. . r ; "., . ~a. J .w Hockey vs. Ohio State Friday, 7 p.m. Columbus spI Is Women's basketball vs. Eastern Michigan Tonight, 7:30 p.m. Ypsilanti Women tankers blow out; men opt to fly out Humphrey sets 200-backstroke record The members of the No. 4 Michi- in 1:54.65 -- six seconds ahead of her gan women's swimming and diving closest competition - and broke her team left the 1994 Speedo Cup East mark by over one second. Invitational with a first place title, a Her time was the third-fastest in the Big Ten record, a Michigan record history of the event. The two spots and multiple qualifications for the above her are held by former Olympi- NCAA championships in March. ans Lea Loveless and Whitney The Wolverines beat their closest Hedgepeth. competition by over 300 points. South "I wasn't really surprised," Carolina placed second with 629.50. Humphrey said. "I have shoulder Senior captain Alecia Humphrey problems, so this summer I started a broke the Big Ten and Michigan new training program and I think that records for the 200 backstroke that has helped." she set last year. Humphrey finished - Rebecca Moatz Men place third after leaving meet early They wanted to race to the finish turned out we didn't." line but had to race to the gate instead. As a result, Harvard won the meet The top-ranked Michigan men's with a score of 832.5, followed by swim team had to settle for third- Florida with 792. The Wolverines place at the Harvard Invitational this were next, tallying 783. weekend, because their early flight However, Michigan led the meet forced them to leave before competi- after the first day of competition, and tion was completed. won every event on the second day The Wolverines decided to exit the before their departure. Overall, the meet early, missing the crucial relay Wolverines won nine out of the meet's events, in lieu of staying an extra night. 14 events, and Urbanchek was pleased. "We didn't want to come home "We only had ten bodies while the Monday and miss morning classes, so other teams had full crews," we decided to come back Sunday Urbanchek said. "Yet, we still had a night," Michigan coach John pretty good competition and came up Urbanchek said. "We thought we had with some great swims." enough cushion to win the meet, but it - Nicholas J. Cotsonika =lowA The Great Lakes Invitational is conducting a challenge in cooperation with the Daily. Grand Prize: A night for two at the Westin Hotel in Detroit and two tickets to each day of the GLI at Joe Louis Areha Dec. 29 and 30. 15 First Prizes: Two tickets to each day of the GLI. To win, drop off your answers at 420 Maynard. This challenge Is cumula- tive - the contestants with the most correct answers through Dec. 13 ' have the greatest chances of winning. Today's question: What two teams played In the longest game In NCAA hockey history?: 'M' tinkers, toys with Detroit, 87-76 - Ward's 9 points ignite first-half run By PAUL BARGER Daily Basketball Writer Steve Fisher used his fifth starting lineup of the season as the Michigan men's basketball defeated the Detroit Titans 87-76 in front of a sparse crowd at Crisler Arena last night. The initial unit was unsuccessful as the Wolverines (4-2) allowed the Titans to get out to an early lead. Then freshman Jerod Ward came in, for the first time displaying the talent that made him the nation's top- rated high school recruit last year. The forward scored nine points and had seven rebounds in only nine min- utes of first-half play. "I saw good things from Jerod," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "(This was) his best game so far. I think Jerod benefited the most (this game) on how he perceives he'll fit in." The Wolverines were down, 12-7, 5:08 into the game when they went on a 19-2 run. From that moment on Michigan never trailed. Detroit (1-3) was forced into what seemed like an endless amount of traveling violations and all-around poor decisions, committing five turn- overs in the first four minutes. The Titans managed only one field goal and three points in over seven min- utes of play during the heart of the Michigan run. "Defense usually starts good things for us," guard Bobby Crawford said. "We forced them to miss a lot of shots and make mistakes." Michigan took a 45-29 lead into the half, holding Detroit to 38.5 per- cent from the floor and out-rebound- ing the Titans, 27-11. The Wolverines lost some of their intensity in the second half as Detroit was able to convert on many second- chance opportunities. The Titans had eight offensive rebounds in the second half after being held to four in the first. "We have to play hard for 40 min- utes," junior Dugan Fife said. "I don't think we played as hard in the second half. Detroit hit some big threes." Detroit was deadly from 3-point range, canning 13 on 28 attempts. Terrence Porter led the Titans with five 3-pointers. Michigan's lead was cut to 13, 69-@ 56, with 7:30 remaining. Three-point- ers by Wolverine guards Fife and Jimmy King were answered by Detroit's Michael Jackson and Porter. Porter nailed another three with just over four minutes remaining to trim the Michigan lead to nine. But that was as close as the Titans would come. The win gives Michigan its first back-to-back victories of the season, providing the team with much-needed confidence heading into Saturday's game with archrival Duke. JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Michigan's Jerod Ward shoots over Alex Renner-Thomas during yesterday's 87-76 victory over Detroit. Ward had 13 points and eight rebounds. Women cagers face Eastern By DAVID ROTHBART Daily Basketball Writer Two young teams on their way up collide tonight at Bowen Fieldhouse in Ypsilanti when the Michigan women's basketball team plays neigh- borhood rival Eastern Michigan. The Eagles and the Wolverines posted miserable records last season but have high hopes for this year's campaign. Both teams are centering their rebuilding efforts around tal- ented young players. Michigan (2-3) is led by sopho- more guard Amy Johnson, who has scored 28 points in each of the Wol- verines' last two games. Eastern Michigan (2-2) relies on point guard September Silvers to con- trol the offense. The 5-foot-5-inch fresh- man has tallied 11 assists in four games this season. With the two victories, the Eagles doubled last year's win total. The Wolverines have also recov- ered from a catastrophic '93-94 season. Already, Michigan is one win away from matching last year's victory total. Despite early season success, coach Trish Roberts expressed concern about the ability of her eight freshmen to endure their fourth game in nine days. "They're not used to playing this often," Roberts said. "It's physically (and emotionally) exhausting." In last year's contest, the Eagles drove up to Crisler Arena and were ambushed by an understaffed Michi- gan squad, 76-62. DETROIT (76) FO FT RES MIN WA M-A 0-T A F PTS Pickett 29 4-9 3-4 2-6 4 4 13 LeGardy 24 2-5 4-6 3-3 1 0 8 Renner-Thom14 0-2 0-0 1-3 0 2 0 Alexander 26 3-7 0-0 0-2 1 4 6 Jackson 38 2-7 3.5 0381 9 Robinson 28 5-8 0-0 2-3 3 2 13 Jenkins 8 1-4 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 Domke 8 1=5 1-2 0-0 0 3 4 Porter 13 5-8 0-0 0-2 0 1 15 Turner 12 3-3 0-1 2-4 0 4 6 Totals 200 26-58 11- 2231 1723 76 FG%: .448. FT% .611. Three-point goals: 13- 28.464 (Porter 5-7, Robinson 3-3, Jackson 2-5, Pickett 2-6, Domke 1-5, Alexander 0-1, Jenkins 0- 1). Blocks: 0. Turnovers: 19 (Jackson 5, Alexander 4, Pickett 2, LeGardy 2, Robinson 2, Renner-Thomas, Jenkins, Domke). Steals: 3 (Alexander, Jackson, Domke). Technical Fouls: none. MICHIGAN (87) FA FT REB MIN M-A U-A O-T A F PTS Jackson 30 5-9 1011 1-7 6 1 20. Mitchell 18 4-10 0-0 4-5 1 0 8 Ndiaye 15 1-2 1-3 1-4 1 3 3 Fife 24 1-3 0-0 0-2 2 5 31 King 34 5-12 3-4 1-5 2 2 is Taylor 16 3-6 4-5 1-3 0 3 101 Ward 24 6-12 0-0 5 48 2 2 13 Crawford 19 1-1 0-0 0-1 2 2 3 Baston 13 4-4 3.8 2-2 0 4 11 Conlan 5 0-0 1-2 0-0 0 0 1 Morton 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Fields 1 0-0 0-0 0.1 0 0 0 Totals 200 30.58 22-33 18-43 1622 87 FG%: .508. FT%: 667. Three-point goals: 5-11, 455 (King 2-3, Ward 1-1, Crawford 1-1. Fife 1-3, Mitchell 0-1, Jackson 0-2). Blocks: 4 (Mitchell, Ndiaye, Taylor, Conlan). Turnovers: 17 (Ndiaye 5, Jackson 4, Fife 2, Ward 2. Mitchell, Taylor, Crawford, Baston). Steals: 3 (Jackson, King, Baston). Technical Fouls: none Visitors........ 29 47 - 76 Home........45 42 - 87 At: Crisler; A: 13,247 Answer: Name: Phone: A 0 0