I Kentucky, Lyracuse square off tonight e ssociated Press 4EW YORK - Rick Pitino likes to preach to his Kentucky basketball team about living in the "precious present." No looking ahead or back. Just worry about today. Well, almost no looking back. When Kentucky faces Syracuse in the NCAA championship game tonight as a 14-point favorite, its toughest job will be solving the Orangemen's 2-3 zone. The zone has been a much-discussed topic ong the Wildcats ever since it was .ed by North Carolina to beat them in last year's Southeast Regional final. "The North Carolina loss is the only thing we look back on from the past," Kentucky point guard Anthony Epps said yesterday. "We go against that zone ev- ery day in practice." After a season in which it didn't really seem to matter what type of defense was used against them, the Wildcats (33-2) 1*i finally get to go against the zone in a game. They won by an average of 23 points this season, and Saturday night's 8K1-74 semifinal victory over top-ranked Massachusetts was theirfirstNCAA tour- nament win by fewer than 20 points. Still, last season's 74-61 loss to North Carolina - one step from the Final Four - has been a tough one to forget. The Wildcats shotjust 28 percent and were 7- for-36 from 3-point range. "aAfter last year when we played North rolina; we have played against a 2-3 zone for anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes every day," Pitino said. "We've been good at attacking it and we have to be, because Syracuse plays the best 2-3 zone in the country." Syracuse (29-8), which reached the title game with a 77-69 victory over Mis- sissippi State, has won praise -not ridi- culentf thseazon, endSecially duigts fne recie te crdt for the re gional final win over Kansas when the Jayhawks became the fourth straight team to shoot under 39 percent and were 4-for- 25 from beyond the are. The zone faced a tough test in Saturday night's game when Mississippi State hit three threes in as many attempts in the opening four minutes. But the rest of the way, the Orangemen's zone forced the Bulldogs into turnovers and negated their *ide game." Kentucky doesn't want to make the same mistake. "You have to keep attacking the zone," Pitino said. "You can't rely on fool's gold if you make three or four long jump shots andyou think you've discovered a way to beat it. Patience, dribble penetration and offensive rebounding are what's needed to beat a great defense like that." yracuse coach Jim Boeheim, who nt to the zone because of his team's lack of depth and speed, knows what his team is up against in Kentucky, the pre- season No. I and a team that was consid- ered the favorite to win the championship all season. "They have tremendous depth and are good at every position, and they are able to inside-outside at every position," said Boeheim, who hired Pitino as an assistant in his first season at Syracuse. "That's *y they've been the way they've been all year. They present a lot of problems, and we have to come up with some solu- tions." Just like Kentucky has to solve that zone. "The way we play, we encourage people to take 3-point shots," Boeheim said. "But it's not just shooting, it's how you attack it. We have to be pre- W ed for that and adjust to whatever do." Whatever Kentucky does, it will be with a lot of players. Pitino uses a 10-man rotation to keep the pressure defense in- tense and fresh. Syracuse plays seven players, and the starters log most of the minutes. That makes point guard Lazarus ~IE£di4Wn, ---LadgA j Michigan's Tom Malchow received All-Amiedca honors after finishing second in the 200-yard butterfly at the NCAA championships this past weekend. Michigan swims well but cannot repeat as champion By Doug Stevens Daily Sports Writer AUSTIN, Texas - A common for- mu4a for success in coaching is to work with what you have. Members of the media often encour- age coaches to speculate as to "what woulid have happened" had a certain absent player been available. Although he would never admit it, at this past weekend's NCAA Men's Swimming and Diving Championships, Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek must have pondered the impact that numer- ous athletes from last year's winning squad might have had on his current team's performance. Urbanchek brought only 11 athletes down to the Lone Star State, his team lacking entrants in seven different events (two sprint freestyle races, two breastroke events and three diving com- petitions). The weekend culminated with the defending champions finishing a dis- tant third (358 points) behind winner Texas (479) and runner-up Auburn (443.5). Urbanchek undoubtedly must have considered how the meet's events might have gone differently, had the Wolverines still possessed eight-time All-American sprinter Gustavo Borges, breaststroker Steve West, diver Abel Sanchez and freestyle/IM swimmer. Owen von Richter. As a result of these athletes' absence, Michigan's 1I swimmers were all forced to step it up for the team to compete with the other top programs, all of which possessed a full lineup. These men certainly lived up to their end of their bargain. Before the meet, Urbanchek stressed that while his team was not entered in a lot of events, it would dominate the ones in which it competed. As pre- dicted, Michigan excelled in the dis- tance events, the butterfly, the indi- vidual medley races and the backstroke. "We swam as well as we could with the 1 guys we had," Urbanchek said. "I got 110 percent from the guys we had." Indeed, of Michigan's 11 swimmers, only two failed to score any points in their events. In the distance freestyle, the squad's premiere event, Michigan's perfor- mance was nothing short of domina- tion. In the 500 freestyle, the Wolver- ines captured the first, second, fifth and 11th places. In the 1,650, Michigan grabbed the first, sixth, 10th, 17th and 19th places. In addition, the team's 800 freestyle relay team of Tom Dolan, Jason Lancaster, Chris Rumley and John Piersma broke a 12 year-old American record, as well as setting new NCAA, U.S. Open and pool standards with a time of 6:20.89. It was Michigan's fourth consecutive national title in that event. "We own that event - our name is permanently on that trophy," Urbanchek said about the Wolverines' perennial dominance in the relay. In one respect, the Wolverines' lack of depth definitely worked against them. The champion Longhorns illustrated the benefits of a deep team by becom- ing only the third squad ever, and the first in 13 years, to capture the team title without winning an individual event. "Without a doubt, our depth was real important," Texas coach Eddie Reese said. "I fyou can get two in the top eight, or four in the (consolation final), that's not just depth -that's good depth. We knew we were good in every event." On the other hand, Michigan's lack of depth gave it an opportunity to show- See TANKERS, Page SB i S COREKEEPERS Spcrraa Wv.. dsss Q tt TUESDAYm,&S ARE DOLLAR DAYS: 9 - CLOSE B( TT LE S