6 - The Michigan Daily -- SPORTSMonday - Monday, December 5, 1994 Wolverines excite UTC r 'M' game biggest event ever in Chattanooga By RYAN WHITE Daily Basketball Writer CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. - Saturday's game between the Wol- verines and Moccasins may have been the biggest thing to happen in the city since the famous Choo-Choo came to town from Cincinnati in 1880. Michigan against Tennessee- Chattanooga a major event? It's hard for anyone from Ann Arbor who sees the Wolverines against Duke every year, and has seen Michigan in the Final Four two of the last three seasons to be excited about the Moccasins. But Tennes- see-Chattanooga was very excited about the Wolverines. There were five stories about the game in The Chattanooga Times Sat- urday. One story on the front page said the game rivaled the 1991 U.S. Ama- teur golf tournament as the biggest sporting event in the city's history. Three of the stories were about Dick Vitale and ESPN coming to town to televise the Moccasins na- tionally for the first time ever at home. In fact, Vitale's presence may have been a bigger event than the game. And, on top of it all, Tennessee- Chattanooga was trying to defend a 27-game home winning streak against the nationally-ranked Wolverines. "This was the game in the Round- house," Moccasin forward Brandon Born said after the game. The crowd of 11,103 started mak- ing noise as soon as ESPN went on the airanddidn'tstopuntilthefinal buzzer. In between, UTC had a miniature blimp flying around the arena, people sling-shotting free t-shirts into the seats and a special guest. At 15:56, the game's first official timeout, Super Hugo, the Charlotte Hornets' mascot, slid out of the arena's rafters on a rope, and onto the court. For the rest of the game Hugo entertained, dunked and danced around in a pointed bra doing his best Ma- donna impersonation. The crowd's balloon waving and tomahawk chopping were largely re- sponsible for the Mocs' second half comeback that cut the Wolverines' 13-point halftime lead to three. "When the crowd's cheering for you like that, it makes you play harder for some reason," Born said. "The crowd was great," Tennessee- Chattanooga forward Maurio Hanson MOCS Continued from page 1 defense consistently rallied for the Wolverines, causing 26 turnovers, while committing only 14. "Wejust made some crucial turn- overs down the stretch," said Neal, who had two late giveaways. "Against a ranked team like Michigan, that will kill us." Michigan's defense also held the Mocs' Brandon Born to 18 points, half of which came on free throws. Born, the Moccasin's leading scorer, spent most of the first half on the bench with two fouls and didn't score his first field goal until 5:18 into the second. "We needed to have our best play- ers on the floor," Moccasin coach Mack McCarthy said. "AndBorn'sfouls kept him on the bench in the first half." Hanson led Tennessee-Chatta- nooga with 26 points. Both teams were victims of tight officiating that resulted in 51 total fouls, including 26 against Michi- gan. "Itwasapretty physical ballgame," Born said. "King and Jackson are both big guys and they were trying to bump me whenever I came inside." Michigan continued to struggle with its outside shooting. The Wolver- ines shot just 3-for-16 from 3-point range, including a number of air balls. MICHIGAN (83) Fr iFTREB MIN WiA hM-A OT A F ITS Jackson 32 6-11 7-8 1-5 3 4 19 Taylor 20 4-8 1-2 1-3 1 4 9 Baston 11 2-2 0-0 0-1 0 2 4 King 35 7-16 8-13 3-6 4 4 23 Fife 33 1-3 2-4 0-1 5 4 5 Ndiaye 22 2-4 0-0 38 0 4 4 Mitchell 20 3-7 3-3 2-5 0 2 9 Crawford 13 1-3 0-2 1-1 1 1 3 Ward 14 2-3 3.4 1-1 1 1 7 Totals 2002&57 2436 12.311626 83 Fri%: .491. FT%: .666. Three-potrnt goals: 3-16, .188 (King 1-4, Fife 1-3, Crawford 1-3, Jackson 0-4, Mitchell 0.1, Ward 0.1). Blocks: 2 (Taylor, Baston). Turnovers: 14 (Jackson 4, Crawford 2, Ndiaye 2, Taylor 2. Basteon, King, Fife, Ward). Steals: 18 (King 6. Fife 6. Jackson 3, Crawford 1. Ward 2). Technical Fouls: King. Fishercontinued his frequent sub stitution of players, using a nine- man rotation. "When it gets right down to it, that might have been one of the factors," McCarthy said. "They had fresh people down the stretch and we didn't." "It'sa lot more fun when you win," Fisher said. "We're going home feel- ing good about ourselves." The Wolverines are also returning home with a game to prepare for right away. Michigan will face former assis- tant coach Perry Watson and his De- troit Titans tonight at 7:30 at Crisler Arena. Itwill be anotheryear before Michi- gan fans can see former Wolverine Leon Derricks play in a Titan uniform, Nonetheless, Detroit features a num- ber of high-profile players. Senior guard Michael Jackson is the top returning scorer, averaging 12.7 points per game last season. He also dished out 4.7 assists per game at the point guard position. Two other starters from last year's team return - center Alan Renner- Thomas (5.3 ppg) and forward Herman Jenkins (4.4). The Titans are still trying to find a. way to replace departed star forward Tony Tolbert. The former Wolverine led the Midwestern Collegiate Con- ference last season in scoring (23.6). Last year the Wolverines defeated the Titans, 78-60, at Crisler Arena. TENNESSEE-CHATTANOOGA (71) FG Fr REB #IN WiA hi-A O-T A F PTS Hanson 34813 7-9 6-11 2 5 26 Born 27 4-7 9-11 2-9 4 4 18 Smith 28 4-8 2-4 1.5 0 5 10 Watkins 16 0-3 0-0 2.4 5 1 0 Lemons 17 1-7 1-3 0-0 0 2 4 Neal 25 0-0 0-1 0-1 3 1 0 Henderson 13 2-3 0-1 2-5 0 0 4 Moore 12 0-2 0-0 0-1 0 3 0 Scott 16 2-4 1-1 0-0 0 2 5 Oliver 12 2-6 0-0 1-1 0 2 4 Totals 200 23-53 2030 ±538 1425 71 FG%: .434. FT%: .667. Three-point goals: 5-20, .250 (Hanson 3-7, Born 1-3, Lemons 1-5, Oliver 0- 4). Blocks: none. Turnovers: 26 (Neal 6.,Watkins 5, Henderson 4, Lemons 4, Hanson 3, Born 2. Moore, Smith). Steals: 5 (Born 2, Moore, Neal, Scott). Technical Fouls: none. Born said. "We haven't played in that kind of atmosphere since I've been here." Even though the Wolverines are used to going into hostile arenas and playing in big games, Michigan coach Steve Fisher was impressed. "I think that home crowds are most of the reason that teams win 70 or 80 percent of their home games," Fisher said. "Home crowds are a factor, and theirs was tonight." If nothing else, the game may have helped get the Wolverines ready for Saturday's contest, when they take on Duke and the Cameron crazies. For the Moccasins and Chatta- nooga, though, the game was their time in the spotlight and probably a bigger event than the arrival of their train. After all, Vitale never rode the Choo-Choo. Mlchlgan........ 49 34 - 83 Tenn.-Chat.........36 35 - 71 At: UTC Arena; A: 11,103 AP PHOTO Tennessee-Chattanooga forward Brandon Born swats at Jimmy King. . COCKY Continued from page 1 ' No one is ever going to confuse Michigan's opponent Saturday with the likes of the Wildcats or the Sun Devils. After all, Tennessee-Chattanooga doesn't have much bulk inside. The Moccasins don't have guards who can knock down 3-pointers as if they were playing Nerf basketball. As Tennessee-Chattanooga coach Mack McCarthy said the day before the game, "Michigan has us totally outmanned. We have to play a perfect game to stay in the contest." The Moccasins hardly came close to playing a perfect game. They had 26 turnovers, hit only 43 percent of their shots and com- mitted 25 personal fouls. So did Michigan blow them out? Did the Wolverines coast to a mon- strous victory, making the Mocca- sins look like marshmallows extraordinaire? No, Michigan just squeezed by, refusing to take charge of whatcould have been a lopsided game. It's funny though, because if you saw the looks on the Wolverines' faces after the game, you would have thought they had returned to the Final Four. Ray Jackson and Jimmy King cracked jokes. Dugan Fife grinned running up court. Coach Steve Fisher talked of leaving Chattanooga "feeling good about ourselves." Please forgive them for their gid- diness. After all, even if they didn't quite look like champions, the Wol- verines did something quite ex- traordinary Saturday ... THE TIME: 1:03 to go in the second half. THE SCENARIO: King picks the ball away from Maurio Hanson. He drives. He shoots. He's fouled. Count it, and send him to the line. THE RESULT: Good old-fash- ioned trash-talking. King jaws off at the rambunctious Moccasin fans, stomping on the sidelines, raising his arms in mockery as if to say "We're back." Then Michigan did it again ... THE TIME: 39 seconds left in the second half. THE SCENARIO: Dugan Fife steals the ball from Shane Neal. He dishes to the trailing Jackson, who leans home a slam. THE RESULT: Jackson and King embrace at mid-court. And then again.... THE TIME: 0:13 to go in the second half. THE SCENARIO: Streaking to the basket with three trailers, Fife slides a pass over his left shoulder to Maurice Taylor. The freshman forward viciously delivers the ball through the rim. THE RESULT: The whole team heads up the court smiling bigger than Miss America pageant contestants. Yes, Michigan actually had fun. That unforgiving, unadulterated, "We're Michigan, who the #@$% are you?" kind of fun the Wolver- ines are so famous for. And had been so devoid of so far this year. "There hadn't been a game this year where we've really had fun," Fife said. "I think that's because we didn't get the fast break a lot." "We had a lot of emotion, which I think we lacked in some games. We fed off our big plays," the junior guard added. "We just push the ball a lot and gave us a chance to have fun, especially at the end of the game." No one is saying that the Wol- verines have turned their season around just because they enjoyed themselves against a squad that has never beaten a Big Ten team. There is still a lot of work to do, many strides of improvement to* make. Indeed, with Duke and Penn- sylvania looming in the near future and with a tough conference sched- ule not that far away, Michigan is likely to struggle and be frustrated for some time. But it sure is nice, for one game; to see the Wolverines doing what they do best - stealing the spotlight. And if Michigan remembers to. play with that kind of character and emotion when the team gets its game together- hopefully by NCAA Tournament time - the Wolver- ines will once again be anything but humble. zw 6on 't get, left in the cold! &icitar(son's tica Warm up with hot deals on top brand eye wear. We have all your vision care needs. 320 S. State St. (Below Decker Drugs) SThT2 5T;R22TUESPORTS ,¢f4tetie 7.ecgea & AA64l I The Michigan Daily. The best in men's basketball coverage. 0 a didas N> Models, M.C., Production and Technical Crew needed for wl hk Leasing Now For Fall 1995! May-to-May Leases Too! -. .- 330 S. State Street 761-7615 Wear your "Season O' Shame" 100% Cotton, X-Large T-Shirt and let everyone know that the luck has run out for the Irish. I OUTFITTERS 333 S. Main Ann Arbor M(48104 Backpacking * Camping Mountaineering " X-Country Skiing P' Humiliated Schools with I I I ,