tjgduti Da Scoreboard NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL TORONTO 110, Utah 96 Mich. State 58, WISCONSIN 50 Minnesota 110, NEW JERSEY 107 No. 1 KANSAS 134, Niagara 73 Atlanta 97, ORLANDO 92 No. 3 KENTUCKY 68, Canisius 45 Golden State 102. VANCOUVER 86 No. 18 N. MEXICO 79. TCU 64 NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE No. 21 STANFORD 109, UCLA 61 Detroit 5, PHOENIX 4 No. 17 Oregon at WASH. ST, inc. Home team in CAPS Thursday January 10, 1997 cers hope to bake Alaska, Ferris State Mark Snydsr Y Sports Writer ULnder normal circumstances, a 91est against the CCHA's ninth- team would suit the Michigan key team just fine. Y, 'BIit following a tie to Cornell and ossessing a lengthy memory that ecalls an early-season visit to Alaska, Michigan is far from excited to see Alaska-Fairbanks. Michigan (18-1-2) will host the a n o o k s tonight and Ferris State (9-15-I) t o m o r r o w, Who:Michigan both 7 p.m. vs. Alaska- games at Yost Fairbanks and Ice Arena. Ferns State The two whe: Fairbanks opponents are tonighterris contrasting, a tOmorOwiH be at t in how 7 have Where: Yost ce d the Arena o verines. La$t time: The was near- Wolverines went three Up North to beat ths ago Alaska, 6-4, on thi Michigan Oct. 25. New eled to Year's Eve, they Alaska for a ruined the party two-game set. for Ferris, 11. hile it eseaped with two victories against the- CCHA cellar-dwellers, both games were hotly contested at Alaska. Led by forward Cody Botwell, the * Nanooks used their home ice to their Vantage. Alaska (4-15-0) plays its bome contests on an Olympic-sized ziik (200 x 100 feet), which is 15 feet wider than most other college ks, icluding Yost. A"dd bounces created problems for MAihigan goaltender Marty Turco, a s ituation that shouldn't arise at home. TFhe meeting was early in the sea- son, and both teams were still work- ing out kinks in their games. Now, Michigan is in third place in the CCHA, three points behind league- leaders Miami and Michigan State, whlile Alaska shares the basement 1641h Ohio State. But the Nanooks had more than hockey on their minds then. "That was a tough time for their team, with the accident," Berenson said. Erik Drygas, a sophomore defenseman, fractured a cervical vertebrae during practice Oct. 7 and was initially thought to be paralyzed. But now there is good news for a team that can use some. ,% in recent weeks Drygas has shown improvement, gaining feeling in his arms and left wrist. Prior to tonight's game, Michigan captain Brendan Morrison will pre- sent Alaska coach Dave Laurion with a photo of Drygas skating against Michigan. Alaska is led by sophomore center Jeff Trembecky, who has scored in x traight contests. His streak has n highlighted by nine points as well as four power-play goals. (Alaska has) been practicing (at Yot) all week ... so they won't be intimidated by this building," Berenson said. "They'll give us a real good game." While Michigan's most recent contest with Alaska was not one it would like to repeat, Ferris State will be a welcome sight for the #olverines. On New Year's Eve, Michigan trounced the Bulldogs, l1-1, in its most impressive victory of the sea- son. Thirteen Wolverines scored in the contest, and Michigan left a lasting impression on Ferris State. "Ferris will come in with revenge on their mind," Berenson said. "They ere embarrassed here, and they'll 'me back and play much better." Wolverines rip through By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor Apparently, finding the on/off switch is a little more difficult than you would think. Nonetheless, the Wolverines found their switch, albeit three games into the Big Ten season. No. 16 Michigan's 88-74 victory over No. 25 Illinois (1-2 Big Ten, 11-4 overall) last night was its most complete effort thus far. "Tonight might have been our best game of the season when you talk about 40 minutes of basketball against a good team," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. Led by a red-hot first-half shooting performance and a magnificent defensive effort on Illini stud Kiwane Garris, the Wolverines staked them- selves to a 12-point halftime lead and never really looked back. "They pretty much outplayed us in every phase of the game," Illinois coach Lon Kruger said. "They were comfortable from the start and we couldn't change them." The Wolverines (2-2, 11-3) shot a sizzling 21-for-32 from the floor in the first 20 minutes en route to scor- ing 45 points, a season-high for the first half. They shot 60 percent for the game, also their best mark of the season. Louis Bullock continued his fine shooting of late, leading Michigan's marksmen with 19 points, connecting on eight of 12 field goals. Over the past five games, Bullock has hit more than 50 percent of his shots, averag- ing almost 20 points. "He's gotten himself into a little bit of a groove where he thinks it's going in," Fisher said. "At times, when you're shooting well, it does." But it seemed as if Bullock's team- mates were joining him in his groove. best gan Robert Traylor overpowered a weak Illini frontline with 16 points, miss- ing just one of his nine shots. And Brandun Hughes had his best shoot- ing performance of the season (5-of- 8) and scored 13 points. As a result of the-strong shooting, Fisher felt his team's confidence returned to where it was before the Wolverines left for Hawaii. "They feel good about themselves for the first time in a long while," he said. The Wolverines' defense, which stifled the likes of Duke and Arizona, also rose from the ashes. Hughes and Travis Conlan held Garris to one bas- ket in the first half. Garris didn't fare much better in the second half. He had only five points with three minutes remaining in the game. "We were able to keep a man in front of him and not let him get to the free-throw line," Fisher said. "Travis and Brandun contested his outside shot and did a good job on him." Michigan blew tlhe game open early in the second half, building on the 11-4 run they had at the end of the first. Jumpers from Conlan, Hughes and Jerod Ward built the lead to 17 less than five minutes into the second. Illinois then scored the next 10 points in an attempt to make it inter- esting. But a pair of dunks from Maurice Taylor brought the Crisler Arena crowd of 13,265 to its feet, in what was their loudest performance of the season. Those dunks helped Taylor break out of his recent slump.. He finished with 14 points. Along with Traylor and Maceo Baston, Taylor helped give the Wolverines a yet commanding 43-31 advantage on the boards. "We're getting back to our old work habits," Bullock said. "Practice (Wednesday) was the most energetic all season." Michigan did play without guard Ron Oliver, who sat out the game for academic reasons. Two of Oliver's grades from last term are in limbo at the moment. "We have to wait for thdse grades to be changed," Fisher said. "He may or may not make the trip with us to Minnesota (on Saturday)." ILLINOIS (74) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Garris 35 515 00 17 5-0 12 Turner 33 7-15 00 1-1 0 1 17 Gandy 32 4-11 7-9 1-5 1 2 15 Heldman 28 2-10 2-3 1-1 4 2 7 Johnson 24 2-5 0-0 3-5 1 3 4 Gee 23 6-8 2-3 3-6 0 4 14 Notree 19 2-6 1-1 1-1 0 1 5 Abdullah 5 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Chukwudebel 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1.0 Totals 200 28-7212-1615.3111:4 74 FG%: .389. FT%: .750. 3-point FG: 6-25, .240 (Turner 3-11, Garris 2-7, Heldman 1-6, Abdullah 0-1). Blocks: 1 (Johnson). Steals: 8 (Johnson 2, Gandy 2, Turner, Garris, Gee, Abdullah). Technical Fouls: none. MICHIGAN (88) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A -T A F PTS Conlan 35 2-5 22 15 3 '1 8 Bullock 31 8-12 2-2 0-3 5 1 19 Taylor 31 7-11 0-0 0-6 3 2 14 Hughes 29 5-8 2-2 2-3 3 3 13 Traylor 28 8-9 0-2 1-5 3 '3 16 Ward 25 4-11 0-0 2-4 2 3 9 Baston 21 3-5 3-8 3-11 2 2 9 Totals 200 37-61 9-1610-432115 88 FG%: .607. FT%: .563. 3-point FG: 5-12, .417 (Conlan 2-4, Hughes 1-2, Bullock 1-3, Ward 1-3). Blocks: 3 (Baston, Taylor, Ward). Steals: 5 (Baston 2, Bullock, Hughes, Taylor). Technical Fouls: none. Illinois .................33 41-74 Michigan.......4543-88 At: Crisler Arena A: 13,265 * I . WARREN ZINN/Oaily Brandun Hughes grew up in Peoria, Iii., but he helped bring down one of his home state's schools last night at Crisier Arena, scoring 13 points. Upnext Date Opponent City Site Saturday Minnesota Minneapolis Williams Arena Thursday Purdue Ann Arbor Crisler Arena JYich group o Wolverines will show uptat Mbinsota?2 rior to this season, the Michigan basketball team was picked by the media to win the Big Ten conference. And why wouldn't the Wolverines win the conference? Good players returned, many of whom were heading into their third season of conference competition. And they had the lethal combination of tal- ent and experience that wins conference titles and keeps. teams playing a long way into March.. Eight games into the sea- son, it looked like the pun- WILL dits were right about the McCAHILL Wolverines, who were Whatcha talkin' ranked fourth in the country, 'bout Willis? with some huge wins. A vic-_ tory at Duke was among sev- eral on the road, and Michigan had beaten Arizona, something the team hadn't done since coach Steve Fisher was 12 years old. But then something happened. A loss to Memphis in the first round of the Rainbow Classic, followed shortly thereafter by a loss to Pittsburgh in the same tournament. A momentary lapse, perhaps. Except that those defeats were fol- lowed by one that really, really wasn't supposed to happen - a loss at home to an allegedly mediocre-at-best Ohio State team. Which brings us to Minnesota. Right now, the Gophers are the team that Michigan is supposed to be. They have a bunch of seasoned upperclass- men, just like the Wolverines. The only real dif- ference is that Minnesota got nowhere near the amount of preseason hype Michigan did, so peo- ple are shocked that the Gophers are 14-1 and ranked 11th in the nation. And Wednesday night, they again sent some shock waves through the college basketball estab- lishment when they beat No. 15 Indiana in Bloomington, 96-91 in overtime. To win the Big Ten, you have to take care of business at home, and win a decent number of conference road games. Right now, Minnesota is 7-0 at home, and is 3-0 in the Big Ten, with two of those victories coming on the road. Hey, look who's up next for Michigan - the Golden Gophers. At Williams Arena, no less, which is a tough place to play in a league full of such establishments. So here's the scoop: if the Wolverines lose to Minnesota tomorrow night, they will be lucky to finish as high as second in the conference. Things don't get any easier after that. A visit to Columbus is the easiest road game left, and the Buckeyes have already beaten Michigan at Crisler Arena. If you can't beat a team at your place, how can you expect to beat them at theirs? Last night's 88-74 victory over Illinois went a long way to bringing the Wolverines back to their pre-Hawaii form. The inside game was working, the team was scoring in transition and from the outside, and the defense held Illinois to a measly 39 percent from the field. And most importantly, the competitive fire, the hustle, the vibrant chemistry the team displayed early in the season was back again. "We just got into it tonight,"junior guard Travis Conlan said. "If we keep our intensity level as high as it can be, and if everyone goes out and leaves everything they have on the floor, we're a tough team to beat." Indeed, the Wolverines look like the real thing heading going into tomorrow's must-win contest at Minnesota. And not only must the Wolverines win then, but they have to win at least four other places away from home - and of course avoid slipping up at home - if they want to win the Big Ten. Can they do it? Sure they can - Michigan has proven it can win tough road games, such as at Duke. Will the Wolverines do it? If the team that waxed Illinois last night shows up, the Wolverines have a shot. If the team that blahed its way to a meager 18-point win in Evanston last weekend takes the Williams Arena floor tomorrow night, forget it. And a Big Ten championship with it. - Will McCahill can be reached over e-mail at wmcc@umich.edu. Cardinal to be early test for Blue By TJ. Berka Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's swimming and diving team will end its California holiday travels this week- end with meets against No. I Stanford tomorrow and No. 16 California on Sunday. The Wolverines' travels included a two-week training session in Coronado, Calif., and a practice meet against UCLA and California- San Diego. "Our goal with training in Coronado was to get two weeks of training with no compromises to develop the workload we'll need to succeed in the Big Ten and NCAA meets," Michigan coach Jim Richardson said. With a meet against the top team in the nation, one would think that the Wolverines would devote a lot of time to competing against the Cardinal. But, this meet will be used as a warmup for the heavier competition that lies ahead in February and March. "We did not set time aside to pre- pare for the meets, because we were at the point where we needed to put in two solid weeks of work," Richardson said. "The meet will be important, because it will show how well we race when we are tired and fatigued. "Nobody will give a hoot in February about who won at Stanford, and even less people will care at the NCAAs in March." Despite the lack of emphasis that is being put into winning the meet, the Wolverines are looking at it as a challenge and an indication of where they stand among the nation's elite. "Stanford is Stanford, and they are the No. 1 team in the nation," Richardson said. "It will be a lot of fun for us and give us a feel for where we stand." searching for meaning to focus your life? f; 1 5iTea Tne z irsz 1