10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 6, 1994 Scoring drought mars cagers'Big Ten opener By BRENT McINTOSH DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER When you think of Johnson and Johnson, you probably think of nonir- ritating shampoo. What you probably don't think of is basketball. But Johnson and Johnson were the names most heard last night at Mackey Arena, site of the Michigan women's Big Ten opener againstNo. 16 Purdue. And while theBoilermakers' Leslie Johnson outscored the Wolverines' Amy Johnson by a single point, 25-24, the final score wasn't as close. The Boilermakers(1-0Big Ten, 11-2over- all) took advantage of a seven-minute Michigan scoring droughtto melt away the Wolverines, 78-57. Down 40-32 at the half, the Wol- verines (0-1, 3-6) cut the lead to four with 15:41 left. A Purdue jumper then a free throw by Michigan freshman center Catherine DiGiacinto, who fin- ished with 15, brought the Purdue lead to five. Not for long, though as the Boiler- makers scored 18 straight points over a stretch of more than seven minutes, led by freshman forward Danielle McCulley's five points. The Wolverines never challenged again, with every score seemingly met by a Leslie Johnson bucket. The 6- foot-1 freshman center had eight re- bounds and ten points in the second half to keep the Michigan deficit above 20 for the rest of the game. Any thought the Wolverines had of cutting the margin stalled when fresh- man forward Silver Shellman, leading Michigan with a 17.1 per game scoring average, fouled out with five minutes left after scoring 10 points. The Wol- verines were left with only six players and not enough time. "I was pleased with our first half performance. We came out with deter- mination and intensity," Michigan coach Trish Roberts said. "I thought fatigue played a factor in the second half, but overall, we came and played well." After trailing 21-4 only six minutes into the game, the Wolverines began to scrape back into the game with two Amy Johnson buckets. Shellman then put in three free throws and a lay-up, followed by arunningjumper and two free throws by Johnson, who had a personal game of her short career. "I think our defense on [Johnson] was as bad as I ever saw us play de- fense, and we just couldn't finish our shots in the first half," Boilermaker coach Lin Dunn said. Two more free throws, from fresh- man guard Jennifer Kiefer, pulled the Wolverines to within six, but back-to- back lay-ups by Purdue's Johnson moved the margin back to ten with eight minutes remaining in the first half. The Wolverines were out-re- bounded 63-32 and shot only 21-for- 58, but Roberts said she was pleased with the way the Wolverines slowed the Purdue break. MICHIGAN (57) Fo FTEU MINM MA WA OT A F PTS Gray 24 2-5 041 0.2 1 3 4 Sheilman 28 3-14 3-3 2.7 0 5 10 DiGiancinto 36 7-14 1-6 3- 0 3 15 Kiefer 40 0-2 2-2 0.1 7 0 2 Johnson 35 9-16 2-2 1-5 1 2 24 Brzezinski 25 0-5 2-2 3.6 2 3 2 Ross 12 0.2 0-0 0.0 00 0 Totals 200 21-58 10-16 11.32 1116 57 FQ%:.362. FT%:.625. Three-point goals: 5-12, .417(Johnson 4-7, Shellman 1-4, Kiefer 0-1). Blocks: 1(Brzezlnski). Turnovers: 23 (Sheilman 7, Johnson 6, Kiefer 5, DiGiancinto 3, Brzezinski, Ross). Steals: 10 (Sheilman 6, Brzezinski 2, DiGiancinto, Kiefer). Technical Fouls: none. PURDUE (78) FU FT RES MIN MAMA -A OT A F PTS Kirk 19 6-15 0.1 3-3 3 1 13 Johnson 25 9-16 7-11 7-12 0 3 25 McCulley 22 5-15 0-0 9-13 1 1 10 Jacoby 28 2-6 0-0 1-4 7 1 6 Lamping 30 3-8 1-4 2-6 8 1 8 Griffin 22 2-4 0-1 4-7 0 2 4 Lovelace 17 4-10 0-0 2-5 2 3 8 Lindsey 16 0-3 2-2 3-4 2 3 2 Roland 13 1-7 0-0 1-3 0 0 2 Taggart 4 0-0 0-0 0-001 0 Hildebrand 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Totals 200 3284 10.19 3583 2117 78 FG%:.381. FT%:.526. Three-pout goals: 4-13, .308 (Jacoby 2-5 Kirk 1-3, Lamping.1-4. Roland 0.1). Blocks: 5 (Grif fin 3, Kirk, Lamping). Turnovers: 20 (Kirk 3, Lamping 3, Lovelace 3, Roland 3, Johnson 2, McCulley 2, Hildebrand 2, Jacoby, Taggart ). Steals: 12 (Lamping 3, Griffin 2, Kirk 2, Jacoby Lindsey. Lovelace, Mcculley, Roland). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan.........32 25 - 57 Purdue............ 40 38 - 78 At: Mackey Arena; A: 3,370 KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/SPECIAL TO THE DAILY Michigan cannot afford to fall down in this weekend's contest against Lake Superior if the Wolverines are to maintian their lead in the CCHA. The Wolverines defeated the Lakers in the earlier matchup between the two teams this season, 4-2, Nov. 5 in Saulte Ste. Marie. Time is of the essence for Lake State. Weekend sweep a must if Lakers hope to catch CCHA-leading Blue By MICHAEL ROSENBERG DAILY HOCKEY WRITER Back in October, few would have predicted that there would be a nine- point differential between Michigan and Lake Superior State at this point in the CCHA season. Most observers would have thought that the Wolver- ines would have at least stayed within a few points of the Lakers, who were ranked No. 1 in the nation in the preseason. Imagine the surprise then, when the Wolverines not only took sole possession of first place, but jumped out to such a huge lead over the sec- ond-place Lakers. The Wolverines are 13-0-1 in the conference and have held the No. 1 ranking in the country for six straight weeks. Michigan's most impressive victory during this streak came Nov. 5 in Sault Ste. Marie, when the Wol- SHOWDOWN. AT YOST C l verines knocked off then-No. I Lake State, 4-2. That loss was not the first for the Lakers, who are a disappointing 9- 4-0 in CCHA play. Suddenly, Lake Superior State has a lot of work to do if it wants to capture the conference's 3 1 Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM regular season championship. The Lakers can take a big step toward taking that title by faring well against Moeller's son gets job as assistant at Missouri BASKETBALL Entries Taken: Tuesday 1/11 (Instant Scheduling) 11:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. IMSB Main Lobby Play Begins: Thursday 1/13 For Additional Information Contact IMSB 763-3562 Michigan tomorrow and Saturday at Yost Ice Arena. "If they are going to have any chance to catch us they'll probably have to sweep us," right wing Mike Knuble said. Right wing David Oliver added that Lake Superior State is in a more des- perate position than Michigan. "They have to at least split to con- sider catching us," Oliver said. "I think they probably have to sweep." Michigan coach Red Berenson, while stressing that the season will not be determined this weekend, did not deny that these games are as im- portant as any his team will play in the regular season. "I don't know that first place is on the line," Berenson said. "But these FCP Continued from page 9 Nor did he recall the Sultan of Swat, Babe Ruth himself, who pointed to the then-ivyless brick walls of Wrigley Field and called his shot in the 1932 World Series against the Cubs. He couldn't. The Wolverines have seen Shawn Respert. They've played against him. Shawn Respert is no Babe Ruth. And, he hasn't learned yet that there are no guarantees in college basketball. There shouldn't be. Instead of psyching out MSU Continued from page 9 games in the Big Ten, we may not be as fortunate as we are tonight with a victory." The second half seemed to bring more intensity to the floor. "In the second half, guys started bringing the fight to the game," Rose said. are four-point games. We've got a head start. We don't want to be look- ing back over our shoulder in the second-half of the season." Despite the team's almost-perfect* first half, Berenson is not optimistic about his team's chances this weekend. "They're as good as anyone in the country," Berenson said. "They're a better team than they were last time we played." Chief among Berenson's worries are the fact that left wing Ryan Sittler is out for four weeks with a tear of the medial collateral ligament. Also, Jason Botterill will not return from his stint with Canada's junior team until to- night, and Kevin Hilton and Blake Sloan only rejoined the team last night after being with Team USA's junior squad. Michigan, Respert's hot air comments merely inflated the already dominant Wolverines. As Michigan guard Bobby Crawford said, "He made a mistake. When he said it, we knew we were going to win." So what did Respert - a.k.a. Karnac, the foreseer of the future - have to say in defeat? Did he remain just as defiant as when he was tossing out ear candy to the East Lansing media? Did he let the outcome speak for itself? Nope. "(My guarantee) made the guys relax a little bit," Respert said. How predictable. Ray Jackson rebounded from a poor first-half showing. He started the second stanza hitting three shots in the first four minutes. But his play only made the score 47-43. MSU tied the contest with an Eric Snow layup at 15:27. King countered' with two layups, priming Michigan for a strong finish as the Wolverines then put the game away, going on a 19-4 run near the game's end. ASSOCIATED PRESS Andy Moeller, the son of Michi- gan coach Gary Moeller and currently an assistant at the U.S. Military Acad- emy, has joined the staff of new Mis- souri football coach Larry Smith. Smith also announced Tuesday the hiring of Jonathan Hoke, the defen- sive coordinator at Kent State Uni- versity. At Missouri, Hoke will coach either the wide receivers or the defen- sive backs, and will also have special teams responsibilities. Smith, who succeeded Bob Stull when Stull moved into the athletic department last month after five years as coach, now has seven members of his staff in place. He kept Skip Hall and Curtis Jones from Stull's staff and previously had announced the hiring of Moe Ankney, Ricky Hunley and Harry Hiestand. Moeller will coach offensive tack- les, tight ends and special teams. He was a four-year starter at linebacker at Michigan from 1982-86 and was all Big-Ten and captain of the Rose Bowl team in 1986. Moeller was a graduate assistant at Indiana before going to Army, where he coached the offensive line, inside linebackers and special teams. - ----- OUR SJJER HEjIS FULL OF SPECIALSI * GREAT CLASSES. Earn transferable credit including Year-in-a-Summer courses in Spanish, Physics and Calculus in just ten weeks. 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