aYbe £tantuuiI All-Star Wolverines Glen Rice and Juwan Howard, former Michigan basketball players, were named as reserves to the NBA East All-Star team. Charlotte's Rice and Washington's Howard join Terrell Brandon of Cleveland and Jason Kidd of Dallas as the only first-time All-Stars. 6 1 Wednesday January 31, 1996 19 Cagers look to rebound against Boilenn~akers By Paul Barger Daily Sports Writer Gene Keady is at it again. Perhaps one of the most underrated coaches in America is in position to lead his team to its third consecutive Big Ten title. No. 17 Purdue (5-2 Big Ten, 15-4 overall) comes into Crisler Arena to- night a game behind Penn State for the conference lead. The Boilermak- ets take on a Michigan (4-3, 14-6) squad that is reeling after two con- vincing losses on the road to Indiana and Iowa. Tonight's game will be televised by ESPN. Tip-off is scheduled for 7 p.m. Two years ago, the Boilermakers were led by consensus All- American Glen Robinson. After Robinson left West Lafayette, no one ex- pected Keady's squad to be in con- tention for the title. Instead, they won it outright by beating the Wolverines on the last day of the regu- lar season. * Purdue v Michigan When: 7 p.m., Where: Criser as any coach in the nation. However, the Boilermakers do not have one player that even resembles an all-conference performer. Cur- rently the team's leading scorer is Chad Austin, who is averaging 10.9 points per game. Purdue's leader is guard Porter Rob- erts. Roberts was a key contributor in the most recent championship run and is averaging 8.1 points per game this year. Herb Dove (6.9 ppg), Roy Hairston (9.2 ppg) and Brandon Brantley (9.6 ppg) round out the starting five. Roberts is the only current starter that started on last year's sqaud. Keady has a solid bench led by Justin Jennings and Brad Miller. Millerwasacan- didate for Big Ten Freshman Player of the C Year last season, ESPNaveraging 6.5 points per game r Arena and 4.3 rebounds per game. Individually, none of these players strike fear into an opponent, but as a team they are very solid. The Boilermakers have an ex- tremely balanced scoring attack, as opposed to last year when departed seniors Martin and Matt Waddell com- bined for 27.7 points per game. "We have a lot of good players," Keady said. "We don't have any great players, but if they play together and have good ball movement and play good defense, I think we'll probably have a great team by March." Just a week and a half ago, Michi- gan had forged a first-place tie with Penn State and Purdue by beating the Nittany Lions in Ann Arbor. The team's confidence level was very high, but, after two straight de- feats, that confidence is waning. Before Sunday's game at Iowa, Fisher stressed how important it was for his team to play aggressively and intelligently. Instead, Michigan was manhandled by the Hawkeyes and never really gave itself a chance for victory. "They played great," Traylor said. 'We didn't play well. I didn't play well so I'm depressed." Hoosiers hold off Hawkeyes The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Indiana's best offense came with the clock stopped. The Hoosiers survivedan eight-minute stretch without a field goal, scored 16 their final 20 points from the free throw line and beat No. 16 Iowa 76-73 Tuesday night. Michigan lost to both teams while on the road last week. "Ouroffense got real slow. We weren't cutting and moving like we were the first 28minutes ofthe game," said Brian Evans, who led Indiana with 25 points. "The last 12 minutes we were standing, not really cutting and moving." Indiana's last six points came on free throws and for the game, the Hoosiers hit 24 of 35 foul shots to just I1 of 18 for the Hawkeyes. Indiana(12-8, 5-3 Big Ten)blew a 16- point lead as Iowa (15-5, 4-4) scored 10 straight points midway through the sec- ond half. The Hawkeyes eventually closed the gap to 74-73 with six seconds to go before Haris Mujezinovic and Andrac Patterson each hit one free throw for the Hoosiers. "It wasn't our game plan to get the ball to me and get fouled, but it kind of hap- pened," said Mujezinovic, a 47 percent free throw shooter for the season. For the game, Mujezinovic hit four of nine free throws. He missed his second foul shot with five seconds left, but Patterson rebounded the ball to set up his own free throw with less than one second left. "The part of this game that I'll pay th most attention to is that last 12 minutes, because we didn't get the kindofwork on the backboards we've got to have and we got to slowing down things a little bit," Indiana coach Bob Knight said. "From my standpoint, as disappointed as I might be, with the fact that really 28 minutes of good play kind of slipped away from us, yet we did hang on and we got some things that we had to have." A steal and fast-break dunk by Jesi Settles brought the Hawkeyes within 62- 59 before a basket by Indiana's Patterson. A 3-pointer by Andre Woolridge, who led Iowa with 19 points,cut the lead to two before Patterson hit two free throwsand Evans got an off-balance hook to drop just as the shot clock expired. That was the Hoosiers' final field goal of the game. S"They just stuck it to us so bad there i the early going it didn't even look we were going to even be in the game. But we just came battling back and trying to find a way to win coming down the stretch," Iowa coach Tom Davis said. With the loss of Cuonzo Martin to graduation, Purdue looked like it would be an also-ran this time around. But Keady has waved his magic wand, and the Boilermakers are in the thick ofthe Big Ten race without a bonafide star on their roster. Tonight's game is a must win for No. 20 Michigan. The Wolverines' road woes have cost them crucial ground in the conference race. To be a legitimate contender for the Big Ten title, Michigan must continue to be successful at home. The Wolverines are mired in a very difficult stretch that has gotten off to a bad start. After tonight's game, Michigan coach Steve Fisher must take his team back on the road again for contests against Ohio State and Purdue. "This is a big game for us," fresh- man Robert Traylor said. "We have to stop the losing streak." There are a lot of teams Michigan would rather play in order to end the streak. Purdue matches up well with the Wolverines at most positions, and Keady gets as much out of his players MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Robert Traylor dunks in the Wolverines' win over Illinois. Traylor and his teammates take on second-place Purdue tonight in a crucial Big Ten contest. Recent Big Ten regular season champic Year Team 1985-1986 Michigan1 1986-1987 Indiana1 1987-1988 Purdue 1988-1989 Indiana+ 1989-1990 Michigan State 19904991 Ohio State 1991-1992 Ohio State 1992-1993 Indiana 1993-1994 Purdue 1994-1995 Purdue Purdue has won 20 Big Ten regular season titles, the most of any Big ten team. The Boilermakers either won or shared the championship in 1911, 1912, 1921, 1922, 1926, 1928, 1930, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1938, 1940, 1969, 1979, 1984, 1987, 1988, 1994, and 1995. f 1 _. OPEN SKATING Do you like .ichigan If yes, then write for Come on in 420 Maynard so rts? Mornson questionable for weekend due to wrist injury a I .l I I . ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM - PACKAGE HANDLERS PERFECT FOR.-o COLLEGE STUDENTS Saving for tuition? Find part- time work, year round at RPS! - Earn up to $8.50 per houra Roadway Package System, a small' package delivery service, hires package handlers to load and unload' package vans and semi-trailers. If you are not afraid of hard work, are at least 18 years old and want to work 4-5 hours per day, Mon.-Fr., we can offer you $6.50/hr. to start, By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Writer Not again. Following its worst weekend show- ing in almost two years, the Michigan hockey team was hit with more bad news yesterday. For the second time this season, the Wolverines' top player, center Brendan Morrison, is battling an in- jury. This one concerns a sprained wrist that he hurt in Saturday night's 6-5 loss to Bowling Green. "He has a sprained wrist, and we put it in a cast," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He had it X-rayed and it doesn't show anything." Berenson said that Morrison in- jured the wrist -in the middle of the game Saturday \iWC night. He scored his only goal of the Notebook weekend in the third period of that game. Morrison did not practice yesterday. His status for this weekend's pair of home games against Ohio State is up in the air. "It's just a matter of (whether) it getsbetter in time to play or not," Berenson said. "Right now he's a big sists) and tops the nation in scoring average with a clip of 2.4 points per game. He has been named CCHA Player of the Week four times this season and his name has been consistently mentioned among the leading candi- dates for the Hobey Baker Award, given to the nation's top collegiate hockey player. Morrison did not miss a game last season and missed only three his fresh- man season in 1993-94. Men's track High jumper Jon Royce has jumped to an early start this season and isn't resting on his laurels. Royce's early season jump of 7-foot-2 made him a provisional qualifier two weeks ago at the Red Simmons Invitational. The defending Big Ten Champion, Royce is out to prove that his title was no fluke. This past weekend, at the Michigan Intercollegiate meet, Royce remained victorious as he leaped 7-foot-I. He was unable to clear the bar when it was at 7-foot-3 but will have a few more shots to become an automatic qualifier. The NCAA standard for automatic qualifiers in the high jump is 7-foot- 4. - Mark Snyder from behind. We did it again (against Indiana). "We've got to come out, and we have to set the tempo of the game." Michigan did not set the tempo and played flat in both games of the week. end set. Against the Hoosiers, the Wolver- ines fell behind, 4-0, and didn't score until there was 16:49 left in the first half. A Jennifer Brzezinski turnover and a traveling violation by Akisha Franklin helped increase the Wolver- ines' deficit from five to 17 in the first four minutes. The Hoosiers led, 25-8, with ,1 minutes to go in the half. The Wolverines headed into half- time down 14. A late Michigan charge in the second half wasn't enough to overcome the Hoosiers. "If we played in the first half as well as we did in the second half, I think the outcome would have beena little bit different," Roberts said. - James Goldstein Men's diving At Canham Natatorium, there's more than a big lap pool. Therekslso a deep pool. The Michigan men's divers have made a big impact in the Wolverines' winning season, while making small Sate-of-the-art indoor facility with professional floor surface, locker room, concession stand, pro shop. D$1.00 OFF, ADMISSION 1,