Women's Basketball vs. Michigan State Tonight, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Women's Gymnastics vs. Western Michigan Friday, 7 p.m. Cliff Keen Arena 'M' dances to old-time romp-n-roll, 91-67 ,! Y uCHAD A. SAFRAN Safrancisco Treat Wolverines give it all for full 40 minutes microbiologist removes small bits from an organism and later examines it under a high-powered microscope to locate something, anything, that normally cannot be found. Last night at Crisler Arena before a raucous crowd, the organism under examination was a Wolverine. More like 10 Wolverines. And this time the ones eyeing the specimen were basketball doctors fans), looking at Michigan through their national microscope - a.k.a SPN. What was discovered lurking inside the Wolverines was something not seen all season - 40 minutes of intensity and pure desire. Michigan displayed ferocious play and tenacity over two halves, making the moniker Wolverines ever so appropriate. The Maize and Blue bit and clawed the Hoosiers til they bled from numerous scars. The Indiana team doctor just called Johnson & Johnson to renew his supply of Band-Aids. What was the difference? A change in the pregame meal? No. New socks? No. * It was the presence of the largest Wolverine to roam the Crisler (hard) woods in.recent years. And it was not Antoine Joubert for all those reminiscing of Michigan's team of 10 years ago. It was Chris Webber. The 6-foot-10 beast of power and emotion made his first visit to a Michigan home game since departing for the NBA last spring. Webber entered the Wolverines' locker room prior to tipoff and sat on the bench throughout the contest. He even joined the club for the pregame huddle. "He just told us to take it to 'em," said Ray Jackson, who had a game- *igh nine rebounds in his first action since serving a one-game suspension. "In my heart I just wanted to win this one for Chris," Dugan Fife said. No one rubbed Webber's head for inspiration, but the desire must have passed by osmosis into each of the Michigan players. They dove after so many loose balls that the floor now desperately needs a new layer of lacquer finish. Asked if he's ever seen the 6-foot-8 swingman do his Greg Louganis See SAFRAN, Page 10 Women cagers looking fo By BRENT McNTOSH single conference matchup, and their DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER losing streak has now reached double Here we go again. digits. The second half of the Big Ten But they hope to alter both those season begins today for the Michigan statistics at7:30p.m. tonight atCrisler women's basketball team, and it can Arena against Michigan State, the Big only hope it turns out better than the Ten's fifth-place team at 4-4 in the first. conference, 9-8 overall. King, Jackson return to help Blue past I11 By RACHEL BACHMAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Neither the giant in college coach- ing - Bobby Knight - nor the one from the NBA - Chris Webber - expected to see what they did last night at Crisler Arena. The Wolverines upstaged the side- line stars and their off-court exploits to stun the twelfth-ranked Hoosiers, 91-67, and claim sole possession of first place in the Big Ten. Returning from their one-game suspension for violating team policy, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson com- bined for 30 points. Their performance - and that of their teammates - impressed fellow Fab Five member Webber, who watched the game from the bench in street clothes. "We gave them an old-fashioned butt-whipping, and that's what we needed to do in the Big Ten," Webber said. The two starters, along with walk- on Chris Fields, were issued warrants Monday for allegedly stealing sev- eral 12-packs of beer from a local Dairy'Mart. Propelled by a scant 10 turnovers and a high 33 rebounds, the Wolver- ines silenced critics and drew support even from Knight, who is usually stoic in defeat. "Good kids screw up occasion- ally," Knight said, referring to the three players back from suspension. "That's different than some kid that's out trying to hurt somebody. If these kids are good kids, then they deserve to have another chance. "If...they were my kids, they would have been playing here tonight for me also," Knight said, who was disap- pointed in his team's effort. Indiana was without the services of starter Brian Evans, who was side- lined with a separated shoulder. Knight did not say whether Evans' presence would have improved his team's play. First-half highlights included a classic display of Michigan athleticism, combined with the dis- ciplined play characteristic of Indi- ana. Behind 63 percent first-half shoot- ing and just three turnovers, the Wol- verines pulled out to a 16-point half- time lead, their biggest in the first 20 minutes. With 7:18 to go, Howard drove the lane to put the Wolverines up by 10. Olivier Saint-Jean tipped in Howard's short jumper with 6:14 re- maining to push the lead to 13. On the next possession, he followed with a breakaway double-pumpjam--com- plete with trash talk and head pump - to make the score, 40-25, in favor of Michigan. Throughout the half, the Wolver- ines' low-post defense outperformed Indiana's patented man-to-man cov- erage. Juwan Howard, along with Leon Derricks and Makhtar Ndiaye, outmuscled Indiana big man Alan Henderson to notch a collective four blocks. "Wejust outplayed them from start to finish," said Howard, who turned 21 Monday. Jason Bossard, who played just the final minute of the game, gave the Wolverines their biggest lead with his 23-foot jumper. The shot sent the Crisler crowd into convulsions. The tallest celebration of the night, however, was between Howard and Webber, who hugged as the final sec- onds ticked away. At the game's start, fans welcomed Webber with the cus- tomary mass bow, hands outstretched in admiration. The former Wolverine, who left Michigan after his sophomore sea- son, now plays for the NBA's Golden State Warriors. When asked if Webber's presence, a No. 1 conference ranking, or the challenge of playing their conference nemesis contributed most to the Wol- verines' victory, Howard replied, "The biggest factor was us." INDIANA (67) FO FT RED MIN M-A M-A 04 A F PTS Graham 25 38 0-0 1-2 1 1 7 Leary 18 2-5 0-0 0-0 3 0 5 Henderson 38 6-12 6-12 4-8 1 3 18 Bailey 35 5-17 5.6 1-4 4 2 17 Hart 27 1-3 1-1 1-6 2 3 3 Knight 14 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Wilkerson 26 4-8 0-0 2-3 3 2 11 Mandeville 11 1-3 2-2 1-3 0 5 4 Hales 6 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 Totals 200 23-57 14.21 17,36 1516 67 FG%: .404. FT%: .667. Three-point goals: 7-16, .438 (Wilkerson 3-4, Bailey 2-4, Graham 1-5, Leary 1-3). Blocks:1 (Hart). Turnovers: 19 (Bailey 4, Graham 4, Wilkerson 3, Hart 2, Knight 2, Leary 2, Hales, Mandeville). Steals: 5 (Bailey 2, Garham, Henderson, Leary). Technical Fouls: none. MICHIMAN (91) FO FT RED MIN U-A U-A O}T A F PIS Jackson 31 4.8 5-6 3-9 1 1 13 King 28 6.9 2-2 1-1 2 4 17 Howard 32 8-14 3-5 4-6 3 3 19 Fife 38 1-7 2-2 0-1 5 2 5 Rose 27 7-13 4-6. 1-2 4 3 20 Saint-Jean 21 4.6 0-0 3-6 0 2 8 Ndiaye 13 0.1 0-0 0-3 0 2 0 Derricks 7 3-3 0-0 1-3 0 1 6 Bossard 1 1-1 0-0 0-0 0- 1 3 Fields 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Smith 1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 3463 16-21 13-33 1619 91 FG%: .540. FT%: .762. Three-point goals: 7-17, .412 (King 3-6, Rose 2-3, Fife 1-5, Bossard 1-1, Jackson 0.1, Saint-Jean 0-1). Blocks: 4 (Howard 2, Jackson, Ndiaye). Turnovers: 10 (Jackson 2, Rose 2, Saint-Jean 2, Fields, Howard, Ndiaye). Steals: 9 (Fife 4, Jackson 2, Howard, Rose, Saint-Jean). Technical Fouls: none. Indiana....... 30 37- 67 Michigan.....46 45 - 91 At: Crnsler Arena; A: 13,562 MICHELLE GUY/Daily Michigan's Ray Jackson celebrates the Wolverines' 91-67 victory over Indiana. Jackson had a team-high nine rebounds in his return. r fresh start against MSU Of course, it can't get much worse. 'he Wolverines (0-9 Big Ten, 3-15 overall) have failed to prevail in a "We're going into the second round and we can redeem ourselves," Michigan coach Trish Roberts said. "We didn't lose that bad to Michigan State and I think they're a team that can be beat. However, over the week- end they beat Northwestern and Illi- nois, who beat us by 15 points." The Spartans beat the Wolverines Jan. 12 by a comfortable 12-point margin, even after Michigan led by three at the break. Michigan State junior forward Tanya Place had 15 points in the contest's crucial second half, and that concerns Roberts. "(Place) got hot with about ten minutes to go and hit two three-point- ers," she said. "Before then the score was going back and forth. When she hit those two three-pointers, the mo- mentum just shifted. We've got to contain her- she's the kind of player that if she gets hot, you can't stop her." Not only did the Wolverines fail to stop Place in the second half, they also scored just 28 points themselves, compared to the Spartans' 43. Roberts' cure for those woes is as simple as basketball strategy gets - score and play defense. "We're going to have to score," she said. "I think player for player we match up very well with them. If you look at their inside players, they didn't hurt us. The three people that hurt us were (junior guard Christine) Pow- ers, Place and (junior forward Kisha) Kelly. If we can contain those three I think we'll be okay." Stopping the trio of juniors will require more defensive awareness than the Wolverines have displayed in any game this season. "We're going to have to know where their key shooters are - that's the big thing, forme especially," fresh- man guard Amy Johnson said. "I have to keep my eye on my player." That was the Wolverines down- fall in the last contest, with the second half finding the Spartans wide open far too often for Michigan's good. Roberts has said that recent team frustrations deal \vith the fact that the Wolverines have played well for stretches, but have continued to lose. In order for the Wolverines to keep See WOMEN, Page 10 ISUMMER JOB IN ANN ARBOR! 1 "Working at the Daily in the summer is a great ex- perience because there is low pressure and a relaxed atmosphere. It's a good summer job if you're living in Ann Arbor and you want to make money and have fun." Gillian Trojanowski, Account Executive The Michigan women's basketball team looks hosts Michigan State tonight. 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