6- The Michigan Daily - SPORTSTuesday - Tuesday, January 17, 1995 New attitude fuels Blue turnaround Unselfishness, confidence put Michigan back in race for Big Ten title . By PAUL BARGER Daily Basketball Writer EVANSTON - One game can change a season. Heading into last Wednesday's game with Iowa, the Michigan men's basket- ball team was at a low. Six losses, after only 13 games. That is not what Michigan fans have come to expect from their team. The shooting had been horrendous and the intensity even worse. Onlookers began to speculate that the Wolverines and their heralded recruiting class just were not that good. The immediate fu- ture seemed very unpromising. O UR T And then Wednesday came and changed everything. ent Simply statedMichigan is a differ- ent basketball team than it was a week ago. Saturday's easy victory against y._Northwestern proved that. The team that could not shoot the ball blazed away for 60.7 percent Saturday. The team that could not hold onto the ball had a mere seven turnovers. "We went from a team that couldn't throw the ball in the ocean if we were standing right next to it, to a team that now thinks we're pretty good shooters," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "So often how you feel about yourself allows you to be successful. We're hoping we can continue in that way. We've been getting shots from the perimeter all year, we just haven't made them." Northwestern is not a good basketball team by any extent of the imagination, but that should not take away from Michigan's performance. The Wolverines blew the Wildcats out relatively early, but they played hard until the final whistle. The outcome of the game was never really in doubt, but don't tell Michigan that. The team scrapped, played defense and ran the floor like the score was tied. There was no taunting or trash-talking, but the swagger and confidence the team has lacked all season were back in force. Northwestern may not be the most intimidating conference road game, but it is a road victory nonetheless. After Michigan's performance against Penn State last week, any win on the road is a welcome relief for Fisher. What is truly surprising about this team is the unselfishness that is being displayed. Freshman Jerod Ward came to the Wolverines as a top-rated high school player that could fill it up. It is well-documented that things have not gone that well for Ward, but Saturday night he was on the floor hustling on offense and defense and helping his team in any way he could. "During the Iowa game everybody stepped up," Ward said. "Asa unit we want to build on what we learned from that game and against Penn State. We wanted to turn this thing around and we're doing a pretty good job of it." Sophomore Bobby Crawford has seen less and less time on the court because of the play of freshman Travis Conlan. Crawford was inserted into the Michigan lineup for the first time with 2:47 to play Saturday. He made the best of his few moments, draining a 3-pointer with a hand in his face and playing his typical tough brand of defense. Unselfishness leads to success, especially on a team with as much talent as the Wolverines have. Huge games, including tonight's at Illinois, will be the true test of the heart and ability of this squad. In a conference like the Big Ten, there are certain to be losses in the near future. This team has to prove that it can bounce back from a tough loss and win two nights later. There are no breaks on the schedule. In fact, after tonight's game in Champaign, Michigan must prepare for Sunday's game against Michigan State and Shawn Respert.If that weren't enough, the Wolverines will be in Bloomington next Tuesday trying to break Indiana's impressive home winning streak. If the Wolverines can sustain a confident attitude while maintaining their unselfishness as a unit, they are alegitimate contender for the Big Ten title. If they don't, there could be a lot more games like Penn State in the future. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Senior Jimmy King scored 16 points in the second half against Northwestern. WILDCATS Continued from page 1 the Wolverines in any other phase of the game. "I thought the fact that we outrebounded this team had to be encour- aging. We were a lot more disiplined with what we were trying to do offensively. The fact that they had more depth created aproblem for us. We can't afford to wear down and go to our bench." Michigan used the game to con- tinue the intense play that helped them win last Wednesday's game against Iowa. "We just wanted to come in and getagoodroad win,"King said. "Itwas a good team performance.We have to get road victories and defend our home turf." The recent stretch has allowed Fisher to become a little more comfort- able with his lineup. For the first time all season the same starting lineup has been used for four consecutive games. We're getting a better feel for one another," Jackson said. "We're defi- nitely having fun now." The Wolverines will have an even better feel for themselves following the next week. Road games at Illinois and Indiana plus a home matchup with Michigan State will determine Michigan's fate in the Big Ten race. Jackson sparks 'M' against Northwestern,. MICHIGAN (92) FG FT REB MIN M-A MA 0-T A F PIS Jackson 33 9-16 7.8 2-4 3 1 25 Taylor 30 11-14 1-3 1-3 0 2 23 Ndiaye 18 2-3 0-2 1-4 1 4 4 Fife 16 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 King 28 7-10 2-2 0-2 6 2 16 Conlan 17 1-2 0-0 0-1 3 2 - 2 Mitchell 19 3.6 2-2 1-4 1 0 9 Baston 15 1-1 1-2 0-3 0 4 3 Ward 19 2-6 2-2 1-4 2 4 7 Crawford 3 1-1 0-0 0-0 00 3 Lengemann 1 0-1 0-0 00 0 0 0 Morton 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 3761 1519 6.27 1620 92 FG%: .607. FT%: .789. Threepoint goals: 3-9- .333 (Crawford 1-1, Mitchell 1-2, Ward 1-2, Conlan 0-1, Fife 0-1, King 0-2). Blocks: 3 (Baston, Mitchell, Ward). Turnovers: 7 (Jackson 2, King 2, Baston, Taylor, Ward). Steals: 7 (King 2, Baston, Conlan, Jackson, Taylor, Ward) Technical Fouls: none. NORTHWESTERN (70) FG FT RES MIN M-A M-A 0-T A FPTS Neloms 28 2-7 4-5 3-5 2 2 8 Chamberlin 26 2-4 2-2 1-3 2 4 6 Williams 33 7-10 4-5 2-2 0 1 18 Duerksen 22 3-7 2-3 0-2 5 3 9 Carlisle 35 3-10 2-3 2-7 4 0 9 Lee 22 4-10 0-0 1-2 0 1 10 Branch 11 1-2 0-0 1-2 0 1 2 Kreft 12 2-2 0-1 1-4 0 1 4 Purdy 6 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 Dean 4 0-2 2-2 0-0 0 1 2 Rayford 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Totals 200 25.56 16-21. 13-32 1416 70 FG%: .459. FT%: .762. Three-point goals: 4-14, .286 (Lee 2-5, Duerksen 1-2, Carlisle 1-4, Branch 0-1, Dean 0-2). Blocks: 1 (Carlisle). Turnovers: 14 (Carlisle 4, Duerksen 3, Neloms 3, Chamberlin 2, Lee 2). Steals: 1 (Duerksen). Technical Fouls: none. By ANTOINE PITTS Daily Basketball Writer EVANSTON - The play is nor- mally reserved for Jimmy King. With a short shot clock the Wolver- ines usually give the ball to King and clear everybody else out. He then goes one-on-one trying to create a scoring chance before time runs out. In the closing seconds of the first half of Saturday's victory over North- western, King sat on the bench so the ball went to Michigan's other senior. Ray Jackson got the ball, tapped his head signifying a short clock and went to work. He dashed by the Wildcat defender, drove the lane and layed the ball off the backboard to give Michi- gan a five point lead at the half. The basket capped a 20-point first- half performance for Jackson. He shot 7-for- 11 and grabbed four rebounds in the half. "Ray Jackson's basket at the end of the half allowed us to come in feeling a. littlebetter about ourselves," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. Jackson clearly was the offensive sparkplug for the Wolverines in the first half. He hit from everywhere on the court, insideand outside. Jackson pulled an assortment of moves out of his bag, juking and knifing through defenders, on his way to a career-high 25 points. "I was just in a zone," Jackson said. "Once you feel it you want to keep getting the ball." Jackson shot just five times in the second half scoring fivepoints as North- western adjusted its defense. It was Jackson's first bucket of the second half that turned out to be a milestone, though. His jumper from the left wing 42 seconds into the half put Jackson over the 1,000-point mark in career scoring. In doing so he became the fifth member* of the 1990-91 Fab Five recruiting class to top a grand. Jackson joined King, Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, and Chris Webber and moved into 32nd place on the alltime Michigan scoring list. "I didn't let the other four players down," Jackson said. "I followed in their footsteps," This season Jackson has been asked to step up like never before. His statis- tics show he has been equal to the task. Jackson leads the Wolverines in rebounds per game (5.5), assists per game (2.9) and free throw percentage (80). He is second in scoring with 15.5 points per game. Jackson has also been a consistent defender this season for the Wolver- ines. Earlier in conference play he con- tained Purdue's Cuonzo Martin and did a stellar job Saturday against Northwestern's Cedric Neloms. "Ray Jackson guarded Neloms - he's turned into a steady reliable de- fender," Fisher said. "He takes a lot of pride in that." Jackson will have plenty of defen- sive work in coming week beginning with Illinois' Kiwane Garris and end- ing this Sunday with Michigan State's Shawn Respert. MIchIgan...........37 55 - 92 Northwestern.....32 38 - 70 At: Welsh-Ryan Arena; A: 8,117 UAC is looking for motivated individuals for its executive board for a variety of positions DESCRIPTION friendly responsible team-oriented dynamic professional in attitude LAS'"'SEEM: wandering on campus RWARDE: friends, fun, great satisfaction, excellent business experience Hf you fit this description, please turn yourself in to the UAC office at 2105 Michigan Union to pick up an application, or call 763-1107 for more information. Applications are due Fri, January 20th at 4:30 pm UAC, the University Activities Center, s the largest student-run organization on campus. We provide educational and ocalprogramming for the student body. AP PHOTO Senior Ray Jackson dominated the first half of Michigan's game against Northwestern. He scored his 1,000th career point early in the second half. BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK' Michigan shines on both ends of floor By PAUL BARGER Daily Basketball Writer EVANSTON - Statistically speaking the Michigan men's basket- ball team had its best game of the season Saturday. The team shot 60.7 percent from the field, managed 16 assists, shot 78.9 percent from the free throw line and committed only seven turnovers. Michigan had a solid game on de- fense tallying three blocks and seven steals. Even more impressive was that the team held Northwestern's biggest offensive threat, Cedric Neloms, to seven shots from the field. ACTION JACKSON: Senior Ray Jack- son became the fifth member of the Fab Five to hit the 1,000 point plateau Saturday. The 1991 Michigan recruit- ing class, consisting ofJackson, Jimmy King, Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose and Chris Webber, is only the second group in NCAA history to accomplish that feat. The first class to have five members reach 1,000 was the 1986 Pittsburgh class that included Jason Matthews, Brian Shorter, Bobby Martin, Sean Miller and Darelle Porter. Rose (1,788 points) leads the Fab Five in career scoring and ranks sev- enth on the all-time point list. He is followed by Howard (11 th, 1,526), King (18th, 1,327), Webber (1,218) and Jackson (32nd, 1,004). Glen Rice is Michigan's career leader in scoring with 2,442 points. STARTERS SET: Coach Steve Fisher seems to have found a starting lineup. For the fourth consecutive game Fisher started Jackson, King, Makhtar Ndiaye, Maurice Taylor and Dugan Fife. The group also started against Arizona State earlier in the season. " _ _ However, Fife only saw only 16 minutes of playing time against North- western compared to freshman Travis Conlan's 17 minutes. Freshman Willie Mitchell, Jerod Ward and Maceo Baston all had significant court time. SAN JOSE BOUND: Olivier Saint- Jean has officially transferred to San Jose State. He is required by NCAA rules to sit out for a full season and will be eligible to play in late December. Saint-Jean had been troubled by a knee injury during the off-season, but still managed to ignite the Wolver- ines against Tulane in tie Maui Invi- tational. In the game, Saint-Jean scored 13 points in 13 minutes. POLL PosrrmoN: Michigan is still no- where to be found in either the USA Today/CNN coaches' or AP polls. The Wolverines did receive 15 votes in the coaches' poll. Michigan State is the top-rated Big Ten team, ranking 12th in both polls. Illinois ranks 20th in the AP poll and 22nd in the coaches' poll. Iowa, whom Michigan knocked off last Wednesday.is No.25 according to RESIDENCE HALLS DINING SERVICES , y SNACKBARS I t"' .r_ . t Oro. I i Entrse 444D i t r i S 1-S i 0 i - -s m m m