,Fireshmen make fast unpact By Josh Kleinbaum y Sports Writer Mandy Stowe sat in the Crisler Arena press lounge with a grin stretching across her face. She had just finished her first basket- ball game in a Michigan uniform - a 95-67 exhibition rout of Sporitelna Bratislava - and she had exceeded all expectations. Stowe, a 6-foot-I forward from Ludington, came off the bench to score * points and grab seven rebounds in just 21 minutes. After a quiet first 10 minutes - she missed her only field-goal attempt - Stowe caught on fire, scoring nine points in a six-minute stretch. "This was something that I had been waiting for for a long time," Stowe said. "The girls have been great in practice, helping me and teaching me, so it was- n't a complete shock, but I've still got a t to learn." Stowe has benefited from practicing against some of the the Big Ten's best on a daily basis, including preseason All- Big Ten selection Pollyanna Johns and senior forward Tiffany Willard. Sporitelna didn't have anyone the likes of Johns to send up against Stowe, so she was prepared for anything the Slovak team had to throw at her. "I would be hurt if she didn't play like , e did," Johns said. "I would have taken rpersonally." The freshman had one rough stretch in the second half where she committed two turnovers and a foul. Those, howev- er, were Stowe's only turnovers of the game.' She did get into foul trouble late in the game, committing her fourth foul with five minutes left. But Stowe stayed in for the last five minutes and managed to avoid picking up a fifth foul. *Stowe wasn't the only freshman to make a statement in Michigan's only exhibition game. Point guard Anne Thorius had an impressive debut, adding seven points and seven assists. Thorius, a 5-11 Denmark native, ran the Michigan offense with the poise and on-the-court vision of a veteran. Starting in her first game at Michigan, she picked apart the Sporitelna defense with se, finding Johns, Stacey Thomas and Swe time and again for easy layups. "I was pretty pleased with the way Anne played," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "She ran the show for us today. That's tough for a freshman to come in and, all of a sudden, you're leading the team. She has a lot of respect for the weapons we have on this team." Thorius was unselfish at the point thorughout the game. In 27 minutes, she took just three shots from the field, hit- Fg all three, as well as going one-for- o from the charity stripe. "I want her to look to score a little more than she did," Guevara said. Older than most freshmen - Thorius is just two weeks shy of her 20th birthday - she was a three-time member of the Danish National Teamh, giving her more experience than the average rookie. Thorius' biggest problem was turnovers - she committed three of #m against seven assists - which a point guard must avoid. But all three turnovers came in the second half, well after the game had been decided. One_ explanation for the turnovers might be the actual ball. In Denmark, they play with a larger basketball, and it has taken Thorius some time to adjust. But if that's her biggest problem, she should have a bright future at Michigan. * ItmT~kf COLLEGE BASKETBALL MICHIGAN STATE 82, E. Tenn, State 59 CONNECTICUT 68, Boston University 54 Purdue 73, VALPARAISO 56 RHODE ISLAND 78, UNC-Wilmington 69 KANSAS 88, Rice 61 NOTRE DAME 72, The Citadel 53 ILLINOIS 69, Bradley 59 Utah State 75, MINNESOTA 64 TENNESSEE 75, Miami (Ohio) 74 PRO HOCKEY MONTREAL 4, Tampa Bay 1 Boston 4. OTTAWA 2 St. Louis 3, TORONTO 2 Edmonton at Phoenix, inc. PRO FOOTBALL Buffalc at Mi ym inc Tuesday November 18, 1997 9 Something to talk about News or noise? While the weekend soundbites came from Columbus and Ohio State wide receiver David Boston, yesterday Michigan's players and coach got the chance to talk back. Here's a sampling of the early-week chatter, I agree with David Boston. I think Ohio State should be two- or three-touchdown favorites." - Coach Lloyd Carr "Being emotional is not a problem for this game. The only problem is calming down those emotions. It will come down to who calms their nerves the best." - Quarterback Brian Griese "I was surprised (Boston) made those comments so early. But he'll have to see me on Saturday." "I was never an Ohio State kid. There was never a question of crossing over." - Cornerback Charles Woodson War of words focus shifts to Michigan By Alan Gokdenbach Daily Sports Editor The most striking example of how backward this season is for Michigan and Ohio State as compared to the last two, is the normally taciturn approach Michigan coach Lloyd Carr is taking to the trash-talking game. "I agree with David Boston," Carr said referring to the Buckeyes' wide receiver, who opened the war of words following Ohio State's victory on Saturday. "I think Ohio State should be two- or three-touchdown favorites." Boston's well-publicized comments Saturday were: "If our offense and defense are clicking, we should beat (Michigan) by two or three touchdowns. We're going to go up there and upset them. I think we're better than Michigan." The season finale for the Wolverines and the Buckeyes the past two seasons has been set with an undefeated and sec- ond-ranked Ohio State team squaring off against a Michigan team with three loss- es and ranked in the bottom half of the top 25. This year, the roles are reversed and Michigan is playing the part of favorite. But it hasn't changed the attitude in the Wolverines' lockerroom. Demeaning comments will usually make it on to a team's bulletin board. In fact, Michigan cornerback Charles Woodson said that Boston's words have been plastered on the walls of Schembechler Hall and the Wolverines' lockerroom as a form of inspiration. "If someone keeps saying your name, you know they're thinking about you' Woodson said. "It's flattering." But words can only go so far in this rivalry. The 'most powerful intangible in this game is emotion -- something nei- ther team should have trouble amassing. "If I have to get them up for this game, then something is wrong with our pro- gram," Carr said. "Regardless of what has happened in the past, this is our biggest rivalry game. "In my estimation, this is one of the greatest rivalries in collegiate athletics and if you are red-blooded, then you are going to be excited." But lapsing those emotions is the crit- ical point for both teams, as they hake learned in past seasons. Players have let their mouths say perhaps a little too much, as Boston did, often regretting their comments later. "Being emotional is not a problem for this game, Michigan quarterback Brian Griese said. "The only problem is calm- ing down those emotions because there is so much tradition-in this game. It will come down to who will calm .hir nerves the best." The emotion behind this rivalry really began to mount in the 1970s when Bo Schembechler's Michigan teams rou- tinely battled Woody Hayes' Buckeyes for the Big Ten's Rose Bowl bid. Schembechler, a former Hayes assis- tant, who took the reins at Michigan-in 1969, pulled off a miraculous upset in his first year at the Wolverines' helm, defeating the top-ranked, defending- champion Buckeyes. As far as upsets are coerned, this is not the year where one team will shock the other, as both are ranked in the top four. But the magnitude of this game, which includes Big Ten rings, Rose Bowl bids and national title implica- tions, makes it the most heavily antiti- pated tilt - from a Michigan point'of view - since 1974, the last time the Wolverines entered this game undefeat- ed. Michigan lost that contest, 12-10, sending the Buckeyes to Pasadena. A loss for the Wolverines this year See WAR, Page 10 MARGARET MYERS/Daily Chris Floyd, who has displayed courageous performances while fighting Injuries, Is more of the silent type when It comes to verbal battles. While Floyd has not provided the Buckeyes with bulletin-board material, Ohio State wide receiver David Boston was far more outgoing. According to Charles Woodson, Boston's comments are already on the Michigan lockerroom wall. DAILY SPORTS. WATCH AND LEARN. ._ I I _ .. , SYRACUSE SUMMER ABROAD *:~r... . 0. iE:iE+G3