastern Michigan tonight. At the point, Stacie McCall and Leah Wooldridge will be called on for greater offensive production and defensive stops, while the shooting guards, Char Durand and Jennifer Nuances, must make similar im- provements. Forward LaTara Jones saw her first significant minutes against Youngstown and may get the call again against the Hurons. "She'll be a factor, because she's playing physical inside," Van- DeWege said. Win or lose tonight, the Wolver- ines will take some time off before their December 22 game against the University of Toledo. The recent three-game slide has given clear indi- cation of what needs to be worked where we need to, and emphasis dif- ferent things," VanDeWege said. "No matter what happens tomorrow, you're gonna see a different team." Michigan plays some difficult games during the winter break. The Wolverines will face the University of Toledo, the University of Wis- consin-Milwaukee, and Michigan State. The Spartans will be the Wolver- ines' first Big Ten opponent. Van- DeWege hopes a concentration on fundamentals will set his team in the right direction in all the games dur- ing the holiday season. 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