Quote of the w That's got to be some ki - Michigan coach, complete disbelief after he forward Luke Reckers 22 performance again Indiana's Luke *cker was the beneficiary of many whistles g e t t i n g t o t h line for 24 free throws in a 73-71 victory over , Michigan. AP PHOTO Oliver sees b By Josh Klelnbaum Daily Sports Editor BLOOMINGTON - Sometimes the biggest spark can come from the most unexpected places. Yesterday, it was Ron Oliver, the little backup guard with the big eyes and the bigger heart. "He competes," Michigan coach Brian yrbe said. "He goes in there and hangs it a on the line. We're the last team in America that should be holding back, and Ron doesn't hold back." His line in yesterday's 73-71 loss wasn't anything special - four points, two assists, two rebounds and one turnover - but his hustle and aggressive style of play was. In his 17 minutes -- the most he's played in a Big Ten game - Oliver was every- where, diving for loose balls and jumping ui for rebounds against guys nine inches Or than him. But his biggest contribution was on defense, wheree helped stifle one of the conference's top perimeter snipers. Drawing the task of guarding Indiana's AJ. Guyton, Oliver helped hold the guard to just 13 points. And it wasn't because Guyton was having an off day - he hit half "H ots"MichiganohBra Ste w e Amr tate Whudehln bak n big Ten tite EAST LANSING - A big, hand-lettered sign in Michigan State student section said it all: "Ain't no 4 this year!" This time, the Spartans have the Big Ten chan onship all to themselves. Michigan State clinched the conference regular 9 son crown as Morris Peterson scored 13 points Sun( 6-51 win against No. 13 Wisconsin, stretching Scans' winning streak to 14 games. "They're a very good team, Wisconsin coach D Bennett said. "In a league that's really solid, Michi State is as worthy a champion as you can have. We m them play half-court and they were good enough to 1 us." It was the first outright title since 1990 for the four ranked Spartans (14-1 Big Ten, 25-4 overall), who v forced to share the conference crown with Illinois al losing the last game of the season to Purdue in 19' Wisconsin fell to 9-5 in the conference with an over rd of 21-6. is feels good," said Antonio Smith, whose rebounds helped the Spartans to a 39-19 edge on boards. "We weren't satisfied last year, you know.' had to go out there and accept a trophy after just be beaten." Not this time. When the final buzzer sounded, Michigan State pl ers jumped and hugged while hundreds of students green "Izzone"' T-shirts rushed onto the floor at Brec Center. A metal ladder was set up under the south 1 ket and each player, starting with the three seniors, t( A in cutting down the net. "I've never been on a championship team in my I Peterson said. "That emotion was unbelievable. It just overwhelming to me. And I'm so happy for coa This was all his plan." No.20 IowA 78, ILLNOIS 72 Jess Settles played 20 minutes and scoring 16 pc The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 22, 1999 -- 5B weekend ind of record." Brian Ellerbe in earing of Indiana -of-25 free throw st the Wolverines Indiana 73 ( Michigan 71 Player of the game Shooting guard Louis Bullock Bullock played with fire, Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said, scoring 22 points on 8-of- 24 shooting fiom the field. The senior guard also added five assists while grabbing six rebounds against Indiana. C istle disp fouls By Andy Latack Daily Sports Editor BLOOMINGTON - The whistles of Big Ten officials are probably beginning to sound like a broken record to Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe. In Assembly Hall yesterday, they sounded virtually every time Michigan was on defense. The result? A mammoth 41 trips to the line for Indiana, of which the Hoosiers converted 32. With nearly half of their points coming from the line, the Hoosiers were able to rely solely on free throws to hold off Michigan's late comeback. Indiana scored just one field goal in the final 14 minutes of the game, a drought usu- ally indicative of a team on the bad side of a blowout. But during that stretch, Indiana made 20 of 25 free throws, and never trailed Michigan despite not hitting a basket from the floor. Indiana wasn't in a shooting slump. Michigan was just being whistled for fouls before the Hoosiers could get a shot off. Luke Recker led the free-throw shooting contest for Indiana, taking 25 - 10 more than the entire Michigan team. And this free-throw practice proved simple for Recker, who nailed 22 of his attempts from the charity stripe. During one stretch in the sec- ond half, Recker scored 12 of 13 Indiana points from the stripe. "We knew some of their guys were in foul trouble, and I just tried to pen- etrate and pick up fouls on them," Recker said. "We got them in foul trouble and got easy shots from the line." Ellerbe wouldn't have been bothered by the Hoosiers' trips to the line if his team made a comparable number of visits. But the numbers weren't even close. By the eleven-minute mark of the second half, Indiana was already in the bonus. Michigan, on the other hand, didn't enter the bonus until three min- utes remained in the game. And this isn't the first time his team has been on the short end of a gross discrepancy in fouls. Almost exactly a month ago, against Minnesota, Michigan was called for 24 fouls - compared to 17 for Minnesota. The Gophers made 35 of 39 free throws, with Quincy Lewis going a Recker-like 15 of 16 from the line. Michigan made 10-of-14 attempts in that game. Coincidentally, that game was on the road, too. Ellerbe, handcuffed by stringent league rules that prohibit criticizing officiating, was reserved after the game "How many field goals did Recker have?" Ellerbe asked. When told that the sophomore had scored just two points of his 24 points from the field, the coach simply looked away. As for the Hoosiers going to the line almost three times as often as Michigan? "That's got to be some kind of record," was all Ellerbe could say. Even though Ellerbe couldn't say anything about the foul situation, he didn't have to. The numbers said enough. Michigan stats leaders SCORING PLAYER VS, INDIANA SON Bullock 22 20.7 Reid 11 13.4 Asselin 8 8.7 Smith 7 8.6 Vignier 13 6.3 REBOUNDING Vignier 7 7.3 Asselin 1 5.5 Bullock 6- 4.1 FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE Asselin .800 .547 Young .400 .481 Vignier .625 .480 FREE THROW PERCENTAGE Bullock .800 .859 Reid 1.000 .811 Jones N/A .754 ASSISTS Reid 5 3.1 Bullock 5 2.5 Smith 3 2.0 STEALS Smith 1 1.4 Bullock 2 -1.2 Reid 1 1.1 )ig minutes and delivers of his shots - it was because Oliver and the rest of the Wolverines weren't letting him get open looks at the basket. With a hand in his face the entire game, Guyton fired just eight shots. Even when he hit the game-winning 3-pointer with 2:17 to play, he did it with Oliver draped all over him. "Certain parts of my game aren't as good as the other guys," Oliver said. "I make up for that with hard work, and that overshad- ows the little things. Hard work is what we need right now." Oliver is seldomly used as extensively as he was yesterday. He averages just six min- utes a game, and his four points nearly dou- bled his season total - he now has nine. "I feel I can step up at any time," Oliver said. "I know what I takes to win. I lead by example, whether it's on the bench or on the floor." So when the Wolverines quickly found themselves in foul trouble - Josh Asselin picked up his fourth foul with over eight minutes to play in the first half - Ellerbe turned to his spunky guard. And Oliver thrived, even in pressure situ- ations with the game on the line. With 4:05 to play and the Wolverines trailing by just four, Oliver took a pass to the left of the hoop just outside the 3-point arc. Indiana's Luke Recker lunged for the steal, but Oliver grabbed the ball before Recker got to it and dribbled by the Hoosier's forward. He took two dribbles forward, hesitated a second, then fired the wide-open 14-foot jumper, cutting the Indiana lead to two. "Right now, we're looking for leadership from anywhere," Oliver said. Ellerbe "called on me and I was ready." LONG-RANGE HISTORY: Louis Bullock is racing the clock. With just two games to play, plus anywhere from one to four more in the Big Ten Tournament, the Michigan guard is on the verge of becoming the Big Ten's all-time 3-point leader. But he can't afford to slump now. After hitting a pair against Indiana yes- terday to push his career total to 329, Bullock is just two behind Michigan State's Shawn Respert for second place and three behind Penn State's Pete Lisicky for the title. CONFERENCE Standings and Results ConferenceaOverall Team W L W L Michigan State 14 1 25 4 Ohio State 11 3 21 6 Wisconsin 9 5 21 6 Iowa 8 6 17 7 Indiana 7 7 20 9 Purdue 6 7 18 9 Minnesota 6 1 15.8", Northwester 6 8 14 10 Michigan 4 10 *1 17 Penn State 3 11 11 13, Illinois 3 12 11 16 - Saturday's games: Penn State 78, Purdue 70 Ohio State 59, Northwestern 49 Yesterday's games: Indiana 73, Michigan 71 Michigan State 56, Wisconsin 51 Iowa 78, Illinois 72 i r 3 Michael Lewis and Indiana advanced their NCAA tournament expectations by defeating Michigan at Asssembly Hail yes- terday. HOOSIERS Continued from Page 1B When Indiana's Kirk Haston missed a 15-footer along the left baseline and the rebound went out of bounds to Michigan with 16.5 seconds left, the Wolverines called timeout to decide whether to go for the win or shoot for overtime. "We got a good shot," Ellerbe said of Michigan's final possession. "We were looking for the best shot available. We weren't looking specifically for the three." Michigan (4-10 Big Ten, 10-17 over- all) withstood a barrage of second-half free throws from the Hoosiers, who had just one field goal in the last 14 minutes of the game - but scored 22 points from the line. Luke Recker led the charge from the stripe for Indiana (7-7, 20-9), hitting a whopping 22-of-25 free throws. "I'd like to get to the line that many times every game;" joked Recker, who had just one field goal despite scoring a game-high 24 points. "I've been work- ing extra hard on my free throws in prac- tice, and it paid off." Despite missing only three times from the line, two of Recker's misses came with Indiana looking to put a little distance between themselves and he surging Wolverines. With 1:50 remain- ing and Indiana clinging to a two-point lead, Recker missed both from the char- ity stripe, keeping it a one-possession game. Michigan starters Josh Asselin and Brandon Smith and sixth man Leon Jones were forced to watch the nail-biter from the bench. The trio had fouled out by the five-minute mark of the second half Asselin took a seat with 7:51 remaining. With the foul trouble, little-used reserve Ron Oliver saw 17 minutes of action, his most to date in Big Ten play. Oliver contributed four points, nailing a crucial jumper with 4:05 remaining to bring Michigan within two, 68-66. Post players Peter Vignier and Chris se bS s e MICHIGAN (71) FG FT REB MIN *A MA 0-T A F PT5 Assein 9 4-5 0-0 04 0 5 8 Smith 29 2-5 3.4 1-2 3 5 7 ignier 28 5-8 3.3 2-7 0 3 13 Reid 33 313 3-8 0-4 5 2 11 Bullock 37 8.24 4-5 1-6 5 4 22 Jones 21 1-4 0-3 3-7 1 5 2 Oliver 17 2-2 0-0 1-2 2 1. 4 Young 26 2-5 041 3.6 0 2 4 Totals 200 2746 12-1514.3916 27 71 FG%: .409. FT%: .800. 3-point FG: 5-15,-333 (Reid 3-8, Bullock 2-7). Blocks: 3 (Smith 2, Young). Steals: 5 (Bullock 2, Reid, Smith, Asselin). Turnovers: 14 (Young 3, Bullock 3, Reid 3, Jones 2, Asselin, Smith, Oliver). Technical Fouls: none. INDIANA (73) FO FT RES MM * A MAO0TA FPM Recker 28 1-7 22-25 1-3 1 3 24 Richardson 37 8-15 2-7 5-12 0 4 18 Haston 35 5.11 4-4 1-9 0 2 14 Lewis 31 0-0 2-3 0-4 7 2 2 Guyton 36 4.8 2-2 0-3 4 1 13 Fife 13 1-1 0-0 0.1 0 2 2 Jimenez 5 0-1 0-0 0.0 1 1 0 Turner 10 0-2 0-0 0-0 11 0 Gladness 5 0-0 0-0 0-1 1 0 0 Totals 200 19.45 32-41 7-34 15 16 73 FO%:..422. FT%:.780. 3polnt FG: 3-7.429 (Guyton 3-5, Recker 0.1, Turner 0-1). Blocks: 7 Guyton 2, Recker, Fife, Haston, Richardson, Gladnes). Steals: 5 (Recker 3, Fife 2). Turnover: 13 (Recker 4, Guyton 4, Lewis 2, Richardson, Haston, Gladness. Technical Fouls: none. Michigan............................30 41-71 Indiana...............................37 36 - 73 At Assembly|Ha|l Attendance: 17,149 AP PHOTO Center Calvin Booth helped Penn State, formerly the last-place team in the Big Ten, surprise No.17 Purdue 78- 70 in West Lafayette on Saturday. n w .-.._r__ - rn enr__-1__= t_ ___.__ ______ r__ . _ _W_.____ n___y_ ___ a _.___ _ts._._