_____ The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, February 6, 1995 - 5 Wolverines not given same home court advantage as Minnesota MINNESOTA INNEAPOLIS - In the Big Ten conference, the key to success is winning at home. Minnesota has put itself in solid contention for the conference championship because it has done just that. Five Big Ten home games, five victories. Michigan was the Gophers' latest victims, the young Wolverines learning once again how hard it is to win on the road in the: conference. Especially in a building as intimidating as Williams Arena.- The fans would not let their Go- phers lose. No matter how hard Michi- gan tried, or how well the team played, t it would not have mattered. The Wol- verines could not silence the raucous PAUL home crowd. BARGER That simply does not happen in Barger Ann Arbor on a consistent basis. The Than Life so-called alumni section is peppered by fans that will not yell. In fact, for most of the game they are glued to their seats. But the students are to blame as well. Michigan has been one of the most successful programs in college basketball over the past six years and cannot even fill Crisler Arena. Against Wisconsin last Wednesday night there were at least 300 empty seats in the student section. And, as hard as it is to believe, the stadium was not filled for the Jan. 22 game with Michigan State. Those students that show up are often loud even though Michigan's play at home this season has not exactly warranted that much cheering. Still, for Michigan to be a legitimate contender in the Big Ten it has to have a decisive edge at Crisler. That edge must be given by the fans. Minnesota has that edge and it takes advantage of it. The confidence that is created makes the Gophers an awesome force in their own building. It must be frustrating for the Wolverine players to walk into an arena as intimidating as Williams, knowing that when they travel home to play Ohio State Wednesday their arena will not be nearly as intimidating. The Minnesota players were grateful to their fans after Saturday's game. "The crowd was very instrumental in our victory tonight," guard Townsend Orr said. They had a lot of energy. They helped us fight back after Michigan made a run." Michigan players have only said something like that once this season - after the Iowa game. That game went to double overtime, it was certainly not hard for the fans to get excited. Any hopes for a Big Ten title virtually disappeared in Minneapolis. However, contrary to what many believe, the NCAA tournament is still a distinct possibility. To even be considered, the Wolverines will have to win at least four of their remaining five home games. Even that might not be enough. Michigan needs its fans to give it a decisive edge at home. Up until now the support has been a complete embarassment. At Williams arena the fans yell for their Gophers. They stand up during the fight song. 14,520 people making noise and pulling for their squad. What a concept. Imagine, an entire arena cheering, not just the student section. In fact, up until a year ago, Minnesota did not have a student section. The arena was still one of the loudest in the conference. None of this should take away from the Gophers' effort. Minnesota was clearly the better team Saturday, but the results could have been different if the teams had met on a neutral court, like Crisler. But since Michigan and Minnesota do not meet there this year no one will ever know. "I wish they were coming into our place," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "I can say that because they're not." Grim Jacobson Thomas Lenard Orr Kolander Walton Wolf Winter Whaley Watkins Crittenden Osterman Togas MIN 20 14 25 34 31 15 27 9 15 6 2 1 1 (80) Fe &.A 3-5 1-1 2-6 6-15 4-8 0-3 4-7 1-3 1-1 1-2 0-1 0-0 0-0 M 2-2 5-6 2.4 3-4 9-9 0-0 3-4 0.0 2-2 0.2 0-0 1-2 0.0 2-2 2-2 1.6 3-8 1.4 2-3 2-10 0-0 o-2 1-1 0-1 1-1 0-1 A 0 1 5 2 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 3 3 1 1 4 0 2 2 3 0 0 2 8 6 19 2 0 11 2 4 2 0 1 0 200 23-52 27-35 16.44 1322 80 FG%: .442. FT%:.771. Three-point goals: 7-19, .368 (Lenard 4-10, Orr 3-5, Wolf 0-2, Whaley 0-1, Watkins 0-1). Bocks: 3 (Thomas, Walton, Winter). Turnrovers: 17 (Grim 1, Jacobson 1, Thomas 4, Lenard 1, Orr 1, Kolander 2, Wolf 1, Winter 3, Whaley 1, Watkins 1, Crittenden 1). Steals: 11 (Grim 1, Jacobson 1, Lenard 1, Orr 2, Kolander 1, Walton 1, Winter 2, Watkins 1, crittenden 1). Technical Fouls: Kolander 1 MICHIGAN (58) Taylor Jackson Ndiaye Fife King Baston Conlan Mitchell Crawford Morton Totals FO MIN M4 29 4-T 31 3-12 19 3-4 23 1-3 33 3-10 23 3-3 10 0-2 20 4-12 11 1-7 1 0.2 200 2262 M"A OTAFR 2-3 2-313 0.3 2-4 3 -4 0-0 3-8 0'3 0.0 00 3 4 2-2 1-4 3 1 4.6 360 4 0-0 0.0 1 1 1-3 44 1 2 0.0 1.213 0-0 0.1 0 0 9.17 16.33 1.325 p 10 8 6 3 10 10 0 9 2 0 so FG%:.355. F%:.529. Three-poInt goals: 5.23, .217 (Jackson 2-6, Fife 1-3, King 26. Conlan 0-2, Mitchell 0-2). Blocks: 4 (Taylor 1, Ndiaye 3). Turnovers: 17 (Taylor 3, Jackson 5, Ndiaye 1, King 3, Baston 2, Conlan 2, Mitchell 1). Steals: 8 (Taylor 1, Jackson 1, Fife 1, King 1, Conlan 2, Mitchell 2). Technical Fouls: Jackson 1. Minnesota............45 35 - 80 Michigan..............29 29 - 58 At: Williams Arena; A: 14,520. JUAI d.Kg g sNgp LUHIL-ss ii Jimmy King looks to pass In the Wolverines 80-58 loss to Minnesota on Saturday. King struggled scoring 10 points on 3 of 10 shooting. BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK Big Ten Standings Through games of Feb. 5. CONFERENCE 0 VI JUIL TEAM W L w Michigan St. Purdue Minnesota Michigan Penn State Illinois I Indiana Wisconsin Iowa Northwestern Ohio State 8~a.1 16 2 6 6 2 3 6 3 5 4 5 4 5 4 3 1 8 0 9 15 15 12 13 14 13 10 13 5 8 8 8 Gopher coach not happy with post-game actions By Ryan White Daily Basketball Writer MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota basketball coach Clem Haskins didn't like what he saw at the end of Saturday night's game against Michigan. After the Golden Gophers beat the Wolverines, 80-58, a number of Wolverines left the court without shaking the hands of their Minnesota counterparts. In his post-game press conference, Haskins said that he was going to write letters to Michigan's president James J. Duderstadt and athletic director Joe Roberson expressing his displeasure with what occured. "To make that the issue of the game is unacceptable to me," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. One Gopher in particular was upset that he didn't get to shake hands with Michigan seniors Ray Jackson and Jimmy King. Senior Jayson Walton is from Dallas and played against King in the high school state playoffs and with Jackson in summer leagues. He also played in the same high school conference with the Wolverines' Maceo Baston. "I really wanted to shake Jimmy King's and Ray Jackson's hands," Walton said. "Maceo came out and shook my hand, and I appreciated that. "But for the other guys it was just poor sportsmanship." HoMEBoY: Detroit native Voshon Lenard finished his last game against Michigan by scoring 19 points and leading Minnesota to a win, but he wasn't entirely happy. Lenard lost four of his seven games against Michigan in his career and never won in Ann Arbor. "It was probably the last time I'll ever play (the Wolverines) in my career," Lenard said. "I'm not completely satisfied because we never beat them (at Crisler)." REVERESED: Haskins has complained this season about the discrepency between his team's free throw attempts and those of Minnesota's opponents. Saturday night, just the opposite occured. Michigan went to the free throw line just 17 times as opposed to 35 freebies for the Gophers. "They were able to get to the line with consistency tonight, something they haven't been able to do much of lately," Fisher said. "I think that really helped them." OUCH: The Wolverines 80-58 loss to the Gophers was Minnesota's second biggest victory ever against Michigan. In the 1968-69 season the Gophers beat the Wolverines by 27 points, 94- 67. Michigan still leads the overall series, 66-52. 5 13 4 15 MEN Continued from page 1 "I don't think (the officials) let it et out of hand," he said. "We just got in a deficit and we couldn't get out." One positive for Michigan was its balanced scoring attack. Jack- son, like Taylor and Baston, fin- ished with ten, and Mitchell scored nine. The Williams Arena crowd got into the game early and often, but according to Jackson it's too late in the season to blame a road loss on the team's youth and inability to handle hostile crowds. "I don't think it was a road thing," he said. "We just weren't ready to play." JONATHAN LURIE/Daely Voshon Lenard drives to the hoop against Ray Jackson Saturaay. Lenara had 19 points and 8 rebounds in the Gophers' win over the Wolverines. Women 's game gains some respect, exposure y David Rothbart wDeily Basketball Writer The first dunk. N When North Carolina's Charlotte Smith shot out on a fast break, rose into the air and edged the ball over the in last December, many heralded the moment as the dawn of a new era of popularity for women's basketball. With fourteen games slated for ational exposure on ESPN, and the NCAA Tournament scheduled for prime-time slots on CBS, it seemed as if this would be the season women's basketball finally caught on with America's sports fans. OF A- f Gob Ank. At Michigan, attendance at women's games has risen slightly this season, but this seems like a re- sponse to the Wolverines' improved team, not indicative of a general trend of women's basketball's growing popularity. "(The women's games are) just not that exciting," says LSA junior Timothy Walbridge, a faithful at- tendee at men's games who saw the women's team play once in January, a 94-79 home loss to Ohio State. "They don't have the skills to pay the bills." Walbridge's assertion is debat- says Michael D. Bell, an assistant with the women's team at Morehead State. Bell rails against the notion that women's basketball can never acquire a substantial level of popularity. "What makes the games exciting is not dunking," Bell says. "Flashy passes, flashy shooting-it's all there. What really makes the games exciting are the great finishes." The championship game of last year's NCAA Tournament is a prime example of a great finish. The Tar Heels' Charlotte Smith nailed a 3- pointer over two Louisiana Tech de- fenders as the buzzer sounded to bring hoops gets the exposure, the interest will follow." In Denmark, where professional women's basketball has been estab- lished for twenty years, women's games often draw, a bigger crowd than men's games. In 1992, the Ladies Pro- fessional Basketball Association started up in the United States. The professional league featured tight Spandex uniforms and nine-foot rims designed to increase dunking oppor- tunities, but it quickly fizzled out.. "It was a circus sideshow," Bell says. "It wasn't basketball." Michigan guard Amy Johnson, the Wlver~i-nes' connd-ea-dinO Psrer. WOMEN Continued from page 1. the second half with a 25-6 run capped by Melina Griffin's 3-pointer~ from the top of the key. The Wolverines shot only 20 per- cent from the floor, their worst output of the season, compared to a 49 per- cent clip for the Boilers. Michigan managed only three field goals in the first 13 minutes of the second period. Even with crisp passing and good looks at the basket, Michigan could not get the ball to drop. "We shot the ball vey poorly," Roberts said. "If we can't put the ball in the hole, these are the kind of results you are going to have." Brzezinski led the Wolverines with nine points and freshman Tiffany Willard pulled down 10 rebounds. Wolverines began a 13-2. run, includ- ing five points from Akisha Franklin and four from Brzezinski to end the half. Michigan shot an unusually high 43 percent from the floor and went