OTHEa ~R SPORTS S 0 0 QUICK INFO Nomber 7, 1998 - ; 6 - The Michigan Daily - Football Saturday - November 7, 1998 'day %ff w- v i1 a.7 ,W mate Penn State Record: 6-1 overall (3-1 Big Ten) Coach: Joe Paterno, 33rd season Last meeting: Michigan 34, Penn State 8; Nov. 8, 1997 Overall series: Penn State leads (3-2). Key players QB Kevin Thompson, Jr. WR Chafie Fields, Jr. MICHIGAN LEADERS The two-dee Vigner-t hauls down 16, as 'M' sends Aussies down under By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Editor If there were any doubts about what the Michigan men's basketball team's game plan is going to be this season, the Wolverines made it abundantly clear in the first five minutes of Wednesday's 80-48 exhibition victory over the North Melbourne Giants. The game plan? Three-pointers. Five of Michigan's first six baskets were from long range, and all six were either by Louis Bullock or Robbie Reid. By the time Brandon Smith took a Bullock pass and laid it in -just less than five minutes into the game - for the first points scored by someone other than a member of Michigan's guard tandem, the Wolverines had a 20-4 lead. The Giants inexplicably left Michigan's two sharpshooters wide open from beyond the arc so often that Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said that it was "a distraction. When you're a shooter, you want to have something coming at you." For his fourth or fifth long-range shot," Reid said. "He got a look in the corner that was so wide open that "I was like, 'Wow, this is nice."' Bullock tied his career high with 27 points thanks to 8-for-10 shooting from long range, and Reid added 16 while shooting 4-for-9 from beyond the arc. But what pleased Ellerbe the most was not the play of his guards, but of his frontcourt, where there are more question marks than anything else. Junior Peter Vignier, starting for the first time in his Michigan career, grabbed 16 rebounds and scored seven points. "It was my job," Vignier said of rebounding. "It's what I was supposed to do, so I went out and did it." Forward Josh Asselin recorded a double-double with 13 points and 13 boards, while adding five blocks. The Wolverines had a considerable size advantage over the Australian- based Giants, with both Vignier and Asselin towering over their Aussie coun- terparts. The Wolverines out-rebounded the Giants, 54-38. Freshman guard/forward Leon Jones struggled from floor, hitting only one of his nine shots, but was excellent defensively. "He made some plays that you don't see sophomores make," Ellerbe said. Despite the lopsided victory, Ellerbe saw a lot of room for improvement. The offense has to execute better, cutting back on turnovers, and the defense has to tighten up some holes. One of the Wolverines' biggest problems may have been lack of concen- tration. After holding the Giants to just 18 first-half points, Michigan added 30 in the second stanza. "Once we took control of the game, mentally we got a little lackadaisical," Ellerbe said. "We spent a little too much time focusing on the clock (instead of) focusing on the game." The Wolverines did an excellent job containing Melbourne point guard Antoine Howard. Howard, who scored 18 points against both Indiana and Purdue earlier this week, managed just five last night. In fact, no Giant scored in double figures - their leading scorer, forward Luke Egan, had just nine. PASSING Player Brady Henson Cross G-A 12&203 15-35 0-1 Yds 1484 200 0 RUSHING Player Att Thomas 104 C.Wilams 51 Fargas 63 Cross 20 Shea 13 Jackson 12 Henson 4 Knight 2 Dreisbach 1 vinson 1 Brady 36 RECEIVING Player No. Streets 38a Knight 28 Tuman 20 Terrell 10 Thomas 9 C.Williams 8 Bryant 6 Jackson 6 Campbell 5 Shea 5 Johnson 3 Walker 3 Fargas 1 Feely 1 PUNTING PlayerN Vinson KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Fargas 14 Thomas 5 C. Williams 5 Schanski 2 Brooks I Campbell 1 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Whitley 16 Knight 8 Streets 2 Terrell 2 Patmon 1 Yds 428 271 263 130 65 45 26 4 0 -25 -82 Yds 609 385 185 109 36 56 67 60 45 18 82 25 5 2 Avg 4.1 5.3 3.7 6.5 5.0 3.8 8.3 2.0 0 -25.0 -2.3 Avg 16.0 13.8 9.3 10.9 4.0 7.0 11.2 10.0 9.0 3.6 27.3 8.3 5.0 2.0 TD 8 3 0 L9 69 58 27 66 13 9 17 3 0 0 17 Lg 76 51 22 32 20 21 16 17 13 11 28 18 5 2 Int 6 1 1 TD 5 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 TD 7 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Split End 7 Corey Jones 13 Sam Crenshaw Short Tackle 68 Floyd Wedderburn 78 John Brick Short Gaurd 67 Karen McKenzie 50 Gabe Tincher Center 51 Eric Cole 62 Francis Spano Long Guard 60 Ryan Fagan 55 Greg Ransom Long Tackle 78 John Blick 74 Jordan Caruso Tight End 82 Cuncho Brown 89 Tony Stewart Quarterback 16 Kevin Thompson 12 Rashard Casey Tailback 32 Cordell Mitchell 8 Eric McCoo Fullback 36 Mike Cerimele 25 Aaron Harris Flanker 2 Chafic Fields 1 Bruce Branch Kicker 14 Travis Forney 29 Ryan Primanti El Uj I- pf m Defensive End 90 Juaquin Fea 99 Jake Frysing Defensive Tack 94 Eric Wilson 91 Josh Willian Nose Tackle 58 Rob Renes 60 Nate Miller Outside Linebac 56 James Hall 59 Grady Brool Outside Uneba 40 Eric Rosel 43 Clint Copen Cornerback 30 Andre Weat 3 Todd Howard =I9O No. Yds Avg Lg 40 1612 40.3 55 Wu z w w w Q w H. 2 2 w a Left End 86 Courtney Brown 94 Marc Kielmeyer Left Tackle 95 David Fleischhauer 88 Jason Wallace Nose Tackle 96 Bob Jones 57 Imani Bell Right End 5 Brad Scioli 37 Justin Kurpeikis Outside Linebacker 11 LaVar Arrington 40 Aaron Gatten Inside Linebacker 43 Brandon Short 52 Maurice Daniels Outside Linebacker 31 Mac Morrison 58 Eric Sturdifen Left Cornerback 27 David Macklin 28 Joe Dawkins Right Cornerback 19 Anthony King 10 Bhawoh Juc Free Safety 24 Shawn Lee 6 James Boyd Hero 4 Derek Fox 18 Askari Adams, Punter 41 Pat Pidgeon 33 Greg Kennis W W w U Wide Receiver 86 Tai Streets 9 DiAllo Johnso Left Tackle 79 Jeff Backus 72 Ben Mast Left Guard f 76 Steve Hutch~ 74 Jason Brook Center 64 Steve Frazie 67 David Brand Right Guard 75 Adam Adkin 54 Maurice Wil Right Tackle 77 Jon Jansen 54 Maurice Wil WAHEN4ZINN/Uaily The collision of Michigan guard Louis Bullock (left) and center Peter Vignier might have been one of the only rough spots of Michigan's 80-48 exhibition victory over the North Melbourne Giants Wednesday night at Crisler Arena. State keeps State Pride, breaks spikers' hearts DEFENSE Player Sacks Sword 2 Hendricks 2 Jones 3 Hall 4 Whitley 1 Renes 0 Gold 0 Jordan 0 Weathers 0 J. Williams 1 Patmon 0 Feazell 0 Frysinger 2 G. Brooks 0 Brackins 0 Miller 2 Ray 0 Howard 0 Wilson 0 Foote 1 Schanski 0 Peterson 0 Kratus 0 Copenhaver 0 McCall 1 Jackson 0 Shea 0 Singletary 0 Young 0 Fargas 0 Campbell 0 Epstein 0 Streets 0 Sechler 0 Smokevitch 0 K. Jackson 0 Bryant 0 Jansen 0 Terrell 0 Yds 276 135 116 27 0 16 Yds 142 43 5 15 3 Solo 60 36 29 26 25 22 26 28 25 18 20 7 14 14 12 10 9 9 7 8 7 5 5 3 1 4 2 3 2 3 2 2 2 2 1 0 1 0 1 Avg 19.7 27.0 23.2 13.5 0.0 16.0 Avg 8.9 5.4 2.5 7.5 3.0 Asst 18 17 14 14 12 12 8 4 5 8 6 9 7 6 5 7 5 4 6 2 2 3 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Lg TD 28 0 45 0 32 0 15 0 0 0 16 0 Lg TD 25 0 10 0 5 0 13 0 0 0 Total 78 53 43 40 37 34 34 32 30 26 26 16 21 20 17 17 14 13 13 10 9 8 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 Staff Picks - all picks made against the spread. *Last week's guest selector was . a quarter. Game (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) Penn State (-3) vs. MICHIGAN OHIO STATE (-27.5) vs. Michigan State UCLA (-16.5) vs. OREGON STATE TENNESSEE (-42) vs. Ala,.Birmingham Kansas State (-28.5) vs. BAYLOR FLORIDA STATE (-17) vs. Virginia Nebraska (-26) vs. IOWA STATE OREGON (-6) vs. Washington Syracuse (-2.5) vs. WEST VIRGINIA WISCONSIN (-19) vs. Minnesota SHARAT RAJU JIM ROSE MARK SNYDER r ® By Jon Zemke Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - "I was just really happy to get that game over with," said a relieved Michigan State setter Christie Landry. Landry, who said after the last intrastate match that the Spartans "had to kick (Michigan) while they're down " didn't do much kicking as the Michigan volleyball team almost pulled off a stunning come-from- behind, five-game upset of No. 16 Michigan State on Wednesday. Michigan got off to a slow start, los- ing game one, 15-8. The beginning of the match was close as the two teams traded side outs, but the Spartans crept to a 7-2 lead. Michigan came back to take an 8-7 lead, but Michigan State scored the rest of the points save one, to win. The second game was even worse for the Wolverines. Michigan State dominated to win, 15-3. The third game was a complete opposite of the first two, as Michigan coach Greg Giovanazzi switched set- ters inserting freshman Shannon Melka. The lineup change worked as the Wolverines took a 5-1 lead. Michigan State came back to within one, 8-7, until Michigan scored five more points tom make the score 13-8. Senior outside hitter Linsey Ebert served the game point for the Wolverines to win, 15-11. Michigan held the Spartans to a .023 attack per- centage while registering a .279 clip U of their own. Game four was a mirror image of game three as the Wolverines and Spartans were tied at three, exchang- ing side outs until Michigan scored the game's next six points. Michigan State came back and served three straight points to go ahead 6-9. Michigan served the next five points to end the Spartans' come- back, and held off a smaller Michigan State rally to win, 15-8, tying the match at two games apiece. Senior Karen Chase was on fire in the two victories; she fired six of her 18 kills to become Michigan's all-time kills leader with 1,126. The fifth game saw the two teams trading points, and neither could pull ahead. Michigan State rallied to take a 9-5 lead. The Wolverines crawled back to within two, 11-9. But it was too lit- tle, too late, as Michigan State scored the final four points of the game to avoid the upset, 15-9 and close out the match with a 15-9 win. Michigan Michigan State UCLA Ala.-Birmingham Kansas State Virginia Nebraska Oregon Syracuse Minnesota Purdue Indiana Purdue 5-7 (0-1) 53-43-1 (5-3) 'p Penn State Ohio State UCLA Ala.-Birmingham Baylor Florida State Iowa State Oregon Syracuse Wisconsin Purdue Indiana Syracuse 4-8 (1-0) 41-55-1 (3-5) Michig Michigan Ala:-Brimi Bayk Florida Iowa S Washin Syrac Wisco Purd India Michigar 8-4 (( 45-51-1 Purdue (- Indiana ( Best Bet Last Wee Overall (b 13) vs. NORTHWESTERN -135) vs. ILLINOIS ek best bet)