Hockey vs. Notre Dame Saturday, 7 p.m. Yost Ice Arena SPORTS Men's Basketball vs. Arizona Tonight, 9 p.m. (ESPN) Palace of Auburn Hills Wolverines out for revenge vs. Blue looks to get back at Arizona at inaugural Great Eight Festival 'Cats By SCOTT BURTON Daily Basketball Writer It's natural that an extraordinary amount of hype develops when two premier basketball programs play one another early in a basketball season. Fans want to see their teams play some real meatrather than the marsh- mallows that usually mark aschedule. Coaches want to see how cohe- sive and developed their untested squads are. And the players want a chance to show what they really can do in the national spotlight. But the hype for tonight's contest between No. 17 Michigan (2-1) and No.9 Arizona (2-1) at the Direct TV Great Eight Festival (9 p.m., ESPN) has a little extra element to it - revenge. The Wildcats embarrassed the Wolverines last season in the finals of the Fiesta Bowl Classic on Arizona's home floor, 119-95. But with this year's contest being played nearby, at the Palace of Auburn Hills, the Wol- verines are looking to even the score. "It's our hometown, and we have got to show them something," senior guard Jimmy King said. "There is defi- nitely another level to this game. We have a score to settle from last year." Even Michigan coach Steve Fisher, usually reserved and under- stated, recognizes the significance of the battle. Along with Duke, Arizona presents the Wolverines with their toughest test of their pre-Big Ten schedule. "We've been preparing for Ari- zona since we've returned on Satur- day from Maui," Fisher said. "They are an awfully, awfully good team that beat us to death a year ago at their place. We want to come out and play well." For Michigan to reverse the results of last year's blowout, increased de- fensive intensity is a must. The 119 points given up in that contest was 22 more than the Wolverines allowed in any other game. "We have to keep them under 40 percent shooting," King said. Although the Wildcats lost their top scorer from last year's Final Four team, shooting guard Khalid Reeves, they return perhaps the most exciting players in the nation - Damon Stoudamire.The 5-foot-11 pointguard was a preseason first-team All- America selection. Yet, even with three other starters returning from last year's team, there is a dire need for players besides Stoudamire to make up for Reeves' scoring punch. That was certainly evi- denced in the Wildcats' loss to Min- nesota in the Great Alaska Shootout last week. "With Khalid gone we're missing that capable scorer who you know can probably get you a bucket anytime you need it," Stoudamire said. "But with Khalid gone that's going to make some other people step up." In particular, Arizona is counting on 6-foot-10 centerJoseph Blair and 6- foot-9 forward Ray Owes to establish themselves in the low post. Both were double-digit scorers last season and combined forover 15 rebounds a game. "I think they're ready to step up and kind of take over where Khalid left off," Stoudamire said. "No one's going to replace those 24 points that he gave us, but if you distribute those around to MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Semelda Elverton hit on 3 of 8 from the field in Michigan's 62-48 loss to Illinois-Chicago. The Wolverines connected o~n only 16 of their 71 shots. i oiS-Chicaro burns - sh ting Michigan By DAVID ROTHBART Daily Basketball Writer The Michigan women's basket- ball team travelled to the Windy City last night and came up with nothing but air. Illinois-Chicago, sparked by a sec- ond-half rally, handed Michigan a 62-48 loss. Poor shooting doomed the Wolverines, who shot a season-low 22 percent from the floor. Even the team's best marksmen had their shots blown off course. Amy Johnson, the Wolverines' leading scorer, made just 2 of 10 at- tempts, and Molly Murray shot 2-for- 12, including 1-for-6 from beyond the three-point arc. Michigan didn't score until three minutes into the first half. Tiffany Willard, the Wolverines' lone fresh- man starter, nailed a 15-foot jumper to tie the score, 2-2. The teams battled evenly until the lastminute of the first half when Flame guard Joanne McCarthy got hot. McCarthy bombed a 3-pointer and hit two free throws to give the Flames a 27-20 halftime edge. Michigan's freshmen helped the Wolverines sneak back into the game. A free throw from center Pollyanna Johns followed by SemeldaElverton's acrobatic layup brought the Wolver- ines within five. But McCarthy took the wind out of the Wolverines' sails. She banked a shot from 10 feet and dropped a free throw to put the Flames up 47-35. Michigan hung in the game, rallying to within six, but an 8-0 Illinois-Chi- cago run put the Wolverines away. Jennifer Brzezinski led Michigan with 12 points and nine rebounds. Johnson chipped in with seven points, four rebounds and two assists. The Flames' Penny Armstrong led all scor- ers with 16. The Wolverines fell to 1-2. Illi- nois-Chicago, avenging last season's loss to Michigan, evened its record at 1-1. Michigan continues its four-game road trip tomorrow night against South Carolina. MICHIGAN (48) MO FT REB MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Johnson 25 2-10 2-2 24 2 2 7 Brzezinski 23 3-7 6-7 3-9 0 3 12 Ross 14 1-7 1-2 1-5 2 2 3 Shellman 32 2-8 0-0 4-8 0 4 4 Willard 24 1-9 0-2 2-8 2 3 2 Murray 29 2-12 0-0 1-1 2 4 5 Franklin 2 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Elverton 18 3-8 1-2 2-2 1 3 7 DuBois 2 0-1 0-0 1-2 0 0 0 Johns 12 1-3 2-7 3-3 0 2 4 DiGiacinto 19 1-6 2-2 1-1 1 0 4 Totals 200 16-71 14-21 2552 1024 48 FG%:.225. FT%: .583. Three-point goals: 2-14 .143 (Johnson 1-4, Murray 1-6, Brzezinski 0-1, Franklin 0-1, Ross 0-1, Shellman 0-1). Blocks: 1 (Murray). Turnovers: 19 (Brzezinski 3, Murray 3, Willard 3, Elverton 2, Franklin 2, Ross 2, Shellman 2, DiGiacinto, Johns). Steals: 15 (Shellman 5, DiGiacinto 2, Ross 2, Brzezinski, Elverton, Johns, Johnson, Murray, Willard). Technical Fouls: none. ILUNOIS-CHICAGO (62) FO FT RES MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Underwood 18 2-5 0-0 2-7 0 2 4 McKenna 31 1-3 2-2 1-10 1 2 4 Pekoe 34 1-5 1-2 1-4 1 4 3 Mccarthy 34 5-11 3-3 1-4 4 3 15 Armstrong 35 4-14 8-14 1-5 7 3 16 Orstead 2 0-0 1-1 0-0 0 0 1 Blackmon 10 1-3 4-4 1-5 0 3 6 Petersen 16 4-5 0-0 0-3 0 2 8 Schueler 1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 crowell 20 1-4 3-4 0-4 1 4 5 Totals 200 19-51 22-30 9.48 :1423 62 FG%: .373.2FT%:.733. Three-point goals: 2-8 .250 (McCarthy 2-5, Petersen 0-1, Armstrong 0- 2). Blocks: 4 (Armstrong, Crowell, Mc(~arthy, McKenna). Turnovers: 26 (Armstrong 8, McCarthy 6. McKenna 5, Crowell 3, Blackmon 2, Petersen, Underwood). Steals: 8 (Armstrong 3, McKenna 3, Blackmon, Petersen). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan......20 28 - 48 UIC ...........27 35 - 62 At: UIC Pavilion; A: N/A k MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Following its 95-83 victory over High Five America Monday, Michigan takes on a much tougher foe tonight in No. 9 Arizona at the Palace of Auburn Hills. two people, I think we'll be all right." Along with the Michigan-Arizona contest tonight, five other teams from last year's NCAA tournament final eight are playing in the Great Eight Festival. Boston College defeated Florida, 91-65, and Connecticut knocked off Duke, 90-86, last night. Missouri and Purdue match-up with each other tonight at 7 p.m. Arkansas, last season's national champion, skipped the event. As the highest-ranked team left over, the Huskies were selected instead. Confident Stoudamire provides leadership, scoring for Arizona attack By RYAN WHITE Daily Basketball Writer Arizona point guard Damon Stoudamire does not have a confi- dence problem. It's not so much that he's cocky, but that he knows what he's capable of doing on the basketball court, and he knows what he needs to do for his team to be successful. "I know that at any moment in the game I can probably take the game over," Stoudamire says. "So if I can get my team playing as well as they can, and get their confidence up then, with what I can do, I think we'll be a great team." Last season as a junior, he aver- aged 18.3 points and nearly six assists per game. He put up those numbers despite playing second fiddle to backcourt partner Khalid Reeves, who averaged 24.2 ppg. This year, Stoudamire is expected to fill the void left by Reeves. The senior playmaker, however, says that the rest of the team has to be involved in order for the team to win. "The other players around me are going to have to score and pick up the slack," he says. "I don't think me going out and getting 26, 27 points a game will be beneficial to us winning, because if I'm doing that, it must mean that we're struggling on of- fense, and that's the reason I have to Color Printing Color Printing Color Printing Color Printing Big savings on color printing for all clubs, businesses, and organizations. score that many points. "Last year with me and Khalid it was different, that's what we had to do to keep our team in the game, but that's not what I have to do this sea- son to help us win." With all of the preseason atten- tion he's received, Stoudamire knows that some players are going to go out on the court with the inten- tion of making a name for them- selves against him. I know that at any moment in the game I can probably take the game over.' - Damon Stoudamire Arizona point guard "Everyone at my position, point guard, is going to be compared to what I do," Stoudamire says. "I know that every game I come out I'm going to have to play hard, because if I don't someone else is going to try to take what's been put on me." Stoudamire also isn't too worried about someone taking his place on the pedestal he feels he's been put on. But if he should happen to be outplayed, it's not a big deal. "If you go out and (another player) is better than you, so be it," he says. "But, I've been playing a lot of ball, and there haven't been too many people better then me on those days." Stoudamire hasn't always had this much confidence about his game. He says that there was a time during his freshman year when he wondered if he could have the same success in college as he did in the high school ranks. He improved steadily throughout his first three years at Arizona. Much of the improvement is due to the domi- nant players the Wildcats have fea- tured down low, like Ed Stokes and current-Minnesota Timberwolf Sean Rooks. "Those guys helped the guards a lot because it wasn't as much of a burden on the perimeter players," Stoudamire says. While a lot is expected from Stoudamire this year, he knows he has things to improve upon, and memories he wants to erase. Last season's, 91-82, Final Four loss to Arkansas, in which Stoudamire shot 5-of-24 from the field and 2-of- 13 from 3-point range, was what he calls the worst shooting game of his life. Still, he says that coach Lute Olson hasn't told him to change much. "He's just putting the ball in my hands and expecting me to carry on and build on what I did last year." Stoudamire Student Directories Campus-wide free distribution to students has been completed. Costs to fill a resume are high, University of Michigan