BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - February 23, 1998 -58 Quote of the We "I know a hell of a lot more that so you could imagine how I thoi played." - Indiana coach Bobby Knig reporter called Michigan "a Player of the Week Jerod Ward The forward scored 46 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in Michigan's two games this week. Wolverines do it again when it 'counts, this tibe in OF 'm not really sure where to start. The final score was fairly impressive - 112-64. A couple weeks ago, feeding off my optimism following Michigan's clutch victory over Iowa, I thought to myself, "Hey, this team is gonna score 100 points and win by 50 in one of its next three games." Those three games were against Northwestern, ! !! ! Minnesota and Ohio State. NOT INDI- ANA! Not the rich tradition that is the Hoosiers. DAN Not Bobby. Knight's STILLMAN troops. Still the All Knight Man could do was slowly sip from his cup when the Wolverines' fourth- consecutive shot from the floor - all 3-pointers - hit its target, extending Michigan's lead to 31 points with 52 seconds left in the first half. The General was rather calm after the game. What could he do or say, really? His team was obliterated, embarrassed, rendered helpless in an important game late in the season on national television. When you've just lost by 48 points, MICHIGAN (112) FG Ft RES MIN MA *A 0-T A F PTS Conlan 32 3-6 00 0-0 4 3 7 Ward 28 1015 0-0 5-10 0 3 24 Traylor 30 10-12 2-3 3-11 7 2 22 Reid 28 6-11 0-0 0-2 5 2 16 Bullock 28 9415 4-4 0-6 5 3 26 Taylor 3 0-0 2200 002 -Scott 2 0-0 0-000 01 0 Oliver 4 0-1 1-2 0-1 1 0 1 Asselin 13 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 1 0 Austin 2 01 0-0 00 00 0 Smith 21 3-6 4-6 1-3 3 2 12 Szyndlar 4 1-1 0-0 0-1 0 1 2 Vignier 5 0-0 00 0-3 0 0 0 -Totals 200 42.68 13&17 1145 25 18 1122 F0%:.618. FT%: 765 3-point FG 1525, 600 (Ward 4- 6. Bullock 4-6. Reid 4-7, Smith 2-4. Conlan 1-2). Blocks: 2 (Asselin, Smith). Steals: 8 (Bullock 3, Traylor 3, Reid, Conian) Turnovers: 9 (Ward 2, Traylor 2, Bullock 2, ReidOliverSzyndlar). Technical Fouls: None. INDIANA (64) FPG FT RED MIN A MA 0T A F PS Recker 24 3-7 2-2 0-2 0 1 10 Gladness 23 1-3 44 46 0 0 6 Patterson 16 0-7 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Lewis 34 04 2-2 00 3 2 2 Guyton 38 2-6 1-2 0-1 1 1 7 Miller 6 1-5 01 1-3 2 2 2 -. Jiminez 13 1-2 0-0 1-3 3 3 3 Mandeville 22 1-2 0-0 GO0 0 2 3 Turner 26 3-9 5-7 1-2 2 3 12 Eggers 12 35 0-1 3-5 0 0 6 Richaidson 21 5-11,34 02 0 4 13 - Totals 200 20:L6171-23 1.127122 18 64 FG %:.618. FT%: 739. 3-point PF: 722, .318 (Recker 2- 4, Guyton 2-4, Mandeville 1-1, Jiminez 1-2, Turner 1-3, Lewis 0-2, Patterson 0-3. Miller 0-3). Blocks: 3 (Patterson 2, Eggers). Steals: 3 (Recker, Patterson, Gladness). Turnovers: 14 (Richardson 4.Recker 2, Guyton 2, Miller 2, Gladness, Eggers, Jiminez, Turner). Technical Fouls: None Indiana--------------25 39- 64 Michigan......................... 54 58- 112 At: Crisler Arena A:13,562 you can't muster anger, or exci explanations - or anything. "Somebody come up with a good question," said a defeated "It'd be the first bright thing of Evidently, Knight wasn't iml with his team when, at one poi second half, his Hoosiers cut t Michigan lead to a measly 38. Let's get one thing straight - one, not even Knight, was surp Wolverines won this game. In the wake of Tuesday's hea ing loss to Michigan State, the game took on the aura of a mu and everyone's seen what the Wolverines can do when they v (see Duke game) or have to (se game) perform. But it's been a while since Michigan's 81-73 victory over Dec. 13, and some people didn believe in the Wolverines anym maybe even some of the Wolve themselves. For once, Michigan playersr placed more importance on a g than their fans, or even the me( "Jerod (Ward) made the stat that he's never played in an NC Tournament game, and I haven either," Robert Traylor said. "It one of those games that you fe have to have to really impresss people and show everybody th, want to be in the NCAA Tourn shocking stle uses or Maybe that's why Ward scored a career-high 24 points and dominated really the boards with 10 rebounds. Knight. Maybe that's why Louis Bullock fthe day." drove to the basket with authority. pressed Maybe that's why Robbie Reid shot the nt in the ball with confidence. Maybe that's why he Travis Conlan dunked. But none of that accounts for a 48- - no point win - the Wolverines' largest rised the margin of victory against a Big Ten team, ever. There must have been some rt-break- other power was at work. El Nino? Indiana This was monumental. This was one st-win, of those inexplicable moments, like the magical Duke game and the Michigan want to football team's 34-8 decimation of Penn :e Iowa State on Nov. 8. This was one of those games that makes every Michigan fan beam with Duke on pride. 't "We wanted to make this game a ore - statement game, Michigan coach erines Brian Ellerbe said. The Wolverines made a statement all may have right. At long last, they have effectively ;ame guaranteed themselves an NCAA dia. Tournament bid. ement More important, they appear ready to AA be serious. Serious about playing hard, 't serious about winning, serious about was just their season. el you 112-64 - how much more serious some can you get? at you - Dan Stillman can be reached via e- iament." mail at dns@umich.edu. Despite scoring just seven of Michigan's 112 points yesterday, Travis Conlan con- tributed in numer- ous ways, holding Indiana guard A.J. Guyton to seven points and keep- ing Rob Turner (pictured) off-bal- ance. SARA STILLMAN/Daily Reid breaks out of extended slump with four 3-pointers Pitching has more to do with shooting than one might think By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer Michigan guard Robbie Reid got some shooting advice from his coach. But it wasn't from his Brian Ellerbe, his basketball coach. It was from the skipper of the Michigan baseball team - Reid's other coach. "Coach (Geoff) Zahn had it all fig- ured out," said Reid, the two-sport athlete, who will play baseball for Zahn in the spring. "He said the rea- son I'm missing my shots is because I'm a pitcher, and pitchers always go to the corners. "He said, 'You can't shoot to the corners, you've got to shoot the ball down the ' middle.' So after that, we worked it out and now I'm back on track'." Maybe Ellerbe should hire ZahnR as Reid's shooting coach. In yesterday's 112-64 demolition of Indiana, Reid threw mostly fast- balls down the middle., Breaking a six-week shooting slump, Reid knocked in 16 points on 6-of-1l shooting in 28 minutes of action. He connected on 4 of 7 3-pointers and dished out five assists, only turn- ing the ball over once. Just like a pitcher, Reid finally found his location - and luckily for the Wolverines, it was through the bottom of the net. "From the floor, I've been really struggling with my shot," Reid said. "At the same time, I felt great. I've been making shots in practice and I felt like at some point in time my shot would come around. And this game, it came around. And hopefully it will stay there." To say that Reid was struggling is an understatement. Since Michigan's Jan. 6 game against the Hoosiers in Bloomington, Reid had gone ice cold. In the past 11 games, Reid had shot a meager 22.3 percent, convert- ing just 15 of 67 shots. Behind the 3-point arc - from where practically all of Reid's shots are launched - he wasn't shooting well. Since knocking down four 3- pointers against Penn State on Jan. 3, Reid had only made 14 of 57 3-point- ers (24.6 percent). But that all changed yesterday. The contributions to Michigan were an example of "Anything you can do, I can do better." Almost every Michigan player contributed, and each had a spurt of his own that was key in the victory. First, it was Jerod Ward's 18-point, nine-rebound first half. Then, it was the Louis Bullock-Robert Traylor show in first seven minutes of the second half. The two combined to score the first 23 points for Michigan in that span. And then it was Reid's turn to join the party. After scoring eight points and draining two triples in the first half, Reid got hot with 11 minutes left in the game and Michigan leading by 41 points. Although the game was already easily in hand, Reid and the Wolverines didn't show any signs of letting up. Ilfelt like ..my' shot would come around. And this game, it came around."f - Robbie Reid Michigan guard Reid hit a jumper from inside the 3-point arc. On the next Michigan possession, he nailed a 3-pointer from the left of the key and two min- utes later, he connected on another 3- pointer - eight points in 3:14. In Michigan's game against Michigan State on Tuesday, Reid missed on all three 3-point attempts, including the possible game-tying 3- pointer with five seconds remaining. Afterward, Traylor consoled the teary-eyed Reid, who buried his head in Traylor's arms on the bench. Yesterday, Reid, like the rest of the team, broke out in many smiles. When Ellerbe took him out, with the Wolverines maintaining a near-50 point lead, Reid got a loud ovation from the Crisler crowd. It was a well-deserved curtain call for a player who's had his troubles. "I've been appreciative of people being supportive in general, especial- ly my teammates," Reid said. "They all have been behind me - they want me to shoot the ball." Now, Reid knows what to do when his shot is off - think about hard- ball. SARA STILLMAN/Daily While Robbie Reid's defense on Michael Lewis contributed to Indiana's lackluster effort, Reid's offensive production (16 points) made a bigger difference and put an end to a personal shootimg drought. HOOI IER Continued from Page 18 tested the Wolverines, who scored 42 of the half's final 57 points to turn a 12-10 lead into a 54-25 advantage at the break. "Michigan played great," Indiana coach Bobby Knight said. "It was a great game from Michigan's stand- point. "I've only seen them place twice this year, and they were a lot better this time." Indiana pounded the Wolverines in Bloomington on Jan. 6, using 19 points by Andrae Patterson to win 80-62. Yesterday, Patterson didn't score, and the Hoosiers got a total of 25 points from their starting five. "I wish I could figure it out," against Boston University. Last year against Indiana, the Wolverines held an 18-point half- time advantage before losing in overtime, 84-81, in the teams' meet- ing at Crisler Arena. The fact wasn't lost on Traylor, who made it a topic of conversation during halftime of yesterday's game, when the Wolverines led by 29 points. "The first thing I said at halftime was, 'Don't forget last year,"' Traylor said. "We wanted to make a statement, and that's what we did. We wanted to show people that we belong in the NCAA Tournament." After the break, Michigan went on a 19-5 run to begin the second half. Traylor and Bullock combined to score the team's first 23 points of the half, and it wasn't until Ward hit a tr-, with -U . Ar~mni.nv~inathat ccmvvep