Women's Basketball vs. Indiana Tonight, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Wrestling vs. Lehigh Tomorrow, 7 p.m. Keen Arena *FULL COURT. PRESS Clutch Rose play keys Wolverines' late rally by Ken Suguira Daily Basketball Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - One down, 17 to go. While no one's going to call their first step toward a Big Ten title the most treacherous they'll take, make no doubt it wasn't an easy one, either. In the aftermath of the Wolverines' 80-70 triumph over Purdue, there is not a whole lot that can be learned. Purdue is good, Michigan is better, and Jalen Rose still holds the keys to coach Steve Fisher's team. The lead item, I suppose, was the long-awaited showdown between two of the nation's mammoth sophomores, Chris Webber and Purdue's Glenn Robinson. It did not disappoint. From the opening tip, which Robinson won, the two made big play after big play in a fantastic duel. After a 2-for-9 first half, Robinson shot 6-for-10 in the second to end with 30 points. "We recruited Robinson, so we know how good he is, he knows how to win," Fisher said. Webber finished with eight fewer points, but cleared five more rebounds, 14-9, and also added five assists and four blocks. Call Robinson-Webber I a draw, and mark Feb. 7 on your calendars when Purdue visits Ann Arbor. Unfortunately, the rematch will probably be the finale as well. At any rate, Michigan's real hero last night was Rose. Not the best num- bers - 5-for-14 shooting from the floor and four turnovers - but when it counted, Rose was the floor leader Fisher needs him to be. With the Wolverines up, 52-50, at 13:13 of the second half, Rose drew his fourth personal foul. Exit Rose. In the next five-and-a-half minutes, Pur- due battled Michigan behind eight points from Robinson. When Fisher re- turned Rose to the court, Michigan was up, 61-60, and the 14,123 crammed into Mackey Arena tried to blow the roof off. In the final 7:49, the Rose-led Wolverines went on a 20-9 tear to end the game. "I wouldn't say it was just because of me that we came back," Rose said. "But, a team loses its flow when its point guard is out of the game, and I am the point guard, so..." Fisher echoed this sentiment. "Jalen cane back with his four fouls and played well, and then we took off," Fisher said. "It shows how important he is to the team." 'IWomen need divine touch for league start Blue beats Purdue in Big Ten opener, 80-70 by Ken Davidoff Daily Basketball Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - Unlike the notorious sweathogs from "Welcome Back Kotter," the Michi- gan men's basketball players have been passing all of their tests lately. They continued this trend last night as they defeated the Purdue Boiler- makers, 80-70. With the victory, Michigan (11-1) has now won 10 games in a row. It seemed as though the contest would live up to its hype as the two squads kept it close most of the way, with Purdue (9-1, 0-1 Big Ten) leading 62-61 with 7:15 to go in the game. Then, center Juwan Howard hit a short jumper for a Wolverine lead that would not be relinquished. From that point, the Wolverines cruised as they dazzled the noisy Purdue crowd with a combination of flashy plays and solid free throw shooting. "Our kids played hard; Purdue's kids played hard, " Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "We played the same type of game nine points ahead as we did one point ahead. One year ago, we probably wouldn't have been able to do that." "It was one of those situations where their experience just whipped our behinds," Purdue coach Gene Keady said. "We didn't block out well all night. Poor shot selection and not blocking out just killed us." The much-ballyhooed Chris Webber-Glen Robinson matchup turned out to be interesting, but not the main feature. Robinson shot only 2-for-9 from the field in the first half, but he rebounded with a 6-for- 11 second half to finish with 30 points to Webber's 22. However, everyone attempted to downplay the individual showdown. "It (the matchup) wasn't even discussed in the lockerroom," Keady said. "We recruited Robinson so we know how good he is," Fisher said. "He knows how to win. That's all he has done." Howard shot an impressive 9-for- 12, including 12 points in the second half. "I just had confidence in my shot," Howard said. "The team would come down low and pass me the ball, so I knew I had to step up for that second and be ready for it, and it just happened to go right. I just hope it can be that way for the whole season." Although the Wolverines have been on a tremendous roll - they have now beaten four top 20 squads in their last five contests - this triumph proved especially sweet, as the players clearly pride themselves on the strength within their conference. "I think if you ask any of the team, they'd trade all their non-con- ference games for a Big Ten cham pionship," Webber said. Chris Webber scored 22 points in Michigan's Big Ten opener at Purdue. MICHIGAN (80) FG FT Min. M-A M-A Webber 35 10-16 1-3 Voskuil 18 0-4 0-0 Howard 26 9-12 0-0 Rose 34 5-14 1-2 King 40 6-11 0-0 Pelinka 17 0-3 4.4 Riley 18 3-6 4-4 Fife 11 0-1 2-2 Derricks 1 0-0 0-0 Totals 200 33-67 12-15 Reb. 6-14 0-1 1-3 0-6 2-7 1-2 2-41 1-1 0-01 15-43 11 A F1 5 2 1 4 14 5 4 2 1 1 2 0 3 1 0 00 6 20 Pt. 22 0 18 12 12 4 10 2 0 180 PURDUE (70) FG FT Reb. Min: M-A M-A O-T A F Pts.. Robinson 39 8-1913-14 3-9 1 4 30 Martin 31 3-10 0-0 1-3 5 3 6 Stanback 20 1-4 0-0 1-3 0 1 2 Waddell 35 4-12 2-2 2-5 3 3 13 Painter 33 4-10 5-7 3-5 3 3 13 Williams 9 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Roberts 8 0-2 0-0 1-2 0 1 0 Darner 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Dove 11 2-3 0-0 0-0 1 0 4 McNary 12 1-2 0-0 1-1 0 2 2 Total 200 23-63 20-23 13-31 13 18 70 FG%- .365. FT%- .870. Three-point oals: .250. Team rebounds: 4. Blocks. Turnovers:12. Steals:8. Technical fouls: none. FG%- .493. FT%- .800. Three-point goals: .133. Team rebounds: 2. Blocks: 7. Turnovers: 14. Steals: 4. Technical fouls: none. Michigan................43 37 - 80 Purdue.........33 37 - 70 At Mackey Arena; A-14,123I 50% OFF STUDENT " " " " " " " " " " by Rachel Bachman Daily Basketball Writer Perfection is not something with which the women's basketball team has had a lot of experience. Come 7:30 tonight at Crisler Arena, the team will have to rise very close to divinity in order to be successful against Indiana. "We'd have to play a perfect game to beat them," Michigan head coach Trish Roberts said. Indiana, which boasts an 8-0 overall record, is one of only eight teams nationwide still undefeated. Sophomore forward Shirley Bryant leads the Hoosier offense, averaging nearly 18 points per game. "They're very quick, and all of their players can shoot the ball and penetrate," Roberts said. Michigan opens the Big Ten sea- son tonight with a record of 1-8. "I looked at our pre-conference schedule as a time for us to tune -up for the Big Ten," Roberts said. "It didn't fare the way we wanted it to." Adding to the Wolverines' woes is the season-ending eye injury of Tannisha Stevens, which she suf- fered Dec. 26, just before the start of the Orange Bowl Holiday Classic Tournament in Miami. Stevens averaged 10 points and three assists per game and showed promise despite being only a freshman. As a result of the injury, coach Roberts says, "the lineup will change significantly. Tannisha was our quickest player on the perimeter and was a three-point shooting threat. We lost that." Roberts stressed that Stevens will be missed both as a starter and as a COPIES. RESUMES U 24# stock, 8.5x11 "spark plug" off the bench, and her absence transformed the whole out- look of the team. "We don't seem to get buckets as easily in transition anymore," Roberts said. The team will not change its strategy, however. "It's late in the season, (so) we're going to stay with what we've got," Roberts said. The team's second test in three days will come on Sunday at 2:00 against Purdue. The Boilermakers currently post an 8-1 record. Their only loss was at the hands of then No. 6 ranked Maryland. Michigan, which has not beaten Purdue since 1986, will rely on a man-to-man defense and a fullcourt press to try and suppress the Boiler- makers, whose offense is averaging 76 points a game. TICKET SALE Saturday, January 9 Hill Auditorium 1-5 p.m. Take 50% off the price of selected tickets to concerts including recitals by Mstislav Rostropovich and Cecilia Bartoli, Orchestra of St. Luke's, Urban Bush Women, Vienna Chamber Orchestra, NYC Opera National Company, Chicago Symphony Winds, Mark Morris Dance Group, Tokyo String Quartet, and more! " VALID STUDENT I.D. REQUIRED " LIMIT 2 TICKETS PER EVENT--BUT CHOOSE AS MANY EVENTS AS YOU WISH! " VISA, MASTERCARD, CHECKS AND CASH ACCEPTED. 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