Hockey vs. Kent State Friday, 7 p.m. Kent SPOR Men's Gymnastics Penn State Invitational Friday, 7:30 p.m. State College Men cagers show Detroit no Mercy Derricks scores 10 filling in for injured Howard as Blue rolls, 78-60 By RACH EL.BACHMAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Even without the help of center Juwan Howard, the third-ranked Michigan men's basketball team got 25 points from Jalen Rose and held former Wolverine Tony Tolbert to six to top Detroit Mercy, 78-60, bringing its record to 5-0. "I thought the absence of Juwan Howard ... energized us, to be honest," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. After slightly straining his right Achilles' tendon in practice Sunday, Howard was cleared to play against the Titans. Less than 10 minutes before tipoff, Fisher decided to start Leon Derricks in his place as a precautionary measure. Howard did not play the entire game. "The kids kind of rallied around Leon," Fisher said. "I like what he gave us tonight." Derricks posted a career-high 10 points, and missed a triple-double by three assists, notching seven of them, along with 13 rebounds. "(Howard) helped me, telling me what I should do and how I should do it," Derricks said. He added that filling Howard's hightops was not as daunting as he anticipated. "The other three juniors ... I know they'll step up their game a lot more (when I'm in) because they have to," Derricks said. Last night's game marked the return of a few Titans with ties to Michigan. Head coach Perry Watson spent the past two seasons as an assistant under Fisher. Senior Tolbert, who came into the contest averaging 31.3 points per game, played his first two years at Michigan. With a subpar performance from Tolbert, Watson was glad to have at least one thing on his side. "It was great that Steve didn't use Juwan because it would have been unbearable," Watson said. Fisher repeatedly shouted "passing game" throughout the first half, and his players responded. With 3:49 left in the first stanza, Ray Jackson found Rose on a fast break, who dished off to Jimmy King underneath for a reverse layup. With just over one minute to play, Jackson picked Titan Patrick Lacy's pocket and passed to Fife, who scored an uncontested two. A King pass to Rose 80 seconds later pushed the Michigan lead to 34-17, its biggest lead of the half. The score at the first-half buzzer was 40-23. Just after the mid-game break, Jackson took the ball downcourt, sparking a string of lightning passes from Fife to Rose back to Jackson for an easy two before the defense had the chance to set up. Freshman Olivier Saint-Jean showed he has assimi- lated into the Michigan defense, talking trash after deny- ing Mercy's Greg Grant. "Ijustsaid, 'goback' or something like that," Saint-Jean said. In another milestone, walk-ons Emerson Moore and Chris Fields saw their first minutes as Wolverines. Howard's status is day-to-day, but he said he hopes to be ready Saturday for Michigan's game against Duke. Last night's contest was just the fifth in his career that Howard did not start. It was an experience that Fisher would not like to repeat. "I'd be petrified to go into the next game without Juwan," he said. ncnr . cA FA 01 FO FT REB MIN M-A M-A O A F PTS Jenkins 15 1-3 0-0 0-0 1 4 2 RennerThomasl4 1-1 0-0 1.4 0 4 2 Grant 20 3-7 1-2 1-5 0 1 7 Jackson 38 2-6 0-2 0-5 3 3 4 Tolbert 20 2-5 2-5 1-4 2 0 6 Hailey 9 0-4 1-2 1-1 0 0 1 Lacy 19 5-8 2-4 0-2 1 2 12 Pickett 12 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 Smith 12 1-1 0-0 1-1 1 1 2 Bibb 15 1-2 1-2 0-3 1 1 4 Montgomery 5 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Porter 13 3.4 2-4 0-0 1 111 Mundrow 6 0-0 0-0 0-000 0 Domke 7 2-2 1-1 0-1 1 1 7 Totals 200 22.46 10-22 6.29 1120 60 FG%:.478. FT%:.455. Three-point goals: 6-10, .600 (Porter 3-4, Domke 2-2, Bibb 1-1, Jackson 0-1, Jenkins 0-1, Montgomery 0-1 ). Turovers: 22 (Jackson 5, Lacy 4. Pickett 4, Bibb 2, Renner- Thomas 2, Tolbert 2, Domke, Grant, Jenkins). Steals: 4 (Pickett 2, Bibb, Tolbert). MICHIGAN (78) FO FT RES MIN M-A M-A OT A F PTS Jackson 29 3-9 5-8 4-5 3 3 11 King 28 6-8 0-2 2-2 0 3 12 Derricks 32 5-12 0-0 2-13 7 2 10 Fife 35 3-6 0-0 1-1 11 7 Rose 34 10-17 4-6 2-7 4 3 25 Saint-Jean 14 1-6 0-0 0-4 1 2 2 Crawford 19 1-5 0-0 2-3 1 4 3 Bossard 7 2-3 2-4 1-2 1 1 6 Fields 1 1-1 0-0 1-1 00 2 Moore 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 32-67 11-20 17-41 1819 78 FG%:.478. FT%: .550. Threepoint goals: 3-11, .273 (Crawford 1-4, Rose 1-3, Fife 1-2, Bossard 0-1, Saint-Jean 0-1). Turnovers: 13 (Crawford 2, Fife 2, Jackson 2, King 2, Bossard, Derricks, Saint-Jean). Steals: 8 (Fife 3, Jackson 2, Derricks, King, Rose). Detroit Mercy... 23 37 - 60 Michigan. 40 38 - 78 At: Crisler Arena; A: 13,159 (paid) *I Women's basketball drops pair to Irvine, N. Texas By BRENT McINTOSH DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Coach Trish Roberts' team may have come away from this weekend's Marriott Classic without a win, but they didn't leave without a Silver. Silver Shellman, that is. The fresh- man forward led the Michigan women's basketball team this week- end, providing a sparkle to an other- wise lackluster tournament. The Wolverines (1-2) lost 65-40 to UC-Irvine Friday and 85-72 to North Texas Saturday, but-Shellman's all-tournament performance had Rob- erts raving. "It was a surprise," the second- year coach said. "She remained steady for us: double-digit points, eight to 10 rebounds." Steady scoring and rebounds - 10 points and 12 boards against host Irvine, 15 and six versus North Texas - were the hallmarks of Shellman's play this weekend, but they weren't enough to satisfy her. "I really think it's important for anybody who's capable of double dig- its, scoring or rebounding, to contrib- ute that way," she said. "I still don't think I played up to my capabilities." Aside from Shellman's perfor- mance against Irvine, Michigan got six points and eight rebounds from freshman forward Sonya Mays while sophomore forward Jennifer Brzezinski chipped in eight points and six boards. Jinelle Williams sparked the Anteaters (1-2) with 15 points, 10 rebounds and six steals. While Shellman's showing may have had the Wolverines raving, simi- lar efforts were apparently scarce. "I don't think that we played to our full potential," freshman Jennifer Kiefer said. "We beat ourselves." Kiefer's comments may be true, but the Anteaters and the Lady Eagles certainly had a part in hand-4 ing the Wolverines their first and sec- ond defeats of the season. UCI harassed Kiefer and fresh- Sheliman man guard Amy Johnson into scoring only five and four points, respectively, and turning the ball over a total of 17 times. The Anteaters led, 24-22, at the break, but picked up the defensive pressure on the Wolverine guards in the second half. The Wolverines shot only 22 percent after halftime, in- cluding a goose-egg in 11 attempts from three-point range. "Amy's performance was un- usual," Roberts said. "They really had her number, really overplayed her. That's something she's going to have to learn to deal with because people are going to key on her." "They came after us more than any other team," Kiefer said. The Anteater pressure took the Wolverines out of their offense, and poor rebounding and transition de- fense plagued Michigan for the whole tournament. "They beat us up and down the court," Roberts said, "We did a poor job of boxing out and getting back on defense." The problem was simpler, but no less frustrating, against the Lady Eagles (1-3). Despite Shellman's showing, 19 points from freshman forward Catherine DiGiacinto, and six blocks from Brzezinski, Michi- gan couldn't stop Eagle sophomore guard Jaquita Deaton, who peppered the Wolverine defense with 38 points on 16-for-22 shooting. Deaton found open shots in transi- tion against the depleted and fatigued Wolverines, who only suited up seven players for the game. "She burned it up from the out- side," Shellman said. "She really hurt us." Michigan's Jimmy King guards Detroit Mercy center Greg Grant in last night's 78-60 Michigan victory last night at Crisler Arena. Volleyball comes out sluggish at Tn-State Invitational I I L - V Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM By MELINDA ROCO DAILY SPORTS WRITER The Michigan men's volleyball team wrapped up its preseason Sun- day at the Tri-State Invitational, con- cluding a three-week hiatus from competiton. It was apparent that the long break from play had taken its toll on the Wolverines, as the team struggled through several slow starts and mental errors. Even still, Michigan finished first in its pool, defeating Tri-State 'B', 13-15, 15-5, 16-14, Windsor, 15-10, 15-13, and Louisville 'B', 15-10, 15-8. In the championship round, the Wolverines lost to Michigan State, 16-14, 16-14, in the semifinals., Senior outside hitter Bill Seeley, who has been playing in the shadows through most of the preseason, emerged in the spotlight, leading the team in blocks, kills and defensive digs. "We've spent the past few weeks working out the kinks in Bill's game and developing confidence between him and the setter," Michigan coach Pam Griffin said. "He came through when we needed him, and it's gratify- ing that the hard work paid off." Junior Todd Coffey also stepped forward as a force in the middle posi- tion. With starting middlehittersAndy Spitser and Chad Stielstra absent, Coffey came off the bench to take control at the net throughout the day. "Todd's game has really picked up since the Ohio State match three weeks ago," Griffin said. "He did very well seeing the block and scor- ing on the attack." Plagued by injuries, illness and fatigue, Michigan's problems were only compounded by a two-hour wait before the semifinal match against the Spartans. Michigan State over- came the defensive finesse of Seeley, Stan Lee and Justin Biebel to win the close contest. "Itjust wasn'tourday to beat State," Griffin said. "We didn't have all our weapons there, and we sat a long time whereas State had just finished playing. It's a lot easier to come into a tough match already warmed up." However, Griffin said the team is pleased with their preseason perfor- mance and is excited about the im- pending regular season. 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