SportsMonday - February 21, 2000 - The Michigan Daily - 5B Quote of the weekend "Their character can never be questioned." -- Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe, on the resilien- cy of his Wolverines, who allowed Penn State to come back from deficits of as many as 20 points, but were able to hold on in, overtime. Penn State 8}7 Player of the game Michigan guard Kevin Gaines Gaines found the energy to play 43 minutes of tough defense, holding Penn State s Joe Crispin to 2-for-12 shooting (0-for-8 from 3-point range). The freshman also adding 17 points on sharp 6-for-12 shooting. Ig Michigan 0 _. F . " , E Blue 'pushes ' ief to victory KIMITSU YOGASHI/Daily Freshman LaVell Blanchard expressed relief after Michigan's overtime victory Saturday. And why not? The Wolverines hadn't won in a month. hio State, Pe make thei moves By Mark Francescutti Daily Sports Editor Moments before Saturday's game, as the Michigan players prepared to storm the court in the Crisler Arena tunnel, a pushing match erupted. Josh Asselin pushed Leland Anderson. Anderson pushed Asselin back. Asselin pushed Kevin Gaines. The unexpecting Gaines lost balance and flew into the Crisler wall. OK, so maybe the pushing went a lit- tle too far. Gaines was fine, and so were the rest of the Wolverines, as their high emotion- al intensity prior to and throughout the game, lifted Michigan to a vital 89-87 overtime victory over Penn State. After seven games and seven losses - six of them by double digits, how can anyone get excited to play again? "During that stretch, it was tough even coming in and getting ready to practice after you know you have to face another top 25 team,junior Brandon Smith said. But "today we felt like it was our time." The Wolverines, bruised and battered mentally after what seemed to be a never-ending losing streak, found a way to spark their emotions giving them an early edge and a 9-0 run to start the game. "We came out with a lot of emotion," Smith said. "I don't think we've seen that type of emotion in a long time. Everyone was focused. It started with the first run" Throughout the game, from the thun- OVERTIME Continued from Page 1B 82 lead, thanks to a Stephens layup. With Michigan on the brink of losing control of the game, Jones hit a clutch 3-pointer that not only kept the Wolverines alive, but gave them the lead as well. The Nittany Lions tied the contest once after that, although they never led again. Michigan's victory was its first without Jamal Crawford, who fin- ished his six-game suspension and should be ready to play at home against Purdue this Thursday, bar- ring further NCAA rulings. "I think we came out with a lot of emotion, which was key for us," said Michigan forward Brandon Smith, who had a career-high of 16 points while continually exploiting his size mismatch against Penn State's guards. "It started with the moment we came to the gym today." And it finished with several rounds of high-fives and hugs by a team that can now profess how good it feels to win. derous dunks to the towel waiving Jamal Crawford, more emotions came from the Wolverines than in Titanic's first run. "I asked the guys when was the last time we high-fived in the game or a chest bump and all tha t good stuff they do," Ellerbe said. "YOU have to bring some emotion into thu game. "If you can't get up for games in this league, you have to question it. Today, they just decided enough is enough, and they were going to fight " BALANCING ACT: Chris Young and Smith both set career highs? Gavin Groninger gets back on track, and seven Wolverines score at least eight points? Michigan finally got an all-around game under its bit, after several games of inconsistency. For Young, it was the third time he set a career record in points with 13. Smith found his way to drive on the slower Penn State forwards while shooting over the smaller guards to net 16. Groninger nailed two out of his first three 3-point tries. "We wanted to get some confidence with a couple guys," Ellerbe said. "It was good that Gavin got off to a good start and made a couple shots, and I am sure he's feeling a little better abut himself." Groninger also earned another chance in the starting lineup in place of Leon Jones. "I wasn't really happy with Leon's defense at Wisconsin," Ellerbe said. "Gavin had a couple really good days at practice so I gave it to him. He earned it." BIG BOY: Penn State senior Jarrett Stephens, a Ferndale, Mich. native, scorched the Wolverines with 33 points and 18 rebounds. The forward had an easy time on Michigan's smaller lineups, especially with his 255-pound frame banging on the inside. Stephens couldn't do it all for the Lions, as his final shot to tie the game fluttered off the mark. The loss "hurts especially for him," Dunn said. "He's from around here and he really wants to do well when he comes here." NITTANY DELAY: Saturday's game was delayed from its original 12:17 p.m. tipoff to 2:30 p.m. because Penn State hadn't arrived yet. A snowstorm forced the Nittany Lions to leave Saturday morning. Penn State bussed from Harrisburg, about two hours away from State College, before finally catching a flight to Michigan. They arrived at Crisler a little after I p.m. "Obviously we looked a little slug- gish," Penn State coach Jerry Dunn said of the results of the delay. "But we still have to play the game. We definitely came out stronger in the second half" Meanwhile, at least one Wolverine found a prime benefit to the delay. "They called me in the morning to tell me so I went back to sleep," fresh- man Kevin Gaines said. "I didn't have a problem with it." Thursday Purdue at Michigan, Ciser Arena, 8 p.m The last time these two teams met, Michigan pulled off a double-overtime upset in front of a stunned Mackey Arena crowd. That was when the Wolverines had momentum. If they can get Jamal Crawford back for this Thursday, as projected, then maybe they'll have the needed momentum to beat Purdue again. Saturday Michigan at Northwestern, Welsh-Ryan Arena, 12:17 p.m. This year's Big Ten road gimme. The free space on Michigan's bingo card. The complimentary chips-and-salsa with the Wolverines' Chi Chi's meal. All right, enough's enough. FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A Q-T A F PTS Joe Crispin 41 2-12 5-5 0-3 8 4 9 Jon Crispin 32 5-10 1-1 0-3 1 2 15 Watkins 12 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Stephens 44 15-20 2-6 5-18 1 4 33 Ivory 40 4-11 3-6' 4-9 5 2 13 Smith 34 34 2-4 1-4 2 1 9 Banta 5 0-0 0-3 0-1 0 1 0 Wittesk 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Jackson 16 2-4 4-5 0-1 0 5 8 Totals 225 31-62 17-3012-43 18 20 87 FG%: .500. FT%:..567. 3-point FG: 8-22.,.364 (Jon Crispin 4-7,Ivory2-4, Smith 1-1, Stephens 1-1, Joe Crispin 0-8, Watkins 0.1). Blocks: none. Steals: 6 (St hens 3, Joe Crispin, Jon Crispin, Smith). Turnovers: 18 (oe Crispin 4, Step hens 4, Ivory 3, Smith 3 Jon Crispin 2, Jackson, 'Witkowsky): Technical Fouls: none. MICHIGAN (89)G(OT) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A O-T A FPTS Blanchard 37 6-17 2-2 3-11 1 2 16 Smith 32 7-12 2-2 2-5 4 3 16 Young 27 6-7 13 2-4 0 4. 13> Gaines 43 6-12 24 1-4 6 4 17 Groninger 36 3-7 0-100 4 1 8 Jones 26' 2-7 3-6 ,0-2 1 2 8 Asselin 13 2-3 4-5 0-3 0 2 8 Anderson 4 0-1 0-0 0-30 10 Vignier 7 1-1 1-2 0-2 0 4' 3 Totals 225 33-67 15-25 8-35 16 23 89 FG: .493. FT%: .600. 3-point FG: 8-20 .400 (Gaines 3-4, Blanchard 2-7, Groni ner 2-5, Jones I-), Blocks: 3 (Asselin 2, Banchard). Stel: 6 (Gaines 2, Smith' 2, Blanchard, Jones). Turnovers: 12 (Blanchard 3. Gaines 2, Smith 2, Asselin, Groninger, Vignier, Young. team). Technical Fouls: none. Penn State. .....21 53 7 -87 Michigan...:...........44 36, 9 - 89 At: Criser Arena Attendance: 11,522 BLOOMINGTON (AP) -- Michael Redd scored 28 points, including five free throws in the final two minutes, as No. 7 A jio State stole an unusual road victory Assembly Hall on Saturday, 82-71. Redd added 10 rebounds. George Reese also had a double-double for Ohio State (9-3 Big Ten, 18-5 overall) with Il points and 10 rebounds. Officials called 58 personals with four Buckeyes and two Indiana players fouling out. The teams combined to shoot 87 free throws and misses proved costly to the Hoosiers. Indiana (8-4, 18-5) missed 17 4 attempts. A. Guyton led Indiana with 27 points, becoming the fourth player in school his- tory to score 2,000 points. He's fifth on Indiana's career list with 2,007. Three consecutive 3-pointers by Brent Darby. who made all four of his shots from behind the arc, gave Ohio State a 69-63 lead. The Buckeyes scored their final 11 points on free throws. No. 6 MICHIGAN STATF 59, WISCONSIN 54: Morris Peterson and Sarlie Bell each scored 15 points and o. 6 Michigan State hung on to first place in the Big Ten with a 59-54 win over Wisconsin on Saturday. Andy Kowske scored I11 points for Wisconsin (5-8, 13-12), which held the Spartans to just three field goals over the final 14:21 of the game. Michigan State shot just 34 percent (I 6-of-47) from the field and the Badgers 39 percent ( 16-of-4 1). *A three-point play by Kowske gave Wisconsin its first lead, 32-31, on the first Score of the second half It was the first of six lead changes in the half. The Spartans (10-2, 20-6) went 4:39 between a jumper Jason Richardson and Charlie Bell's layup with 9:40 remaining, but four free throws helped Michigan State build a 47-41 lead despite the shooting slump. No. 25 PURDUE 97, MINNESOTA 61: D rdue's balance was just too much for manned Minnesota. Mike Robinson scored 18 points and the Boilermakers used a 22-0 first-half run to beat Minnesota on Saturday. It was a season-best sixth straight victory for Purdue (10-3, 19-7) and the second straight loss for the Gophers (4- 9, 12-11) since leading scorer Joel Przybilla was suspended for academics. The ragged Gophers had more #novers than shots through the first 10 Conference Team Michigan State Purdue Ohio State Illinois Indiana Penn State Wisconsin Michigan Iowa Minnesota Northwestern W 10 10 9 9 8 5 5 4 4 4 0 L 2 3 3 4 4 7 8 8 8 9 12 Overall W L 20 6 19 7 18 5 17 7 18 5 13 10 13 12 13 10 11 13 12 11 5 20 Sturday' resuts: MICHIGAN 89, Penn State 87 (OT) MICHIGAN STATE 59, Wisconsin 54 PURDUE 97, Minnesota 61 Ohio State 82, INDIANA 71 Illinois 63, NORTHWESTERN 30 Txrrow'sgame; Indiana at Illinois, 9 pm. Wednesdas mames Northwestern at Ohio State, 8 pm. Wisconsin at Iowa, 8 p.m. Michigan State at Penn State, 8 p.m. Thgdy's me: Purdue at Michigan, 8 p.m. minutes and went scoreless for a seven- minute stretch when Purdue took con- trol. All 11 Boilermakers scored, and all but one of them had at least two baskets. Besides Przybilla, Minnesota was without John-Blair Bickerstaff, out for the season with a broken leg. ILLINOIS 63, NORTHWESTERN 30: As time wound down in the first half of Illinois' win over Northwestern on Saturday, the question was not who would win but whether the Wildcats would ever score. Illinois scored the game's first 23 points as Northwestern went the first 15:13 of the game without a single point, going 0-for-11 and committing 15 turnovers. When Aaron Jennings scored on a driving layup and converted a free throw with 4:47 left in the half, the mostly orange-and-blue-clad capacity crowd let out its most enthusiastic roar of the night. But by then, the game was decided. Illinois led 30-6 at halftime and never led by fewer than 19 in the second half. SCORING PLAYER Vs PS:P Crawford DNP Blanchard 16 Gaines 17 Jones 8. REBOUNDING Blanchard 11 Asselin 3 Gaines 4 ASSISTS Gaines 6 Crawford DN P Jones 1 STEALS Gaines 2 Crawford DNP Jones 1 TURNOVERS Gaines 2 Crawford DNP Jones 0 AVERAGE 16.6 15.3 11.8 9.0 8.3 5.3 3.9 4.5 4.5 1.8 1.3 1.1 0.9 3.4 3.1 2.5 KIMITSU YOGASHI/Daily Despite his throw-back afro, Peter Vignier and the Michigan frontcourt wasn't able to stop Penn State big man Jarrett Stephens, who scored 33 points Saturday. The question: i 1amal play? By Mark Framescutti Daily Sports Editor submit the Univet NCAA as soon as The NCAA sta The talk over the next week about the decision as to wt Michigan basketball team revolves face more v io around one question. with his reinstater Will Jamal Crawford be back? A source close The NCAA suspended the freshman told the Daily this guard for six games for violating a byiaw deal- a? ing with amateurism. J M S Ut Crawford took gifts, Jamal Crawford finished serving his including cars, money six-game sus ension by sitting out and jewelry from Barry Yeterday's 8-87 oetietory Hentorn charma ofover Penn State. Will Crawford Henthorn, chairman of return for Michigan's next g-ne, a telecommunications Thursday against Purdue. company in Seattle. Mich d the NCAA ti Crawford's suspen- process of investigating new etail - sion has now ended, tn the case. Once the investiuatin but new developments is completed the NCAA wil hcn forced Michigan to decide if furer violations/punish- rmaents are Necessary. reopen its investiga- tion. Crawford could If no decision is made prior to face more penalties Thursday, Michigan may have to keep Crawford ineligible for fea r () with his reinstatement, possible later NCAA repercu tios. including more sus-- rsity's findings to the it concludes. Lf will then make a hether Crawford will ns andior punishments int. to the investigation past weekend that the investigation is near- ing completion. Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said last week that he doesn't know what will happen if a deci- sion isn't reached before the Purdue game. "I have been told that we'll cross that bridge when we get there Ellerbe said. "I haven't spoke to anyone since Friday. I am just going to wait to hear from our peo- deemed the relationship between Henthorn and Crawford as unusual. Ont the other hand, a change of heart in the result of Crawford's case could impact the whole world of college bas- ketball. "It will be a landmark decision," Ellerbe said. Many of the new developments could hamper Crawford. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer report- ed Saturday that Charles McLennan, an employee of Henthorn, drove a 1988 Mercedes from Seattle to Ann Arbor to give to Crawford. It was the Mercedes that jumpstarted Michigan's investigation, when officials found out that Crawford wasn't the only name registered on the car. Henthorn also admitted last week that he asked Darcienne LeRoue, his former administrative assistant, to co-sign loans to buy a 1985 Chevy Blazer and gold jewelry for Crawford. LeRoue has filed a lawsuit in Seattle, containing an allegation that she was forced to sign on the loans to protect Henthorn from being linked to the bas- ketball player, stating that "the real pur- pose of the loans involving Mr. Crawford was to evade or violate NCAA rules and Washington state laws." Henthorn also created a scholarship foundation, the Academic Assistance Fund, and listed Crawford as a benefi- ciary, drafting a contractual agreement asking Crawford to, make appearances FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE Young 6-7 .692 Asselin 2-3 :569 Vgnier 1-1 .550 3-poitNT PERCENTAGE lol Jones Blanchard Groninger 1-4 2-7 2-5 .394. .38 .357 FREE THROW PERCENTAGE Blanchard 2-2 .792 Crawford DNP 784 Anderson 0-0 .756 pended games, if the NCAA finds that the new details show more violations. Regardless of what could happen, Crawford expects to return for Michigan's next game against Purdue. "I wish it was the 24th right now, Crawford said. "Through all this, I've become hungrier. I want to prove I can still play. Even if I go 0-for-20, I still just want to be out there with those guys. For the past three weeks, Crawford ple on The Hill and the (administration) to find out what the situation is." If anyth ing can be sa id at this moment, it's that Ellerbe may not be able to pencil in Craw ford on his lineup card, as the freshman's eligibility for Thursday still hangs in the air. Several analysts from around the country have called into question the NCAA's policies on aa teurism, espe- cially after C rawfov.r t =ill faced penalties Team 1. Cinannati (66) 2. Stanford (5) 3. Duke 4. Arizona 5. Tennessee 6. Michigan State 7. Ohio State 8. Oklahoma State 9. Syracuse 10. Indiana 11. Florida 12. Auburn DoC, 23-1 21-1 19-3 21-4 21-3 18-6 17-4 20-2 20-2 18-4. 18-5 19-4 Agents tell Przybilla he'll be lottery Dick Arizona St. -Southern Cal. game ends in brawl