Ube Bidbiiuan aig AN hh A~ Battle oft/e Bi es: Give the rst round S azvkeyes OWA CITY - During the Big Ten preseason press conference in early November, a couple of media guys found time for a little chit-chat. Their conversation - I'll call them Harry and Sam - went something e this: Harry: "What do you think about Iowa and Michigan?" Sam: "The two best teams in the conference, no question." <, r Harry: "And the Hawkeyes' Jess Settles and the Wolverines' * 'p"Maurice Taylor?" Sam: "With RRY apologies to SOLLENBERGE Indiana's Brian Sollenberger Evans, the two in Paradise best players in the conference. Boy will that Iowa-Michigan matchup Jan. 28 in Iowa City will be something." It sure was. If you are a Hawkeye an, that is. Settles and his buddies rolled over Taylor and his pals, 70-61, yesterday at Carver Hawkeye Arena. The Wolverines didn't help their cause by committing 23 turnovers and shooting 23 of 60 (38 percent) from the field for the game. While neither team is currently among the top two in the league standings, the game had that No. I vs. 4 o. 2 feel to it. Iowa was the media's eseason pick to win the league with ichigan.second. While both teams have struggled early in conference play, the Big Ten season is a long war and these two teams figure to be standing at the end of it. Give round one between these two heavyweights to Iowa. "It was obviously a great effort by our ballclub," Iowa coach Tom Davis said. "From top to bottom, I don't *ink this team could have played much harder." Settles and Taylor didn't disap- point. The Iowa junior had a solid 12 points and nine assists. Not to mention that he seemed like he was in 100 places at once. "Jess was exhausted coming down the stretch," Davis said. "He just gave everything he had." Taylor contributed a team-high 17 ints and registered a career-high 14 rds. "He's very strong and has great hands," Davis said. "The ball just seems to feather into those hands. He's a great player." But neither Settles nor Taylor was the best player on the floor yesterday. That honor belonged to Iowa's Andre Woolridge. The junior consistently bombed m the outside and jetted by ichigan's baffled trio of guards. He finished with 28 points. "The perception is sometimes different than the reality," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "The reality is that Andre Woolridge is the best guard in the Big Ten." The Hawkeyes easily beat Michi- gan without the shooting touch of their top two scorers - Russ Millard nd Chris Kingsbury. beImagine what the final would have been if Millard (1 of 7 from the field) and Kingsbury (1 of 13) hadn't played like they were at a bricklaying convention. But their shooting woes didn't matter. Woolridge and the Carver- Hawkeye crowd were too much for Michigan. Woolridge would bomb from the .utside. And the crowd noise would deafening. Woolridge would drive the lane for an easy lay-in. And the crowd noise would be deafening. Over and over again. Indeed, it was not a good day to leave the ear plugs at home. "Indiana and then here are two of the e rol is over Once-hot Wolverines barely tie Buckeyes, lose to By John Leroi Daily Sports Editor BOWLING GREEN- If Michigan's bus broke down on the way back from Ohio, the whole weekend may have been lost. As it was, the Wolverines' two-day excursion to Ohio State and Bowling Green ranked somewhere between total disaster and nuclear holocaust. Michigan managed to salvage just one point on the weekend, dropping a 6-5 decision to the Fal- cons the day after they escaped Columbus with a 4-4 tie. The Wolverines (15-4-1 CCHA, 20-5-1 over- all) played as poor a defensive series as they have all season and had trouble solving two constrict- ing defenses as well. "This is a feeling that I know I'm going to remember when I strap on the skates Monday," Michigan center Mike Legg said of the disap- pointing weekend. "We'll be skating hard then. We'll all be working harder at least I know I will." Michigan is coming off a two-game series with- out win for the first time since the 1993-94 season when they dropped a pair to Miami (Ohio). Even worse for the Wolverines, with just one point this weekend, they fall into a third-place tie with Lake Superior State, five points behind league-leader Michigan State. The loss to the Falcons (10-8-1, } Bowling Green 16-10-1) was Michigan's first since a Dec. 9 setback at Western Michigan. The Wolverines' biggest problem was their defense, or lack thereof. The 10 goals Michigan surrendered equals the amount of scores it gave up in the previous eight games. It wasn't exactly a career weekend for Michigan goaltender Marty Turco. The sophomore allowed all 10 goals on just 38 shots. Bowling Green did a decentjob setting up its scores, but Turco was less- than-average against the Buckeyes, who sport the league's worst offense. "After the kind of goals (Ohio State) got on me, I admit, I got I got a little down on myself," Turco said. "It hurt me a little bit the kind of goals they were getting. "As a goalie, you love an opportunity to have an impact on the game. Both nights I got that and I didn't perform." Michigan had trouble getting its offense going both nights. Ohio State (3-13-4, 5-13-4) extin- guished Michigan's red-hot offense with a tight neutral zone trap and kept the Wolverines from getting any offensive momentum at all. In fact, the Ohio State outplayed, outthought and outhustled Michigan all night. If it weren't for two Michigan goals in the games' final two minutes, the cellar-dwelling See LOSSES, Page 4B On his way to 28 points, Iowa's Andre Woolridge howls during the Hawkeyes' 70-61 victory yesterday. Too easyl Iowa drops foul-plagued Blue Michigan beat the Falcons, &1, earlier this seasonin Bowling Green. Saturday, however, the Wolverines weren't as successful, dropping an exciting 6-5 game. Mike Legg scored three points in both of Michigan's games this weekend. WALKER VANDYKE/Daily ..- } y{ By Michael Rosenberg Daily Sports Writer IOWA CITY - Before the pregame show, before the Super Bowl, even before the special episode of "Friends," Michigan and Iowa played a men's basketball game. If you're a Wolverine fan and you missed it, don't worry. "Friends" was much prettier.o The 16th-ranked Wolverines turned the ball over 23 times in their Michi 70-61 loss, which dropped their Big Ten record to 4-3 and their chins to their chests. "At the end of the first half, I saw Iowa sprinting up the floor and I saw fe l us with our heads down," said Michi- gan coach Steve Fisher, whose team is now 14-6 on the year. "We had a feel and a look of a team that didn't think it could win." The No. 22 Hawkeyes' sprint off the floor followed their sprint to a nine-point halftime lead. Andre Woolridge scored 14 first-half points and Jess Settles added 20 for Iowa (4-3, Big Ten, 15- 4, overall). But the most important play of the game didn't involve anyscoring at all. Fisher sent Louis Bullock into the game with 0:42.8 left in the first half to make an impact. Unfortunately for Fisher, the only impact Bullock Hangover kfrs success-drnk i 'er made 'was va70, Igan 61 on Kenyon Murray's chest. Bullock charged into Murray three seconds before halftime. It was Bullock's fourth foul. It ruined his day. "It was poor judgment on his part, for sure," Fisher said, "and maybe on my part as well for assuming he would have better judgment." After the foul, Iowa chose to have Ryan Bowen throw a full-court pass offthe hands ofiess Settles to Murray for a layup at the buzzer. The OWLING GREEN - Getting drunk can be loads of fun, but you give up a lot at the same time. Your sense of reality goes. You start to lose control. And you can't concentrate as well. The effects are even more intense when you're drunk and playing hockey. Win asr many games as Michigan has recently, and you start to believe you can score fromY the bench, beat people to the puck while coasting, and win NICHOLAS J. by just showing up. COTSONIKA You get drunk on success. The Greek The Wolverines have been Speaks having quite a party recently. They've downed second-tier CCHA teams like many college students do beer. Before this weekend, they hadn't lost since early December, had outscored their opponents 58-8 in their last six games, and felt dizzy as their heads expanded. Michigan coach Red Berenson shortened practiced from two hours to one last week, giving his players a break, and allowed them to be loose and confident. The Wolverines worked hard, but there was more joking around and goofing off than there had been all season. Things were fun. The team was winning. Heads were spinning. No one foresaw the hangover to come. "I don't think over-confidence will be a problem," Michigan winger Warren Luhning said after practice Tuesday. "We're used to winning. We've done it before." The third-ranked Wolverines are certainly used to winning, but what makes this See GREEK, Page 4B II Hawkeyes had a 39-30 lead. Just 4:27 earlier, the game was tied at 30. Michigan would get no closer than seven after the break. Iowa went on a 13-6 run to start the second half, stretching its lead to 52-36. The See IOWA, Page 5B Cowboys lasso Steelers to win 5th Super Bowl title The Associated Press TEMPE, Ariz. - Those limo-ridin' glam- our bays from Dallas backed up their bluster, but barely. And they can thank one of their least glam- orous players, defensive back Larry Brown, for their third Super Bowl victory in four years. The Cowboys beat Pittsburgh 27-17 yester- day to extend the NFC's streak of victories in the NFL's showcase game to an even dozen. "There were high expectations but it was a reliefj ust the same," quarterback Troy Aikman said. "1t wasn't the prettiest game we played, the defense really stepped it up, but a win is a win. We knew it would be a tough game." For coach Barry Switzer, who had to win a Super Bowl to be considered anything but a failure, it was more than enough. "We did it our way, baby! We did it! We did it! We did it! We did it!" Switzer shouted. AP PHoo They did it without a big game from Troy, Emmitt, Michael and Deion during a second the 30 minutes. Instead, the Super Bowl's most valuable player was Brown, a former 12th round draft pick. Brown's 44-yard interception return in the third quarter of Neil O'Donnell's pass set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Emmitt Smith that put Dallas up 20-7. This came after Pittsburgh, which fell behind 13-0, seemed ready to take the lead. Then, after Pittsburgh had closed to 20-17 and had the ball with four minutes left, Brown, just as he did to seal the NFC title game with Green Bay, made another interception, return- ing it 33 yards to set up another Smith TD run, this one of four yards. Only then did the Cowboys celebrate a strug- gling Super Bowl victory that capped a strug- gling season. And the hugs in the end zone reflected relief more than the "in-your-face" braggadocio with which the Cowboys faced Super Bowl week. "This ball game represents the kind of sea- son we've had," said owner Jerry Jones in commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who had bit- terly attacked Jones on national television ear- lier in the day. "This was a struggle,"'said Jones, who turned away quickly from Tagliabue as he accepted the trophy. "But this for me was the sweetest." Smith gave Switzer all the credit. "This is one for coach Switzer, who took all that abuse - the dumb and dumber thing," he said. But it was not the way the Cowboys had hoped. Aikman, who at one point in the first half completed 10 straight passes, tying Phil Simms for second place in Super Bowl history behind Joe Montana's 13, was good early but finished 15 of 23 for 209 yards. And Smith, whose fourth and fifth rushing touchdowns passed Franco Harris and Thurman Thomas for the most in Super Bowl history, was held tojust 49 yards in 18 carries, far short of the 115 he needed to become the leading rusher in Super Bowl history. Twenty-three of i The Dallas defense gang-tackles Bam Morris during the