The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - January 29, 2001- 3B Compliments scarce as M' underachieves DAVID DEN HERDER By David Roth Daily Sports Writer Being Sue Guevara. Dealing with the complications of ' veling through a mysterious tunnel eren't necessary to figure out what was going on inside the head of Michigan's women's basketball coach. Co-captain and starting NORTHWESTERN 59 guard Anne - Thorius had MICHIGAN 74 gone down with a sprained ankle. Post players Jennifer Smith and LeeAnn Bies had somehow stayed alive with four fouls. nd Michigan (6-4 Big Ten, 13-7 over- ) had survived the embarrassment of losing to basement broomers Northwestern fO-9, 4-14), who were looking for any sort of positive to take back to Evanston. "Thank God it's over," Guevara said. Michigan's 74-59 victory, a lack- adaisical effort compared to its 42-point romp of the Wildcats ten days ago, did- n't exactly register as a step forward. "We came out with a lack of intensi- ," Raina Goodlow said. "When we did try to pick it up, it was in spurts. We did- n't put a whole game together today. I felt there was a lot of frustration out there." After the game ended, the Wolverines huddled up at center court to confer. The meeting was not self-congratulatory. "It was mostly negative because we didn't play the game that we should have," Goodlow said. 9Michigan hoped to blow out Worthwestern, which has lost its last five games by an average of 39 points. But YESTERbAY'S GAME Northwestern (59) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Sears 36 3-10 4-7 1-7 2 4 10 Win 25 2-9 0-0 0.1 2 3 4 14 1-2 0-0 0-4 C 5 2 tier 37 6-14 4-8 0-0 5 3 19 Messenger 16 2-2 0-0 1-1 a 1 4 Fisher 1 0-0 0-00-0 0 0 0 Leonard 21 5-8 1-2 2-2 1 1 14 Koester 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Zylstra 26 0-3 0-4) 14 0 5 0 Russell 22 3-5 0-0 5-8 0 2 6 Totals 200 22-53 9-7 15-34 11 24 59 FG%: .415. FT%: 529.3-point FG: 6-16..375 (Butler 35, Leonard 3-6, Will 0-4. Zystra 0-1). Blocks: 0 Steals: 5 (Sears 3, Will, Russell). Turnovers: 22 (Butler 7 Sears 5. Messenger 4, Leonard 2. Will, Dolland, Zyistra, Russell). Technical Fouls: none. the Wildcats matched the Wolverines in shooting percentage in the first half and tightened the game to a 50-47 contest with less than eight minutes to play. "We made a statement to ourselves," Northwestern coach June Olkowski said. "No, it's not a good feeling to lose, but my kids showed character today by com- ing out and giving effort that we can give. Giving this performance on the road is one step closer to where we've got to be." Emily Butler kept Northwestern close by making opportune 3-pointers. Butler shot 60 percent from behind the are and led all scorers with 19 points. Northwestern's players and coaches came out showing that they had learned from their mistakes in the previous game. Northwestern "had us scouted down to a tee," Guevara said. The Wildcats came after Smith and Bies, and each found herself in early foul trouble. Bad became worse when Thorius headed to the training room with a bum ankle. With the trio as onlookers, Goodlow and Alayne Ingram stepped up and fin- ished with team-highs of 15 points. "I had to be more of a leader out there," Goodlow said. "You lose a lot of leadership with (Thorius) hurt and Bies on the bench." Ingram knocked down a key 3-pointer with 7:08 to put Michigan up by eight and defuse the chance of a Northwestern comeback. "I knew I had to step up," Ingram said. "People look to me for leadership. I had to run the offense and get stuff done." Along with Ingram and Goodlow, Whose expectations, anyway? BRENDAN O'DONNELL/Daily Heather Oesterle attempts a layup over two Northwestern defenders. Michigan found the Wildcats to be a lot peskier this time than in its first game with Northwestern. Heather Oesterle scrapped together a well-rounded performance with 13 points, nine rebounds and six assists. "She's a garbage player" Guevara said. "She does all those little things that people don't really notice until you get the stat sheet afterward" Oesterle was a main contributor to Michigan's free-throw shooting, attempting 12 foul shots. The Wolverines had twice as many opportunities from the line as the Wildcats and hit 27-of-35 from the stripe, compared to Northwestern hitting just 9-of- 17. "We didn't get to the line enough," Olkowski said. "Are we not strong enough, do we not draw the attention ? I'm not quite sure." once knew a Michigan coach that was fond of reminding media- types exactly what they were deal- ing with. "You have to remember," he would say, "these are kids." That would have made me, sitting there with my recorder, also a kid. I. thought that was fair enough. It was intended as some kind of dis- claimer - "don't expect too much," or something to that effect. That's a stigma that I'd more or less tacitly agreed to most of my life. Around the time I enrolled at this uni- versity, it went without saying that expectations of my peers and me were implicitly lower. Sure, we could "play a great game" or "put on a Why ar great show" - consider- entrus ing. Considering we were uphi just kids, students, whatev- Michlga er. dards , In a way, it was comfort- dar ing. It gave you a little comi wiggle room, lowered the teXpec1 standards a bit, and didn't subtract any points. It was a perk of youth that I figured extended at least through college - after all, I'd been hearing about the joys of "being a college kid" for years. But as I became a part of the University, I began to notice subtle changes in the way my peers behaved. The wiggle room that everybody knew existed was still available, but people were inadvertently pushing it aside. The first example seemed unique. The men that constructed a perfect football season the autumn of my freshman year were, I figured, a notch above the rest of us. But the spirit that promoted such excellence, I found, seemed to permeate the entire cam- pus. It was an attitude, if nothing else. I watched as it turned up in every aspect of Michigan life - from ath- letic performance to musical perfor- mance to dramatic performance to academic performance. And allowing yourself to consistently be impressed - even amazed - by your friends eventually leads you to raise your own expectations. This past weekend, as I sat on the floor of a sound-stage-turned-theatre watching the student-produced play "Philadelphia, Here I Come," I real- ized that the disclaimer I had adhered to for so many years had dissolved te pol an completely. The students had given a masterful performance. Period. There was no need to apply a special stan- dard, no need to lower expectations. Maybe that journey - from dis- . claimers to expectations of excellence - maybe that's college. From everything I'd been taught, it is certainly Michigan. Which is why a statement coming from the Athletic Department last week is a little disheartening. In a story examining Michigan s"^ basketball attendance epidemic, the Detroit Free Press quoted Michigan ticket manager Marty Bodnar as say- ing that Michigan doesn't measure its attendance against North Carolina or Kentucky, and that a fair- people er measure would be ed with schools like Florida State ding and Nebraska. s Stan- 'The thing is, if you uddenly look at it as far as other schools across the coun- m"iSng try that are football pow- 3tiOnS? erhouses, they don't nec- essarily have strong bas- ketball programs,' Bodnar told the Free Press. "If you'compare us to those other schools we do pretty well in support for basketball." Sentiment like that caught me com- pletely off guard - especially because it came from the front office. Why are people entrusted with upholding Michigan's standards sud- denly compromising expectations? Since Michigan is a football power- house, Bodnar's reasoning goes, it can't be expected to have solid basket- ball attendance. Oh well, nothing we can do here. Hey, for a football powerhouse,, we're doing pretty good. For a football powerhouse. Four years ago, when I had no rea- son to reject disclaimers, I might have accepted that logic. This past weekend I realized that what my peers have been doing the past four years is simply impressive. Not impressive for a bunch of stu- dents or impressive for a bunch of kids - just plain impressive. This university creates and perpetuates such excellence. To hear that officials would lower any expectation for this university is-' unsettling. David Den Herder can be reached at dden@umich.edu. Shock's star conducts Criler clinic By Benjamin Singer Daily Sports Writer MICHIGAN (74) FG Oesterie 37 311 - low 3C 33-3 Thorius 15 1-3 c- 01 2 2 Ingram 33 5- Jara 1 0-0 0- 00 0 0 Leary 6 0-1 0- 1 C 0 Schumacher 5 0-0 Robinson - 3 0-C0 - 00 0 0 *andy 24 2-2 Dykbouse 1 0-0 Smih 22 3-5 Totals 200 23-49 2-3 03 21 7 FT 712 4 20s REB 4-9 i-5 0.1 0-0 36 A 6 0 2 3 5 0 1 i 0 0 0 18 F 2 3 4 2 3 0 C 0 0 2 1 4 21 PTS 13 15 10 2 15 0 0 0 0 6 0 12 74 The WNBA's Detroit Shock sent director of community relations Eve Claar and all-star power forward Wendy Palmer to teach the fundamentals of bas- ketball in a clinic at Crisler Arena before yesterday's game between Michigan and Northwestern. "In order for them to be great players, they have to work at the basics first and get that down;' Claar said. Palmer stood in front of attentive chil- dren and shared some of her basketball philosophies. "My motto is offense does not win games, defense does," she told them. She showed defensive stances and had the children emulate her. For most of the clinic, it was Claar, a high school coach at Birmingham Groves in the Auburn Hills area, who gave the instructions while Palmer walked around the court, almost acting as an assistant. "Eve is really the clinic specialist," Palmer said. "I'm just here to help in any way and interact with them on a more personal basis." With smiles and a playful nature, Palmer exhibited a sincerity in her work for the community, as well as her skill. "Once we get out there with the kids, that's what it's all about," she said. "I enjoyed giving back to the game. I don't want to give back when my shoes are hung up and the ball stops bouncing ---I want to give back while they can still see me put everything to use that I tell them." This is the third year in which the Shock has set up clinics at different local universities to share its basketball knowledge. Claar and Palmer held a clinic just last Thursday at Michigan State. before the Spartans hosted the Michigan women's basketball team. Some Wolverines took a peck at the yesterday's event before the game. "I think it's awesome that they take the Palmer's career stats Games 119 Starts 93 APG 1.3 STL 94 BLK 33: PPG 13.2 FT% .667 time to come down here to Ann, and work out with these little1 Arbor girls," FG%: .469. FT%: .771. 3-point FG: 1-7, .143 (Ingram). Blocks: 3 (Goodlow 2. Oesterte) Steals: 11 (Gesterle 3. Ingram 3, Bies, Thorius. Leary, Gandy, Smith). Turnovers: 15 (Goodlow 5, terle 3, Gandy 2, Ingram, Leary. Robinson). Technical Fouls: Northwestern ....27 32 - 59 Michigan ........34 40 - 74 At: Cnsler Arena Attendance: 2,421 BIG TEN STANDINGS guard Alayne Ingram said. Mary Rogers from the Detroit Shock's front office reported that last year's attendance at the clinic in Crisler reached 50, whereas this year it totaled 75 - an encouraging sign for the growth of the Shock and women's bas- ketball. In addition to learning from Claar and Palmer, participants of the clinic were invited to stay for the follow- ing Michigan game. "It's kind of a close sorority of women's basketball fans, players and coaches," Claar said. "We just want to be here to support them and hope that they'll come out and support us." Parents and coaches brought their children to come learn from the Shock's star forward, but gained more than just lessons in drills. With the WNBA still a relatively new league, it needs to show young female athletes positive role mod- els they can look to follow. The opportunity to meet with Palmer and watch the game allowed the kids "to be able see players playing at higher lev- els and dream to be at that level;' Claar said. Conference Team. W L Purdue 9 0 Wisconsin 6 3 enn State .6 3 ichigan 6 4 Iowa 5 3 Illinois 5 3 Ohio State 4 5 Indiana 4 5 Michigan State 2 6 Minnesota 1 7 Northwestern 0 9 Overall W L 19 3 12 7 14 6 13 7 10 8 10 10 14 5 13 .7 8 11 8 11 4 15 HOLD ON TIGHT, YOU KNOW WE'RE A L1TTLE BIT PANGEROUS DAILY S.PORTS: Y sterdays results: *hio State 83, INDIANA 76 PURDUE 75, Wisconsin 70 MICHIGAN 74, Northwestem 59 Illinois 88, MINNESOTA 81 PENN STATE 97, Michigan State 49 r: Detroit Shock forward Wendy Palmer practices her Harlem Globetrotter moves as the Director of Community Relations Eve Claar teaches the kids. i1 m ... :? f2.$