B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 15, 1999 COLLEGE BASKETBALL From Saturday Bucknell 57, Colgate 45 Cent. Conn. St. 56, Mt. St. Mary's, Md. 54 Connecticut 53, Seton Hall 48 Cornell 74, Harvard 64 Dartmouth 66, Columbia 61 Delaware 80, Vermont 62 Drexel 77, Northeastern 68 East Carolina 59, American U. 53 Fairleigh Dickinson 66, Quinnipiac 49 Georgetown 99, Southern 73 Hartford 65, Towson 56 Hofstra 58, Boston U. 55 Holy Cross 73, Army 59 lona 77, Manhattan 61 Miami 69, Providence 65 Niagara 95, Fairfield 93 Penn 71, Yale 50 Princeton 67, Brown 45 Rhode Island 59, Massachusetts 56 Robert Morris 72, Monmouth, N.J. 70 Rutgers 75, Boston College 62 St. John's 82, Villanova 75 Virginia Tech 79, Fordham 75, OT Wagner 72, St. Francis, Pa. 62 SOUITH Alcorn St. 77, Alabama A&M 68 Appalachian St. 83, VMI 65 Auburn 102, Alabama 61 Coastal Carolina 81, N.C.-Asheville 73 Coll. of Charleston 58, Chattanooga 53 Coppin St. 73, Bethune-Cookman 67 Duke 102, Wake Forest 71 E. Tennessee St. 82, Davidson 73 Fla. International 88, SW Louisiana 65 Florida 75, Georgia 64 Florida A&M 91, Morgan State 67 Florida Atlantic 56, Centenary 55 George Mason 60, N.C.-Wilmington 53 Georgia St. 57, Samford 54 Hampton 64, N. Carolina A&T 53 Jackson St. 65, Grambling State 63 Jacksonville 65, Mercer 61 Jacksonville St. 68, Campbell 60 Kentucky 74, South Carolina 40 Liberty 72, High Point 55 Louisiana Tech 87, W. Kentucky 71 Marshall 81, Toledo 72 Maryland 81, North Carolina 64 Md.-Eastern Shore 71, Howard 54 Middle Tennessee 87, Austin Peay 81 Morehead St. 91, E. Kentucky 69 Murray St. 94, E. Illinois 89, 20T NE Louisiana 78, Northwestern State 58 Old Dominion 70, William & Mary 48 Radford 72, Elon 71 Richmond 78, Va. Commonwealth 72 S. Carolina St. 73, Norfolk State 72 SE Missouri 60, Tenn.-Martin 49 South Florida 72, Southern Miss. 57 Southern U. 71, Alabama St. 53 Stetson 80, Troy State 76 Tennessee 63, Vanderbilt 62 Tennessee St. 68, Tennessee Tech 67 The Citadel 86, W. Carolina 82 UNC-Greensboro 83, Georgia Southern 56 Wofford 69, Furman 57 MIDWEST Ball State 69, Central Michigan 63 Bowling Green 84, Buffalo 61 Cleveland St. 87, Wright State 64 DePaul 81, Memphis 75 Detroit 62, Butler 52 Indiana 69, Northwestern 62, OT Indiana St. 67, Drake 48 Kansas St. 77. Baylor 68 Kent 92, Akron 82 Marquette 69, N.C. Charlotte 59 Miami, Ohio 78, E. Michigan 56 Michigan Sate. 84, Minnesota 82 Missouri 87, Colorado 56 Northern Iowa 87, Wichita St. 82 Nebraska 59, Iowa St. 57 Oakland, Mich. 79, Chicago St. 63 Ohio Sate. 73, Iowa 69 Ohio University 74, W. Michigan 55 Purdue 63, Illinois 56 S. Illinois 80, Evansville 65 SW Missouri St. 61, Bradley 48 W. Illinois 84, Ind.-Pur.-indpls. 79 Wis.-Milwaukee 71, ill.-Chicago 57 Wisconsin 73, Penn St. 63 Youngstown State. 61, Valparaiso 60 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 82, Mississippi State. 62 Arkansas St. 74, Ark.-Lttle Rock 55 Houston 76, Tulane 72 Lamar 83, Texas-Arlington 62 McNeese St. 87, Sam Houston State 72 Miss. Valley St. 84, Prairie View 63 Nicholls St. 104, Texas-San Antonio 99, 20T Oklahoma 102, Texas A&M 75 Oral Roberts 98, Missouri-Kansas City 90 Rice 59, UNLV 55 SW Texas 65, SE Louisiana 51 Southern Meth. 75, Wyoming 72 Texas Christian 84, Colorado St. 79 Texas Southern 84, Ark.-Pine Bluff 68 Texas Tech 90, Kansas 84 Texas-El Paso 70, San Jose State 64, OT Tulsa 78, Air Force 75 FARWET Arizona78, Louisiana State 71 Boise St. 70, New Mexico State 48 Brigham Young 93, San Diego St. 76 CS Northridge 83, Montana St. 62 Cal Poly-SLO 87, Long Beach St. 79 Cal St.-Fullerton 104, UC Irvine 97 California 85, UCLA 67 Gonzaga 69, San Diego 62 Idaho 85, North Texas 66 N. Arizona 74, Montana 53 New Mexico 83, Fresno State 81 Oregon 94, Washington 81 Oregon St. 83, Washington State 64 S. Utah 69, Denver 65 Sacramento St. 66, E. Washington 62 San Francisco 83, Loyola Marymount 71 Southern Cal 86, Stanford 82, OT St. Mary's, Cal. 68, Portland 56 UC Santa Barbara 60, Pacific 38 Utah 82, Hawaii 55 Utah St. 66, Nevada 60 BIG TEN BASKETBALL STANDINGS Through yesterday AP TOP 25 RESULTS Through yesterday 1. Duke (25-1) beat Wake Forest 102-71. 2. Connecticut (22-1) beat Seton Hall 53-48. 3. Auburn (24.1) beat Alabama 102-61. 4. Cincinnati (21-3) lost to St. Louis, 67-59. 5. Mich. State (22-4) beat No. 22 Minn. 84-82. 6. Stanford (20-5) lost to Southern California 86- 82, OT. 7. Maryland (22-4) beat No. 12 North Carolina 81-64. 8. Kentucky (20-6) beat South Carolina 74-40. 9. UCLA (17-7) lost to California 85-67. 10. Arizona (18-4) beat LSU, 78-71. 11. St. John's (20-6) beat Villanova 82-75. 12. North Carolina (19-7) lost to No. 7 Maryland 81-64. 13. Ohio State (19-6) beat No. 19 Iowa 73-69. 14. Utah (20.4) beat Hawaii 82-55. 15. Wisconsin (21-5) beat Penn State 73-63. 16. Miami (17-5) beat Providence 69-65. 17. Indiana (19-8) beat Northwestern 69-62 OT. 18. Syracuse (17.8) beat Pittsburgh 75.67. 19. Iowa (16-7) lost to No. 13 Ohio State 73-69. 20. College of Charleston (23-2) beat Chattanooga 58-53. 21. Purdue (18-7) beat Illinois 63-56. 22. Minn. (14-8) lost to No. 5 Mich. State 84-82. 23. Florida (17-6) beat Georgia 75-64. 24. Kansas (16-8) lost to Texas Tech 9084. 25. New Mexico (206) beat Fresno State 83-81. M' CLUB SPORTS GET YOUR CLUB SPORT HERE Call 647-3336 with your results. 'M' SCHEDULE ThundaI. Feb. 18 Men's basketball vs. Michigan State, 7:30 p.m. Women's Swimming & diving at Big Ten Championships (Bloomington), TBA Men's Tennis at National Team Indoor Championships (Seattle), all day Fday Feb. 19 ' Women's basketball vs. Iowa, 7:30 p.m. Women's gymnastics at Georgia (Athens, Ga.), 7:30 p.m. Men's hockey at Western Michigan, 7 p.m. Women's swimming & diving at Big Ten Championships (Bloomington), TBA Softball at Louisville Slugger Invitational (Gainseville, Fla.), TBA 'Wrestling vs. Penn State, 7:30 p.m. Men's tennis at National Team Indoor Championships (Seattle), all day Women's tennis at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Dallas), all day Saturday. Feb.13 Softball at Louisville Slugger Invitational (Gainseville, Fla.), TBA Men's hockey vs. Michigan State (at Joe Louis Arena), 7 p.m. Rowing at World Indoor Rowing championship (Boston), TBA Men's track at Big Ten Championships (Madison), TBA Women's track at Big Ten Championships (Columbus), TBA .-A.*.t.- tw 3idi n ThdIg 4 ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Who: Stacey Thomas Hometown: Flint High School: Southwestern Sport: Basketball Year: Junior Why: Thomas scored her 1,000th career point against Illinois Friday night ... topped her own Michigan record for steals with her 90th Friday night ... currently has 94 steals this seasnn. Background: Student in the School of Business Administration ... born Aug. 29, 1978 ... daughter of Charles and Norries Thomas ... brother Scott ran track for Florida A&M ... 1997 Big Ten freshman of the Year ... 1998 all-Big Ten second team (coaches) and honorable mention (media) ... 1998 Big Ten steals leader W11F Zi- Women's swimming & diving at Big Ten Championships (Bloomington), TBA Men's tennis at National Team Indoor Championships (Seattle), all day Women's tennis at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Dallas), all day Sunday. Feb. 21 Men's Basketball at Indiana, 12:30 p.m. Women's Basketball vs. Indiana, 2 p.m. Men's Gymnastics vs. Massachussetts, 7 p.m. Wrestling vs. Ohio State, 1 p.m. Softball at Louisville Slugger Invitational (Gainseville, Fla.), TBA Men's Track at Big Ten Championships (Madison), TBA Women's Track at Big Ten Championships (Columbus), TBA Men's Tennis at National Team Indoor Championships (Seattle), all day Women's Tennis at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Dallas), all day COLLEGE BRIEFS sometimes it's a generic put-down. Other times, it seems, it can mean what- ever the crowd wants it to mean.a' And, in the case of Indiana'an "Hoosier daddy," there may have be some wordplay at work. Stanford students chanted it last year at Arizona guard Mike Bibby, who had a strained relationship with his father, Henry Bibby. It appears Knight chose to intevpret the chant in its most literal way. And the Indiana coach insists it has no place-in college basketball. "The crowd can get on my butt, th* have all things to get on my butt abou they'll never run out of them," he said. "But that's not the kind of thing that should be part of college basketball. The crowd needs to have the same class as the team does." I i Bruins weekend lost after two losses 0 Team Michigan State Ohio State Wisconsin Purdue Iowa Indiana Northwestern Minnesota Michigan Penn State Illinois Conference W L 11 1 9 3 6 5 6 5 7 6 6 6 6 6 5 7 4 8 2 10 2 11 Overall W L 22 4 19 6 21 5 18 7 16 7 19 8 14 8 14 8 10 15 10 12 10 15 - Grand Spacious Hare On-Site Prop. #1065 Saturday, March 6 at 3 PM 1942 Cambridge, ANN ARBOR 3,609± sf - 5 Br/3 Ba -Close to University DIRECTIONS: Washtenaw Ave. to Day St., East on Day St. to Cambridge Rd., North to Property. OPEN HOUSE: SAT., FEB. 270 1 - 3 PM PLUS OTHER PROPERTIES TO INCLUDE: MARCH 4, 5 & 6 Doublewide Manufactured Home, Mendon - Home on 4± Acres, Lake Orion - Mult-Family Development Property, Farmington Hills - Industrial Warehouse, Detroit - Beautiful Home, South Bend BIPPUSJ&hn .ippus 50 . ichigan Ave.com INNOVATIVE REAL ESTATE MARKETING Three Rivers, MI 49093 If you know exaCtly what the next year of your life will be like DON'T READ THIS I If, on the other hand, you might be interested in doing something - redib diffeiefe Knight upset over 'Daddy' chants EVANSTON (AP) - Bob Knight, the king of profane outbursts, was offended. Chants of "Who's your daddy?" got him hot. Or was that "Hoosier daddy" that Northwestern students were direct- ing at the Indiana bench? Knight didn't care. He just didn't like it. So once his Hoosiers won 69-62 in overtime Saturday, he pointed to the scoreboard and repeated the same chant to the bleacher section nearest the bench, one filled with students and band members. "I just asked then: 'Who's your daddy now?"' Knight said. Moments later, Knight angrily con- fronted Northwestern coach Kevin O'Neill at midcourt where coaches usu- ally meet after games. Knight lectured O'Neill about the crowd and O'Neill took offense. The Wildcats coach grabbed Knight's trade- mark red warmup before Knight ripped his arm away. O'Neill was intercepted by an Indiana assistant coach. The whole exchange lasted seconds. Less than an hour after the game, Knight and O'Neill cooled off and made peace, meeting on a practice court to shake hands and talk. Knight tried to downplay what hap- pened, choosing to praise Northwestern's strong season, O'Neill and center Evan Eschmeyer. "This is great for Northwestern if that end of the floor would take a course in English etiquette," Knight said. "I didn't think it (the crowd) was hos- tile. I thought it was a great environ- ment except for that end. What more could a team ask for than the crowd behind them like this one was?" O'Neill professed innocence, saying he didn't know what the crowd said and couldn't control it if he did. "Crowds get like that," O'Neill said. "I didn't hear anything. If our crowd said something out of line, I'd be upset. But I don't know what was said." "Who's your daddy?" is not an uncommon cheer in college basketball, :although its meanings are open to inter- pretation. Sometimes parentage is involved; OAKLAND, Calif. - UCLA heade- to northern California ranked No. 9 it the country and in position to vie forthe Pac-10 title. The Bruins headed home with two more losses and doubts about their attitude. An 85-67 loss Saturday at California, the Bruins' biggest margin of defeaton the road to the Bears in 51 years, corn-t pleted a lost weekend that began with a 77-73 loss to No. 6 Stanford.:m Thursday night. 1-1 Baron Davis, who had 27 points:for the Bruins but got .little support from his teammates, said UCLA still seemed to have a hangover from Thursday, night's loss when it got clobbered-by California. . . - "When you lose you move on. If you- can't figure it out, you shouldn't 'be playing basketball," Davis said. "We jvst laid down. If we're going to lose, we should go down fighting. I refuse to fu somebody else treat us like they did." UCLA committed 21 turnovers and, made just four steals as opposed to ripe by the Bears. The Bruins came into te,. game leading the Pac-10 conferenpe with an average of 11 steals per game. "When we got beat by Kentucky and. Stanford, at least we played hard," S4afn Farnham said. "A lot of us have got to start working harder. We didn't expect this." Ex-Hoyas coach to host radio show; WASHINGTON - Former Georgetown basketball coach John Thompson will host a one-hour talk show during the NCAA men's tourna- ment in March, according to a pub- lished report. Thompson's show will be on WTE'4- AM, an all-sports talk station, fror 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., Monday throug Friday, The Washington Post reported. Saturday. Thompson, 57, resigned last month as the Hoyas coach after 27 seasons abd one NCAA championship. He is well known for his lectures, particularly oil matters of race. "John is a man of great depth dnd breadth, and he's going to use (the show) as a challenging opportuntt said Thompson's agent, David Falk. "He's going to discuss a wide range' df topics. I 'l _ , *)ooie1teob OWL di *totally Israel bepyperson~ NOW is the time to decide if you want to spensd a year in Israel PROJECT OTZMA the ultimate real -life exoerience You've got plans to engineer the21st CentuFyE You're looking for a company with the energ , 4 i I i F