SportsMonday - January 8, 2001- The Michigan Daily - 5B Quote of the game YESTEb AYS : Player of the game "Right now, we are just a struggling basketball team offensively. I have got to get some scorers, that's the bottom line." - Michigan coach Sue Guevara, on her team's poor offensive output WI Michigan Iowa 58 79 Iowa guard Cara Consuegra torched the Michigan defense for 19 points on 9-of-13 shooting. She also dished out eight assists and nabbed five steals omen continue losing streak against Iowa 1y Benjamin Singer Daily Sports Writer IOWA CITY - In the media room, an exasperat- ed Sue Guevara picked up the stat sheet revealing the numbers behind Michigan's 79-58 loss to Iowa at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. With a smirk, the Michigan women's basketball coach crumpled the paper in her hand. "I'm just a little frustrated," she said. The Wolverines shot under 40 percent from the floor for the third-straight game for its third-straight double-digit loss. Guevara said she fears that the players have no emotion and even less confidence. The stat sheet should be thankful she didn't rip it to shreds. Shuffling players in and out throughout the game, Guevara was unable to find any combination that could produce. "Right now, we are just a struggling basketball team offensively," Guevara said. "I have got to get some scorers, that's the bottom line. I have got to get some kids that really believe they can drain the ball." While Michigan was unable to produce on offense, its defense had to be superb to keep the Wolverines in the game. But the Hawkeyes found several hot hands with which to torment Michigan. Cara Consuegra was Iowa's answer for-everything in the first half, as she netted 19 points on 9-of-1O shooting. She didn't score a single point in the second half, but she didn't have to. Instead, Consuegra shared the wealth, dishing out seven of her eight assists after the break. Leah Magner and Lindsey Meder ended with 18 and 17 points, respectively, after scoring just two each in the first half. "Those girls can bomb the ball from anywhere, and they have the green light to shoot it," Michigan guard Anne Thorius said. Consuegra "goes to the person that's hot. She's a smart player, and she knows who to go to." Consuegra contributed 11 points to a 13-0 run in the first half that helped put Michigan in its 36-25 halftime hole. The Wolverines started to climb back with a 6-0 run after the intermission, trimming the Iowa lead to five. But then Iowa began a 12-0 run, this time with Meder and Magner emerging as the scoring threats. The run put Iowa up 50-33 and Michigan away for good. There was still 13:27 left after Magner's 3-pointer that capped Iowa's run - enough time for a stirring comeback. But as the common themes that have plagued the Wolverines this year continued, Michigan lacked the energy and emotion to erase the difference. The ability to control the tempo Michigan estab- lished in the second half's opening minutes seemed like a distant memory. Two more minutes passed before Jennifer Smith's layup officially ended the run. While Iowa suffered from its own three-minute scoring drought at that time, the difference was that Iowa merely went cold. Michigan stayed cold. "We couldn't get a basket," a disbelieving Guevara said. "We just couldn't get a basket." "We knew that Iowa had some good perimeter shooters, and we saw that today. God, I wish I had their perimeter shooters." Guevar shakes up rotation By David Roth D aily Sports Writer YESTERDAY'S GAME Michigan (58) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A CM A F PTS Goodlow 30 2-9 -0 1-7 1 1 .4 Bies 29 5-9 1-1 3-9 0 3-1 Jara 18 0-0 0-0 1-2 2 2 .0 Thorius 31 1-5 2-2 14 2 1 4 Ingram 34 5-16 0-0 0-1 3 1 12 Leary 4 0-1 0-0 0-0 00 0 Schumacher 12 2-8 4-4 1-1 1 0 8 Oesterle 7 1-3 0-0 1-2 1 0 2 Robinson 5 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0.3 Gandy 15 2-5 1-2 2-3 0 2 5 Dykhouse 3 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0. 0 Smith 12 3-5 3-4 2-2 1 5 9 Totals 200 22-62 11-1315-38 11 15 58 FG%: .355. FT%: .846. 3-pont FG: 3-11 273 (Ingram 2-6, Robinson 1-1, Goodlow 0-1, Leary 0-1, Schumacher 0-1, Oesterle 0-1). Blocks: 4 (Goodlow, Bies, Thorius, Ingram). Steals:' 6 (Ingram 2, Goodlow, Bies, Thorius, Smith). Turnovers: 18 (Goodlow 4, Bies 4, Thonus 4, Jara 2, Gandy 2, Leary, Smith). Technical fouls: none. IOWA (79) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Magner 28 7-9 0-0 0-3 4 0 18 Lillis 27 3-5 0-0 3-8 0 2 6 Peterson 27 2-7 1-3 1-8 3 1 5 Meder 30 6-13 2-2 3-5 2 4 17 Consuegra 38 9-13 0-1 1-2 8 1 19 O'Brien 2 2-3 0-0 1-1 0 0 4 Watson 9 0-3 0-0 2-4 0 4 0 Berdo 21 3-9 0-0 04 2 1 6 Chambers 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Schrupp 2 1-1 0-0 1-2 0 2 2 Bullock 10 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 McCann 4 0-0 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 34-66 3-7 13-39 20 16 79 FG%: .515. FT%: .429. 3-point FG: 8-17, .471 (Magner 4-6, Meder 3-7,Consuegra 1-1, Berdo 0-3). Blocks: 3 (Lillis, Peterson, Watson) Steals: 8 (Consuegra 5, Peterson 2, Meder). Turnovers: 15 (Magner 3, Meder 3, Lillis 2, Peterson 2, Bullock 2, Consuegra, Watson, Berdo). Technical fouls: none. 0 GENTLE GIANT7 Michigan........25 Iowa..........................36 33 -58 43 - 79 At Carver-Hawkeye Arena, Iowa City Attendance: 3,923 BY BENJAMIN SINGER DAILY SPORTS WRITER u leash the beast. Sue Guevara can wish it until she's blue in the face, but there may just be no beast to unleash. Talk about post play with the Michigan women's basketball coach, and Guevara will tell you she wants an animal in the paint. But her rotation of six-footers spits out one nice guy after another. Their style of play is too reserved for Guevara's lik- ing. While the three low-post players have been pro- ductive, their undemonstrative approach to the game may be a better defense than any opposing coach can draw on a chalk board. THE TIP-oFF Quicker than Chamique Holdsclaw can take her first step, the Wolverines learned they would have to win from inside the paint this year. The opening week- end saw Michigan's sharpshooters go a combined 3- for-24 from beyond the arc. The experienced guards and emotional leaders, Anne Thorius and Alayne Ingram, hit just I 1-for-43 from the floor in those two game against Louisiana Tech and Washington. Only free throws and the play underneath the basket earned Michigan a win the first night. Power forward Raina Goodlow scored 17 points and LeeAnn Bies contributed 10. The loss to the Huskies two days later came despite the best efforts of Goodlow and Bies, who tallied 17 and 16 points respectively. Although the plan entering the season was to ride the quick tempo of the guards, success in a halfcourt offense should not come as a surprise to Michigan. The 6-foot-2 Goodlow started 23 games last year as a sophomore and averaged 9.6 points. She came in with high expectations for the program and herself. "I think it's about time I score more," she said. Last year's leading scorer "Stacey Thomas isn't here any- more. Somebody has to pick up the slack" { Bies stepped into a starting role after a successful freshman campaign from off the bench. The 6-foot-3 center averaged 10 points and six rebounds in 20 min- utes per game as the sixth player last season. Then the freshman recruit turned the Twin Towers t into triplets. Matching Bies' height at 6-foot-3, Jennifer Smith promised to be more mobile - she was on the track team at DeWitt High School in the Lansing area - and held the potential to contribute on offense. She came in fifth in Michigan Miss Basketball voting with 17.9 points and 9.2 rebounds a game as a high school senior. GRowTH SPURT Smith didn't make too big an impact right away. In the first three contests, she played 11 minutes a game. She stumbled early, shooting just 37.5 percent from the field as she struggled at times, even with layups. But after a two-game slide, Guevara felt a change in her lineup was necessary. Junior forward Heather Oesterle and Bies sat down. Freshmen Stephanie Gandy and Smith stood up and stood out. The switch gave Guevara the quicker lineup she was looking for. Both Gandy and Smith signifi- cantly increased their production. In her 10 starts before Iowa, Smith shot 55.7 percent from the floor and is currently second on the team in shooting per- centage. Bies, back to her familiar role from last year, has dropped her numbers slightly to 11.2 points and seven rebounds a game. Goodlow continues to lead the offensive attack for the Wolverines, shooting 55 per- cent from the floor for an average of 11.6 points. Rarely will just one be out on the court with the low- post duties solely on her shoulders. Never have all three been on the floor at once. Guevara has a two-at-a-time policy. "I like when the Twin Towers play together," Guevara said. "I like when Raina is playing with one of the Twin Towers. Raina doesn't know the 3-spot. With Heather and Gandy vying for that 3-spot, I'm comfortable with Raina in the post' BATTERED AND BRUISED Guevara has some vindication for her complaint that her players don't show enough aggression or emo- tion. But, it came at a drastic cost. First, No. 8 Purdue beat Michigan 65-54 in a game televised nationally. Missed opportunities to score turned directly into a missed opportunity to pull off an upset over the Boilermakers at home for the second straiuht season. The normally reliable Smith and Michigan because we stand straight up, our knees are locked and we're not sliding our feet. Goodlow took the brunt of the punishment at the Marquette game Dec. 10. If Guevara's gripe is that her players don't move enough, she saw to it that Goodlow was motionless - on the bench, rather than on the court, as she played just ~It five minutes in the second half. "At the Marquette game, when we watched film, we could really tell that it was lack of intensity," Smith said. 4 "It's just effort. That's where we're really struggling. One player gets beat and another player won't pick up her slack." WHERE'S THE BEAST? The trio has at least one thing that can't be taught - height. What they're lacking is an animal instinct, an aggres- sive nature that Guevara believes is vital for dominat- ing inside. "Coach G pointed that out," Smith said. "SheY wants the post players to call for the ball more. She said we play soft some- times. She said she wants e.. .,{. 5 , :; t EE f 2 ' . BIG TEN STANDINGS s ;; LeeAnn Bles (far left) GP-GS Pts. Rebs. Season 144 11.1 7.1 Career 44-7 10.3 6.4 an animal post player, so I'm trying to be that player." They hear what Guevara has to say, but meeting her expectations takes more than comprehension. "The post players, we don't talk about it too much" Bies said. "We know our strengths. We just try to go out and do our part for the team. She really gets on us about finding an animal post player. We still haven't been showing it to her, I guess." Aggressive play is a constant lesson plan for Guevara. Work for position. Fight in the post. Tapping into that brutality mentality isn't easy. She recognizes that she's asking for a physical display of passion from players who don't have an inclination to attack. "You're not going to see LeeAnn Bies throwing elbows. That's not going to happen," Guevara said. "Bies gets rebounds, Bies catches the ball, Bies scores. But is she going to look at you and show you a lot of emotion? Nope. And really, neither is Raina. That's not their nature. We're trying to bring out the beast in them." Bies gets her boards and points, so aggression should be irrelevant. Guevara said assistant coach Ron Mott has raised the question "What else do you want?" - to which she replies "I want somebody to dominate." While understanding that aggression has to be innate, Guevara still instructs her post players to call for the ball. More than just vocalizing the words, she wants their body language to say "Give me the ball." "It's definitely something we can work toward," Goodlow said. "You can still be an animal and not look like an animal. I think everybody has some kind of ani- Raina Goodlow(left) GP-GS Pts. Rebs. Season 14-14 11.1 3.9 Career 70-44 8.8 3.8 Jennifer Smith (above) GP-GS Pts. Rebs. Season 14-10 9.1 4.9 mal in them. It's just a matter of bringing it out" Thorius can't add to Michigan's all-time assist record when the players in the low post just sit and wait for the ball. From beyond the arc, she looks inside, but needs to see someone asking for the ball before she responds with a pass. "I think in the beginning of the season, with Jennifer Smith coming in, she's used to just getting the ball pounded inside to her probably, in high school," Thorius said. "All of a sudden she's got to work for position. It was obvious in the beginning of the season that they were just there." NEVER GIVE UP Even if Guevara can't find the power switch that turns her silent leaders into the Shaquille O'Neals of women's college basketball, she hopes her prayers will be answered next year. She called one of her current recruits, Katrina Mason, "flat-out mean" But Guevara doesn't want to wait that long. She's not asking only that the posts play better, but that they play with more intensity. The success will fol- low. All the rough rebounding and defensive drills she runs in practice may not make monsters out of the Wolverines, but Guevara is not going to quit. She works on them with the same persistence that she needs them to show in the paint. "Coach is going to keep trying," Bies said. "We'll see if it shows up" IOWA CITY - With 12 players on her roster, it seemed as if Michigan women's basketball coach Sue Guevara would have an endless num- ber of possibilities to put on the court. But in yesterday's 79-58 loss to Iowa, Guevara looked as if she had exhausted all of them. All 12 players saw significant action in the game. In certain stretch- es Guevara introduced a new lineup almost every minute. After the game was over, Guevara had more questions than answers after introducing dozens of new lineups. "Who wants to be on the floor?" Guevara said she asked her players. "Who wants to start? Who wants to finish? Who wants to score? Who really believes they can score? Who's willing to take a shot and miss it knowing they'll have another one?" Down by 20 with 7:26 left in the game, Guevara showed her frustration with her current lineup by substitut- ing in five different players. Michigan guard Anne Thorius, who scored well below her average with four points against the Hawkeyes, said her coach isn't alone in her disappointment. "If she has to sub in five different players at a time, then she's just as frustrated as we are not finding that lineup that's going to make an impact and that's going to go and win the game for us;' Thorius said. "She's saying that if the regular people can't get it done, then why not give a shot to the people that work hard in prac- tice every day." Practices have been key in govern- ing Michigan's lineup in games. Players who don't often see action have an incentive to do well in prac- tice, knowing that trying hard might equal playing time in games. The Michigan coaching staff's decision to put in everyone was likely more than a desperation move. "I don't think it was matter of them' giving up and putting in people who don't play a lot," junior Alayne Ingram said. "People have been play- ing well in practice and that's why they were in the game" Junior Susana Jara, a walk-on, showed how doing well in practice equals game time. Jara, who played 27 minutes all of last year, tallied 18 minutes yesterday in her first career start. "I was excited with my opportuni- ty," Jara said. "I tried to make the most of it and help my team" Jara's start serves as an inspiration for the rest of the players. "It's definitely obvious that right now there are no certain five starters and no certain first player off the bench," Thorius said. Practices have become extremely competitive in players' quests to earn floor time. -"To tell you the truth, our practices are harder than games,"said freshman Jennifer Smith, who has seen off-and- on time in the starting rotation. "Every practice we all work super hard." Despite the lineup changes, the Wolverines couldn't solve any of their problems, and have lost their last two games by a combined 54 points. Yesterday's results: Iowa 79, Michigan 58 Wisconsin-Green Bay 82, WIScoNSIN 80 (OT) Ohio State 66, NORTHWESTERN 61 Michigan State 66, MINNESOTA 65 ILLINOIS 75, No. 9 Penn State 71.. No. 6 Purdue 67, INDIANA 59 Tomorrow's game: Illinois at Northwestern, 7 p.m. Thursday's games: Illinois at Ohio State, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota at Indiana,;7 p.m. Penn State at Michigan, 7 p.m. Wisconsin at Michigan State, 7 p.m.' 'M' SCHEDULE Thursday Michigan vs. Penn State Crisler Arena, 7 p.m. The schedule doesn't get any easier for the Wolverines as they return home to face Penn State. Michigan hopes to bounce back in its first gameaat home after a 21-point drub- bing at Iowa. Sunday Michigan vs. Ohio State Crisler Arena, 2 p.m. The Buckeyes have a 1=3 A Big Ten record, just fie the Wolverines. But they cannot be overlooked as they went undefeated in non-conference play. Conference Team W L Indiana 3 0 Purdue 3 0 Penn State 3 1 Wisconsin 2 1 Michigan State 2 1 Iowa 2 2 Illinois 1 1 Michigan 1 3 Ohio State 1 3 Minnesota 0 3 Northwestern 0 3 Overall W L 12 2 13 3 11 4 7 5 8 6 7 7 68 8 6 11 3 7 7 4 9 AP PHTiO Topranked Connecticut. WOMEN's AP Top 25 As of Jan. 2 Team 1. Connecticut 2. Tennessee 3. Notre Dame 4. Georgia 5. Duke 6. Purdue 7. Iowa State 8. Louisiana Tech 9. Penn State 10. Rutgers 11. I ouisiana State Record 9-0 11-1 12-0 11-2 12-1 13-3 9-1 10-3 11-4 8-2 9-3 I <, .