CARDINAL Continued from Page 11 Traylor were victims of that talent. Between the two of them, Traylor's two second-half free throws were the lone attempts at the charity stripe for the Michigan big men. With Cardinal and Purdue center f Brad Miller literally laying into him all night, Baston's post play fell off dra- matically. The majority of his 14 points came on second-chance dunks or off Ilose balls. "It was really physical in the paint," Purdue guard Jaraan Cornell said. "When Miller was out of the game, Cardinal stepped up." After a tight game throughout the sec- Qnd half, the final four minutes proved crucial and Michigan's inability to reach the free throw line was of sever conse- quence. Cardinal, who finished 7-of-10 from the free throw line, outshot the Wolverines by himself. Michigan reached the line just eight times - for the entire game. The primary reason that Michigan falls behind in games is its a lack of hus- tle and smart decisions. It's Jerod Ward not diving for a loose ball, Brandon Smith, in the few minutes he plays, mak- ing his move before he receives the pass, and Travis Conlan saving the ball under his own net. It's relentless Purdue pene- tration -- opportunities Michigan pro- vides by playing the perimeter tight. And it's the extra effort in and out of the paint that Cardinal provides -_ and Michigan lacks. The closest player Michigan has to Cardinal is freshman Josh Asselin, and playing only 15 minutes, his production is limited. A few second-chance tips and five rebounds shows Asselin has the skills, but playing time remains distant with Ward starting in the third forward spot. But sometimes the intangibles are easy to forget. In the tunnel at halftime with Michigan leading 41-37 - someone in the crowd suggested a dou- ble-digit lead for Michigan "if they did- n't have so many turnovers." Purdue, certainly a team with extraor- dinary talent, made the most of Michigan's 23 miscues - especially down the stretch. A victory for Michigan was as neces- sary as a glass of water on a hot summer day. And the Wolverines needed the vic- tory to remain close in the Big Ten race. But championship teams maintain leads in the second half, and Michigan has given them away, losing the second half' contest last night by I 1 points. "This was a big game," Cardinal said. "And we only play it once." Sloppy ball-handling,. Traylor all banged upn WARREN ZINN/Daily Robert Traylor's impressive stats - 17 points and 7 boards - could not help the Wolverines upend the Boilermakers last night. By James Goldstein and Dan Stillman Daily Sports Writers Michigan shot over 50 percent, outre- bounded the Boilermakers by 11 (40-29) and held Purdue's All America candidate and 3-point sharpshooter Chad Austin to zero 3-pointers. On any ordinary night, those would be statistics that would put another "W" in the win column. But the Wolverines turned the ball over, and over and over -23 times to be exact, which was Michigan's third- worst team turnover total of the season. The Wolverines coughed the ball up 27 times against Detroit on Nov. 30 and 24 times against Western Michigan in their opening game of the season on Nov. 15. "You're not going to beat a good team if you have 23 turnovers," Michigan guard Travis Conlan said. Maceo Baston had the worst butter fin- gers, turning the ball over six times. Brandon Smith, in just seven minutes of action, coughed the ball up four times. Conlan, Robbie Reid and Jerod Ward had three turnovers apiece. Robert Traylor had just two giveaways but looked winded for parts of the game - a problem many of the Wolverines experienced because of the Boilermakers' constant pressuring detense. "We got a little lackadaisical at times, Traylor said. "They got some steals up top that led to easy baskets." TRACTOR JACK-KNIFED: It's been a tough stretch for Robert Traylor - a bro- ken nose, the flu and now a bad back, not to mention the six feet and eight inches totaling 300 pounds of human flesh he must carry around in the first place. Hampered by remnants of the flu, Traylor added another ache to his body Up next Who: No. 16 Iowa Where: Carver-Hawkeye Arena When: Sunday, 1 p.m. EST TV: CBS 0 yesterday night when his back tightened late in the second half. "It was kind of tiring because it was up- and-down basketball," Traylor said. "With about six or seven minutes left my back tightened up." Traylor finished the game with 17 points and seven rebounds. The Wolverines' co-captain broke his nose on Jan. 17 against Ohio State bef contracting the flu before the lllin game in Champaign on Jan. 25. Traylor wore a protective mask over his nose to start the Minnesota game on Jan. 20, but the mask lasted all of one Michigan pos- session before Traylor removed and flung it toward the Wolverines' bench. PURDUE (89) FG FT REB MIN M A A 0-T A F PTS Cornell 32 10-15 4-4 1.2 3 1 Cardinal 36 5-11 7-10 2-6 1 3 Miller 28 6-10 7-9 4-8 4 3 1 Austin 36 6-15 3.3 2-2 1 0 15 Eidridge 33 2-5 0-0 2-4 7 0 5 Barnes 1 0-0 0-0 0.0 0 0 0 McQuay 12 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 Mayfield 10 0-1 0-0 1-0 0 3 0 Robinson 12 1-7 0-0 3-0 0 1 2 Totals 200 3166 21-2617-29 16 12 89 FG%: .470. FT%: .808. 3-point FG: 6-20, .300 (Cornell 4-8. Cardinal 1-2, Eldridge 1-3, Mayfield 0- 1, Robinson 01, Austin 0-5). Blocks: 1 (Miller). Steals: 13 (Cornell 4, Cardinal 3, Austin 3, Eldridge 3, Apreem Mouken 27). Technical Fouls: 0 MICHIGAN (82) FG FT REB MIN M-A * A QT A F PTS Baston 32 7-12 0-0 5-8 3 4 Ward 24 6-15 1-2 7-10 3 2 Traylor 32 8.13 12 4-7 4 4 17 Reid 24 1-4 0-0 0-3 4 3 3 Bullock 33 6-13 3-3 0-2 0 1 18 Conlan 33 3-6 0-0 1-4 3 2 8 Asselin 15 4461-1 35 0 3 9 Smith 7 00 0-0 00 0 0 0 Totals 200 35-69 6.8 21-40 1719 82 FG%:.507. FT%:.750 3-point FG: 6 20, .300. (Conlan 2.4. Bullock 3.9, Reid 1-3, Ward 0.4, T. Arimah 17-83). Blocks: 7 (Traylor 4, Baston, Asselin, Smith). Steals: 9 (Ward 3, Conlan 3, Traylor 2, Asselin). Technical Fouls: 0. 6% Purdue------ ..---- 37 ..Michigan-----------........41 At: Velvet Touch A: 13,242 52 --89 41 - 82 40 Y9L-MAKE THE CALL t- on out \experiento ever. After all, you're picking them! a RESTAURANT V SPORTS BAR 1220 S. University 665-7777 We are a major advertising agency. And yes, we're hiring. We are D'Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles, a full-service advertising and marketing communi- cations agency. 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