The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 5, 2001- 3B Bleachers not done; Robinson suspended * :. . : RAPHAEL GOODSTEIN By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor Michigan Executive Associate Ath- letic Director Mike Stevenson calls it an "embarrassing situation." The much-anticipated movement of the students to the floor at Crisler BASKETBALL Arena was delayed. The com- Notebook pany hired to com- plete the project failed to get the bleachers ready for Michigan's first exhibition game yesterday. According to Stevenson, it will be done by Michi- gan's next game on Sunday. The renovation began on Oct. 15th and was expected to be done by the 26th. While Stevenson said the arena was made available from 7 p.m. to l1 a.m. every day since, the workers from the Canadian company that Michigan contracted, Sheriton, have been "mov- ing too slow, not working overtime and iot having all the parts," Crisler Arena Manager Lisa Panetta-Alt said. Stevenson said that supplemental assistance from the University is com- ing today in the form of five outside carpenters from Pittsburgh who will "assist and supervise" the existing crew to make sure it is finished. Instead of sitting in the seats they paid for, students were placed sporadi- cally around the second level of the arena, with the exception of about 20 Maize Ragers, who sat in the new courtside seats behind the benches. FIRST IMPRESSIONS: It didn't take very long for Michigan's three freshmen to make an impact. Just six minutes into the game, with the Wolverines Awn five and struggling to find a basket, freshman Dommanic Ingerson entered the game and gave Michigan a "shot in the arm" according to coach Tommy Amaker. Ingerson immediately crashed the offensive glass and tapped in a missed shot. He then knocked down two treys in an 8-0 Michigan run a few minutes later to get the Wolverines back on track. Ingerson ended up with I1 points and four rebounds in 18 minutes. "When (the freshmen) came in the game we were kind of staggering," sen- ior tri-captain Leon Jones said. "They lifted up the intensity for us, and that's what we need from them." MIA: Three of Michigan's top players either didn't play or missed significant minutes yesterday. While healthy enough to play, sophomore Bernard Robinson was suspended by the coach- ing staff for a "violation of team rules" While he didn't disclose the reason, Robinson said he knew for "a while" that he wouldn't be playing and said that Varsity is now. getting what it really deserves MAJIE MARSHALL/ai y Without bleachers, the Maize Ragers stood courtside during yesterday's exhibition. he'll be practicing with the team today. Amaker sat LaVell Blanchard the entire second half of yesterday's game when he found out that Blanchard's right ankle, which he turned two days ago in practice, was bothering him. We were just "keeping him out to get treatment and not try to take a chance injuring his ankle or making it worse this early in the season,"Amaker said. Sophomore center Josh Moore, did- n't play either. But Amaker said his major concern wasn't necessarily Moore's nagging herniated disk. EA SPORTS Continued from Page 11B But with those three on the bench, Groninger, who shot 5-of-5 in the second half from behind the arc, emerged as the star. "My shots have been falling in practice and I'ye been putting in a lot of time,' Groninger said. "I missed my first three threes and coach Amaker told me to keefshooting it." While Groninger was the highlight for the Wolverines from the outside, the inside game was not where it needs to be. Senior Chris Young offered his usual solid game, highlight- ed by his 15 points and three blocks. But point guards Avery Queen and Mike Gotfredson had a difficult time getting the ball down low. Young was helped by 6-foot-7 freshman Chuck Bailey. He posted seven boards and nine points in 20 minutes. "He brought in incredible energy," Young said of Bailey. "He was just everywhere, doing everything he needed to do. A couple of times I was really surprised by the things he was able to do." While just an exhibition win, there are still positives to take away. Both Amaker and his players were pleased to see that the things they have been working on in practice - offense from defense, fast breaks - are being used effectively on the floor. "They played very well," LaVell Blanchard said of his teammates, "I was just happy to get a win. I don't care if its exhibition or street ball - A win's a win." "Before you can become a good player you have to become a good prac- tice player and we haven't been able to have that happen with Josh. I hope that he can be more consistent." BLAST FROM THE PAST: Former Fab- Five member Jimmy King was spotted taking in the game yesterday. "They look good," said King, who Amaker has contacted several times this summer. "The atmosphere is better. It's going to take some time, but Amak- er is the kind of guy that can bring them back." YESTERDAY'S GAME MICHIGAN (94) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Jones 31 5.11 7-8 2-9 1 3 19 Blanchard 6 0-3 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Young 35 7-9 1-3 2-5 0 2 15 Gotfredson 10 0-0 3-4 0.0 3 2 3 Groninger 27 9-14 4-4 24 1 1 29 Queen 28 1-4 0-0 0-2 6 3 3 Bailey 20 3-5 2-3 2-7 0 4 9 Ingerson 18 4-12 1-1 1-4 0 1 11 Bennett 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 Adebiyi 19 2-2 1-2 2-4 0 2 5 Totals 200 31-6019-2513-38 1116 94 FG%: .517. FThk:.760. 3-point FG: 13-31.,.419 (Groninger 9-14, Ingerson 2-6, Jones 2-7, Bailey 1- 1, Queen 1-4. Blanchard 0-2). Blocks: 4 (Young 3, Bailey). Steals: 9 (Queen 3, Groninger, Gotfredson, Young, Ingerson, Adebiyi, Jones). Turnovers: 16 (Jones 3, Bailey 3. Young 2, Groninger 2, Queen 2, Bennett 2.'Ingerson, Gotfredson). Technical fouls: none. EA Sports (68) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Taylor 27 1-7 4-6 2-9 0 5 6 Davis 26 2-6 0-0 2-4 4 2 5 Asselin 9 2-2 0-1 1-3 0 5 4 Fountain 25 6-14 1-2 1-3 0 2 13 McClure 37 8-12 5-6 2-6 4 3 25 Jackson 28 2-5 2-4 4-6 0 2 6 Turner 28 3-5 3-6 2-7 0 1 9 Mobley 10 0-4 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Craft 10 0.1 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 Totals 200 24-5615.25 15-34 9 24 68 FG%:.429. FTh:.600. 3-point FG: 5-17, .294 (McClure 4-7, Davis 1-4, Fountain 0.3, Mobley 0-2, Taylor 0.1). Blocks: 0 Steals: 7 (Fountain 2, Taylor. McClure, Jackson, Turner, Mobley). Turnovers: 20 (McClure 5, Jackson 3, Taylor 2, Davis 2, Asselin Fountain 2, Craft). Technical Fouls: none. EA Sports.........................28 40 - 68 Michigan...........................50 44 - 94 At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 7,543 E AST LANSING - Michigan did not "deserve better" Satur- day, regardless of what Lloyd Carr says. Michigan State outplayed Michigan, and while there were a number of bad calls late in the game, the team that deserved to win won. Obviously in an ideal world, the officiating would have been better, but Michigan State was going to find a way to win that game one way or another. At the beginning of the year, Michigan was viewed as a team that would lose two or three games and con- T tend for the Big Ten The Woh title. Each statement 9-2 team. An is still true. course of a-s Michigan will teams lose t likely win out, win the Big Ten title and play in a BCS game. If you're hon- est with yourself, you know that is the best this team could have hoped for the second Drew Henson left Michigan. Everyone pretty much realized that Michigan was not the fourth best team in the country - regardless of what the BCS said last week. The Los Angeles Times went so far as to call Michigan the BCS' worst top ten team. While that's probably not true, had Michigan found itself in Pasadena this year, it likely would have been exposed. Does anyone really think Michigan could beat Miami (Fla.)? . Saturday's loss ended any hopes Michigan had of playing in the national title game, but the reality is that Michigan is not one of the best two teams in the country - and over the course of the year, the best two teams in the country separate them- selves. When Miami (Fla.) or Nebraska have their opponents on the ropes, they knock them out. Michigan never could knock out Michigan State or Washington. In both games, the Wolverines had opportunities late in the game to go up two scores, and couldn't get it done. If it wasn't a blocked kick returned for a touchdown, it was a dropped pass. If it wasn't bad kickoff-return cover- age, it was a stupid penalty. It's easy to look at Saturday's loss and blame the officials, who by the end of the afternoon had lost control of the ve d tw two games. This is nothing to be ashamed of - 9-2 is very good. Especially in a confer- ence like the Big Ten, and with the non- conference schedule that Michigan annually plays. How many schools in major conferences are annually as good as Michigan? After Florida, and Nebraska, you'd be hard pressed to find another team (The ACC does not constitute a confer- ence, like the Big Ten, thus excluding Florida State.) Saturday's loss was, perhaps, the most gut-wrenching loss in Michigan sports since Chris Webber's timeout. But at the end of the day, Michigan State was the better team. The Spartans ran the ball at will on Michigan. Their secondary - as bad as it is - prevented Michigan's passing attack from doing much of anything in the second half. Actually, it's probably more accu- rate to say that John Navarre prevent- ed Michigan's passing game from doing much of anything in the second half. But until Michigan recruits a bet- ter quarterback - or starts Jermaine Gonzales - the quarterback position is only as good as Navarre. And the difference between Navarre and a better quarterback, and the differ- ence between LeSueur and a competent defensive back, are the little differences between 9-2 and 11-0. Raphael Goodstein can he reached at raphaelg@umnich.edu. game. But what about Jeremy LeSueur's penalty? That was one of the dumbest penalties in Michigan football history. Maybe the dumbest. What about Marquise Walker drop- ping passes in the fourth quarter? What about John Navarre blowing easy pass- es? What about the best run defense in the country giving up 211 yards to T.J. Duckett? There's no single reason Michigan lost Saturday. There were many reasons. The Wolverines are a 9-2 team. And they'll get what they deserve - rines are a nine wins. over the Obviously it would ason, 9-2 have been nice to go o games. to the Rose Bowl, but over the course of a season, 9-2 teams lose DANNY MOLOSHOK/uaily Besides scoring 19 points and pulling down nine rebounds against the EA Sports All-Stars, Leon Jones played some tenacious defense. M' sweeps weekend, remains undefeated By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Writer Victories over Georgia and Indiana this week- nid gave the Michigan's men swimming team a 4-0 record for the first time since 1994-95. That team went on to win the NCAA championship, but coach Jon Urbanchek doesn't foresee the same outcome this year. "There won't be an NCAA title, I guarantee you that one," Urbanchek said, adding that while he thinks Michigan is the best distance team in the country, its sprinters can't compete with Texas and Stanford, last year's NCAA champion d runner-up, respectively. Traditionally, meets between Michigan and Georgia have come down to the"final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay. Urbanchek expected the same when the Wolverines faced the Bulldogs Saturday at Can- ham Natatorium, but this year the first race was the key. Michigan's 400-medley-relay team of Jordan Watland, Jeff Hopwood, Tony Kurth and Garrett Mangieri beat Georgia's relay in a wire-to-wire race with a time of 3:28.86. Michigan took con- trol with an 11-6 lead and never trailed on its way to winning the meet 131-111. Michigan won four consecutive races after the relay, and by the time Georgia's Andrew Mahaney placed first in the 200 butterfly, his team was already looking at a 30-point deficit. "Luck was on our side," Urbanchek said of the 20-point victory, before giving credit to his team. "It was a pretty good show. Everybody functioned up to what we would expect them to." The distance swimmers led the way for Michi- gan. Brendan Neligan and Andrew Hurd posted a 1-2 finish in the 1000 freestyle and Neligan, Tim Siciliano and Hurd swept the 500 freestyle. Neligan and Hurd have been the best of Michi- gan's nine freshmen all season and have faced the most pressure. "We expect those guys to function under stress," Urbanchek said. "They're not really freshmen. They've had a lot of international experience, and many of the kids don't have that. They're seasoned, even though they're freshmen in age." Neligan competed in the World University Games over the summer, and Hurd represented Canada in the 2000 Olympics. Michigan warmed up for Georgia Friday night with its first Big Ten meet of the season, against Indiana. Although their top swimmers competed in fewer events than usual to conserve energy for Saturday, the Wolverines took 11 of 13 events in a 160.5-82.5 win at Canham. Mangieri won the 50 and 100 freestyle races. Neligan, Hurd and Dan Ketchum each had a first and second-place finish. Diver Jason Coben won the one-meter and three-meter diving events with personal-best scores of 333.97 and 345.22. Diving is one of Indiana's strengths, and Coben 'said Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball, who plans to retire after this year, gave the Wolverines extra motiva- tion against the Hoosiers. "He's pretty much giving it all for us, so we decided to make him happy and beat Indiana one last time for him," Coben said. Although Urbanchek doesn't think Michigan's strong start is an indicator of NCAA title poten- tial, he thinks a different title might be in the Wolverines' sights. "I think we have a pretty good shot at the Big Ten championship," Urbanchek said. BRECNDAN O'DONNEiLL/Dailiy Senior Eric Wilson is part of the first Michigan swimming and diving team to start a season 4-0 since the 1994-95 team, which won the national championship. Wolverines outclass field at Eastern Michigan Open r/I/PAA y2,J 101 r By Eric Chan Daily Sports Writer YPSILANTI - The Michigan wrestling team went into the Eastern Michigan Open filling only nine of the 10 weight classes; but of those nine, seven were champions. In their first preseason action, the Wolver- ines dominated wrestlers from Ohio State, Pur- due, Michigan State and ,powerhouse Edinboro. "It's been a great day for us. I'm really happy at how we competed," Michigan coach Joe McFarland said. Junior A.J. Grant had the stiffest competition move-wrestling was no match for the All- American's relentless attack, and Grant took the win, 3-2. "DuBuque was tough. He had some good hips, and he- wasn't easy to take down," Grant said. "But all I had to do was wrestle like we do at Michigan - banging style - and I pulled it out." Although he wasn't one of the seven tourna- ment champions, Jeremiah Tobias was one of the most impressive Michigan wrestlers on the day. After winning his first match, Tobias lost, 9-7. Tobias battled back to record pins in four of his next six matches en route to a third-place finish. Tobias broke the Eastern Michigan appwt&fe&aweni 4>The Cotton Exchange Affi t' tT Tp. i