SPORTS mciandaily.com /sports THURSDAY NOVEMBER 29, 2001 8A a Falcons deny Amaker first road victoryt By Steve Jackson y Daily Sports Writer BOWLING GREEN, Ohio - The Michigan basketball team y v came to Bowling Green seeking its first road win under new coach Tommy Amaker.s But when the buzzer sounded and the orange sea of Falcon faithful swarmed the court, it was clear that the Wolverines - <4 who entered the game as five-point underdogs - were once again losers MICHIGAN 59 on the road, 65-59. With 29 seconds remaining and his BOWLING GREEN 65 team up 60-58, guard Keith McLeod iced the game with a 3-point bomb as the shot clock was run- ning out. The ball rolled all the way around the rim before final- ly finding its home at the bottom of the net. "It was in, it was out," Amaker said. "I thought it was out."' But McLeod, who also tallied a career-high nine assists, nevery had any doubt. "I don't shoot to hope;'McLeod said with a smile. "I shoot to- make." On the previous possession, Michigan called timeout and setR up an inbounds play to tie the game.x But the Wolverines failed to execute at the most critical of points and sophomore forward Bernard Robinson was forced to heave an awkward shot as the shot clock ran out.' "There's no excuse for that," said senior tni-captain Chris d Young. "We work on that stuff all the time in practice. We have a F lot to work on." Nine minutes into the game, Amaker dug into his bag of tricks by sitting Young and throwing a small lineup at the Fal- cons, giving Michigan the defensive spark it needed. The changevr # resulted in a couple of steals by Robinson and freshman Chuck!5 Bailey led to easy transition buckets for the Wolverines. Michigan held Bowling Green to just three points over a six-w and-a-half minute span in the first half with the small lineup. RYAN LEVENTHAL/Daily When Young returned to action at the 7:06 mark, Michigan Forward Chuck Bailey and the Wolverines struggled to find their offensive rhythm. Michigan See FALCONS, Page 9A stumbled out of the gate in the second half, going scoreless for the first five minutes. Leadersh absent n secon - ofloss ARUN GOPAL I 6 Redskins 'recent postseason run is destined to fall apart This week's cover of Sports Illus- trated features the Washington Redskins, who have made an impressive turnaround after an 0-5 start. As all pro football fans know by now, the Redskins have reeled off five con- secutive wins to elevate themselves into contention into the NFC (L)East. As an ardent Redskins fan, I greeted this news with a twinge of pride. I've watched the 'Skins put together this impressive winning streak and I've thought to myself, "Wow, this team might have a shot at the playoffs." But, just when I start to get enthusias- tic, my common sense nails me with a James Butler-quality sucker punch (you should see what this guy did to his opponent on Friday). I suddenly realize, "Wait, these are the Redskins. They'll clearly find a way to mess this up." I've been rooting for Washington since 1987. I saw a Redskins game in the middle of the season, was hooked by the design on their helmets and by the color scheme (hey, I was seven years old at the time) and started cheer- ing for them. I got pretty lucky that year - Washington went on to win the Super Bowl by blowing out Denver, 42- 10, thanks to four Doug Williams touchdown passes. I didn't know enough about football to realize what a big deal the Super Bowl was, but I thought it was pretty neat that the Redskins won. When they won another Super Bowl four years later, I was convinced that Joe Gibbs was a God and that Washington would be an NFL power for years to come. How silly of me. For the past JO years, I've watched that team approach levels of mediocrity previously reserved for the Lions (although the Lions appear to have gotten tired of medioc- rity and downgraded). When Mark Rypien held out of train- ing camp the year after the Redskins won the 1991 Super Bowl, I should've known that the good times were over. He came back a week before the season started, played like ass, and Washington ended up treading water around .500. Then, Gibbs retired. For the next half-dozen seasons, Washington had bad coaching (Richie Petitbon, Norv Turner) and worse drafting (Desmond Howard, Heath Shuler, Andre Johnson, Michael Westbrook, etc., etc.). Throw in a pitiful defense and a bunch of below- average stop-gap quarterbacks like Jeff Hostetler, John Friesz and Gus Frerotte, and you had one sorry franchise. Oh, the Redskins tried to be good on occasion. They signed defensive tackles Dana Stubblefield and Dan Wilkinson a few years back and tried to convince fans that the horrific defense was saved. Not exactly - the horrific defense just got a lot more expensive. If anything, the defense might actually have gotten worse. Don't ask how, it just did. I really wanted to throw up my hands and say, "Screw it. This team will never figure this out." But then, seemingly out of nowhere, the Redskins won the NFC East in 1999. I couldn't believe it - Washington's free-agent quarterback Brad Johnson was playing great, draft choice tailback Stephen Davis was hav- ing a Pro Bowl season, and the defense started making strides. Heck, even Westbrook had a decent year. Although Washington lost to Tampa Bay in the divisional playoffs, I had high hopes for the 2000 season. "Maybe the Redskins are on the right track;' I naively thought. Once again, how foolish of me. Led by perhaps the NFL's worst owner, Daniel Snyder, the Redskins went out and signed the finest the 1993 Pro Bowl team had to offer - guys like Bruce Smith, Mark Carrier and Irving Fryar. Turner - as usual - appeared to have no clue what was going on, and Brad Johnson decided to do his best Heath Shuler impersonation. A team many picked for the Super Bowl ended up 8-8 and out of the playoffs. So, that brings us to the present. I checked out Washington's next few games, and they appear to be pretty winnable: Home games against Dallas and Philadelphia sandwiched around a trip to Arizona. Once I saw that slate, I started to become optimistic. Maybe Marty Schottenheimer isn't nearly as washed- up as I thought he was. Maybe Ki-Jana Carter will continue showing flashes of the talent he had at Penn State. Maybe LaVar Arrington will emerge as one of the best defenders in the NFL. But, here comes my common sense again. These are, after all, the Redskins. Arun Gopal is hoping the Redskins win another Super Bowl before he turns 50. He can be reached at agopal@umich.edu. I By David Horn Daily Sports Writer BOWLING GREEN, Ohio - After a less than glorious performance by the Wolverines' leader- ship in last Friday's loss to Western Michigan, sophomore Bernard Robinson and junior LaVell Blanchard needed an immediate opportunity to prove their worth as on-court leaders. The opportu- nity came last night in Bowling Green. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, the guys who were expected to step up failed to do so adequate- ly. In the first half, Robinson led Michigan with four rebounds, two assists and two steals, and complemented Blanchard's nine points with six of his own. But as the production of the Wolverines' dynamic duo trailed off in the second half, so too did Michigan's. Blanchard had 17 points and five rebounds in the game, but had a game-high six turnovers. Robinson turned the ball over four times himself, and scored just three points in the second half. "There's no question that our key guys have to take care of the basketball," Michigan head coach Tommy Amaker said. What was perhaps most discouraging was that both Blanchard and Robinson were in positions last night tomake important shots. The highlight for Blanchard was a bank off the glass with less than six minutes remaining that retook the lead for Michigan - a lead it had relinquished just three minutes into the second half after going into the break ahead by four. With the Falcons leading by two with 1:19 to play, Michigan took a 30-second timeout. Coming out of the huddle, Robinson missed a mid-range jumper that was destined to find the bottom of the net, but ultimately did not. It was followed imme- diately by a Keith McLeod basket for Bowling Green that teased as if it wanted to rim out, but fell and gave the Falcons a five-point lead with less than 30 seconds left. It was not missed shots, but the number of turnovers that plagued the Michigan offense. "They played great defense," Blanchard said. "I'm working hard to get in this offense. I had six turnovers? That's bad. I need to improve on that." ORANGE CRUSH: Bowling Green's Anderson Arena must have seemed like a strange land to the Wolverines. A capacity crowd of just under 5,000 - donned overwhelmingly in Falcon orange - roared early and often during last night's game to create an intense and intimate atmosphere that made Crisler Arena look like the UGLi on a Friday night. "It certainly was a very difficult place for us to play," Amaker said. "It's my first time here and I hope I don't have to return. It's an outstanding environment for college basketball." No Big Ten team has won in the building in 31 years, since Iowa knocked off the Falcons, 89-78, in December of 1970. Two Big Ten teams visited Bowling Green in the 1990s. But neither Michigan State in 1990 nor Penn State in 1993 could over- See LEADERSHIP, Page 9A 4 a S I Michigan in the zone for home opener tonight By Jim Weber Daily Sports Writer Michigan head coach Sue Guevara looks for improvement out of her players and asks nothing less of her- self. Guevara worked on the team's zone defense this week during prac- tice because this defensive scheme has been used more this season than at any other point in her six-year tenure. "If we are not one-on-one the best defensive players, then we have to go to the zone," Guevara said. "So it has been a change for me personally, my philosophy, that I don't want to get CRISLER ARENA Who: No. 16 Michigan (31) vs. Marquette (2-2) When: 7 p.m. Latest: Michigan will be using and facing a lot of zone defense tonight. The team will need guard Alayne Ingram to hit open shots. One Ingram 3-pointer will also tie a Michigan record. stubborn and stay with something if it's not working." Michigan's current players are more effective in the zone than the more difficult man-to-man defense and Guevara learned this the hard way. "There were games last year that we lost that I could kick myself because I was stubborn, and I can't do that," the coach said. "I have to grow, too. I make mistakes and it is like, 'Listen fat head, you have to wake up and make this change.'" Guevara was impressed by the team's defensive intensity after a practice session on Tuesday and she will need the same defensive effort in tonight's home opener against Marquette. Michigan has also faced a lot of zone defense this season because of its dangerous post players. Centers LeeAnn Bies and Jennifer Smith are the first and fourth leading scorers on the team, respectively. Senior Raina Goodlow, the team's third most prolific scorer last season, started the season slowly but broke out with 15 points against New Hampshire last Friday. "People are so concerned with our inside game, and why wouldn't you be?" Guevara said. According to Guevara, Michigan faced a lot of zone defense last weekend because Bies scored 23 and 25 points in her first two games against man-to-man defense. With the zone, opponents challenge Michigan's perimeter players to hit LESLIE WARD/Daily Sue Guevara made the decision to play more zone defense with this year's team. UU outside shots. Guevara called Michigan's 3-point shooting last season its "Achilles' heel," but you wouldn't know that after last weekend's games. The Wolverines were 12-of-21 from behind the arc, including five triples by Alayne Ingram. She is only one 3- pointer shy of the Michigan career record and the team is counting on her to beat the zone defense. "I think everyone and their mother knows that when we need a 3-point shot, Alayne Ingram is going to be the one we go to," Guevara said. Guevara does not know how much zone they will see tonight because Marquette plays both zone and man- to-man. Either way, the Wolverines will have to shoot better than 37-per- cent from the field, the number they put up last season in a 67-58 loss. "When we played Marquette last year, they were on a four game los- ing streak," Guevara said. "We went there, and we got drilled. We got out- hustled, we got out-rebounded, and they did a very, very nice job of defending our penetration. "They get after it. This is our home opener. We will not be out- hustled, we will not be out-worked. They are averaging 17 offensive rebounds a game.I will break some- thing if they get 17 offensive rebounds." DAILY SPORTS. 0 4 This Weekend in Michigan Athletics Presented by: age. 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