oreboard-.-'Tracking 'M' teams NCAA MEN'S WISCONSIN 61, NCAA WOMEN'S The Michigan women's gymnastics team begins its BASKETBALL (12) Texas 45 BASKETBALL 1999-2000 season with the Maize and Blue intrasq (2) Arizona 78, (14) Indiana 73, (2 Tennessee 92, Cliff Keen A at p (6) Connecticut 69 MIsSOURI 6MEMPHISy65e ensa 5 . (5) Michigan State 66, (19) MARYLAND 76, (14) N. CAROUNA 74, (4) Kansas 54 Winthrop 65 (OT) Georgia Southern 55 (7) North Carolina 91, (22) KENTUCKY 86, CREIGHTON 55, BUFFALO 67 N.C. - Asheville 41 (15) Kansas 54 Wednesday (9) SYRACUSE 86, (23) Purdue 86, (20) ILLINOIS 80, 0Dcmbr 8, J999 Alba 46 ILUINOIS STATE 75 Illinois State 58 Blue win streak halted at seven By Dona Both Kilchr Daily SportsWriter Everything just seemed to be falling into place too perfectly. For 2:51 last night, the undefeated Michigan women's basketball team held Vanderbilt in the palm of its hand. The Wolverines were showing that no, their 7-0 start was hardly a fluke. Sophomore forward Raina Goodlow started her first game since returning from a dislocated patella, suffered in the first exhibition game of the season, and delivered a quick lay-up at 47 seconds into the game on Michigan's first pos- session. Senior forward Stacey Thomas made all of her first four shots and had two early steals. ,Michigan's defense stayed tough and did what it needed to do to prevent Vanderbilt's 6-foot-6 Chantelle Anderson scoring like she has against, the smaller teams the Commodores have facg so far this season. The Wolverines as a, whole were getting good looks, holding onto the ball and staying out of foultrouble. As if somebody spoke too soon, Michigan loosened its grip, and the Commodores went on a rampage less than five minutes into the game. Vanderbilt decreased the Wolverines' lead from eight points, to four points, to one point - tying the score, taking the lead and eventually stealing the game right from under Michigan's nose. -After the Commodores arose from the dead, Michigan's entire game went downhill and the Wolverines turned over their undefeated record to Vanderbilt, losing 76-60. There was no big comeback in the second half for Michigan like there was in last Tuesday's game against Providence. "The first five minutes of the second half is very important and we didn't come out and play aggressively and try to take over the game," Michigan guard Alayne Ingram said. "They capitalized on our turnovers and they came out with the win." The Wolverines couldn't make their shots - landing just 31 percent during the second half. Michigan traded in points for turnovers, turning the ball over to Vanderbilt 20 times - 13 times in the first half alone. "We hurt our own selves on the offen- sive end," said Ingram, who scored 18 of the 29 points in the second half. Ingram gave Michigan chances tog come back, making both of her 3-point- ers look easy with less than 2:45 to go in the game. The shots decreased Vanderbilt's lead to 10 - the closest the Wolverines would get in the second half. Nonetheless, the Wolverines couldn't move the ball up the floor without losing their balance, or their possession. "This is probably their first experi- ence against a team of our size,". Vanderbilt coach Jim Foster said. Despite two 5-5 guards, Ashley Smith and Ashley McElhiney, the Commodores still had at least four or five inches on the Wolverines at every other position. The lack of size had Michigan hitting the floor and fighting for the ball more often than it was hitting the basket. "They were pretty tough," Thomas said. "They take up a lot of space down, there. It was very physical. Diving to the floor, it was who ever was tougher was going to get it. We just have to step up. We've been to the weight room, we've practiced and we're pretty physical our- selves." Was Michigan just not ready for this? "No, we knew exactly what we were going to get," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "I just thought we were going to do a better job of scoring against their zone." The Wolverines lost their quick step and their handle on the basketball - possibly due to fatigue from playing three games in five days or possibly because Vanderbilt was bigger. Or it could have just as easily been the strain on maintaining their undefeated record. "To be pretty honest with you, I thought we played pretty tired," Guevara said. "I thought we looked tired and we had a lot of short shots and that is always an indicator of tired legs. It didn't matter who I put in. We had trouble rebounding the basketball, grabbing the basketball and getting off of our feet" Kent tests Blue stamina tonight at Crisler Arena Can 5-0 'M' concentrate wit Duke on horizon Saturday? By David Den Herder- Daily Sports Writer He was so quick to respond, and so confident, thsat was almost convincing. "What do you think about being 5-0, coach?" askedr reporter in one of Crisler Arena's back-hall nooks. Not even a smile. TONIGHT "I think it's insignificant," Ellerbe said. "We have got an Who: awful lot of basketball to Michigan vs. Kent learn. It's just very early in Where: the season to even think Crisler Arena about the record or any- C een thing. When: 7:30 p. Well, maybe this is the The latest: hottest start for Michigan in Michigan is unbeaten three years, but from all and looking for its appearances, Ellerbe isn't sixtitwin of the sea yet amused, and trying his hardest to keep the hype T machine on the ground. HISTORY "We're more concerne d BOOK . about how we play," Ellerbe .-.-.....-...--.- said. "It's repetition, we've Michigan has never just got to keep working." lost to Kent although The problem is, Michigan more or less invented the in the lastmatchup modern college basketball (13 years ago, minus hype machine - and they one day), Kent came did it with this Saturday's the closest to a victory opponent - Duke. - within 12, 73-61 at. The other problem? While Crisler Arena. Other mouths in Ann Arbor water 1986 newsmakers: over the Blue Devils, Josh Asselin and his band of U Space Shuttle flashy frosh still have busi- Challenger explodes ness to take care of. Kent returns to Crisler Arena tonight for the first Cntra time since 1986, and is still Cotra looking for its first victory ;'. scandal over the Wolverines.^ breaks But the Mid-American Conference has come a long way from the mid '80s. So Mets win World has Kent. Series over Red Sox "They were a tournament team last year. We weren't," * p G beomes Ellerbe said. "They've got a low post game and a perime- single great- ter game, and they'll throw est Navy some pressure at us, so we're recruiting concerned about this game." tool of Ellerbe's concern is legiti- all time. mate. With the backcourt of Andrew Mitchell and Kyem Murray, Kent has a good shot at taking the MAC and an automatic NCAA Tournament berth. That in itself is no easy task - the conference fielded two teams in last year's Tournament. And so, Ellerbe is trying - trying - to play down the hype. The players seem to share his perspective, at least in the hallways of Crisler Arena. "We have to worry about Kent," says Jamal Crawfo "Duke is Saturday. We have a game Wednesday." Will they display such perspective on the court? , ( - *1 Allison Miller could do no utter than a single basket against a superior Vanderbilt team. The sloppy shooting that has characterized the Wolverines so far this season finally caught up with them last night. Reality check: Michigan overp",oweretC,,d by Vand FORE[)0AD@ Women's hoops' hottest starts . . and howthey ended 1981-82 (9-2) 17-9, nopastseason 1987-88 (7-2)14-14,nopostseasnt 1489-90 (6-0) 20-10, NCAA secondround 1996-97 (5-0) 15-it no postseason 1997-98 (6-1) 19-10, NCAA first round 1998-99 (9-1) 18-12, WNTsecond round 1999-00 (7-1) NAME BRAND BELOW WHOLESALE PIONEER ROCKFORD FOSGAiTE REnWOOD ALPIE CLRION KICKER InfINITY ...AND MANY OTHER TOP BRANDS B(JY MtR=CTAWI SAVE: VISIT OUR WEB SITE: WWW.FACTORYDIRECTMARKETING.COM By Arun Gopal Daily Sports Writer What a shame. Things were going so well, weren't they? By losing to Vanderbilt 76-60 yesterday, the Michigan women's basketball team saw its seven-game winning streak, a school record for season starts, come to an abrupt halt. Instead of building momentum heading into a pivotal Louisiana road trip, the Wolverines suf- fered a disappointing home loss against a team they felt they were capable of defeating. While 7-1 certainly isn't shabby by any means, 8-0 would feel a lot nicer heading into games at No. 22 Louisiana State and No. 3 Louisiana Tech this weekend.. "Vanderbilt did a nice job against us in their zone," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "We really had trouble scoring from the perimeter." Part of the reason for Vanderbilt's decisive victory was its decided edge in the post. While Michigan's starting forwards, Ruth Kipping and Alison Miller, scored a meager three points between them, the Commodores got 16 points from forward Zuzana Klimesova and 20 from 6- foot-5 freshman center Chantelle Anderson. "We didn't have an answer for their inside game," Guevara said. "We were fronting and doubling, but they were still able to get it inside. "We were pressuring the passer, but (Anderson) was just too big. This is as big a team as we've seen this year." The Wolverines also had a terrible time hold- ing onto the basketball - committing 13 turnovers in the first half. Even though they were able to cut that number to seven in the sec- ond stanza it was already too much to recover from. "We were doing a decent job against their zone early, but then they woke up," Guevara said. "The giveaways were unforced, and I think it's because we're trying to do something quick- ly. "One of our main focuses has to be the turnovers," guard Stacey Thomas added. "We've been talking about it in practice, and we just can't have that, especially playing some of the better teams like Vanderbilt." One of the Wolverines' strengths so far this season has been their depth. Strong reserves like LeeAnn Bies, Kenisha Walker, and Heather Oesterle allowed Guevara to substitute players See HALT, Page 15 FINA.mLS Take advantage of this special price on lecture notes from Grade A Notes and start preparing for finals NOW! At Grade A Notes we know that even good students can take bad notes. Whether you missed aday of class or simply want a great study aid our lecture notes can helpl Lecture notes are typed in paragraph format so they are easy to read and understand. Lecture notes from Grade A will give you that extra edge you need to make finals abreeze. Stop by and browse our library of notes! I Receivea lull term set of lecture notes for only$28. l sVaidwith upon.Notvadwilh offer ors.Expires121799 Grade A Notes at Ulrich's Booksore - 741-9669-549 E Univ., 2nd Floor email: annabor@gradeanotes.com www.gradeanotes.com L-..-.----..._-.-- -_-_---- ---- -- - ----- Chris Young and the other young Wolverines say they haven't looked past tonight's matchup with Kent. DANA ULNNANE/Daily The Psychology Peer Advisors Present Fall 1999 Focus Group #6 Enhancing Your Psychology Degree: Research, Internships, and Experimental Psychology Courses Thursday, December 9th, 1999 7:00 - 9:00 PM 4th Floor Terrace, East Hall There will be refreshments. Anyone interested in Psychology and/or Mental Health Professions is encouraged to take advantage of this opportunity. The Psychology Peer Advisors are located in 1044 East Hall and have walk-in hours from 11:OOAM-4:OOPM Mon-Fri. They help students with questions regarding the Psychology and Biopsychology concentrations and can help declare students in either concentration. 0