The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - January 11, 1999 - 7B Quote of the weekend , , Player of the game "HeodmeI u t g tM Michigan forward Josh Asselin -Michigan Stateo Mateen Cleaves n advicefrom M ichigan State Asselin had a career game, scoring a career- Magic Johnson, referring to the alcohol-related high 17 points, grabbing four rebounds and violation he and Hutson received while Michigan 67 blocking a shot. He was aggressive in the celebrating a victory over Michigan last season post, an aspect that the Wolverines have ___________________________________lacked all season. Jig game for big men keeps Ellerbe optimistic By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Amid the rubble of Michigan's 81-67 loss to Michigan State on Saturday even the most pessimistic of fans can 'nd a gleaming nugget of hope. Michigan's frontcourt put together its best game of the season, even though it wasn't enough to overcome the Spartans or the Spartan, 24-point effort offered up by the Michigan guards. "I saw some things that encouraged me," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. This was the second game in a row in which Michigan's forwards and centers played more than bit parts. So despite the sour result, this is the kind of game that the Wolverines have been waiting for. Forward Josh Asselin's 17 points were a career- est performance, topping his record of 16 from Tuesday night's defeat of Indiana. Freshman for- ward Chris Young tied his career best with seven points. Center Peter Vignier and forward Brandon Smith came within two and four points of their career marks, as well. "That gives us the opportunity to see that we can score points and rebound and do some things against a top-15 team'" Ellerbe said. But for the Wolverines to be "in the thick of things" the way Ellerbe thinks they can be, Michigan will have to provide a combined effort. Games in which only the guards, or only the front- court plays well will most likely wind up as loss- es. Exhibit A for that would be the play of guards Louis Bullock and Robbie Reid. The pair - usu- ally good for 34.1 points a game - provided just 22 on Saturday. And at the half, only Bullock had scored, making one of his six first-half shots. "They didn't play very well, and that's going to happen," Ellerbe said. "They're human. They did- n't play very well in the first half or the second half" But the confidence of such usually sharp shoot- ers as Bullock and Reid is hard to shake. And Michigan's green frontcourt is getting more and more seasoning, both in practice and in games. "We've been doing a lot of individual break- downs and working on different post moves," Young said. "I feel that my confidence is building every game." " f' C() / - Cleaves helps quie season-high 25-poi AP PHOTO Michigan State point guard Mateen Cleaves broke out of his recent shooting slump, pouring in 25 points to help the Spartans past rival Michigan. Wisconsin bucks Purdi State sits alone atop co By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - This time, he saved his antics until the game was well in hand. Michigan State point guard Mateen Cleaves, whose first- half dagger-in-the-heart routine almost blew up in his face last sea- son, played Saturday's game without any outburst more than an occasion- al, "Who, me? Naw!" after being whistled for one of the referees' many touch-foul calls. In fact, Cleaves' season-high 25 points had been nearly silent ones until he was fouled hard by Michigan guard Louis Bullock late in the sec- ond half. Cleaves' first hint of either splash or dash was the head-swivel- ing, arm flailing dance he performed in front of his bench after watching his shot go in from his vantage point flat on the floor. For his trouble, he was assessed a technical foul, after he converted his ie; Ohio nerence under 10 minutes to play, but Northwestern countered with a 3-pointer from Tavaras Hardy. Illinois closed the gap to 49-41 with six minutes to play before Eschmeyer scored and was fouled. With 3:07 left, Northwestern led 54-41 after free throws by Eschmeyer and Julian Bonner and 57-41 before a Bradford 3-pointer. MINNESOTA 75, PENN STATE 60: Quincy Lewis scored 24 points and Joel Przybilla added a career-high 17, leading No. 16 Minnesota to a 75-60 victory over Penn State (1-3, 9-5) on Saturday night. Lewis, the Big Ten's leading scorer with a 22-point average, was 9-for-14 from the floor as Minnesota (1-1, 10-2) rebounded from an unexpected three- point loss to unranked Northwestern on Wednesday night. Lewis has been in double figures in 17 straight games and has 20 or more points in 10 of those games. Przybilla, the Gophers' highly-recruit- ed 7-foot-1 freshman, added 13 rebounds and six blocked shots to hold his own against Calvin Booth, the con- ference's top rebounder. three point play. But the o points he scored to help his S sink Michigan on Saturda; whispers in comparison with the sophomore's actions thi Stats lines against Michigan big-name opponents like Du Connecticut seemed to Cleaves' incompetence fro rooftops. 3-for-14 against D for-15 against Connecticut. But the statistical roar of C 7-for-10 shooting will help out the discord of dismal past mances. "I think this was one ofn all-around games since I'v here," Cleaves said to a small reporters deep within the Center. It came not too long after s his worst, but this might be th Cleaves needed to shed the I ized straitjacket of hype that I .rounded him since the Sparta Michigan stats leaders SCORING PAYR V.MSUtSEASON Bullock 15 21.1': Reid 7 12.2 Smith 10 84 Asselin 17 7.7 Vignier 9 6.5 REBOUNDING Vignier S 7.9 Asselin 4 5.2 Bullock 2 45 FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE Asselin .667 .531 Young 1.000 .529 Vignier .600 .520 FREE THROW PERCENTAGE Bullock .800 .881 Jones 1.000 .824 Reid 1.000 .308 ASSISTS Peter Vignier (left) Reid 1 3.1 and Josh Asselln Bullock 2 2.4 gave the Smith 3 2.0 Wolverines the post presence STEALS they needed to Smith 2 1.6 stay competitive Reid 3 1.2 against Michigan Bullock 1 1.1 ! * State. AP PHOTO t critics with CONFERENCE Standings and Results n t o u tin g - C o neOr d Iowa 3 0 12 1 Ohio State 2 0 13 3 Northwestern 2 1 9 3 ther 22 ranked in the top five in both presea- Wscestn 2 2 14 3 partans son polls. . Michigan 2 2 8 9 y were For the Wolverines, the leader of Minat 2 1 1 10 2 most of their arch-rivals couldn't have bro- Purdue 1 1 13 3 s year. ken through at a worse time. They Michigan State 1 1 12 4 State's have to face him again, Feb. 18 at Indiana 1 3 14 5 tke and Crisler. Penn State 1 3 9 5 shout "Mateen was really good today, he m the got some good looks and knocked Fray's games: uke. 2- them down," Michigan coach Brian none Ellerbe said. "He was a factor." leaves' If the 25 points Cleaves scored drown when all was said and done weren't Satrday's games: perfor- enough, his eight assists might have Michigan State 81, Michigan 67 been just as deadly. All told, Cleaves Northwestern 59, Illinois 46 my best was directly responsible for at least Ohio Stae 73, Indiana 56 e been 41 Michigan State points - more Minnesota 75 Penn State 60 knot of than half of the Spartans' total offen- Sunday's game Breslin sive output.Snsiae His demeanor may be toned down. Wisconsin 61, Purdue 56 ome of His celebration tonight might not e game make the papers the way it did after pressur- last season's victory. But as far as his has sur- production is concerned, he's as loud ns were as ever. Top 25 weekend results 1. Cneticttta130) bet WetVirgiia 8045.. 2 Det(S-t betVrgna,11-69 3 Cncsatti 50bet Sssdns Misssippi 54-SL 4. Sanod (13-21 beat No. 25 Caforni 71-62. .Maryland tS-2) beat North Canslina St.94-48 z 6lentscyt43 beat Vandebilt 7357. Z. UCAt(1-3) bet Oregon 6563. .Arizna (11-1) beat Washington 88-86. 9. Purdue (13-2)lst N. 24 Wsonsin, 61-56 10.St.JJohn'st13-3) beat Seson Hall 86-75. 11. North Carolina (14-3) did not play. 12. Michigan State (12-4) beat Michigan 81-67. 1.Ibina 14-) st to OhioState 73-56. 14 Auburn ti1-0) beat LS) 73-70. 15. New Mexic t4-2) beat Hawaii82-59. 16.Minnesota (10-2) beatenstate 75-60. 17.lowa(12-1) did ot play. 1.Kansas 1-3)tbeatlowsState 74-60. 19. Arkansas (11-4)lost to Mississippi 76-65. 20.Syracuset11-3d noplay. 21 Clessn (24tlst ts Wke arest 646. 22.Texas Chistia t12-2)did notplay. 23.Oklaboma State (t1-3 bestylor 76-63. 24.Wscsnsin beat No. 9 Pudue,61-56 25.Caliria no-3)iost to No.4 Stanford 71-62. ' h ( . MICHIGAN (67j - Mk gMIN MA N*A 041 A F M1 Asselin 27 6-9 56 0. 0 4 17 mth 35 4.6 1-12-2 3 5 10 Vignier 35 3.5 042-5t0 3 Reid 33 2-8 2-2 02 1 4 7 Bullock 34 3-14 810 02 2 3 1S yJones 21 03 2-2 0-0 0 2 2 Tylo 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 000 Oliser 15 GO0-0 0-0 0 050 Young 18 3-3 11 2-3 0 2 7 Totals 200 2148 22-263U-21 8 2367 FGe: .438. F%: .84, -3-point FG: 312, .250. Smth 1-1, ReiO 1-4,tullock 1-6.#ones 01,). oP PHOTO Blocks.3 (s Viner 2.Asselin). Ses: 12 (Reid 3, APPOO Jones 3, Smith 2,Vignier 2, Bullock, Young). nference play by downing Indiana 73-56 in Turnovers: 21 (SmithS, ,Vgnr 0.,Jones0, Reid 3. diana dropped to 1-3 in the conference. Bullock 2. Asselin, Ytung). Tecbnical Fouls: 0. MICHIGAN STATE (81) . . MIN "A *A &T A F M 7e MagicalPadvice 30 Kelle 12 15 0-0 0.3 2 1 2 Lou. In the first half, he struggled to get open tell 17 1-2 2-2 5 0 0 0 looks past State's Morris Peterson. At the inter- Granger 2 1 000 00 mission, he had just one basket on six shots and Totas 200 28.s4 26 7 3 FG%:.519. FT%:.885. 3ptF:21-6 was 0-for-1 from the charity stripe, uncharacter- (Cavesei-2, Granger 1Klein a5, Petetson 0.1, istically missing the front end of a one-and-one. ranger 2, S teas (ees K 2 Center Pete Vignier continues to improve. His Hus4, eOth Granmger). Trneis: 22(Hutson 2, nine points, five rebounds, two blocks and two Bell 2, Davis). Technical Fouls:1(cleaves). steals were impressive, one of the better games Michigan.27 40-67 of his career. Michigan State...............38 43-81 But he is tentative when handling the ball, At: Breslin center particularly when receiving -passes. Twice early Attendance: 14,659 in the game, a Robbie Reid pass into the post bounced off of Vignier's hands and out of bounds. Despite the loss, many positives can be taken out of Saturday's game. The frontcourt had one Coming up of its best games to date. If the backcourt and this week... frontcourt can come together, this Michigan bas- ketball team could be a force in she conference. But first they've got to take M agic's advice:. S t at e s. loosen up, be themselves and have fun on the Ohio State vs. ichigan court. Crisler Arena, 1207 p nrm When a legend speaks - even if he's not TV: ESPN regional speaking to you - you should listen. Radio: WJR 760 AM - Josh Kleinbaum can be reached via e-mail at apocalypse@umich.edu. MADISON (AP) - Sean Mason to start th scored 25 points to lead No. 24 Indiana n Wisconsin to a 61-56 win over No. 9 stayed pert Purdue yesterday, the Badgers' second tory Satur victory over a Top 25 team in less than a It was ek. victory on '. Mason scored 13 of the Badgers' last Bob Knit 19 points, including two free throws that never bef gave them a 57-50 lead. more than The Boilermakers (1-1 Big Ten, 13-3 The B overall) rallied with a basket by Mike overall) it Robinson and a 3-pointer by Jaraan home, Val Cornell to pull within 57-55 with one 8-22 over minute remaining. times to t Charlie Wills then hit a jumper from Big Ten at ie corner to put Wisconsin up 59-55. NORTH er Cornell hit one of two free throws, Evan Esc Ty Calderwood put the game away with 16 points two free throws. Illinois 59 Wisconsin (2-2, 14-3) got I1 points Illini fr each from Calderwood and Mark scorers wi Vershaw. Last Wednesday, the Badgers The Wi beat No. 12 Michigan State 66-51 to (0-3, 8-7) break a two-game Big Ten losing streak. outreboun Brian Cardinal scored 13 points to Northw( lead Purdue. Greg McQuay added 12 lead midw and Jaraan Cornell I1 points. finished t OHIO STATE 73, INDIANA 56: Jon shooting j nderson scored six points in a 9-0 run Illinois SPARTANS Continued from Page 1B Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "Hopefully, they can force tough shots so we can get rebounds and get going. We try to let our defense dictate our offense.: Michigan State's defense was so tenacious at it succeeded in dictating Michigan's offense as well. With Bullock and Reid non-factors - the duo combined for just two points in the first half - Michigan's offense was forced to rely on its inexperienced frontcourt. And the big men answered the call admirably. In the absence of any backcourt scoring, for- ward Josh Asselin established himself as an offensive weapon, scoring a career-high 17 4 oints and breaking the mark of 16 he set ear- er in the week against Indiana. Forward Brandon Smith added 10 points and center Peter Vignier scored nine. "That's encouraging," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said of the frontcourt's play. "We see that we can score points and rebound against a top-15 team. "That gives us an opportunity to have offen- sive balance on a consistent basis, which is what we're looking for.: e second half and 13th-ranked ever recovered as Ohio State fect at home with a 73-56 vic- day night. the most lopsided Ohio State ver the Hoosiers during coach ght's 28 seasons. Knight had ore lost to his alma mater by nine points. uckeyes (3-0 Big Ten, 13-3 improved to 9-0 in their new ue City Arena. Ohio State was all last season - losing three he Hoosiers - and 0-8 in the t St. John Arena. WESTERN 59, ILLINOIS 46: hmeyer had 17 rebounds and to lead Northwestern over 946 Saturday. eshman Cory Bradford led all ith 22 points on 8-18 shooting. ldcats (2-1, 9-3) held the Illini ) to 28 percent shooting and ded them 42-33. estern jumped out to a 25-7 way through the first half and he half up 33-18, with Illinois ust 7-of-31 from the floor. cut the lead to 10 with just Ohio State stayed perfect in cot Columbus on Saturday night. In Smith was Michigan's most consistent scor- ing threat in the first half, scoring all 10 of his points before being handcuffed by foul trouble for most of the second half. During one two-minute stretch, Smith scored seven straight Michigan points, ending with a 3-pointer from the left side with 4:01 remain- ing that cut the Michigan State lead to 26-25 and prompted Izzo to call a timeout. And just like Michigan's win over Indiana - in which Michigan scored seven quick points in the final minute of the half - the tone for the game would be set during the crucial moments leading up to halftime. After the two teams traded buckets out of the timeout, Michigan State exploded for a 10-0 run in the last three minutes of the half. The stretch was capped by a pair of Andre Hutson free throws with 2.8 seconds to play that gave the Spartans a 38-27 lead - one they would never relinquish. Michigan would get no closer than six points the rest of the way. "That was crucial," Ellerbe said of Michigan State's run. "We're not an explosive offensive team, so we don't want those runs affect us. We let that happen. "I say 'we' because we let that happen, and that's the hard thing for me to swallow," Ellerbe said. Blue could use son KLEIN BAUM Continued from Page 18 Cleaves' attitude, from the aggressive style of play to the aggressive style of celebration, was contagious. The rest of the Spartans were having fun. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo was having from. From his seat in a luxury box, Earvin seemed to be having a pretty good time, too. The only people who weren't having fun were the Wolverines, particularly their all-senior backcourt of Bullock and Robbie Reid. After an early air ball from long range - Reid fell for a Breslin faithful prank and rushed the shot as the fans counted down to zero with five seconds left on the shot clock - Reid was timid offensively, often not even looking for the shot. He appeared to be affected by a loud Spartan crowd that was riding him relentlessly. Reid, who averages more than I1 shots and seven 3- point attempts per game, took just eight and four respectively, on Saturday. He finished with just seven points, more than five below his aver- age. Bullock was anything but the usual Sweet I