Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - December 7, 1992 BASKETBALL NOTEBOO K Duke enters war of words with Michigan by Andy De Korte Daily Basketball Writer DURHAM, N.C. - Although so-called trash talking is a long- standing basketball tradition, Michigan's brash Fab Five, Chris Web- ber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson brought the issue to the forefront last season. Since then, the NCAA passed a new rule giving officials the authority to assess technical fouls for excessive verbosity. Last season, against Duke, Webber had numerous tete-a-tete with current Minnesota Timberwolf Christian Laettner. Naturally, one would wonder how interactive the Wolverines would be with Duke's new big man - Cherokee Parks. The talk took on a new perspective this year, pre-game and post- game. Webber interjected the Wolverines would beat the Blue Devils even if they brought back Laettner as well as reportedly saying all-American Bobby Hurley could not guard Rose. "I try not to think about it," Hurley said of opponents' talk. "I save my energy for the game. I can't do anything about what they say so I work on the court." About Michigan's confidence, Hurley said, "To a point it's good, but it can be bad. I think maybe they were overconfident. Like when they were down eight with four minutes to play, they thought they could come back and maybe they did come out and work for it." While Hurley did not have anything to say against the Wolverines, Parks had a clip full of fodder. "We knew what we had to do, we know we're a good team," Parks said, before adding a comment mocking Michigan's proclamation last April that the Fab Five was out to avenge UNLV's loss to Duke in 1991. "Last year, they were trying to win the Final Four for UNLV, and feed the children or whatever it was. Same thing tonight, they were mak- ing hype. 'We're looking for revenge for last year, because they stole the championship from us.' Well they only scored 20 points in the second half. We didn't steal anything from them. We earned it." SENIORITIS: Before the game, one of Michigan's biggest assets was supposed to be its bench. In limited action, the four seniors posted dis- appointing numbers. Rob Pelinka, James Voskuil, Michael Talley, and Eric Riley combined for two points on 1-for-5 shooting. Pelinka tallied the lone score. HOW BIG IS IT?: Despite not receiving network television coverage, -the Duke vs. Michigan contest drew considerable national attention. The game is only the second nationally-syndicated game in history. A school-record 220 media credentials were given out for the game, in- cluding 75 TV passes. CAMERON CRAZIES: Duke's 'Victors': Hail, to the state school choosers/ Hail, to the sophomore losers/ Hail, Hail to Michigan/ The cesspool of the West. Hail to the slam dunk players/ Hail, to the two-year players/ Hail, Hail to Michigan/ We're not finished yet. Hail, to the Fab Five criers/ Hail, to the champions...Not!! Hail, Hail, to Michigan/ The bastards of the West. Bonfire of the Crazies Cameron faithful save vintage performance for Blue . by Ken Davidoff Daily Basketball Writer DURHAM, N.C. - Fundamen- tally speaking, a Duke basketball game cannot exist without mention of college hoops' best crowd. As always, the Duke student body got in its shots against the opposition. But the effects of their tactics were debated between the two clubs. As soon the Wolverines took the practice court for the first time, the fans got right to work. "Oh no, not Rice!" registered as the first coher- ent insult. Chants of "Safety school!" "We want Rice" and "AAU!" soon followed. As the scoreboard flashed "1992 National Champions," the Blue Devil faithful wanted to insure that the Michigan squad took a glance. "Scoreboard!" they chanted. Then, twisting their bodies, they alternated cheers at Duke and Michigan, yelling "Champions!" when they faced the former and "NOT!" to- wards the latter. Not quiteconvinced that the Wolverines understood that Duke had won the last two national cham- pionships, and that Michigan hadn't, the Duke loyalists announced, "We've got banners!" That seemed to settle any remaining debate. Perhaps the pinnacle of the pregame treatment occurred when the Wolverines were introduced. It seems a Michigan graduate student who went to Duke as an undergrad took advantage of his double-agent status to cause trouble. In a letter to the Duke Chronicle, Erland Stevens revealed each of the Fab Five's nicknames. He urged Duke fans to "please use/exploit/abuse the names as you see fit." So, when Chris Webber was in- troduced, the Duke crowd gladly shouted, "Hi, Truth." Similarly friendly introductions went out to Money (Ray Jackson), Big Nook (Juwan Howard), Jim Jam (Jimmy King) and Jinx (Jalen Rose). This didn't faze the Wolverines, and ac- cording to them, the crowd was not a factor in the entire contest. "The crowd was what I ex- pected," Rose said. "They were loud, but it's nothing we've never been through before. We were able to block that out." "They have a real good crowd," Webber said. "I don't want to take everything away from them. But we thrive on that. I don't think they were the edge that put them (Duke) over." Despite the Wolverines' claims, they only managed to convert four of 11 free throw attempts. The Duke fans have a wide selection of free throw distraction strategies, and they operated in midseason form. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski appreciated the effort invested by the people in attendance. "I want to thank our crowd for being so positive for Duke," he said. "They responded in absolutely unbe- lievable fashion, and it makes me proud to be the coach of Duke where the sixth man performs at that level." Coach K's point guard Bobby Hurley concurred. "The crowd was great for us," he said. "There were a lot of times when we need that lift, and they provide it for us." When the game ended, the crowd, some of whom had canped outside Cameron fer over a week to get into the game, sang its traditional farewell, "Na na na na, hey hey," and ran outside for a victory bonfire. The Cameron Crazies relished in victory, but they knew in the back of their minds that the next victim was not far away. " Michigan's Chris Webber dejectedly watches the finish of the Wolverines' 79-68 loss to Duke Saturday. DUKE Continued from page 1 from the free-throw line, 21-for-25 to Michigan's 4-for- 11, as well as besting them in turnovers, 11-19. "We talked before the season started about making sure we got turnovers down and got free throws up, two areas that we didn't do a good enough job in," Michi- gan coach Steve Fisher said. "We were four of 11 at free throws. One, we have to make them and two, we have to get more. We turned the ball over too much." Indeed, two of their first three possessions ended in missed opportunities - an eerie foreshadowing of the rest of the game. The most critical stretch of the game occurred be- tween 11:54 and 7:48 of the second half. Grant Hill hit a 14-foot jumper to extend Duke's lead to 58-44, equal- ing its largest of the game. Michigan stormed back, cut- ting the deficit to 58-50, keyed by two Juwan Howard baskets and an a Jimmy King lay-up assisted by Howard. King led all Wolverines with 20 points. Then at 9:30, James Voskuil took a charge from Grant Hill, his fourth foul. With Duke's most dominat- ing player of the game sitting down, Michigan seemed poised to continue its rush but two more turnovers were followed by a Hurley three-pointer. "I thought Hurley was Hurley, he always seems to come up big. He came up probably with the biggest bucket of the game when it was 58-52," Krzyzewski said. "They were outplaying us and we were in foul trouble, and I thought they were wearing us down." The Duke frontcourt certainly has not been known to wither in yesteryear, but all-American Christian Laet- tner left his post for the NBA and the role fell to an un- proven Cherokee Parks. While Krzyzewski was pleased with the play of his sophomore big man, Fisher was content with his team's limiting Parks to 15 points and three rebounds. During the first half particularly, Chris Webber and Eric Riley both got the better of Parks in fierce competition. "I told Cherokee after the game, 'Welcome to the big time,' Krzyzewski said. "I-know someone is going to say that was not a pretty game. You're damn right it wasn't a pretty game ... when you put all those athletes out there it's tough to score. That's where Thomas (Hill, who scored a game-high 21 points) was really good for us because he made some very difficult shots. He wanted it badly and that determination showed." After Michigan lost the national championship game, 71-51, players and fans focused on the next time tle teams would meet. Although the next game's date is npt certain, the desire for a rematch had built before the bleachers coud clear. "I hope to see them one more time deep into the tournament. When you lose and you expected to win - and we expected to come in here and win - it's hard," Fisher said. "Its frustrating its disappointing, but life MOMENTUM Continued from page 1 one flash of brilliance to overcome the two-time defending national champions in their backyard. Momentum ranks as one of the more mystical aspects of sport. It's not like Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski wrote "Saturday, De- cember 5, 10:02 p.m.: Have mo- mentum ... tape 'Saturday Night Lives..." on his daily planner. So how come momentum didn't pay a spontaneous visit to the Wolverines Saturday night? The theories abound. "When you're trying to make a run, your shots just gotta keep falling in," Rose explained after the game. "For whatever reasons, we would get on that run, and then a shot wouldn't fall in." Duke center Cherokee Parks in- sisted that his squad did the "little things" - like trying to knock the ball out of rebounders' hands and taking charges - that prevented Michigan from gaining the Big Mo. "We knew that if we could get 'em down like that, that was gonna take 'em," Parks said, "because they're a team that, if you get a cou- ple blows in, they kind of sink really fast. We just never let down." Duke small forward Grant Hill said: "I think a combination of us playig ghard, good defense and the cro °& l ' deprived Michigan of domi- naii nriods. Credit Hill with the cliche explanation. Blue Devil point guard Hurley added: "I think we got back on tran- sition and we kind of neutralized Webber." A more technical explana- tion from the player who looks like he belongs in a science class. All valid arguments. But all of them comoined still don't tell the whole story. Free throws should be regarded pected, considering it was only the second game of the season for both clubs. The turnover count? 11 for Duke, 19 for Michigan. Momentum will not happen un- der these circumstances. There's still plenty of time for the Wolverines to work on their 'We knew that if we could get 'em down like that, that was gonna take 'em, because they're a team that, if you get a couple blows in, they kind of sink really fast. We just never let down.' - Cherokee Parks Duke center as automatic. When a team is in the middle of a rally, a missed foul shot can suck the life out of it. Michigan attempted 11 free throws for the entire game and made a paltry four. Duke? Twenty-one out of 25. Turnovers simply must be avoided if a team hopes to prevail victorious. Some sloppiness was ex- flaws. Despite the tremendous hype given to this contest, it's still only Dec. 7. Two down, about 30 to go. But the Big Blue will disappoint this year if it does not run into the Big Mo mo' often. The Wolverines may not be able to make an ap- pointment with the ambiguous char- acter, but they can certainly be more receptive to its arrival. 0 MICHIGAN (68) FG FT Rob. Min. M-A MA O-T A F Pts. Jackson 20 39 1-3 3-4 1 4 7 Webber 33 7-13 0-0 4-11 6 4 14 Howard 33 4-9 2-4 1-6 3 4 10 King 38 9-18 0-2 2-4 3 3 20 Rose 35 7-15 1-2 2-6 1 2 15 Riley 14 0-0 0-0 1-4 0 2. 0 Pelinka 12 1-4 0-0 1-3 2 1 2 Talley 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Voskuil 10 0-1 0-0 0-2 0 1 0 Fife 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Total 20031-69 4-1117-441622 68 FG%- .449. FT%- .364. Three-point goals: 2- 12,_167 (King 2-6, Rose 0-3, Pelinka 0-2, Webber 0-1). Team rebounds: 4. Blocks: 6 (Webber 3, Jackson, Howard, Riley). Turnovers: 19 (Rose 4, Jackson 3, Riley 3, King 3, Voskuil 3, Howard 2, Webber). Steals: 3 (Rose 2, King). Technical fouls: none. 0 x ,:: >, I 1W' i