BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - March 10, 1997 -5B Michigan women cagers bow out of Big Tens in first round By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - For the Michigan women's basketball team, the Big Ten tournament was like a really bad ending to a really good movie. "The most disappointing thing is that we did have a pretty good season," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "We surprised a lot of people but it was just the way we played today that overshad- ows everything that happened during the year." The Wolverines (7-10 Big Ten, 15-11 overall) lost, 72-54, to Indiana (9-10, 16- 13) on Friday in the first round of the conference tournament at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis. The loss marked the third time the Wolverines fell to the Hoosiers this season. "I guess three times you're out," Guevara said. "Indiana had our number the whole year." As in their two previous losses to the Hoosiers, the Wolverines shot poorly, this time an abysmal 27.4 percent. Michigan center Pollyanna Johns and shooting guard Stacey Thomas, ordinar- ily Michigan's offensive leaders, were held to 3-of-17 from the field and only 13 total points - a far cry from the 28.6 the two average together. For most of the game, the Wolverines were unable to get the ball inside to Johns. The Hoosiers sealed off the mid- dle by throwing in a variety of defenses. "We changed things up, played some zone, played some man," Indiana coach Iguess three times you 're out. Indiana had our number the whole year." - Sue Guevara Michigan women's basketball coach Jim Izard said. The Hoosiers forced 20 Michigan turnovers and came away with nine steals. "Indiana plays real scrappy, aggres- sive, playground-style of defense," Guevara said. "They reach and they shove and they push and they just play basketball.' While the Hoosiers played a great defensive game, the Wolverines did not. Indiana's starters Dani Thrush (12 points), Tatjana Vesel (15), Quacy Barnes (12) and Rachael Honegger (12) were too much for the Wolverines. Michigan never led, falling on the short end of an Indiana 1 1-3 run to start the game. With 2:58 left in the half, the Wolverines found themselves in a 20- point ditch without a ladder. "I challenged the kids at halftime to come out and play a little tougher," Guevara said. JEANNIE SERVAAS/Daiiy mIhigan forward Catherine DiGiacinto finished with 10 points and seven rebounds as the Wolverines fell to Indiana, 72-54, In first round of the Big Ten tournament. It was the Wolverines' third-straight loss to the Hoosiers this season. The Wolverines are still searching for their first-ever win in the conference tourney. Blue's Thomas selected as Big Ten Freshman of the Year By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Although the Michigan women's basketball team didn't come away with a victory at the Big Ten tournament, at least one N olverine walked away a winner. Michigan freshman shooting guard/small forward was named the Big n Freshman of the Year, selected by both the confer- nce coaches and the media. She is the first Michigan player ever to be s lected for the Stacey Thomas, ' Zate 'a team honorable mention selection. MORE POSITIVES: Thomas wasn't the only Wolverine to receive special honors last weekend. Junior Pollyanna Johns was selected to the All-Big Ten second team for the sec- ond-consecutive season. During this season, the 6-foot-3 center led the Wolverines in points (15.3 per game) and rebounding (10.5), good for 1Ith and third in the conference, respectively. Johns has received the highest all- conference team selection in Michigan's history. There have been no Michigan first-teamers, nor any All-Americans. INDIANA WOES: The Hoosiers must have some new, radical drug that they have secretly administered to the Wolverines in their sleep. For some reason, the Wolverines could not find their shooting touch in each of the three losses to the Hoosiers this season. In Friday's game, the Wolverines shot a miser- able 27.4 percent from the field - their worst shooting performance of the season. Michigan's second lowest perfor- mance also came against Indiana. In early February in Bloomington, the Wolverines shot a regular-season low of 29.2 percent. In January at home, the Wolverines fared slightly better against Indiana, yet still shot a paltry 33.3 percent. Overall, Michigan shot just under 30 percent against Indiana. HAPPY THOUGHTS: Depressing as the conference tournament was for the Wolverines, consider the follow- ing: In one season, Michigan first- year coach Sue Guevara managed to win seven conference games, two more than heu predecessor Trish Roberts won in four seasons. The Wolverines posted their best record since the 1989-90 season, in which they finished fourth in the Big Ten at 01-7, and 20-10 overall. Including the 1989-90 season, there have been only three seasons that have been as or more successful for the Wolverines -- 1985-86 and 1975-76. In the '85-86 season, the Wolverines finished 14-14 overall, and won more conference games than this season, finishing 8-10. During the '75-76 campaign, Michigan finished 3-2 (12-6). Michigan's 8-1 record entering conference play was its best season start ever. The Wolverines one loss came at the hands of then-No. 1 Stanford in which the Wolverines lost by three, 77-74, during the Hawaiian Air Wahine Classic. The Wolverines were still unable to put any serious run together in the see- and half, while Indiana pounded away with a 17-7 run. There were only a couple of bright spots for Michigan. The Wolverines outs rebounded the Hoosiers, 43-31. Senior center Catherine DiGiacinto came off the bench and scored 10 points - her second-highest total of the season. Small forward Molly Murray also tried to rally the Wolverines by shooting the lights out, hitting three 3-pointers and scoring 14 points on 5-of-8 from the field. But the only two Wolverines to finishI in double-figures weren't enough to defeat the Hoosiers last Friday. "Like Coach G said, (the first round loss) overshadows everything we've accomplished," Murray said. Despite the loss, it was a remarkable season for Michigan. Entering confer- ence play, the Wolverines were 8-1, their best start ever. Their one loss came to then-No. 1 Stanford, in which Michigan came up three points short. During the Big Ten season, the Wolverines defeated, then-first-place Illinois before losing six of their next seven. The Wolverines are still searching for: their first ever Big Ten tournament vic- tory. They haven't won a tournament. game in the tournaments' three years of existence. "We'll get by this," Guevara said,- "We'll be a better basketball team next year and hopefully, we will get by the first round." Tournament finals First Round: No, 9 Mic~igan 52, No, 8 indiana 74 No. 7 Penn State 79. No. 10 Ohio State 80 No. 6 Wisconsin 75, No. 11 Minnesota 80 Quarterfinals: No. 1 Purdue 54, No. 8 Indiana 61 No. 5 Northwestern 63, No. 4 Iowa 73 No. 10 Ohio State 79, No. 2 Michigan State 85 No. 11 Minnesota 76, No. 3 lliinois 98 Semifinals: No.8 Indiana 53, No.4 owa87 No. 2.Michigan State 66, No, 3 llinois 77 Finals: No. 3 Illinois 56, No. 4 Iowa 63 MICHIGAN (54) FO FT REB MIN M-A M-A OT A F Pro Thomas 20 1-8 2-5 45 0 2 4 Kiefer 11 0-0 0-0 0-0 10 0 0N Walker 5 0-1 0-0 1-1 0 1 0 Johns 34 2-9 5-19 4-9 1 3 9 Shellman 19 0-7 0-0 1-2 1 3 0 Johnson 12 2-9 0-0 2-3 1 3 4. Lemire 32 2-15 0-0 3-5 3 1 5 Murray 25 5-8 1-3 2-5 0 0 14 Willard 18 3-5 2-2 2-6 0 1 9& DiGiacinto 24 5-11 0-0 4-7 1 2 10 Totals 200 20-7310-2023-437 16 54 FG%: .274. FT%: .500. 3-point FG: 4-16, .250 (Murray 3-7, Lemire 1-4, Johnson 0-3,-a Shellman 0-3). Blocks: 5 (Johns 2, Kiefer, Lemire, DiGiacinto). Steals: 6 (Shellman 2, Lemire, Murray, Willard. DiGiacinto). Turnovers: 20 (Johns 5, Lemire 4, Thomas 3, Shellman 2, Murray 2, Willard 2, Johnson, DiGiacinto). Technical Fouls: none. INDIANA (72) FG FT RED MIN M-A MA OT A F PTS Thrush 26 5-11 2-2 0-7 4 2 12 Green 38 1-6 0-0 0-2 3 0 3 Vesel 37 6-12 3-4 4-7 5 0 15 Barnes 29 5-11 2-3 0-7 1 3 12 Honegger 18 4-7 2-2 1-4 1 5 12 Kerns 26 2-3 2-2 0-1 1 3 6, Maines 8 3-5 2-2 0-3 0 4 8 Porter 13 1-4 0-0 0-0 1 1 2 Morgan 1 0-0 2-2 0-0 0 0 2 Malone 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 27-5915-175-311618 72 FG%: .458. FT%: .882. 3-point FG: 3-12, .250 (Honegger 2-4, Green 1-3, Vesel 0-3,~ Thrush 0-2). Blocks: 9 (Barnes 3, Kerns 2, Vesel, Honegger, Porter, Malone). Steals: 9 (Thrush 2, Vesel 2, Honegger 2, Kerns 2, Barnes). Turnovers: 12 (Vesel 3, Trush 2,. Green 2, Morgan 2, Barnes, Kerns, Porter). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan........28 26-54 Indianas......41 31- 72 At: RCA Dome Indianapolis award. . Although Thom'as was held to .l- a-8 shooting in Michigan's first- yTund loss at last weekend's Big Ten tournament, she has been a main rea- s for Michigan's success this sea- 'Throughout the season, Thomas displayed strengths in all facets of the game - offense, defense and rebounding. She finished the regular season among the conference leaders in several categories. She was second insteals (2.8), sixth in field goal per- entage (52), ninth in rebounding 6.6) and 14th in scoring (13.3). Thomas was also an All-Big Ten JEANNIE SERVAAS/Daily Michigan forward/guard Stacey Thomas was named the Big Ten Freshman of the Year, becoming the first Wolverine to ever be selected for the award. She was sec- ond In the conference in steals and sixth in field goal percentage. The Wolverines were runners-up in that tournament, the first time that has happened in recent memory. Guevara is getting to work on improving the Wolverines post-sea- son play as soon as possible. "Next season begins in three weeks," Guevara said. women hoopsters plagued by history of losing ly Chris Farah Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Old habits die hard. Real hard. The Michigan women's basketball team expe- rienced a revitalization under new coach Sue Guevera during the regular season, winning more conference games than it had in the last four sea- sons combined. It seemed as though the Wolverines had finally learned how to effectively dtilize a relatively talent- aden squad, which in the bast had always mysteri-.. ously faltered. True, Michigan didn't become a Big Ten power- house, but it was winning most of the games it was supposed to win, and even some that it should- 1't have. zi 7 Wolverines also had never beaten the Hoosiers this season - one of the few teams Michigan should have beaten, at least once, but didn't. Instead, the Wolverines lost both regular-sea- son matchups with Indiana, which was also a middle-of-the-pack Big Ten team. Both Michigan and the Hoosiers entered the tournament with a matching conference record of 7-9. It seems like there was plenty of incentive for the Wolverines to beat Indiana in the tourna- ment's opening round - the chance to not only prove that they had broken their Indiana jinx, but also show that they had finally gotten beyond the losing days of the past. And Michigan did want to win. Badly. Aside from the Wolverines' second regular- season loss to the Hoosiers, Guevera never seemed more upset after a game. No, it wasn't a lack of effort or determination that sealed Michigan's tournament doom, and it wasn't because Indiana had some kind of mysti- cal curse on the Wolverines. No, old habits die hard, and it was the habit - the mentality - of losing that ultimately kept Michigan from achieving the success that it should have earned in the Big Ten tournament. Drugs aren't the only thing that can be habit- forming. The consistent pattern of under achieve- ment that plagued the Wolverines for years will not go away overnight. When a program experi- ences as much failure as Michigan has, losing becomes easy and even expected. A tendency like that becomes something to fall back on whenev- er the pressure gets too hard to handle. And that's how the Wolverines played against Indiana in the tournament - like a team that was expected to lose. - From the start, Michigan looked passive and even confused, never finding a solid offensive rhythm. The Hoosiers, on the other hand, seemed confident in their offensive and defensive execu- tion in transition and in the half-court game. Here's a telling statistic: Indiana almost dou- bled the Wolverines' number of blocked shots, with nine compared to Michigan's five. Indiana center Quacy Barnes does lead the Big Ten in blocked shots with an average of 3.38 a game, but Guevara knew that the Wolverines' attitude had a lot more to do with the Hoosiers' dominance in the paint than any difference in tal- ent. "I've said before (that) Indiana plays a real scrappy, aggressive, playground type of defense," Guevera said. "They reach, they shove, they push and they play basketball. And I think sometimes when you get slapped going to the basket, hey, that's basketball. You gotta suck it up and you gotta fight. "It's almost like you got the ball, you got them beat. Now you're looking them in the eye and I am scoring on you.' And I think that's a mentali- ty that has to start with this team." There were signs that the Wolverines are learn- ing how to think, act and play like winners. The Michigan dominated the boards, pulling down 25 offensive rebounds to Indiana's five. Michigan forward Molly Murray shot with confidence, nailing 3 of 6 three-pointers. Sophomore guard Ann Lemire was cold, hit- ting on only 2 of 15 shots from the field, but she was constantly looking for openings in the Hoosier defense and driving to the hoop with authority. Many of her shots took unlucky rolls, barely bouncing off the rim. Old habits may die hard, but the Wolverines are on track to develop the winning tendency that accompanies a winning mentality. They demon- strated that winning tendency during the regular season. Maybe next year that tendency will be strong enough to carry over to the Big Ten tour- nament. Then came the Big Ten tournament. Going into their first-round game against ndiana, the Wolverines had never won a tourna- rnent game in the three years of its existence. The ... PARADISE Continued from Page 3B Since that game their record is 32- victory. Now, you expect something different. Defeat. So, is Michigan unable to attract versy and a murderous schedule that includes Colorado and Notre Dame doesn't help the situation. The fact is that Michigan no longer BASEBALL Continued from Page 38 inning. The Wolverines scored two Tournament for the fourth time in its fifty-year history. Only host Rollins, with 17 victories, has won the tourna- ment more times than the Wolverines. pitchers, picked up the victory. Michigan travels to Tulsa next week- end for three games against Oral Roberts, Kansas State and Pepperdine