Cbe £idrigwrn tig 11 pli IN NS--- - --------- ROI A i.-;: 1 O- - -- - - - - I ROUND I Blue drubs Spartans, inside and out By John Leroi Daily Sports Editor Last week: in East Lansing. Saturday: here. Last week: good Michigan win. Saturday: real good Michigan win. Last week: for some wacky reason, the game didn't count toward the Big Ten standings. Saturday: oh yeah, it counted. Last week: Michigan State concentrated so much on the shooting prowess of one Louis Bullock that the Wolverines' trio of big men had a field day, combining for 44 points. Saturday: Bullock scorched the Spartans for 22 points, courtesy of six 3-pointers, five in the first half. Instead of a 13-point win like last week, No. 16 Michigan (6-3 Big Ten, 16-5 overall) played an inspired first half before No DCEFOR ISU MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Boling Green's Dave Faulkner tried to corral Brendan Morrison, but just like most of Michigan's opponents this season, he couldn't. Morrison scored his 21st goal of the season in the Wolverines' 6-.1victory over the Falcons on Saturday night. Icers pound Falcons 6-1, take control bDan Stillman Daily Sports Writer Believe it or not, the Michigan hockey team has a significant weak- ness - at least it did. Saturday night against Bowling Green, the Wolverines generated a single-period season-high 26 shots on goal, three of which went in, dur- ing a frantic second period to take a commanding three-goal lead. Michigan (16-1-2 CCHA, 25-1-3 overall) went on to defeat Bowling Gren (8-10-3, 13-12-3), 6-1 in front of 6,687 at sold-out Yost Ice Arena. The victory extended the Wolverines' unbeaten streak to 22, -breaking the previous school record of 21, which spanned the end of the 1947-48 season and the beginning of the '48-'49 campaign. efore its last two games, higan had struggled during in the second period. The Wolverines had scored 35 goals in the middle stanza for the season, far less than the 66 and 57 goals they had compiled in the first and third periods, respective- ly. Michigan has also faltered defen- sively in the second period this sea- son, allowing 44 more shots on goal than in the first. ut suddenly, the Wolverines' gest weakness has become their strength. Saturday night's second-period performance was preceded by anoth- of CCHA er three-goal effort in the second period of Thursday night's game at Ohio State. "We've been talking to our psy- chologist Hugh Bray about (second- period problems) a bit," Michigan forward Jason Botterill said. "It's a situation where we got in a little bit of a lull in the month of January there in the second periods. We sort of put the second period as the period to separate ourselves from our competi- tion. "It's good to, each period, have a focus. First period, we want to focus on setting the tone early, and the third period, we just want to find a way to win. I think now that we have a good clear focus on what we want to do in " the second period, it's helping us out a lot." It looked like it was going to be another rough second period for Michigan on Saturday night when Bowling Green scored 1 1/2 minutes into the stanza to tie the game at one. But the Wolverines took back the lead 28 seconds later when center Mike Legg hacked in a rebound that seemed to sit in the crease forever before he finally got his stick on it. "I saw it lying there and I was wait- ing to get hit and I was sort of brac- ing myself," Legg said. "I was trying to pull it and shoot it in and it was just sitting there. The goalie sort of made a move for it and I sort of See FALCONS, Page 4B Michigan 85 9 Michigan State 65 cruising to an 85-65 victory over Michigan State (4-5, 11-7) on Saturday" It was the Wolverines' second win in a week over their intrastate rival - and maybe this one was a little sweeter. "We didn't quite play the way we wanted to last week" said Michigan center Robert Traylor, who celebrated his 20th birthday Saturday by scoring 16 points and grabbing eight boards. "Today we had it all going, inside and out, both ends of the floor." Though the second half was good, the first was better for the Wolverines. Michigan State kept it close for the first five minutes of the game. The Spartans had a 10-6 lead after a lay- up by Antonio Smith at 4:37 of the first half. But Michigan reeled off a 12-0 run to give itself an 18-10 lead. The two teams traded baskets for the next three minutes, with Michigan State guard Ray Weathers scoring the Spartans' next eight points and Travis Conlan netting eight of Michigan's next 10. But it got worse for Michigan State after that. The Wolverines spent the last seven minutes of the half on a 20-4 s run that made the halftime score 46-23 and pretty much ended things for the Spartans. Bullock nailed all five of the threes he took in the first, including three in a 56-second span late in the half. Conlan got in on the act as well, hitting four of his six shots, includ- ing two threes, and dishing out five assists. "You all just saw Michigan play a real good first half," Maceo Baston led a stingy Michigand See SPARTANS, Page 5B Mateen Cleaves to 6-of-15 shooting a A4 changbzg to the gadP~ SARA STILLMAN/Daily defense, which held Michigan State's highly-touted freshman s the Wolverines coasted to a 20-point blowout. orderfi Hoosiers pummel women's hoops, 73-5 6 By Kevin Kasiborski Daily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON - February has finally brought temperatures above freezing, but there is still enough ice on the sidewalk to cause a hard fall. And fall is what the Michigan en's basketball team's shooting tentage did yesterday, when Indiana tripped up the Wolverines,, 73-56. The Wolverines shot only 29 per- cent from the field (21 for 72) one week after scorching the nets at a .604 clip in their win over Iowa. Michigan (4-5 Big Ten, 12-6 over- all) trailed by only one with 30 sec- onds remaining in the first half. A up by Indiana's Tatjana Vesel e ended the Hoosiers lead to three. With the shot clock turned off, the Wolverines should've held the ball for the last shot, but Michigan guard Akisha Franklin was called for trav- elling. deficit up to that point. Indiana (4-6, 12-9) took control of the game at the start of the second half with a 12-3 run, and Michigan was never within single-digits of the lead the rest of the way. "We have not done a good job in the last two minutes of the first half in our last three basketball games," Indiana coach Jim Izard said. "Today we went from plus-one to plus-six." "We came out in the second half and took it to them on both ends of the floor and built a commanding lead." Michigan made only nine field goals in the second half despite attempting 42 shots. "We couldn't score," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "We had some wide-open looks. Obviously, if you can't score from the perimeter, your big girls aren't going to be open inside, and I thought we tried to force it down inside." Indiana's outside shooters were et's hop in our DeLoreans and go back in time a bit. Say to the mid- le of October, before the college basketball season got underway. "Excuse me, Mr. Basketball expert, what is the key to success for Michigan this season?" "Well there, mental midget, that's a pretty dumb question. Michigan's frontcourt will be what takes the Wolverines to the Final Four. No doubt about it." Now that we are midway through Michigan's Big Ten slate, we know that there is doubt about it. So far this conference season, the- most impor- tant factor in Michigan's ALAN success has GO DENBACH been its back- court. Louis The Bronx Bullock and Bomber Travis Conlan have been the Wolverines steadiest, and overall, most valuable players. And Saturday's game against Michigan State was the backcourt's ultimate test thus far. At least, the ulti- mate test of its endurance. With Brandun Hughes suspended for the game, Michigan coach Steve Fisher pretty much asked starters Louis Bullock and Travis Conlan to give ironman efforts. That simply entailed playing close to, if not all of, the full 40 minutes. What Fisher didn't expect was for the pair to have two of the best games ir icAbigan, Conlan did was score a career-high 12 points and dish out a Michigan sea- son-best nine assists. "Bullock got into one of his shoot- ing frenzies where you knew he was going to make it every time he tried to shoot it," Fisher said. "Travis Conlan," he continued, "played about as good a total game as he has played for us since he has been here at Michigan." What made their performances all the more astounding was that Bullock and Conlan were doing it with only Ron Oliver to back them up. With all due respect, Oliver is a very capable{ fourth guard but shouldn't be expected to assume Hughes' minutes. Both Conlan and Bullock almost surpassed Oliver's season total Saturday alone, playing a combined 73 out of a possi- ble 80 minutes. At times, you just have to wonder how the big men stole all the attention in the preseason. Times like when Bullock hit three 3-pointers in 56 seconds late in the first half to give Michigan its 23-point halftime lead. Times like when Conlan drove the lane and whipped a no-look pass across his body, in true Magic Johnson form, to Maceo Baston for a sensa- tional dunk. Times like when the two of them walked off the court at the end of the game looking at the scoreboard and seeing a 20-point Michigan advantage. But these times where the backcourt has won the game for Michigan aren't new. They've been happening all sea- son. Like when Conlan's all-around