R &cuIFEtU 1I The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 29, 1996 --58 oad treats Blue poorly olverines have won only 4 of 10 while travelling y Michael Rosenberg not been the only demons for Michigan Daily Sports Writer on the road. The fans in Indiana and IOWA CITY- This just in, courtesy Iowa are among the loudest in the na- Lif toug on f the Fictional Memo Department: tion. the road. We have ,: Jack Kerouac The Wolverines have also had prob- rrom: Steve Fisher lems with the officiating lately. Maceo lost two in a row Re: On the road Baston, Robert Traylor and Maurice Jack, Taylor all got into foul trouble in on the road. Shove it. Bloomington, and Louis Bullock picked Steve up four first-half fouls yesterday. IWinning on te If the Michigan men's basketball "They did some things that we coach hasn't read Kerouac's famous couldn't do," Traylor said after the In- road) is our next book, "On the Road," he likely won't diana game. "They were getting away anytime soon. At this point of the sea- with things that we couldn't get away challenge$. son, Fisher wants nothing to do with the with. They got calls we weren't getting. - Steve Fisher road. It might lead to some basketball But it's something you have to expect a~a, where his team might have to on the road." Michigan basketball coach play agame, andthatjusthasn't worked Bullock made similar claims about orous for the rest of the season. Michi- very well lately. Michigan has lost six his fourth foul-a charge-yesterday. gan has only five remaining road games, of its 10 games away from home, in- "I should have known I would get called and two of those - at Northwestern cluding three of four in the conference. for that on the road," Bullock said. and Ohio State - should be fairly easy "Life is tough on the road," Fisher Michigan's earlier road losses came victories. said. "We have lost two in a row on the against Arizona', Georgia Tech, Wis- The good news for the Wolverines is road. (Winning on the road) is our next consin and UNLV. The Arizona and that their next game is at home. The bad challenge." Georgia Tech games were played at news is that it is against Purdue. The The Wolverines lost, 99-83, at Indi- Madison Square Garden in New York, Boilermakers have won have two oftheir a Tuesday before falling, 70-61, at but the Wolverines were clearly not the last three games against Michigan. 14a yesterday. In both games, Michi- fan favorite in either game. Arizona Michigan cannot afford to lose many gan had to deal with an opposing player brought a large contingent of support- more games if it is going to win the Big - or players - having a career game. ers, and Georgia Tech freshman Stephon Ten title. Penn State currently leads the For the Hoosiers, Bryan Evans, Todd Marbury - a native New Yorker - conference at 6-1. Lindeman and Neil Reed each played drew a large crowd. Of course, the season is still young. spectacularly. Yesterday, the The flip side of the coin is that the "I guarantee Penn State will have a Hawkeyes' Andre Woolridge scored Wolverines have dominated at home. hard time when they come (to Iowa) 28 points, tying his best performance as They have not lost since last Super and when they go to Indiana," Fisher a collegian. Bowl Sunday against St. John's. said. "This may be a year when 13-5 The guys in the white uniforms have And the schedule is not quite so rig- ties for the Big Ten title." G. 1 ADrLB..IuIL t r r r 7 a r Left: Michigan's Maceo Baston topples as Andre Woolridge (5) scores two of his game-high 28 points. Right: First-half action yesterday finds Iowa's Jess Settles driving around Baston and Albert White. AP PHOTOS Medium-sized Hawkeyes are big rebounders By Barry Sollenberger Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY -The Iowa H awkeyes don't boast the biggest lineup in the nation. Their starting frontcourt consists of 6-foot-8 Russ Millard, 6-foot-7 Jess Settles and 6- foot-5 Kenyon Murray. But, man, can they re- bound. Before yesterday's 70-61 win over Michigan, Iowa it was outrebounding oppo- nents by 12.3 rebounds per game, tops in the country. Notebook Iowa has more than doubled its opponent's rebounds in six games, including wins over Ohio, Drake, East Ten- -- nessee State, Northern Iowa, Texas Southern and Morehead State. Strong rebounding has been a trademark of Iowa coach Tom Davis' teams during his 10 years at the school. The Hawkeyes led the nation in rebounding margin in 1987, 1989 and 1993. So how did the Hawkeyes fare yesterday against the Wolver- ines? They went out and got outrebounded, 45-33. "It sure looked to me like (the Wolverines) gave an unbelievable effort," Davis said. "Es- pecially in the second half. You saw the way they went to the boards and how it got them back in the game." Yesterday marked the fourth time Iowa lost the battle of the boards this season. The Hawkeyes lost the other three times. KINGS-BoaB: Iowa's Chris Kingsbury is not afraid to let it fly from beyond the are. He holds the school record for 3-point field goals in a game (9), season (117) and career (207). He also holds the top 11 slots in the Hawkeye record book for 3-point field goal attempts in a game. Kingsbury also draw some oohs and ahhs from the crowd when he fires from the 30-foot range. "Chris has the ability to maintain his form all the way out to halfcourt," Davis said, at the preseason media conference. Kingsbury certainly didn't change his game plan against Michigan. ie attempted 10 treys and was successful only once. For the game, Kingsbury was I for 13 from the field for three points. "Chris had a lot of good looks," Davis said. "I don't think he forced one ofthem. It wasjust one of those days for him." BU LL'S EVE: The Wolverines have their own long-range bomber in the form of Louis Bul- lock. The freshman guard was 3 of 6 from down- town against Iowa and finished with 15 points overall. His three treys yesterday gave him 49 for the year and moved him past Dugan Fife and Rumeal Robinson into fifth place on Michigan's season list. TURNOvERs!: The Wolverines again had trouble holding onto the ball yesterday. Their 23 turnovers on the day give them 363 for the season, compared to just 273 assists. "We didn't do a good job with decision- making," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "It looked like all we had to do was shoot it, and we would pass and turn it over." The Hawkeyes' defense contributed to the Wolverines' turnover woes. Iowa started the game in man-to-man but switched to a zone defense after Michigan grabbed a quick 12-5 lead. "It was clear early that (man-to-man) wouldn't work," Davis said. "Our zone was really strong, no question about it." BENCH-LESS: The Wolverines also got little help from their bench yesterday. Willie Mitchell (four points) and Robert Traylor (two) were the only Michigan non-starters to score. At the half, the Wolverine bench was a combined 0 for 8 from the field, 0 for 3 from 3-point land and 0 for 2 from the line. That's a lot of zeros. MICHIGAN(61) - FG FT RE MIN M-A M-A Taylor 33 7-15 3-56-4 I 1 White 20 4-6 4-4 Baston 21 3-4 1-2 Conlon 39 1-4 0-0 02 0 3 Bullock 31 5-13 2-2 Traylor 19 1-7 0-0 Mitchell 26 2-8 0-2 Fife 9 0-3 0-0 Morton 1 0-0 0-0 0 Oliver 1 0-0 0-0 00 0 0 RES G-T 6-14 3-4 1-3 0-z 0-0 5-7 3-7 0-0 0-1 o-0 A 0 2 8 1 1 1 1 0 0 Fi a s 2 2 1 a _I PTS 17 # 13 7f 3' 15 2 4 0 0 0 No. 3 Kansas, No. 4 UConn roll Totals 200 23-60 10.15 20-45 1321 61 FG%: .383. FT%: .667. Three-point goals: 5-15, .333 (Bullock 3-6, White 1-2, Conlon 1-3, Mitchell 0-2, Fife 0-2). Blocks: 5 (Taylor). Turnovers: 23 (White, Conlon, Traylor 4, Bullock- 3, Taylor, Baston Mitchell 2, Fife, Morton). Steals: 8 (Conlon 3, White 2, Bullock, Traylor, Mitchell). Technical Fouls: none. The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. - Paul Pierce scored 25 points and No. 3 Kansas used a 21-6 run early in the nd half Sunday to blow open a close game and i Nebraska 88-73 for coach Roy Williams' 200th career victory. Kansas held a 36-35 halftime lead, but three consecutive 3-pointers to open the second half sparked the decisive run. Two free throws by Jacque Vaughn gave Kansas its largest lead, 61- 43, with 12 minutes remaining in the game. Kansas (16-1, 4-0 Big Eight) forced Nebraska into 22 turnovers and outrebounded the Huskers (15-5, 3-2) 42-33, including a 20-9 margin on the ( nsive boards. .only Everett Case of North Carolina State has more wins in his first eight seasons, with 213. Williams can pass him by season's end. No. 4 CONNECTICUT 76, VIRGINIA 46 HARTFORD, Conn. - Ray Allen scored 24 points and keyed a 17-0 run in the first half as No. 4 Connecticut beat Virginia 76-46 on Sunday and extended its winning streak to a school-record 18 games. Allen, who couldn't seem to shake a pesky Curtis Staples in the first seven minutes, finally got going with a 3-pointer and had 18 points before halftime. The Huskies (19-1) held the Cavaliers (7-9) to 7-for-27 shooting from the field in the first halfand led 39-18 at the break. Virginia's leading scorer, Harold Deane, didn't hit from the field until five minutes into the second half. Rashamel Jones added 12 points and Rudy Johnson had I I for the Huskies, who held the Cavaliers to their lowest point total this season, two less than the 48 they scored against Vanderbilt. Courtney Alexander finished with 10 points for Virginia, which dropped its fourth straight game and the sixth of its last eight. IoWA (70) Murray Settles Millard Woolridge Kingsbury Koch Helmers Bowen Glasper Totals MIN 31 28 23 34 29 14 10 14 17 FQ M-A 6-9 2-6 1-7 10-13 1-13 1-6 2-2 1-2 1-2 FT MA 1-2 6-8 0-1 5-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0 RES o-T 1-3 2-5 2-5 1-3 0.2 1-2 1-2 3-4 0-2 A 1 9 3 2 1 0 2 1 0 F 0 3 4 2 1 1 2 2 2 PTS 14 12 2 28 3 2 4 3 2 70 IOWA Continued from Page 1B Wolverines then called timeout to re- group, a tactic that proved successful, at least temporarily. Michigan's Albert White nailed a 3-pointer, sparking a 11-2 burst that closed the lead to 54-47. But then Iowa opened the gap once again. Mon'ter Glasper hit a jumper. Michigan's Maceo Baston made a free throw, but Woolridge came back and made a 3-pointer. The Wolverines would score consecutive baskets only once more, in the final 30 seconds of the contest. By that time, it was hardly a contest. Woolridge was a big reason why. "We had a great game," said Iowa coach Tom Davis. "The beauty of a point guard isthatyoucan have a really great game without scor- ing20. Youcanhave a great game scor- ing two." Woolridge had a really great game while scoring 28, tying his career- high. He hit 10 of13 shots, including all Woorldge three of his 3-point attempts. Bullock guarded Woolridge in the first half, but Travis Conlan covered him after Bullock's fourth foul. "Bullock getting in foul trouble prob- ,.L1_. 1 , , 1 l .,.:. - 200 250 13-18 14-33 1917 FG%: .417. FT%:.722. Three-point goals: 7-21, .333 (Woolridge 3-3, Murray 1-1, Settles 2-4, Kingsbury 1-10, Glasper 0-1, Koch 0-2). Blocks: 2 (Millard, Woolridge) Turnovers: 14 (Woolridge 5, Settles, Koch, Helmers 2, Murray, Millard, Kingsbury) steals: 11 (Settles, Woolridge 3, Bowen, Glasper 2, Millard 1) Technical Fouls: none. Iowa-....-.... 39 31-70 Michigan........... 30 31-61 At:: carver-Hawkeye Arena; A: 15,500 Tt if .rwq p.r. ,.,.r,..w.l ..MSA*4, q f~ 4-.rv. T A I r Ank~E' r a ' h='x; .:a 'q n.I. . . 'IijfP h'I"tIfk I I