*I Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- April 5, 1993 I C H I 0 A N 8 1 . BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK No-call reminds Fisher of 1989 by Ken Davidoff Andy De Korte and Ken Sugiura Daily Basketball Writers NEW ORLEANS - When Jalen Rose went up for the last shot of regulation, he drew a bump (or bumped into) the Kentucky defender. Rose's shot, of course, was off the mark, and no call was made. In the sequence, Michigan coach Steve Fisher said he saw a little bit of the past. "I thought (he was fouled), but I'm looking at it through Michigan eyes," he said. "I was hoping for 1989 revisited right then." Fisher was referring to the 1989 NCAA championships, when Michigan point guard R umeal Robinson drove the lane and drew a blocking foul. Robinson sunk two free throws to win the title. "I don't think officials like to de- Webber and Ray Jackson vacant. When he was asked why the players showed up late, Webber said Assistant Athletic Director Bruce Madej was to blame. When someone asked if Fisher behaved any differently in practice than he did during press conferences, Rose responded, "He curses a lot more in practice than he does up here." Another scribe questioned if Webber's father, Mayce Webber, still planned on shaving his head if Michigan captured the national championship, Webber said he would make sure the pledge was kept and added, "Coach promised the same thing last week." "Yes, I promised that Chris' dad would shave his head," Fisher coun- tered. All five starters offered what they would say to former UCLA and "I would ask him for his auto- graph," Webber said. "I'd just say, 'I hope I under- achieve like this for the rest of my life,," King said. A DRIVING FORCE: If the Wolverines needed any extra moti- vation for Saturday's game, they found it in those who didn't give Michigan much chance to beat Kentucky. "A lot of people doubted us, we were six-, seven-point underdogs and we pulled it off," Jackson said. "It's just a lot of excitement that we can do it and prove to everybody else that we can do it." "We haven't been the underdog that often and it was our focus to get started early and play well," Howard said. "We did that to come back again in overtime to win it." CLASS COACHES: During the week, the relationship between North Carolina coach Dean Smith and Kansas coach Roy Williams re- ceived much attention. Williams previously coached under Smith for the Tar Heels. Throughout the week the two- some downplayed the relationship, and rightfully so. They maintained the game was between players,.not coaches. After the game, no one asked either coach how the game felt in relation to the other coach. However, the friendship between the two will not suffer from competition. "There will be questions about how it feels to lose to North Carolina," Williams said. "It still feels crappy. I'll still be pulling like the dickens for North Carolina on Monday night. If you're a Kentucky or a Michigan person, then I'm sorry. But if you don't understand that then you don't understand Roy Williams." ACC STILL TOPS: Among other things, North Carolina's vic- tory over Kansas sealed, at least for a year, the conference lead in tour- nament wins. The ACC has 201 while the Big Ten has 199. This year will also be the fourth consecutive championship game with an ACC representative. Duke has been in the previous three, losing in 1990 and winning in 1991 and 1992. The Tar Heels' victory also moved them into second in alltime tournament wins with 61, two be- hind UCLA. NBA-BOUND?: Webber was named to the AP first-team All- America team over the weekend, along with Indiana's Calbert Cheaney, Duke's Bobby Hurley, Mashburn and Memphis State's Anfernee Hardaway. Hurley and Cheaney are seniors, and Hardaway and Mashburn have announced their intentions to enter this year's NBA draft. I, :., <; Michigan's Jalen Rose tries to dribble away from Dale Brown of Kentucky. Michigan faces North Carolina in tonight's I M thwarts Kentucky King, Jackson lead defensive charge on Michigan's Chris Webber and Kentucky's Jamal Mashburn embrace after Saturday's 81-78 Wolverine victory. cide games, and I agree with that," Fisher said. GOOD HUMOR: Fisher and his starters were in rare form at a press conference yesterday. Serving as a gargantuan contrast to the sullen demeanors they displayed a week ago in Seattle, the. Wolverines showed the media their comic side. The session began with Fisher sitting alone at the dais and the seats reserved for Juwan Howard, Jimmy King, Jalen Rose, Chris NBA star Bill Walton, who has been quoted as saying that the Wolverines are "the most overrated bunch of underachievers in basket- ball history." Howard, Jackson and Rose all questioned Walton's wisdom but re- spected his freedom to express his thoughts. "I would ask him where his statements came from," Rose said. "I don't believe they are true. But he's a man and has an opinion." by Ken Sugiura Daily Basketball Writer NEW ORLEANS - Thirty-one points per game. It was the statistic that everyone seemed to know. Thirty-one points per game, of course, was Kentucky's average margin of victory in mauling its first four opponents on its road to the Fi- nal Four. The Wildcats laid waste to Rider, 96-52, hammered Utah, 86- 65, pummeled Wake Forest, 103-69, and in the Southeast regional final, thwarted Florida State.by a 106-81 count. How could anyone conceivably stop this thunder-and-lightning at- tack? Would anyone be able to de- fend the Southeast region's Most Outstanding Player, Travis Ford? The 5-foot-9 mighty mite had dropped 13 three-pointers for a .591 percentage. He raked the Deamon Deacons by going 10-for-11 from the floor, including 5-for-6 from outside the three-point arc. And how could Michigan stop Kentucky's inside-outside scoring maven Jamal Mashburn? The NBA- bound 6-foot-8 rock had blitzed the tournament field with nine treys of his own, and a healthy 17.8 points per game. To reach New Orleans, Kentucky coach Rick Pitino's mad bombers had hoisted up 90 three-point at- tempts, connecting on 42. By com- parison, the Wolverines had tried only 46 threes, hitting 17. What could Michigan do to avoid the tor- ment? The oddsmakers seemed unable to'find a suitable answer for any of these questions, establishing the Wildcats as a seven-point favorite. "We were saying all along they haven't faced a defense like ours," Michigan forward Ray Jackson said. "Not too many teams have gotten an awful lot of threes against us, and we just came out and played our normal defense and fought. From the outset, the Michigan defense put the brakes on the Wild- cat run-and-gun offense. Constant attention from the taller Michigan guards, on the perimeter, particularly Travis Ford, limited Kentucky's ef- fectiveness. Defended by Jimmy King and Jackson for much of the game, Ford took only two three-. point attempts in the first half, both errant. 'They have an insider outside game, where they try to drive and then kickout. We tried to eliminate that and make every three-poin shot they took contested Ji ---immy Michigan guar "It was obvious in the first hal they were bodying me everywhere went," Ford said. Wildcat guard Jeff Bras added: "Give them all the c They took away the three-point sh in the first half. I don't even tJhiu Travis scored. They did a great jc on him, and no one else could get shot off either." Ford finished the game 3-for- from the field and 2-for-6 fro three-point range for 12 points. -As team, Kentucky fired 21 treys aun WILDCATS Continued from page 1 Tony Delk scored the last Ken- tucky points on two free throws. Michigan controlled the leaderless team the rest of the way. Following lay-ins by Jackson and Webber, Rose sealed the game by making two free throws with 21 seconds remaining. Earlier in the game it seemed Kentucky's quickness would pose a problem for the Wolverines. The Wildcats had some of the fastest hands Michigan has faced all year. Kentucky's 11 steals tied the record for NCAA semifinal games set last year by Cincinnati, also against 'Webber and Howard are definitely the strongest guys I've been up against this year. They're a force on the boards, powerful underneath and were a little too much for us to handle tonight.' - Jared Prickett Kentucky forward However, Kentucky negated at least part of its fast track advantage when they rushed its shots, leading to poor shots and more turnovers. > C. J ^y 3 2 k k q * , + .. i. ..,... .h3t>.Jx' .,: #k,:.D Cl*58 ..... ... .: .. ... ._., .h .. ... ..::...... ... : .., b,... .... fh' ;'7tC f:{f: :. .: .. .. ....xa. .. ,. .. ' I I