6B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - February 3, 1997 BASKETBALL -HOOSIERS Continued from Page 18 shooting, to lead all scorers. "We went back to getting the ball to the perimeter," Izard said. "We wanted to get our one, two, three and four spot players involved in the offense. "Bridget Porter comes out in the first half and has 11 points because she had the green light to hit the :shots and not to be so concerned about getting the ball into (center) Quacy Barnes." Barnes, who had 18 points in Indiana's 72-59 win over Michigan on Jan. 17, only had two points in ,the first half yesterday, but finished with 10. The Hoosiers made more free throws (18) than Michigan attempt- ,ced (14). "Indiana goes to the free-throw -line a lot," Guevara said. "They put .-their head down and penetrate to the basket. The hardest thing to defend _fis penetration, and they do a very t:'good job of it." Michigan's Amy Johnson received her most extensive playing time in wweeks and provided 13 points off the ,bench, 10in the first half, to lead her wteam. Stacy Thomas, who finished ::with 10 points, was the only other .Wolverine to score in double fig- ures. Michigan guard Ann Lemire did- n't start or play in the first half due 1-to a violation of team rules. Both teams started slowly. The -game was scoreless for the first two minutes until a 3-pointer by Jennifer Kiefer. Michigan held a lead as large as six for the first 14 minutes of the game. A 3-point basket by Porter gave Indiana its first lead, 18-17, and the Hoosiers never trailed the rest of the game. Lemire, Johns fr411 +1 A l'l~x "' 1411lIA) UK By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON - Ann Lemire and Pollyanna Johns are like reliable pizza men - they always deliver. The problem in Michigan's loss yesterday at Indiana was that no one was ordering pizza. Everyone was calling for Chinese food. As yesterday's game proved, the normally lethal pair are the biggest key to victory for Michigan. Johns averages a double-double per game, 14.4 points and 11.3 rebounds. The Michigan center was held to nine points, on 3-of-8 shooting from the field, with nine rebounds, yesterday. "We used a lot of combinations of defenses (on Johns)," Indiana coach Jim Izard said. "We always had a play- er in front and behind her." A major problem Johns encoun- tered in Bloomington was Quacy Barnes. Barnes, Indiana's towering 6- foot-5 center, managed to do what few other centers have accomplished - contain Michigan's most consistent player. The only lower-scoring game for Johns was eight points in a victory over conference doormat Minnesota. Last month, when the Hoosiers vis- ited Ann Arbor, Michigan lost a close battle - minus Johns, who was side- lined due to the flu -in which Barnes scored 18 points. The difference in this game was supposed to be Johns' formidable presence. Although Johns' occupied Barnes to an extent - the Big Ten's leading shot blocker had only one block - the lanky Hoosier still man- aged to score 10 points. Johns' mere presence turned out to be not enough. A large part of the reason why Johns' presence wasn't enough was Lemire. Lemire wasn't in the starting line- Big Ten Player of the Week (for the week of Jan, 20 to Jan. 26> Helen Darling, Fr., G. Penn State 1 Guided Penn State. to three Big Ten wins during the week. She scored a game-high19'points against Ohio State. Darling con- tributed three points, six rebounds and four assists against Iowa. up. In fact, she didn't even pf the entire first half. The 5-foot-l0 guard, who has been known to slice her way through crowded lanes and fill up the hoop with her Jordan-like accuag was absent. Apparently, she ha en behaving more Rodman-like (Mnus the groin kicking). "She violated team i e$," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "It was disciplinary." There was 18:08 left in the game and the score was 37-29 when Lemire entered. The Hoosiers were at a point in the game where they were gaining momentum. Lemire couldn't find her rhyti* throughout the remainder of the game - not an easy task to do after sitting down the entire first half. Although often running the point for. the Michigan offense, she found herself handling the ball less than usual. As a result, Michigan could not pro- duce the all-too-familiar come-from- behind run and pull out the victory. She only shot the ball three tinl and finished with no points - cry from her average of 13.8. One of the biggest keys, to Michigan is the fact that they boast two viable offensive threats both of whom defenses need to respect If only one of them is on the court,-that player has to bear the brunt, of the opposing defense's force - just as Johns did during the first half at Assembly Hall. With Lemire and Johns in thedi* up, the Wolverines have shown the ability to contend with any teamin the country. Teams have to be cautious of Johns inside and Lemire out on the perimeter. With either Lemire or Johns absent, the Wolverines have shown that they can play as poorly as any team-in the country. Big Ten Standings Team Couf. Overall llinois 9-2 174 Michigan State 8-2 16'4, Purdue 7-3 11; Wisconsin 7-4 14.5 Iowa 5-5 19; Indiana 5;6 129 Northwestern 5-6 12-$ Michigan 4-6 124 Penn State 4-6. 11-9. Ohio State 3-7 11A Minnesota 0-10 248 I MICHIGAN (56) FG FT REB MIN M-A W&A 0-T A F PTS She lman 14 1-5 0-0 2-4 1 4 3 Willard 25 4-7 1-2 1-4 0 2 9 J'ohns 30 3-8 3-5 4-9 0 3 9 Thomas 20 4-10 2-2 3-5 2 4 10 Kiefer 36 1-6 0-0 0-2 4 2 3 DiGiacinto 8 1-2 0-0 1-1 0 1 3 Johnson 17 4-14 3-4 1-2 2 4 13 Murray 13 0-8 0-0 0-3 0 3 0 Walker 12 3-6 0-0 4-6 0 1 6 ,Franklin 6 0-3 0-1 1-2 0 0 0 Lemire 13 0-3 0-0 1-3 0 0 0 Sikorski 1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Poglits 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 Totals 200 21-72 9.1422-5010 25 56 FG%: .292. FT%: .643. 3-point FG: 5-18, :270 (Johnson 2-5, Kiefer 1-3, Shellman 2- 4, Willard 0-1, Franklin 0-1, Murray 0-4). Blocks: 2 (Johns, Murray). Steals: 7 (Kiefer 3, DiGiacinto 2, Shellman, Thomas). Technical Fouls: none. INDIANA (73) FG FT RED MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Porter 29 6-8 2-2 2-5 2 4 16 Karns 17 3-3 1-1 0-4 0 3 7 Barnes 29 4-8 2-2 1-5 1 4 10 Thrush 18 3-8 0-1 2-5 1 3 6 Green 37 2-8 7-8 1-6 4 1 12 Morgan 3 0-2 0-0 1-1 0 0 0, -Vesel 31 3-14 5-8 2-7 2 1 11 Maines 11 1-2 0-1 1-3 2 1 2 Honegger 22 4-9 1-3 3-5 2 1 9 Malone 2 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Wube 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 t4s 200 26-6318-2615-481419 73 'G%: .429. FT%: .692. 3-pint FG: 3-15, 200 (Porter 2-2, Green 1-4, Thrush 0-1, +ionegger 0-3, Vesel 0-5). Blocks: 2 (Barnes 2). Steals: 7 (Porter, Karns, Thrush, Green, Vesel, Maines, Honegger). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan .........29 27 - 56 Indiana......35 38-73 r At: Assembly Hall A: 668 MARGARET MYERS/Daily The Michigan women's basketball team lost for the second time this season to Indiana, 73-56, last night in Bloomington. The Wolverines are now 4-6 In the Big Ten, good for eighth place and closer to where they have been used to finishing in recent years. Mchigan not far from mediocrity Without either of their top guns, Wolverines aren't tough to defend By Pranay Reddy Daily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON -The Michigan women's basketball team had a flash- back last night. The Wolverines (4-6 Big overall) were harshly re their infamous history as basketball program. This is not a good thing. A Big Ten cellar-dwellar in the past, the Wolverines finally started turning heads ,_ with their play thus far this season. However, a 73-56 drubbing by Indiana yes- g Ten, 12-7 minded of a women's U aW fu RU MU ' " most squads - but a stellar one for Michigan, which shot a paltry 21 per- cent in the final stanza. Quite an aberration from the consis- tency the Wolverines have usually dis- played this season, Whether it was Pollyanna Johns, Ann Lemire or Stacey Thomas, some- one has been there down the stretch to prod Michigan to victory. The key intangible that Michigan head coach Sue Guevara has talked about all sea- son, resilience was sorely missed last night. Guevara didn't have to say much last night to express how disappointed she was with her squad. A tired, worn face told the entire story. "I was extremely disappointed with (Michigan's) effort tonight, Guevara said. "I certainly didn't see the same team that I saw last weekend." The same team that made Guevara so proud, outlasting Iowa 75-63 a week ago, gave her nothing but heartache on a night where everything went wrong. Indiana's Bridget Porter summed it up best. "Effort is what matters, and that's what wins ball games," Porter said. A simple statement, maybe even obvious, but nevertheless an idea that was lost upon the Wolverines last night. Effort is what made the difference for Michigan this year as opposed to years past. Under previous coach Trish Roberts, the Wolverines often failed to match the competitive fire that has been present this entire sea- son. R NEW, I1 was extremely dissapointed with (Michigan's) effort tonight3" - Sue Guevara Michigan women's basketball coach S: T he ....Br .......... a Y ....R a h Y baktaly e Thta SS S S s a 3 y an 0 uf B I a L < Iin' bOut. alumnists. terday may have turned some heads away from the Michigan women's pro- gram. In arguably their most disheartening loss of the season, the Wolverines were, simply put - ugly. Not physi- cally speaking, mind you, rather in their style of play. Just how ugly? Consider: The Hoosiers shot roughly 43 per- cent from the field in the second half. It would have been an average half for In 1996-97, the Michigan campaign has been about aggressiveness. Rather than going through the motioned, the Wolverines have been eager to stay in contests. And it has worked - so much so that Michigan has even come to expect success. But for-every stride the Wolverines have taken to erase the memories of the past, last night was a difficult set- back. The loss indicated what might have been if Michigan did not show its refreshing attitude and effort the entire season. The ground-breaking changes that Guevara is trying to instill into the program can't be wasted by simple lack of effort. Her players owe her'''- much. After suffering under a system that disappointed them frequently, and failed to motivate them consistently, the Wolverines can finally appreciate what a good coach can do for a team. But a coach can only do so much, as Michigan clearly pointed out. Friday, Feb. 7 Penn State Bryce Jordan Center 7 p.m. Up Next *35 ............................................................................... ...... ..... . ........... Sunday, Feb. 9 Purdue Crisler Aena 2:30 p.m. 4' MUSIC TELEVISIOW ing toPanamaa y s right. MTv has once again chose ty Beach as its Spring Break Headq eed a place to crash? The Boardwo the premier destination for Spring1 Space is limited, and here's why: 3eadc.. n quarters olk Beach Break. If it happens in Michigan sports, we're gonna cover it. Read Daily Sports. Daily. "Sex Matters: Insights and Outbursts on Loveet, and Dating" r. .+ w.._k. I - -