10- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November, 24 1999 Crawford storms back from early slump By Mark Francescutti Daily Sports Writer Halftime in the Michigan lockerroom, and Jamal Crawford felt down. His halftime stats didn't look pretty - 0-9 from the field, 0-3 from 3-point land and no assists for the freshman. "I was down on myself," Crawford said. "All the guys told me 'Hey, keep your head up. There's one more half, and you can't play any worse."' Early in the second half, a fight broke out in the Crisler Arena stands, and suddenly, the fight inside Crawford built back up at the same time. "I told him to keep his head up," Michigan guard Kevin Gaines said. "He had to take over." With 17:09 left, Crawford hit his first jumper..The cold streak was over. The Crawford comeback was on. He hit a run-stopping 3-pointer, one of many big shots that Michigan nailer during a second-half stretch to come back from a 15-point deficit. With three minutes to go in the game and Michigan down three, Kevin Gaines fouled out. Now the ball rested in Crawford's hands - and instead of looking at 0-10, he looked at Rashad Philips. The Detroit superstar guard had already schooled Crawford with his quickness on several plays, netting 22 points in the process. But the 6-foot-6 Crawford used his long arms to freeze the 5-10 Phillips in his tracks. Crawford got a piece of Phillips' shot, and in the scramble for the ball, Phillps fouls Crawford. The Crawford comeback continued. He banged home two free throws, then took the ball to the hole and hit a fadeaway jumper. "If you don't believe in yourself, no one else will," Crawford said of his strong response. "I said 'I can't miss forever."' Then, Michigan guard Leon Jones and forward Josh Asselin fouled out. The Wolverines got a break as Detroit's Terrell Riggs missed two free throws. With three starters on the bench, the game tied at 62 and sec- onds remaining, Michigan put the ball in Crawford's hands. It takes two timeouts to get the ball in, and two passes to get the ball to Crawford, but Michigan had its set - and that set was "give the ball to Jamal." The clock wound down ... 10 seconds ... eight ... six. Crawford senses the time is now. The freshman drives, crosses over, leaps into the air and jumps. Swish - Michigan goes up by two. "I was trying to stall," Crawford said. "I didn't want them to get another shot off. We have a play designed for situations like that to make our move." And then -- as if he hadn't made himself star of the game yet, Crawford stole the Titans' inbound pass. He travels, but no official saw anything except his pass to Michigan's LaVell Blanchard for a thun- derous game-ending dunk. Crawford finished with a team-high 13 points, all in the second half. He also added four assists and four rebounds. "Any given night it can be anyone," Crawford said. "But I kind of wanted to put the ball on my shoulders and make something of it." SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Detroit's Rashad Phillips netted 22 points, but his second- half injury gave the Wolverines a window to comeback. 'State pride' at stake for volleyball in finale Detroit 1(62) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 4T A F PTS Whye 26 48 0-0 22 2 8 Craft 14 02 0-0 14 2 2 0 Phillips 37 8-17 34 0-5 5 2 22 Ferguson 37 6-16 0-0 1-6 3 1 14 Bein 24 1-2 0-0 12 0 1 2 Harmon 8 12 0-1 0.4 0 5 2 Riggs 14 44 2-8 2-4 1 3 10 Walton 6 12 0-0 2-2 0 1 2 VanDyvke 2 00 0-0 01 0 0 0 Green 16 15 0.0 11 0 0 2 Mazur 16 0-0 00 0.1 0 4 0 Totals 200 26-58 5-14 1240 13 21. 62 FG%:.448. FT%: 357. 3-point FG: 5-22.227 Whillips 3-7, Ferguson 2-8. Green 0-3, Wye 0-1). Stocks: none. Steals: 4 (Belin 3. Harmon 1). Turnovers: 16 (Phillips 6. Riggs 3. Walton 2. Behn 2, Green 1. Harmon 1, Ferguson 1. Technical Fouls: Harmon. MICHIGAN (66) FT REB MIN M-A M-A O4T A F PTS Jones 27 3-7 0-0 0-3 1 5 8 Blanchard 37 3-11 6-8 29 2 3 12 Asselin 22 3-3 2-4 3-4 0 5 8 Crawford 35 518 2-2 04 4 2 13 Gaines 23 2-6 2-3 02 2 5 6 Groninger 25 4-6 0-0 0-0 1 0 11 Young 8 0-0 0-2 1.1 0 0 0 Anderson 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Vignier 22 1-3 6-8 19 1 0 8 Totals 200 21-54 18-27 8-34 11 21* 66 FG%:.389. FT%: .667. 3-point FG: 6 -1, .333. (Groninger 3-4. Jones 2-3. Crawford 1-7, Blanchard 0-1, Gaines 0-1). Blocks: 2 (Jones. Crawford). Steals: 3 (Crawford 2, Gaines). Turnovers: 14 (Gaies 5, Jones 3. Crawford 2, Blanchard. Asselin, Groninger, Young). Technical Fouls: none. Detroit--------------34 28 - 62 Michigan-------------26 40 -66 At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 9,537 TITANS' Continued from Page 8 Crawford was the first Wolverine to score from the field, and the Wolverines began to claw back. With Gaines fight- ing Phillips, Crawford hit a 3-pointer that brought Michigan within single dig- its. The crowd got loud, he asked them for more, and they gave it. With Asselin and Peter Vignier in the Michigan line- up, physical play began to chip away at the Titans. "They went to smash-mouth on us," said Detroit coach and Michigan specter Perry Watson. "Vignier was being phys- ical and knocking guys of the block." Detroit's offensive production began to grind, and a technical foul on Mike Harmon provided Michigan with a per- fect opportunity. Asselin cut the lead to six with one of two technical-foul free throws, and a jumper from Leon Jones made it four. Phillips did what he could to keep his team's lead, but Crawford answered right back. Phillips, who had since gone down with a severe camp but refused to sit out, succeeded in disqualifying Gaines, but could do no more from the field. Ellerbe called timeout once the Wolverines led by three, and Gaines offered encouragement to the cold and hot Crawford from the bench. "I just told him, 'Keep your head up - you've got to feel it and run the team these last couple minutes."' As the clock ticked, a layup by Terrel Riggs put Detroit up 61-60. Then, Crawford felt it. The freshman answered with a jumper of his own, and when Riggs tied the game at 62 with 57 sec- onds to go, the play was his to make. Hockey tickets still available for all home games Michigan hockey tickets are still available for all home games. Hundreds of tickets are avail able for both games in this weekend's College Hockey Showcase - against Minnesota at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Wisconsin at 7:00 p.m. on Saturday. Tickets are available for every other home game except Michigan State on Feb. 25. Tickets cost S12 and $15. Fans who must see the Spartand, can purchase standing room tickets * for $9. 'M' grapples with each other today Michigan wrestling team hits the mat again today at the Maize and Blue Intrasquad meet in Davison in another preseason tuneup. The Wolverines had a strong showing the last time out, at the unattached Michigan State Open on Nov. 13-14 at Jenison Fieldhouse in East Lansing. Junior all-America candidate Otto Olson continued his strong early-season showing, winning - his second straight meet. Senior Joe Warren and junior Damion Logan won their weight classes, 133 and 141 pounds, respectively. Freshman Foley Dowd finished sec- ond to Warren at 133 pounds, and sophomore Andy Hrovat was the run- ner-up at 184 pounds. Swimmers earn Big Ten awards In the first week of nominations on the season, two members of Michigan's men's swimming and div- ing team claimed Big Ten athlete of the week awards. Junior All-American Chris Thompson was named swimmer of the week. Thompson took first place in the 1,650-yard freestyle against Penn State on Nov. 12. His time of 15:05.75 also automati- cally qualified him for the NCAA championships. He was also part of the first-place 800-yard relay. Senior tri-captain Josh Trexler earned diver of the week honors. He lead his team with two individual first- place performances. He scored NCAA zone diving qual- ifying marks in the three-meter and one-meter competitions. By Richard Haddad Daily Sports Writer Tonight, the Michigan volleyball team is playing for pride. Michigan State visits Cliff Keen Arena for the second installment of the annual "State Pride" matches. After being swept earlier this year in East Lansing, the Wolverines are eager to return the favor and win at least a slice of that pride for themselves. "There's no question that one of the special things about college athletics is rivalries,"' Michigan coach Mark Rosen said. "There'll always be rivalries between certain schools, and this will always be a good one. The kids always get fired up about it, everyone works a little harder this week, and hopefully that'll show on the court." In the last meeting, the Spartans deliv- ered a thrashing and disposed of the Wolverines in three games. "We didn't play well in any facet of the game, they outplayed us in every possible way," Rosen said. "They executed well and we didn't put up much of a fight, we didn't execute in any capacity. It was one of those matches in which we didn't play near our style or up to our ability, this is a chance to redeem ourselves." According to the stats, Michigan's downfall lay in a season-low -.017 team- hitting percentage, resulting in a 9-15, 6- 15, 5-15 loss. But it isn't as simple as that. Statistics are a reflection of execution, and the Wolverines didn't execute. The statis- tics were in the Spartans' favor in nearly every category. "It isn't as easy as saying 'we need to hit better,' Rosen said. "Everything con- tributed; we didn't pass the ball well, our setting won't very good, our attackers did- n't make good choices, and it all showed up in the hitting percentage. We need to improve from every standpoint." The fifth-place Spartans (9-9 Big Ten, 19-11 overall), are beatable, but it will be tough. Michigan's performance against Illinois and Indiana last weekend provides encouragement. In knocking off a formi- dable Illinois squad and nearly doing the same to the Hoosiers, the Wolverines showed improvement from earlier outings against those opponents. More importantly, after turning in one of their worst showings of the season at Ohio State the previous week, Michigan successfully bounced back. Whether or not the team would be able to do so after playing so poorly so late in the year was a critical question, and Michigan answered it affirmatively. The Wolverines' effort showed that they are still intent on finish- ing the season out strong. The intra-state battle takes on a greater significance because it represents the final home match of the year. "We talked about it, and we're not going to have another home game for a long time, 10 or 11 months, so we ought to take advantage of this opportunity, be able to finish and say that we played well, played hard and took care of business," Rosen said. Lost in all of the "State Pride" hype is that Michigan still has to travel to Evanston to take on Northwestern on Friday. The cellar-dwelling Wildcats (2- 16 Big Ten, 4-24 overall) may be easy to overlook, but Rosen feels that his team will be able to avoid doing so. "I don't think we've played consistent- ly enough to be able to overlook anybody, and that's something that our team is aware of" Rosen said. Despite their record, the Wildcats' style of play makes them dangerous. Rosen compared them to a football team with a consistent big-play threat - if it gets hot, its tough to stop. The Wolverines will attempt to control the game early to pre- vent Northwestern from finding its rhythm. But Michigan State is on everyone's minds. "It's more than just a state-pride com- petition, and part of that is because they beat us pretty badly up there. It will be hard for us to beat them soundly enough to make up for it," Rosen said. "It's the chance to even the score with them." J:i MULTI COLOR SPECIALISTS " ARTIST ON STAFF _RUSH ORDERS " NEAR U OF M CAMPUS 1217 PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665-1771 $: .. o4 FF with this ad. http://www.tshirtstudio.com 1 m