8 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSWednesday - Wednesday, January 5, 1994 Arizona punishes Michigan,119-95 . Reeves' record 40 points leads Wildcats to Fiesta Bowl Classic title By JOSH KARP and BARRY SOLLENBERGER DAILY SPORTS WRITERS TUCSON, Ariz. - One of the few constants in college basketball over the past few years has been that the Ari- zona basketball team does not lose at home. In fact, going into last Thursday's Fiesta Bowl Classic final against sev- enth-ranked Michigan, the No.12 Wild- cats were 97-2 in their previous 99 games at the McKale Center. The Wolverines, however, fig- ured to challenge Arizona's homecourt supremacy. After all, the Fab Four had experienced success in front of hostile crowds in the past. But as it turned out, Michigan was hardly achallenge to the Wildcats, who led by as many as 36 points in their 119- 95 victory. "We got a good old-fashioned whip- ping from start to finish ... that's all you can say," Wolverine coach Steve Fisher said. The Wildcats were led by Khalid Reeves, who scored a career-high 40 points, while Juwan Howard paced Michigan with 20 points. The fact that the Wolverines lost to Arizona wasn't as surprising as the manner in which they were beaten. The Fab Fourhas neverbeen beaten so badly, and the last time Michigan lost a game by more than 24 points was a 112-70 thrashing by Indiana during the 1990-91 campaign. Two critical junctures in the game sealed Michigan's fate. The first came at the 10:32 mark of the first half. The Wolverines enjoyed a 23-19 lead, thanks largely to Ray Jackson's eight points in the game's first six Date Dec. 11 Dec. 20 Dec. 28 Dec. 30 Jan. 3 Opponent No. 4 Duke Central Michigan Result L 63-73 W 86-44 W 102-81 L 95-119 W 111-84 Leading Scorer Rose 31 Rose 16 King 22 Howard 20 Howard, Rose 19 minutes. But Jimmy King was whistled for his third foul when he hammered the Wildcats' Dylan Rigdon on a three- point attempt. Rigdon made all three foul shots to start a 35-15 run that propelled Arizona to a 54-38 halftime lead. The second momentum shift came at the beginning of the second half. Jalen Rose missed both free throws that had been awarded to Michigan when Arizona coach Lute Olson was hit with a technical foul for arguing a first-half play during halftime. Rose then proceeded to miss an open three-pointer from the top of the key, and then two more free throws 30 seconds later. Meanwhile, the Wildcats were in the midst of a 23-12 run that put the game out of reach at 77-50 with 11:45 to play. "Arizona made some big-time bas- After losses to Duke and Arizona, Michigan fell from No. 3 to No. 13 in the AP poll. Tonight the Wolverines face unranked Michigan State at Crisler Arena. kets," Rose said. "Wewould try to cut it back and they would shoot it back up." Rose did not score in the second halfand finished with 12 points, nearly half his team-leading average of 23 a game. "When Jalen is good, Michigan is good. And when Jalen is not good, Michigan is usually going to struggle, and Jalen was not good tonight," Fisher said. One reason for Rose's poor play, aside from a slight case of the flu, was the defense of Arizona guard Reggie Geary. Geary, who had 12 points and a team-high 10 assists, held Rose scoreless in the second half and set the tone for an Arizona de- fense that resembled that of its football team. "I thought Reggie did a great job," Olson said. "I think the fact that he was so tenacious wore Rose down." In addition to the Arizona defense, the Wolverines could not stop Reeves The tournament MVP repeatedly beat Michigan defenders for back- door layups and buried open jump- ers. He was a blistering l3-for-14 from the field, and his 40 points set a Fiesta Bowl Classic record. "Khalid Reeves is as good a player as I have had the misfortune to sit on the opposite bench and go against," Fisher said. "He was abso- lutely sensational." Besides Reeves' brilliant play, Ari- zona received big production from for- ward Ray Owes, who had 21 points and five rebounds. "We've got to take this game and learn from it and move on. It's the past and we can't dwell on it," Howardsaid. Fisher agreed, adding that the sea- son is still young. "I don't put a lot of stock into one performance," Fisher said. "If- we get beat by 30 or 40 points three or four times in the league I'll say that we've got big-time problems. 1 "But I remember when Indiana got beat by UCLA by about 30 in the finals of the NIT and then Indiana beat them in the elite eight to get to the Final Four." Both squads reached the finals by rolling up easy victories in first round competition. The Wolverines pounded Auburn, 102-81, as the four juniors totaled 77 points. King and Jackson also combined for21 rebounds. Arizona had no trouble with Fordham, 111-84, as Reeves led all scorers with 23 points on 10-of-I I shooting. Point guard Damon Stoudamire was also solid, netting 14 points and dishing out 10 assists with no turn-, overs. Junior guard Ray Jackson dunks in Monday night's game against Boston University at Crisler Arena. Jackson had 16 points and three rebounds., HOOPS Continued from page 1 in awe of them," Terriers coach Bob Brown said. Crawford squared up three times from the top of the key in the first half and found the bottom of the net each attempt. He was a perfect 4-for-4 from three-point range. "My shot's here and there," Crawford said. "It was there today." The rest of the team's shot was, too, as the Wolverines shot a collective 64 percent from the field. Boston freshman and native Nige- rian Tijani Awojobi, in just his third year playing basketball, posted a team high 18 points. "This was not a good rebounding game for him," Brown said. "Usually he's close to double figures on re- bounds." Boston junior Dave Stiff came off the bench to score nine second-half points and push his team's scoring per- centage from 44 to68 percent. Michigan staved off Awojobi, Boston's zone defense and a Terrier second-half scoring blip to win a game in which substitutes abounded. Even alternate cheerleaders and an alumni band stood.in for the regulars. Despite Michigan's bench players' contributions, they did not steal the show. According to one of the replace- ments himself, that function is still reserved for the team's four headliners. "I think my role is to play good defense and when guys like Jalen and Jimmy penetrate, to hit the open jumper if they kick it out," Crawford said. Boston coach Brown concurred, say- ing the Fab Four are still the team's most feared threat as well as its biggest draw. "I look at the stats and I think most of the starters played close to 30 min- utes," Brown said. "I was more im- pressed with them staying on the floor than I was with the bench, to be honest." ExitBoston, stage left. BOSTON UNIVERSITY (84) FG FT RES MIN MA A A A .T A F PTS Awojobi 29 8-13 1-4 0-3 2 1 18 Brown 29 6-13 2-3 1-7 3 3 15 Stiff 29 5-6 5-8 2-9 4 2 15 Wallace 38 3-5 2-3 0-2 5 3 8 Delgardo 13 2-6 0-0 0-0 2 0 5 Byrd 18 5-5 3-3 1-1 2 0 16 Schwartz 12 0-2 0-2 0-0 1 2 0 Delayeffitte 12 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 Rosu-Myles 20 1-2 0-0 0-1 2 2 2 Hubbard 5 1-2 0-0 0-1 0 0 3 Totals 200 32-56 13-23 6.26 2115 84 F6%: .571. FT%:.565. Threelpolnt goals: 7-11, .636 (Awojobi 1-2, Brown 1-1, Delgardo 1-3, Byrd 3- 3, Hubbard 1-1). Tunovers: 23 (Wallace 5. Stiff 4, Brown, Awojobi 3, Byrd 2, Rosu-Myles, Delayeffitte). Steals: 4 (Awojobi, Brown, Wallace, Rosu-Myles). MICHIGAN (111) FQ FT REB MIN W-A M-A O-T A F PTS Jackson 27 8-12 0-1 3-3 5 3 16 King 28 8-14 1-2 3-5 3 0 18 Howard 32 8-14 3-5 1-6 5 2 19 Fife 21 2-4 0-0 1-1 6 1 6 Rose 259-13 0-0 0-4 42 19 Derricks 13 3-3 0-2 1-4 2 3 6 Crawford 21 4-4 1-2 0-5 0 1 13 Saint-Jean 14 3-4 1-2 2-3 1 4 7 Bossard 15 1-5 2-2 1-1 1 1 5 Fields 2 1-1 0-0 G . 0 2 2 Moore 2 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Totals 200 47-74 8-16 14.37 2719 lit F0%-.635. F1%G .500. ThreepOnt goals: 9.20, .450 (Bossard 1-5, Crawford 4-4, Fife 24, King 1-3, Rose 13, Jackson 0.1). Tunem:16 (Jackson 3, Rose 3, Howard 2, Crawford 2, Bossardi 2. King, Fife, Derricks, Saint-Jean). Steals: 11 (King 3, Howard 3, Rose 2, Jackson, Crawford, Bossard). At: Crisier Arena A:11,132 Underdog Spartans to challenge 'M' By TIM RARDIN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER When Michigan andMichigan State face off at 8 p.m. tonight at Crisler Arena to kick off their respective Big Ten schedules, they will see a bit of themselves in each other. Lastyear, both teams reliedon solid inside games, and the Wolverines won both games between the two - a nar- row 73-69 victory in East Lansing and an 87-81 overtime thriller at Crisler. Michigan (8-2 overall) had Chris Webber, Juwan Howard and Eric Riley. The Spartans (9-3) had Mike Peplowski, Dwayne Stephens and An- thony Miller. This season, the two rivals enter the Big Ten race in similar circumstances, with just one legitimate post threat in the lineup. Webber and Riley are gone for the Wolverines, while Michigan State is now without the services of Peplowski and Stephens. As aresult, both teams no longer boast their strength inside, but instead utilize smaller, quicker lineups. "We're backtoa three-guard lineup, and not with great enthusiasm," Michi- gan State coach Jud Heathcote said. "Afterexperimenting with about amil- lion different combinations, we feel this is our best lineum" Senior shooting guard Shawn Respert, a second-team all-Big Ten selection last season, paces Michigan State with 22.9 points per game. Six- foot-7 sophomore Quinton Brooks and the 6-9, 255-pound Miller each con- tribute more than 14 points a contest. "I've watched enough film on them to know that Shawn Respert's as good a guard as there is in the league," Fisher said. "Anthony Miller's lost about 20 pounds and is playing like a veteran senior." Junior guard Eric Snow (6.5 assists per game) and senior guard Kris Weshinskey (7.8 ppg) round out the Spartans' three-guard set. Similarly, Michigan starts four pe- rimeter players to complementits lone big man, Juwan Howard. With 6-2 guard Dugan Fife now in the lineup instead of the 6-9 Webber, Heathcote knows the Wolverines area very different team from a year ago, though not necessarily a less talented one. "If Ihadmy choice of Dugan Fife or Chris Webber, I guess I'd choose Chris Webber," he said. "It's a smaller team, and they're not as physical inside, but you still haveavery talentedfirstfive. "They have an unbelievable ability to score in a hurry, but then they have these lapses where they don't score any points. We hope they have about 40 minutes of lapses." Heathcote hopes to exploit Michigan's lackofdepth with his team's new up-tempo style of play. The Spar- tans rely on many substitutions, hoping-9 to wear down their opponents. "We'll still do a lot of substituting against Michigan," Heathcote said. "They don't have the good experience coming off the bench that they had last year." Still, the Wolverines have seen im- proved bench play from their fourmain contributors - Bobby Crawford,,; Olivier Saint-Jean, Leon Derricks and Jason Bossard. The foursome has com- bined for 22,27 and 26 points in the last three games. Michigan enters the Big Ten sched- ule seeking a title it never won with; Webber. The preseason favorite Wol- verines feel they're ready for confer- ence play despite disappointing losses to Duke and Arizona. "Going into the Big Ten, it's like everyone's 0-0," Jalen Rose said. "I think we have the kind of team that's capable of winning the Big Ten title... We need to take advantage of our strengths -our speed and our athletic ability." I U 7 '^ : ; . . .,t . A Z I -' U [ j 11of W - - ~.-'. -~ -, ~:..