(Itie .01 0 Ili firtic4ligulft - UtW4 IA Yha Michigan Daily ! Tirest aYr Janlry Pale IB 1Iand it to Hughes, le deserves Te credit It's perhaps the most cliched expres- sion in all of sports: "Pressure situa- tions bring out the best in me." What makes it so trite is that too many athletes apply it to themselves when only the game's greats are allowed t y it, if that. W e greats ... and Brandun Hughes. Hughes followed Jerod Ward's com- ing-out party against Purdue with one of his own, Sunday against Iowa. His sensational 18-point effort and stingy defense against the Big Ten's top dog, Andre Woolridge, made it all the more impressive. "I knew I'd have a big game today," Hughes said after Michigan's 79-71 victory. "Because most of the time N when we play GOLDENBACH against good guards, I have a The Bronx big game." ber Sure, Hughes had big games against Illinois' Kiwane Garris and n nesota's Bobby Jackson. But neither ofthose performances came close to matching the shooting and defensive exhibition he put on against Woolridge. Hughes' play flat-out won the game for Michigan on Sunday. Everyone of his baskets seemed big. His first points of the game came on a 3-pointer seven minutes in. It ended a 6-0 Iowa run and began a 13-4 Michigan spurt which ultimately gave Wolverines a three-point lead. ine minutes later, Woolridge hit the second of his five treys to a rowdy Criser crowd. But Hughes promptly replied with a three of his own, which began the duel. "(Playing against good guards) brings out my competitive nature ; Hughes said. "That just brings my spirit out and helps me play well." A pair of jumpers in the 44 seconds tre the intermission gave Michigan a t ee-point halftime lead, 40-37. The other score of note: Hughes 10, Woolridge 10. But halftime was more of a starting gun for the Hughes-Woolridge show- down than it was a break in the game. "Brandun's got a lot of pride,' Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "He was chomping at the bit to guard Woolridge." Early in the second half, Hughes' *nse bit deeply, forcing Woolridge to fire up an airball and bringing "airball" chants every time he touched the ball afterwards. Every time until Woolridge drove to the hoop for a two-handed jam, which tied the game at 58 and saw Hughes and Woolridge begin trading verbal blows up and down the court. With Woolridge out, Hughes embar- IedIowa's backup, Jason Bauer, for straight baskets, which gave the Wolverines the lead for good, 62-58. And giving Hughes the individual See GOLDENBACH, Page 5B After Friday tie, Broncos go quietly Morrison leads Blue to 3-point weekend By Andy Knudsen Daily Sports Writer With three points in a home-and- home series against Western Michigan this weekend, the consenus No. 1 Michigan hockey team has finally made it back to the top of the CCHA. After settling for a 5-5 tie in Kalamazoo on Friday, Michigan came out strong on its home ice Saturday, out- lasting the Broncos, 8-5. The Wolverines (12-1-2 CCHA, 21-1- 3 overall) now find themselves in a three-way tie with former frontrunner Miami (Ohio) - which lost twice this weekend - and Lake Superior. Once again, cap- tain Brendan Morrison came through when theY Wolverines needed him most, scoring with 13.2 seconds remaining Friday Morrison to tie the game. Morrison then netted three goals in a span of 9:55 in the first period Saturday for his fourth career hat trick. With one assist each night, Morrison now has 51 points (18 goals, 33 assists) on the sea- son. But despite the dramatic comeback Friday and elevation into first place in the conference, the Wolverines didn't feel much like celebrating after giving up 10 goals in the weekend series, and 14 in the last three games. "This has been a tough stretch for us," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Our team has played well in spots but we're not playing well consistently and we're not playing well defensively." Michigan looked determined to blow the Broncos (5-8-3, 9-12-3) out of Yost Ice Arena on Saturday, getting goals from the three centers it dressed - Morrison, Mike Legg and Bobby Hayes - in the first 2:26. At 8:19, left wing Matt Herr fed Morrison from behind the net for an easy one-timer on the power play, extending Michigan's lead to 4-0. "Brendan is one of those players who has to play through a lot of defense every night," Berenson said. "It's nice to see him get through some of it aind put the puck in the net, because he is one of the premier players on our team and in the league, and in college hockey." But Western Michigan's confidence was lifted by a 4-on-3 goal 10 minutes into the game on only its third shot of the contest. The Broncos' sixth shot also found the net at 18:42, cutting Michigan's lead to 5-2 at the first inter- mission. With goals from John Madden and Jason Botterill, and strong goaltending from Marty Turco, the Wolverines apparently put the game out of reach in the second period. But in the third, the Broncos got two goals in the first 3:30 and added a fifth goal at 18:25 to make Michigan's win less impressive and less pleasing. "I think the challenge of defense takes a lot more work than the challenge of offense;' Berenson said. He continued to say that the lapses can't be pinned on any one particular player or position. "I can't tell you it's goalkeeping. I think Turco's played very well during this stretch, but he's given up some weak goals," he said. "Our defense has played very well, but they've also made some costly mistakes and turnovers and give- aways and missed assignments. The for- wards have played very well, but also contributed to the defensive lapses." Morrison thinks the team is taking shortcuts. "Our team is capable of doing (the lit- tle things), it's just (making) us willing to do it, paying the price to get the job done," he said. The Wolverines were willing to get the job done in the last minute Friday. Mike Melas scored his third goal of the night for the Broncos with 5:43 remaining in the game and it didn't look like Michigan was going to beat red-hot goaltender Matt Barnes in the final min- utes. Turco came off the ice with 37 sec- onds left in regulation in favor of a sixth attacker, and the added pressure paid off. Defenseman Harold Schock skated to the middle, and put a shot on goal, See BRONCOS, Page 4B MARK FRIEDMAN/Daly Wolverines like Maurice Taylor saw to it that Guy Rucker and the Hawkeyes fumbled away their lead in the Big Ten race. Deathroned!. -,Jm - - -w ' w s Michigan brings Iowa back to reality By Danielle Rumors Daily Sports Editor History does not always repeat itself, as the Iowa men's basketball team found out Sunday. The Hawkeyes employed the same zone defense game plan as a year ago, Michigan 78 AP Iowa 71 but this time there was a different out- come. Last year, Michigan's three-guard rotation struggled against the Hawkeyes at Crisler Arena, losing, 62-55. This year, Michigan's three guards - Brandun Hughes, Louis Bullock and Travis Conlan - turned the tables on the Hawkeyes (5-1 Big Ten, 14-4 overall) to win, 79-71, and destroy their previous unbeaten mark in the Big Ten. Last year, the Hawkeyes destroyed the Wolverines (4-2, 13-4) mainly by destroying their guards. The Hawkeyes' stifling defense shut down Michigan's perimeter game, holding its guards to a 3-of-22 shooting per- formance. This year, Michigan's guards con- nected on 15 of 29 field goals, and the Wolverines sunk 52 percent of their shots as a team. "If you want to look at specifics as to why (the Wolverines) are better now (it's) because of the addition of Hughes into the backcourt as well as the improvement of Bullock and Conlan," Iowa coach Tom Davis said. "They're both better, and then you add in a third guy who is also very good and tough to cover." The Hawkeyes played the No. 18 Wolverines in a zone for most of the afternoon, intending to shut down Michigan's post play. And it worked for the most part, especially on Maurice Taylor. He attempted just seven shots for the entire game, connecting on three, and finished with eight points. Fellow forward Maceo Baston had many of the same problems in the paint, fin- ishing with five points, while center Robert Traylor finished with nine. Iowa's zone undoubtedly kept Taylor - and the other big men - off-balance all afternoon and allowed See HAWKEYES, Page 5B WARREN ZINN/Daily Michigan center Bobby Hayes was moved up to John Madden and Warren Luhning's line this weekend, but he couldn't beat goalie Matt Barnes on Friday. Brawl breaks put at end of track meet By Chad Kujala Daily Sports Writer The windchill dipped well below zero outside Saturday, but inside the track building, things were hot. The end of the Michigan men's track meet ended in a spontaneous mob, a small version of a Riddick Bowe- irew Gulotta boxing match. The last men's event, the 4x400 relay, proved to be the most exciting race of the day for the second straight week. Michigan's biggest competition came from Eastern Michigan. The race was close throughout, but the last leg was too close. Michigan anchor runner Neil Gardner and Eastern Michigan's anchor runner were itntacirt nrridtn:int a ct I- ndn .t.- rhP.nnn- Wolverines seeing Green ,after weekend sweep By Sharat RaJU Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - So close. So very close. The Michigan women's basketball team now owns a 3-4 record in the Big Ten. The Wolverines could just as easily be 4-3. After dropping a heart-breaker Friday at home to Indiana and having a potentially epic rally from 20 points behind fall short at Michigan State on Sunday, the Wolverines dropped both games this weekend, 72-59 and 76-67, respectively. On Sunday, 7,519 green- and white-clad fans packed into the Breslin Center to watch their first- place Spartans (6-1 Big Ten, 14-3 overall) beat up Michigan (3-4, 11-5), the traditional doormat of the Big Ten. For about 35 minutes, they got to see inst that - a Michigan State nummeling of its in- Most of the game was controlled by the Spartans, as they put on a defensive clinic, forcing 23 turnovers on 12 team steals in the game, enabling them to burst out to a 22-point lead. With about five minutes remaining in the game, the Wolverines snapped out of their drought, and began to play closer to their normal level. - "We dug ourselves a hole and couldn't get out of it," Guevara said. "But we out-played them in the second half." Tiffany Willard's 3-pointer from the top of the key with 4:37 left in the game sparked a 15-4 Michigan run. Ann Lemire's defense (four steals) and clutch shooting also helped the Wolverines climb back into the game. "I feel that penetrating is one of my strong 11A,~-> r