6 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday, February 13, 1995 ____ ~ r-' t__ l }T'_'_'4S_°'_5.1'--"-lF--°-it--,.-"-11---X°-i7- --+4 --u--- l -= \ y- :l 4-._131 N l_ BASKEiBALL NOTEBOOK Crisler crowd gives Wolverines a lift r- WOMEN continued from page 1 worried that Michigan would come back. "It's their job to catch up," she said. "I never look over my shoul- der." Longworth, who tallied 21 points Friday night, 12 over her average, said the entire Penn State squad stepped up in the absence of Potthoff. "We knew we had 18 points and 10 rebounds to make up for," Longworth said. "We all did our share." The Michigan players were dis- appointed by the final score, but pleased with their performance. "We gave the No. 12 team in the country a good game," Johnson said. Coach Roberts said her team could have emerged with a victory if they had not fallen behind early. "We hung tough," she said. "We handled full-court pressure well, we crashed the boards, and we outhustled them. We played intense. Compared to our last game (with Penn State), this was a moral victory." The Wolverines have four confer- ence games remaining before the Big Ten Tournament March 3-6. "If we play as tough as we played tonight, we can win our next four games," Roberts said. By David Rothbart Daily Basketball Writer The Michigan women's basket- ball team, depleted by injuries and discouraged by close losses, can use any help it can get. Friday night against Penn State, that help came from the Crisler Arena crbwd of 1,526. As the Wolverines battled evenly with the No. 12 Lady Lions, the crowd went crazy, cheering after steals and baskets, lambasting the referees for bad calls. Coach Trish Roberts said the fans give her team a boost. "(A loud crowd) makes a big dif- ference," Roberts said. "When we get 1300, instead of the 300 we've had past seasons, it spurs (the team) on." One of the loudest fans was John Devlin, a Ph.D. philosophy student from Toronto. "It's important to support the women's program," Devlin said."The tenacity, courage and determination here is more than you'll find on any other varsity squad." Devlin brings his two daughters to the Michigan women's games. He feels it is important for them to know that playing sports is a real option for women at the university level. He said although the Wolverines have had a tough season, they'll surprise some teams next year. "We'll have ten conference wins next season," Devlin said. "The year after that, watch out." The Molly Murray Fan Club, a group of ten young girls, sat behind Michigan's bench and cheered on the Wolverines. The girls are members of a local team called the Granny Fugi- tives. When they are not on the court themselves, they are at Crisler, urg- ing on their favorite player. "Molly Murray is total lightning," Donna Taylor-Ross said. Taylor- Ross, 10, said that Murray is her fa- vorite player because she plays so unselfishly. Rebecca Zazove, 10, said Murray is going to be famous. "She's going to the Olympics," Zazove said. "She's awesome. She's fantastic." Also in attendance Friday night was race car driver Eric Firavich. Firavich said he loves the Wolver- ines' fast-paced tempo. "It's not as fast as automobile rac- ing, but it's still good entertainment," he said. MANUTE: The Lady Lions inserted 6-foot-6 backup center Julie Jarosz with five minutes remaining in Friday night's contest. Jarosz bullied her way inside for six points and one rebound. "I just tried to bump her out of there," Michigan center Jennifer Brzezinski said. "I tried to keep posi- tion and distract her shot." WHERE'S MARITZA?: Absent from the Wolverines' bench Friday night was little-used sub Maritza DuBois. "She's no longer with the team," Roberts said. DuBois, a native of Brinklow, Md., finished her unstoried career at Michi- gan with two rebounds and zero points on 0-for-3 shooting in five games. MEKISHA's BACK: This weekend, guard Mekisha Ross will return to action for the Wolverines. Ross, who has missed almost a month with a minor stress fracture in her right shin, will give starting point guard Akisha Franklin some much-needed rest. Ross' injury, in addition to a season- ending ligament tear suffered by Jen- nifer Kiefer, has forced Franklin to log close to 40 minutes every game. Michigan is still without the ser- vices of center Pollyanna Johns. Johns will not return this season, since she tore her anterior cruciate liga- ment early on in the season. PENN STATE Parsons Nicholson Coleman Reimers Thayer Longworth Masley Hrivnak Calhoun Jarosz Totals MIN 21 27 25 12 1 34 30 13 32 5 200 (82) FG M7-A 4-7 7-8 1-5 2-4 0-0 8-14 4-12 12 5-8 12 33-62 Fr M-A 0-1 0-0 3-4 0-2 0-0 2-2 0-1 0.0 2-3 4-4 11-17 REB O-T 12 11 2-5 0-0 0-1 1-5 3-6 2-6 1-8 0-1 11-40 A F 0 0 10 2 0 3 0 2 1 1 2 2 0 4 2 2 0 4 0 0 1520 MICHIGAN (65) PTS 9 15 S 4 0 21 8 2 12 6 82 Murray Franklin Johnson Brzezinski Shelman Willard DiGiacinto Totals FG%: 364 MIN 18 40 31 40 33 22 16 FG FT W-A W-A 5-10 6-7 6-13 0-0 5-17 11 5-8 0-2 1-8 3-4 1-4 22 1-6 0-1 REB 4T 1-5 0-1 2-3 4-10 2-6 12 0-2 A 2 3 0 2 4 2 1 F 2 2 1 2 3 5 5 PTS 18 13 12 11 5 4 2 200 24-66 12-17 16-36 1420 65 FT%: 706 Three-point goals: 5-19, FG%: .532. FT%: 647 Three-point goals: 5-8, .625(Longworth 3-6, Parsons 11, Nicholson 1-1). Blocks: 7(Calhoun 5, Hrinvak, Masley). Turnovers: 20(Calhoun 4, Coleman 4, Longworth 4. Masley 4, Nicholson 3, Hrivnak). Steals: 7(Nicholson 3, Longworth, Masley, Parsons, Reimers). Technical Fouls: none .263(Murray 2-5, Franklin 1-6, Johnson 1-4, Brzezinski 1-3, Willard 0-1) Blocks: 1(Murray). Turnovers: 20(Franklin 6, Brzezinski 5, Johnson 3, Willard 3, Shellman 2, Murray) Steals: 10(Franklin 5, Shellman 2, Brzezinski, Johnson, Willard). Technical Fouls: none JUDITH PERKINS/ Daily Michigan's Amy Johnson went 5-of-17 from the field Friday night, tallying 12 points. Her teammates didn't shoot much better, hitting on just 36.4% of their shots en route to a 17-point loss to Penn State. Penn State...........41 41- 82 Michigan ............30 35 - 65 At: Crisler Arena A. 1,526 Women 's season could have been so much more Court ress Up next for the Wolverines: Northwestern, Fri. 8:00 EST Michigan State, Sun. 1:00 LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT INVITES YOU TO A CAMPUS MEETING ON THE PASSIFAIL ISSUE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13,1995 7:00 PM MICHIGAN UNION K UENZEL ROOM 4003 MICHIGAN UNION 763-4799 ATUDRT CARVEDPEENTT ARTCARVED PRESENTS By Ravi Gopal Daiy Basketbal witer Last Friday's 82-65 loss to Penn State was yet another loss in the Wol- verines' dreary season. Michigan fell to 8-14 overall, 3-9 in the conference. Does it even matter'? Aside from the fact that Penn State entered the game ranked No. 13 in the nation, Michigan was given little chance for success. What hurt the Wolverines most was the fact that the Lady Lions had 10 players see action; Michigan, seven. How many players were on the Wolverines' bench, either injured, redshirted, or not ready for action? Six. Those six bodies represent the dif- ference between languishing in the cellar of the conference, and possibly being a title contender. The number used to be seven, un- til the Wolverines lost freshman for- ward Maritza DuBois over the course of last week. DuBois' departure from the team wasn't surprising, consider- ing her most impressive stats were minutes (3.3) and turnovers (.71)per game. DuBois aside, a look at Michigan's "Harangued Half-Dozen" shows just how far the Wolverines could have gone this year. Guard: Redshirt sophomore Jennifer Kiefer would have been the Wolver- ines' starting point guard. Unfortu- nately, she tore her anterior cnciate ligament (ACL) during the summer, forcing her to sit out the '94-'95 cam- paign. She dished out 133 assists last season while averaging 7.4 points and 1.26 steals pergame. Her fill-in, fresh- man Akisha Franklin, has developed rapidly as the season has progressed. But who leads Michigan in assists this season? Silver Shellman, who has 75. What position does Shellman play?. Small forward. At the off-guard, freshman Semelda Elverton would have been an able back-up to Amy Johnson and Molly Murray. But Elverton was redshirted before the Wolverines' conference season started. Michigan coach Trish Roberts said she wanted to give Elverton more time to de- velop as a player. Johnson is probably wishing that the time flies by, as her nightmarish season draws to a conclusion. Mired in a season-long slump, she is aver- aging nearly four full points lower per game than her freshman cam- paign (11.9 vs. 15.6) and, at times, has been benched in favorof Murray. This occurred Friday, as Murray played most of the stretch run in the second half. Although she was in- serted for defensive purposes, Murray also produced offensively-18min- utes, 18 points. But how has she performed the past few games? Before Friday's matchup, she shot 8-for-34 in her past four outings. Broken up into two categories, good and bad, Murray has gone 4-for-8 and 4-for-26. Don't mention Murray and con- sistency in the same sentence. Sophomore Mekisha Ross has also been out of action, due to a stress fracture. However, Ross is projected to see action this weekend, when the Wolverines take on Michigan State and Northwestern. Forward: This is the Wolverines' main strength. Actually, it's their only strength. Junior Jennifer Brzezinski leads the team in most every category. Her linemate has been either freshman Tiffany Willard or sophomore Catherine DiGiacinto. Both have per- formed up to par, although DiGiacinto's rebounding (a measly 4.7) could be improved upon. At small forward, Shauna Sikorski is beginning to see minutes -she had a season high of 18 against Indiana two weeks ago - but has remained a rarely-used substitute this season. The Wolverines could use 6-0 Tennille Caruthers in the lineup. Named last year's USA Today top player in the state of Michigan, the freshman power forward from De- troit was redshirted this season, with reasons similar to Elverton's. With Caruthers in the game, Michigan would have another strong force down low, to take the load off Brzezinski. In addition, there are other players on the team who can play either the forward position, making the Wol- verines deep at the position. Center: Freshman Pollyanna Johns would have been a key reserve off the bench. She tore her ACL and was lost after December 20. Johns was the only player the Wolverines had who could intimidate players by her mere pres- ence under the basket. Standing 6- foot-3, she is the tallest player on Michigan's roster. Due to her height, she could get high-percentage shots, and made quite a few of them, shooting 55.6% from the field. More importantly, in just 13.8 minutes a game, Johns averaged 6.8 rebounds and 1.8 blocks. Can you say Mutombo? If she were healthy and put up stats similar to her pre-injury num- bers, Johns would rank second in the team in rebounds and fifth in blocked shots. As if you needed anything more, she also tallied five points a game. Seeing all this, one might be tempted to say, oh, the Wolverines would have been great, or, wow, Michigan could be so much better. With all these players healthy and ready to play, the Wolverines would be able to compete for the conference crown. A couple of losses this season could have easily been wins. But does it really matter? 0 0 0 T-SHIR T PRINTING HIGH QUALITY LOW PR ICES Personalize your i MEDICAL CAREEs SOAR IN THE AIR FORCE. There are many direc- I