10A The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 9, 1999 The Daily Grind= To M'fans: jump on tihe bandwagon Nice work. You guys just made it. You packed pretty quickly, espe- cially considering this was a trip you weren't even planning to take. But the wins started mounting - 4-0, 5-0, 6-0 - and so did your interest. It might have been after ANDY Michigan's come- LATACK back win over Detroit, a team that had made the NCAA Tournament two years running. Or maybe it was after the Wolverines beat Georgia Tech, COUNTER a quality ACC pro- LATACUC gram, on the road. But at some point in the last week, the thoughts came raining into your head like one of Gavin Groninger's deadeye three-pointers. Michigan might be decent this year. At the very least, the young Wolverines were gonna be exciting. You wonder, are tickets still avail- able? Don't be ashamed of joining the Michigan basketball bandwagon. It's good to be excited about your team and those that have been through thick and thin will grudgingly slide over and make room for you. As far as college basket- ball fans go, it's the more, the merrier. And your timing is impeccable. Because as I'm sure you know, No. 14 Duke comes to town on Saturday. Which means one of two things for those of you that barely made the train as it was pulling out of the station. If Michigan loses to Duke, this will be the shortest ride of your life. You'll return home from the game and scour the top 25 for your next favorite team. Michigan's exciting and terrifyingly tal- ented squad will fade from your mind. Until they win a few in a row again. But if Michigan beats Duke, all but assuring the team of its first national ranking in over a year, you can blend in with the crowd. Nobody will know that before Saturday, Blanchard, Gaines & Crawford could have been a law firm company for all you knew. You can adopt that 'down-since-day-one' men- tality, keeping your Duke ticket stub as proof that you were a fan even before the huge win. I'm not saying Michigan will beat Duke. I'm not saying it'll lose. I'm merely welcoming you late-comers to the bandwagon, because truth be told, you guys make up an important part of college basketball. You think members of 'The Izzone' - Michigan State's student section, which I reluctantly admit is second only to Duke's Cameron Crazies in terms of rowdy fans I have witnessed - were huge Michigan State fans for all their lives? No way. Many of them just hap- pen to be going to the school during a period when it's very trendy to be a backer of Spartan basketball. So what do the Wolverines have to dc to get your ever-changing allegiance? The answer seems to be to beat Duke. At least, that's what it was two years ago. That Michigan team lost its season opener to Western Michigan, and many of you must have twisted your ankles making your leap. But almost a month later, the Wolverines beat then-No. I Duke in Crisler, a game for which fans showed up in droves. It was one of my favorite Michigan sports memories, as die-hards and bandwagoners united one December afternoon to simultaneously lose their minds for a few hours. For the only time in recent memory, Crisler Arena was a tough place to play. So I can't fault you guys, because you do fill the seats and can yell just as loud as real fans. With the exception of last year, when Michigan's 0-2 start knocked the wheels off the wagon before it could even get out of the garage, bandwagon boarding has been as much a fixture as baggy shorts in the recent history of the program. For many reasons, though, this is bothersome. Michigan fans are about as loyal as your average NBA player (oh, so that's where Tony Massenburg ended up) and that's confusing given the rela- tive success of Michigan's recent teams. Sure, Michigan hasn't made a serious NCAA Tournament run since members of the Fab Five were still around, but it's not like the Wolverines are chopped liver as far as college basketball pro- grams go. If you go to Northwestern, I can see writing off your team after an early loss or two. But bandwagon jumping just seems like it would be so darned unfulfilling Quote of the game "'I probably would have told him I'd have to see it to believe it." - Michigans Leon Jones, when asked what he would have said if someone told him in July that Michigan would start the season 6-0. Player of the game Guard Jamal Crawford The freshman scored 27 of the team.' 75 points on 10-fer-18 sIiootinifi the ield. He also played a game-high 39 minutes. I0 Michigan 75 Kent 73 I Crawford keeps the ship afloat in first half By Mark Francescuttl Daily Sports Writer The scoreboard read Kent 40, Michigan 38, but the Wolverines were thankful for the tight score. A poor first half, preserved by fresh- man Jamal Crawford, kept the Wolverines from looking at an upward second-half climb. "The first half, I give it a D or D- minus," Crawford said. "We weren't lis- tening to the coaches like we were sup- posed to do" Crawford began to listen when the Wolverines fell behind 35-25 with just 4:42 remaining until halftime. The freshman went on a tear, netting 13 of Michigan's 15 points in the next four minutes. "Really? I seriously didn't know that," Crawford said. "I knew the guys were in foul trouble, and I wanted to be more aggressive. I knew I could get around my man and could make some- thing happen." Crawford played 19 minutes in the first half, and the entire second, as Kevin Gaines and LaVell Blanchard sat on the bench in foul trouble. In his four-minute run to bring the Wolverines back into the game, Crawford shot 3-for-3 from the field including two 3-pointers, and also went 4-for-4 from the free-throw line. "That one kid Crawford -- he's going to be a dynamic player here one day" Kent coach Gary Waters said. "He's going to be one of the best players in the Big Ten if he continues to play like that." Crawford was able to find his open shot thanks to Kent lessening its defen- sive frontcourt pressure. The Golden Flashes stifled Michigan's guards early, but had to fall back when the referees started blowing their whistles.- "There was some crazy foul calls," said Waters, as the referees called 12 fouls in the first six minutes. "We had to lighten up on our pressure because of the (foul) issue. If we touch them, they call a foul" Ellerbe had other worries than just fouls, moreover, his team's inability to execute in the first half. "We were stubborn at executing on both sides of the floor," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. "You can only stay young for so long. We have to grow up." Michigan will need to mature fast in the first half by Saturday, when the Wolverines face off against national power Duke. Michigan especially has to grow up in rebounding and turnovers. For the sec- ond straight game, Michigan gave up 10 offensive boards in the first half. The Wolverines also turned the ball over a whopping 14 times before intermission. Only down two at the break, Kent's inability to build a big lead gave the Wolverines a perfect opportunity to win. "We thought they played pretty well in the first half, and we didn't play well at all," Crawford said. "We then felt like we were still in it. The coaches said it was ours to win" But things didn't way, as even the couldn't execute to defensive end. go all Crawford's offensive leader his liking on the Kent reserve guard Trevor Huffman, whom Crawford guarded most, jolted the Wolverines for 19 points on 7-of-I5 shooting. TICKET UPDATE: According to Michigan Marketing Director Tom Brooks, the Duke game on Saturday at 4 p.m. is sold out. However, despite what was announced at Crisler Arena last night, Michigan State tickets are still available to faculty and students only. STUDENT FREEBIE: Michigan plans on giving out more than 100 Nike head- bands at Saturday's game. The move comes in response to Crawford's unusu- al headgear - a headband in his team's color. Brooks won't know the color of the headbands until the Michigan coaches decide what color jerseys the Wolverines will wear against Duke. FG FT REB MINA M-A MA OT A F PTS Thomas 23 3-6 0-0 3 4 2 0 7 Massey 25 4.10 0 1 4-7 1 2 8 Whonoo 30 4-10 0-0 0-2 1 1 8 Shaw 36 5-9 5-6 3-6 2 3 15 Mitchell 25 17 0-0 1-2 2 4;3 Huffman 26 7-15 3-3 0-3 1 1 19 Vaughn 9 1-2 0.0 0-1 0 3 2 Meers 11 2-5 0-0 1.1 22.:6 Warren 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Perry 14 1-2 3-6 0-1 0 4 5 Totals 200 28-66 11-1616-33 11 21 73 FG%:.424. Frx%: .688. 3-point FG: 6-15, .400 (Meers 2- 4, Huffman 2-6, Thomas 1-1, Mitchell 1-3). Blocks: 1 (Thomas). Steals: 7 (Shaw 3, Massey 2, Thomas Whoton). Turnovers: 14 Wa rton 3, Vaughn 3, Thomas 2, Shaw 2, Massey, Huffman, Warren). Technical Fouls: none. MICHIGAN (75) FG FT REB. MIN M-A M-A 01 A F PTS Jones 35 5-8 4-7 3-6 2 2 16 Blanchard 25 2-7 0-0 2-7 1 3 4 Asselin 16 4-5 0-1 1-4' 0 4 8 Crawford 39 10-18 5-6 0.0 4 2 27 Gaines 18 1-2 2-3 1-2 4 5 4 Groninger 28 2.4 0-0 1-2 1 1 6 Young 7 0-1 2-2 0-1 0 0 2 Anderson 1 2-2 0-0 0-1 0 3 4 Vignier 21 2-3 0-0 1-5 2 0 4 Totals 200 28-50 13-19 1031 14 20 75 FG%~: .560. FT%: .684, 3-point FR: 6-14,.429. (ones 2- 2, Groninger 2-3, Crawford 2-6, Blanchard 0-2, Gaines 0-1). Blocks: 8 (Asselin 3, Crawford 2, Jones, Blanchard, Groninger). Steals: 3 (Blanchand,. Crawford, Vignier). Turnovers: 21 (Crawford 5, Asselirn 4, Blanchard 3, Gaines 3. Jones 2. Anderson 2, Groninger, Vignier. Technical Fouls:7none. Kent.:... n...40 33 -73 Michigan. -.38 37 - 75 0' At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 8,723 Barkley is finished From staff and wire reports Houston forward Charles Barkley ruptured a tendon in his knee in the first quarter against Philadelphia last night and will need surgery that could end his career. Barkley, who says he is retiring after the season, was going up to block a shot by Tyrone Hill when he lost his balance and hit the floor hard with 4:09 left in the first. He will need surgery and is "most likely" out for the year, Rockets spokesman Tim Frank said. 4 Dear LF1Mom Dad Li Other AllI [IHanukkah want Q]Christmas for LQMillennium is... 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