The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday,_January 10, 1994 - 5 t:bal Presv fw Wolverines look to ease growing pains Roberts searches for positives despite inexperience, lack of depth By BRENT McINTOSH DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER If all news were good, life would be rather mundane, right? Just the same, the Michigan women's basketball team could use a little good news once in a while; most of what it hears is about as negative as it comes. Need an example? How about this one: the Wolverines tallied only two victo- ries during the entire 1992-93 season. Or how's this: only two current Wolverines had any college basketball court time prior to this season-the rest are straight off the high school courts. Want more discouraging news? Michigan women's hoops has an all- time record of 74-208 against the teams they face this season. Still not deterred? What do you make of the fact that the Wolverine roster now consists of a paltry seven players - yes, seven, as in more than six and less than eight? You're still not discouraged? Nei- ther is Michigan coach Trish Roberts. "We're going to have to wait and see, but I'm optimistic," Roberts said at the beginning of the season, before her Wolverine squad beat three non- conference foes to chalk up more vic- tories in its first 10 games than last year's team did the whole year. So now Michigan is 3-8, but that doesn't necessarily mean there are many more victories in the making. The weaknesses still loom large, and most of them are lacks: the Wolver- ines lack tradition, they lack experi- ence, they lack height, they lack depth. Of the teams Michigan takes on this year, only one has a losing series record against the Wolverines:Eastern Michigan is only 6-11 all-time against Michigan. Of course, few current Wolverines have participated in any Michigan history at all. Only junior Shimmy Gray and sophomore Jennifer Brzezinski return, with, neither having played a full season. But Roberts still isn't discouraged. Since 1992-93 was her first year coaching Michigan, even the experi- enced players on last year's team were operating in a new and different sys- tem. This year's ample freshman class provides Roberts with a chance to drill her system into virgin minds, more center Angie Mustonen. With- out Mustonen, the tallest Wolverines are Gray, Brzezinski and freshman Catherine DiGiacinto;all 6-foot-1. Mustonen and Jokish's departures, along with those of sophomore Tannisha Stevens and freshman Sonya Mays, leave only seven Wolverines. And while Roberts maintains that a team needs only five players, a small roster has certain drawbacks. Injuries and foul trouble can be disastrous, and fatigue is also a factor. "We've gone to playing more zone, but whenever we get a fast break, we're going to take it," Roberts said. "We can't slow that down. "We're going to try to run. I think we've got a point guard that can do that. We're a little bit quicker - our perim- eter players are definitely a lot quicker and a lot stronger." Roberts finds a benefit in the lim- ited roster, though: she says the lack of numbers will force the freshmen to learn fast, a bonus in future seasons. The Wolverines are led by Gray, who averaged 7.9 rebounds and 7.8 points per game last year. A natural small forward, Gray has been forced by the Wolverines' rebounding prob- lems to play at power forward. "Shimmy has kind of been forced into that role[of captain]," Roberts said. "She's taken it upon herself to be a leader. Her game has really elevated. For us to be successful with so many young players, she needs to be in that role." Brzezinski is the other player with experience, but hers was limited by a season-ending knee injury nine games' into last season. She will be counted on to provide a rebounding and shot- blocking force. The freshman class, which Rob- erts called "probably one of the best recruiting classes Michigan has ever had," is highlighted by 5-foot-11 shooting guard Amy Johnson. "She's an all-around player. She can shoot. She can dribble-she's the total package," Roberts said. "I think she's going to be a leader this year." Johnson has proven Roberts right so far this season, complementing her guard skills with nearly six rebounds per game. The other rookie standout is for- ward Silver Shellman, who Roberts calls "a great athlete." "She played mostly inside at 5- foot-11 in high school, but she knows she can't play that spot in the Big Ten, so she's refined her game and come to the outside, and is shooting very well," Roberts said. The starting spot at point guard belongs to 5-foot-7 Jennifer Kiefer, the top Wolverine in assists, but 5-foot-7 Mekisha Ross has also seen time off the bench. The only center on the team is DiGiacinto, who has put in some solid minutes while starting every game. Those seven players are the clay that Roberts will mold; the weaknesses have led Roberts to a modest goal, one that the Wolverines can probably realize. "The goal that we set has to be to improve on last year's season," Rob- erts said. "All of our kids know what last year was about and so if we can win 10 ballgames I think that's going to set the pace for this recruiting class." With three wins already, Roberts has got to be encouraged. free of all but high school schemes. "They're very young, very inexperi- enced," Roberts said, "but I've always been told that experience is the best teacher, so they'll learn very quickly. "We're much farther ahead at this point than we were last year when I came in as a new coach even though we had more experienced players." Last year's team was not only more experienced than this year's bunch, it was also taller. With 6-foot-3 Trish Andrew graduated and 6-foot-2 Rhonda Jokish out for the year with shoulder problems, the Wolverines are vertically challenged. "Where we lack depth is in our post position: we're short. Our tallest player is six-two, and she's a walk- on," Roberts said prior to the depar- ture for academic reasons of sopho- ammered by Detroit-Mercy's Faith Cyr during the Wolverines' 79-69 defeat d both games this past weekend but has already won more games (three) .... "' OURT Rebuilding Michigan searches for RESS pieces to the elusive victory puzzle orth Atlantic Conference champi- nship. A rocky first year at Michigan as quite a change for Roberts. "With so many experienced play- rs - five seniors - I really felt the . me of last season would have era lot better," Roberts said. As the tipoff of season No. 2 for oberts approached, she had a new atch of recruits to keep her busy. ith only tworeturning players on the urrent roster of seven, the Wolverines ere slightly short-handed. But, in spite f this fact, they have already topped st year's total victory mark of two by efeating Oral Roberts, Dec. 29,72-58 !*ir third win. It was a great confidence booster," oberts said. "At the time, that was one four goals: to improve upon last year's cord. It really helped us going into the ig Ten (play) with that victory." The current ranking of 11 in the ig Ten, however, illustrates the huge hallenges still lurking in Michigan's loset. How then, is such a struggling ream able to recruit any quality layers to help turn around their win- er three games since returning. At e same time, she continues her role steam leader, encouraging the eshman to play through their okie mistakes. "I just wish there were more pperclassmen on the team so that uld sit there and tell them you have it a lot easier compared to ow we had it last year," Gray said. wish they could have us talking out good experiences, but they n't. All of them overwhelm me d it makes my job as captain a lot ore difficult." It is tough for Gray to sit on the delines as her injury heals, but it's e ay her career has been at gan. She has endured three sing seasons, been suspended from e team, had a recurring knee jury, yet her will to succeed has ot been deterred. "I haven't really been pleased ith any of my years at Michigan. ,A r .T.. loss record, like Gretzky did? "Academically, it wasn't hard at all, but we've really harped on the fact that they can come in and they can make an impact right away," Roberts said. "These kids go and visit the other schools and they see two and three players with experience that are there at those schools that play their posi- tion," Roberts said. "They come to Michigan and they see that we may only have one player at that position and their chances (for playing time) are going to be a lot greater at Michi- gan than any other place." Now that's a pretty decent argu- ment on behalf of Michigan, but was that really the reasoning behind the players' decisions to don the Maize and Blue? Just what was it that enticed the athletes to Ann Arbor? The balmy weather? Well, not exactly, as fresh- man guard Amy Johnson explains. "I had a lot of confidence in Coach Roberts," Johnson said." In weighing Michigan against the other schools I was choosing from, Michigan seemed like the better school. I liked it here and I liked the coach." Obviously, the process of rebuilding a losing program cannot be completed in one night. It's the baby steps and patience that are key here. Slowly but surely, things will start turning around. Winning the national championship might be setting goals a bit high, espe- cially for a team like Michigan this season, but there are other ambitious, but more realistic targets to aim for. "I feel that we are in a much better place this year at this time, with the freshmen, than we were last year with those seniors," Roberts said. "They are freshmen and they are hungry. They came to Michigan knowing our record and they came to Michigan knowing what kind of program we have. So their outlook is a little more positive because they feel they can come in and make a difference. "We expect to win a few games, and we haven't given any specifics, but there is a need to improve on last year's team," Roberts added. "All of our kids know what last year was all about, and if we can win 10 ballgames, I think that's going to set the pace ..." As anyone who has ever been part of a lackluster team knows, the ab- sence of overwhelming fan support does not help increase team morale much, either. "In the beginning, it was disappoint- ing," Roberts said. "But then, the more we lost, I'd go to the games and I'd look up in the stands and we still had those die-hard fans and those fans, who con- tinued to come and see us play, knowing that we were having a really bad season, really made me feel good. "It lets me know too, that if we ever got a winning program at Michigan, I know that the fan support would be there. It's an old saying from that movie 'Field of Dreams': 'If you build it, they will come.' That'swhatI'mlooking for. They will come, because people like to be associated with winners." Only time will tell if and when Michigan's dream will become a real- ity. But the Wolverines are taking a few steps in the right direction. And let's not forget who won the race, the tortoise or the hare? IVHU,,rILLL I.UY/Ually Freshman forward Silver Shellman is one of five rookies making up the 1993- 1994 Wolverine squad. Shellman has led the team in scoring in four games. HOOPS Continued from page 1 ing to a 47-20 halftime lead with nu- merous uncontested layups off fast- break opportunities. Forward Shirley Bryant headed the first half effort with 8-for-10 shooting and 16 points. "We get a lot of baskets in transi- tion, we use our speed, we run the passing game, we set a lot of back and down picks and then we are a good MICHIGAN (58) FQ FTEE OBi MIN *-A M-A O-T A FPM Gray 31 3.6 0-0 2-702 6 Shellman 29 3-9 3-6 1-3 4 3 9 DIGiacinto 31 6-10 0-2 2-7 0 2 12 Kiefer 36 0-3 00 00 1 2 0 Johnson 40 &23 3.4 3-7 3 2 22 Brzezinski 18 3-4 3.5 1-5 0 1 9 Ross 15 0-1 0-0 0.1 0 3 0 Totals 200 23-56 9-17 13-36 815 58 FG%: .41. FT%: .529. Threepolnt goals: 3-13, .231 (Johnson 3-7, Kiefer 0-2, Sheliman 0-2, Brzezinski 0-1, Gray 0.1). Blocks: 0. Turnovers: 22 (Kiefer 9, DiGiacinto 4, Sheliman 3, Brzezinski 2, Gray 2, Johnson 2). Steals: 4 (Gray 2, Johnson 2). TechnIcal Fouls: none. INDIANA (101) perimeter shooting team, " Izard said. "I think we did an excellent job of taking advantage of things they couldn't defend." The second half was more of the same, although the Wolverines, be- hind Amy Johnson's 20 points, went on a somewhat sustained 11-8 run midway through the half. Johnson hit three three-pointers in the contest while collecting seven rebounds. "She really is going to be a good player," Izard said. "She's even better then I thought." Indiana's frequent press proved troublesome for Michigan, forcing the Wolverines into 22 turnovers. Hoo- sier senior point guard Kris McGrade was particularly tenacious on Michi- gan point guard Jennifer Keifer, forc- ing the freshman into nine giveaways. Wolverine Mekisha Ross did pro- vide some relief at point guard, how- ever, giving the team some sharp play and effectively averting the full-court pressure with no turnovers in 15 min- utes of play. "We thought we could hurt them with changings of defenses," Izard said. "We have a lot of speed and it is just really hard to get the ball to the correct areas and make things happen with the basketball. That was what they were having problems doing." Yesterday's game against Detroit Mercy was one Michigan literally let slip away. The Titans' pressure defense forced the Wolverines into committing 26 turnovers, including 10 steals from junior guard Amira Danforth en route to a 79-69 Titan victory. "I really felt that this was a game we could win," Roberts said. "I think their spirits are down and they have a right to be." Trailing 58-50 in the second half, the Wolverines cut the Titans' lead down to 58-57 on a Shimmy Gray layup, but two three pointers from Autumn Rademacher and Ann Shaw propelled Detroit Mercy to a lead it would never relinquish. For the Wolverines, it was certainly a case of missed opportunities. Michi- gan hounded U of D on the boards, outrebounding the Titans 56-40, but they couldn't convert those rebounds into baskets. Michigan shot a dismal 33 percent for the game, and freshman Amy Johnson, who had scored 22 points against Indiana and poured in 20 against Purdue, went cold in a 1-for- 14 shooting effort. Gray had one of her best games of the year, finishing with 20 points, 10 rebounds and three steals. Silver Shellman and Catherine Digiancito had 17 and 12 points respectively. With the two loses, the Wolver- ines' record dropped to 3-8, 0-2 in the Big Ten. Their next game is Wednes- day when they face Michigan State. MICHIGAN (69) FO PrTRES' MIN M-A M-A OT A F PTS Gray 36 9-17 1-2 3-10 2 4 20 Shellman 40 6-16 4-8 6-11 3 3 17 DiGiacinto 21 4.7 4-7 3-8 0 2 12 Kiefer 38 2-4 2-2 0-3 9 2 7 Johnson 26 1-14 2-2 2-5 2 3 5 Brzezinski 23 1-5 2-4 6-11 0 2 5 Ross 16 0-5 3-5 36 22 3 Totals 200 23.68 18-30 23-561818 89 FG%: .338. FT%: .600. Three-point goals: 5.13, .384 (Gray 1-1, Brzezinski 1-1, Kiefer 1-2, Johnson 1-3, Shellman 1-4, Ross 0-2). Blocks: I (Brzezinski). Turnovers: 26 (Kiefer 7, Gray 5, Ross 5, DiGiacinto 3, Shellman 2, Johnson 2, Brzezinski 2). Steals: 9 (Gray 3, Kiefer 2, Brzezinski 2, Ross 2). Technical Fouls:none. DEa'Im mA..3Diev fY I r lnnif '