12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 10, 1998 Men thump Eagles EAG LES- Continued from Page 9A MICHIGAN (I R 16-point lead was cut to seven. MIN -A C0 "You're down 15 points, you bet- Jones 20 3-10 3-3 0 Smith 32 2-4 8-10 0 ter do something, Barnes said. Vigner 28 56 01 3 But the Wolverines responded by ue 35 10-16 1-122- doing something, too - something, Olver 3 0-0 1.2 0 Asln 11 0-2 1-2 0 that they've struggled with all sea- Young 28 0 4-4 0 son. They put an opponent away. Scott1r 2 0.0 0.0 0 And, surprise, surprise, Bullock Gibson 1 0.0 0.0 0 Denning 1 GO0.0 0- led the charge. Szyndlar 2 00 12 0 The senior scored nine points in a Totals .204.2246% 343 6-: two-minute span as Michigan scored (Bullock 3-7, Reid 3-9, smith 1-1, Jo Blocks: 2 (Asselin, Bullock). Steals: 11 straight, shooting down the Bullock 2, Vignier 2, Reid 2, Asselin Turnovers: 16 (Reid 4, Jones 3, Smit Eagles' soaring hopes. Asselin, Bullock, Taylor). Technical I But unlike most coaches after a loss, Barnes wasn't quick to give EASTERN MICHIGAN (68 accolades to the victors. MIN -A U-A "Michigan's a decent ballclub," Warner 38 7-12 2-6 5-1 Barnes said. "They've got some Radney 20 1 3 o 1 matchup problems that some teams Hard 24 3 -10 13 - could exploit, but we couldn't. We're Ebeer 3 GO g0-0 Roao 5 0- - - just not talented enough to win yet." Wells 6 0-1 0-0 1- Ellerbe does have more talent to VanOrden 16 3-0 0-0a work with, but he's not quite sure MGee 18 1-1 2-3 a: Somevile0 O-0 0-0 0-t how to use it yet. Last night, he went Tanner 6 0-0 2-2 0- with a new-look starting five, FG%:.396.Ft%:.471.3-pointFG:5 benching Josh Asselin in favor of a (Erquhart 2-7, Hadley 2-6, Tarrant 1- 2, Wells 0-1, Howard 041). Blocks: 2 three-guard lineup, putting Leon McGee). Steals: 7 (Howard 4, Erquh Jones with Reid and Bullock in the 3,c Tunowerd 2 Hadr , Th backcourt. McGee, Van Orden, Sommerville). Te none. "W e didn't do it for Leon, we did Michigan............................38 it for Brandon (Smith)," Ellerbe Eastern Michigan.............24 said. At: Convocation Cente Asselin has constantly been in Atten tiance?,47 foul trouble this season - he fouled out with 7:32 left yesterday, playing) just 11 minutes -and Ellerbe cited "AMlC him for lack of aggressiveness in the M 1c paint. With the three guards creating opportunities for Smith, Ellerbe thought the sophomore could use his By Andy Latack athleticism to exploit a small. Daily Sports Wrter Eastern front line. Smith responded YPSILANTI -- Despite l by scoring 13 points. for most of last night's game Ellerbe hasn't decided if Asselin accuse Eastern Michigan will start Saturday's game versus unprepared. Like everyc Duke. Michigan has played this The Blue Devils have a much big- Eagles were well awar ger, stronger, more experienced Michigan could beat them. frontcourt than Eastern Michigan. Michigan guards Louis B New arena finally home for Eagles .3 0-T A F PTS -1 2 2 7 2 4 5 13 -7 3 2 10 13 5 3 15 11 0 3 34 -1 0 0 1 -2 0 5 1 x7 14 26 86 -20000 cones 1-3) n, Jones). -T A F PTS 12 1316 .1 0 0 0 5 1 3 2 L-2 6 2 10 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 }- 2 4 )-1 0 0 1 i-21,.238. ERomano 0 1 (Smithar, Bart, Romano, JonaE)ha uchnical Fous: 48 - 86 439 - 63 er DAVID ROCHKIND/Daiy Although guard Robbie Reid took a spill on this play, Michigan walked all over Eastern Michigan last night. The Wolverines evened their record at 5-5 on the sea- son with the 84-63 victory. fall too much for Eagles By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer YPSILANTI - Walk the halls deep inside Convocation Center. The scent of new paint and con- struction dust has settled, leaving the new home of Eastern Michigan's basketball and volleyball teams with the faint scent of newness, and little else. Even though both decks of seats seem to hover directly over the free- throw lines, there's still plenty of room in a new arena such as this. Plenty of room, it seems, for sto- ries. Which, for Eastern's men's basket- ball team, is a good thing. They'd probably just as soon for- get the way they opened The Convocation Center, with an 84-63 loss to Michigan The Eagles' new digs for the next millennium have a lot going for them. And with the NBA locked out, they've got the market for gaudy paint jobs, laser-light shows and black pants-wearing dance teams cornered. For player introductions, the lights were turned off. Bass-heavy dance music blared from the darkness and a spotlight shone the rotating silhouette of an Eagle onto the floor. Even though the floor is painted between the 3-point arc and the key, and the arena has luxury boxes, there's one touch that makes it a true college basketball arena. The student section - and there is a designated student section -- is in the lower bowl of seats. And in the second half, it's at the end of the court that Eastern defends. But perhaps the best feature of the student section - it's free. And even a below-capacity crowd of 7,646 was able to fill the arena with noise, especially when Eastern's press cut Michigan's lead to seven early in the second half. "You want to go to a place that's full and crazy," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said after the game. As for the actual game-friendli- ness of the place, Michigan guard Louis Bullock seemed impressed as he scored 34 points - a career high. "It's beautiful," the senior said after the game. "It's a nice place .to play in." Some arenas evoke ghosts of past players and the goosebumps raised in chanting, bobbing masses of col- lege students. Tate of the Tape Some vital statistics on Eastern Michigan's newly completed Convocation Center, which was completed prior to this season and officially dedicated before last night's game: Cost $29.6 million Capacity (basketball) 8,824 Capacity (special events) 9,780 Square Footage 204,316 Architects Rossetti Associates/The Argos Group Eagles' record at Convocation Center 0-3 kI 0, Next up for the Michigan basket- ball team is just such a place - Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadiun Il looking lost e, you can't of being other team year, the e of how Bullock and Robbie Reid would have to lead the charge .for the Wolverines to win, as will be the case all season long. And being a perimeter-oriented team, there is one thing Michigan needs to succeed - open looks at the basket. Coach Brian Ellerbe knows this, and devotes plenty of his offensive game- plan to getting Bullock, Reid and the rest of Michigan's shooters clear shots. And in last night's lopsided victory over the Eagles, the Wolverines were getting plenty of open looks. But they didn't come off any screens, cuts or inbound plays that Ellerbe drew up. No, the Wolverines were even more open than that. Because at the grand opening of their brand new Convocation Center, the Eagles were fired up. And very out of control. Which resulted in plenty of open looks for the Wolverines - from the free-throw line. "Both teams were really eager to make plays," Ellerbe said. "That con- tributed to the game being a little slop- py." Sloppy is exactly what last night's game was, from start to finish. The first half of the game was sloppy, with nei- ther team shooting over 40 percent from the floor. The second half was sloppy as well, with five players fouling out and Eastern Michigan center K.C. Tanner being ejected for a flagrant elbow to the head of Michigan center Josh Asselin. And the final statistics were sloppy, especially from the Eagles' standpoint, as they did not shoot over 50 percent from the field or the free throw line. Michigan struggled from the floor as well, but still managed to blow out Eastern Michigan, thanks to free throws - those open looks that come from 15 feet away with the clock stopped. The Wolverines shot 79 percent from the line against the Eagles, and when you go to the line 43 times, as Michigan did, that results in plenty of points. And while Bullock can drain a wide- open 3-pointer as well as anyone in the country, his free throws are even more automatic. The senior is shooting 91 percent from the line this season. Against the Eagles, Bullock, who again re-wrote his personal record book with a career high of 34 points, was even better than his average, going I I - of-12 from the line. And four of his free throws were cru- cial, coming during a 30-second stretch midway through the second half and putting an end to the Eagles' only threatening run of the game. "Every game I go into, I tell myself that I want to get to the foul line," Bullock said. "If I get my foul shots going, it helps me get my shot in rhythm, which I've been able to do late- ly." And even when Michigan wasn't converting from the charity stripe, it was taking advantage of the Eagles' lackluster offensive play. The Wolverines' starting five tallied 10 steals on the day, as the Eastern Michigan guards managed to equal their dubious average of 20 turnovers per game. "We scrapped tonight;" Bullock said. "That was the key. We got after them on defense." where every rafter and every bolt has borne witness to legend after legend, and the cheers of two NCAA championship seasons in thi decade. Cameron is also home to a legion of fans - the Cameron Crazies - { who are known for their ability to shower taunts and derision upon a struggling opponent, as well as their ability to make noise. "That's what college basketball is - all about," Ellerbe said. Even Crisler Arena, certainly not included in the Pantheon of arenas with names like Maples or Rupp, has absorbed the stories of the Fab Five, and countless others, into its cush- - ioned seating. But at Eastern, the only stories are sealed beneath layers of varnish and- green paint. The floorboards are the very ones.,J. upon which Kentucky and Utah bat- . - tied last year for the NCAA title. Although that will probably be a close to the NCAA Tournament as . the Eagles come this year, they've got time. r They played in their previous home, Bowen Field House, for 43 years. So far, Convocation Center has lasted one game. 401 E. Huron 9t. (walking distance from campus) :0 769-0560 f 3t 3 t ..Wy..._.i l x?! r \ - DAVID ROCHKIND/Da Iy ,Freshman guard Leon Jones made his second start of the season last night, as coach BrianEllerbe altered his starting lineup against the smaller Eagles. } a :: a F i i \"' _ R '. J 'T 5 y :i r= - - tk-t \ Y.4 r \ rtf A w.,.,i , § E ' , Y \ ii , t 9P ... .. . ., -, \ ; rle §O2c! i5S O 1-orIiB1iN'G! ecL6PZKS--Take orders for advertising services and balloons 'OivEP--Drive one of those cool little university trucks! Ci2APd4iC AzriSr--Design diag boards and banners. Contact sundholm@umich.edu for more information! These are student positions. Deadline is December 21.- AML NOW- Iri Ii t, $ . .ea - . ., 73