Scoreboard WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL PURDUE 73, No. 7 Notre Dame 58 No. 10 DUKE 72, Florida St. 66 No. 10 TEX. TECH 74, Oral Roberts 51 ALABAMA 70, No. 16 Minn. 67 No. 14 W. KEN. 81, Murray State 57 No. 9 IOWA ST. 57, Tenn.-Martin 36 MICHIGAN ST. 90, Il.-Chicago 60 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE WOFFORD 84, Montreat Anderson 59 INDIANAPOLIS 37, Philadelphia 10 No. 23 Xavier at LOYOLA-MMT,, inc. Home games in CAPS 9 * Friday December 6, 1996 16 Matti3on betrays, warns M zian &Apunch in the stomach. A slap in the the face. A kick in the roin. Those are the things you feel first when you're stabbed in the back. And every Michigan football player is feeling them this morning. . The Wolverines' best assistant coach, Greg Mattison, betrayed his school, his fellow coaches and his fans yesterday. He left Michigan for Notre Dame. No, he didn't take the head coach- ing position. Bob Davie took that last week. No, he didn't move up in his profession. No, there really doesn't seem to be any good reason for him to Mattison leaves 'M' for Notre Dame Michigan defensive coordinator accepts the same job with Fighting Irish, Davie 0 SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Greg Mattison, defensive coordinator at Michigan the past two years, was named yesterday to that position at Notre Dame. Mattison, 47, replaces Bob Davie, who was elevated to Irish head coach last month after Lou Holtz announced his resignation. Mattison joined the Michigan staff in 1992 as defensive line coach and continued in that job when he became coordinator. "I am very pleased that Greg Mattison has decided to join our football staff at Notre Dame," said Davie, who coached with Mattison at Texas A&M from 1989-91. "It's obvious when you look at what he's done that he's been suc- cessful at every step of his career. Mattison will also take over as linebacker coach from Davie, who headed Notre Dame's defense for the past three seasons. Mattison is one of five finalists for the Broyles Award, which recognizes the top assistant coach in college football. The winner will be announced Wednesday in Little Rock, Ark. Michigan players contacted last night were unaware of his departure. I am very pleased that Greg Mattison has decided to join our football staff. " -- Bob Davie Future Notre Dame coach Ma#tiso 's coaching career Before arriving at Michigan five years ago, Greg Mattison had coached all over the country. The Madison, Wis., native was a high school head coach in Wisconsin from 1971 to 1975. He held various positions at Cornell, Northwestern, Western Michigan, Navy and Texas A&M from 1976 to 1991. MARK FRIEDMAN/D) Mattison's efforts could be seen by the standout play by players like Williami Cam He took the same position he currently holds at Michigan - defensive coordi- nator. He took the same position, the one he was promoted to for doing things like telling the Wolverines how important it is to beat the hated Wolverines win clash with Titans Blowout keeps Michigan unbeaten NICHOLAS J. COTSONIKA The Greek Speaks Fighting Irish - one of Michigan's most bitter rivals. He took the same position. At Notre Dame. I talked to a player last night. He found out about it on ESPN2's ticker wire, that little thing that gives fans scores and tidbits in a tiny blue region on the bottom of television screens. He plays defense, the area Mattison coaches, and he had no idea it was coming. A punch in the stomach. He had no idea his coach was leav- ing him. He found out by watching television, when he was trying to relax after a night of studying. He found out at 12:30 p.m. It was like finding out your parents were splitting up, on television, at 12:30 p.m., when you were just talk- ing to them hours before. After all, this player spends a lot of time around Mattison, and Mattison runs a large portion of his life. It breaks your heart, and it makes you mad. The player did not want his name used, but he did want one word used. That word is "traitor," which the player said is the kind of man who does this kind of thing to the people he says he loves. A slap in the face. Maybe Mattison is doing this for his family. His children are rapidly approaching college age, and Notre Dame coaches get to send their chil- dren to Notre Dame for free. No See COTSONIKA, Page 19 By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor All signs pointed to it. It should have happened. It might have even been best for Michigan. The seventh-ranked Wolverines were supposed stay on their downward spiral of recent poor play that began with a six-point victory over Cleveland State and continued with an narrow escape from Bradley in overtime. When Detroit Michigan 75 Detroit 59 (2-3) came to Crisler Arena last night as Michigan's third straight unranked opponent, it seemed as if the Wolverines' late-game luck was sure to run out. But the Wolverines (4-0) used their last two games as a wake-up call and defeated the Titans by a margin they should have, 75-59. The key to Michigan's victory was its second-half dominance on the boards. The Wolverines outrebounded the Titans 27-8 after halftime, and 49-28 for the game. "In the second half, we were much smoother with the way we played," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "We were much more aggressive. Instead of us hoping to get every rebound, we got every rebound. That's how we need to play." Leading the second-half charge for the Wolverines were Maurice Taylor and Robert Traylor, two Detroit nat' playing against several opponents t they knew prior to coming to An Arbor. The 16-point victory was made all that much sweeter with that motiva- tional tool in place. "Knowing everyone that you're play- ing against gets you up for the game," Traylor said. "It feels good to beat them, because I came down to Michigan.;ari Detroit for where I was going to school. "I'm 2-0 against Detroit, so it looks like I made a good decision" 9 Traylor matched his career-high in rebounds with 12, including seven on the offensive glass, and scored five of his nine points within a minute that increased Michigan's lead to 16 and put away the Titans for good. "We had them up against the ropes in the second half," Taylor said. "The thing I liked was that we didn't let them off. We took their hearts from them, and kept it that way. We didn't give the chance to get back in the game." Late in the first half, though, it was Michigan which needed to get back into the game. Down, 36-31, Louis Bullock hit a 3-pointer with two sec- onds remaining in the first half to give Michigan momentum going into the break. The Wolverines carried that emo- tion through the break, as they scored the first six points of the second And when Leon Derricks drew I s fourth foul with over 16 minutes to play, Detroit didn't have enough big bodies to stop Michigan's dominant inside play. See TITANS, Page 19 SARA STILLMAN/Daily Michigan's Maurice Taylor scored 17 points and grabbed eight rebounds in a 75-59 victory over Detroit. LmM m m 0 0 0 m 0 7 am T- SHIRT PRINTING . LOWEST PRICES! HIGHEST QUALITY! * FASTEST SERVICE! U * 1002 PONTIAC TR. U 994-1367 Schedule Today Men's gymnastics hosts Maize and Blue Intrasquad, Cliff Keen Arena, 7 p.m. Women's swimming and diving at Miami (Ohio) Invitational, Oxford, 9:30 a.nr, (preliminaries), 6:30 p.m. (finals) Wrestling at Las Vegas Classic, Las Vegas, Nev., all day Tomorrow Women's gymnastics hosts Maize and Blue Intrasquad, Cliff Keen Arena, 7 p.m.y' Women's-swimming and diving at Miami (Ohio) Invitational, Oxford, 9:30 a.m. (preliminaries), 6:30 p.m. (finals) Wrestling at Las Vegas Classic, Las Vegas, Nev., all day Hockey vs. Ferris State, Big Rapids, 7 p.m. Sunday Men's basketball vs. Duke, Durham, N.C., 1:30 p.m. (ABC) Women's basketball vs. Central Michigan, Mt. Pleasant, 2 p.m. re