Page 4- The Michigan Daily -- Sports Monday-- March 22,1993 Adam Miller a Blue downs Coastal in tourney opener, 84-53 Coast to coast for Coastal? That's crazy TUCSON, Ariz. -- Have you ever wondered what criteria psychiatrists used to classify someone as "certifiably crazy"? I'm not sure what the clinical answer is, but I can give you an experien- tial example from the sports world: A Michigan basketball devotee leaves Ann Arbor for Detroit last Thurs- day. He departs Metro Airport for Tucson 10 a.m. Friday, arriving at 12:45 p.m. Tucson time (a nearly five-hour trip after a change of planes in Dallas). He races to his hotel, checks in, and heads to the McKale Center to con- firm his seats. Later that night, he watches the Wolverines pound Coastal Carolina, 84-53. The next morning, he returns to Ann Arbor, since he has a pressing commitment Monday morning and could not get out of Tucson Sunday night. How do I know this story? The man in the story is me. I had made plans earlier last month to cover the tournament for the Daily, assuming I would depart Arizona today. Then last week I learned I had a scholarship interview this morning. Suddenly, I faced a dilemma. I could not attend the tournament as originally planned, since I had to be back on time. But was it worth it just to go to see Michigan-Coastal Car- olina, a No. 1 versus a No. 16, a practically done deal before tipoff? I decided yes. Here's why. Because, even though it was Wolverines-Chanticleers, even though it was on the other side of the country, even though many called it a meaning- less game ... Wait a minute. That's why I went - it was not a meaningless game. It was the first round of the NCAA tournament, and despite everything you can say about it, it still was a tournament game. For it wasn't really a done deal, was it? Michigan could have lost. Say it again: though unlikely from the talent mismatch, Michigan could have lost. Don't believe it? No. 15 Santa Clara beat No. 2 Arizona, 64-61, Thurs- day night at the West regional in Salt Lake City. It was only the second 15-2 upset in NCAA history, the first being Richmond's 73-69 defeat of Syracuse in 1991. The afternoon I arrived, I saw part of the afternoon session at the McKale Center. Georgia Tech, the West No. 3 seed, lead No. 14 seed Southern by 10, 22-12, less than halfway through the first stanza. Busy with other arrangements to make before the Michigan game, I left. Of course you know by now that Southern won, 93-78. And only later did I learn that the first game of that session was also an upset, with No. 12 George Washington beating No. 5 New Mexico, 82-68. Other regions had their upsets, too. No. 11 Tulane took out No. 6 Kansas State, 56-53, in a Southeast region first round game. No. 7 Western Ken- tucky knocked out No. 2 Seton Hall - a pre-tournament favorite for the Fi- nal Four in most books, since the Pirates had won 12 straight to finish the regular season - 72-68, in a second round Southeast affair. No. 6 Califor- nia sent Duke packing, 82-77, in the Midwest, making it the first time in seven years the Blue Devils won't be in the Final Four. But that's the beauty of the NCAA tournament format. It's not the NBA Fials, where the better team usually wins over the course of seven games. No. One bad night, and we'll C-YA next year. And that's why they call it March Madness. That's the beauty of the NCAA tournament format. It's not the NBA Finals, where the better team usually wins over the course of seven games. No. One bad night, and we'll C-YA next year. Furthermore - and perhaps because of this - there's an aura, a pageantry, if you will, that goes with the NCAA tournament, even in the early rounds. No team plays at its home site, so all make a journey to the competition (don't get me started on how the selection committee, greedy for cash, manipulates the system so that it often fails to live up to its ideal - witness Indiana at Assembly...er, the Hoosier Dome). Hotel space is, therefore, impossible to find. Tickets are scarce. The fans who do make it are rabid. For instance, I saw some people there that I also saw following the team in Hawaii last December. So go ahead. Call me crazy. Better yet - call me mad. by Adam Miller Daily Basketball Writer TUSCON, Ariz. - Prior to the Michigan men's basketball team's first-round NCAA game Friday night against Coastal Carolina, no No. 16 seed had ever beaten a No. 1 seed. Yet, this weekend was full of upsets as Georgia Tech, Arizona, Duke and Seton Hall all lost. You didn't pick this one as an upset in your pool, did you? The Wolverines eliminated the Chanticleers easily, 84-53, to ad- vance to the second round against UCLA. The Chanticleers held their only lead with under two minutes elapsed in the contest, 5-4, when senior forward Tony Dunkin nailed a three-pointer from the right baseline. The game was essentially decided when Michigan went on a 10-0 run midway through the first half to take command, 27-11. The first half ended with Michigan leading, 44-25. "When we got down we took bad shots," Chanticleer coach Russ Bergman said. "We've got good shooters but we've got to take good shots. We took bad shots." Coastal Carolina, a team that shot .443 during the regular season, made 18-for-65 field goal attempts (.277), including 3-for-25 on three-point at- tempts. Michigan effectively contained Dunkin, the four-time Big South Player of the Year. Dunkin shot 4- for-20 on the evening, and had only one field goal in the second half. Dunkin averaged 23 points on the season, but had only 17 points in Friday's contest. "I feel like a fallen trooper," Dunkin said. Much of the credit for Dunkin's containment belongs to Michigan forward Ray Jackson, who turned in a solid performance for the Wol- verines. Not only did Jackson lead the team in scoring - he had 19 points on 8-for-12 shooting from the field, and was a perfect 2-for-2 from the line - but he keyed a tenacious matchup defense that assured that whenever Dunkin touched the ball, he had at least one Wolverine in his face. It was the first time this season that the sophomore from Austin, Texas, has led the team in scoring. "Ray Jackson was more than just scoring," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "Our defense started with him on Dunkin. He did an ex- cellent job getting on him, gave him no easy looks. So if you want to win, that's the sort of solid effort you need." "We take nobody for granted," Jackson said. "We don't have that kind of team. We worry about what we have to do and nothing else." The Wolverines also received key support from center Juwan Howard (16 points and 10 re- bounds), forward Chris Webber (11 points and nine rebounds) and guard Rob Pelinka (eight points). Leading, 76-46, with just over two minutes remaining in the game, Fisher began clearing his bench. By the end of the contest, the Wolver- ines had inserted Dugan Fife, Leon Derricks, Jason Bossard, and Sean Dobbins. Forward Ray Jackson lays the ball in during the first half of the Wolverines' first round game against Coastal Carolina. ! FULL COURT. -RESS Wolverine intangibles push Blue past UCLA by Andy De Korte Daily Basketball Writer TUCSON, Ariz. - All season, the Wolverines heard the criticisms. They would not win the tournament because: they had no discipline, Fisher had no control over his team, they would miss free throws down the stretch. Just pick one. Everyone has a favorite. The one you never heard was they had no heart. Well, in the Wolverines' latest contest - their closest scrape with mortality, an 86-84 overtime victory - they proved their critics right. Michigan committed 17 turnovers. It shot 58% from the free throw line - including 3-for-7 in overtime. Jalen Rose stayed in the game after a stretch when many coaches might have pulled him. He hit two critical three-pointers during the larger Wolverine run. But he made mistakes shortly after Michigan had built a 76-68 advantage, its largest lead of the game - the point where Michigan tradi- tionally loses its focus. With 2:44 of regulation, he lost the ball in his feet. The turnover led directly to a Shon Tarver breakaway slam. The next trip down the court, Rose's shot was blocked when he drove too far into the lane and the ball caromed off of him out of bounds. Later, Fisher removed Rose from the game. "I understand why he pulled ne," Rose said. "I wasn't playing typical Jalen Rose basketball. It's more important for the team to do well than for one person."~ The free throws as well as the turnovers obvi- ously could have cost Michigan the game. However, Michigan refused to let that happen, as tenuous as the victory margin may have been. Trying to respond to another criticism - that they showboat too much - cost the Wolverines dearly. The first half seemed like an extension of Friday's game against Coastal Carolina. Exuber- ance did not abound - the Wolverines recorded only four dunks. The level of competition did not matter during the regular season. The less-than-expected emotion represented an answer to the showboat criticism. While Webber did not wish to use that as an excuse, he made it clear that they had toned down their act before the second half. Webber sparked the emergence from any emotional funk with a one- handed alley-oop dunk from Juwan Howard. From that point on, Webber would not let his team lose. "I didn't come to Michigan to play with five soft starters, 16 soft players and three soft coaches," Webber said, obviously not pleased with the way his team lost control in the first half. "I came to play with a bunch of people that have heart and I think we showed that." With a proud yet pained look on his face, Webber continued to exhort his teammates. Howard joined in by exploding down the court to ignite crowd support. The comeback continued and over the next 10 minutes Michigan had overcome its largest deficit of the season and grabbed an eight-point lead. In the past, Michigan has thanked the media for giving them something to prove. This game nearly vindicated all the nation's critics. But in the end, Michigan's talent and heart overcame the criticisms and the Bruins. BASKETBALL Continued from page 1 After being down by as many as 19 points late in the first half, Michigan took only its second lead of the game on a Rose triple with 7:53 remaining in regulation. In the seven minutes that preceded the triple, the Wolverines blocked, re- bounded and stole the show from UCLA, going on a 14-4 run. The Wolverines were not fin- ished, as they continued their defen- sive barnstorming and ran the lead to eight. "In the second half, we did a lot better job and got an eight-point lead," Fisher said. "I thought, maybe like our kids did, that we would be able to hang on (to the lead), but we didn't." COASTAL CAROLINA (53) PG FT Rob.. Mn. N-A Ni-A O -T A FPtPs. Dunkn 39 4-20 7-8 2-6 0 2 17 Acha 40 5-14 0-0 1-9 0 1 10 Key 17 1-3 0-1 1-2042 Hgck 39 3-17 2-2 1-4 2 1 9 Hart 33 3-6 2-2 3-3 1 0 8 Johncan 22 1-1 0-1 2-4 0 4 2 DoyyIe 1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Wils 6 1-3 3-3 2-3 0 0 5 Saunders- 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Grisset 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 To, 20018-514-1715-5 1 00 F016 .277. FT/*- .624. Three-point goals: 3- 25. .120 (Dunkin 2-9, Hicks 1-4. Aa0.5. Hart 0- 2, Wills 0.1) Team rebounds: 4. ,ocks: 2(Km, Aca.Turnovers: 13 (Ache 8, Dunkin 2. Hart 2. Hicks 2,Key). Steals:6 (Hart 2, Acha. Dunkin. Hicks.,Willis). Technical fouls: none. An offensive explosion led to a 19-point first-half lead. Ed O'Ban- non and Kevin Demsey both went three-for-three from the three-point line in the half and Shon Tarver scored a Bruin high 24 points. "They didn't miss in the first half," Fisher said. "It was more them than us. They shot seven-for-nine from three-point range and 21-30 overall. But it was a little bit us, we didn't aggressively fight through screens, and they had good looks at their shots." Juwan Howard's defensive effort against Ed O'Bannon may have been the key to the turnaround. O'Bannon scored 17 points in the first 9:57 of the game. He would not return to the scorer's column until he made two free throws with 2:38 remaining in overtime. UCLA (84) FO FT Rob. Mn. M-A M-A O -T A FPtsl. Butler 35 6-9 2-2 4-7 2 4 14 OBannon 35 6-11 4-5 1-3 0 2 19 Petruska 37 3-12 0-0 0-3 2 5 7 Edney 45 3-8 4-4 3-7 6 3 10 Tarver 42 10-18 4-7 2-3 1 1 24 Zimmerm'n 15 0-0 1-2 0-1 0 4 1 Demsey 14 3-6 0-0 1-2 0 0 8 Zidek 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 BMe 1is0 0-0 " 0 0 0 Totals 22531-6415-2012-29.11 20 84 FG%- .484. FT%/- . 750. Three-point goals:?7- 15.467 (O'Bannon 3-5, Demsey 3-4, Petruska 1- 4, Edney 0-1, Turner 0-1). Team rebounds: 3. Blocks: 2 (Petruska. Zimmerman Turnovers: 9 (Edneyf 3, Petruska 2, Butler, Turner, Zidek, Zimmerman). Steals: 10 (Turner 3" Edney 2. Petruska 2, Butter, Demsey, O'Bannon). Technical fouls: none. BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK On second try, Dobbins pulls off trick-play basket by Andy De Korte and Adam Miller Daily Basketball Writers TUCSON, Ariz. - It had to work one time. In the last regular season game against Northwestern, Michigan coach Steve Fisher made a concerted effort to get senior walk-on Sean Dobbins a basket through a trick play. While it didn't work against the Wildcats, Dobbins scored a lay-up using the same play in Friday's game against Coastal Carolina. "It's kind of a perfect play for me," Dobbino said. "I was just trying to scoot out of there not really that noticeable. It worke, perfectly, they were scrambling around because they didn't know who they were going to guard. It was really good to score." To run the play, Dobbins hid among the players on the bench before springing out to receive a long inbounds pass from downcourt. "In my Michigan career, this is proba- y the highest," Dobbins said. "This is the NCAA tournament, something u dream of." SOMETHING IN THE WATER: The 1 n who has the most fun at the McKale Center is not a player, fan, or c. .. No, it is undoubtedly the scorer who records play-by- play transcripts for the media. While most tran- scripts are cut and dry, the Arizona scorer couldn't resist inserting suppos- edly comedic lines in the transcri-t. For example, with 14:09 renm ining in the first half of the Coastal Car- olina game, Jalen Rose sailed ViLough the lane for a dunk. The transcript read, "Rose shows off the latest fashions for the STYLE JAM." Later, when Eric Riley was. called for offensive charging, the transcript said he "knocked down the barricades." REIGN IN ARIZONA: In an odd twist of irony, Michigan used Arizona's locker room in the McKale Center Friday night against Coastal Carolina. The second-seeded Wildcats had lost the night before to Santa Clara, 64-61. "I just let the shock of warning sink in," Fisher said after the game against the Chanticleers. "We know well enough not to take anybody for granted." Il(..{:.... ........i 1..'. Z7.1.....A - r-A..t.A r ... ~t MICHIGAN (84) PG Min. M -A Webber 26 5-10 ,Jackson 26 8-12 Howard 31 6-11 Roee 25 3-2 Kng 30 0-2 Riley. 15 2-3 FT N-A 1.3 2-2 4-5 2-4 2-4 2-2 Rib. 0.1' 2-9 2-3 4-10 0-3 1-5 3-9 A 4" 0 2 4 2 1 F Ps. 2 11 3 19 1 16 3 9 1 2 2 6 MICHIGAN (86) Min. M -A Webber 42 12-162-714 17 Jackson 39 7-10 56 14 4 1 Howard 39 6-11 Rose 40 4-11 King 41 4-8 02 25 2 1 Riley 9 1-4 1- 46 2 3 FT M-A 2-4 5-6 2-2 1-2 0-2 1-3 nn OTi 7-1 -2 2-5 A 2 4 3 4 0 1 4 2 Ats. 27 19 14 12 11 3 n i AIi I I i I fa; L s .........., '.-- -G+/ ' : 4 d ,.. : I