>____ s a4G v s. E &.S MEN'S BASKETBALL Michigan 67. NOTRE DAME 66 UTAH 82, Stanford 77 (OT) MINNESOTA 90, Clemson 84 (20T) UCLA 74, Iowa State 73 (OT) KENTUCKY 83 St. Joseph's 68 PRO BASKETBALL LA. Lakers 89, CLEVELAND 76 ORLANDO 100, Golden State 95 HOUSTON 96, Washington 90 Portland 97, MILWAUKEE 78 PHOENIX 113, San Antonio 106 SEATTLE 123, Denver 97 PRO HOCKEY Florida 2, OTTAWA 2 PITTSBURGH 6, Toronto 3 Phoenix 4, CHICAGO 2 ST. LOUIS 4, Hartford 1 San Jose 2, VANCOUVER 1 :! Friday March 21, :1997 19, ' icers await NCAA quarters Blue braces for potential nail-biter By Dan Stillman Daily Sports Writer The NCAA quarterfinals. Last year it was The Goal. In 1995, Michigan battled the crowd in Madison and escaped with a one-goal victory over Wisconsin. In '94 the Wolverines came from two goals down to take a :one-goal lead over Lake Superior, only to lose in overtime. In '93 - another overtime game and another one-goal ;victory over the Badgers. And in '92, the Wolverines rallied from a 6-3 deficit in the second period to defeat the defending national champion, Northern Michigan, 7-6. Now, the '97 quarterfinals await the ,Wolverines. And they have the potential -o match the drama of the ones that have 'preceded them. Michigan, the No. I seed in the West -Region, received a first-round bye and will play the winner of tomorrow's 6:30 p.m. Minnesota-Michigan State game -on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. Both games will -be played at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids. PASS Sports will televise the "Michigan game live. The Minnesota- -Michigan State game will be shown on ,tape-delay at 10 p.m. tomorrow. The Spartans (22-12-4) have beaten the Wolverines (33-3-4) twice this sea- son. Should Minnesota (27-12-1) advance, the Golden Gophers will be looking to avenge last year's 4-3 loss to Michigan in the quar- terfinals and this sea- son's 4-3, over- time loss to the Wolverines. , Preceding the fourth-seeded Gophers and fifth-seeded Spartans will be No. 3 Miami (Ohio) (26-10-1) and No. 6 Cornell (20-8-5), which face off at 3 p.m. The No. 2 seed, North Dakota (28-10-2), has the other bye in the West and will play the winner at 2 p.m. on Sunday. The quarterfinal round has produced more than its fair share of close games and memorable moments in recent years. Several of those fantastic finishes and everlasting images have involved Michigan. "For both teams, you can look at it as this is the final game, we have to win this game, we have to play well," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "And a lot of things happen -bounces, great plays, unlucky things, lucky things." The Wolverines' only quarterfinal loss in the last five years came at the hands of Lake Superior in '94. "The championship game might have been the game between Michigan and Lake Superior, the year (this season's seniors) were freshmen," Berenson said. "Because Lake Superior went on from there and they never really ran into as good a team as they did against Michigan." This year could be a similar story for the Wolverines and their opponent. As a result of the questionably low seeding of the Gophers and the suc- cess of the Spartans against the Wolverines during this season, Michigan is in, arguably, the toughest bracket in the tournament. The tournament committee "picked the right 12 teams," Berenson said. "But how they seeded them ... there's been a lot of questions." Newl 7L ii lt n Maceo Baston showed he's ready for the mean streets of New York City last night, throw. ing an elbow Into Pat Garrity's face u at Notre Dame. Tuesday, the Wolverines will play Arkansas in the NIT semIfi- nals at Madison Square Garden. JOE WESTRATE/Daily Under bik pressure, OTRE DAME - The Big Guy So you is going to the Big Apple. the Joyce' Although Michigan center night. Bul Robert Traylor is probably not going to I'd have to take the rest of the Wolverines on his One co. back and carry them to New York City Traylor to next week, I don't think anyone would to topple be surprised if he did. ricane. Ev Traylor - a monster of a man -- carried th came up with a monster of a game last night, scoring a career-high 26 points, grabbing 13 rebounds and helping swat away Notre Dame's final shot. The performance was tremendous enough, splendid enough, to bring a huge grin to the normally-expression- less lips of sophomore Louis Bullock "I love the big guy," was the first thing that occurred to Bullock when MCCAH asked about Traylor's performance. Whatcha Sure, huge games are something 'bout Wi that's expected of star athletes at - Michigan. But look at what Traylor's in his sho going through these days. Living life allegation under the hot glare of the public spot- them back light, the temperature has been turned Hold or up exponentially over the past week as There's an allegations of a variety of NCAA vio- It was a lations have surfaced. Michigan And the way the media is portraying high in th things, it seems as if Traylor's already the year, t been convicted of everything from ed to fall accepting a fleet of sport-utility vehi- of the NC cles to taking food from Michigan that werer coach Steve Fisher's dog. themselve cork, New York! Michigan advances to 0 NIT semis, beats Irish 01 $7.00 AN HOUR AT New U of M Hospital Location - Now Hiring Closers Enjoy all of the usual benefits of working at Wendy's as well as premium pay for a premium position! Apply in person at the following location: Wendy's - 1655 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor Or call General Mgr., Jim Pilon at (517)784-4094 - ext. 46 to inquire! Bik Guy o) can imagine how the fans at 1 Center were treating him last lock called it "hassling," and 1 say that's pretty diplomatic. 1 uld be forgiven for expecting I wilt under all the pressure, over like a giant tree in a hur-1 en after the way Traylor has e Wolverines over the last half of the season, one would think he'd be just too drained to go any } further. Well, one could be forgiven, I guess, but I wouldn't ask the ILL Big Guy to do the talkin' forgiving. Nor llis? would I expect him to. If I were es, I'd want to take all the s and insinuations and shove in our faces. n a see here - I can't see. NCAA report in my eye. rough regular season for the basketball team. After flying e polls at the beginning of he Wolverines then proceed- so far that they dropped out AA tournament. And as if n't enough, they soon found s under suspicion as the n to Bik le press began to trumpet the findings of a University report. Worse, they found themselves in a situation the legal sys- tem of the United States is designed to protect against. The Wolverines were guilty until proven innocent. Robert Traylor made a statement last night. He told us all that he was going to ignore the whirlwind of allegations and just play basketball. But as usual, Traylor didn't "just" do anything. The Big Guy did it BIG. He went all out, keeping Michigan from withering under the Irish pressure and the raucous - not to say rude - crowd. And when it was all over, he'd won himself a trip to New York. The Wolverines now have two games left in their season. They face Arkansas on Tuesday night and then will either play for the NIT title or for third place. Although we're likely to hear that these games are perhaps junior for- ward Maurice Taylor's last in a Michigan uniform, there's someone else we really ought to be watching more closely, because we could lose something else, something big. Robert Traylor. Look out, New York. The Big Guy is on his way. - Will McCahill can be reached over e-mail at wmcc numich. edu. By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor NOTRE DAME -Wolverines aren't supposed to have luck like this. Especially in South Bend. Brandun Hughes' running jumper from the foul line with 7.6 seconds left* last night gave Michigan a 67-66 victq- ry over Notre Dame, sending the Wolverines to New York City for the NIT semifinals. Michigan (22-1l) will play Arkansas on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden. SMichigan 67 N. Dame 66 Hughes' feat was quite improbable, considering that he was having an awful game to that point, connecting on only one of eight shots. And Notre Dame (16- 14) had fought back from a dismal first half, in which it scored only two points in the first 10 minutes, and seemedto have momentum. Pat Garrity dunked two of his 23 points with 2:20 left to give Notre Dame its first lead of thD game, 63-61. After Robert Traylor responded with a driving, one-handed layup to tie it, Garrity hit a 10-foot jumper over Traylor and drew a foul. Garrity hit the fre throw, giving the Irish a three-point lead with 1:37 to play. But those would be Notre Dame's final points. Maurice Taylor hit a turd- around jumper the next trip downcourt, cutting the lead to one. Then, after an exchange of turnovers on both ends, Michigan fouled Notre Dame's Admore White with 20 seconds left. White, a 65-percent free-throw shooter, missed the front end of a one- and-one, giving Hughes the floor for his dramatic ending. Following a timeout, Michigan drove down court, and as Hughes reached the top of the arc, he almost ran into team- mate Louis Bullock. But Hughes calle* Bullock off the ball and cut back to the free-throw line, where he shook a defender and buried a short jumper. "We were trying to loop Lou up anid run a bump for (Taylor),' Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "But Lou was covered." But Bullock didn't doubt that Hughes could play hero. "Brandun has been fearless through- out his career," Fisher said. "He malIe' plays to win games. He doesn't pla afraid." Notre Dame had one final chance to win, but Traylor blocked a baseline jumper from White as the buzzer sound- ed. Hughes' heroics overshadowed a magnificent performance by Traylor, who had 13 rebounds and a career-high 28 points on 12-of-18 shooting. The Beaver College Landen Semester AT CITY UNIVERSITY Spend fifteen weeks getting to know London studying with British students at City University. Classes are available in dozens of subjects. You can also opt for one or more of our special classes that explore the theaters, the museums and the heritage that prompted Samuel Johnson to observe, "When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life." i HAN j'a 7 V ,. I N I --m f I