Amaker era begins with sweet revenge The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 19, 2001- 3B RAPHAEL GOODSTEIN By David Horn Daily Sports Writer So it begins. The much-hyped Tommy Amaker era began Friday night at Crisler Arena with an 81-73 revenge win over Oakland. It wasn't the prettiest win, but Amaker's squad did what his prede- cessor - former Michigan coach B r i a n Ellerbe - OAKLAND 73 couldn't do M A 81 in his final MICHIGAN1 season at the helm: Beat the Golden Griz- zlies. It was an important victory for a team trying to regain its consistency and tradition of excellence. Last year's loss was a setback from which the team did not recover, and one that left the Wolverines vulnera- ble to criticism of being just the third or fourth best team in the state. But Friday was a different story. Despite early foul trouble for senior center Chris Young, Michigan was able to execute when it was sup- posed to, and implement a style of play - transition offense, high traps on defense, patience to yield good shot selection - that can only improve. Junior forward LaVell Blanchard led the Wolverines with 14 rebounds, and was part of a bal- anced scoring attack that included fellow junior Gavin Groninger and sophomore Bernard Robinson. Groninger led the way with a game- high 19 points, and was supported by the contributions of Blanchard's 17 and Robinson's 15. Michigan showed that it might have some unforeseen depth as Amaker used 10 players, nine of whom saw dou- ble-digit minutes. Friday's game, like Michigan's two exhibitions, was one in which the team failed to produce two strong halves. Following a timeout FRIDAY'S GAME MICHIGAN (81) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Jones 16 1-4 3-4 1-2 2 2 5 Blanchard 35 6-13 46 4-14 1 4 17 Young 15 3-4 1-2 1-4 1 5 7 Gotfredson 22 1-1 00 0-0 2 2 3 Groninger 30 7-11 3-3 0-2 5 2 19 Queen 18 1-1 00 0-2 2 1 2 Ingerson 7 1-2 0-0 0-1 1 0 2 Robinson 29 5-8 5-5 0-0 4 2 15 Bailey 14 0-1 3-7 2-4 0 1 3 Moore 14 2-2 4-4 1-2 0 4 8 Team 0 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 0 0 Totals. 200 27472331 9.32 18 23 81 FG%:.574. FT%:.742. 3-point FG: 4-14, .286 (Groninger 2-5, Blanchard 1-4, Jones 0-2, Robinson 0-2, Gotfredson 1-1). Blocks: 3 (Blanchard 2, Young). Steals: 7 (Robinson 2, Jones, Blanchard, Queen, Bailey, Moore). Turnovers: 20 (Robinson 6, Blanchard 4, Jones 3, Groninger 2, Queen 2, Young, Ingerson, Bailey). Technical fouls: none. Oakland (73) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Covington 30 6-11 24 1-6 5 4 15 champagne 36 813 2-3 2-2 2 4 18 Sabourin 8 0-1 0-0 0.1 0 0 0 Rozycki 36 4-10 5-6 0-4 1 3 15 Helms 28 3-8 8-10 3-5 2 3 15 Williams, K. 19 02 0-0 02 0 5 0 Williams, R. 4 0-0 0-0 (10 0 2 0 Buddenborg 32 3-8 4-5 2-2 1 4 10 Martin 7 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 ' Team 0 00 0-0 2-2 0 0 0 Totals 200 245421-28 1024 1. 2573 FG%: .444. FT%: .750. 3-pint FG: 4-13,308 (Royc ki 2-6, Covington 1-2, Helms 1-2, Williams, K. 0-1, Buddenborg 0-1, Martin 0-1). Blocks: 0 Steals: 5 (Martin 2, Covington, Helms, Buddenborg). Turnovers: 16 (Roycki 4, Helms 4, Covington 3, Buddenborg 3, Champagne 2). Technical Fouls: none. with 5:14 remaining in the first half and leading by 6, Michigan went on a 16-4 run to end with a 43-25 lead. Over that stretch six different Wolverines scored, and Michigan looked like it was as much better than Oakland as it is supposed to be. The Golden Grizzlies are in just their third season as a Division I basketball program. Their victory last year over Michigan was the biggest in the history of the pro- gram. In the second half, Oakland made up almost all the ground lost in the first, clawing its way back to within two points with 8:29 left in the game. "I thought we, defensively, were outstanding in the first half," Amak- er said. "Certainly we haven't been able to put two halves together of the basketball that we want to play. I think that has to do with us under- standing that at halftime the game isn't over." The second half was disastrous. As the Wolverines attempted to reestablish a comfortable lead, they were plagued by turnovers, most of them courtesy of Blanchard and Robinson. The two scorers coughed up pos- session a combined 10 times, and made it difficult for Michigan to even find its scoring opportunities. The Wolverines shot the ball just 21 times in the second half, compared with Oakland's 33 shot attempts. The point guard position was shared by last year's primary starter Avery Queen and fifth-year senior Mike Gotfredson. But it was the energetic senior who was super, hit- ting the basket of the day for Michi- gan. With just over six minutes remaining and the Wolverines up by just six, Gotfredson found himself unguarded at the 3-point line. He hesitated, shuffled his feet, and sank the shot (just the second field goal of his college career.) The basket Brigham Young title claim is gettingold Every year, there's some school that's barely better than the 11 bad teams it plays, builds an impressive record and then cries bloody murder when it doesn't get the respect that a team that beats 10 good teams gets (Tulane circa 1998, I'm looking in your direction.) It's almost akin to the student who majors in Commu- nications and then brags about his impressive grade point average. Saturday evening, I was watching Brigham Young beat Utah 24-21, and couldn't help but think this team would be 6-5 if it played in a good conference. Being 11-0 is great, if you're an 11-0 team. But it's not acceptable for a 6-5 team to masquerade as an 11-0 team getting no respect. The Cougars impressive wins this year are Saturday's three-point win feated against one of college foot- ball's weakest schedules, people will overlook the schedule and see an impressive record. Fortunately, those Cougars didn't have t play in the Sugar Bowl. For this to happen once, shame on the Cougars. Twice? It won't happen again. The BCS was implemented to check such frauds; teams can no longer go 11-0 and claim that all 11-0 records are equal. Brigham Young is currently ranked 13th in the BCS, 10 of the 13 teams have one loss and two teams have lost two games. But from what I saw Saturday evening, the BCS' logic hasn't been accepted by Brigham Young fans. What I saw Saturday evening was absurd - tens of thousands of Brigham Young fans painted blue DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Chris Young dunks over Grizzlies forward Adrian Martin in the first half of Friday's game. Young was strong down low, but saw little time because of foul trouble. gave the Wolverines a nine-point lead, and a much-needed shot in the arm emotionally. "I didn't know if it was going in or not, but it went in and it felt great," the modest Gotfredson said. "I thought Gotfredson's three was as big as any shot that we had all game," Amaker said. "He stepped up, and he's confident and he buried it. I'll be even more pleased if we ever get a lead like that again and we don't need to make those big plays." The game began as well as it could have. Its closing minutes were as nerve raking and unnecessarily dramatic as they could be. One old problem (defensive intensity) seems to have been successfully addressed, while another (keeping Chris Young and the frontline out of foul trouble) still needs work. But a win is a win, and Amaker and his crew are very comfortable taking that away from Friday night's game. "They all aren't going to be this dramatic," Amaker said. "I'm happy for our kids because I know it was a tough situation for them a year ago, and I'm happy that they were able to bounce back in the opening game at home and to win. "And we certainly can't take that lightly for our ballclub." over Utah, a four- point win over UNLV and a seven- point win over Wyoming. In 1984, an unde- feated Brigham Young got away with this when in the Holiday Bowl, Rather than Fiesta Bowl bid should beg for the to take them. Tha win the Liberty undefeated ands championship cam 'A night to remember' for the Wolverines, not the Grizzlies with a kid in one it beat a Michigan team that fin- ished 6-6. The Cougars beat Michi- gan 24-17, though Michigan lead 17-10 in the fourth quarter. After the win, the Cougars were deemed "national champions," but had there been a tournament instead of a bowl system, the Cougars would have lost in the first round. If that Michigan team went 5-4 in the Big Ten, the Cougars would have gone 6-3, at best. In 1993, West Virginia went 11-0 against a soft schedule and reached No. 3 in the polls. The Moun- taineers weren't invited to play in the national title game. Instead, they played Florida in the Sugar Bowl. The Gators went on to take a bite out of crime, 41-7. Virginia Tech used this same scheme in 1999, when it went unde- feated and got to play Florida State in the national-title game. The Hokies joined the Moun- taineers in the "Nice Try" chapter of college football history, losing 46- 29 in a game that wasn't even that close. This was the lesson the Cougars learned in '84 - if you go unde- begging for a arm, holding a sign t, the Cougars begging for a spot Fiesta Bowl not in the Fiesta Bowl. t way they could in the other. What's even more upset- yuptis- ting is that these start a national fans know the Fies- npaign. ta Bowl is an easy target to push aroind. These fans undoubtedly saw Oregon State make a bunch of empty threats to get an at-large bid to the BCS' worst game. As far as receiving an illegitimate at-large bid to a BCS game? We'll see But to be honest, I don't even know why the Cougars want to play in the Fiesta Bowl. If you want to play in the Majors, don't play in the Mountain West conference and play Tulane, Nevada and California in the nonconference part of the schedule. Rather than begging the Fiesta Bowl to take them, the Cougars should beg the Fiesta Bowl not to take them. That way, they could go to the Liberty Bowl, finish with an undefeated record and start a national championship campaign, the way they did in 1984. Playing Pac-10 champion Oregon in the Fiesta Bowl is just going to highlight what everyone already knows - Brigham Young is not that good. Raphael Goodstein can be reached at raphaelg@umich. edu. By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor Michigan....................... 43 Oakland.............. 25 At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 11,030 38 48 -81 - 73 Michigan center Josh Moore'-said that the Wolverines wanted to give Oakland its own "night to remem- ber" after the devastating season- opening loss the Wolverines surrendered to the Golden Grizzlies a year ago. Michigan's BASKETBALL memories of that game served as Notebook the fundamental reason why it prevailed this time around. Several players emphatical- ly stated that they were "so much more prepared" than last year, when they were under the guidance of Brian Ellerbe. "We just had a lot better game plan," Moore said. It's no secret that Oakland relies heavily on its 3-point shooting, and it was behind the arc where the Grizzlies repeatedly dug Michigan a hole last year from which it couldn't get out. Oakland sixth-year senior for- ward Dan Champagne remembers how surprised he was when Michi- gan continued to leave shooting guard Jason Rozycki open last year, as the sharpshooter lit up the Wolverines for 32 points. "They just kept letting him find his corner and never found him," Champagne said. "Why would they do that?" Michigan coach Tommy Amaker wasn't in Rochester Hills a year ago, but made defending the 3- point shot the "No. 1 priority." Michigan held the Grizzlies to a dismal 4-13 performance (Rozycki was 2-6) from behind the arc and 44 percent from the field. Michigan senior tri-captain Chris Young attributed much of that to the Wolverines' highly-concentrated focus in practice this past week. "I don't remember shooting the ball too much," said a smiling Young. "All we did was defense, .defense and more defense." Oakland coach Greg Kampe also noticed an entirely different Michi- gan team from a year ago. "We can't simulate that type of intensity in practice or exhibitions," Kampe said. "And they just came at us hard and we weren't ready for it." ONE-SHOT WONDER: Another per- son who wasn't quite ready was Mike Gotfredson, who waited a lit- tle bit before draining a wide-open 3-pointer late in the second half to halt an Oakland comeback. It was his only attempt of the game and the second-career field goal for the gun-shy fifth-year senior. But Amaker said there was "no shot more important in the game" as it ignited a late 9-3 run for Michigan that helped it put the Grizzlies away. "He got the ball, looked down, looked at the line, and the whole time we were all yelling at him to shoot," Young said. "But he stepped up big." CHECK THE LINE: Two staples in last year's starting lineup, Bernard Robinson and Avery Queen, were not included in Friday's starting five of Gotfredson, Gavin Groninger, Leon Jones, Young and LaVell Blanchard. Amaker insisted that those "who deserve it" will start, and neither Queen nor Robin- son said they knew the reason they didn't. Both entered the game five min- utes in, but Queen played just six minutes in the second half and was replaced by Gotfredson down the stretch. Meanwhile Blanchard a I I VISIT CHICAGO'S HOTTEST NEW NIGHT CLUBS THIS HOLIDAY BREAK! I logged 36 minutes for the Wolver- ines on the night. CHARITY: Michigan's two stars, Blanchard and Robinson, led the team in turnovers with four and six, respectively, sparking a disappoint- ed Amaker to state: "They are two of our best players and have to care for the ball better." NOTES: The announced atten- dance of 11,030 was more like 6,500 but the "Maize Rage" packed the student bleachers ... Nine Wolverines played more than 14 minutes, highlighting Amaker's fix- ation on substitution ... Video clips from Michigan's 1989 Final Four victory over Illinois graced the Crisler Arena scoreboard during halftime and drew an ovation from the crowd. DAILY SPORTS: WE KNOW THAT BRIGHAM YOUNG IS AT LEAST GOOD ENOUGH FOR THE CHICKEN TERIYAKI BOWL AT MAGIC WOK. 'D' makes difference Amaker's newer and stronger defense flexed its muscles in its first game this season to avenge last year's opening loss to Oakland. The defense more than made up for the lapses it showed last year under El lerbe. Oakland FG% Last Year: 53.1 Oakland FG% This Year: 44.4 Oakland FT% Last Year: 81.1 Oakland FT% This Year: 75.0 Oakland 3-pt. FG% Last Year: 51.7 Oakland 3-pt. FG% This Year, 44.4 Oakland 3-pt. FG Made Last Year: 15 Oakland 3-pt. FG Made This Year: 4 Rip-off this great k chance to make serious $ and go to Florida next Spring .. . : I ,/ /. 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