The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 18, 1999 - 19A h-oop success helps 'heal' Auburn sports ''iNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Auburn's basketball success has helped sitooth over some rough athletic times ie university. Auburn's troubles began last fall with tAb mid-season firing of football coach Tery Bowden. They didn't get any bet- ter 'when the Tigers reneged on a com- mitment to play Florida State on ESPN t8 open the 1999 football season, thus avoiding the wrath of terry's father, SOUTH 'o1by. -'The controversy PrevieW comnbined to bring ----------- unwanted national attention. utit the basketball team won its way into Thursday's NCAA South Regional s iifinal against fourth-seeded Ohio "'tis basketball team has allowed te Auburn family to heal. It has pushed the controversy to the side' Cliff Ellis sad'of his top-seeded Tigers. SORE FOOT: St. John's leading scor- Ron Artest, was limping noticeably ractice Wednesday but said he'll be fine: 'Arest said he got sick to his stomach lbes,4ay night and whacked his foot on his rOommate's bed while making a desperate dash toward the bathroom in t~ie'dark. fe said the tape job he got before pc tice was too tight and that caused the Alip. HOLIDAY TIME: Ohio State coach Jim Flint goes green FLINT, Mich. (AP) - Flint was wearing a particular shade of green this St Patrick's Day: Spartan green. .The city is watching with excitement as four native sons suit up Friday for Michigan State in the Spartans' Sweet 14 matchup against Oklahoma in the N*AA tournament. Mateen Cleaves, Antonio Smith, *arlie Bell and Morris Peterson all vent to high school in Flint before jdiing Big Ten champion Michigan State. Each has "Flint" tattooed on his arm. Around this industrial city north of Detroit, the four are known as - well, just ask Margaret Schuetz. "The Flintstones!" she beamed Wednesday, her eyes brightening. Ms. Schuetz, a mental health worker Wo lives in Saginaw but commutes to Flint, said she typically doesn't watch basketball. But this year's different. "Even people in Saginaw are excited about the Spartans, she said. Deborah Jefferson, who went to the same high school as Peterson, called her sister in Milwaukee last weekend to ask if she was watching the Flintstones. "She said, 'The cartoon?' She thought I was crazy," Ms. Jefferson id. "She hadn't heard that nickname. o now I'm spreading the word." Ms. Jefferson said her young son - 13 but already 6 feet tall - is glued to the television for the tournament and wants to go to Peterson's former high school. But downtown Flint was displaying few signs of Spartan pride yesterday, perhaps because of the proximity of the University's Flint campus. PREVIEW Continued from Page 14A PARING SHOTS: Even though our brackets were a bit hard to read (fit- ting that Duke blotted out the rest of the field, huh?) we also received , omplaints that they were wrong, cause ESPN's looked different. Even though we've made mistakes before (see Pg. 18A if you don't believe me), we knocked down this open look ... Did you pick Weber State? Can you prove it? Didn't think so - but if you think you can, e-mail hoops. daily@umich.edu, we 've got something for you. ... Did you laugh at my Surprise CAA Tournament team when "ipoff came out back in November? The other basketball writers did. Who's laughing now? (HINT: me, because I almost never get those right.) Did you laugh at my pick last week for Texas as the Cinderella team? Who's laugh - O'Brien, of the Brooklyn O'Briens, St. Francis Prep and Boston College, had post-practice plans for St. Patrick's Day. "I'll have corned beef and cabbage and a green beer," he said. "How tradi- tional is that?". THIs WAY TO NCAA: Their records and seedings make it no surprise that Auburn and Ohio State are in the round of 16, but that's recent history. Before the season started, it would have been a highly unlikely matchup. Ohio State is the bigger surprise. The Buckeyes were 8-22 last year and fin- ished last in the Big Ten at 1-15. The Buckeyes added Scoonie Penn, who followed O'Brien from Boston College and was named the Big Ten Player of the Year. But the remarkable about-face took more than one player. Three freshmen have contributed, as well as junior college transfer George Reese. "I just wanted to be better than we were a year ago," O'Brien said. "Scoonie's mentality is that when March rolls around, you play in the NCAA tournament. "I was the one who thought he was crazy, but he obviously knew more about it than me." SWEET PRESSURE: Maryland has been in the round of 16 in four of the last six years, including the last two. But the Terps haven't advanced past the Sweet 16 since 1975. Florida's Shannon is A ' Most Courageous' PHOENIX (AP) - Florida point he has talked about his team and the guard Eddie Shannon, who played his game of basketball. To me that is a les- senior season with just one eye, has son for all of us." received the Frontier Most Courageous Calhoun said Davis was an innovatoT Player Award from the U.S. Basketball with his pressing defense, tactics he first Writers Association. showed in his days as coach at Boston Shannon has had limited vision in his College in the late 1970s and early right eye since the seventh grade, when 1980s. he was hit by a rock. In recent years, the "A lot of the stuff you see by Rick condition worsened. Pitino, by Jim Calhoun, by a whole Finally, last October, he was fitted bunch of coaches from our part of the with a prosthetic country, really evolved from when Tome eye after having W came to Boston College," Calhoun said. the damaged parts EST "His influence in college basketball con- ' r removed surgical- Preview tinues to live on in literally hundreds and ly. hundreds of teams across America." "I think I've inspired a lot of people GAGA OVER GONZAGA: Gonzaga - by being in the situation I'm in and con- coach Dan Monson says he's never seen tinuing to play and contribute," Shannon anything like the statewide support his said. "It just goes to show what you can team has received in Washington over achieve no matter what, if you just put the past week. your head to it." Monson has a lot of experience in the Coach Billy Donovan said it's not just state. The 37-year-old coach, was an t: that Shannon has played, but the way assistant at the Spokane school for nine he's played, that makes the story years before taking over as coach inf astounding. 1997. "Here's a kid who lost his vision in the "We've almost had a sense of state seventh grade yet overcame it and was pride, for the first time since I've been at recruited by some top-notch programs," Gonzaga," he said. "It's almost equal to Donovan said. what Washington State did a couple of COMPLIMENTING DAVIS: Connecticut years at the Rose Bowl. It doesn't matter coach Jim Calhoun admires Iowa coach if you're a (Washington) Husky or a Tom Davis and the way he has handled (Washington State) Cougar, if you root his final season with the Hawkeyes. for Eastern Washington. Everybody is, AP PHOTO "I think very few of us would have the for Gonzaga. ni this year has helped heal the entire decorum and the dignity with which he "It's like you're in the middle of a hur- Shah ee rodlfr several years, conducted himself; 'Calhoun said. ricane and everything is swirling around a y Bowden was fired "What Tom has done so wonderfully is you and you're just watching it." Spaulding leads Sooners i tourneyi. . Z s' i r, s r Yi i d 3 kt ix r.> -,, .; Cliff Ellis said Auburn's success In basketba athletic department at the University. Auburr and problems climaxed this fall when footbal NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -After per- forming superbly in his first two games of the NCAA tournament, Oklahoma guard Alex Spaulding seemed surprised by what had happened. "I never dreamed I'd play this good," he said. He's not alone. Spaulding's first two seasons with Oklahoma had been remarkably average - many would say MIDWEST below average. He Preview scored 2.5 points per game while averaging only 6.2 minutes last season. This season, he averaged 3.2 points although he started 19 times. But coach Kelvin Sampson insists he and the team aren't surprised by Spaulding's play in the tournament. He scored 10 first-half points against Arizona in the first round, then had 12 points, six rebounds and eight assists against North Carolina-Charlotte." "He's not surprising us because we've seen him do it," Sampson said. "I saw the kid score 39 and 43 points in a high school game. I saw him take his team to the state championship at the Dean Dome in North Carolina and win as the point guard on that team. "He had three recruiting visits - to Wake Forest, Clemson and Oklahoma. It's not like he was a shot in the dark. This kid's a player." He's also, Sampson said, a victim of circumstances and the public's rush to judgment. Sampson had planned to redshirt Spaudling last season to allow him a year to adjust, but a back injury knocked Tim Heskett out of the lineup and left Sampson little choice but to play Spaulding. In October, Spaulding left school for personal reasons. That cost him a spot in this season's media guide - there's no bio, no picture - but he returned two weeks later and asked to be put back on the team. Sampson again planned to redshirt him, but then Kelley Newton, who was going to be a starter, injured a knee, so Sampson was forced to play Spaulding. "Those developments have slowed his progress," Sampson said. "Unfortunately, people look at numbers and statistics in evaluating players.' What many people didn't know; Sampson said, is that Spaulding had knee surgery in the spring of his senior year of high school and didn't recover well. So that slowed his progress when he got to Oklahoma. The Sooners will need another solid game from Spaulding if they are to beat Michigan State in the Midwest regional' semifinals Friday. "If you think about all the things he's been through ... it's not shocked me that he's come along so slowly,' Sampson said. . a AP PHOTO Residents of Flint are joyfully cheering their favorite sons, who are helping Michigan State roll through the NCAA Tournament. The top-seeded Spartans face No. 13 seed Oklahoma tomorrow in the round of 16. SW Missouri State has history agamst it SPRINGFIELD, MO. (AP) - The first time he was asked how he planned to get little Southwest Missouri State past mighty Duke, Steve Alford had a ready reply. He would sneak out onto the New Jersey Turnpike and put up detour signs. No. 1 Duke would get lost on the way to the Meadowlands, and Alford's Bears would have bamboozled another top-ranked opponent into defeat on a march toward an NCAA title. "But then I found out they're 8-0 there," Alford said, chuckling. "So they probably know how to get there." EAST They certainly know how to play review there, in an arena ----------------- that is home to this weekend's NCAA East regional.. But then Duke knows how to play anywhere. The Blue Devils won their first- and second-round games last week by 41 points apiece. "They're very good once they get ahead," Alford said, noting how the Blue Devils often have jumped to quick leads and never relinquished them. Then, after a long pause, he added: "They're very good once they get State, seeded 12th, beat Team Duke, seeded No. 1? "A No. 12 seed has never won," Alford said. But that's not to say that the coach, who played on a national championship team at Indiana in 1987, doesn't believe it can't be done this time. And so do his players who, like him, say they'll play hard, have fun and hope that's enough. In the meantime, they don't appear particularly worried as they prepare for the biggest game of their careers. "It's our biggest game just because it's our next game," guard William Fontleroy said. "The next obstacle standing in front of us just happens to be Duke." Still, he grinned at the thought of playing in the Meadowlands, "in front of the New York media where we've got a chance to make a name for our- selves." This is a team, he said, that went 20- 10 during the regular season but could have been 24-6. It lost four conference games to its two toughest opponents, Creighton and Evansville, by margins of three points and two points, one in overtime.