Fcoreboard. *MEN'S NCAA (18) OKLAHOMA ST. 90, -BASKETBALL Northwestern St 65 (23) UMASS 87, UNC-Wilmington at Niagara 73 (14) WASHINGTON, inc. (11) N. CAROLINA 65, WOMEN'S NCAA Florida International 44 BASKETBALL (16) PURDUE 77. llinois-Chicago 61 (16) G. WASH. 72, Georgetown 54 (1) TENNESSEE 108 St. Joseph 63 (20) Florida 70, BAYLOR 58 NFL FOOTBALL Denver 30, KANSAS CITY 7 SPO£RTS~a kI~ 5fpckng 'M' winners After much discussion, the Daily football writers picked a winner in the movie title contest - Dawn Harris, for "That's Still Not How You Played Last Season." Harris wins a copy of College Football '99 for Sony Playstation. Tuesday November 17, 1998 9 M' decides not to play insult game Not n the Cards I By Marc Snyder Daily Sports Editor Packed with print, radio and television edia, Weber's Inn hosted its weekly football press luncheon yesterday under the intense glare of the media spotlight. But after two hours of sitting, listen- ing and watching, nothing of signifi- cance occurred. The orchestrated parade of Michigan players cautiously strolled to the podium one by one, trembling at the thought of making news. The irony of the "questioning" was astounding. Nearly every media member ed their instrument of destruction to elicit a damaging comment. Print reporters extended tape recorders, televi- sion reporters protruded wireless micro- phones and the rest of those in atten- dance inflamed the situation merely with their inquiries. But the Michigan players - all upperclassmen efficiently skilled in political correctness - weren't biting. With the Ohio State game creeping er closer, no player - from either W'am - wanted to have his quote give the opponent any type of fuel. "You never want to give anyone any- thing to put up on a bulletin board," said senior co-captain Jon Jansen, an 1-time all-press conference team member this season. At least Michigan made an effort to avoid confrontation by steering the inter- action in a different direction. The ploy, markably consistent in its message trom first speaker Jansen to Lloyd Carr, who spoke last, was a focus on how the Wolverines "respect the opponent" That's not to say that reporters weren't digging for that inflammatory nugget anyway. In an interview with Rob Renes, one television reporter pounded away War for the Roses Michigan contrlw t tiny. With a vic- tory, the Wolvernerhead to the Rose Bowl. Read The Daily's special section Friday pr- viewing Saturday's showdown at The Horseshoe. Nov. 21. 1998 " Noon O Ohio Stadium I with six nearly identical questions before succumbing with a "Don't you realize what I'm trying to do here?" The unusual nature of the discourse could be expected. Columbus media drove more than three hours to elicit a reaction for the big game, while their Michigan counterparts were sent in the other direction. None of this would occur if the game's implications weren't so huge. Jansen called Ohio State "the best team in college football" and Renes pointed out that "Ohio State is still same team that was rated No. 1" for most of this season. Even fans west of the Mississipp, have a vested stake in the outcome. The Las Vegas oddsmakers opened the bet- ting line with the Buckeyes as 10 1/2- point favorites, but the Wolverines were quick to dismiss such extraneous ele- ments asa factor. "For this game, I don't know if you can put a point spread," Jansen said. "So many things go into (the game). You can't gauge those emotions." FEELING IT: Michigan placekicker Jay Feely was recognized for his three field goal effort against Wisconsin as he won the Big Ten special teams player-of- the-week award. Ball State rolls past Blue, 7-6 By Pranay Reddy Daily Sports Editor Last night at Crisler Arena, the worst-case sce- nario unfolded for the Michigan men's basketball team. The Wolverines (0-2 overall) - a team low on depth and heavily dependent on the play of guards Louis Bullock and Robbie Reid - were victimized by poor execution and incon- sistent guard play in their home opener, losing 75-64 tod Ball State 75 Ball State (1-0).-Michgan 64 After finding themselves down after the first half, the Wolverines came out firing after intermission, cut- ting an 12-point deficit to one by scoring the first I1 points of the half. Keying Michigan's surge in the second half were forwards Brandon Smith and Josh Asselin, who came out of their first-half shells and scored four points apiece during the run. But that's where it ended for the Wolverines. "You don't want to dig a big hole, spend your ener- gy coming back, get there, and then not have enough to get over the hump," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. "That's what we did. We dug ourselves a hole and weren't able to get out." Ball State held off the Michigan onslaught, main- ly through fundamental play and a defensive stand where the Wolverines were held to four points in five minutes during the second half. "Down the stretch, when we had to, we played with great poise," Ball State coach Ray McCallum said. "We knew Michigan would come out after the half and get (its) wake-up call. "We got the stops that we needed to, we moved the basketball, and then we made enough free throws to hold onto the win." Michigan's first half started off slow, as Reid and Bullock faltered on the majority of their early scor- ing opportunities, especially 3-point attempts. Reid See CARDINALS, Page 10 I DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Josh Asselin tried to be a physical presence last night against Ball State, and in a way he was, commit- ting five personal fouls. But his six points weren't enough to push the Wolverines past the Cardinals. Rebuilding or not, teams put bullseye on Blue S omewhere on the banks of the Hudson River, David Letterman is smiling. The red-haired comedian's alma mater, the Ball State Cardinals, top- This play on Saturday resulted in - season-ending surgery for Justin Forges yesterday. The freshman tall- back had two. bones In his lower leg. fused together. - WARRENZINN/Daily " Farashas surgery pled the Wolverines, 75-64, pulling off an upset on par with David vs. Goliath, or, well, K e v i n Eubanks vs. P a u l Schaeffer. Forget the fact that mighty Michigan JOSH KLEINBAUM Apocalypse Now are usually the butt of jokes on his talk show - to Ball State fans, even to the Cardinals themselves, this was- n't just another victory. "These guys grew up watching the Fab Five," Ball State coach Ray McCallum said, his voice almost as big as his smile. "It's a great thrill, and a great win for a program." For the second time in as many games, the Wolverines found them- selves playing the Schaeffer/Goliath role as images of Traylor, Chris Webber, Glen Rice and Cazzie Russell danced through opponents' heads. Last Friday, the Wolverines' trip to Florida International drew the largest crowd in Golden Panther Arena histo- ry. Everyone was given pom-pons, commemorative cups were made up and the upper section of the arena was opened for the first time in years., Fans had to harken back to a 1984 game versus Georgetown to remem- ber a similar atmosphere. And after the Panthers pulled off the 69-62 upset and the packed house stormed the court and mobbed its heroes, Florida International President Modesto Maidique declared it the greatest athletic victo- ry in the school's history. Last night, the Wolverines didn't have the benefit of a packed house. Crisler Arena hosted a fair number of fans - 9,932 to be exact - but was about as intimidating as, well, David Letterman. With seven new players on their roster, including one freshman starter, an intimidating crowd could have put the Cardinals on their heels from the get-go - that's what Florida International did to Michigan. Instead, it was the Wolverines backpedaling, playing like they didn't belong on the same court as their opponents. "We've got to go out and put bod- ies on people, and that starts with the big men getting physical," Michigan guard Louis Bullock said. "Right now, we don't do that until our backs are against the wall." By the time the Wolverines decided to play, they were trailing 28-9 with the game more than a quarter done. If they were looking for inspiration from the hallowed tradition of their school, they picked the wrong sport. Fielding Yost's great point-a-minute team played football, not basketball. And the Wolverines aren't done playing the Goliath role. When Detroit-Mercy comes to Crisler Arena on Thursday, Perry Watson will bring a team made up largely of players who weren't recruited by Michigan. Then, after a three-day jaunt in Hawaii, Towson and Bradley,y a pair of teams who gave the Wolverines fits last sea- son, awaits. It doesn't matter that Michigan is young and inexperienced. As far as most of its nonconference opponents are concerned, Michigan is a power- house with a big bullseye right on the block-M. David Letterman, enjoy it while you can. I'm watching Leno tonight. - Josh Kleinbaum can be reached via e-mail at jkbaum n@umich.edu. y Mk nyer Daily Sports r 3 Michigan freshman tailback Justin Fargas underwent a surgical procedure yesterday to fuse two bones in his lower leg that were broken in Saturday's victory. Initially, the injury suffered against Wisconsin was thought to be a knee dislocation, but Michigan coach Lloyd Carr clarified his .postgame comments at yesterday's. media luncheon. "Paul Schmidt, our trainer, and mnyself, I swore I saw him put his knee back into place and it was dislocated, but in fact it was the ankle," Carr said. "The tibia and the fibula were both broken just above the ankle. They did not think there was any damage to the knee this morning (when they re-examined it), which is really a blessing. They're doing surgery, (associate team physician) Dr. Ed Wojtys is doing the surgery to reset the broken bones in the legs.' Until the final five minutes of the victory over Wisconsin, Fargas only saw the field on the special teams. But with the outcome firmly in, hand and two other Michigan backs over 100 yards, he got a few garbage-time carries. On his final rush, when he was dragged down for a two-yard loss, his leg twisted in an unusual manner, causing the injury. Michigan's dominant frontcourt of Robert "Tractor" Traylor, Maceo Baston and Jarod Ward are all gone. Forget the fact that they're replaced by Josh Asselin, Brandon Smith and Peter "I'm allowed to dunk?" Vignier, none of whom played more than five minutes a game last season. To Letterman - whose Cardinals JUST THREE MORE DAYS UNTIL THE DAILY'S WAR FOR THE ROSES. L* r rr i --~1 , JV W £ NGL. NA , , ] I,17E7CATU'RE The Michigan Union Program Board and Mortar Board proudly present: Faculty Wednesdays at the University Club THE PANHELLENICASSOCIATION, INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL, UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE, UM ATHLETICS, AND STUDENT AFFAIRS PROGRAM COUNCIL PRESENT ONE NIGHT OF DRINKING, A LIFETIME OF CONSEQUENCES ALCOHOL AWARENESS PRESENTATION "He uses both humor and real life stories to provide a fun and educational program on the dangers of alcohol abuse." - Bradley Holcman, IFC President SPRI.NG C'y