BASKETBALL- The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 5, 1996 - 5B * Ten Roundup: due ops MSU om tie for St place WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)- Jus- in Jennings came off the bench to core eight points for Purdue in a ecisive 12-point spurt that led to the oilermakers' 56-51 victory over ichigan State Saturday. rdue (7-2 Big Ten, 17-4 overall) i the Spartans without a field goal or nine minutes in the second half. Michigan State (6-3, 12-9) fell out f a first-place tie in the conference vith the loss. The Boilermakers trailed, 35-31, fter Chad Austin made one of two ree throws with 13:26 left to ignite he run which put the Boilermakers head to stay. ichigan State then had six turn- >s and nine consecutive missed hots. Jennings, who scored all 10 of his oints in the second half, had a pair of teals and layups in the streak and a asket with 8:48 to play put the Boil- rmakers ahead, 42-35. After Quinton Brooks made one of wo free throws for the Spartans, ennings came up with another steal nd hit two free throws to give Purdue .0-36 advantage. The Spartans managed to cut their eficit to 46-43 but Purdue responded ith a 3-pointer by Todd Foster. Jon aravaglia's 3-pointer and a free hrow by Daimon Bethea left the Spar- ans trailing, 49-47, with 1:54 to go. Porter Roberts hit two free throws ne second later for Purdue, followed y Austin's 3-pointer. Purdue then sed an opportunity to put the game y at the free throw line as it missed ou of six attempts in the final 61 econds, but the Spartans were un- ble to capitalize. No. 10 PENN STATE 95, No. 16 OWA 87, OT Pete Lisicky and Glenn Sekunda ach scored 20 points and Matt Gaudio dded 19, including eight in over- ime, to lead No. 10 Penn State to a 5-87 win over No 16 Iowa Satur an Earl finished with II points and Phil Williams 10 for the Nittany Lions (7-2, 16-2), who continued to laim a share of the conference lead while handing Iowa its first home loss this season in 11 games. Jess Settles scored 23, Andre Woolridge 19, Chris Kingsbury 17 and Russ Millard 15 for the Hawkeyes (4-5, 15-6), who were trying to give c~h Tom Davis his 200th win at Iowa. WISCONSIN 57, ILLINOIS 56 Hennssy Auriantal's jumper with seven seconds remaining Saturday gave Wisconsin a 57-56 Big Ten win over Illinois. Auriantal only scored four points, but his baskets were the final ones of the game for both teams. His jumper with 1:07 to go brought the Badgers ( , 13-8) to within a point, 56-55. fter Auriantal's second basket, Kiwane Garris got the ball for Illinois (3-6, 14-7) in the final seconds but missed a layup as time ran out. Illinois led by as many as eight, 48- 40, on Richard Keene's 3-pointer. The Illini then went cold, making only one field goal and four free throws in the next seven minutes. INDIANA 95, NORTHWESTERN 61 rian Evans scored 27 points and gbbed eight rebounds to lead Indi- ana to a 95-61 victory over North- western Sunday at Assembly Hall. Haris Mujezinovic and Neil Reed had 13 points apiece, while Andrae Patterson added 12 points, three steals and three blocked shots. Indiana (6-3, 13-8) dealt Northwest- ern (1-8,6-12) its worst loss of the season. The Hoosiers remain one game behind Big Ten leaders Penn State Purdue at the midpoint of the conference schedule. Big Ten Standings New starters put Blue back on top Traylor, Mitchell, By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - There is only one problem with that "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" cliche: Its value dimin- ishes significantly if "it" is indeed broke. Then, our lovely, trite proverb has very little to offer. Then, we have to search for our own solutions. Michigan coach Steve Fisher fi- nally found the solution to his team's problems Saturday, as the Wolver- ines snapped a three-game losing streak by slamming Ohio State, 77- 58, on the Buckeyes' home court. Part of that solution certainly was that Michigan played a Buckeye team that had only two Big Ten wins. An- other part, though, was found in Fisher's starting lineup. After beginning consecutive losses to Indiana, Iowa and Purdue with Maceo Baston, Albert White and Travis Conlan on the floor, Fisher's Saturday slate was absent that trio. Replacing them, and accompanying the usual Louis Bullock and Maurice Taylor, were Willie Mitchell, Robert Traylor and senior captain Dugan Fife. Fisher said the move was part of an attempt to eliminate the bugs that had been plaguing the Wolverines. "When you lose three in a row, it's like Watergate," he said. "You do everything you can to find fault." The switcheroo paid off for Michi- gan, which jumped out to 45-30 half- time lead behind 21 points from the newly appointed starters. Fisher didn't show much of a grudge against the benched three, though: All three subbed into the game after just over five minutes, replacing their replace- ments. "I'm not a guy that likes to change the lineup just to change the lineup," Fisher said. "But I'm not a guy who likes to lose either. I didn't want to make those three guys scapegoats. If I could have subbed five guys, I should Fife get the nod have. I felt it was imperative to make changes." For Fife, the change held a certain irony. The team's lone senior had started 65 consecutive games before sitting for Michigan's tip against Ari- zona Nov. 22. With Bullock's emer- gence as an outside threat and Conlan's improvement, Fife found himself relegated to the role of a sub- stitute. lie took no time to assert himself Saturday, however: with 1:20 gone in the game, the senior nailed a 21-foot 3-pointer to give Michigan a 5-0 lead. Forty-six seconds later, he dropped another long-range bomb on the Buck- eyes; the score was 8-2 and the Michi- gan rout was on. "I thought Fife really changed our game plan," Ohio State coach Randy Ayers said. "He hit those two threes and it sort of changed our ability to help in the post. Our plan was to back off Michigan's other guard (besides Bullock). We thought it would be Conlan who would start." Fife finished the game with I1 points on only four shots: he hit three of four from downtown and made his two free throws. Mitchell scored I I points on 5-of- 10 shooting and stole the ball three times in his eighth start, while Traylor chipped in 13. The freshman center's court time was limited to 19 minutes by foul trouble, but he still shot 6 of8 from the floor and 1 of I from the line to tally 13 points, six rebounds, two assists and a blocked shot. Fisher said he was impressed with the 300-pounder despite his fouls. "Traylor played with a lot ofenthu- siasm and effort," he said. "Some- times he makes mistakes that are youthful. Sometimes he gets called for fouls because of his size and his reputation." Traylor, too, was happy with his second start, calling it "a step forward as far as being a player." Louis Bullock (22) was one of two Wolverines not to lose his starting job in Saturday's game in Columbus; the other was Maurice Taylor. Bullock hit only three of his nine attempts and finished with nine points, three rebounds and two steals. Taylor led Michigan with 14 points in 29 minutes of play. The two are Michigan's leading scorers. WALKER VANDYKE/Daily speli trouble for0 OSU°:-' By Michael Rosenberg Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - The Michigan men's basketball team was put in an unusual position against Ohio State Sat- urday. The Wolverines were the vet- eran team. Of the Buckeyes' top six scorers, five are freshmen. Seniors Rick Yudt and Steve Belter are the only upperclass- men to have a ma- jor impact. At times this season, the youngsters kt have tested Ohio 13ase State coach Randy Ayers' patience. Notebook "I've been where Randy is with a lot of young kids," said Michi- gan coach Steve Fisher, referring to the Fab Five, all of whom started as freshmen Wolverines. "But they didn't have bodies of young kids, especially Chris (Webber) and Juwan (Howard)." Ohio State guard Damon Stringer said his team's inexperience contrib- uted to its ineffectiveness. "We just fired up shots when we didn't have to," Stringer said. "That's something we have to work on." THE BULLOCK FILE: Louis Bullock didn't play well against the Buckeyes - he shot just three for nine from the field. But he continued making his mark on the Michigan record book. Bullock's two 3-pointers gave him 51 for the season, tied with Sean 11 iggins for fifth on the Wolverines' season list. Glen Rice holds the top spot with 99 in 1988-89. Bullock needs just five more to pass Jalen Rose for fourth place. What's more impressive is Bullock's assault on the career record. Rice holds it with 135. Even if he doesn't hit an- other 3-pointer this season, Bullock would need only to average 28 per season over the next three years to tie Rice. Bullock needs nine more to tie James Voskuil for 10th on Michigan's all-time list. SEVEN STRAIGHT: The Wolverines have beaten the Buckeyes seven straight times. The first win of the streak is also the most noteworthy. Michigan beat Ohio State, 75-71, in overtime in the 1992 NCAA Southeast Regional Final to earn a trip to the Final Four. The Buckeyes have not been nearly so close lately. In their only meeting with Michigan last season, they lost 72-58 at Crisler Arena. In that game, Ohio State scored just 18 first-half points. Turnovers are the main culprit for the Buckeyes' troubles with Michigan lately. Ohio State has committed 51 in its past two games with the Wolverines. NOT-SO-FINE FIFE: Michigan guard Dugan Fife suffered ahip pointeragainst Indiana Jan. 23. He has not missed a game since, but said he expects the WALKER VANDYKE/Daily Michigan's Travis Conlan keeps a close eye on Ohio State's Jason Singleton Saturday night at St. John Arena. Conlan finished with seven points and six assists in the Wolverines' 77-58 romp. injury to bother him season. for the rest of the A Team Penn State Purdue Michigan St. .iana sconsin Michigan Iowa Minnesota Illinois Ohio State N'western Big Ten W i 7 2 7 2 6 3 6 3 5 4 5 4 4 5 3 5 3 6 2 7 1 8 Overall W L 16 2 17 4 12 9 13 8 13 8 15 7 15 6 11 9 14 7 9 9 6 11 McINTOSH Continued from Page lB fouls are becoming a little too routine for his own good. He's averaging more fouls per game (3.05) than any Wolverine except the extremely foul-prone Baston. Foul trouble has limited his minutes several times this season, as it did Saturday at Ohio State. Part of Traylor's ability to attract whistles, though, is physics: Like most freshmen, he hasn't mastered the vagaries of mass ratios yet. When Albert White, all 230 pounds ofhim, bumps someone, that someone tips slightly. When the 300 pounds Traylor carries around bumps some- one, someone gets out of the way rather quickly whether someone wants to or not - and so Traylor gets called every time for transgressions that White gets away with every time. "He can't be getting in foul trouble all the time," Mienhaan mnnn C ,te r iser said after Travlor's four- Burton Tower. The media played Traylor off as the best thing since the hallowed Fab Five. Therein lies the prob- lem: Blame it on the Fab Five. Since Jalen and Company's arrival, Wolverine rooters have expected freshmen to step onto Crisler's floor and into the ranks of the nation's prime players. In real life, the Fab Five are the singular exception. What teams have equaled their first-year ac- complishments? Exactly none. Traylor shouldn't be held to those standards. He is not Chris Webber -- but he forces opponents to alter shots like the now-injured Washington Bul- let did, and you better box him out if you don't want him to grab the re- bound. Think he can't jump? He has no problem hoisting his mass sky- ward. But Traylor's biggest assets - in spite of the stereotvoe that big guys BASKETBALL Continued from Page 1B this time for good. "I didn't think that, at the critical time of the game when we pulled within eight, that we played well," Ayers said. "We really forced the is- sue. I have to give Michigan all the credit. They came in prepared after losing three in a row." There was one bright spot for Ohio State: Jermaine Tate. The center shot 7 for 7 from the field. He finished with 16 points and eight rebounds, both game highs. After the game, the Wolverines took the attitude that a win is a win. More' importantly, it's not a loss. Michigan had had enough of those lately. "I not only feel better about.the win," Fisher said. "We played harder. We at least are headed in the direction we want to be in." The Wolverines plugged the artery. Now they have a few days to get back in top condition. Saturday. At Purdue. Their next game is I MICHIGAN (77) OHIO STATE (58) FG MIN FG M-A Fr M-A REB 04T FT M-A REB O-T A Fl PTS MIN M-A A F PTS { 1 IN Mitchell 2 3 5-10 1.2 02 2 3 11 Yudt 33 310 2-2 2-4 1 2 81 I