BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - SPRTSMonday - January 13, 1997 --58 Michigan starting to feel the effects of not having White -0 r Minnesota guard obby Jackson drove over, around and through the Michigan defense °.on Saturday. The O4bot4l guard, an '*ig Ten candi- date, scorched the Wolverines for a game-high 20 points. He also snagged 1 rebounds and dished out three assists In the Gophers' 70-64 victory. Minnesota now *a 4-0 Big Ten mark, Its best since it won the conference title after the 1981.82 season and Is in the driver's seat In the race for the Big ten title this season. JOE WESTRATE/ Daily By John Lerol Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS -The two teams that took the floor Saturday at Williams Arena were strikingly simi- lar. Both were Big Ten contenders. Both rely heavily on meaty front- courts to score and rebound. Both have guards that can knock down 3- pointers. With all apologies to Indiana, Michigan and Minnesota are the two teams with the best shot to win the Big Ten. So what was the difference when these two teams met Saturday? One answer is this: The Gophers rotated 10 players, three weighing in at more than 270 pounds and seven at more than 200. Michigan coach Steve Fisher could afford to play only seven guys - the other five who made the trip are sim- ply not Big Ten caliber players. As the game wore on - especially after the Wolverines whittled a 10- point deficit to two - Minnesota wore the Wolverines down. The Gophers got to more loose balls, more rebounds and could play more aggressive defense than the Wolverines could, partly because they had more players. Robert Traylor fouled out after playing cautiously for most of the second half. Maurice Taylor picked up two early fouls, though he settled down after that. It is becoming increasingly appar- ent that the Wolverines are starting to miss not having another player to throw into the mix. When Albert White was dismissed from the team before the season began, the Wolverines lost that eighth play- er. White, who has since trans- ferred to Missouri, aver- aged nine points and five boards a game his fresh- man season. White He probably would have done at least as well this year. And, more important, he may have been that extra something that would have helped the Wolverines pull out a road win at Minnesota. In any case, White, who started 14 games last season, would have been an extra man that Fisher could have thrown into the mix without the Wolverines skipping a beat. "Obviously they have nine or 10 guys and we have seven," Fisher said. "That's in their favor, but every team !)raylor and Harris play together in U.S. for first time since '94 By Danielle Rumors Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS - One is a for- rd. The other is a guard. ne is from Detroit. The other is from New York. One leads his team in rebounding. The other leads his team in scoring. Sometimes they are friends. Sdmetimes they are enemies. Despite the opposites, Michigan sophomore forward Robert Traylor and Minnesota junior guard Eric Harris have a lot in common. raylor and Harris first played tether when they were teammates on the 1994 U.S. Junior Team that won the gold medal in the World Junior Championship in Argentina. And now, they both play for Big Ten basketball powers - Michigan and Minnesota - both vying for the conference title. The Wolverines have not held the jhonor since 1986, and the Golden Gophers since '82. Both Traylor and iris are starters and both mean a lot to their respective squads. On Saturday at Minnesota's Williams Arena, Traylor and Harris °played together for the first time since the '94 game in the Southern Hemisphere. "We played on the junior national team together, ... so I know him and :guys like Maurice Taylor," Harris . "We talked a little bit (on rday). Off the court, we're good friends, but on the court it's a war." Harris, a junior, is playing the best ball of his college career, averaging 13.2 points per game, which leads the -Gophers balanced scoring attack. O'ver the previous two seasons, Harris averaged a meager 2.3 and 4.7 points per game. But this year, with Harris leading the' offense and the scoring, the 6 hers are off to their second-best smrt in school history. They are just one win away from tying the best start, 16-1, posted by the 1976-77 team. Kevin McHale, then a fresh- man and one of the most storied play- ers in Minnesota history, was an inte- gral part of that team's success as Harris is now. The Gophers are 4-0 in conference play for the first time since the 1971- 72 team got off to the same 4-0 start. The best conference start ever was 10-0 by the 1918-19 team. . o4 "We got the chance to break the school's all-time start for the sea- son," Harris said. "We stuck with the defense (yester- day), and when you do that, you're chances are good." The Wolverines, on the other hand, have lost four games this season, including two conference games, but Traylor's steady play has helped the Wolverines. He leads the team in rebounds and has had three double- doubles this season. SHOT DEAD: The Gophers won Saturday's contest, but not in their usual fashion. Before Saturday, the Gophers aver- aged 49.9 percent from the field. Over the weekend, the Wolverines limited the Gophers to just 40.3 percent. Secondly, the Gophers stifling defense allowed its first three Big Ten opponents - Wisconsin, Michigan State and Indiana - to a combined 37.2 field goal percentage. This weekend, the Wolverines broke through that average, connect- ing on 39.7 percent for the game, 43.5 percent in the first half. The Gophers had also averaged 34 percent from three-point range and 64.5 percent from the charity stripe. The Wolverines limited them to a 33.3 percent clip from downtown and 55 percent from the stripe. GROWING OLD: The Gophers home court, Williams Arena, completed in 1928, is the oldest arena in the Big Ten and one of the loudest and tough- est places to play in the country. The Gophers are 100-26 in Williams under coach Clem Haskins over the past seven seasons. Although the Wolverines hold a 68-52 series advantage overall over the Gophers, they are just 23-37 in games played at Minnesota and 20- 34 in games played in Williams Arena, one of the few raised-floor arenas in the country and one of two in the conference. Purdue's Mackey Arena has the other raised floor. The Gophers have won the last three games against the Wolverines in Williams. The Wolverines last won there during the Fab Five era, Jan. 20, 1993. So, were the Wolverines rattled by the venerable arena this time around? "No, not really," Taylor said. "It's just another game." Despite Taylor's opinion, Williams was ranked third in a list of top col- lege basketball arenas in the country by Inside Sports. FEELING UGLY: During a timeout late in the second half with the Gophers up, 53-51, Williams Arena officials held a contest for the ugliest dressed person in the crowd. And Goldy the Gopher, Minnesota's bushy-tailed, bucked- tooth mascot, won out of the field of three contestants. Minnesota's mascot? Winning the prize? He probably won because he wore a little too much gold - blue and gold, that is. Goldy wore a Michigan tee-shirt and shorts, and his victory induced a few chuckles from the maroon and gold-clad crowd. JOE WESTRATE/ Daily Gophers like Eric Harris rarely slipped up when checking Michigan's guards Saturday, leading Minnesota to a 70.64 victory over the Wolverines. GOPHERS Continued from Page 1B Crisler and if anyone wants to judge who's the better team, we can judge then." Michigan's biggest problem may have been trying to handle Minnesota's constant pressure. The Wolverines shot 40 percent from the floor but failed to execute their half-court offense when it mattered most, mostly due to the Gophers' aggressive and unrelenting defense. Both teams finished the game with 43 rebounds, but Minnesota clearly had the early edge on the glass with nine offensive boards in the first half to Michigan's three. "They're a real physical team," said Michigan center Robert Traylor who was in early foul trouble and picked up his fifth with 90 seconds left in the game. "They outrebounded us down the stretch. No, they outrebounded us all game." The game was relatively even except for a 21-5 Minnesota run sandwiched around halftime that left Michigan playing catch-up for most of the con- test. A Robert Traylor basket from the low post gave the Wolverines a 23-17 lead with just six minutes left in the first half. But Minnesota scored four- straight baskets including three 3- pointers, one each from Jackson, Sam Jacobson and Charles Thomas. The Gophers had a 32-25 lead, when Brandun Hughes canned a three with 43 seconds left to bring Michigan with- in five. The Wolverines had Minnesota stymied on the next possession, forcing Jacobson to take an off-balanced 17- footer, but 6-foot-1 reserve point guard Russ Archambault snuck into the paint and put back Jacobson's miss as time ran out. The Gophers scored the first two baskets of the second half to take their biggest lead of the game, 38-28. "That run killed us," Hughes said.. "That turned out to be the difference in the game now that you see the final score. "We've just got to be strong and fight through rounds like that and step up our defense, which we didn't do today." The Wolverines fought back little by little, narrowing the gap to 53-51 with a 9-0 run of their own capped by Hughes' putback of Travis Conlan's missed layup with eight minutes remaining. The Gophers went back up by five behind two long jumpers from Jacobson. Taylor made two free throws with 3:13 left to cut the lead back to three, but the Wolverines couldn't get a defensive stop any time after. The Gophers sealed the game when Jackson sank a twisting layup after a Hughes miss with 1:16 left to put the Gophers up 67-59. . "We weren't getting the shots we wanted down the stretch," Hughes said. "We didn't execute our half-court offense well at all. They stopped us when they needed to." Jacobson finished with 15 points and Charles Thomas had 11 in only eight minutes including a spurt of eight in a row for Minnesota. Six-nine center John Thomas hauled in 11 rebounds. Four Wolverines scored in double in the Big Ten will have that." But by many accounts, White was the kind of scrappy player that would have grabbed a couple of those loose balls that were snatched up by Gophers. He was the kind of player who would come down with those rebounds that were tipped around a few times. He would score those ugly baskets on putbacks. Instead, it was a Gopher doing the little things. While the Wolverines denied they were tired, Minnesota center John Thomas said the Gophers had a distinct advantage in that area. "Sometimes, late in the game, they were a little worn down," Thomas said. "Maybe they didn't box out sometimes, and we got more chances." While the Wolverines held their own, they clearly were lacking some- thing, despite probably having the edge in talent. Exactly - halfway through their schedule, the Wolverines may be starting to feel the wear of having just seven players. "We're not fighting through all the screens," Michigan forward Maurice Taylor said. "Sometimes we're a stp behind. "We should be used to it by now. It's not going to get any better. It's not like we're going to trade for someone else before the season Garris sparks Illini, downs Penn State CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Kiwane Garris scored 22 points and made all seven of his free throws, as No..25 Illinois overcame poor first-half shoot- ing to beat Penn State, 85-70 Saturday. The Illini (2-2 Big Ten, 124 overall) shot just 31 percent from the field in the first half, but still led 31-27 at half- time. They improved to 59 percent shooting in the second half. The closest the Nittany Lions (0.3, 7-5) got in the second half was 49.45 on a basket by Pete Lisicky with 13:13 left. But Illinois outscored Penn State 17-10 over the next six minutes and took a 66-55 lead on a 3-pointer by Matt Heldman. I5T N Heldman fin- ished with four 3- CONFERENCE pointers and 21 Ro d points. Chris Guii lUP Gandy had 12 points and six rebounds despite getting into foul trouble in the second half. Lisicky led Penn State with 18 points, and Phil Williams scored 14 and grabbed eight rebounds. The Lions outrebounded Illinois 36-32, but com- mitted 21 turnovers, as compared to the Illini's 14. In the opening half, the Illini were up by as many as 12 points, 25-13, on a free throw by Gandy. But Illinois did not score for almost five minutes as Penn State went on a 14-4 run to pull within two, 29-27, on a free throw by Tim McGovern. PURDUE 78, NORTHWESTERN 53 Purdue freshman Mike Robinson scored a season-high 21 points at West Lafayette. Robinson was 7 of 12 from the field and 7 of 10 from the line. He also added six rebounds, two assists and a blocked shot in 32 minutes against Northwestern (0-3, 5-9). The Boilermakers (2-1, 7-6) wore uniforms similar to those worn in the 1930s as part of Mackey Arena's "Throw-Back Day." MICHIGAN STATE 69, OHIo STATE 66 Michigan State (2-2, 9-3) outscored Ohio State 27-6 from the free-throw line and made 27 of 34 free throws. Ohio State (2-2, 7-6) connected on only six of 15 attempts from the line. Ohio State has lost:its last seven meetings with Michigan State. Spartan Mateen Cleaves matched his season high of 18 points, with 12 coming on free throws. IOWA 78, WISCONSIN 53 Hawkeye guard Andre Woolridge led his team with 21 points at Iowa City. Woolridge went 6-for-10 from the floor and 7-for-7 from the free-throw line as the Hawkeyes (13-3) improved to 4-0 in the conference. The Badgers (1-3, 8-6) led the Big Ten in scoring defense going into the game. Wisconsin had been giving up only 53 points a game while holding opponents to 36 percent shooting. Iowa shot 51 percent on Saturday. RUMORE Continued from Page 16 counted. Fundamentally better, that is, 'and the Wolverines can learn 'from this. They can learn from the 'Gophers. I*Against the Minnesotas, the Indianas, we've got to rebound," Michigan forward Maceo Baston said. "The whole thing was the rebound- ing: If we had rebounded, it would have been key for us, it would have 'been great for us." MICHIGAN That's playing tough. The Wolverines didn't see all of the shots, and they didn't box out. There are also fundamentals to a half-court offense: moving without the ball, running set plays, setting picks, moving off screens and recognizing mismatches. Minnesota does all of these things regularly. Jackson and backcourt mate Eric Harris run the offense and find the open men. And they run through screens to give themselves open looks. halfway through the second half. "Our half-court execution struggled against their aggressive man-to-man defense," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "We did not do a good enough job of swinging the ball through the high- post." For every small thing the Wolverines did wrong, the Gophers did something right. And they did it together. "I just happen to have a group of young men who refuse to lose, and Taylor Ward Traylor Bullock Conlan Hughes Baston Totals MIN 34 30 22 33 29 28 24 200 (64) FO FT REB M-A M-A OT A 4-8 3-4 2-10 2 3-13 0-1 2-8 0 6-7 1-3 1-8 0 4-8 5-5 0-1 2 0-3 0-0 4-6 2 6-12 2-5 2-3 2 0-7 3-4 2-5 0 23-58 14-2214-438 F PTS 3 11 1 6 5 13 2 16 4 0 3 15 2 3 20 64 FG%: .397. FT%: .636. 3-point FG: 4-13, .308 (Bullock 3-6, Hughes 1-2, Ward 0-5). Blocks:6 (Baston 3, Bullock, Taylor, Ward. Steals: 5 (Baston, Conlan, Hughes, Taylor, Traylor). Technical Fouls: none. MINNESOTA (70)