-- i ,' cyrsi 2o 'iTN P .. PRO BASKETBALL Indiana 98, TORONTO 84 ATLANTA 96, Portland 89 ORLANDO 114, Sacramento 103 SAN ANTONIO 64, Cleveland 59 CHICAGO 94, Dallas 92 HOUSTON 112, Minnesota 103 PHOENIX 117, Milwaukee 112 Seattle at GOLDEN STATE, inc, Vancouver at L.A. CLIPPERS, inc. PRO HOCKEY Colorado 4, HARTFORD 0 Philadelphia 4, NEW JERSEY 3 TAMPA BAY 5, Ottawa 0 WASHINGTON 3, St. Louis 2 Anaheim at CALGARY, inc. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CINCINNATI 6, Detroit 1 Florida 8, BALTIMORE 5 Pittsburgh 6, BOSTON 4 4 Wednesday March 26, 1997 NCAAsA NATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT Milwaukee takes note of feared Michigan ' Coaches careful to compliment Wolverines By Dan Stillman Daily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - All four teams still alive in the NCAA hockey tour- nament arrived here yesterday, but one is already drawing the most attention. "I really believe that when the tournament started, it was Michigan against the rest of the field," said Boston University coach Jack Parker, whose team Rad plays the Wolverines at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the second semifinal at the Thursday Bradley Center. DaCola Michigan, which CO rea received a first-round vs. Nort bye, advanced after jump-. (291-2 ing all over Minnesota, 7- 0 Michig 4, on Saturday. 4) vs. Ba "Michigan has the .Universit three-fold problem," 3), 7:3 Parker said. "One, they Televiso put so much pressure on you offensively, but Saturday 4hey're also real stingy N Semifi defensively, and they've winners,' got a great goaltender. Televisio "This team, you can not take penalties against. All game You'll pay drastically for Bradley North Dakota coach Dean Blais took time to praise Michigan as he prepared his Fighting Sioux to take on last year's runner-up, Colorado College. "Certainly, Michigan seems to be in a class by themselves, he said. Combine the Wolverines' attempt to be the first team to repeat as national champions since Boston University in 1971-72 with Michigan captain Brendan Morrison's bid for the Hobey Baker Award (the winner will be announced Friday), and Michigan is the talk of the town. While the Wolverines have taken on the aura of a premier team, there are three other schools vying for the championship. The biggest story to besides the Wolverines may be the return of Colorado College. After SsemnIs earning the No. I seed in : sem the West Region last year, before losing to Michigan Dakota in the championship 1p.m. game, 3-2, the Tigers n (35-3- earned a No. 5 seed in the ;ton East Region this year, with (25-8. a record of 25-14-4. .m. But the Tigers sur- RE$PN2 prised everyone this past weekend when they s final knocked off New al Hampshire and the No. 1 p.m. seed, Clarkson. ESPN "We basically played ourselves into the tourna- at the ment," Colorado College anter in coach Don Lucia said. The Tigers will play the No. 2 seed from the West Region, North Dakota, at 1 p.m. tomorrow. The Sioux posted a 28- 10-2 record and earned a first-round bye after defeating Minnesota, 4-3, in overtime in the WCHA champi- onship game. North Dakota then took care of Cornell in the NCAA quarterfinals, 6-2. See SEMIS, Page 12 Bright Michigan advances to title game with victory By Will McCahill Daily Sports Editor NEW YORK -- It wasn't pretty, but the Michigan men's basketball team earned itself a chance to play for a cham- pionship. The Wolverines overcame a sloppy first half and a pesky Arkansas squad to pull out a 77-62 victory last night in the semifinals of the NIT at Madison Square Garden. Using their patented full-court press, the Razorbacks came back from an early 10-point deficit to cut Michigan's lead to four at halftime, then proceeded to make Michigan 77 ~ Arkansas 62 lights, big things more interesting in the second half. After Michigan forward Jerod Ward's two free throws with 14:03 remaining in the half pushed the Wolverines' lead to 43-39, Arkansas sophomore guard Pat Bradley canned a 3-pointer to narrow the margin to one. A foul by Razorbacks sophomore for- ward Derek Hood put Michigan sopho- more guard Louis Bullock on the line in a one-and-one situation. But the normally reliable Bullock missed the front end, and the Razorbacks forged ahead, 44-43, on a hook shot in the paint by sophomore guard Ali Thompson. For the next three minutes, the lead swayed back and forth, tilting in Michigan's favor on a bucket by sopho- more center Robert Traylor, then back to the Razorbacks' after a jump hook by senior center Lee Wilson. Michigan called a 20-second timeout after Wilson's score and turned on the jets coming out of the break. Junior forward Maceo Baston fol- lowed a Bullock miss with a resounding slam, and when Arkansas turned the ball over on its next trip down the court, Baston was on the receiving end of an alley-oop from junior forward Maurice Taylor. And just like that, the score was 49- 46, Michigan. A 3-pointer by Razorbacks guard Kareem Reid tied matters briefly at 49, but the Wolverines were soon back into the lead and tenuously began to increase their margin. With just under eight minutes remain- ing, Michigan held a 56-49 lead, and seemed on the verge of delivering the knockout blow. city 0 The Big Guy di n't come up bi in the Big Apple last night, scor- ing just seven points. But his bulk helped ° Michigan advance to tomorrow's NIT. SARA STILLMAN * Although Arkansas had only one play- er with size comparable to Michigan's mammoth front line, the Razorbacks grabbed 17 offensive rebounds to .the Wolverines' seven. Conlan said crashig the boards and taking care of the ball 'woe major themes in the lockerroom at halftime. "We had some turnovers at the begin- ning, myself included," Conlan s "But we came out in the second half h didn't have very many at all." Michigan had 14 turnovers at the half - four by Conlan - and finished wi4h 22. , q, 4. 44 ..., Photos by WARRI Harold Schock and Bill Muckalt celebrate with teammates Sunday. But Arkansas hung tough, continuing to push the ball hard up the floor. A jumper by Wilson made the score 56-51, and after a trey by Ward, Reid cut the lead to six, at 59-53. With about four minutes remaining, Arkansas guard Glendon Alexander hit from beyond the are to cut the margin to five, 63-58, but that was as close as the Razorbacks would come. As the foul tally mounted, the Wolverines found themselves at the free- throw line and used their opportunities to cushion their lead. Baston and junior guard Travis Conlan each hit a pair from the stripe, and with 2:45 left in the contest, Michigan led, 67-58. The Razorbacks, left with little choice but to force up quick shots, allowed the Wolverines to blow the game wide open in the waning moments. Each Arkansas miss turned into an easy transition basket for Michigan, and the margin ballooned to 17. The Wolverines called a 20-second timeout with 33.5 seconds remaining to bring in the reserves, and a Razorbacks jumper later, the game was over. The key to Michigan's victory was the Wolverines' increased efforts on the offensive glass in the second half. L ._,. -- -r- - P1 . IA Em