14 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, D December 2, 1996 LEROI Continued from Page ii were going to, but they wouldn't let that happen." Fisher even had to use 6-foot-9 for- ward Maceo Baston to help out up front. Fisher had hoped to rest Baston, out with a strained Achilles tendon since early November, at-least until tonight's game against Bradley or Thursday's matchup with Detroit. It turned out Baston's help was vital. He had nine points and pulled down two boards in just 10 minutes of action. More important, Baston sank five of his six attempts from the free throw line down the stretch and caused two turnovers to spark the 17-2 Michigan run. Even with the Baston's return, the Wolverines didn't play like they should have. The Vikings made more shots from the floor, and more threes. If it weren't for 20 points from the charity stripe, on just 20-for-33 shoot- ing, Michigan would have been sunk. Don't get me wrong. Michigan did- n't play terribly. In fact, Cleveland State played exceptionally well. The Vikings are no longer a Midwest patsy, tucked neatly on major teams schedules between Illinois- Chicago and Adrian. New coach Rollie Massimino, who has 423 career victories at Villanova and UNLV tucked under his belt, brings immediate credibility to the program. The Vikings, who have gone through only one decade with a win- ning record, overcame a 30-point deficit in their season opener against Georgetown. They ended up losing by 10. Massimino had his troops ready for Michigan. The Vikings shot well from the perimeter and held their own inside, grabbing 12 offensive rebounds and scoring 1 7 second- chance points. They played aggressive defense and, save a few traveling violations in the paint, rarely made a mistake. "I thought our players played absolutely super," a dejected Massimino said. "Not good, super. They hung in there, they defended, they went after people, they didn't back down. "You're talking about our little 6-5 guy playing a 6-9 Michigan guy who weighs 300 pounds. I think you've got to give our guys a tremendotis amount of credit." Deservedly so. Still, this wasn't a game that should have been in doubt with less than a minute to go. This wasn't a game that the 10,123 fans in Goodman Arena should have stuck around past halftime for. This was the No. 7 team in the country playing Cleveland State, maybe the worst team on Michigan's schedule. This was a game that the Wolverines should have killed the Vikings on the boards and in the paint and won by 20. This was a game that Maurice Taylor should have dominated. Taylor scored 17 points and led all players with 10 rebounds, a solid performance for sure. But he took just 14 shots and made only six of them. A 6-9, 250-pound All-Big Ten for- ward, one who NBA scouts are clam- oring over, ought to put teams like Cleveland State away. "They were pretty small," Taylor said. "We could have done better." That is certainly true. It's good to know that the Wolverines can pull out the close ones, win games when they don't play well. But No. 7? If Michigan wants to stay there, it'll have to play much bet- ter. - John Leroi can be reached over e-mail at jrleroi@umich.edu. VIKINGS Continued from Page Ja like they were going to hold off the Vikings attack, as Baston put back a Brandun Hughes miss and Travis Conlan got a driving baseline layup to fall through. But Cleveland State hung tough, and pulled within four points on the strength of two 3-pointers by freshman guard James Madison. By this time, the 10,123-strong crowd at Goodman Arena was on its feet. After Maurice Taylor put the Wolverines up, 71-65, Madison nailed another trey to bring the Vikings with- in three. After a miss by Taylor, Baston fouled Nichelson, who made one of two shots from the line, and Michigan's lead was down to a mere basket. Forty seconds later, Sims fed junior forward Michael Bowens on an inbounds pass for a lay-in, and the Wolverines teetered on the razor's edge. Hughes found Traylor for an alley- oop to put Michigan up, 74-71, and a foul by Madison sent the big man to the line. The shot caught the rim and bounced off toward the left sideline, where it was poked back inbounds by a diving Hughes. Taylor capitalized with a baseline lay-in, and the lead seemed safe at 76-72 with just over a minute to play. After a Cleveland State miss, Bullock controlled the ball, but slipped and turned the ball oser to Sims, who easily canned the open 3-pointer. The Vikings then fouled Hughes off the inbounds pass, and when lughes missed the second free throw to leave the margin at three with 33 seconds left, Cleveland State was still alive. But Madison's attempt from beyond the arc on the Vikings' next possession glanced off the rim, and Taylor tipped the ball safely into Bullock's hands, seconds before Cleveland State defenders put him on the line to ice the game. "Cleveland State's a scrappy team," Traylor said. "They're a team that's not going to quit." Hughes saw both good and bad in the Wolverines' performance. "We held them off, and that's part of being a good team," he said. "We're taking steps forward in doing that, but I think we also took a step back in how we didn't finish them when we could have." Massimino - who won an NCAA title as coach at Villanova in 1985__ gave his team all the credit for taking the Wolverines the distance. "You've got to understand that this is the seventh-ranked team in the coun- try," he said. "You're not just playing chopped liver.," It was right there to be had," Massimiho said of the game. "But that's basketball. That's what makes it so good., Michigan coach Steve Fisher didn't mince words about his team's close encounter with the Viking hoard. "We had our hands full and then some," he said. "Their crowd energized them, and got us a little frustrated." "We need to go back and say 'What can we learn from this?' and be better prepared." The Wolverines have little time to learn the lessons of the near-plunder- ing at Cleveland -- they face Bradley tonight at 7:30 at Crisler Arena. Michigan ( Taylor Ward Traylor Bullock Conlan Hughes Oliver Baston Vignier Totals MIN 36 31 24 36 31 28 2 10 2 200 ($0) FG FT REB MA M-A 0-T A F PTS 6-14 5-9 3-10 3 2 17 2-6 2-4 1-3 2 0 7 6-9 1-3 7-8 0 4 13 5-11 5.7 0-5 3 2 19 3-4 1-2 2-4 5 2 9 2.7 1-2 0-2 5 1 5. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 2-2 5-6 2-2 0 2 9 0-1 0-0 1-1 0 0 0 26-5420-3316-39 181480 0 FG%: .481.FT%: .606. 3-point FG: 8-17. .471 (Bullock 4-9. Conlan 2-3, Ward 1-3. Hughes 1-2). Blocks: 5 (Taylor 2, Traylor 2. Baston). Steals: 7 (Bullock 2, Conlan 2, Ward 2, Hughes). Team Rebounds: 4 Technical Fouls: none. Cleveland Sims Bowens Nicholson Lambert Madison Dames Rahas Skoutaris Brewster McRoy Totals MIN 35 34 38 8 32 21 1 7 17 7 200 State (74) FO FT RES MA M-A O-T A F PTS 4-12 3-4 1-5 11 1 '2 6-13 0-0. 1-3 0 4 14 6-11 4-5 2-7 6 2 17 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 4 2 6-15 2-2 1-5 1 1 19 3-6 0-0 3-3 1 2. 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 1 0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 5 2 1-3 0-0 0-1 1 2 9 28-62 9-1112-322222 74 0 FG%: .452. FT%: .818. 3-point FG: 9-21, .429 (Madison 5-11, Bowens 2-4,Sims 1-4, Nicholson 1-2). Blocks: 0 Steals: 9 (Madison 4, Brewster 2, Sims 2, Bowens). Team Rebounds: 6 Technical Fouls: none. Michigan........40 40 -80 Cleveland St......37 37 - 74 At: Goodman Arena. A: 10,123 c