The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - February 15, 1993 - Page 5 * F U L L C O U R To Women cagers fall just short once again _ PRESS _Late Wisconsin run keeps Blue winless in Big Ten in 79-75 home loss Another loss gives no answers for M' by Rich Mitvalsky Daily Basketball Writer You probably know he s. . . In fact. anyone who has so much as browsed through an .xltion of the Daiy this term undoubtedly knows the story. It goes something like this: the Michigan women's basket- ball team played a competitive basketball game against its most recent Big Ten opponent until the five minute mark. Right'? And so it did Friday evening. Michigan coach Trish Roberts accurately and painfully pointed out her plight to the press immediately following Michigan's 79-75 loss to Wisconsin Friday. The Wolverines had just dropped their eleventh contest by less than ten points. And you can bet that each one of those particular losses has followed the same script. This season has posted several obstacles for the Wolverines. With a first-year head coach, change was inevitable. Then the injury bug hit, leaving Michigan to play its conference games with eight players, six of whom actually see any playing time at all. Most recently, questions asking if Michigan can win a single Big Ten game this season have surfaced. Hmmm. I don't want to put my answer in print. I mean, geez, of course they should win one. Look at the odds. And the law of averages. I don't think hunger for a win is a real problem here, but a very real as- sessment of the facts tells us that, uh, well ... don't hold your breath. The problem is that Michigan's performance was not bad against the Badgers. That may sound a bit odd for a problem, but the Wolverines played not only with vigor and inspiration. They also had some ex- '... the legs were bound to go. And they will continue to go. With six players running an uptempo game, it just doesn't matter how well-conditioned you are. At some point, you'll hit a brick wall.' tended streaks of some darn good basketball. Michigan even blended splendid point distribution with vastly improved rebounding, both offensively and defensively. Take the second half for example. Michigan just couldn't get any closer than nine or 10 points midway through the half. A Robin Threatt triple with 10 minutes to go re-established the Badgers' comfortable margin. What happened next was simply out of character for the Wolverines. For the first time this season, Michigan went on an emphatic run. And this streak of 13 unanswered points which gave the Wolverines a 71-69 lead with six minutes remaining had all of the characteristics of a team we had not seen yet this year. Of course there was senior Trish Andrew netting swinging one-handers through the lane. But there was another senior, Nikki Beaudry, accompanying Andrew, picking up the garbage and putting it away. A Jen Nuanes three-point bucket certainly aided the cause, too. But one thing stood out - the face of sophomore Shimmy Gray as the Wolverines daunted the Badgers. Gray had converted on a driving lay-in, as well as on a 16-foot jumper. And when Michigan took the lead, Gray thrust her arm into the air and yelled something inaudible to her teammates as Wisconsin took a time-out. Indeed, there was spirit. And even we at press row did something illegal by press conduct standards. We cheered. And kept cheering. Oh yes, we threw away the book on press conduct, ignoring all of the cruel and unusual punish- ments which you figure go along with such a violation. It had been that long since this team had showed such life and emotion. But, back to one fact that may seem unclear. Gray's inspired words were unheard - that's a fact. But get this - the sound from the crowd drowned her out. Even the fans were into this one, as fraternity and sorority brothers and sisters filled up at least a few more of the seats, chanting the names of particularly comely Badgers in attempt to distract their focus from the game. Well, the Wolverines took their token 71-69 lead and then scored four whole points during the final six minutes. Yes, they lost. I guess it was a bit anticipated - the loss, that is - considering that Roberts has attributed many of Michigan's losses, and especially those which were decided in the final moments, to their lack of numbers. By tipoff time Friday, soph Molly Heikkinen had added her- self to the Wolverine's extensive injury list with a bum thumb. With six players, the legs were still bound to go. And they will continue to go. With six players running an uptempo game, it just doesn't matter how well-conditioned you are. At some point, you'll hit a brick wall. If you're Robert's squad, you smash head-long into that wall after about 35 minutes of basketball. by Mike Hill Daily Basketball Writer Another bag of candy was flashed in front of the Michigan women's basketball team. But, yet again, just as the Wolverines were poised to snatch it, it was just out of reach. Wisconsin (4-6 Big Ten, 7-12 overall) played the taunting bully Friday night, holding off a late Michigan surge at Crisler Arena to hand the Wolverines (0-11, 1-18) their eleventh loss by less than 10 points this year, 79-75. With less than nine minutes to play and trailing by 11, Michigan staged a 13-0 run. The spurt was highlighted by a pull-up triple from senior Jen Nuanes and a Stacie McCall to Shimmy Gray fast-break layup. Center Trish Andrew capped it with a jump hook, giving the Wolverines the lead, 71-69, with 6:02 remaining. "Our man-to-man defense, I thought, was the key to the turn around," Michigan coach Trish Ro- berts said. "It was a shock to us. We didn't think we could stay up with them. We felt that (Badger guard Robin) Threatt was extremely quick. We didn't feel we could match up with them. But when our zone wasn't working, we switched to man and we saw that we could stay with them." Remembering past Michigan games, onlookers had to be wonder- ing when the fun would end. Their question was soon answered. when Wisconsin coach Mary Murphy cal- led a timeout. The Badgers re- sponded, countering the Michigan ambush with a game-deciding 8-0 run. And the Wolverines could only muster four points in the final six minutes. "I think that was just great coaching," Murphy said, laughing. "Sometimes (our players) listen and sometimes they don't. We just bench because you know that things can start happening when she gets some confidence. I'm not surprised by anything she does or Nuanes does or Trish does or Nikki Beaudry." After losing by only six to the Badgers in Madison earlier this sea- son, the Wolverines were surprised by Wisconsin, who jumped to a comfortable 14-point lead early in the second half. After leading, 41-35, at the break, the Badgers seemed to have pulled away when junior guard Dolly Rademaker buried one of her four three-pointers for a 57-43 ad- vantage. And when center Jen Waterman cooled off, sophomore Camille Williams took over. But like many of Michigan's losses this season, the Wolverines just couldn't come up with a bucket when it was needed most. WISCONSIN (79) FG FT Rob. Min. M-A M-A O-T A F Pts. Williams 32 8-10 8-9 6-7 1 2 24 Waterman 32 7-13 0-1 5-12 0 3 15 Shreve 34 0-2 0-0 0-3 11 0 0 Threatt 25 6-16 0-0 2-6 4 4 14 Rademaker 27 8-18 0-0 0-5 2 2 20 Bostrom 12 0-1 0-0 0-2 0. 2 0 Johnson 17 3-8 0-0 1-2 1 3 6 Winkler 11 0-2 0-0 0-2 0 2 0 Leet 10 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Totals 200 32-71 8-10 14-41 1919 79 FG%- .450. FT%- .800. Three-point goals: 7-18. .389 (Rademaker 4-8, Threatt 2-6, Waterman 1-2, Bostrom 0-1, Johnson 0-1). Team rebounds: 2. Blocks: 2 (Waterman, Williams). Turnovers: 18 (Rademaker 6, Johnson 5, Threatt 2. Bostrom, Leet, Shreve, Waterman, Williams). Steals: 7 (Threatt 2, Bostrom, Johnson, Rademaker, Shreve, Waterman). Technical fouls: None. MICHIGAN (75) FO FT Rob. Mn. M-A M-A O-T A F Pts. Stewart 28 4-14 0-4 5-9 1 1 9 Beaudry 39 4-15 4-6 4-8 0 5 12 Andrew 32 5-22 10-12 8-16 2 2 20 Nuanes 35 6-10 0-0 2-6 4 2 14 McCall 35 1-3 2-2 1-2 3 2 4 Gray 31 8-17 0-0 4-8 2 3 16 Totals 200 28-81 16-24 24-53 1215 75 FG%- .346. FT%- .667. Three-point goals: 3-10, .300 (Nuanes 2-6, Stewart 1-3, Andrew 0- 1). Team rebounds: 4. Blocks: 4 (Andrew 3, Gray). Turnovers: 16 (Stewart 5, McCall 4, Nuanes 4, Andrew 2, Beaudry). Steals: 12 (Beaudry 4,Andrew 3 McCall 2, Stewart 2, Gray). Technical fouls: None. Wisconsin........41 38 -79 Michigan..........35 40 -75 At Crisler Arena, A-856 The Wolverines again fell short in their attempt for their first Big Ten win. needed to catch our breath and say this is what we're going to do. Trish (Roberts) went to man (to-man de- fense). We were shredding up the zone pretty well. Her changes hurt us, but we were kind of able to get our sanity back. We momentarily lost our minds before getting back into reality." Michigan received the kind of balanced scoring Roberts has been looking for. After shooting only 1- for-7 in the first half, Andrew came back strong to lead the Wolverines, notching 20 points to go along with 16 rebounds. Niuanes, Gray, and Nikki Beaudry also scored in dou- ble figures. Gray posted her best game of the season, scoring a ca- reer-high 16 points. "Shimmy's a great player," Murphy said. "I remember recruit- ing her. She's one of those players that you're glad when she's on the BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK Badgers knock heads with Blue by Jaeson Rosenfeld Daily Basketball Writer During the first half of Friday's Michigan- Wisconsin contest, Badger forward Robin Leet wrestled for a rebound with Michigan center Trish Andrew under the Wisconsin bucket. Neither gave in and the two fell to the floor with Leet's head taking the brunt of the fall, making a large audible whack throughout Crisler Arena. A 20-minute injury timeout ensued, in which the Wisconsin training staff and Crisler emer- gency personnel immobilized the forward's neck. This was nothing new for the junior nursing stu- dent. It was the second time in three weeks her head has met the floor with great velocity. "She did the same thing at Northwestern on SportsChannel two weeks ago Sunday and had a concussion," Badger coach Mary Murphy said. "So she hit the same spot again." Unfortunately for Leet her second head-bang- ing experience also marked the end of one of her season goals. "We went over our team goals last week and her goal was not to hit her head again," Murphy said. Leet was treated and released from the University Hospital. In the Michigan-Wisconsin game at Madison, Wolverine point guard Stacie McCall suffered a slight concussion in a similar incident. PLACES TO GO, PEOPLE TO SEE: Friday's contest also marked the second leg of the big-screen TV contest sponsored by the Michigan Athletic Department. The contest will award the fraternity or sorority with the most fans in atten- dance at the designated games with a big-screen television. Unfortunately the competition didn't provide all of the extra fan support the Wolverines had hoped it would create. After being counted for the contest standings early in the first half, a large portion of the Greeks left Crisler. HEY LADIES, GET FUNKY, Some of the fraternity members who chose to stay provided comic relief in the second half while also scaring most of the Wisconsin team right out of Ann Arbor. Apparently impressed by Badger senior Jen Waterman (apart from her playing ability), some fraternity members started a "Jen Waterman" chant in the middle of the second half. Later, one c f the brothers of the fraternal order offered his most sincere admiration in a bench side serenade to Wisconsin freshman Tracy Winkler. Murphy and her players were truly impressed to see that chivalry was not dead in the Wolverine State. "You've got some wild guys here it Michigan, don't you?" Murphy quipped. "They were out there looking for Valentines' dates or something. It's a long commute but I guess they (her players) are worth it. "Don't you have any girls here?" LICENSED TO ILL: Michigan senior Jen Nuanes braved severe cold symptoms and pro- vided the Wolverines with solid play from the guard position. She was a perfect four-for-four in the first stanza, on her way to 14 points, six re- bounds, and four assists. Nuanes hit on six-of-10 from the field in 35 minutes of play. LOOKING FOR A PARTY?: After a nine- day layoff, the Wolverines will return to action Sunday Feb. 21 against Ohio State. The Crisler Arena contest has been labeled "Hoop Happenin"' day and will feature corporate mascots and a half- time slam-dunking exhibition by the American Flyers. SportsChannel America will carry the 1 p.m. tipoff live, and festivities begin at 11 a.m. Rumor has it that only those under 18 years of age will be allowed to sit on Tony the Tiger's lap, so bring your fake IDs. Orangemen topple " injured men's gymnasts Women gymnasts top school record, CMU by Scott Burton Daily Sports Writer Going into Saturday's meet with No. 5 Syracuse, the Michigan men's gymnastics team fully ex- pected to be the Orangemen's equal, even without Brian Winkler, Royce Toni and Seth Rubin. Unfortunately, the Wolverines found out how much they miss their injured stars in their 274.85-269.80 loss to the Orangemen. "It was a tough meet," Michigan coach Bob Darden said. "We needed a good meet to beat Syracuse, and we just didn't have a good meet. "We had some very good per- formances, but not the number we needed for a full team effort, and that's where Syracuse pulled away -'-- .......3 .1--- Michigan's early frustration was furthered by its substandard perfor- * , . mance on the vault, parallel bars and -.. . high bars. Although the top two or : three Wolverines in these events placed strongly, Syracuse took ad- - vantage of Michigan's lack of depth to pull away for the win. , - -}- "We had three major breaks on . high bars that distanced Syracuse# away from us," Darden said. "Its wrote the whole scenario for us on '?.-{< the day - a couple of key perfor- mances from us that gave Syracuse the tenths they needed to develop a $ better score."f Some of the frustration on theĀ£ day was eased by Michigan's per-= formance in an event that had been a sore spot all year - the still rings.> n...a e n- o ~ n a nC by Mike Rancilio Daily Sports Writer Even before the final results were announced at the Michigan women's gymnastics meet, the team knew it had completed something special. The Wolverines huddled around the vault after the meet against Central Michigan with a good idea that they had won the meet. What they were waiting for, though, was the team score. It came, and the celebration followed. Michigan, 193.45, to CMU's 188.00. The new team record was a reward for a outstanding team effort. Nearly every gymnast had a hand in the outcome, as steady scores dominated the statistical rundown. "Sometimes it's that first big one (performance) that sets the mood for the rest of the meet," Plocki said. "The team really came through and did an excellent job." Even though Wymer and Kelly Carfora took their usual position on top of the all-around board, with 38.90 and 38.85, respectively, this accomplishment was more than just a two-gymnast effort. Sandwiched between the all-around performances were Tina Miranda's 9.75 and 9.7 on the bars and beam, respectively, Dianna Ranelli's 9.75 on the vault, and Ali Winski's 9.75 floor exercise. But the performance that best epitomized the Wolverine's depth and team effort was that of Debbie