BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - February 3, 1997 -Y58 Conlan rises to occasion with Hughes on sidelines By Danielle Rumore Daily Sports Writer After the Michigan basketball team *ated Iowa, 79-71, on Jan. 19, Michigan coach Steve Fisher said that "sometimes there's addition with sub- traction." He was referring to Iowa guard Andre Woolridge's increased productivity since the Hawkeyes lost their star, Jess Settles, to injury indefinitely. But Fisher's statement could have eas- ily been a portent about one of his own guards, Travis Conlan. g)n Saturday in the highly-anticipated c ference matchup against Michigan State, Michigan guard Brandun Hughes did not play for violating team rules. And Michigan's usual thin seven-man rotation got even thinner. . That's when guard Travis Conlan, one of Michigan's most underrated players, stepped up and had arguably the best game of his college career. "Travis Conlan played about as good a *1 game as he's played for us since he's been at Michigan," Fisher said. This season, Conlan has typically been the point guard when Hughes is not in the game. Prior to Saturday's game, Conlan averaged four assists, tops on the team, and just 5.2 points per game. Without Hughes in the lineup Saturday, the Wolverines needed to com- pensate for Hughes' 9.5 points per game. Conlan, as usual, played point for the rre 39 minutes he was in the game, but he was also told to create more of his own shots off dribble penetration. He scored 12 points on 5-of-9 shooting. "I told Travis ... that he needed to give conscious thought of penetrating off the dribble, and not just penetrating to always be looking to pass, but first pen- etrating thinking score;' Fisher said. Which he did in the early minutes of the game. He worked inside for a layup, missed, stole the ball back from a Michigan State player and laid it in, tying the game at six. Halfway through the first half, with the shot clock winding down, Conlan pulled up for a 3-pointer at the top of the key, giving the Wolverines a 21-13 lead. A few possessions later, Conlan was on the right side of the key. The Spartans switched a man on defense, leaving him open for a split second. Conlan took advantage and drained another 3-pointer, giving the Wolverines a 10-point lead, 26-16. All in all, Conlan shot the lights out in the first half, nailing 10 of his 12 total points on 4-of-6 shooting, but it was his point skills - nifty passes off dribble- drive penetration - that set the tone for the entire game. Conlan had a blistering nine assists, the second-highest of his career and the most by any Wolverine this season. "Travis played excellent today," Michigan guard Louis Bullock said. "He really kept us in early. He did an excel- lent job of knocking down some shots and then once they keyed on him, I got open for some shots." His ball-handling skills set up basket after basket for Bullock, who finished with 22 points, especially on one of the best executed plays of the day. Conlan had the ball on the right side of the key with 53 seconds remaining in the first half. He signaled to Bullock, who was standing above the foul line, to run to the right side of the key. As Bullock moved, Conlan moved down the key and handed off to Bullock. The movement created a screen for Bullock, who found himself open at the top of the key. He buried his fifth 3- pointer of the half, giving the Wolverines a 46-23 lead at halftime. Bullock's final shot from downtown before the half was his third in a row, both assisted by Conlan. "Travis did a great job as far as mak- ing great passes, and he got a chance to knock down some open shots," Michigan forward Robert Traylor said. "So tonight was one of his better games" At 3:29 of the first, Conlan flipped a behind-the-back pass to a trailing Maceo Baston who slammed the ball home. On the Wolverines' next possession, Conlan dished inside to Traylor for one of his slams on the day. "If you watch me play, you know I usually don't take a shot for the first cou- ple of minutes" Conlan said. "I try to get everyone else involved .... As a point guard, that's your role." Ray Weathers was the only Spartan to show up offensively on Saturday, but even his efforts weren't enough to win the battle of the guards with Michigan's Louis Bullock and Travis Conlan. Bullock torched Michigan State for 22 points. Suspended Hughes sits out game; Streets does double duty By Will McCahili Daily Sports Editor As it turned out, the Wolverines didn't really need , junior guard Brandun Hughes during Michigan's 85-65 victory over Michigan State on Saturday. And it was just as well, because Michigan coach Steve Fisher suspended Hughes for Saturday's game for violat- ing a practice rule. Hughes said he was benched because of an incident in prac- tice Thursday, but1 would not give details. "It was just one of those things" he said. "I was just being competitive.' "But it ended there. . No one's angry. No hard feelings." Fisher refused to elaborate on the inci- dent, but said Hughes has learned his lesson. "I'm not going to go into details" he said. "We made a decision that he wouldn't play. "You make decisions and move on, and that's what we've done." MAY THE FORCE BE WITH Lou: After another successful outing from beyond the 3-point arc, sophomore guard Louis Bullock finds himself just four treys from tying Glen Rice atop Michigan's career 3-point list. Bullock entered Saturday's game in second place with 125 3-pointers, one ahead of Jalen Rose and three ahead of Jimmy King. He attempted only five shots in the first half, but all were threes, and he con- nected on each one. For the game, Bullock went 6-of-8 from 3-point-land, giving him 131 for his career. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said that Bullock was one of many daggers the Wolverines put to use Saturday. "Give Louis Bullock credit," Izzo said. "He's shooting the ball so effective- ly if he's open, and we just did not , defend him well." Fisher put an even more descrip- tive spin on Bullock's perfor- mance. "Bullock got in one of his shooting frenzies, where you knew he was going Streets to make it every time he tried to shoot it." So far this season, Bullock has con- nected on 61 of 127 3-pointers, giving him an average of almost three treys made per contest. At that pace, he should break the record next Saturday, when Penn State visits Crisler Arena. TAIGN' IT TO THE STREETS: After being the subject of rumors for several weeks, Michigan wide receiver Tai Streets finally made his appearance. On the basketball court. After much negotiation and pleading with football coach Lloyd Carr, and much discussion between Carr and Fisher, the sophomore was allowed to suit up and hit the Crisler hardwood. "I had to talk to coach Carr a lot, and he finally gave in," Streets said. "As long as I stay with my football, he said it was all right." Streets saw a minute of action Saturday, picking up two rebounds, one on either end of the floor, to Fisher's delight. "He's active," Fisher said. "(Sophomore center Robert) Traylor nicknamed him 'The Worm' because of his ability to pursue the ball. "Who knows, he might help us a little bit." Carr had only aesthetic concerns about Streets' tilt with the hoopsters. "He looks better in a football uniform, I know that," Carr said. "I look better?" Streets asked, when told of Carr's response. "I think I do too in a football uniform." BETTER TO RECEIVE: Saturday was Traylor's 20th birthday, and the victory over Michigan State was the best gift anyone could have given him, Fisher said. "Before we went out, I said 'The only present I can give you is the greatest pre- sent I can give you, and you can give it to yourself,"' Fisher said. Traylor went out and celebrated by scoring 14 points, a handful on high- spirited jams. "One of the best presents I could receive, right there," Traylor said. MAKE WAR, NOT LOVE?: Following the game, Fisher was asked by a slightly tongue-tied reporter if junior forward Maurice Taylor was displaying any signs of "passivity." "He's not a pacifist," Fisher replied. Illinois pushes Hoosiers under .500; Tate-less Buckeyes thump Badgers C do. + :omrayw Yt- - -- SARA STILLMAN/Daily Robiert Traylor celebrated his 20th birthday in style - a victory over Michigan State and 16 points along the way. tPA TANS Continued from Page 1B Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "I thought our offense was somewhat created by our defense. Maceo Baston started it as far I was concerned with his rebounding and Bullock got in one of his shooting frenzies where you knew he was going to make it every time he shot. "Travis Conlan played about as good a ame as he has for us since he's been at Michigan. I could go on and on like that" But he didn't have to. Conlan was asked to step up after Michigan's third guard, Brandun Hughes, was suspended for the game by Fisher for an altercation in prac- of offensive rebounds. No other Spartan had more than two points at the half. The Wolverines held Michigan State to just 41 percent shooting in the half and the Spartans only made one of their five free throws. Michigan meanwhile, was a siz- zling 62 percent from the field in the first, and an even toastier 64 percent from 3- point range. Michigan cooled off a bit in the second, getting outscored by Michigan State, 42- 39, while missing five of eight times from the free-throw line. But the Wolverines still shot 57 percent in the second half with a 23-point halftime lead, it really didn't matter. "We were just outplayed in every aspect of the game except maybe rebounding;" Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "That's probably the most talented Michigan team I've seen in my years here." BLOOMINGTON (AP) - Kiwane Garris scored 28 points, including seven free throws in the final minute, as Illinois sur- vived a big Indiana comeback and beat the 17th-ranked Hoosiers, 78-74, yesterday. Indiana trailed 46-34 early in the second half but fought back to take the lead. The Hoosiers led for the final time with seven minutes to go, but Kevin Turner's 3-pointer put the Illini in front for good at 66-65. Indiana then fell behind by seven only to close within E i. a point in the final minute. Garris, who moved past Eddie Johnson CONFERENCE into second place on the Illini scoring list Roundup with 1,706, made two free throws to give Illinois a 73-66 lead with 59 seconds remaining. Andrae Patterson's hook and Neil Reed's 3-pointer pulled the Hoosiers to 73-71 with 47 seconds to go, but Garris made one of two from the line. OHIO STATE 60, WISCONsIN 42 Damon Stringer scored 18 points and Ohio State held Wisconsin to 11 first-half points on 10 percent shooting in beating the Badgers 60-42 Saturday. It was Ohio State's second straight victory since losing two of its top players for the season with injuries. The Buckeyes, without second-leading scorer Jermaine Tate and Sean Tucker, shocked 17th-ranked Indiana, 73-67, Thursday night. Jason Singleton added 10 points for the Buckeyes, 9-9 over- all and 4-5 in the Big Ten. It had been almost three years since Ohio State won back-to-back conference games. PURDUE 67, PENN STATE 62 Brad Miller scored 17 points and Michael Robinson and Bryan Cardinal added 14 each to lead Purdue to a 67-62 win against Penn State on Saturday. Jarrett Stephens scored a career-high 22 points in a losing effort for the Nittany Lions. After Stephens hit a layup to open the second half, Purdue scored seven of the next nine points to take a 42-39 lead. Penn State answered with a 7-0 run of its own before Purdue even- tually pulled ahead 49-48. The Boilermakers, who led by as many as six, would not trail again. MINNESOTA 75, NORTHWESTERN 56 John Thomas scored 17 points and No. 6 Minnesota used an 11-0 second-half run Saturday night to pull away to a 75-56 rout of Northwestern. Minnesota needs one victory to tie the school record for the best start set in 1972-73 and 1976-77. The Golden Gophers trailed by two points at halftime, but the run and a later 11-2 spurt gave them a 57-42 lead with eight minutes left. MICHIGAN STATE (65) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 4T A F PTS Smith 31 6-6 0-2 4-10 0 4 12 Garavaglia 26 2-8 1-2 2-3 1 1 5 Thomas 15 1-2 1-1 1-2 0 1 3 Weathers 27 5-9 1-2 0-1 0 1 14 MICHIGAN (85) FO FT REB MIN MA M-A O-T A F PTS Taylor 29 4-9 1-2 0-0 2 4 9 Ward 33 5-11 0-1 2-4 0 1 11 Traylor 25 6-10 4-8 3-8 0 1 16 R~I~L .21! 9-11044 n 1-r% n o GOLDENBACH the game around. "We have a pretty good inside-outside but they should start to look outside for offense more often.