4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - March 31, 1997 Basketball 's not a totalfaure, but Blue's Cason doesn'tpass with flying colors NEW YORK - Is it possible to win a postseason championship and still be considered a failure? Is it possible to win 24 games and be labeled an underachiever? As Michigan proved this season, anything - and I mean anything - is possible. The Wolverines were NIT champions and did improve significantly over the past month. But did anyone really think before the season that winning the NIT or recovering from their worst losing streak since 1983 would be major accomplishments? Although a preseason No. 9 ranking exaggerat- ed this team's talent, there's no doubt that this team was capable of big- ger and better things. Those bigger and bet- ALAN ter things included chal- QOLDENBACH lenging for a Big Ten The Bronx title, maintaining its sta- Bomber tus among the top 20 teams in the country and winning an NCAA tour- nament game for the first time since 1994; those were the three legitimate goals that this team established at the outset of this season. Michigan failed miserably in all three quests. Now, let's see if as individuals, the Wolverines fared better this season: As of right now, is there any doubt as to who leads this team? Michigan is clearly Robert Traylor's gang, and he showed no fear in taking this team on his back and carrying the Wolverines during their NIT run. Never was a player more deserving of an MVP award than Traylor was in the NIT (he averaged 18.2 points and 8.4 rebounds in the five-game tourney). He was, by far, the best and most dominant player in the 32-team field. By the end of the season, he was the most improved player on this team. He learned not to put the ball on the floor in the paint, how to use his weight to get position inside and devel- oped a nifty little medium-range jumpshot. But, like the rest of this team, Traylor's sea- son can't be judged on the basis of his postsea- son performance. He really didn't exhibit sig- nificant development of these skills until late in the season. He was also foul-prone, which hurt Michigan in losses at Indiana and Wisconsin. Still his improvement and ability to carry the team over long stretches can't be overlooked. 'raylor: B+ The other Wolverine who showed a tenden- cy to pick up his teammates' slack for an extended period of time was Louis Bullock. By midseason, Bullock proved that he was the Big Ten's best outside shooter. He connect- ed on 47 percent of his shots form behind the arc and broke just about every one of Glen Rice's school-records regarding 3-pointers. When he got hot, his jumper was indefensible. But when he went cold, Michigan froze with him. Against Purdue, Minnesota and Illinois during the late-season five-game losing streak, Bullock went a combined 11-for-36 from the field and 5-of-16 from 3-point range. What separates Bullock from the Big Ten's great guards like Minnesota's Bobby Jackson and Andre Woolridge is that they don't disap- pear in games that are must-wins. But that's about all that separates Bullock from the nation's best shooting guards. Next season, Bullock should be a preseason candi- date for All-America honors. If that's the case, perhaps Michigan coach Steve Fisher will finally be convinced than Bullock needs more than 11 shots per game. Bullock: B+ After Traylor and Bullock, the Wolverines' games went downhill this season. And no one's was more apparent than Maurice Taylor's. Taylor fell so far from his preseason expec- tations (he was a preseason finalist for the Naismith Award) that by season's end, Michigan fans were excited about 14-point, six-rebound showings. Fourteen points and six rebounds are numbers that a player like Taylor should be putting up before halftime. There's only one thing funnier than the idea of Taylor going pro last summer -the idea of him leaving school now, after an even worse season. Throughout the NIT, however, Taylor showed glimpses of what a player with his skills can do. When Fisher inserted Maceo Baston in the starting lineup late in the season, forcing Taylor to the small forward spot, his game seemed to open up. He averaged 16 points and 7.7 rebounds over the last seven games. The problem was that those numbers were 11.4 and 5.8 in the first 28 games of the season - a good season for a marginal player, but a marginal season for a good player like Taylor. Taylor: C Also disappointing the Michigan faithful thi season was the supposed savior of this team, Brandun Hughes. The junior college transfer was brought in with the intention of being Michigan's first true point guard since Gary Grant left Ann Arbor nine years ago. After averaging 28 points and 6.5 assists in the juco ranks, people were asking not if, but when, he would step into the Michigan starting lineup. That was why Hughes was so disappointing; he never did make it into the Wolverines' start- ing five except for two games (one of them because of an injury to Travis Conlan). The reason why Conlan consistently got the nod over Hughes was that Conlan didn't make the poor decisions that Hughes so often did. Conlan didn't come downcourt one-on-three and take it to the rack. Conlan didn't try to force the ball into the paint when the big men were double-teamed or out of position. Conlan didn't let his opponents get in his head and rat- tle him to the point where he hurt his team. But let's not start gushing over Conlan. He' proven he's nothing but a good backup. He wa hesitant with every jumpshot he launched and he could not handle any type of pressure. So what good is there in having'a point guard that can't dribble? Not much, but is it any better than having one that thinks shoot first, pass second and can't execute the fundamentals? Hughes: C Conlan: C+ It's tough to say if Jerod Ward was a disap- pointment. After all, was anything expected of him in the first place? Ward, however, did surprise some people midway through the season, posting a pair of career-high, 19-point games against Purdue and Penn State. But after the second of those games, he simply went back in the tank and proved those games to be just an aberration. If Ward's jumper isn't on, he has no value to this team. His bad knees make him a defensive liability. He doesn't use his 6-foot-9 frame to post up smaller players and he gets a rebound about as often as he takes over a game. 0 Ward: D+ See GOLDENBACH, Page 6B SARA STILLMAN/Daily Michigan junior forward had anything but the success that was predicted for him. The preseason All- American Maurice Taylor averaged only 12 points and six rebounds per game this season, both lower than his totals of a' year ago. But Taylor wasn't alone among underachieving Wolverines this season. Both Wildcats win in Final Four INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - When Ron Mercer was in the game, his shots weren't falling. When he was out, his cramping legs were on ice. That combination should have had Kentucky in a bad way. Instead, the Wildcats will get a chance to defend Saurday's their national title. S~alt1raS Kentucky's tena- games cious defense and a sudden burst of balanced scoring by Mercer's teammates gave the Wildcats a 78-69 victory over Minnesota on Saturday night. Mercer scored 19 points on 7-of-21 shooting as Kentucky (35-4) advanced to the NCAA championship tonight against Arizona, which beat North Carolina 66-58. The one thing for sure is that the winner will be the Wildcats. It will either be Kentucky's seventh title or Arizona's first. "I have tremendous admiration for our basketball team that overcame a lot of problems, from foul trouble to CATS Continued from Page 1.6 standing team against an outstanding ballclub, and they've been that way throughout the tournament, and they've been that way throughout the season." Kentucky (35-4) is one win away from becoming the first repeat champion since Duke in 1992, and Pitino would be the seventh coach to win at least two straight titles. His team bears little resemblance to the one that beat Syracuse for the title last season, except for Ron Mercer, who had 20 points in that championship game cramping and was still able to dig deep down and win this ballgame," Kentucky coach Rick Pitino said. Mercer, who had 20 points in the national championship game against Syracuse last season as a freshman, couldn't get untracked against Minnesota (31-4). A 50 percent shoot- er during the season, Mercer was 3-of- 13 in the first half as the Wildcats took a 36-31 lead, then was bothered by the leg cramps. "I just started catching cramps in the second half," he said. "I tried to con- tinue to play on, but it was worst when I was jumping and it kind of affected my jumping a little bit." ARIZONA 66, NORTH CAROLINA 58 First, Arizona stunned No. 1 Kansas. Then, the Wildcats conquered Dean Smith's mighty North Carolina Tar Heels. And now, Arizona is only one more improbable victory away from its first NCAA title. Miles Simon, rejected by Smith four years ago, scored 24 points and Mike as a freshman. Still, Kentucky uses the pressure defense to get things going even if the opposition has the same strategy. "When teams press us we try to get layups off it," said Kentucky senior Anthony Epps. "And with me and Wayne Turner both being point guards, we have two guards to beat the press and we use all five guys to break it. We press each other every day in practice, so we know how to handle it." Arizona freshman point guard Mike Bibby also didn't sound all that con- cerned about facing pressure. "They like to run. We like to run," he said. "Teams that have tried to press us Bibby shook off a horrible start to hit four 3-pointers down the stretch as Arizona defeated North Carolina 66- 58 Saturday night. The Wildcats (24-9), winning a game for the first time in three Final Four appearances, will play in tonight's championship game against Kentucky. North Carolina (28-7), which won its previous 16 games, shot 31 percent and committed 17 turnovers. The Tar Heels, who have reached the Final Four 11 times in Smith's 36 years, won't get a chance to bring their coach his third title in the same season in which he broke Adolph Rupp's record for coaching victories. Arizona, which stunned Kansas in the Southeast Regional semifinals, was the only team that wasn't a top seed in its region to reach the Final Four. Bibby finished with 20 points, including six 3-pointers, for Arizona, which shot 33 percent. have only done it a couple of possessions because we have broken it every time. Their press is unbelievable, and they keep coming at you because they never seem to get tired." Like Turner. He played 39 minutes against Minnesota with one turnover, and was a key in forcing all those Golden Gopher turnovers. "I hope that wasn't my best game, that there's a better one from me in my career, he said. "I think it will be a great challenge. Bibby and (Miles) Simon are great guards. You really want to test yourself defensively and offensively.' r ,,- g irl :. Guard Allen Edwards and the rest of Wildcats helped send Big Ten champ Minnesota packing from the Final Four with a 7849 victory over the Gophers on Saturday. Kentucky will battle another crew of Wildcats, Arizona, tonight in the championship game: Vols win physical game vs. Monarchs CINCINNATI (AP) - Tennessee won yet another national championship, and this one might have been the toughest - and most bruis- ing --of all. Shackling Old Dominion with aggressive, physical defense, Tennessee weathered a second- half comeback and beat the Lady Monarchs, 68- Women's 59, last night to win its tournament second straight national championship in women's basketball and fifth overall. Chamique Holdsclaw led the Lady Vols (29- 10) with 24 points and made the key plays down the stretch after Tennessee temporarily lost the lead. In the final 6:48, she scored 10 points, .~a ct,-A ntu h ~ anti him~rpt a The result was two and three bodies sprawled on the floor at times and a lot of frustration for the Old Dominion players. Old Dominion managed to overcome that frustration, though, and took the lead on three occasions in the second half, the last time at 49- 47 on reserve Amber Eller's 3-pointer from the left corner with 7:05 left. But Holdsclaw, the sophomore All-American who always seems to be there when Tennessee needs her the most, came through again. First, Holdsclaw got a basket inside to tie the score at 49 with 6:48 left. Then she fed Niya Butts for a short bank shot in the lane that put the Lady Vols up 51-49. That was follnwed by a pastowide-onnen first half and finished with 10 points on 4-of-13 shooting. Machanguana's 16 points led Old Dominion (34-2), which was seeking a return to the glory years that produced AIAW: national champi, onships in 1979 and 1980 and the NCAA crown in 1985. But Tennessee was too relentless and the Lady Monarchs saw their 33-game winning s , come to an end. The title capped a long bumpy ride for Tennessee, which suffered through injuries and the nation's toughest schedule in the first half of the season. Tennessee stood 10-6 after losing at Old Dominion 83-72 on Jan. 7 and looked noth- in like a team that could win the national cham- '" "- ..s_.. _ y ...__:._ h {_ ray .:, .. ' . ,.::. ; ..: ' ;. ; _... _. .: ? .nrut.:: ..x. eG