------------- ----- ---------- Men's Gymnastics Michigan Invitational Saturday, 7 p.m. Cliff Keen Arena S S Hockey vs. Kent State Friday, 7 p.m. Yost Ice Arena 0 Blue seeks conference crown in Evanston By CHAD A. SAFRAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER For several seasons the slogan "Expect Victory" has been the calling card for the teams of Northwestern. Those triumphs for the men's basket- ball team have been few and far be- tween in recent years. The 1993-94 season, however, has been different. Under former Detroit-Mercy coach Ricky Byrdsong, the Wildcats (4-13 Big Ten, 13-13 overall) have a chance at a winning record for the first time since the 1982-83 campaign when they finished 18-12. Unfortu- nately for Byrdsong, Northwestern will have to knock off No.8 Michigan (13-4, 21-6) to reach that standard as the Wolverines invade Evanston for tomorrow's 1 p.m. game. Michigan, coming off a 81-72 vic- tory over Penn State Wednesday, needs a triumph to secure at least a tie for the Big Ten title, its first since ending the 1986 conference season in first. Should the Wolverines win and Purdue lose to Illinois Sunday, Michi- gan would win the conference title outright. In most seasons a victory would seem eminent, considering the Maize and Blue's opponent, but the Wolver- ines realize that this version of the Wildcats is much improved. "Northwestern used to be a team where people would say it's an auto- matic win, but they've been playing really well," Jalen Rose said. "They'd like nothing more than to knock us out of Big Ten contention. We've got to be ready." The Wildcats play picked up their biggest win of the season when they knocked off Wisconsin last Saturday, 66-54. Northwestern then fell to Ohio State, 76-73, Wednesday, giving the Wildcats one final but difficultchance to secure a bid to the National Invita- tional Tournament. "Any 14th victory may not do it, but one over Michigan would cer- tainly help," Byrdsong said. "If we can beat Michigan, it would be a win that would gain us respect." Byrdsong feels the key to his team having a change against the Wolver- ines would be the play of Kip Kirkpatrick. The senior guard is aver- aging 11.1 points per game. "He's the reason why we win or play well," Byrdsong said. "Most teams respect (Pat) Baldwin and (Kevin) Rankin, but Kip has been a surprise." Baldwin and Rankin are part of a five-man senior class that has en- dured more of its share of downs than ups during its time in Evanston. After four years, the quintet has finally been able to enjoy some success. Rankin, the 6-foot-I I senior cen- ter, grabs an average of 8.4 rebounds per conference game and nets 15.4 points. Both figures lead the team. Baldwin and Todd Leslie provide much of the Wildcats outside shoot- ing power. Leslie leads the team in three-pointers with44during Big Ten play. However, he has connected on only 38 percent of his chances. 'M' drops a close one, again Women fall short to tourney-bound Indiana, 67-64. BY BOB ABRAMSON DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER If there was any other incentive besides trying to escape the Big Ten season with a victory, the Michigan women's basketball team had a shot at keeping Indiana from getting a bid to the NCAA tournament. The Hoosiers (10-7 Big Ten, 19-7 overall) on the verge of their first NCAA tournament appearance since 1983, needed a victory over Michi- gan to lock up a bid to the tourney. Try as they may, the Wolverines (0-17, 3-23) could not be spoilers, or first-time Big Ten winners, falling short once again, 67-64. "We knewhcoming into this bas- ketball game there was a large amount of pressure on our basketball team," Indiana coach Jim Izzard said. "But our players responded in the second half, and this victory puts us in the NCAA tournament." Trailing 67-64 with 23 seconds remaining, Michigan had a chance to knot the game up, but an Amy Johnson three-point attempt clanged off the rim, and went over the top of the backboard. Thus giving Michigan a team-record 18 straight losses. "I think Amy forced her shot at the end," Michigan coach Trish Roberts said. "I think if she would of waited a little bit for another pick, we could've gotten the shot. But again, she pan- icked- freshman mistake. Hopefully next year, she can capitalize on those." The Wolverines looked like they might come away with their first Big Ten victory of the -season, after a Jennifer Kiefer three-pointer and a Catherine DiGiacinto pull-up jumper put Michigan ahead 50-44 with 13:16 left in the contest. But just as they have been prone to fold in the second half all season long, the Wolverines suddenly began to unravel. Michigan went scoreless until the 5:41 mark, allowing the Hoosiers to go on a 13-0 run, including two three-pointers from Kris McGrad to retake the lead, 57-50. "We just went on a cold spell," Roberts said. "If we could've scored three or four buckets right there, I think that would of made a difference in the game," Michigan cut Indiana's lea( down to 65-64 on a Johnson bank sho with 36 seconds left, but with the Wolverines forced to foul, Indiana' Lisa Furlin (23 points) nailed boti free throws to preserve the victory. "I think we let it slip away a littk bit," DiGiacinto said. "But then I think we caught ourselves. We didn't let i slip away as much as we had in the' past. We tried to hold on to it." Michigan came out on the defen- sive in the first half, holding Indiana to an impressive 34 percent from the field. See BASKETBALL, Page 12 Lack of leadership leads to numerous on-court breakdowns By BRENT McINTOSH DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Would anyone have heard of the Merry Men if they didn't have Robin Hood? Would there be movie about the Doors without Jim Morrison on lead vocals? . Not to slight the little people, but the frank answer is no. Friar Tuck and this band just doesn't have a-leader. "I think that if our team did have a dominant leader, it could make the difference," Michigan coach Trish Roberts said. The maize and blue mantle should fall on the shoulders of junior forward Shimmy Gray, the team's lone upper- classman. While Roberts claims tha9 Gray is the team's off-court leader, the eldest Wolverine's concentration lapses have kept her from becoming Michigan's clutch player. Take last night's 67-64 loss to Indiana. Gray had 12 points, but ac- cording to Roberts, Michigan "didn't get very much of a defensive effort from Shimmy. So maybe freshman guard Am See LEADERS, Page 12 JOE WESTRATE/Daily Shimmy Gray goes up for a block on an Indiana player during the Hoosiers' 67-64 win over the Wolverines last night at Crisler Arena. Ray Manzarek weren't enough - the groups needed a leader to succeed. And that"s the problem for the Michigan women's basketball team: ockey playoff run starts with Kent State By JAESON ROSENFELD DAILY HOCKEY WRITER Michigan hockey fans might want to bring their thesauruses to this weekend's CCHA first-round home playoff series against Kent State. The Yost Ice Arena faithful may need to look up alternatives for sieve, a taunt itshouts attheopposingteam's goalie after each Wolverine score. With the Golden Flashes' mediocre goaltending, sieve will certainly be- come a tiresome word in the best-of- three game series. Kent State netminder Scott Shaw sports a 5.43 goals against average, worst among all first-string goalies in the CCHA. The Golden Flashes' scor- ing defense, which allows 5.51 goals per game, may be just the medicine to shake the Wolverines' out of their recent slump. "It's a good weekend to build some confidence," David Oliver said. "Right now, we're not looking at who we're playing. We're just trying to focus on playing better hockey." Michigan has lost four of its last five games, including a lethargic, regular-season ending 6-2 loss to Ferris State last Saturday. The six goals by the Bulldogs are the most the Wolverines allowed during the regu- lar season. Michigan coach Red Berenson hopes the defense can step things up for the post-season. "Our efforts are going to be fo- cused on playing good defense," Berenson said. "We have to do a bet- ter job of protecting our goalie and not giving up unearned goals." Although the Golden Flashes' de- fense is worst in the league, their offense possesses the capability to test the Michigan defense. Bill Switaj's team averages 3.89 goals per game, fourth in the conference. The Golden Flashes goal scorers managed to top Michigan's 2.67 goals against average in a 10-4 loss Feb. 4 at Yost. Claude Morin leads Kent with 55 points, ninth in the nation, and linemateDean Sylvester follows with 45 points. Blueliner Blake Sloan's return should help the Wolverines' defense stop Morin and Sylvester and avoid a repeat performance of last Saturday. The freshman CCHA All-Rookie team member missed the Ferris State game due to a minor concussion suf- fered the previous night at Bowling Green. Additionally, the conference's highest-scoring freshman, Brendan Morrison, will don the Michigan sweateronce again, after missing both games last weekend due to a shoulder injury. The freshman rejoins a power- play unit which was switched up a bit against the Bulldogs. Berenson slid Oliver from his usual left circle posi- tion to the left point, and moved Brian N ..... .. .... ........... ................. ............ . ......... JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Freshman forward Mike Legg and the Wolverines face Kent State in first round CCHA playoff action tonight. Men gymnasts written off into history By AARON BURNS DAILY SPORTS WRITER Fifty years. For fifty years now they've flipped, tucked and twisted. For fifty years they've pushed themselves in practice, toiling away in empty gymnasiums so that when the seats filled up and the routines counted, they could stand proudly after each landing. See HOCKEY, Page 11 "We are the Michigan men's gym- nastics team," they could say. "The leaders and best." On Saturday night, that half cen- tury of athletic excellence enters its first phase of expiration. Barring a future change of heart by the Univer- sity, the Wolverines will compete in the final home meet of this sport when they host the Michigan Invitational at Cliff Keen Arena. What makes the University's de- cision to terminate the program so painfully ironic for coach Bob Darden and his team is the fact that they are performing better right now than any other team in that storied fifty-year past. Michigan set a new school record for team score last week when it posted a 282.25 in a loss at No. I Ohio State. Make no mistake about it - the Wolverines are peaking. Ask any member of the team how long that record will stand and the answer is instantaneous; it's destined to fall this weekend. "(Setting a new school record is) not even a goal, but a plan," said sophomore Bob Young, who leads Michigan in the all-around with a score of 56.15. "If I can just remember to stay out of the way," Darden joked, "we'll break 283 or 284." Such moments of levity are rare for Darden these days as his team's apparent fate becomes more and more concrete. The University officially an- nounced the decision to drop the pro- gram in March, 1993, as a first ste toward meeting the Big Ten mandat on gender equity. Since then, the team has repeatedly asked the Regents to rescind the decision and to direct the Michigan Board of Intercollegiate Athletics and Athletic Director Joe See GYMNASTS, Page 11 UPHAIR & NAILl weave SALON braid + relaxers haircuts spiral perms full nail service wave nouveau custom hairstyling 312 Thompson St. (near corner of Liberty) 995-5733 Chinese Cuisine China gate 18000777"0112 The world's largest student & youth travel organization STA TRAVEL fOX JAL ON ALL St EI CE tNTER an evening of Classical Indian Introducing New Menu Items: Sze Chian Soft Shell Crab. Beef Chow Fun I I *~i~& Au *4±~&Vk Ed S:';'j t