The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - December 3, 2001- 3B Michigan 78 Notre Dame 63 THE DOWN-LOW GUEVA-RANT: "WHADDYA THINK?" (GUEVARA ASKED THE MEDIA WITH A SMILE) KEY STATS: MICHIGAN SHOT 68% FROM THE FIELD IN THE FIRST HALF, OUTSCORING NOTRE DAME 45-27. WHILE THE IRISH AVERAGE 47 REBOUNDS A GAME, MICHIGAN OUTREBOUNDED TURNING POINT: AFTER FALLING BEHIND 7-4, THE WOLVER- INES WENT ON A 26-6 RUN TO TAKE THE LEAD FOR GOOD. YoU KNEW IT WAS OVER WHEN: Halftime - Michigan led 45-27 going into the break. THE DAILY'S MVPs: ALAYNE INGRAM - 22 POINTS INCLUDING THREE TRIPLES TO SET A MICHIGAN RECORD FOR 3-POINTERS. LEEANN BIES - 18 POINTS AND 12 REBOUNDS FOR THE GAME'S ONLY DOUBLE- DOUBLE. NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: A LARGE PORTION OF THE VAN ANDEL ARENA CROWD CAME FROM NEARBY LAKE- VIEW TO CHEER ON LOCAL STAR LEEANN BIES. SHE DID NOT DISAPPOINT. YESTERDAY' S GAME IRISH Continued from Page 1B Mason showed she has good touch in the paint, shooting over smaller Notre Dame defenders. The Irish were constantly confounded by the Wolverines and were unable to stop the hot Michigan offense, which shot # 68 percent from the field in the firstV half. "We came out in the 2-3 and we> were going to double down, but I didn't think the 2-3 was that effec- tive," Notre Dame coach Muffet> McGraw said. "So we then played a little bit of man-to-man after that and we played another defense after that. So we tried three different things in n the first half and really, none of them were successful." The Irish did not give up easily. They came out with renewed intensi- ty after halftime to cut the Michigan -,.. lead to 12. But just as in the first4 half, the strong beginning quickly faded. Notre Dame also fell victim to foul trouble early in the second half, repeatedly sending Michigan players , to the line. LeeAnn Bies alone was 10-of- 11 from the charity stripe. Michigani dominated the boards ~ against Notre Dame, outrebounding the Irish both offensively and defen- sively. The Irish were no match for the Wolverines, who pulled down 40 LESLIE WA*RD/Daily rebounds and held Notre Dame to just LeeAnn Bies returned home to help lead the Michigan women's basketball team to 28 on the day. a 78-63 victory over defending national champion Notre Dame yesterday. ack spasms sid eline Goodlow RAPHAEL GOODSTEIN Nebraska in title game? BCS is coming up short T ere's an old saying about democ- racy: It's the worst form of gov- ernment - except all of the other ones. I used to think this applied more to the BCS than it does to government. After all, the BCS allows college foot- ball to have its cake and eat it too, and no other bowl system accomplishes this. It allows for the bowl system to remain intact, while a national champion is crowned. The old bowl system didn't provide a national champion, and the Bowl Alliance couldn't get the Big Ten or Pac-10 to join. So the Bowl Alliance IS THE BCS ACC was out and the WHAT IT SET OUT Ti BCS was in. Big WHAT SYSTEM WOLJ NCAA sport that doesn't crown its national champion on the field," and "think aboui all the money that a differ- ent system could generate," people thought. Following the 1997 season, the BCS was formed. Four really important bowl games would be played and generate a lot of money; one of these four would be for the national title. The other 20- whatever bowl games would still be played, but the BCS bowls - the Fies- ta, Orange, Rose and Sugar - were the most important. This 'OMPLISHING 10 DO? IF NOT, JLD? year's really important game is the Rose Bowl, the bowl the Big Ten and Pac-10 once cher- MICHIGAN (78) FG MIN M-A Pool 33 5-12 Smith 33 5-9 Bies 22 4-9 Jara 18 1-1 Ingram 39 8-15 Hauser-Price 1 0-0 Oesterle 10 0-2 Gandy 27 1-5 Mason 16 3-5 McPhilamy 1 0-0 FT M-A 1-1 0-0 10-11 0-0 3-5 0-0 1-2 2-3 0-0 0-0 REB O-T 1-1 1-6 7-12 1-1 0-2 0-1 0-1 419 0-3 0-0 A 1 3 4 5 3 0 2 4 1 0 FI 1 2 4 0 2 0 2 1 3 0 PTS 13 12 18 2 22 0 1 4 6 0 Totals 200 29-58 17-22 1540 23 15 78 FG%:.500 FT% .773 3-point FG: 3-7 429 (Pool 0-2. Ingram 3-5). Blocks: 3 (Smith2, Bies 1) Steals: 6 (Ingram 4, Oesterle, Smith) Tumovers: 13 (Ingram 4, Gandy 3, Smith 3, Pool, Bies) . Technical Fouls: none. Notre Dame (63) FG MIN M-A Haney 22 2-6 Batteast 32 5-17 Borton 20 1-4 Severe 30 2-5 Rattay 37 6-11 Joyce 23 4-8 Hernandez 15 0-1 Wicks 12 1-4 Barksdale 9 1-2 Totals 200 22-59 FT M-A 0-0 4-4 0-0 1-2 5.5 0-0 0-0 0-2 1-2 REB 0-T 2-4 3-9 1-1 0-1 3-7 1-2 0-0 " 1-2 0-0 A 0 1 0 6 2 1 2 1 0 F PTS 4 4 1 17 3 2 3 5 2 19 0 11 2 0 1 2 3 3 1963 By Jim Weber Daily Sports Writer GRAND RAPIDS - Raina Good- low, where are you? This Scooby Doo fan missed yes- terday's game against Notre Dame due to back spasms and watched the game from a wheelchair because she had problems walking. In honor of the senior forward and team captain, Michigan coach Sue Guevara put a piece of tape on her sports coat BASKETBALL with Goodlow's name and num- Notebook ber, an idea she got from the players. "When I walked into the locker room during pre-game, I saw some- body's shoes, they had '32,' " Gue- vara said. "And then I looked around and they had written (Goodlow's) number on various places and I said to the coaching staff, 'I want one.' " After a slow start to the season, Goodlow tied her season-high with 15 points in Thursday's game against Marquette. Goodlow also impressed her coaches by increasing her com- munication with other players after Guevara challenged Goodlow and the other captains to show better leader- ship on the floor. In Goodlow's absence, center Jen- nifer Smith started for the first time this year. She halted the Irish's come- back efforts in the second half with 10 points and three rebounds. Guevara also turned to freshman Katrina Mason for quality minutes in the post. Mason played a season-high 16 minutes after two strong practices last week. "You never know when your opportunity is going to come. But when it comes, you take advantage of it," Guevara said in reference to the 6-foot-2 center. Mason did just that, scoring six points - all in the first half-- on 3- for-5 shooting. She made scoring look easy by simply catching, turning and shooting for her points. Other Wolverines like Smith and LeeAnn Bies also scored in this fashion, a crucial part of Guevara's gameplan. Mason and the rest of Michigan's bench players, impressed Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw. "It seemed like whoever came in off the bench didn't miss a beat," McGraw said. Guevara made it clear that these girls were not only playing for one of the biggest wins in the program's his- tory, but they were also playing for their injured teammate. "It was a big win for our program and a win for Raina Goodlow," Gue- vara said. WHAT RECORD?: Three minutes into the first half, guard Alayne Ingram broke the school record for career 3-pointers --- not that she would know. "I forgot about it, actually," Ingram said. "So when I hit it, coach said 'Nice record!' I was like, what play is that?" Ingram hit two more from behind the arc to set the new 3-point record at 137. The old record of 134 was held by Molly Murray (1995-98). She finished with a game-high 22 points on 8-for-15 shooting despite Notre Dame's focus to shut her down. "You would be surprised that we were keying on her, but we were," McGraw said. "That is one of the things we talked quite a bit about - we had to stop (No.) 40 from the 3- point line, so obviously there were a couple breakdowns." That wasn't the only breakdown in McGraw's defense that Ingram caused. She drove through the defense on a couple of occasions to create easy layups for herself. Ingram's most aggressive drive of the day resulted in a 3-point play after she was fouled. It also extended Michigan's lead to an insurmountable 23 points. Ingram started at her familiar shooting guard position but played the point when Susana Jara was on the bench. This was the case for most of the second half; Jara only played in the final few minutes during garbage time although Jara did not appear to be injured. In her 39 minutes of action, Ingram also displayed her ability to distribute the basketball, with sharp passes into the post to beat Notre Dame's zone defense. deal if it had its flaws. It accomplished what it set out to do better than any other system. But now that Nebraska - which lost its "playoff game" to a two-loss Col- orado team by 26 points last week - could be just one upset away from play- ing in the Rose Bowl, questions will be asked: Is the BCS accomplishing what it set out to? And if it's not, what system would? The Cornhuskers didn't just lose last week, they were abused to the point that halfway through the game, there was no question who the better team was: Nebraska players were even admitting as much: "We had big dreams coming into today," Nebraska quarterback Eric Crouch said after the game. "Those are over with now" Not only are they not over with, but they're very possible. The Cornhuskers fell from No. 1 to No. 4 in the BCS after the loss. Because of Tennessee and Col- orado's upsets of No. 2 Florida and No. 3 Texas, respectively, Nebraska finds itself rooting for Louisiana State to beat soon-to-be No. 2 Tennessee next week. If this happens, the Cornhuskers go to the national title game. Jan. 1 used to be my favorite day of the year, filled with great college foot- ball games from 11 a.m. till 11 p.m. Twelve hours of non-stop football. When Jan. 2 rolled around, I might have been tired of TV and football, but there were a number of great bowl games, all of which seemed important, while a national champion was crowned. Was two teams sharing the national title really so bad? Is Michigan's 1997 season any less special because Nebras- ka won a piece of the title? If anything, that just made the bowl season seem that much more important. I truly cared who won that year's Orange Bowl, and how often is that the case? But most disagreed with this senti- ment. "College football is the only ished and annually played in. To determine the national champi- onship game's participants, a formula was created to determine the two best teams. The BCS system seemed to match up the best two teams in the country the first three years, or at least the best team, while the bowl system remained intact. There were a few catches -only two of the four BCS games would be played on Jan. 1, the Big Ten and Pac-10 were no longer guaranteed to annually play in the Rose Bowl, all games that were not the national title game seemed like consola- tion games - but, hey, it was the best system out there. But after watching the Buffaloes stampede Nebraska and run over Texas, can anyone really say that they're not at least the second-best team in the coun- try. In fact, after watching Miami (Fla.) barely beat Virginia Tech, one could argue that-if there was a playoff, Col- orado would beat the Hurricanes. Of course this matchup will never materialize. Likely, the Hurricanes will either play Tennessee or Nebraska, which didn't even win the Big 12. Hell, it didn't even win its half of the Big 12. If this happens, not only would the BCS have failed miserably in what it to set out to do, but such a scenario would likely increase the chance of a playoff. The NCAA needs to identify what's important before it takes another step down this road of endless, pointless controversy because the next step will be arguing over who the last team to qualify for the playoff is -"Oregon should be No. 4." "No Florida should be ..." Right now, the BCS is looking less like democracy and more like anarchy. Raphael Goodstein oan be reached at raphaelg@umich.edu. i91-15 132813 FG%: .373. FT%: .733 3-point FG: 8-25, .320 (Bat- teast 3-8, Severe 0-1, Rattay 2-7, Joyce 3-7, Hernan- dez 0-1, Wicks 0-1). Blocks: 3 (Haney, Severe, Barksdale). Steals: 6 (Haney, Batteast, Borton, Severe, Rattay 2). Tunovers: 11 (Haney, Batteast 2, Borton 1, Severe 4, Joyce 2, Barksdale). Technical fouls: none. Michigan...................45 33 78 Notre Dame ..............27 36 63 At: Van Andel Arena, Grand Rapids Attendance: 6, 482 Team leaders THROUGH YESTERDAY POINTS PER GAME: PLAYER 1. LeeAnn Bies 2. Alayne Ingram 3. Tabitha Pool REBOUNDS PER GAME: PLAYER 1. LeeAnn Bies 2. Raina Goodlow 3. Jennifer Smith PPG 16.2 15.4 11.3 Then and Now Last year, Notre Dame demolished Michigan in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Yesterday, the Wolverines were "out for blood" and exacted their revenge. RPG 8.3 5.6 5.3 ASSISTs: PLAYER 1. Alayne Ingram 2. Stephanie Gandy 3. Susana Jara FREE-THROW PERCENTAGE: Ass 18 18 17 Then PLAYER 1. Jen Smith 2. LeeAnn Bies 3. Tabitha Pool FT% 1.00(13-13) .846(33-39) .833(10-12) FIELD-GOAL PERCENTAGE: PLAYER 1. LeeAnn Bies 2. Jennifer Smith 3. Raina Goodlow FG% .615(32-52) .533(24-45) .515(17-33) 88-54 Notre Dame "They just had too much, and we didn't have enough" South Bend NCAA Tournament second round Three, including AP Player of the Year Ruth Riley One Point(0-6 FG), Four Rebounds Score Losing coach says ... Location Situation Irish Senior Starters LeeAnn Bies' Performance MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Now 78-63 Michigan "I keep thinking, I miss my team from last year" Grand Rapids Women's Basketball Showcase One 18 Points, 12 Rebounds, 10 of 11 from the line In the paint with: Jen Smith Smitty File Year: Sophomore Hometown: Lansing Position: Center Height: 6-3 * ^ V !GA HANGIN' IN THE BARN: Jen takes great pride in her free throw-shooting and this season she has yet to miss an shot from the charity stripe. She attributes this, in part, to when she was younger her brother turned t heir barn into a basketball court. "We would alw ay s have the family go shoot out at the barn," she said. There she generated a lively rivialry with her brother. "He still thinks he can beat me," she said 3-POINTERS: PLAYER 1. Alayne Ingram 2. Tabitha Pool 3. Susana Jara 3-PT FG 9 4 3 HOW THE TOP 25 FARED Team: 1. Connecticut 2. Tennessee 3. Oklahoma 4. Vanderbilt 5. Iowa St 6. Louisiana Tech * 7. Stanford 8. North Carolina St. 9. Texas Tech 10. Purdue 11. Colorado Last week: beat Wake Forest 88-38 , beat BaliState 103-69 beat George Washington 88-57, beat No. 8 North Carolina State 93-56 beat TCU 7660, Beat Wichita State 89-68 beat Xavier 7&56, Beat Wisc-Milwaukee 79-64, beat James Madison 90-44 beat Creighton 75-74 lost to No. 14 Duke 7664 beat San Francisco 103-72, beat Pepperdine 7563, beat Santa Clara 94-62 beat Old Dominion 74-58, beat Charleston Southern 99-45, lost to No. 2 Tennessee 93-56 beat Oregon 64-60, lost to New Mexico, beat North Texas 63-53 beat Valparaiso 7658, beat Southern Miss 80-40, beat LSU 70-54 Lost to Colorado State 81-69, beat Iowa 92-83