Score board. MEN'S NCAA WOMEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL BASKETBALL (23) ST JOHN'S 61. (6) IOWA STATE 64, Rutgers 57 Kansas State 61 (11) TENNESSEE 105, (12) LOUISIANA ST. 87, ;7) Auburn 76 New Orleans 54 (17) TEXAS 82. (15) UC SANTA BAR- Nebraska 55 BARA 61, Vanderbilt 48 NBA BASKETBALL INDIANA 93, Phoenix 87 SAN ANTONIO 105, LA Clippers 82 CLEVELAND 116, Detroit 107 (OT) MIAMI 115, Boston 89 SPORTSfi~u §a~ Tracking 'M' teams Check out the Michigan women's tennis team this Friday. The Wolverines face Western Michigan at 6 p.m. at Varsity Tennis Center. Michigan has a record of 1-0 after its win over DePaul. Wednesday January 26, 2000 9 eM' content with current success ByJeb Singer For-the Daily There is a "business as usual" feel- ing at Canham Natatorium this week as'the Michigan men's swimming teafmrprepares to host Indiana. The Wolverines (2-0 Big Ten. 5-2 overall) are coming off a convincing 138-103 victory over Purdue. Indiana 21, 4-1) has strong swimmers and certain events may be close. But the Hoosiers are not instilling fear into the hearts of the Wolverines. "We feel confident in our ability to n," Michigan assistant coach Eric Namesnik said. "But over the long haul, this meet is just a stepping stone. It is another opportunity to race. fhe feeling among the team is opti- unistic at practice. Riding an emotion- allhigh and swimming at home in a 50-meter facility -- and since Michigan is the better team on paper >-there is reason for optimism. A win against Indiana would give the Wolverines a chance at a perfect Big Ten record going into the final meets against Michigan State and Ohio State. While going undefeated in Big Ten regular-season meets has been an annual tradition since 1990, it does not concern the swimmers or coach- ing staff. The Wolverines are most concerned with their performance at practice. "We haven't looked at the resuits," Namesnik said. "We would like to see progression and performance." And right now Michigan has got to be happy with where it is. The results have certainly showed up in the wins over ranked opponents. And success should continue. "We set our goals early and try to stick to them;" Namesnik said. "We can be there in the running for the Big Ten Championships. Having the (Big Ten) championships in Ann Arbor may help." Michigan and Minnesota have con- stantly been in the running for the Big Ten title. "We use Indiana to see where the guys are at,"Namesnik said. "It is more an indicator of where we will be at the end of the year." Keeping with the intention of using this meet as an indicator, the meet will be carried out in a unique fashion. There will be a morning and evening session with added events in order for the swimmers to try out events that they do not normally com- pete in. With key swimmers such as sophomore Tim Siciliano and fresh- man Garrett Manigieri coming off ill- ness that kept them out of the Purdue meet, the Wolverines are at full force going into the final stretch of their schedule. But it is unclear just how much damage the team can do. "Our goal is to be in the top six at the NCAA meet," Namesnik said. "We continue to belive that this is a realistic aini. It is too early to tell just how good we are" DANA LINNANE/Daily The Michigan men's swimming team is spending the week preparing for Indiana, not expressing much concerned over their upcomming opponents. A win against the Hoosiers would maintain Michigan's run at an undefeated Big Ten season. Indiana 85, Michigan 50 Assembly Hell ... ,Michigan pitiful in 35-point defeat By Jacob Wheeler Dily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON -The press room in Indiana's Assembly Hall resembles a classroom, as nine rows of mini-desks face the menacing podium. The only things missing from the school atmos- phere, perhaps, are a chalkboard and an "All I Ever Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten" poster. This is Hoosier coach Bobby Knight's classroom - a place where he's ham- mered home the ABCs of college bas- ketball. almost since students wrote their lessons on wooden slates. Though he's seen hundreds of players pass under his tutelage in 29 years as Indiana's head coach, they have all mem- orized Knight's most important lesson: defense. The Hoosiers (5-2 Big Ten, 15-3 over- all) schooled Michigan with a defense as suffocating as a smoke-filled room last night in an 85-50 drubbing that the freshmen-laden Wolverines (3-3, 12-5) won't forget anytime soon. The stunning debacle was Indiana's largest margin of victorv over Michigan ever - even worse than a 112-79 defeat nine years ago in Bloomington. As the Big Ten race heats up and the margin of error falls accordingly, rest assured Michigan won't see many per- meable defenses. The road ahead only gets tougher, as Michigan faces Michigan State and Ohio State at home next week - two teams that made the Final Four last season. "This game couldn't have been any worse," a dejected Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said in Knight's classroom. "I don't think the game was about (our poor) shooting. It was about competing and executing, and we didn't do that." With the victory, Indiana remains in striking distance of first place in the con- ference, as Michigan slipped into a tie for fifth place with Penn State. The Spartans, Buckeyes and Purdue all share the top spot with 4-1 records. Indiana wreaked havoc on Michigan's offense immediately after tipoff, closing off all open looks at the basket. The Wolverines didn't score until 3:49 into the first half, as their usual offensive schemes - a baseline layup by Kevin Gaines, a Jamal Crawford fadeaway, or a LaVell Blanchard jumper from the foul line - were rendered all but impossible. Michigan shot just 18.9% from the field in the first half, and failed to con- vert a 3-point attempt. The Hoosiers, feeding offtheir coach's patented airtight defense, compiled a series of scoring runs: 7-0, 14-0, 11-0, en route to a 45-18 halftime lead. During one 10-minute stretch in the first half, Indiana outscored Michigan 32-5. "When (the Wolverines) made mis- takes, their first instinct was to get a quick basket," Ellerbe said, summing up his freshmen's collective frustration. "You can't do that against good teams." Ellerbe, who has coerced his team into better second-half play a handful of times this season, could do nothing to stop the onslaught last night. Michigan's shooting improved only slightly after the break, sinking one-third of its shots in the second half. But the growing frustration was starkly evident at the free-throw line, where the Wolverines converted only 52.4% of their "gimmes." The climax came during a one-minute stretch early in the second half, when Josh Asselin, Leon Jones, and Gaines collectively missed six consecutive foul shots. Knight, who is known as much for his sporadic emotional outbursts as well as his team's stifling defense, was all smiles after the blowout. At an apparent loss for words to describe how one quality team could beat another by 35 points, Knight walked around the perss room, shaking hands with every journalist and asking each one, "How are you?" "I told Ellerbe, 'These things happen to everybody when things don't go your way.' It happened to us at Michigan (in a 112-64 Michigan victory two years ago)," Knight said. Indiana used a deadly inside-outside combination on offense, and patiently worked the shot clock when no immedi- ate options presented themselves. Center Kirk Haston led his team with 19 points (17 in the first half alone) and 11 rebounds, and sharpshooting guard A.J. Guyton scored 18 points, including two 3-pointers. Michigan's lone bright spot, though Ellerbe refused to admit it as such, was Blanchard's 19-point, 13-rebound per- formance - the sixth double-double of the season for the athletic freshman. Josh Asselin and the entire Michigan basketball team had trouble guarding Indiana's Kirk Haston, who had 19 points and 11 rebounds in the Hoosiers 85-50 schooling of the Wolverines. Free car, tuition up for grabs at State game 'M' encounters defensive force By Dave Den Herder Daily Sports Writer 0 BLOOMINGTON --At 12:48 in thesecond half last night, on a free throwe from Kevin Gaines, the Wolverines pulled within thirty. Also, they had 30 points. .The rest of the night was less interesting. After Gaines drove to the hoop and put up an airball, Brian Ellerbe let his hands flop down to his sides, letting all the air in his body escape hrough his fluttering lips. Whoever came up with the word flabbergasted' must have been watching someone similar. Out although there was plenty of .ime for disappointment last night, there wasn't much room for disbe- hief..After all, Ellerbe has been clam- ty foreshadowing this day since the season began. ."We know we can score," Ellerbe aid then. "We need a lot of work defensively" There is no doubt that the latter is true. But if this game was anybody's first look at the Wolverines (and it was for a certain bunch of Hoosiers), then there might be some doubt about the former. Michigan hit one out of every four shots on average - but that average was boosted substantially in garbage time, when nothing really mattered. The exact point at which "garbage time" began is up for debate, but Michgian did trail by 27 at halftime. At that point, the Wolverines had recorded zero steals and a lonely block. They finished with only two steals while the Hoosiers racked up nine. It was a defensive battle, except Michigan wasn't playing defense. "When you play IU, you know they're going to play tough help defense," said Michigan guard Gavin Groninger, who hails from Plainfield, Ind. "I heard coach Knight saying, 'Get your hands up for the block."' The Hoosiers obeyed, and five times, they weresuccessful. But another Michigan freshman, Jamal Crawford, wasn't all that impressed. "They didn't do anything differ- ently then any other team," Crawford kept saying after the game. "We just didn't play hard." Whether or not Indiana smacked the Wolverines with the best defense they've seen all year loses some rel- evance when the team looks ahead to its next two games. See HOOSIERS, Page 10 The Michigan Marketing Department plans to have its biggest campaign yet at the Michigan-Michigan State basketball game Tuesday. Michigan Marketing Director Tom Brooks said his department will give sev- eral fans a chance to win a free Michigan tuition or new car at halftime. Contestants selected from the crowd will have to make a tree throw and then a half-court shot to either pay for tuition or drive away in an automobile. Michigan will also give away 5,000 free headbands, giving supporters a chance to idolize Michigan fresh- man Jamal Crawford, who wears a headband every, game. Pom-poms, 3-point cards and other promo- tional items are in the works. Brooks encourages all fans to wear maize for the game. Hockey fans will have an opportunity to grab one of 2,500 free maize t-shirts to be given away at Yost Ice Arena this Saturday, when Michigan faces Ohio State in its only game of the weekend. Tickets for the 7 p.m.game against the Spartans are sold out. The Feb. 13 Indiana matchup sold out last week, while only about 500 tickets remain for Ohio State on Feb. 6. All tickets cost $12 and $15 Students can pick up tickets at the Michigan Ticket Office next to Yost Ice Arena on State Street. - Mark Francescutti ii Travel Alm Cancun Acapulco Puerto Vallarta hh I ...v. r I