12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 30, 2001 'M' perfecting science of comeback a Dar Ar er lwww By Arun uopau Daily Sports Writer After 40 minutes of Saturday night's game at Joe Louis Arena against No. I Michigan State, the Michigan hock- ey team was struck with conflicting emotions. The Wolverines rebounded from a sluggish opening stanza - which ended with Michigan State leading 1-0 - with a strong second period. A goal by John Shouneyia gave Michigan a 2-1 lead at the 5:39 mark of the second, but a pair of relatively soft goals by Troy Ferguson and Jon Insana - the latter coming from just inside the blue line - put Michigan State back on top, 3- 2 when the period drew to a close. Consequently, Michigan entered the lockerroom for the second intermission with mixed feelings., On one hand, the Wolverines were upset that they were once again trailing the hated Spartans. But at the same time, Michigan could take some solace in the fact that it had seized control of the flow of play in the latter stages of the second period. "Towards the end of the second period, it was our peri- od - we outplayed them," Michigan forward Craig Murray said. "We knew that they had just gotten a cou- ple of lucky chances and the bounces went in." The fact that the Wolverines dictated the play for most of the second period made the 3-2 deficit a little easier to swallow. And yet, Michigan was faced with the prospect of hav- ing to put at least one more puck past Miller, who had not given up three goals in a game since Dec. 1. "All of hockey is confidence," Swistak said. "If you don't have confidence that you can come back and score, you're really putting yourself in a hole. But this team knew it had to have it." As confident as Michigan might have been in the lock- erroom, it couldn't possibly have predicted what would happen at the start of the third. A mere 14 seconds into the final frame, Andy Hilbert streaked down the right wing and flipped a centering pass to Mike Cammalleri, who was standing all alone in the slot. Cammalleri didn't waste his opportunity, one-timing the puck over a startled Miller's right shoulder to even the score at three. Before many fans had a chance to return from the con- cession stand, the Wolverines had tied the contest. The shellshocked Spartans never seemed to recover - they took only six shots during the final period and failed to get off a single shot in overtime before Hilbert slid a puck between Miller's pads to end the game. "It was four-on-four hockey, and you know they're coming out to play that kiddie-bar-the-door-defend-the- lead," Michigan coach Red Berenson said of Cammalleri's goal. "Well,,,a minute into the period, they didn't have the lead anymore. It was a huge goal." AND THE WINNERS ARE: Sophomore forward Andy Hilbert was named CCHA Offensive Player of the Week for his performance in wins over Notre Dame and Michigan State. Hilbert had a playmaker in the 9-0 win over the Fighting Irish and scored the game-winning goal in the overtime thriller against Michigan State on Saturday night. In addition, freshman defenseman Andy Burnes was selected CCHA Rookie of the Week, and Michigan was chosen as the "Team of the Week" by USAToday.com. IL. >. ; A Josh Blackburn gave up two soft goals in as the Wolverines came back against Mic Carolina- Duke best ofinti guing matchups By Mike Hensch For the Daily FEB. 1, No. 6 NORTH CAROLINA AT No.2 DUKE Tobacco Road will be the host of yet another instant classic between the Tar Heels and the Blue Devils. Along with bragging rights, the winner will sit alone atop the ACC standings in the fiercest rivalry in college basketball. The Tar Heels are riding a 14-game winning streak, while Duke is still thanking a divine force for its 10 unan- swered points in the final 54 seconds against Maryland on Saturday (hmmm, a possible point shaving scandal). Look for sophomore sensation Joseph Forte, averaging 20.7 points per game, to battle to the end with Duke's Jason Williams, who is averaging 21.3 points. Both teams are stacked with All- Americans, so whichever team stays out of foul trouble may end up with the advantage. The infamous Cameron Crazies, who even skipped the premiere of Survivor II to camp outside Cameron Indoor Stadium, will be the difference. Duke 86, North Carolina 79 (OT) JAN 31, MINNESOTA AT No. 17 IOWA Minnesota will try to avenge a loss to Iowa earlier in the Big Ten season. Although the Gophers are 3-4 in Big Ten action, do not let their conference record fool you -they are 15-5 overall and still in contention for a bid to the Big Dance. The difference in the game may come down to a battle of the boards, where the Hawkeyes' Reggie Evans will reign supreme over the small front line of Minnesota. Evans leads all Big Ten play- ers in rebounds with 11.9 per game. Iowa came back from a 19-point deficit this past weekend against Indiana. Look for the Hawkeves' momentum to carry them. Iowa 69, Minnesota 60 FEB. 1, No. 22 SOUTHERN CAL AT No. 1 STANFORD Stanford is the only unbeaten Division Wrestlers had final mi as iflan vt9 i20 first-place votes in parentheses TeamR 1. Stanford (65) 2. Duke (5) 3. Kansas 4. North Carolina 5. Michigan State 6. Illinois 7. Arizona 8. Tennessee 9. Maryland 10. Wisconsin 11. Virginia 12. Syracuse 13. Florida 14. Georgetown 15. Iowa State 16. Wake Forest 17. Alabama 18. Iowa 19. Fresno State 20. Boston College 21. Southern Cal 22. Seton Hall 23. Notre Dame 24. Oklahoma 25. Georgia Record 19-0 19-1 17-1 17-2 16-1 16-4 14-5 17-3 14-5 13-4 14-4 16-3 13-4 17-2 17-3 14-5 16-3 16-4 17-2 14-2 15-4 12-6 13-5 15-4 13-7 IPts 1,745 1,683 1,598 1,529 1,464 1,393 1,264 1,196 1,160 915 894 857 813 808 757 747 683 599 510 454 288 256 238 207 188 Pvs 1 2 4 5 3 7 12 6 8 15 13 11 14 10 17 9 18 21 22 23 25 16 By Jeb Singer Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - It was an old- school brawl, wrestled on a wooden platform, in an old-school gym between two traditional rivals. A clas- sic difference-maker decided the out- come - momentum. After losing to No. I Minnesota 32-6 on Friday, the No. 6 Michigan wrestling team defeat- ed No. 8 Michigan State 20-12 in East Lansing on Sunday. "In a dual meet in an individual sport, you wouldn't expect momentum to play such a role," Michigan State coach Tom Minkel. "You get on a roll and teams start getting up. It is conta- gious." In a match with numerous momen- tum shifts, the Wolverines stepped up and seized the energy at the end. "We lost some close matches, but I think we responded well," coach Joe McFarland said. While both sides produced big wins in crucial situations, in the third-to-last match of the evening, No. 7 Charles Martelli's 7-4 victory at 165 pounds grabbed the momentum once and for all and put the Wolverines in excellent shape. The momentum see-sawed numerous times after No. 16 Joe DeGain's victory over No. 14 Nick Fekete to start off the dual. "Whoever comes out first wants to get the ball rolling," Degain said. "That was my responsibility tonight, to set the fire." Riding the high of Degain's win, fourth-ranked heavyweight Matt Brink kept the team going on a high note with an overtime victory over Matt Lamb. "After the flip, if I didn't take the guy down, he would have had an advantage," Brink said. "You can't take that in to the tiebreaker. I wanted to take care of it before that time came around." No. 4 Chris Williams started a Michigan State run with a huge over- time triumph against Michigan's sixth- ranked A.J. Grant. No. 5 Pat McNamara and No. 15, Mike Castillo rode the Spartans' high as they defeat- ed Foley Dowd and No. 19 Clark Forward respectively. The momentum tides were turned and Michigan State was pulling ahead. Teammates fed off of each win or loss, swaying the direction of the match. When the match looked to be up in the air, DeGain was not worried. He assumed the Wolverines would grab the momentum and the match at the end. "I have confidence in our whole team," he said. "If some guys drop a match, somebody will be there to fill in. Everyone who won stepped it up." I team. It has also set a school record with 19-straight wins. In 1997-98, Stanford started the season 18-0, finish- ing the year with a 30-5 record. Southern Cal has struggled to put teams away this year. But the return of guard Jeff Trepagnier from an NCAA investigation will give the Trojans some needed experience on the court. With the potent line up of Casey Jacobsen, who is leading the Pac-10 in 3-point shooting at 50 percent, as well as Jason and Jarron Collins, the Cardinals will be too powerful for Southern Cal. This is the one time when choosing a Trojan may be deemed unsafe. Stanford 79, Southern Cal 60 FEB. 3 No. 23 TEXAS AT No. 4 KANSAS Texas is coming off its worst loss of the season, an 80-52 pummeling at the hands of Arizona. The future is not look- ing too pretty for the Longhorns as they must travel to Kansas this week. Kenny Gregory leads the Jayhawks in scoring, averaging 16.9 points per game. Texas' fate may lie with the performance of Chris Owens, who is leading the Big 12 in rebounds at 8.7 per game as well as 14.2 points per game. The Jayhawks' home, Allen Field House, is one of the premiere college basketball venues in the nation. Kansas rarely loses there, with an all-time home record of 212-17. Look for the Longhorns to fall prey to the Jayhawks. Kansas 76, Texas 68 JEFF HURVITZ/Datly the second period, but had the last laugh ~hlgan State to win 4-3 in overtime. omentum Individual records NAME REcoRD RANKING A.J. Grant 21-8 6 Foley Dowd 22-8 - Clark Forward 19-10 19 Mike Kulcyzeki 286 9 Charles Martelli 26-8 7 Andy Hrovat 233 8 Joe DeGain 17-9 16 Matt Brink 24-3 4 F '.e Momentum does not just apply with- in duals, but it is carried from meet to meet. Sunday's win over the Spartans will give the Wolverines reason to be confident going into this weekend's grudge match with fabled Iowa. ALL-STAR CLASSIC: A.J. Grant and Otto Olson competed yesterday at the National Wrestling Coaches Association All-Star Classic at Franklin and Marshall College's Mayser Gym in Lancaster, Pa. Both lost their matches as No. 6 Grant lost to No. 2 Jody Strittmater of Iowa 10-3 and No. 2 Olson fell 6-I to No. I Josh Koscheckl of Edinboro. Strittmater also pinned Grant at the national duals last weekend and they will wrestle again in Ann Arbor on Friday. aFa yf! 6 JOYCE LEE/Daily gaining some momentum that carried ich Browns director Paul Dee said. "I think coach Davis had a lot to give UM and I'm pleased at the success we had." Dee said offensive coordinator Larry Coker has been named Miami's interim head coach. Just last week, the Browns said they were focusing their search on NFL assis- tants, all but ruling out the possibility of hiring Davis, Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops or Washington coach Rick Neuheisel. Browns owner Al Lerner shot d, .vn' reports Davis was coming to Cleveland, saying, "There is no Butch Davis." Davis, 49, was in the fourth year of a seven-year contract at Miami and had nearly agreed to a five-year extension at the university. Davis met with Dee last weekend and said the sides only had to Bitter Knight rants andw raves in Playboy issue INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Former Indiana basketball coach Bob Knight continues to call university officials "deceitful" four months after he was fired. In the March issue of Playboy magazine, Knight says his onl4 regret is not leaving Indiana sooner. "I talked to some people and almost without exception they told me to leave." Knight said in a 12- page interview due to hit newsstands Feb. 5. "What I did in this situation was think about the wrong things. When I quit coaching, I envisioned being able to stay around the university, to help in any way they asked." Instead, university presiden Myles Brand fired Knight on Sept. 10. That doesn't mean Knight, who won three national championships and made five Final Four appear- ances at Indiana, is finished. "I would really like to wind up my coaching career working for people 1 really like and respect and who feel the same way about me," he said. "I want better final memories than have right now." Nurse's testimony hurts Chmura 's case WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP) - A nurse told jurors yesterday she believed the teenager who accused former Green Bay Packers star Mark Chmura of sexually assaulting her at a party after a high school prom. Debra Donovan, a registered nurse at a Milwaukee hospital, testified she talked to and examined Chmura's accuser within hours after the April 9 party. Donovan said she concluded "the findings are consistent with what she reported. I believe she was sexu- ally assaulted." Chmura's accuser, 17 at the time, told police Chmura pulled her into the bathroom,.pulled down her pants and. had sex with her without her consent. Defense attorneys contend the teenager, who baby-sat Chmura's children, hated Chmura and lied about the incident. The 31-year-old player could get up to 40 years- in prison and $20,000 in fines if con- victed. Chmura was a three-time Pro Bowl selection and appeared in two Super Bowls with Green Bay. He missed most of the 1999 season with a neckO injury. The team cut him in June after he was charged. Invesco owns name of Denver's new stadium DENVER (AP) - Denver's new football stadium sold its name for a pile of cash that's a mile high. Disregarding the wishes of they mayor and many fans to preserve the name simply as "Mile High Stadium," the new home of the Broncos will be "Invesco Field at Mile High." Invesco Funds Group, a financial services company, will pay $120 million for 20 years to have its name on the stadium. The Metropolitan Football Stadium District Board accepted the offer Monday in a 7- vote. Taxpayers are responsible for 750 percent of the burden to finance the $400 million facility, which is being built next door to the old stadium. The Broncos begin play at their new home this fall. Mayor Wellington Webb led oppo- sition to the renaming, saying Mile High was a marketing asset for the area. Webb and many fans also said the rich history associated with the* name was more important than cut- ting the stadium's cost. I I Charles Martelli drives his opponent into the mat in the Michigan State competition, the Wolverines to a victory over their instate rivals. 11th Annual Golden Apple Award Students Honoring Outstanding University Teaching T'1 Rackham Auditorium Tuesday January 30, 2001, (S.H.O.U.T) 7:30 p.m. J " 40) . ... u-I w STUDENTS WITH CROH N'S DISEASE OR ULCERATIVE COLITIS Please join Dr. Ellen Zimmermann Assistant Professor of Gastroenterology, U of M For an informal discussion of topics including: Davis to co BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Butch Davis, who returned the University of Miami to national title contention, tesigned yester- day to coach the Cleveland Browns. Davis, who led the Hurricanes to a No. 2 ranking last season, will be intro- duced at news conference today at the Browns' training facility, team president Carmen Policy said. "The Browns organization is extreme- ly pleased to have Butch Davis as our next coach," Policy said in a statement. Davis had been listed as a possible Browns coach since the team fired Chris Palmer on Jan. 11. WKYC-TV and WTAM-AM in Cleveland first reported that Davis would take the Browns job. His agent, Marvin Demoff, said after arrivino in Cleveland iht [atvis had not I Jan. 29 standings Team Record 1. Michigan State 21-2-4 2. Boston College 19-6-1 3. North Dakota 18-5-5 4. Colorado College 19-5-1 5. Michigan 19-6-4 6. St. Cloud 19-6-1 7. Minnesota 18-7-2 8. New Hampshire 16-7-5 9. Western Mich. 1665 10. Denver 14-10-3 Pts 591 551 527 474 441 394 365 306 271 207 4.. NCAA basketball Yesterday's results Top 25 No.11SYRAcusE 70, No.10 Georgetown 630 No. 4 Kansas at Missouri, inc. Today's games - No. 5 Michigan State at Michigan, 7 p.m. Butler at No.10 Wisconsin, 9 p.m. No. 8 Tennessee at No. 13 Florida, 9 p.m. NBA m ,re.. 4WW619 MMOMAW '41AIMINKV I i 14W