6 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 6, 1995 Shallow bench sinks women in tournament Women cagers get little fan support By Ravi Gopal Daily Basketball Writer INDIANAPOLIS -- At the 8:37 mark of the first half of Friday's contest against Michigan State, things were looking very good for the Michigan women's basketball team. ,, Court "ess Spartan coach Karen Langeland had just called a time-out after Michigan scored nine straightpoints, all on three- pointers. Michigan State's All-Big Ten se- lection, Kisha Kelley, wason the bench. Kelley picked up two early fouls and sat down within six minutes of tip-off. The Spartans had given the ball up nine times, the Wolverines, four. An upsethad already occurred ear- lier that day. Ninth-seeded Iowa knocked off No. 8 Minnesota, 57-44. Just prior to Michigan's game, No. 10 Illinois gave No. 7 Ohio State all it could handle before collapsing at the end, 87-73. Everything pointed to a Wolverine victory and a Saturday night date with third-seeded Wisconsin. But the Spartans came out of the time-out possessed, going on a 24-4 run tocloseout the half with a 13-point lead, 36-23. It got uglier in the second half, as Michigan State went on a 20-8 run to end the game. Kelley, playing just 16 minutes, racked up 16 points. For Michigan, it shouldn't have ended this way. Not with nearly a half- dozen players either injured or redshirted. Where were the post players coach Trish Roberts could insert? Where were the bench players Roberts could put in when her starters became weary? Last year, the Wolverines only played seven players the entire season. Then, fatigue was to be expected. But this season, it shouldn't have been a topic of conversation, with the No. I 1 recruiting class in the country. The heat had been taken off the starters. A 22-point loss to its intrastate rival - a team Michigan has matched up with well before? No, that wasn't the way it was supposed to happen. ... Jennifer Brzezinski, who led the Wolverines this season in nearly every offensive category, got confused on a play at the 17:28 mark of the second half. Laying low at the top of the key T-SHIRT PRINTING HIGH QUAUVY LOW PRICES 1002 PONTIAC TR. 994-1367 with teammate Amy Johnson motion- ing her to move, Brzezinski didn't see the ball come at her from Akisha Franklin. The ball bounced off her and was stolen by Michigan State's Paula Sand- ers. Brzezinski was promptly benched. At the 5:39 mark of the second half, with the Spartans in the midst of their game-ending spurt, sopho- more Catherine DiGiacinto was as- sessed a technical foul for arguing a call with a referee. It was her fifth foul, so she took a seat on the bench as well. Amy Johnson, one of the few Wol- verines who can create something off the dribble, was on the bench nearly half the game. Her one-for-seven shooting performance from the field didn't help matters. *** "Our kids are mentally and physi- cally drained," Roberts said after the game. Playingjust seven women over 10 minutes apiece Friday night, the Wol- verines were shorthanded. Entering the contest, Michigan had lost 11 of its past 12 games. Four of those losses were by seven points or less. "Playing three post players...we're small in the post," Roberts said. Losing players left and right due to injuries left the Wolverines very thin; just having warm bodies on the bench could have gotten Michigan a couple more victories. As it was, Michigan often competed against teams that were bigger and deeper . This week, Michigan will re- turn to weights, conditioning and workouts. The '94-'95 campaign may be over, but the '95-'96 season has begun. Forward Tennille Caruthers and guard Semelda Everton will get themselves back to their playing lev- els of fitness after redshirt seasons. Guard Jennifer Kiefer and center Pollyana Johns will be back after injuries. Recruits will arrive, mak- ing the Wolverines greater in num- ber. None of the current players will graduate. Come next year, will there be losses? Yes. Will there be setbacks? Yes. Will there be injuries? Probably. But will there be a seven-person Michigan team, doing what it can to avertloss after loss, not having enough players to conduct a five-on-five scrimmage, thoroughly fatigued by the end of the season? No. And will that be better for Michi- gan? Yes. JOE WESTRATE/Daily The efforts of Tiffany Willard, Jennifer Brzezinski and the Wolverines have gone largely unnoticed by Michigan fans this season. Hardwo o vio ries grabbed on boards By David Rothbart Daily Basketball Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Hinkle Fieldhouse may never have been qui- eter since its construction in 1928 than it was during Michigan's 81-59 loss. In the game that preceded the Wolverines',which pitted Ohio State against Illinois, the Fieldhouse was rocking. Swarms of people in red and orange sweatshirts threatened to blow the roof off with the force of their cheers. During Michigan's game with Michigan State, the arena was near- silent. Indianapolis is only a four-hour drive from Ann Arbor, but only a handful of Michigan fans made the trip. One who cheered on the Wol- verines Friday night was LSA se- nior DeOndre Sims. "Michigan fans are spoiled," Sims said. "Unless the teams are winning, they don't get any support." Senior cheerleader Zeghai Tekeste agreed. "(The women's team) isn't supported at home games, so you can't expect support away," he said. "Women's hoops (at Michigan) just hasn't caught on yet." Even Michigan's cheerleaders were quiet Friday, silenced by a rule that forbids bands and cheerleaders to perform on school days. If Michigan had advanced, the cheerleaders would have been allowed to perform Satur- day and Sunday. "We didn't know about the rule until we got here," freshman cheer- leader Carla Perez said. "It's really frustrating. It's too bad there's not more Michigan fans here to cheer them on." W-OMEN Continued from page 1 seconds, and again found herself on the bench. Michigan was unable to take advantage of Kelley's absence by cutting into the Spartans' lead. Michigan State guard Christine Pow- ers knocked down two treys and fresh- man forward Bella Engen muscled her way in the lane for two putbacks. The Wolverines whittled the defi- cit to nine with seven minutes to go, but Kelley returned to ignite a 9-1 spurt that put the game out of reach. Franklin finished the game with 15 points, five assists, six rebounds and three steals. Shellman added I11 points and Jennifer Brzezinski had 10 rebounds and seven points. Powers led Michigan State with 19 points, while Kelley scored 16 points in only 16 minutes. For the contest, the Wolverines shot 36 percent to the Spartans' 49 percent. Michigan State had the re-I bounding edge, 42-28. Roberts said Michigan State's zone defense was to blame for Michigan's shooting woes. "We knew they would go with the zone," she said. "We worked on swinging the ball around in the post, we just didn't play as well as we did (the last two times) we played them." "The zone really threw us," Brzezinski said. "They double-teamed underneath and it was hard to kick it out. They'd collapse two or three play- ers on you." Roberts said, "Michigan State wanted (the win) more than we did." Langeland said the offensive pro- "The team does need support," Carlotta Willard said. Her daughter, Tiffany, plays forward and contrib- uted seven points and three rebounds Friday. "They've worked very hard, and their hard work paid off some this "Michigan fans are spoiled. Unless the teams are winning, they don't get any support. -DeOndre Simms Michigan basketball fan year," Willard said. "Next year, the results will really show. Hopefully, the fans will come then.".. The crowds for women's games at Crisler Arena this year have been higher than previous seasons. Coach Trish Roberts credits the home crowd for giving her team a lift. "When we're up, they keep us up, when we're down, they keep us go- ing," Roberts said. The lack of fans may have hurt the Wolverines Friday. Michigan took a 19-12 lead, but there were few fans to keep the team excited. As Michigan rallied in the second half and cut the Spartans' lead to nine, there were few fans to urge them on. "Playing athome is best," forward Jennifer Brzezinski said. LSA sophomore Mark Cousineau, a Michigan fan, outlined the paradox. "The team plays better when they have more fans," he said. "But they won't have more fans until they play better." duction of Kelley and Powers was 0 crucial. "Kisha, the hacker that she is, still played a good game, and Christine kept us in the game when we were down," Langeland said. "We focused on outrebounding Michigan and we did." The Spartans' victory kept them alive in the single-elimination tour- nament. The winner receives an auto- matic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Roberts said her team will return to Ann Arbor and rest for a week before beginning preparations for next season. "We'll work on improving indi- vidually and as a team," Roberts said. "Right now, we're mentally drained. It's been a long, frustrating season for us. We started strong, but all the inju- ries really hurt us. At the beginning of the year, I never thought we'd finish 8-19. I had higher hopes." MICHIGAN (59) FG FT Reb. Mi . M-A M-A O-T A F Ps, Brzezinski 32 3.9 1-3 3.10 0 4 7 Shellman 23 46 0-0 0-2 2 1 11 DiGiacinto 23 3.5 0-2 2.4 0 5 6 Franklin. 32 5-14 3-6 3-6 5 3 15 Johnson 31 1-7 2.2 1-3 4 2 4 Murray 28 3-13 00 0-0 1 2 7 Ross 8 1-3 0-2 0-0 0 3 2 Sykorski 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Willard 25 3-6 1-2 1-3 2 3 7 Totals 200 23-63 7-1710-28 14 23 59 4 FG%- .365. FT%- .412Three-point goals: 6-20, .300(Shellman 3-4, Franklin 2.5, Murray 1-6, Brzezinski 0- 1, Ross 0.1, Johnson 0-3). Blocks: 2 (Brzezinski. DiGiacinto). Turnovers: 15(Franklin 6, Murray 2, Ross 2. Shellman 2, Brzezinski, Johnson, Willard). Steals: 14 (Shellman 6. Franklin 3, Willard 2, Brzezinski, DiGiacinto, Ross). Technical Fouls: DiGiacinto. By Ravi Gopal Daily Basketball Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Instead of playing six halves in its three games against Michigan State this season, the Wolverines could have played three. That's because in all three contests, the winner was decided by halftime. Whichever team held a rebounding ad- vantage going into the lockerroom wound up with the victory. In Michigan's 80-75 win against the Spartans Jan. 6, the Wolverines held a commanding 47-32 edge on the glass. Jennifer Brzezinski led Michigan with 21 points and 14 rebounds. On Feb. 19, Michigan State paid back Michigan for its loss at Crisler, 70-65. The Spartans held a slim 38-36 margin on the boards. Who won the battle of the boards Friday night? The Spartans, 42-28. ALONE IN THE ZONE: Michigan had trouble with Michigan State's zone defense Friday night. The Spartans collapsed on any Wolverine who re- ceived the ball in the paint, forcing them to either take a bad shot or kick the ball outside. Michigan did a little of both - with disastrous results. Brzezinski, Catherine DiGiacinto and Tiffany Willard weren't able to establish much of an inside game (20 pts. combined). "Their zone really threw us in the first half," said Brzezinski, who was held nearly six points below her scor- ing average (seven vs. 12.6). As a result, the heat was on the perimeter players all night long. The Wolverines were forced to launch bombs from beyond the arc, putting up 20 treys altogether. And with long shots come long rebounds, which Michigan State hauled down and con- verted into fast-break layups at the other end. "We practiced (playing against the zone) all week long," Michigan coach Trish Roberts said. "For some reason, our post players weren't get- ting the ball to the open players." SOPHOMORE SLUMP: After a sensa- tional freshman season in which she averaged 15.6 points per game, guard Amy Johnson's play took a turn for the worse this year. Although she was Michigan's second-lcading scorer this season (11.4 ppg), her field goal per- centage declined (.388 last season compared to .367 this year, .377 3- point percentage last season against .283 this year) as did her faith in her shot. "(Johnson's play) has been one of the biggest disappointments for us all year long," Roberts said. As the focal point of the offense last season, Johnson had control of the ball for most of each game. This year, with the addition of guards Akisha Franklin and Molly Murray, Johnson has had a hard time adjusting to life without the ball. "Amy Johnson doesn't play well without the basketball," Roberts said. "She's lost a lot of confidence in her shooting throughout the season." Her lack of confidence was evi- dent Friday, as she closed out the '94- '95 campaign by hitting just one-of- seven shots from the field in 21 min- utes of action. MICHIGAN STATE (81) FG Sanders 29 3-6 K. Kelley 16 6.1345 .4 5 1 Engen 23 2-54416 0 8 Powers 30 6-11 Euler 27 3-70-12 1 6 Place 23 3-8012- 2 7 D. Kelley 6 0-0 Collier 2 0-0 Wesley 22 4-5 Burn 4 0-0 Gray 16 2-4 Smith 2 0-0 FT Reb. 4- 1 4-4 0-5 0-0 1-2 0-0 0-0 4-6 0-2 0-0 o-0a 2-4 2-5 A 4 2 1 4 3 2 0 0 3 0 F a 5 a 2 1 2 a a z a z Pts. 6, 16 6 19 6 7 0' 0 13 0 6 0' - ,, _ I L I I a-o 0-0 0 0 (ACT Totals 200 29-59 18-2610-42 15 14 81 FG%-..492. FT%-.692. Three-point goals: 5.12,.417(Pow- ers 3-7, Wesley 1-1, Place 1-3, Engen 0.1). Blocks: 5 (Sanders 3, Place, Wesley). Turnovers: 18 (Sanders 4, Euler 3, Powers 3, Gray 2, Place 2, Wesley 2, Engen, D. Kelley). Steals: 10 (Euler 2, Sanders 2, Engen, D. Kelley, K. Kelley, Place, Powers, Wesley). Technical Fouls: none. 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