Page 6-The Michigan Daily -Sports Monday - December 7,1992 *FULL COURT- PRESS Michigan's recruiting should start at home by Jaeson Rosenfeld Daily Basketball Writer TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - There are two ways that people refer to Terre Haute. Some people call it a "hick town." Those with a little more tact refer to it as "a place with a lot of character." In the center of Terre Haute is the Hulman Center, home of the Indiana State Sycamores. Hulman is the place where legend Larry Bird once graced the court, drilling jump shot after jump shot. The '1979 national finalist' banner still hangs in Hulman, directly across the build- ing from the American flag. And the name of Terre Haute's favorite son still rings in the build- ing, and probably will forever. But now Larry is gone, and so are the packed houses. On Saturday night, a crowd of only 521 fans gathered for the women's game, a matchup be- tween Michigan and the Sycamores, but the lack of numbers didn't stop them from having fun. The band not only played, but they sang, even taking a request yelled out by some fraternity brothers in the stands. Nick Hester picked himself up a cool 11 bucks at halftime in the "dash for cash." And a quartet of ball girls ran around the court at halftime executing their fastbreak with almost as much efficiency as Michigan had in a pitiful 22-point first-half performance. After the ball girls yielded the court. to the Sycamores, a local pizza joint kept the fans en- tertained with a little giveaway. Each time Indi- ana State sank a three-pointer, the P.A. an- nouncer turned around and flung a frisbee into the stands with a coupon for a free pizza taped to the underside. Now if the Ballyhoo Pizza King is a looking for a pizza queen, they need look no further than junior guard Hazel Olden. Four times Olden saw daylight from three- point land. Four times Olden threw up a rainbow from 20 feet. Four times the ball ripped through nothing but net, rewarding the Sycamore fans with free eats. But Olden's performance on Saturday was hardly one-side , as she scored 27 points, pulled down four rebounds, dished out five assists and stole the ball from Michigan on four occasions. This sounds like something from Hoosiers, right? Olden, a small-town farm girl from Somewheresville, Ind., taking on a nationally known school and beating them. But Olden isn't from Somewheresville, or even French Lick. She's from Detroit. That's right, Detroit. Which begs the question, "How did this hap- pen?" What could have drawn Olden to Terre Haute, a town where gun racks are a more popular op- tion on trucks than power steering. "I wasn't really heavily recruited out of high school," Olden said, when asked why she chose Indiana State. Just minutes earlier she had helped her team beat Michigan, a school located less than an hour from her home. Coach Trish Roberts has a lot of big dreams for Michigan's women basketball team. She wants to turn the team into a national power, a school that can compete with Stanford and Vir- ginia. But if she is to reach that goal, the Hazel Oldens can't keep slipping through the cracks. It shouldn't be that hard. Hazel Olden should want to be a Wolverine. And the Ballyhoo Pizza King frisbee can't be a more powerful recruiting tool than the academics and facilities of Michi- gan. Last month, Michigan's Ms. Basketball, Erica Reed gave her commitment to play for Iowa next year. And who can blame her? Iowa has the best program in the Big Ten, and one of the best in the country. Who wants to play for a team like Michigan, that has struggled to keep its head above water? t f '1 , 01 There is no doubt that Roberts has a difficult task in front of her in convincing Michigan re- cruits to stay at home. But her success as a coach 2 will depend on how well she recruits. And if she wants to beat Iowa in recruiting, she'll have to beat Indiana State first. Nikki Beaudry and the Wolverines fell to Indiana State, 79-68, this weekend. Injured Jet inspires 24-17 upset of Bills -1{i.. Y' r+4 WOMEN Continued from page 1 court, the defense disintegrated un- der the post. "We try and get penetration to get an open jump shot. Once our shooters get in there, they can hit it from three-point or two-point terri- tory," Riek said. The Sycamores were successful from both areas. Michigan suffered through a 5 1/2-minute scoring dry spell near the end of the first half. After a pair of three-pointers by ISU junior guard Hazel Olden, the Wolverines headed into the lockerroom at half- time with a 19-point deficit. The key thing was we got a very slow start," Roberts said. "First half, we didn't execute and our shots weren't falling." A bright spot for Michigan was the play of senior forward Nikki Beaudry, who led Michigan with 20 points. Beaudry was 3-for-4 from the free-throw line during the first half; and was 10 of 14 overall. The Wolverines showed marked improvement in their free-throw shooting over recent games, knock- ing down 16 of 22 (73 percent) as a team. Beaudry also took command of the post for the first time this year. "I decided that I was being too passive, so I started posting up and calling for the ball more," Beaudry said. With Michelle Hall and Shimmy Gray out with injuries, Michigan needed Beaudry to do just that. "We are thin on numbers (of players) that we have. Hopefully next week we'll have another post player," Roberts said of the possibil- ity of Hall or Gray returning. With the second half came the Hazel Olden Show. The Detroit na- tive sunk shots from all over the court, including the foul line. She finished with 27 points, and hit all four of her three-point attempts. "I don't set out to shoot the threes, but I figure if I'm going to score I might as well try from out there," Olden said. "As far as my shooting goes, I think I have more luck with threes than twos.". Not to be upstaged by Olden's performance, the Wolverines picked up the pace late in the game. An- drew broke through the Sycamore defense and settled down to score 17 second-half points. With 5:11 left in the game, the Wolverines made one final run. Af- ter jumpers by Andrew and sopho- more guard Molly Heikkinen, Beaudry was fouled and made both shots to cut the Sycamores' lead to 12. A few minutes later, Beaudry again hit from the foul line. Senior guard Jen Nuanes hit a three-pointer with 2:17 remaining to pull Michi- gan within nine, the team's narrow- est margin of the half. In the end, Michigan could not dig itself out of its first-half bole. "Not to discredit them, but we beat ourselves in the first half," Beaudry said. "We took ourselves out of the game." MICHIGAN (68) FG FT Rob. Min. M-A M-A O-T A F Pts. Stewart 25 1-6 2-2 1-5 1 2 4 Beaudry 37 5-10 10.14 6-14 0 5 20 Andrew, 37 8-21 3-4 6-14 1 4 19 McCall 20 0-5 0-0 2-5 1 2 0 Nuanes 36 4-12 0-0 0-5 3 3 9 Stevens 28 4-14 1-2 2-2 2 5 10 Heikkinen 17 3-6 0-0 6-8 3 1 6 Stanley 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 25-74 16-22 21-49 11 22 68 FG%- .338. FT%- .727. Three-point goals: 2-9, .222 (Nuanes 1-5, Stevens 1-4). Team rebounds: 3. Blocks: 5 (Andrew 4, Beaudry). Turnovers: 19 (Stevens 6, McCall 4, Beaudry 3, Heikkinen 3, Nuanes 2, Andrew). Steals: 11 (Stevens 5, Nuanes 3, Andrew 2, Beaudry). Technical fouls: Nuanes. INDIANA STATE (79) FO FT Rob. Mn. M-A M-A O-T A F Pts. Frye 16 3-4 3-4 2-4 0 2 9 Stewart 30 3-8 2-4 2-7 0 5 8 Hamilton 29 4-11 2-3 4-7 1 4 10 Walker 28 1-3 5-8 1-3 3 1 7 Olden 37 9-18 5-6 1-4 5 0 27 Mangen 20 3-4 0-0 0-5 0 3 6 James 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Simms 16 3-6 0-2 0-2 0 3 6 Hester 13 3-6 0-2 3-7 0 2 6 Conn 7 0-4 0-2 1-2 0 0 0 Totals 200 2964 17-31 16-47 9 21 79 FG%- .453. FT%- .548. Three-point goals: 4-4, 1.000 Olden 4-4. Team rebounds: 5. Blocks: 1 (Hester). Turnovers: 21 (Olden 7, Mangen 5, Walker 3, Hester 2, Hamilton 2, Stewart, Frye). Steals: 5 (Olden 4, Hester). Technical fouls: none. Michigan ................. 22 46 - 68 Indiana State...... 41 38 - 79 At Hulman Center; A-521 Associated Press Dennis Byrd had to like what he saw. Byrd, the New York Jets defensive end who was partially paralyzed in last week's game, sat in a hospital room in New York yesterday. On television, he watched his teammates rise up and break a 10-game slide against the Buffalo Bills. Safety Brian Washington's 23- yard interception return for a touchdown with 1:41 remaining lifted the Jets past the Bills 24-17. The biggest lift had come from Byrd via a conference call with his teammates earlier in the week. "He didn't want any of us to play scared," Washington said. "He wanted us to go out and play hard, and that's what we did." After the victory, in which the Jets forced three turnovers in the final two minutes, Byrd spoke by telephone with his teammates. "He said he just wishes he was here," said defensive end Marvin Washington, Byrd's roommate for road games. "And he was." The visiting Jets (4-9) got scoring runs of 9 and 1 yards from Brad Baxter, who rushed for 98 yards. Buffalo (9-4) has lost its last two games to heavy AFC East underdogs. The Bills got 116 yards rushing from Thurman Thomas, but they couldn't take advantage of a strong wind at their back in the final minutes. "They played very inspired football - hard, tough football," Bills linebacker Darryl Talley said of the Jets. "They played a hell of a game." Packers 38, Lions 10 At Milwaukee, the Packers (7- 6) scored five first-half touchdowns on a snow-covered field for their fourth successive win, the first time in eight years they've had such a streak. Brett Favre passed for three touchdowns and Tony Bennett returned a fumble 18 yards for another score. Green Bay led 35-10 at the half, the most points the Packers have scored in a half since 1983. Detroit (3-10) fumbled five times in the first half, losing two, and had eight for the game, losing four. Detroit's Barry Sanders gained 114 yards, joining Eric Dickerson, Tony Dorsett and Earl Campbell as the only players to rush for 1,000 yards in each of their first four NFL seasons. Steelers 20, Seahawks 14 At Pittsburgh, Barry Foster rushed for 125 yards for his his 10th 100-yard game of the season. His 4-yard touchdown run with 2:22 to play gave the Steelers (10- 3) the best record in the AFC. Pittsburgh overcame five inter- ceptions and a broken leg suffered by Neil O'Donnell for its ninth consecutive victory at home, 6-0 this season, and fourth in a row overall. O'Donnell fractured his right fibula while trying to elude a third-quarter sack. Bubby Brister came on, was intercepted twice but drove Pittsburgh 80 yards on 13 plays for Foster's decisive score. Seattle (2-11) did not get a point off any of the interceptions, three by Eugene Robinson. Eagles 28, Vikings 17 At Philadelphia, Randall Cun- ningham, the NFL's all-time scrambling leader, broke out for the first time this season. le ran 16 times for 121 yards and two touchdowns, his best running game since Nov. 4, 1990. Cunningham also completed 16 of 23 passes for 164 yards. Herschel Walker gained 44 yards on 13 carries in his first game against Minnesota since being released by the Vikings in June. Andy Harmon had three of five sacks for Philadelphia (8-5). The loss prevented the Vikings (9-4) from clinching the NFC Central title and a playoff spot. Browns 37, Bengals 21 At Cleveland, Eric Metcalf, in his first appearance before his father, former NFL running back- kick returner Terry Metcalf, gained 210 all-purpose yards. He rushed for 53 yards, returned five punts for 75 yards, had a 9-yard kickoff return and caught six passes for 73 yards, with a 35- yard touchdown pass from Bernie Kosar that started the Browns' 21- point third quarter in a span of 95 seconds. Kosar, in his second game back from a broken ankle, completed 19 of 23 passes for 239 yards and two touchdowns. Cleveland (7-6) beat Cincinnati (4-9) for only the second time in the last eight meetings. Colts 6, Patriots 0 At Foxboro, Mass., before only 19,429 fans, the smallest crowd in the NFL this year, Dean Biasucci's field goals of 30 and 48 yards in a swirling wind were the only points. The Colts (6-7) got their first shutout in 69 games. .Lt ., ~a ,. '"a. Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback Randall Cunningham tries to scramble away from Minnesota Vikings' defensive tackle John Randle in the Eagles' 28-17 victory Sunday. 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