8B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 11, 1996 BASKETBALL rdue joins UMass, Uo, Kentucky as top seeds By Paul Barger Daily Sports Writer There were two major surprises for the Big Ten yesterday during the announcement of the field for the NCAA Tournament. One school was elated, while another suf- fered a major disappointment. Purdue, which lost to Iowa Saturday, was given the No. I seed in the West bracket. Minnesota was on the other end of the emo- tional spectrum, left out of the field of 64. 'The Golden Gophers seemed to clinch a spot in the tournament after beating Illinois for their 18th victory of the year. It is the first time since the tourney expanded to 64 teams that a Big Ten squad with at least 10 conference wins has been denied a bid. "I was shocked when Minnesota didn't get a bid," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "They played well down the stretch. I felt Minnesota would be in." In all, the Big Ten earned five berths in the dance. The Boilermakers are joined by Michi- gan, Penn State, Indiana and Iowa. Last season the conference had six teams in the field, five of which were knocked out in the'first round. Most expected Kansas to receive a No. I seed instead of Purdue even though the Jayhawks lost the Big Eight conference championship game to Iowa State yesterday. The other top seeds are Atlantic-10 champion Massachusetts, Big East champion Connecticut and SEC power Kentucky. "Purdue had a great year - not a good year, a great year," Fisher said. "I would say that they were very, very deserving (of the No. I seed). Kansas could say the same thing. Both of them lost their last games." An interesting first-round matchup pits East- ern Michigan against Duke in the Southeast bracket. The winner of that game will likely face Connecticut in the second round. "I'm going to go with Eastern just because they're right down the road," sophomore Maurice Taylor said. "I've got a couple of homeboys on that team." For the first time in history there are two teams in the tournament with losing records. Central Florida will take on Massachusetts and San Jose State, led by former Wolverine Olivier Saint-Jean, will be thrown into the fire against Kentucky. Both sub-.500 teams earned auto- matic bids by winning their conference tourna- ments. The four Big Ten teams, besides Purdue, that made it to the dance all face fairly tough first- round opponents. Iowa earned a No. 6 seed after defeating Purdue, but still has a difficult game against George Washington. Indiana is also a No. 6 seed and will play the Big East's Boston College. Penn State, a team that slumped at the end of the year, still received a No. 5 seed, but must play Arkansas. Michigan made the tournament as a No. 7 seed and will take on the very quick Texas Longhorns in the first round. Other bubble teams besides Minnesota that were left out of the NCAA tournament include Tulane, Davidson, the College of Charleston, Arkansas-Little Rock and Jerry Tarkanian's squad, Fresno State. Illinois basically had no chance of getting a bid after losing to the Gophers to end the season. Retiring coach Lou Henson will end his career in the NIT. Game times for the first round will be an- nounced later in the week. The NCAA Tourna- ment will begin at noon Thursday. The entire tournament will be televised by CBS. M' beats Northwestern by donunating boards By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Editor EVANSTON - Northwestern is a heck of a good high school team. The Wildcats are big for a high school team, have great skills for high schoolers and play in a large high school gymnasium. Unfortunately for fans of the Purple, the Wildcats play in the Big Ten - a college conference. That much was obvious in the fun had by Michigan last Wednesday - all of it at the expense of the hapless Wild- cats, who fell 77-50. The Michigan players spent the latter parts ofthegame- they were up 20 with 19:48 left - jovially blowing out the frustrated Mildcats. If it wasn't a Louis Bullock long bomb - the freshman fin- ished with a game-high 21 points - it was an Albert White dunk. Bullock's fellow rookie had 11 points, 11 rebounds, and two big slams in traffic. _"We just had a lot of fun," Michigan forward Maurice Taylor said. ,Unfortunately for Purple people, eat- ing up the Wildcats was the order of the f day for the Wolverines. About the clos- est Northwestern came to stopping the Wolverines was when, at the 10-minute mark of the first half, Taylor threw down an acrobatic two-handed jam - only to have it take a strange bounce back through the hoop. It was Taylor's only miss of the half in nine attempts. "Maurice was unstoppable inside in the first half," Michigan coach Steve Fisher. That was less true later, as Taylor fouled out in only three minutes of second-half play. He finished with 17 points and three blocks. Taylor's disqualification required Maceo Baston to re-enter the game, but the 6-foot-9 forward also fouled out less than 30 seconds later. Losing the two big men didn't seem to affect the Wolverines, whose rebounding statis- tio frankly made Northwestern look silly.. The Wolverinesgot51 of77 rebounds and even out-boarded the taller Wild- cats, 24-18, on Michigan shot attempts. ITheirathleticismjust dominated us," Northwestern coach Ricky Byrdsong said. "it looked like it was the offensive bbards, but it was more than that." Illini drops Blue By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Editor CHAMPAIGN - If it weren't for having to greet his siblings after Michigan's 73-62 loss at Illinois, Wolverine coach Steve Fisher prob- ably would have filed a missing person's report for Maceo Baston. The sophomore forward had just one point in 22 minutes of play. Illinois fans will probably file a like report next year. They will be without long-time coach Lou Henson, whose team beat the Wolverines for the first time since 1991. "As much as I like Lou Henson .. this is not the way I wanted my last game against Lou to end," said Fisher, whom Henson interviewed for an assistant's position when he took the Illinois post. Henson's cause was aided by 21 points and five assists from Illini jun- ior Kiwane Garris. "Even when he's not scoring, he's such a factor," Fisher said. "And to- day, he was not only a factor, he was scoring." Unlike Garris, Baston was neither scoring nor a factor. His final stat line included as many fouls and turnovers as points and rebounds. "We told (Bryant Notree) 'lfyoudon't getarebound all afternoon, keep (Baston) off the boards,"' Henson said. Notree checked Baston's rebound- ing so effectively that the Michigan sophomore must have felt like he was facing Gary Kasparov, and Notree grabbed 10 boards to boot. Maurice Taylor had 19 points to go with his 12 rebounds, but the support was sparse. Bullock and Dugan Fife both had 12 points, hitting two and four treys re- spectively, but combined to shoot 9- ,.for-26. Bullock didn't hit his first 3- pointer until 31 minutes had passed and the crowd had dogged him for an early airball. * "Lou Bullock played a little bit like a freshman today," Fisher said. One freshman who didn't play like a freshman was Albert White, who had 14 points and nine boards. Neither Maceo Baston (30) nor Sam Okey (4) can quite get a handle on this rebound, and Michigan's Louis Bullock (foreground) Isn't about to get involved in the struggle. The dunking prowess of Michigan freshman Albert White leaves Wisconsin's Jeremy Hall and Sam Okey bowing. White will be a crucial factor in the Wolverines NCAA Tournament hopes. ROSENBERG Continued from page 11 here's what happened. The Wolverines played scared and confused and ended up losing to Western Kentuckyin the first round. Yes, Michigan lost to Western Kentucky, a team whose marketing slogan is "Western Kentucky Basketball: Our Tickets Are Less Expensive Than Kentucky's or Louisville's." In brief, last year's appearance was brief. This year could be. a different story. Oh, Michigan won't make the Final Four. (That's not all bad - the Final Four' is in New Jersey.) But the Wolverines can beat Texas,"and could even give Wake Forest a contest. It's a question of which Michigan team shows up: ill it be the feisty squad that whipped Wisconsin or the' sleepwalking crew that lost five of six in the heart of the Big Ten season? The fans, media and even opposing teams don't know what to expect. "I wouldn't mind a team wondering which Michigan team will show up," guard Louis Bullock said. "That" would keep them thinking." Which Wolverines take the floor depends on ... ihih Wolverines take the floor. Fisher has to make some choices. The NCAA Totttha- ment is war, and Fisher has to pick the soldiers he wats In his foxhole. Let me explain. You see, last year's team was notdnly, very average, it was very unhappy. Several players were}; disappointed with their playing time, shots and positions. Fisher decided this year's team would a different stoy: So he has played nine Wolverines regularly (down' ta seven with Robert Traylor and Jerod Ward injured.),14is strategy has worked; everyone is buddy-buddy, and for th first time since who-knows-when, no Michigan players ar being rumored to transfer.-2 That's nice, but this is the Big Dance - you can't bring a truckload of dance partners. If Fisher wants to keop" everybody happy this weekend, he can buy them happy meals, give them hugs, whatever - he just can't give them' all playing time. That means Michigan's two best players, Bullock ind Maurice Taylor, each play as much as their stamina al-lows them. It also means that unless Taylor is playing terribly,. he needs to take at least 15 shots - something he hagdone in only five of 31 games. The worst kind of game fdr"' Michigan would be a defeat with Taylor shooting 8-fotO1, like he did in a home loss to Iowa. If that happens, it r means the Wolverines didn't give it their best shot. / Maceo Baston should play as much as he can too, provided he stays out of foul trouble. With Traylor out; Baston is the team's only center. w After those three, Fisher has to make two tough chiokes. Choice No. 1: Travis Conlan or Dugan Fife? Fifei' r consistent but never spectacular. Conlan is sometint ' spectacular but never consistent. Both players will start but they won't both play the whole game. If Conlansist, throwing the ball into the stands, he should sit therei-and ~ Fife becomes the point guard. They can't play together too: much, because the last spot goes to.. Choice No. 2: Willie Mitchell or Albert White. FRtakly,.,r this isn't such a hard choice. White is simply a bettet"" player than Mitchell, even when White plays poorly i'hw Mitchell conntinhues to ze~t nlavinp- time because of his'iih- Stand Out In YOUR Next Presentation. '2 a -- JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Michigan's Willie Mitchell prays that his shot will fall A h hIiuL4