~$coreboard~ MEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL W otre Dame 75, (2) CONNECTICUT 70 (3) CINCINNATI 81, UNC Charlotte 54 VANDERBILT 87, (6) Florida 77 (7) SYRACUSE 93, Rutgers 74 (8) Duke 109 VIRGINIA 100 (OT) (11) MICH. STATE 76, Penn State 63 (15) Tennessee 60, S. CAROLINA 52 (16) OKLA. STATE 125, Langston 65 (21) TEMPLE 88, Rhode Island 45 (25) KENTUCKY 80, Georgia Tech 71 Ifre £Udifja &da TackIg 'M' Teams The No.7 Michigan wrestling team will be the highest- ranked team competing among 15 squads in this weekend's Virginia Duals competition in Hampton, Va. Thursday January 6, 2000 9 erm ready, but what about A. 7? he talk started about a month ago. I was sitting at Ricks, sip- ping on a, um, soda, talking with some of my friends. "Josh," one of them said to me, a curious gleam in his eye. "Have you given any thought to turning pro?" An interesting question. I have to admit the thought had crossed my mind, but I pushed it out. After all, I had to worry out preparations r the biggest Josh game of the sea- Kleinbaum son, the bowlI game, on New r'y Year's Day. There would be plenty of' time, I surmised, to think about such matters after the game. The Orange NO fowlis over. On 'op of my game, I wrote a brilliant column chronicling the Michigan victory. I have had several days to ponder my future. College football players around the country are going through the same dilemma right now. Some have already made up their minds. Lavar Arrington, Plaxico Burress and Na'il Diggs have said goodbye to their respective schools *r the greener pastures of the NFL. Drew Brees has opted to stay at Purdue. Right here in Ann Arbor, Anthony Thomas is deciding whether to stay or go. A.T. and I are debating the same dilemma, but our situations are very different. Anthony has one year of eligibility remaining, I have one semester Anthony's season was slightly disap- ointing, particularly his Orange Bowl, f t he still put up big numbers the rest of the season. He did it as Michigan's only back, and appeared tired for much of the season. I think it's safe to say that nobody outside the state of Alabama thought my season was disappointing - some have gone as far as describing it as stellar - but I had three stooges to take the pressure off of me. Both Anthony and I have hordes of iends and fans who constantly tell us ow talented we are, how good we can be and how we're ready to take our games to the next level. But are we really ready? Thomas' game in the Orange Bowl might suggest he could use another year of seasoning. Thomas had a month to rest before this game. He was healthy and ready to prove his critics wrong. But Alabama's linebackers were lightning quick, closing down holes #fore they were even open. The end result? Those linebackers proved Thomas wrong, holding him to just 40 yards. And defenders in the NFL are much faster than the Crimson Tide's. Anthony, as loud as your friends get, no matter who good they sy you are, don't listen to them. Trust me, you need one more year at Michigan. Now, Anthony, close your eyes. Close them tight and picture another Orange Bowl, this one in 2001. Drew Henson is passing to Heisman Trophy winner David Terrell on one play, hand- ing off to you on the next so you can grind it up the middle, then to Justin Fargas, who can get outside and take some pressure off of you. Eyes still closed, take a deep breath, through your nose. That's not just a national title you're smelling. That's vindication. I know the trip from Louisiana to Ann Arbor is tough for your family. out wouldn't missing a couple games be worthwhile if the family gets the chance to make the trip from Winnfield, La., to Miami? Stay, Anthony. Please. But my situation is different. There are young writers all around me ready to take my place. I've been a Daily stal- wart for three-and-half years, covering more spoils than I can count on my ingers. I've learned from the best and ioned my skills, taking everything I can out of this place. I am ready. Call me a hypocrite if you like. A month ago I turned to my friend and told him I wasn't sure if I was going to go pro, just like Anthony Thomas said after the Orange Bowl. Bi Gophers embarrass 'M in opener By Mark Francescutti DAy Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS - Michigan's 9-2 nonconference record reflected a high- powered shooting and slamming offen- sive threat. But when it all started to mat- ter most, the Wolverines left their offense back in the last millennium, suffering a. 85-68 Big Ten-opening loss to Minnesota last night. Michigan suffered its worst lost to the Gophers in more than 30 years, and put up its second-lowest point total of the season. "We came to play, Minnesota came to win," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. The Wolverines "have to learn how to compete. (Minnesota) beat us in every phase of the game. I don't even know where to begin." The Wolverines looked ruffled and nervous in their Big Ten debut, throwing up airballs, colliding into each other and shooting 3-for-I11 in the first eight min- utes. And just when Michigan seemed to crawl out of its jittery rut with an 8-2 run, Minnesota responded with a 16-5 spurt of its own, building to a 42-27 halftime score. "We dug ourself a hole that we could- n't get out of," junior forward Brandon Smith said. "Maybe at home we can come back, but not on the road." Michigan's Y2K bug struck at every end of the court, from poor rebounding to dismal ballhandling, leaving Ellerbe helpless to find a cure. And unlike in past games where Michigan's hot 3-point shooters often saved them from a poor defensive effort, the Wolverines struggled from 3-point land, netting only 5 of 18, forcing too many shots when they started falling behind. At the break only three Michigan players had scored, compared to eight for the Gophers. The second half was more of the See GOPHERS, Page 10 19 Tlw w Icome [igmer belongs in startingfve M INNEAPOLIS - Brian Ellerbe hoped that if his Wolverines were to lose last night at Minnesota, at least they could make it interesting down the stretch. That way, despite an 0-1 start to the Big Ten season, Ellerbe could tell the press afterward that his team "compet- ed for 40 minutes" and "just hasn't learned to win on the road yet." Michigan fans could shrug their shoulders, chalk the defeat up to the hostile environment, the inexperience Chris of the freshmen, or whatever. Life Duprey would go on as normal and the loss would be forgotten. Ellerbe didn't get his wish. Michigan was outplayed right from the begin- ning. When LaVell Blanchard threw the ball away on the first possession and Leon Jones followed with a nasty-look- ing airball the second time down thee floor, it was evident that something DUPES wasn't right. Scoop And then it became clear - nothing was right. If Minnesota, an NCAA-investigation-ridden team picked to finish near the bottom of the Big Ten, can push around the Wolverines, then Ellerbe must take drastic action. He must call for the beef. Reestablish the twin towers. Insert Peter Vignier into the starting lineup. His one-point offensive performance aside, Blanchard is not strong enough to match up against the power forwards the Big Ten will throw at him. By asking him to defend stronger opponents, Ellerbe is playing him out of position and making him look worse than he really is. Granted, the Big Ten is a guard-driven conference, and skill people with size - anyone who doesn't have Blanchard's thin, fragile frame - are not as abundant as in previous seasons. But yesterday night, time after time, Blanchard's man would back him down, step after step, until he was close enough to flip up a five-footer or pass to a cutter for an easy basket. Michigan cannot survive in conference play with Blanchard, Jones, Jamal Crawford and Kevin Gaines on the floor at the same time. There is not enough size in thatline- up, and that has caused the lack of rebounding and defense that Ellerbe has complained about since the start of 1999. A successful 9-2 record in nonconference play has fooled the Wolverines into thinking that this lineup can hold up in the Big Ten. Hopefully, it won't take them five more games to realize that it can't. So, patterning after the Jordan Rules, here are the Ellerbe Rules: Vignier and Josh Asselin must start. Together. Some combination of Vignier, Asselin and Chris Young must be in AP the game at all times. Either Blanchard or Jones must play the undesirable role APPHOTO of sixth man to accommodate the improved defense. his reach. The Blanchard must guard small forwards when he is in the "f ,+ nihSee DUPREY, Page 10 Leon Jones watches in desperation as Michigan's first Big Ten game soars out of Wolverines were never able to mount an offensive streak, falling to Minnesota, 8 Women's hoops seeks streak' in Indy By Dena Beth Krischer Daily Sports Writer Is it too soon to tell? Should Michigan women's basketball fans start getting mad about the lack of recognition their beloved Wolverines are receiving? One would think that after the pro- gram's undefeated 7-0 start and a non- conference record of 8-3, the pollsters would grant the Michigan women's bas- ketball team more than one vote. Since then Michigan has entered the long, possibly torturous Big Ten season with two more wins over Michigan State (1-1 Big Ten, 10-3 overall) and Minnesota (1-1, 7-5), and faces Indiana (0-2, 5-8) in Bloomington tonight. Maybe it is too soon to tell. After all, 2-0 may be impressive, but it doesn't mean anything. At least not yet. This could be the year, but according to Michigan assistant coach Eileen Shea, the Wolverines aren't jumping the gun. "It's nice to start 2-0, and it's always nice to beat Michigan State" Shea said. "The last couple of years we haven't started off 2-0 in the Big Ten but there's a lot of games to go. 2-0 is great, but 6- 0, 7-0 would be nicer." Why not 3-0 going into Saturday's game against defending National Champion Purdue? It's possible, assuming that Michigan dominates Indiana tonight. And the sta- tistics are in Michigan's favor. But at the "It's great to be winning again," Shea said. "When we lost those three games, we also played three really tough teams right in a row. The games could have been spaced over a season another way and they wouldn't have been as big a deal. We might not have had the seven- game winning streak. I think it's great when we start winning again, it gives the kids confidence, but all the streaks are short-lived - that's why they're streaks. A lot can happen and we can build another winning streak:' One short-lived streak in particular is in jeopardy tonight, and it's neither Michigan's nor Indiana's. Senior guard Stacey Thomas is only four away from stealing Wisconsin's Keisha Anderson's (1994-97) Big Ten record of 327 career thefts. Four steals tonight is hardly out of reach for Thomas who has taken the ball away from the opposition eight times twice this season. At her current pace, the record could very well be broken, and unreachable for years to come. "It's a great honor for Stacey," Shea said. "It epitomizes how hard she works. She gets a lot of steals because she works hard on defense. A lot of people like to score the points because that's what everybody notices, but people don't always notice the defense. For the four years that Stacey's been here, she's always played hard, always worked hard defensively and it's nice for her to have 16