Page 6-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - April 5, 1993 H E C H A P I 0 S H I P ; Tar Heels pound Kansas, 78-68 Daily Basketball Writer Adam Miller scouts tonight's NCAA championship contest. POINT GUARD Michigan's Jalen Rose shined Saturday night- he's on a roll. Tar Heel Derrick Phelps is hurting. Bad. And Rose handled Phelps in December-when he was healthy. ADVANTAGE: MICHIGAN SHOOTING GUARD Don't expect Wolverine Jimmy King's performance against Kentucky (only two points) to hamper him tonight. But don't expect Donald Williams (25 points last game)to cool down, ejther. ADVANTAGE: EVEN CENTER Juwan Howard is having a great tournament. He scored 17 points in Saturday's game, and is playing great in the blocks. But Tar Heel 7-footer Eric Montross is dominating the inside now with his jump hooks and post-ups. 4 ADVANTAGE: NORTH CAROLINA SMALL FORWARD Ray Jackson keys the Wolverine defense while scoring over nine points per game. Brian Reese scores over 11 ppg. Jackson went down early in the game in Hawaii with a shoulder separation. He'll be healthy, and ready,toni ght ADVANTAGE: MICHIGAN POWER FORWARD Tar Heel George Lynch (14.8 ppg.) stands 6-foot-8 and is a great compliment to Montross. But Chris Webber became an unstoppable force in the Kentucky overtime. He'll remain that way tonight. ADVANTAGE: MICHIGAN BENCH North Carolina brings two 7-footers off its bench, Kevin Salvadori and Matt Werstrom, to compliment Montross. Michigan can't match the height, but counters with Rob Pelinka, James Voskuil, and Eric Riley. Still ... Q ADVANTAGE: NORTH CAROLINA by Ken Davidoff Daily Basketball Writer NEW ORLEANS - Unlike its successor- Michigan's 81-78 over- time thriller over Kentucky - the Kansas-North Carolina game Satur- day night will not go down as one of the finer basketball contests in recent history. The Tar Heels' 78-68 tri- umph over the Jayhawks proved to be a triumph of size and execution over a failure to produce in the clutch and a lack of depth. The contest had been anticipated by both schools since December, when the teams almost met in the championship game of the Rainbow Classic in Honolulu, Hawaii. Michi- gan's Jalen Rose sank a putback at the buzzer of the semifinal contest between the Tar Heels and Wolver- ines Dec. 30, giving Michigan a 79- 78 victory and sending it on Kansas in the New Years' Eve final. The Jayhawks had easily beaten the host Hawaii Rainbows earlier that after- noon. However, when the teams finally met, the same factors that led to Michigan's victory in the Rainbow Classic final - size and physicality - benefited the Tar Heels. On this account, Kansas' coaches and play- ers espoused more respect for North Carolina's performance than disap- pointment over their own play. "We do congratulate North Car- olina and their staff and their play- ers," Jayhawk coach Roy Williams aid. "I thought our youngsters played extremely well and played very hard. Donald Williams made a three for them and we had three possessions and didn't come up with anything. That's the most criticism you are go- ing to get from me." The Williams trey, knocked down with 2:43 left in the contest, extended the Tar Heels' lead to 71- 65 and cooled off the Jayhawks' rally. Rex Walters' long distance shot with 21 seconds left turned out to be Kansas only other production. Williams converted five of his seven three-point attempts and to- taled 25 points to lead all players. Center Eric Montross came in right behind with 23, as he found himself with easy shot opportunities all game. "He's a great player and did just a great job tonight," Kansas center Eric Pauley said. "His teammates do a tremendous job getting him the ball on lobs and he does a great job converting those. It's difficult guard- ing someone that big, that strong and who takes up so much space." Pauley and backup center Greg Oostertag could only contribute a to- tal of seven points. While the game never got out of hand, Dean Smith's players basically held control the entire game. Kansas held a single lead of 3-2, and al- though it had several opportunities to ties the score of take back the lead, it never came through.g i "We know we're not going to, come back from 10-14 points down every game," Tar Heels forward Brian Reese said. "We have to play early and we did that tonight. We have to concentrate from the begin- ning and we did." In conjunction with North Car- olina's front line dominance on the scoreboard, the Tar Heels ruled the boards, compiling 35 rebounds to the Jayhawks' 24. "Our big people did a good job on their big people," Smith said. Guards Walters and Adonis Jor- dan - a senior who left the game to a standing ovation with under a minute to play - led the way for Kansas with 19 points each. 0 0 S COACHING Wolverine coach Steve Fisher deserves a world of credit for how he has handled the team, despite constant criticism. But he's going up against The Dean - Dean Smith. I KANSAS (68) FG FT Rob. M. MA A -A O-T A F Pt. Hancock 23 2-5 2-2 2-5 1 1 6 Scott 23 3-5 2-2 1-1 1 5 8 Pauley 27 2-5 1-1 2-9 2 3 5 Walters 32 7-15 0-0 0-0 5 2 19 Jordan 35 7-13 0-0 0-1 4 1 19 Rayford 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Woodberry 20 2-S 0-0 1-2 2 4 4 Richey 17 1--4 0-0 2-2 0 1 2 Ostertag 12 0-2 2-2 1-2 0 3 2 Gurley 5 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 3 Pearsn 1 0.1 00 01]000 0 Totals 20025-57 7-710-2415 20 66 FG%- .439. FT%- 1.000. Three-point goals: 11-20, .550 (Waters 5-9. Jordan 5-7, Woodberry 0-2, Gurley 0-1, Pearson 0-1). Team rebounds: 2. Blocks: 4 (Richey 2, Hancock, Ostertag). Turnovers: 16 (Walters 8, Jordan 3, Hancock 2, Scott 2, Woodberry 2, Pauley). Steals: 5 (Hancock, Jordan, Ostertag, Scott, Walters). Technical fouls: none. NORTH CAROLINA (78) FG FT' Rob. Min. U-A M-A 0-T A F Pto. Reese 23 3-5 1-2 3-4 6 0 7 Lynch 34 5-12 5-10 5-10 0 3 14 Montross 26 9-14 5-8 2-4 1 4 23 Phelps 30 1-3 1-2 2-5 6 2 3 Williams 29 7-11 6-6 0-3 0 1 25 Sullivan 17 0-2 0-0 0-1 1 1 0 Rod! 20 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 2 0 Salvadori 18 3-5 0-0 1-3 1 0 6 Calabria 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Cherry 2 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 0 0 Davis 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Stephenson 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Geth 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Wenstrm 0 0-0 ¢-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 20028-5217-2414-35 17 13 78 FG°,- .538. FT%- .708. Three-point goals: 5-7, .1714 (Williams 5-7). Team rebounds: 3. Blocks: 1 (Salvadori). Turnovers: 16 (Phelps 4, Lynch 3, Montross 3, Reese 3, Cherry. Rodl, Williams). Steals: 8 (Lynch 2, Montross 2, Phelps 2, Sullivan, Williams). Technical fouls: none. Kansas .... ........ 36 32 - 68 North Carolina-.....40 36 - 78 At Louisiana Superdome; A-64,151 . k b ADVANTAGE: NORTH CAROLINA .PREDICTION Rose's putback gave itto Michigan, 79-78, Dec. 30. Michigan won without Ray Jackson, who plays tonight But Montross said he didn't play his best game. Webber, Jackson ... Montross, Lynch ... Fisher, Smith, enough aready. Print the shirts, and prepare Crislerforthe victory party. MICHIGAN 82, NORTH CAROLINA 76 North Carolina center Eric Montross blocks Kansas forward Richard Scott's shot in Saturday's semifinal. Montross Tar Heels overpower Jayhawks to reach final, 78-68 by Andy Do Korte Daily Basketball Writer "NEW ORLEANS - Remember playing "Wonderword" as a child in school? The teacher would put a word on the board, say "thanksgiving", and the students' job was to make as many small words out of it as possible. Behind its monster Eric Montross, the "ton of cars" (North Carolina) drove to victory over a team without enough to spell 'gas' (Kansas), defeating the Jayhawks, 78-68. t'(Montross) has really improved in the past year and he is very strong and aggressive inside for us," North Caiolina backup center Kevin Salvadori said. "He used his physical play and dominated inside at times tonight. We all work hard underneath and take the pounding it takes to be successful inside." The monster made eight of his nine field goals from within the lane, including four lay-ins and a dunk. But Montross was not alone in his efforts. Brian Reese made a big contribution for the Tar Heels also. Leading his team with 6 assists, he and his teammates continually found Montross underneath. The Jayhawk defense did keep the guards further out then normal. Some entry passes came outside the three- point line. "I was impressed with our ability to get it in to Eric," Tar Heel coach Dean Smith said. "Our people were do- ing a good job on their big people." Opposing forward Eric Pauley sounded at least as impressed with the North Carolina guards' passing abil- ity as with Montross. 4 (nnm.l a . .. n.3nv.. addda a m-_ .. n n Heel forward George Lynch said. "We tried to keel Kansas from shooting the threes. I don't think Kansa was prepared for the defense we showed them." After witnessing Kansas' physical dominance, the Jayhawk players drew parallels to the Michigan front court. While the teams' physical prowess drew simila praise, no one would guess which of the two would pre vail. The styles were contrasted. The players describes Dean Smith's team as disciplined, and fundamentall strong, while they called the Wolverines athletic, pow erful, and extremely physical Choosing between the two styles may be as tricky a choosing between a hurricane and a hand grenade or Bourbon Street - both provide explosive results. An remember this: Michigan has already dispatched on - team led by a monster in this Final Four. MONTROSS Continued from page 1 "I never really had a second guess," Montross said. "I haven't given that a second thought. It was a p really easy decision when I thought s about it." % Montross highlighted a recruiting e class consisting of Brian Reese, - Derrick Phelps, Pat Sullivan and r since-transferred Clifford Rozier. At - the time, it was looked upon as the d best class ever. Unlike Michigan's y Fab Five, which arrived only a year - later, the quintet took its time in making its mark. s Tar Heel coach Dean Smith said n he didn't realize how far his center d had come until he-viewed the film e from the 1991 semifinal game be- tween North Carolina and Kansas. "I watched the Kansas tape shortly after I realized that I would be playing Kansas," Smith said. "Eric in the Kansas game didn't play a lot. He was active, his hair was longer. He just looked different. He was not as confident and didn't play as well. "He's really come on defensively and has been very consistent, ever since (taking on Lawrence) Funderburke at Ohio State. Offen- sively, getting passes from Derrick and Brian and Hemnick (Rodl), like he did yesterday, he knows what to do with it and that's to score and get it outside" goto guy for the Tar Heels, and while the nation became more aware of his playing skills, it also came to know him better as a person. His biography in the North Car- olina media guide contains plenty of idiosyncrasies. His favorite televi- sion shows? "Cops,""Rescue 911," "MacGyver," and "Sesame Street." What does he enjoy reading? "Where the Red Fern Grows" and "Encyclopedia Brittanica Volume II." But Montross may not be as much hungry for information as he is laid-back and funny. His composure at an interview podium shows off his comfort in front of a crowd. His choice of speech communication as a major seems a natural fit. "Speech communication is some- thing I really enjoy because it allows me to speak," he said. "I feel very comfortable in front of a group of people. I enjoy that, and it's some- thing I feel is a great way of communicating." After his basketball days con- clude, Montross said he would like to follow his father's footsteps and study law in the hopes of someday becoming a personal injury law yet. However, unlike his love for basket- ball, this is not a career he has al- ways desired. "As I grew up, I wanted to be a foreman or a trashman," Montross recalled. "I liked the big truck they rode on. But then I Rot bigger than three of our big players," Fisher said. "I don't know who'll start on him but Juwan, Chris and Eric Riley will, all three take turns defending him." At the same time, Fisher said he knows Montross does not make the entire Tar Heel squad, and an overemphasis on containing Mon- tross will likely result in a loss. "We're going to have to stop both a heavy inside and outside at- tack," Fisher said. "They're not a team where you say 'Stop Montross x and you stop Carolina,' or 'Stop Phelps and you stop Carolina.' That's what makes them so good and that's what makes our team so good.. If we defend well, and that covers a multitude of things, and if we re- bound, we will have an excellent chance to have success." Much like they look at most op- ponents, the Wolverines regard Montross and his teammates with high praise, but they don't sell themselves short. "We are very confident of our in- side plan," Webber said. "North Carolina is a good team, but I feel we've got the best backcourt in the country and the best big men. Mon- tross is a good player, but I feel I'm a good player and Juwan is one of the best big men in the country." It has been three years since Montross made his decision to snub the Wolverines and it wouldn't be too cynical to suggest that the sore- snorts are still out there. not willing 0 0 0 i. ,.