The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 28, 1999 - 13 Virginia meets pose early challenge for men's tennis Three Wolverines seeking 10th win By Adam Falkauff For the Daily This weekend the Michigan men's tennis team faces a big challenge when it travels to Charlottesville, Va., to play two pivotal early season matches against Virginia Tech and Virginia. "If we go down to Virginia, play hard, and return to Ann Arbor victorious, it will give us a great deal of momentum going into our upcoming matches;" freshman Ben Cox said. The Hoakies and Cavaliers are ranked 41st and 34th, respectively, in the country by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. The undefeated Wolverines are ranked 59th in the nation, and seventh in the Midwest region. Michigan is led by junior Matt Wright. He is the number one singles player for the team, and has a 9-3 record this sea- son. There are three Michigan players that currently have nine victories. They are Wright, junior John Long and freshman Danny McCain. With a victory this weekend they could each reach double 1 digits in the win column. AP PHOTO Michigan State point guard Mateen Cleaves led the Spartans with 16 points as they beat Ohio State, 76-71, last night. DThe Spartans have sole possession of first place in the Big Ten standings with a 6.1record. Spartans squeak by Ohio State against Hokies and Cavaliers Last year, Michigan barely edged out both Virginia Tech. and Virginia. The Wolverines defeated the Cavaliers in Ann Arbor and the Hokies at a neutral site match in Boise, Idaho. The score in both of the matches was 4-3. Virginia Tech have three players that are ranked among the k top 100 in the country. They are led by the Marchetti brothers, Adam and Aaron. Adam is a sophomore and is ranked 23rd, and his brotheri Aaron, a senior, is ranked 38th. Another big contributor is sophomore Niels Oggeson, a student from Denmark, who is ranked 72nd. Virginia is led by sophomore sensation Brian Vahaly. Vahaly is the second-ranked singles player in the country, and is the pre-season favorite to win the Atlantic Coast Conference men's singles title. The Michigan men's tennis team opened up their dual match season with impressive hgme victories over William & Mary and DePaul. The Wolverines destroyed both teams by the score of 7-0 It was the first time since 1994 that the Wolverines registered back-to-back shutouts. Senior Will Farah ; -and the rest of the Michigan men's tennis team will face some tough com- petition this weekend against Virginia Tech and Virginia. MARiGARET MYERS/Dail Michigan State now EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Michigan State coach Tom Izzo did- n't have to say a word to get point guard Mateen Cleaves' attention at halftime of yesterday's game with Ohio State. "He got in a few guys' faces at halftime, but he gave me that stare;' said Cleaves, who scored 10 of his team-high 16 points in the final 2:09 in lifting the eight-ranked Spartans to a 76-71 victory over 15th-ranked Ohio State. "When I get that stare, I know it's time for me to pick it up." Izzo wasn't happy with the Spartans' first-half offense but cred- ited the Buckeyes for that - at least partly. "We didn't seem to be getting into our offensive sets in the first half, but Ohio State deserves some credit for that," Izzo said. "They were changing up from a man-to-man to a zone and we didn't handle it well. We were running our man offense against a zone and our zone offense in driver's seat atop conference standings against a man. "Mateen did a lot of good things out, there but he has to recognize defenses a little better." Jason Klein and Charlie Bell each finished with 14 points for the. Spartans (17-4, 6-1 Big Ten). Michael Redd had a game-high 20 points for the Buckeyes (15-6, 5-3). Scoonie Penn added 17 points and George Reese a career-high 14. Klein capped a 9-1 run with the first of his three second-half 3-point- ers to give the Spartans a 51-47 lead with 8:36 left. That came during a five-minute stretch in which Michigan State's defense held the Buckeyes without a field goal. "We had put ourselves in a posi- tion to win the game, but Michigan State turned up the defensive intensi- ty more than in the first half," Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien said. "And they did a better job of getting on the glass at the offensive end." Ohio State, which led 37-33 at halftime, extended the margin to 42- 34 with a 3-pointer by Redd early in the second half. Michigan State went ahead 48-46 - its first lead of the second half - on Bell's tip-in off a missed free throw by A.J. Granger with 10:47 left. "We do a lot of work in practice on getting the offensive rebound off a missed free throw," Bell said. "My guy didn't box me out so I went around him and had an easy tip-in. We have a lot of great offensive rebounders, so we'll usually get a couple of them a game off missed free throws." The Buckeyes closed to 72-69 on a 3-pointer by Redd with 9 seconds left before Michigan State free throws sealed the victory. The Buckeyes jumped to a 6-0 lead and kept ahead for most of the first half, during which the Spartans' only lead 23-22 with 5:38 left. Antonio Smith pulled down a game-high I1 rebounds for the Spartans. Iowa holds off Penn State rally DAILY SPORTS ARCHIVES LIVE IN CYBERSPACE. LE IN TRON. www MICHIGANDAILY COM IOWA CITY (AP) - For the second ight game, Iowa got burned from the perimeter. This time, though, the 16th- ranked Hawkeyes escaped. Dean Oliver scored 17 points and Iowa overcame the hot shooting of Joe Crispin to defeat Penn State 84-74 yes- terday, halting a three-game losing streak. In a 72-52 loss to Wisconsin last Saturday, Iowa allowed Jon Bryant to get loose and he responded with six 3-point- while scoring a career-best 22 points. Yesterday, Crispin was almost the hero for the Nittany Lions as he scored 19 of his 27 points in the second half as Penn State gave Iowa all it could handle. "Crispin was tough. He looks like he's coming into his own. He's a real sharp player," Iowa guard Ryan Luehrsmann said. Crispin said he is playing instinctively now instead of trying to think too much. 9"You've just got to go out and play the game. You get an open look, you take it," he said. "I don't try to think about it too much." Iowa jumped out to an early 19-6 lead and built a 15-point advantage in the sec- ond half but couldn't put the Nittany Lions away. "You'd like to be able to put them away, but I think you have to give Penn State credit for that. I think we learned a lot," Iowa coach Tom Davis said. "Penn State is a very good ball club. Their only problem is their schedule, who they've played and where they've played them." Penn State coach Jerry Dunn said his team was too sloppy to steal a road win. "We didn't take care of the ball," he said. "They made us make some poor decisions and they got some easy bas- kets from it." Jess Settles added 12 points, J.R. Koch finished with 11 and Luehrsmann had 10 for the Hawkeyes (14-4, 5-3 Big Ten). Iowa had a 37-34 halftime edge and then withstood the hot shooting of Crispin, who scored a career-high 30 points against Illinois last Saturday. Dan Earl scored 18 points and Calvin Booth had 15 points and five blocked shots for the Nittany Lions (10-8, 2-6), who have lost five of their last six games. Matt Hankins scored 13 points and had eight assists for Penn State. Oliver scored four points in an 8-3 run to start the second half that extended Iowa's lead to 45-37. But Penn State answered with a 9-0 run, capped by Crispin's 3-poi, to take its first lead at 46-45 with 15:06 remaining. Neither team gained more than a four- point edge over the next four minutes. Crispin kept the Nittany Lions in the game with two fallaway jumpers and fin- ished with five 3-pointers in 1l attempts. A 3-pointer by Earl pulled Penn State to within 54-53 at the 11:22 mark, but Koch's reverse layup with 10:59 remain- ing ignited a 15-1 run, capped by Settles' free throw, that gave Iowa a 69-54 lead with 7:02 to play. Koch had six points during the spree. Crispin scored eight of his team's final 15 points, including a 3-pointer with 1:11 remaining that brought Penn State within 74-68. But Luehrsmann hit a free throw, Oliver scored off a steal and the Hawkeyes hit five of six free throws to hold on. ... _ ni o0l