Hockey vs. Ohio State Friday, 7 p.m. Yost Ice Arena SPORTS Wrestling vs. Penn State Saturday,8 p.m. Keen Arena Indiana outshoots Blue, 76-75 SF U LL COURT.o PRESS General's plans have no edge over Fisher's' by Andy De Korte Daily Basketball Writer Being down by one with precious few seconds remaining in the game was cer- tainly not a new experience for the Michigan basketball team. Although the opponent had changed from then-No. 5 North Carolina to No. 6 Indiana, Michigan found itself needing a hoop at the end to overcome a one-point deficit. In both cases the Wolverines missed the jumpshot. In both cases Wolverines en- gulfed the rebound. This time Chris Webber could not get clear of the voracious Indiana leapers. Hoosier forward Alan Henderson said, "I think I got a piece of (Webber's shot)." Time expired to leave Michigan with a 76-75 defeat. The critics may claim that Indiana's Bobby Knight is a better coach than Michigan's Steve Fisher. This game did no more to support that thesis than the North Carolina game showed Fisher to be better than Dean Smith. Fisher's critics have long protested that he does not have control over his players. They prefer strict discipline a la Knight. Looking at the first half statistics, three sophomores - Webber, Jalen Rose, and Jimmy King - shot a combined one-for- nine from beyond the three-point stripe. It is easy to argue that that could never happen to a Bobby Knight-coached team, because he would pull the offending player. The easygoing Fisher may take some blame for allowing his players to take so many first shots during the second 10 min- utes of the first half. However, he would have taken at least as much heat if Webber or Rose or Juwan Howard had tried to take over the game and continually attempted to drive the lane. Indiana, using a sound strategy devised by Knight, took away the opportunity for Michigan to get into the paint and domi- nate, by using Bailey to sandbag the Wolverine post players. Recognizing the difficulty, Fisher and his staff made the adjustments that needed to be made. Webber and Howard scored 21 second half points - most coming from within the paint. Early in the second half, Michigan faced a 43-33 deficit. Fisher knew his players and there was no panic. He did not call a time- out. His players responded with a furious 8- 0 run. Moments later, the score was 45-45. While Fisher did nothing in a wild fit that might please a Knight fan, no one ques- tioned his influence - even his counter- part. "In preparation for this game we of course look at the tapes of earlier games and the latest ones," Knight said. "I've seen a lot of progress from them. I told Steve before the game that he's done some good stuff here, and he has." The victory was Knight's 500th at Indiana and his 602nd overall, so he obvi- ously knows plenty about coaching. However, it was a mistake by Knight, that gave Michigan its last great shot to win. While the officials were putting the ball in play during a free throw attempt by Hoosier Todd Leary, he motioned to for- ward Calbert Cheaney to get into the back- court to guard against a Michigan fast break, causing a lane violation and conse- quent turnover. Knight admitted after the game the mis- cue was probably his fault. That error is about as close as a coach can come to de- ciding a game. To say the freestyling sophomores could not play for Knight is to say he would not coach players that do not conform to his style. Because this is true, it limits the kinds of players Knight can pursue. It is to Michigan's advantage that Fisher's ego allows him to recruit the best players available and lets them play their best game. INDIANA (76) FG FT Reb. Min. M-A M-A O-T A F PS. Cheaney 39 9-19 1-2 0.3 3 2 20 Henderson 36 10-15 2-2 2-8 1 3 22 Nover 33 3-7 2.6 1-4 0 2 8 G. Graham 36 5-7 0-0 1-5 5 0 12 Bailey 32 2-5 0-0 1-3 10 1 6 Reynolds 6 0-0 0-0 0-2 2 1 0 Leary 6 1-1 0-0 0-2 0 12 Evans 11 2-4 0-0 0-2 1 0 6 Knight 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 TotalsF 200 32-58 5-10 8-33 22 10 76 FG%-552. FT%-500. Three-point goals: 7- 17, .412 (Bailey 2-4, Evans 2-2, G. Graham 2-2, Cheaney 1-5, Henderson 0-2). Team rebounds: 4. Blocks: 7 (Henderson 5, Nover 2). Turnovers: 6 (Cheaney 4, Nover 3, G. Graham 2, Henderson 1). Steals: 2 (G. Graham, Henderson). Technical fouls: none. MICHIGAN (75) FG FT Reb. Min. N-A M-A O-T A F Pt. Webber 33 8-17 1-3 1-6 0 4 18 Voskuil 24 3-7 0-0 0-4 3 2 8 Howard 35 8-12 1-1 1-5 4 1 17 Rose 37 9-18 1-1 1-5 4 3 19 King 38 4-8 0-0 3-4 4 3 19 Talley 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Pelinka 13 0-3 0-0 2-3 1 1 0 Riley 12 0-2 2-2 1-3 1 1 2 Fife 5 0-1 0-0 0-1 1 1 0 Totals 200 32-68 4-6 11-31 19 15 75 FG%- .470. FT%- .667. Three-point goals: 7- 20,_350 (King 3-7, Voskuil 2-5, Webber 1-4, Rose 1-2, Fife 0-1, Pelinka 0-1). Team rebounds: 3. Blocks: 3 (Webber 3). Turnovers: 6 (Webber 2, Howard, King, Riley, Rose). Steals: 3 (Rose 2, King). Technical fouls: none. Indiana ...................37 39 - 76 Michigan .........31 44 - 75 At Crisier Arena; A-13,562 DOUGLAS KANTIER/D. Hoosier Matt Nover skies over Michigan's Juwan Howard for a rebound last night. Nover had four rebounds on the night. THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I 5TH AVE.AT LIBERTY 761-9700 $ 3.25 DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM ALL DAY TUESDAY- xepw STUDENT WITH LI..5 HOFFA (R) A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT (PG) ~J Present This Coupon When Purchasing A Large Popcorn & Receive One EXPIRES: 21119. BASKETBALL Continued from page 1 battle, both sides made remarkable runs at the other, with the Hoosiers stringing together a 14-6 advantage near the end of the first half to head into the lockerroom up; 37-31. The Wolverines answered in the second half, racing up and down the court, dunking and hitting threes to the tune of a 14-5 advantage to knot the score at 45 in just under five minutes. The rivals also produced mem- orable performances from their sophomores. Henderson, previously mired in a slump, hit jumpers from all over the court, ending with a game-high 22 points on 10-for-15 shooting. "We knew Henderson was a guy who would step out and shoot the 17 to 18-footer," Fisher said. "We didn't figure he'd hit so many." Fisher's own sophs put up a good show of their own. Webber, Rose, Juwan Howard and Jimmy King all hit for double figures, led by Rose's 19. In the aftermath, the Wolverines were heartbroken, but certainly not ready to give up. "We're playing good but we can be even better," Howard said. "We haven't played our best yet." "The club that we've got will have a quiet resolve to come back and make somebody else pay for what Indiana did tonight," Fisher said. After Webber hit a three-pointer to tie the game at 45, the game turned into a nail-biter, each team answering its opponent. For a while, it seemed the team which had the ball last would be the one that would win. In that final 15:25, the biggest lead either team could take was four, Michigan at 56-52 and Indiana at 49- 45. There were five ties and five lead changes. The last came with 96 seconds remaining, when Henderson stuck his 21st and 22nd points over Howard on a 17-footer to make the score 76-75. The game's penultimate play came with Nover on the line. Knight motioned Cheaney away from the key, but as Nover already had the ball, it was a violation, giving the ball to Michigan. by Jaeson Rosenfeld Daily Basketball Writer There are headaches and then there are Excedrinheadaches. After last week, Michigan State women's basketball coach Karen Langeland is probably eating Excedrin like candy. The week started on a high note for the Spartans (1-0 Big Ten, 5-5 overall) who pulled off a 60- 56 home upset over 10th-ranked Purdue. The game featured stand- out performances by center Sher- onda Mayo-Powell, who scored 14 points and grabbed 15 rebounds, and frontcourt mate Annette Ba- bers, who added 10 points and 10 boards. Unfortunately- for the Spartans, this would be the last game of the season for both. Babers, a junior, will miss the remainder of the season due to pregnancy. Mayo-Powell suffered a career-ending knee injury in practice Sunday night. Tonight at 7:30 p.m., Langeland's Spartans will face Michigan (0-2, 1-10) at Crisler Arena without two of their top re- bounders and scorers. Though Purdue, the two teams' only common opponent, easily de- feated the Wolverines, 99-64, it is a different Spartan team facing the Wolverines tonight. "Those are two key players that have been, I think, the key to their success," said Michigan coach Trish Roberts of Mayo-Powell and Babers. "We now feel that even though we don't have the depth inside, we can play them a pretty good game." While the Wolverines don't have the depth inside, they have been hitting the boards hard lately, thanks in part to the emergence of Shimmy Gray as a force on the glass. The 5-foot-11 forward has recently moved into the starting lineup for Michigan and re- sponded by grabbing 14 caroms against Purdue. 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