Page 4 -The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - November30, 1992 Blue switches styles Roberts introduces new fast break offense by Jaeson Rosenfeld Daily Basketball Writer The 1992-93 Michigan women's basketball team is laden with some familiar faces, but if you're expect- ing to see the same Wolverine team as last year, think again. New head coach Trish Roberts has migrated south to Ann Arbor from the University of Maine, and has brought with her a new look for the Wolverines. The Michigan team of old was one that depended on its half-court offense. The Wolverines were coached to bring the ball upcourt and to get it in the hands of 6-foot-2 center Trish Andrew in the post, leading to a slower tempo, ball- control game. The Wolverines new offensive philosophy is to push the ball up- court at every opportunity. "The (old) mentality was, the other team scores, (we) jog back and set-up in our half-court offense. Now it's the other team scores, grab the ball, push it up on designated fast- break and if we can't score off that then we'll go into our offense," se- nior co-captain Nikki Beaudry said. The effectiveness of the Wol- verines new "run-and-gun" offense will depend on several factors. First and foremost is the ability of Andrew, the Wolverines leading scorer last year (18.6 ppg), to adjust to the new style of play. Andrew has been very effective in the Wolverines half-court offense, but Roberts feels that Andrew will fit quite well into the new scheme. "We're running a fast break where she's the last player down the court. She has the green light to stop there and take that jump shot if she wants it. I think that's one of her strengths," Roberts said. In order for Andrew to get the ball in position to shoot a jumper on the fast break it is absolutely tan- tamount that Michigan finds a ball- handler capable of making the right decisions. This is a difficult role to fill, as the ball-handler must have the sure-handedness not to turnover the ball on the break, the quickness to cut past defenders on the way to the hoop, the vision to see the court, and the timing to know when to throw the pass. In her first collegiate game against the Finland National Team, 5-foot-8 guard Tannisha Stevens made a strongbid that she might be just the ball-handler the Wolverines are looking for. Stevens ran the court on many occasions and showed good "court sense", taking the ball to the basket and drawing fouls. "One of the bright spots this year has been Tannisha Stevens. She adds the type of quickness I'm used to in players," Roberts said. "We want to play her at point guard, but at this time we'll probably play her at the number two position. She's proba- bly our best ball-handler." In addition to Stevens, the Wolverines will depend on a pair of senior guards, Stacie McCall and Jen Nuanes, to guide the Wolverine of- fense on the fast-break. Nuanes led the Wolverines in assists last season while also averaging 11.5 points per game. McCall is one of the Wolverines' top ball-handlers, and will be called upon' to be the field general of her team at the point guard position. Michigan's corp of forwards must score points on the break, by con- verting short jumpers and layups when good passes are made by the guards. Beaudry should be a major contributor at this position, as the Roberi by Rachel Bachman Daily Basketball Writer If you're failing your eight o'clock chemistry class because you've slept through it too many times, don't complain to Trish Roberts. The new woman's basketball head coach is not fond of whiners. Considering that she worked 25 hours a week to put herself through college, while carrying a full course load and playing Division I basketball, she knows what it's like to do it the old-fashioned way. Sitting in her office on State Street, away from the glaring lights of Crisler Arena, her eyes have the same intensity as they do just before tipoff. "I look at the opportunities kids have today," she says, resting her elbows on the arms of her chair and making a steeple with her hands. "They don't realize how lucky they are." Practically "raised in church," Roberts grew up in Monroe, Ga., with her six siblings. The only one who did not go to a black college, she opted to attend and play basketball for Tennessee. "My siblings seem to think that I missed out on a lot by not going to a black university," she says. "I think they missed out, too." If nothing else, her brothers and sisters could not see her put up 30 points and take down 10 rebounds per game her senior year on her way to winning all- American honors.: With her post-college career came even more deco- ration. In tue late seventies, she was a member of the World Games team and captain of the 1978 U.S. National team. It was at the 1976 Olympic Games that Roberts took home her most prized basketball souvenir. "Winning the silver medal was my greatest mo- ment as a player," she states. After her playing career wound down, Roberts held assistant coaching positions at North Carolina, Illinois and Central Mihigan. Most recently, Roberts was at Maine, her first head coaching job. With the Black Bears, she enjoyed a 72 percent winning per- centage during her four-year tenure. "The kids there had very limited talent, but I don't think I've ever been associated with a group of young women that worked as hard," she says. "If there was a loose ball, I knew it was going to be ours." One wonders why such a suc,"essful player and 0 S brin coach would want to head a Michigan team that had only three winning seasons out of the past f9. What common thread could Roberts hope to find be- tween coaching a perennial losing team and playing in the Olympics? Precious metals. "It's a gold mine here s ,g forward. "I had my eye on this joi time ago," she continues. "There's so much this state. If we go out and sell this progra n, a. k.!i this team. I just don't think we'll be at twc botto theIN five years." With track-like conditioning workouts and a firm approach, Coach Roberts has already implemenLC some of the techniques she used at Maine. 3 "The thing that surprised me about Michigan waF the work ethic and the lack of winning attitude of tl kids," she says. "Our kids went through a very strenoi ous preseason conditioning program and they're-be ginning to see what hard work is all about. We're get ting there." Her undaunted determination lulls one into beii ing that the 'hard work equals success' equatioir always been true for Roberts. But when she first ap plied for head coaching positions, she learned tha politics can be as important as credentials. Her initial applications to schools all over thi country solicited a number of responses, one of whici was from a Big Ten school. "The response was, 'We would love to hire you as an assistant coach,"' Roberts says evenly. Thinking there had been a mistake, she called thI school's athletic director (who no longer holds position) and restated that it was the head coachti job for which she had applied. The woman saidsh( understood, but hat they wanted Roberts as an assis tant only. "She could have given me reasons why she couk not hire me as a head coach," she says, then pause and looks at her hands. "She could have said, 'Yo don't have the qualifications,' but she didn't." As a.Black coach, Roberts chooses her battle carefully, determined to work harder to offset the prej udice she encounters. "I've always felt that I had to be not only good bb better," she says matter-of-factly. Back in her playing days, she also had to deal witl Guard Jen Nuanes returns as one of the five seniors that Coach Roberts is looking to for leadership. Nuanes averaged 11.5 points per game last year. 6-foot senior averaged 9.5 points per game last year. Sophomores Carrie Stewart (3.0 ppg) and Shimmy Gray (3.9 ppg), who both saw a considerable amount of playing time in Michigan's exhi- bition against the Finland National Team, will be asked to run the court opposite Beaudry. Fellow sopho- more Molly Heikinnen also saw playing time in the season opener against Finland. Along with a new running of- fense, Roberts is also looking to implement a defensive strategy that is just as intense. Michigan, which has played a mix of man-to-man and zone defense in the past, will switch to a high-pressure man-to-man de- fense this year, looking to cause turnovers and facilitate the Wol- verines' fast break. A major factor in the effective- ness of Michigan's defense will be the stamina of the Michigan players. While zone defense allows players to rest on the defensive end, man-to- man defense coupled with a running offense should push the Wolverines' endurance to the limit. "(Man-to-man) is much more in- tense then we're used to. It's contin- uous and there is no resting on de- fense," Andrew said. "It's definitely more conducive to stopping the other team." Andrew herself was quite formidable in stopping the other team, as she was number two in the nation in blocked shots averaging nearly five per game while also lead- ing the Wolverines on the boards (9.9 rpg). It is crucial to Michigan's defense that Andrew stay out of foul trouble so that she may contain the other team inside. The importance of Andrew's pres- ence on the court is augmented by the fact that Michigan has lost four low-post players to injury. Fresh- man Jennifer Brezezinski and juniors Michelle Hall (5.2 rpg), Rhonda Jokisch and LaTara Jones will all start the season on the sidelines. "Looking at the injuries, they're all big people, so we're a little slim on the inside this year," Roberts said. "One of them is to freshman Jennifer Brezezinski who we were re- ally counting on to come in and con- tribute right away. We're hoping that she'll be back by our first or second game." Because of the loss of these in- side players and the fact that man-to- man defense does not allow for Andrew to camp out in the lane as a zone defense does, the forwards will be called upon to pull down more rebounds. In the exhibition against Finland, Gray was a force on the glass and her presence must continue. Beaudry was the team's second leading rebounder last year (6.6 rpg) and will also be called upon to hit the boards. Despite being picked to finish last in the Big Ten coaches' poll, the Wolverines have set some high goals for themselves for the season. Among them is defying the coaches by finishing in the top seven of the Big Ten and posting a winning record for the season. It seems that Roberts, listed as one of the nation's up and coming women's basketball coaches by Sports Illustrated, has alre:ady breathed life into a program that tied for last (7-21 overall, 3-15 Big '1cn) in the Big Ten last year and has qua? ified for the NCAA tournament on once since its incep, ion in 1973. "She's come in an 'already raised the program to a new le s' l," Baudry said. Conference plagued by m 0 Coaches project Hawkeyes to survive casualties by Rich Mitvalsky Daily Basketball Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Injuries. Vi- vian Stringer's top-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes. These two topics domi- nated conversation between coaches at the fourth annual Women's Big Ten Basketball Luncheon. And for most of their preseason training, many Big Ten teams have tried to figure out just how to eliminate both burdens. The primary encumbrance staring directly in the faces of most the Big Ten coaches are their respective in- jury reports. Virtually all conference squads have suffered some, if not significant, losses thus far in train- ing. And the cause seems to remain a mystery. "Well I just got my injury report back ycsterday, and 10 of my 15 players had something significant enough to put on the injury list," Wisconsin coach Mary Murphy said. "Wly' I don't know. We just hope to have t a people to go five on five in practice." Badger Barb Franke, preseason a-American honorable mention, and last season's Freshman of the ; eu is lost for the season because a torn anterior cruciate ligament her right knee. And although Michigan first-year coach Trish Roberts may be a stranger to the league, her injury reports seem to match all too well those of the other Big Ten coaches. "Right now, we have four players who are injured, and of those four we don't know when they'll be back." all the trainers, sports psychologist) nutritionists, sexologists, and eyei one telling me why they're injured This is a big joke. But we've ply in the shoes before, so now they4- saying the treads are a little woin and this and that. But I don't buy They've been playing in worn. hoe all their lives, and those are str kids." The cause of rash of injuries. not be as elusive as it seems., season, each Big Ten team:sa forced to start practice two we later than in years past because Qf new mandate. Consequentl coaches conference-wide were pet haps squeezing too much training' to too small a time slot, and the w and tear may have become evi in the player's bodies. "I am not happy that the season i beginning so soon this year,' Roberts said. "We definitely -cou4 have used the extra two weets prepare. With all of our injuries. don't think we're ready to play jug yet." In a preseason poll announced the Tipoff Luncheon, confers coaches selected Stringer's-I Hawkeyes as the unanimous favdri to win its 12th Big Ten women basketball title. And while othe coaches were quick to talk ua- talented Iowa squad, Stringer won'* have no part in that. "We're at the point where wba got to ignore what happens in ih poll," Stringer said. "I think the-y j vote us number one every year, it amazes me how they come with that. I think they just do itbo cause they think 'OK this is somi thing we just have to do.' The-othe may have placed us there, but the don't intend for us to finish there." Surprisingly, however, were.tb varying degrees to which some, the coaches approved the Big Ten' recently implemented gender-equit proposal, mandating a balancedr of participation between men's women's athletics 'We have two people out with back injuries, and I don't buy a lot of the reasons that our trainers are giving.' -Vivian Stringer Iowa basketball coach Wolverines Michelle Hall (foot surgery), LaTara Jones (injuries to both knees), and Rhonda Jokisch (shoulder surgery) help comprise Michigan's injured reserve list, and are all players in whom Roberts hoped to rely in strengthening Michigan's inside game. "We haven't got to the point where all of the coaches have got .,-. -n"A ,... -1 Aot..na e acnn a sili:i