WOMEN'S BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 22, 1996 - 3B Cagers drop two conference games in weekend road trip White on Target Madness sure to piagyicthe 5uper Bowl Te city of Tempe, Ariz., still scraping off the last Tostitos logos from the Jan.2 Fiesta Bowl, is now host to the NFL's biggest party, the Super Bowl. The teams, the fans and hundreds of media have swarmed the city for what certain to be an interesting week. The two teams, Dallas and Pitts- burgh, have twice played each other in the league's biggest game. These teams, however, bear no resemblance to their predecessors, and this week will resemble nothing the NFL has ever seen. As the press conferences begin, let the madness as well: Tuesday: Steelers' linebacker Gregg Lloyd continues to apologize, sort of, his nationally televised lockerroom expletive after Pittsburgh beat India- napolis in the AFC Championship game. "For the last bleeping time, I told them to shut the bleeping cameras off," loyd says. "I didn't think the bleeping spech was going on TV. And I'm not ,:ing to answer any more bleeping gqestions about it." As for the Cowboys, they get a scare #hen cornerback, wide receiver, kick returner and gold expert Deion Sanders pulls a hamstring. Dallas remains tight-lipped about the njury, but word leaks that Sanders' ;nury occurred while he was practicing 70iew touchdown dance. At his press conference, Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher just scowls. Wednesday: The day begins with Cowboys owner Jerry Jones announc- new marketing deals with Hall- ark, Sony, Budweiser, Ford, Chevy and Lucky Charms. ':Chrysler announces that it feels left -out, but Dallas coach Barry Switzer :sys he really wants to do a commercial with "that little leprechaun." The rest of the NFL owners, with the exception of Art Modell, who no one -can seem to find, announce that once again they are suing Jones. 9 Switzer also makes waves when he again expresses wonder at Jimmy Johnson's $2 million contract to coach Miami next season. "I just don't get it," he says. "It was still the team he built in Dallas last year and we didn't win the championship. He's not worth that kind of money." The NFL slaps Switzer with a gag order for the rest of the week. Cowher continues to scowl. Thursday: The Cowboys announce *at Sanders will be able to play in Sunday's game, but if he scores he will have to hold his celebration to the funky chicken. When asked about Sanders,.Switzer says, "Deion can still dance better than anyone on that other team." Switzer is physically gagged by Jones. When told about Switzer, Cowher j1 ughs, then scowls some more. Friday: In response to the NFL's lawsuit, Jones unveils a plan to buy the entire league. "If they don't like my marketing deals, then they shouldn't own a team," Jones says. Modell comes out of seclusion to wholeheartedly endorse the plan. "Now the city of Cleveland can hate Jones," he says. Meanwhile, long-locked Pittsburgh nebacker Kevin Greene, tired of answering questions about his hair, cuts it all off after practice. Former Steeler quarterback and follically challenged Fox analyst Terry Bradshaw picks up after Greene. "It's the right color and everything," Bradshaw says. Cowher watches the whole scene and scowls. Switzer simply says, "mmmphhh." 0 Saturday: Only the coaches meet. the press Saturday. Switzer's press conference runs for more than an hour, despite the fact that he's never asked a question and no one can understand a word he's saying because of the gag. By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - Personal fouls can do a lot to change the flow of a basket- ball game. But for the Michigan women's bas- ketball team, not only did early fouls take the Wolverines out of the flow;. they ultimately lost Michigan the game. Yesterday, personal fouls called as early as the first half had an impact on the rest of the game between the Wol- verines and Ohio State. As a result, Michigan (0-7 Big Ten, 6-11 overall) lost to the Buckeyes, 73- 65, in front of 6,673 fans at St. John Arena. This followed Friday's 92-77 setback to Illinois at Huff Hall. The winless weekend extended the Wolverines' losing streak to eight games and still leaves Michigan without a con- ference victory. Katie Smith led the way with 31 points, seven assists, five rebounds and a perfect 11-of-11 from the free throw line. Buckeye centerKelly Fergus chipped in 13 points and Marcie Alberts came off the bench to score 11, including three crucial 3-pointers in the first half. Pollyanna Johns topped the Wolver- ines with 20 points. Molly Murray con- tributed 15 and Jennifer Brzezinski tacked on 11. The outcome of yesterday's contest was decided in the last seven minutes of the first half. The Wolverines were neck-and-neck with Ohio State in the first 10 minutes of the opening half. Michigan trailed 21- 19 with eight minutes to go after a pull- up jumper by Amy Johnson. Ohio State was having trouble pen- etrating and dealing with the Wolver- ines' man-to-man defense. But two quick Michigan fouls within seconds of each other, one by Johnson and one by Johns, made coach Trish Roberts change her defensive strategy. The Wolverines switched to a 2-3 - zone for the rest ofthe half after the quick fouls. That seemed to change everything - in- cluding the score. Ohio State pushedthe lead to 44-30 at the half. "When we switched defenses and played the 2-3 zone, that's when (the Buckeyes) made their run," Roberts said. "And we probably stayed in the zone a little too long in the second half." Ohio State's total of eight 3-pointers, with seven of them coming in the first half, came from the zone. The Wolverines did not rotate in time to contest the Buckeyes' shot attempts. Ohio State had such crisp passing from the post to the perimeter that every jump shot was an open shot. Alberts, who had not gotten much playing time from Ohio State coach Nancy Darsch, and Smith were key in the Buckeye run. "Marcie (Alberts) came through for us today," Darsch said. "She was good in spotting up from the seems. She and Katie (Smith) both were finding the seams in the zone and hitting the threes to help us." Michigan made one last gasp toward the end of the game, cutting a 15 point Buckeye lead to eight. But Smith sealed the game with a pretty fingerroll, eas- ily beating Akisha Franklin to the hole and laying the ball in with finesse. In the Illini game, the Wolverines pulled out to the early lead in the first half- something they haven't done in quite some time. But a 9-0 Illinois spurt to start the second hal fbroke the game open and the Illini never trailed the rest of the game. Ashley Berggren led the Illini with 29 points and a career high 13 rebounds. Seventeen of those came in the first half as the conference scoring leader aggres- sively drove to the hole, scoring at will. But when the sophomore off-guard wasn't scoring, her guard companion Krista Reinking was hittingthree point- ers and whipping passes into the post. For Michigan, sophomore center Pollyanna Johns equalled her season high of 30 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. KRISTEN SCHAEFER/Daily The Michigan basketball team remains in last place in the Big Ten after losing two weekend road games. Bue s weekend loss By Jim Rose Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS--Watching the Michi- gan women's basketball team lose to Ohio State yesterday was like watching a bad 3-D movie. That's because the Wolverines didn't have a single one of the three D's. They played no defense. They showed no discipline. Worst ofall,theteam didn't seem to have any direction. The result, predictably, was an 83-75 shelling by the Buckeyes. Don't be fooled by the final score. This game was over by halftime. At one point, Ohio State led by 17 points. The most obvious problems arose from the lack of defense. Michigan started out in a zone, practically daring the Buckeyes to shoot from outside. All Ohio State did was go 7-12 from three-point range in the first half, includ- ing three consecutive treys during a 90- second span that led to a 20-9 Buckeye run. The hapless zone was equally ineffec- tive in the paint, as seven first half offen- sive rebounds and countless lay tips by Ohio State turned the game into a rout. Once it became painfully obvious that the zone wasn't doing the job, the Wol- verines switched to a man-to-man de- fense at the start of the second half. The extra pressure didn't do much good, though, as Buckeye All-American Katie Smith riddled the Michigan defense for 20 Of her 31 points in the last 20 minutes. As the Wolverines' defense disap- peared, so did their chances of a win. The defensive collapse forced Michi- gan into a frenzied offense, and the squad showed about as much discipline as a 4- year-old with a piece of candy. Even ifthe Wolverines hadn't coughed the ball up fourtimes as much as they took it away -16 turnovers to four steals - they still would have donethemselves in with poor shot selection and senseless fouls. Of the starters, only Pollyanna Johns ended the game with less than four fouls; she had three. More importantly, Ohio State went to the free throw line 32 times, while Michigan made just 18 trips. The Buckeyes capitalized on the dis- crepancy by making more free throws (23) than the Wolverines attempted (18). Smith was the main benefwiary, chalking up 11 points from the stripe. The sloppy play was due mostly to a lack of direction, which translates to a lack ofleadership, on the floor. The Michi- gan players were scramblingto stop Ohio State's high-powered offense, but when they did come up with a stop, which happened occasionally, there was no con- tinuity on offense. The team didn't seem to know what to do. The Buckeyes effectively kept the ball out of Johns's hands for much of the game, but instead of moving the ball around the perimeter in search of an easy shot, the Wolverines were repeatedly baited intoturningtheball overorforcing dumb shots. Of course, Michigan could have dis- cussed these types of things early in the first half- when the contest still looked like a decent basketball game- by sim- ply calling a timeout and going over the game plan. Instead, all five of the Wolverines' first-half timeouts went unused, even though their only substitution came with just two minutes left in the half. Were it not for some impressive out- side shooting by Molly Murray and Jen- nifer Kiefer (five 3-pointers combined), this game would have been even uglier than it was. Michigan didn't lose this game be- cause of talent, nor did it lose it because the other team had an All-American. This game was lost because no matter how cliche it sounds, Michigan forgot about the three D's. I don't care what kind of glasses you were wearing - this was one bad 3-D movie. MICHIGAN (77)FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 4T A F PTS Johnson 21 4-14 0-0 1-2 2 0 9 Brzezinski 16 1-4 2-3 0-4 7 5 4 Johns 40 10-15 10s2 5414 0 2 30 Murray 32 5-15 0-0 4-5 1 4 14 J2iefer 40 41 2-3 3-6 5 0 13 Franklin 27 1-11 1-3 2-2 5 2 3 Willard 11 2-4 0-0 0-0 0 1 4 DiGiacinto 13 0-3 0.0 1-2 0 1 0 Totals 200 27-77 15-21 21-40 2015 77 FG%: .351. FT%: .714. Three-point goals: 8-29, .276 (Murray 4-9, Kiefer 3-9, Franklin 0-6, Johnson 1-4, Brzezinski 0-1)). Blocks: 4 (Johnson 2, Brzezinski, Murray). Turnovers: 15 (Franklin 5, Johns 2, Johnson 2, Kiefer 2, Murray 2, DiGiacinto). Steals: 7 (Brzezinski 2, Johns 2, Willard 2, Johnson). Technical Fouls: none. ILLINOIS (92) FG FT RES MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Vasey 29 47 00 360 2 8 Dill 27 4-7 4-6 25 2312 Hanna 30 3-4 0-0 1-7 2 3 6 Reinking 33 8-15 4-4 3-5 3 3 25 Berggren 36 11-21 7-8 4-13 3 4 29 Henderson 26 3-7 2-2 0-3 5 2 10 Smith 1 0-0 0-0 00 0 0 0 Robertson 1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Steuby 1 0-1 2-2 0-1 0 0 2 Bond 7 0-4 0-0 1-3 0 1 0 Albers 6 0-2 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Vandertop 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Totals 200 33-68 19-22 17-50 1619 92 FG%: .485. FT'%: .364. Three-point goals: 7-19, .368 (Reinking 5-9, Berggren 0-5, Henderson 2-4, Steub~y 0-1). Blocks: 5 (Hanna 2, Dill, Henderson, Vasey Turnovers: 20 (Berggren 5, Reinking 5, Henderson 3, Bond 2, Vasey 2, Dill, Hanna, Steuby). Steals: 10 (Reinking 4, Henderson 3, Berggren 2, Dill). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan...38 39-77 Illinois .. ..40 52-92 At:: Huff Hall; A:1,681 MICHIGAN (75) MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PIS Johnson 35 3412 0-0 2-6 5 4 6 rzezinski 29 5-6 1-2 1-4 1 5 11 Johns 33 9-16 2-6 1-6 2 3 20 urray . 36 5-11 2-2 0-2 1 4 15 lefer 40 3-8 0-0 0-1 5 4 8 iGiacinto 14 3-7 1-4 2-6 1 0 7 ranklin 9 2-2 4-4 2-4 1 2 8 illard 4 0-1 0-0 0201 0 otals 200 30.6310-1813-36 1623 75 G%: .476. FT%:.556. Three-point goals: 5-15. 333 (Murray 3-8, Kiefer 2-5, Johnson 0-2).- locks:1 (Brzezinski). Turnovers: 16 (Brzezinski Franklin 3, Johns 3, Murray 3, Kiefer 2, iGiac into, Johnson). Steals: 4 (Kiefer 2, rzezinski, DiGiacinto). Technical Fouls: none. HI0 STATE (83) FG FT RED MIN M-A M-A O- A F PT$ ichols 24 3-6 2-8 6-8 0 5 8 egri 34 3-7 1-2 4-6 2 1 7 ergus 33 5-11 3-3 2-4 0 4 13 mith 34 8-1611-11 1-5 7 1 31 Johnson 25 2-7 2-2 1-2 3 2 6 ackson 14 0-1 2-3 0-4 3 0 2 orter 12 2-2 0-0 0-0 0 3 5 Iberts 17 3-4 2-3 0-0 1 1 11 atterson 6 0-0 0-0 0.2 3 0 0 usetti 1 0-0 0-0 0.1 0 0 Q otals 200 26.54 23,32 1434 1917 8 G%: .481. FT%: .7 19. Three-point goals: 8-15, , 533 (Smith 4-10, Alberts 3-4, Porter 1-1). locks: 3 (Fergus, Jackson, Negri) Turnovers: 1 (Alberts 2, Nichols 2, Porter 2 Smith 2, ergus, Jackson, Negri). Steals: 6 (Alberts 3, ohnson, Nichols, Smith). Technical Fouls: none: Michigan. ...345-75 Ohio State.... 4 39 -83 At:: St. John Arena; A: 6,673 t f 1 . 1 i: ' 1."S.:P}':'::;:." j gJ ';l}7;,:}}..h.. L'}.:" fI'Li: L -Li V "1 { .} :} 4 ... ::}.:.:: .. s. ?arr ar ot A - :. ..:. .ti, A 1V 1 The 1996 Hopwoo d Underclassmen Awards The Academy of American Poets Prize The Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize The Roy W. Cowden Memorial Fellowship The Louise and George Piranian Scholarship Will be announced Tuesday, January 23 3:30 p.m. in the Rackham Auditorium Reading by: Max Annie~ from over 40 Major Landlords. 100's of Listings. General Information and Advice about Finding Off-Campus Housing. *e e V. # S.. . 4 ti,"'Sk \h 18 t4' I