Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Sports Tuesday- January 19, 1993 by Ken Sugiura Daily Basketball Wi Nineteen feet, n seem all that far. An cialists James Voski it probably seems a 1 Watch them in pregame shoot, and3 most of the Wolves threes one after anoth But put the shot game, and suddenl shooting the three - for that matter - ct much harder shot t ies, the pressure of legs - whatever th the same as in practi Sometimes, thout and the hoop looks tale's mouth, and w] finds twine. Saturday's romp found Voskuil as w in such a state, whil King had troubles g drop. "Right now, I' too much when I g learning to co Pelinka said. The senior was errant on triter his only attempt from three-point range ine inches doesn't and is 0-for-1993, a collective 0-for-7 id to three-point spe- streak over five games. King, after a uil and Rob Pelinka, solid 3-for-7 night against Indiana, lot closer. missed each of his five three-point tries practice, or in the Saturday. you'll see them - and Voskuil, on the other hand, trying to rines - knock down put behind memories of his last second- her. miss against Indiana last Tuesday, canned into the context of a both of his three-point attempts and added y, something about a free throw to finish with seven points. - or any other shot And after batting .250 against the hanges. It becomes a Hoosiers (1-for-4), Webber connected on D make. Flying bod- three of four three-point attempts. the game, or heavy "I've been good on my three-pointers e reason - it's not since the beginning of the season," Web- ce. ber said Saturday. "In the Indiana game, I gh, everything clicks didn't make them and people started say- the size of Dick Vi- ing, 'That's a bad shot. You shouldn't hatever is hoisted up take it.' "That's not a bad shot. I can make p over Notre Dame that shot," he continued. "I've just got to ell as Chris Webber make them like I have been." e Pelinka and Jimmy It sounds easy - I've just got to vetting their shots to make them like I have been - but it ob- viously is a little more difficult. And n thinking about it perhaps more so, thinks coach Steve o up for my shot," Fisher, for his two bombardiers. unt by threes "Sometimes when you know you're only gonna get a limited number of shots, you press that much harder to make them," Fisher said following the game. "It's human nature." The numbers would seem to bear Fisher out. Last season, when he aver- aged under one three-point attempt per game, Pelinka shot .320. In his senior year in high school, when Pelinka was the focus of his team's offense, he shot 207 threes - 90 more than he has shot in his three and a half seasons at Michi- gan. Playing with the confidence he would get to take plenty of shots, he hit at a 41 percent clip, 90 points higher than his average last season. That Pelinka has re- gressed as a shooter is not a particularly logical explanation. To coin a phrase, a shooter shoots, and the more he shoots, the better he'll do. But, as Pelinka puts it, he and Voskuil are "there for the scraps," so the shots don't come around as often. "They're (Pelinka and Voskuil) prob- ably not even going to get 10 shots," Fisher said. "So they've just gotta know when they step up and it's their shot - 'Shoot it,' and don't worry about re- sults." But results are what count, and if the results aren't coming, then as Fisher says, it's human nature to press. Which leaves us with Rob Pelinka trying not to press and at the same time free himself from his shooting doldrums. "In practice he just shoots 'em all in, so he's just gotta get on a roll," Voskuil said. Make no mistake about one thing, though. If there's one thing that isn't a problem, for either Pelinka or Voskuil, it's confidence. Both were big scorers in high school, and each seems to possess a scorer's swagger that would make "White Men Can't Jump" hero Billy Hoyle wince. "I felt my stroke has been going good, against Indiana it was good and against Kansas as well," Voskuil said. "So I don't think my stroke's off at all. I never did and I won't admit to it ever be- ing off." "I'm gonna have a hot game probably one game or two games down the road," Pelinka said. "We're both great shooters and we're gonna do fine." The anatomy of the dunk 0 IRISH Continued from page 1 and tried to take advantage of it as best as I could." Howard's play in the first half al- lowed the Wolverines to enjoy any sort of advantage going into the in- termission. The 6-foot-9 sophomore carried his struggling teammates by scoring 14 points on 6-for-8 shooting from the field. "I am feeling comfortable out there," Howard said. "Now I have the confidence in my game. When the guys come to me, I feel I can score." MacLeod had nothing but praise for the Wolverine center who fin- ished the contest with 18 points. "We hoped their big men would- n't shoot so well," MacLeod said. "In the first half, when Juwan Howard shot, he had great rotation. Then in the second half, he still had it. He got hot and then you have to cover him and other guys get on a roll." While Michigan's offense was searching for its range, the Wolver- ines defense managed to contain Notre Dame's most dangerous player, Monty Williams. The senior who was averaging 18.7 points per game coming into Saturday scored just two points, on free throws, in the first stanza and finished with six points. He left the game with a sprained left ankle midway through the second half. The ineffectiveness of Williams only seemed to magnify the Irish's lack of depth. Yet even in defeat the Irish gained some valuable experi- ence, Hoover said. "We played well in the first half and I think that gives us a lot of confidence for the rest of the sea- son," Hoover said. "Hopefully we can come back, get Monty back healthy and see what we can do against Butler (the Irish's next op- ponent)." NOTRE DAME (55) PG FT Rb Min. M-A M-A Russell 30 2-4 0-0 M. Williams 28 2-9 2-2 Cozen 22 3-6 0-0 Taylor 29 3-9 0-0 1- 13 6 Hoover 33 6-14 7-8 04402 Justice 10 0-0 0-0 Jon Ross 21 3-5 0-1 Joe Ross 11 0-0 0-0 1- 12 0 J. Williams 11 1-4 0-0 Boyer 5 0-0 0-0 Rob. O-T 1-7 0-2 0-3 1-5 0-4 0-0 2-5 1-2 0-0 _0-2__ A 3 3 0 1 4 1 0 1 0 Q_ F 2 1 1 3 0 t 4 2 1 i_ Pts. 4 6 8 6 23 0 6 0 2 _0 Tetala 200 2051 9-11 10-37 13 16 55 FG%- .392. FT%- .818. Three-point goals: 6-15.,.400 (Hoover 4.9, Cozen 2-2, M. Williams 0-3, Taylor 0-1). Team rebounds: 7. Blocks: 3 (Joe Ross, Russell, M. Williams). Turnovers: 27 (Hoover 6, Cozen 4, Russell 4, Taylor 4, M. Williams 3, Boyer 2, Joe Ross, Jon Ross, J. Williams, team). Steals: 5 (Taylor 2, Hoover, Joe Ross, J. Williams). Technical fouls: none. MICHIGAN (70) FG Mn. M-A Webber 29 9-12 Voskuil 21 2-4 Howard 28 8-11 Rose 29 6-14 King 25 3-12 Pelinka 18 1-3 Riley 19 0-1 Talley 14 0-4 Fife 9 0-1 Derricks 4 0-1 Bossard 3 0-1 Dobbhins I1 f0-0 FT M-A 1-3 1-2 2-2 2-2 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 M- Rob. O-T 2-8 1-6 1-5 0-4 1-1 2-2 2-3 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0n A 1 2 2 4 5 1 0 2 0 0 0 4_ F Pts. 2 22 3 7 2 18 1 14 1 7 3 2 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Q MICHIGAN Continued from page 1 Wolverines' improvement, that the disruption of the group has not hindered their success on the court. Last year, the coherence of the five rookies seemed vital; Michigan was struggling its way through the mid- dle of the Big Ten schedule with a 5-4 conference record before the switch, but only lost four more games - including the championship loss to Duke - after the Irish contest. However, this installation of the group that was "like family" in the words of Webber left several former starters awkwardly displaced. Michael Talley, a starter in every game in 1990, and Eric Riley, a starter in 26 of 28 contests the previous year, were both suddenly asked to wait behind "the group," as was Voskuil. It wasn't until late in the season, when these "other" members of the team made key contributions to Michigan victories - Riley's performance against Oklahoma State and Voskuil's clutch play against Cincinnati - that it seemed the team had been reintegrated. This year, the Wolverines maintained their starting lineup of the sophomores (until Jackson's injury), but the 1993 Wolverines are much more than a five-man show. Talley and Riley shined in the Rainbow Classic, Pelinka plays solidly at both the small forward and shooting guard position, Voskuil has moved from his sixth-man post to fill in for Jackson, and even rookie Dugan Fife contributes, with his defensive tenacity and ball-handling skill. History did not repeat Saturday. Instead, Michigan put a new spin on the old cliche. Those that learn from history ... Are bound to improve upon it. I I Totals 200 29-64 7-12 10-31 17 16 70 FG%- .453. FT%- .583. Three-point goals: 5-18, .278 (Webber 3-4, Voskuii 2-2. King 0-5. Rose 0-4, Bossard 0-1, Pelinka 0-1, Talley 0-1). Team rebounds: 1. Blocks: 6 (Webber 3, Derricks, Riley, Rose). Turnovers: 13 (Rose 4, King 3. Talley 2, Webber 2, Bossard, Voskuil)). Steals: 10 (Rose 3, King 2, Howard 2. Derricks, Webber). Technical fouls: none. Notre Dame........ 29 26 - 55 Michigan ................ 34 36 - 70 At Crisler Arena; A-13,562 (paid) 0 0 Te~am Conference W L Indiana Michigan Ohio State Illinois Purdue Michigan State Minnesota Iowa Wisconsin Penn State Northwestern 4 0 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 1 3 0 3 All Games W L 15 2 13 2 9 3 9 5 11 2 10 3 10 3 12 3 8 4 6 7 5 7 KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Da Wolverines Rob Pelinka (3) and Dugan Fife double team Notre Dame guard Ryan Hoover in the first half Saturday. I BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK Webber fractures his nose; playing status questionable by Ryan Herrington and Ken Sugiura Daily Basketball Writers Chris Webber followed his nose. Right into Eric Riley's elbow. At practice yesterday afternoon, the sophomore forward suffered a frac- tomorrow - he saw a University doctor yesterday - he will wear'a plastic mask to protect his honker. He will continue to wear the mask for an indefinite period. If he does not play tomorrow, Webber, who is leading the Wolver- ing off last Tuesday's emotional one- point defeat at the hands of Indiana, Michigan's poor first-half perfor- mance against Notre Dame Saturday might have been expected. The Wolverines came out sluggish against the Irish in their 70-55 -vic- explain their slow play in the opening half. "It wasn't tough at all to get up for this game," Howard said. "I was ex- cited for this game. We had a hard- fought game against Indiana. We were ready to come out here. Sure it . I I I ~