14A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 3, 1998 Smith makes return Ellerbe wary of ACC games in December By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Editor Maybe Brandon Smith should fly halfway across the country before every game. The sophomore forward flew from Texas to Michigan just hours before the game. After a slow start, it was the basketball doing the fly- ing - from Smith's hands into the net. in a three-minute span, Smith hit three 3-pointers, grabbed two offensive rebounds, tipped in his own shot and hit a free throw, scoring 13 straight Michigan points. "The first half, I took a little while to get going," Smith said. "At half ---------------- time, Coach (Brian) Ellerbe Basketball really jumped all over me. In the second half, I camp out NOtebOOk more aggressive looking for ----------------- my shot and I was a little more productive." Smith, whose grandmother passed away this past Saturday, was at home in Amarillo, Texas, for the funeral. He missed Monday's 60-45 vic- tory over Towson State. "I've been going through a lot these past couple of weeks," Smith said. "It was tough to concentrate. Basketball has been the farthest thing from my mind. I haven't touched a ball in three or four days." GIVE ME AN 'H': If Michigan guard Robbie Reid were playing a game of horse, pretty much everyone would have an 'H'. Everyone knew that Reid has great range. Michigan'sChris Young tries to get a hand on a rebound in last night's Michigan victory. Young had four points and five rebounds in 18 minutes of action. MARGARET MYERs/Daily And if he had any doubters, well, he pretty much shut them up yesterday. Midway through the first half, Reid was dribbling the ball with about 10 seconds on the shot clock. He tried to pass inside, but had the ball deflected. When he grabbed it just shy of midcourt, the clock was running out of time and Reid was running out of options. So Reid took two steps forward and launched the 30-footer. And he hit it. "When Robbie Reid hit that 3-pointer, it took a lot out of us," Bradley coach Jim Molinari said. Reid was stellar all day. He hit three long- range shots in the first half and added one more in the second, scoring 16 total for the Wolverines. WHO NEEDS A CHALLENGE?: While the Big Ten-ACC Challenge might be great for college basketball, the Big Ten and the Atlantic Coast Conference, Ellerbe isn't sure how great it is for Michigan. "We play Duke every year," Ellerbe said. "I hope that suffices as our one ACC game. We don't want to play two ACC teams in December." The two-day event, which the two confer- ences agreed to earlier this week, has nine Big Ten teams taking on nine from the ACC. Ohio State and Indiana have already agreed to skip the Challenge. REDDY Continued from Page IA Luckily for Ellerbe, he hasn't had to d6 that yet. In fact, the Wolverines have given all they can overthe past coupleOf weeks, with all five starters avemagiiT nearly 30 minutes per game. The trouble starts when Michigats - big men are forced to do a lot of moving on the defensive side of the ball. Bradley coach Jim Molinari directly questione Michigan's ability to defend athlet post players - despite getting little pre duction from his starting frontcourt. As evidenced by the score, the stami na that left Michigan during games with Syracuse and Utah in Maui wasn't a problem. But in the two losses, the close contests slipped away just as easily as did Michigan's legs. And where did it hurt the most? Just look at the 'little things' like grabbing rebounds and set- ting screens - the two facets of tl game that have hurt the Wolverines tW most in their losses this season. "They've been in most games to the end, but haven't been able to finish," Bradley coach Jim Molinari said. Brandon Smith And that will be the difference scored 12 points between surprising people this season or last night, hours living down to exceedingly low expecta- after getting off a tions. This week in practice, Ellerbe got flight from his on his players hard for their lack of Shome in Texas. In aggression and inability to do the litk one stretch in the things. econd half, His yelling may have paid dividends mith hit 3-point- last night, but the question still remains. ers on three Will it continue? onte lotrips - Prtnay Reddy can be reachel aRGd RET MSefl o.y via e-m ail atp l g m iCh.ed' 'M' sinks Bradley in style, 74-44 IN MANY COMPANIES IT TAKES YEARS TO PROVE YOU CAN LEAD... ee ~ 1C r ' WE'L GvEou10 WEES Ten weeks may not seem like much time to prove you're capable of being a leadec. But if you re tough, smart aiid determined, ten weeks and a lot of bard work could make y u an Officer of let nes. And Officer Candidates School IOCS) is where you'll get the chance to prove you've got what it takes to lead a life full of excitement, full of challenge, full of honor. Anyone can say they'ye got what it takes to be a leader, we'll give you ten weeks to prove it. For more informatioii call t-8g0-MARINE, or contact us on the Internet at: wwwMarinescom The Few The Proud. kf S N BRAVES Continued from Page UA Braves in the paint, outrebounding them 35-29. "Their post players are very physi- cal," Bradley coach Jim Molinari said. "And if you're not physical, you're going to struggle against Michigan." And although Bullock's big day will seem to be the storyline in the box score, Ellerbe gave plenty of credit to his post players for Michigan's perime- ter success. "We were very good in many differ- ent areas tonight," Ellerbe said. "The guards are the strength of the team, but our big guys had to set screens and help those guys." Bullock and Reid, who nailed a team-high four threes in the game, reaped the benefits of hard work by players like Josh Asselin, Peter Vignier and Chris Young. "We had many open looks tonight, and that was rare," Bullock said. "If we can get open looks and make the shots, that puts a lot of pressure on their defense." And while you can't fault the Bradley defenders for leaving Reid open from 30 feet, the senior's heave No Great recovery: to Duke CHICAGO (AP) - Duke had a great start, Trajan Langdon had a perfect first half and the fourth- ranked Blue Devils had enough to hold off a comeback by No. 9 Michigan State for a 73-67 victory in the Great Eight last night. Duke (6-1) had lost the No. 1 ranking it held since the preseason poll when it fell to No. 6 Cincinnati 77-75 in the championship game of the Great Alaska Shootout on Saturday night. Michigan State (4-2) had the tough task of trying to make it a two-game losing streak for the Blue Devils, and it was the start that did in the Spartans, who did get as close as three points in the second half. Langdon finished with 23 points, while William Avery had 14 and Chris Carrawell and Elton Brand added 12 each for Duke. Junior forward Morris Peterson had a career-high in points for the second straight game, finishing with 24, three more than he had against Western Michigan. Preseason All- American Mateen Cleaves finished with nine points on 3-for-17 shoot- ing. Duke's start couldn'thave been much more impressive on both the offensive and defensive ends. The Blue Devils scored the game's first 13 points and Michigan State had to call a timeout just 3:08 into the game. After a Michigan State basket, Langdon canned a 3-pointer while being fouled. He made the free throw, and the Blue Devils led 17-2. Duke had a 17-point lead three times in the opening nine minutes, the last time at 26-9 on a turnaround jumper by Brand with 11:01to play. The Spartans, who missed eight of their first 10 shots and had six turnovers in the opening 7:50, was as crucial as it was crowd-pleasing for Michigan. The wild shot came dur- ing a mammoth first-half run for Michigan, one that put the Wolverines ahead for good. After Reid's buzzer beater put Michigan up 18-11 with 9:02 left in the first half, Bullock followed the lead of his backcourt mate. He scored six straight points and assisted on another Reid three, helping Michigan go on a 21-3 run in the final minutes of the half. The Wolverines went into the lockerroom with a commanding 34-18 advantage. "Coach made it a point for us to be aggressive from the start," Bullock said. "We wanted to attack them from the beginning." And when Bullock and Reid gave their shooting arms a rest, sophomore forward Brandon Smith took over the duties from downtown. After a score- less first half, Smith came out of the break gunning. During a one-and-a-half-minute stretch, Smith nailed threes on three straight trips down the floor. Smith went on to score 12 straight points for the Wolverines as they extended their sizeable lead over the Braves to 58-27 with 9:43 left in the game. BRADLEY (44) FG Ft RED MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Hail 19 2-3 3-4 01 1 2 7 Robinson a8 s-s 5-5 2-5 1 1 12 KirIsh 23 29 4-6 3-7 0 2 8 oye 27 2-7 0-0 0-2 1 5 5 Roberson 27 0-3 0.1 0-3 3 3 0' Lee 17 2-4 0-1 15 0 1 4 Clancy 6 04 0-0 0-1 0 0 Schairer 16 02 0so os1o051 0 Koita 19 4-7 0-0 1-2 1 2 8 Atkins 8 01 0-0 00 1 1 0 Totals 200 1542 12.17 5.29 81544 FG%:.357. FT%: .705.3-point F: 2-10.200 (ty 1-4, Robinsons1-2, Robersons 0-2, Clancy 0-1, Schairer0-1).Blocks: 6(Roberson2, Koita 2, Kirsh 1. Lee 1,) Steals: 5 (Roberson 3. Kirsh 1, oye 1). Turnovers: 20 (Roberson 5, Dye4, Hall 3 Robnson 2, Kirsh 2, Koita 2, Lee 1). Technical Fouis: 0. MICHIGAN (741 PT REB MIN M-A U-A 0T A PPTS Jones 29 1-7 0-0 02 0 4 2, Asselin 20 1-3 1-3 3-6 2 4 4 Vignier 32 2-4 0-0 2-5 1 3 4. Reidi 33 5-12 2-2 0-4 4 0 16 Buloik 27 9-15 8-10 3-5 2 1 29 Taylor 3 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 15O0 Scott 1 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Gibson 1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Oliver 9 01 00 01 0 0 0 Dening 1 0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0- SitS 23 47 1-2 3-4 1 4 Young 18 1-1 2-3 45 1 2 Szyndlar - 3 11 0.0 0-0 0 0 3' Totals 200 2454 152013-35 12 20 74 FG%: .444. FT%: .750. 3-point FG: 11-23. .478. (Reid 4.9. Bullock 3-6, Smith 3-5, SzyndIar 1-1, Jones 0-2). Blocks: 2 (Vignier)S steals: 4 (Reid 2. Taylor, Smith). Turnovers: 12 (Jones 3, Vinier 3,. Bullock 2, Asselin, Reid, Smith. Young). Tchnical Fouls: 0. Bradley .................... 18 26 - 44 Michigan........................34 40- 74 At: crisier Arena A PPHOs Duke's Chris Carrawell tries to get a shot off despite pressure from Michigan -, State's Antonio Smith in the first half last night. picked up the defense and finally made some shots and were within 36-30 with 53 seconds left on a 3- pointer by Cleaves - justrhis sec- ond field goal of the game. Langdon was 6-for-6 from the field, including four 3-pointers, in scoring 17 first-half points as Duke shot 70 percent from the field (14- for-20). Michigan State trailed 56-47 with 11:41 left when it went on an 8- 2 run to get within 58-55 on a rebound basket by Jason Klein with 6:12 to play. Avery, the MVP of the Great Alaska Shootout, hit a long 3-point- er after an offensive rebound a minute later that started a 6-0 run that gave the Blue Devils a 64-55 lead. The Spartans did get as close as five points twice the rest of the but the Blue Devils went 7-of-10 from the foul line over the final 90 seconds to seal the win. The Blue Devils have not lost consecutive games since early March 1997 and have not lost two straight non-conference games since Dec. 6 and 9, 1989, when they were beaten by Syracuse and Michigan. Michigan State has lost four of its past five games against top competition, with the lone win c ing in last year's NCAA Tournament against No. 8 Princeton. The Spartans lost their next game to fourth-ranked North Carolina and were eliminated from the tourney. It was their second loss to a top 10 squad in March 1998 - they were beaten by Purdue in a regular-season game just weeks earlier.