5B - The Michigan Daily - SportsTuesday - January 22, 2002 Trash talk 1, "We don't necessarily evaluate whether the ball is going in, although that's what everyone else does." --Michigan coach Tommy Amaker on his starting lineups quality possessions, while being outscored 7-2. SATURDAY'S GAME Minnesota 69 Imm Michigan 71 Players of the Game Bernard Robinson (Michigan) Robinsons 12 points and 10 rebounds gave him his first career double-double. His last-second shot won the game. Dusty Rychart (Minnesota) Rychart was a rebound shy of a double- double of his own. He ended the day with 14 points and nine boards. f .~~l.+-x:b," Young hot when not under fire By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor Although Saturday's game was nearly two weeks removed from the last time the Wolverines battled Minnesota, Michigan center Chris Young still had vivid memories in his mind from the teams' clash in Minneapolis. "A few times they were yelling 'fire' and all of a sudden, three or four guys were standing around me and there was nothing I could do but kick the ball right back out,"Young explained. A discouraged Young finished that game with just eight points in Michi- gan's 90-82 loss. But it was the Wolver- ines' sparkling outside shooting (40 percent from 3-point range) that burned the Golden Gophers and changed coach Dan Monson's defensive strategy for Saturday's rematch. Monson decided to play off Young and focus on defending Michigan's shooters. "We tried to make him earn it inside' said Monson. "And he certainly did." This time, Young had much more room to breathe and maneuver inside, as he wasn't double-teamed nearly as often. Throughout the game, his team- mates continued to find him, and the senior tri-captain tallied 18 points. The total matched Young's offensive output in his last two games combined, and marked just the third time in the past eight games that Young has fin- ished in double figures. Another good sign of Young's aggres- siveness came when he tied a season- high with seven free-throw attempts (6-for-7), especially since he's had trou- ble getting to the line recently. Young delivered the entire game because he kept himself out of foul trouble (one foul in 37 minutes). After taking a key charge late in the game, his one-handed dunk off a nice feed from freshman Chuck Bailey with 17 seconds left gave Michigan a 69-67 lead. But Bailey wasn't the only Wolverine to find Young, as nearly all of Michi- gan's guards followed the game plan and "were looking inside on every pos- session,' Young said. This held especial- ly true after Minnesota's top two big men, freshman Rick Rickert and Jerry Holman, each picked up two early fouls. "We were thinking they wouldn't be as aggressive on defense if we got it inside," Michigan coach Tommy Amak- er said. "And Chris really delivered." Suffocating double-teams have become routine for Young since his career-high 25 point outburst against Duke on Dec. 8. They have kept the cen- ter from giving Michigan an important inside punch, which has put the pressure on the Wolverines' outside shooters. Although Avery Queen and Domman- is Ingerson have proven to be threats from behind the arc (each shooting better than 50 percent), junior Gavin Groninger has struggled - nailing only three of his last 17 shots from 3-point range. While Groninger said his shots will fall, he believes its even more important for the Wolverines that Young con- tributes on the inside to give Michigan's shooters some room. "Offensively and defensively, when Chris is playing well, the rest of the team plays well too," Groninger said. Personnel wrong SATURDAY'S GAME Minnesota (69) fr Amakers plan- - DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Michigan sophomore Bernard Robinson had a career-day, notching his first ever double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds. Robinson also shared the wealth, dishing out six assists - even in a crowd. Unusual suspects: Amaker shows yet another li*ne OsIup M chigan coach Tommy Amaker wants to rebuild the once-proud program, saying that everyone needs to e "patience" because he's in it for the long haul and that he wants to instill "internal standards" instead of outward "expectations" in the way he coaches. He expects his best players to be the hardest working ones, similar to the way Shane Battier was at Duke. He sends motivational messages by taking starting positions and minutes away from Michigan's most talented". . players. He doesn't want the tumultuous chaos that he experienced at Seton Hall, where extremely talented, yet cocky, freshman Eddie Griffin thought he was bigger than the team, bigger JOE than the coach, bigger than the pro- SMiTHi gram. Griffin is no longer there, and neither is the black eye he gave Ty The one Shine, but the memory still remains in and only Amaker's mind. The problem comes when Amaker tries to relate the phi- losophy of playing the "best practice players" and saying that they will "give the team the best chance to win." Because they don't. Not here. Not on this Michigan team. Maybe if Amaker had the luxury of bringing a Maurice Searight or a JaQua Hart or a Kevin Gaines off the bench to motivate another star player, then his plan may be plausible. By no fault to Amaker, these players are not here. But what he can control is what he has, and how he deals with it. When you have former walk-ons as your ammunition, your gun doesn't pack as much heat - especially if you want to win games, like Amaker says he does. "We always do things in term of practice," Amaker said. "The guys who are going to be very competitive and show that drive, courage and determination - those are the guys we're going to go with." The problem is that his players with the most courage and determination didn't gain a scholarship offer to come to Michi- gan in the first place. And it shows on the court. One case in point has been the ever-important beginning moments of seven of the past nine Michigan games - when Amaker most often sends messages by playing former walk- ons or those at the end of the bench who "work hard." Michigan has been outscored 56-4 in the first few moments after the opening tip. Mike Gotfredson started all but one of those games. After another 7-2 deficit on Saturday against Minnesota, Amaker finally unleashed the reigns on his stars, Bernard Robinson, LaVell Blanchard and Dommanic Ingerson because he wanted to win. But after the game, he didn't forget his long- term aims when explaining another apparently poor start. "We don't necessarily evaluate whether the ball is going in, although that's what everyone does," Amaker said. "We eval- uate the type of shots and types of possessions." Amaker even speaks about baskets as long-term goals. He insists on sticking to "his guns" of an aggressive man- to-man defense, even when his team is overmatched in size and is beaten backdoor consistently - because he wants to. be known as a man-to-man team years down the road. He insists on playing those that work the hardest, no matter what, because he wants that type of team in the "long term." "We're setting our internal standards for our program, and everything after that, we can live with," Amaker said. Maybe he can live with it, but tell that to a veteran like Chris Young. Tell a senior captain who worked his tail off for four years and has been through hell and back with this pro- gram. Tell him that when he's finally peaking as a player and his team finally has promise to be putting things together, internal standards will be put above anything else. Tell him to be "patient." If Amaker was given the type of players needed to send such messages, Young and everyone else might understand it. So should Amaker have to adjust to the hand he was dealt, or try to bluff the Big Ten with his lower cards? How he answers this question will determine the Wolver- ines' fate this year. Joe Smith can be reached atjosephms@umich.edu. Changing it up In five of Michigan's past seven losses, the Wolverines have dug themselves a big hole in the first few minutes of the game, being outscored 46-4. at Western Michigan Down 15-2 Young, Blanchard, Robinson, Groninger, Gotfredson vs Duke Down 9-0 Young, Blanchard, Robinson, Groninger, Queen at San Francisco Down 7-2 Young, Blanchard, Robinson, Jones, Gotfredson at Illinois Down 8-0 Gotfredson Young, Blanchard, Robinson, Jones, Gotfredson Bennett Rychart Rickert Burleson Bauer Hargrow Fleming Esselin Holman Totals MIN 26 35 27 33 30 12 23 2 12 200 FG M-A 1-2 6.15 4-8 2-6 7-15 1-1 0-1 041 3-6 24-55 FT REB M-A O-T A FF 2 2-2 4-9 1 2 6.8 0-3 2 3 2-2 0-4 8 0 0-0 1-2 2 2 2-2 -0-3 0 1 3-6 2-4 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 2-3 0 4 15-201435 15 17 FG%: .436. FT%: .750. 3.ont FG: 6-17, .353 (Bauer13-7,Rickert 1-1, Bennett 1 -1Hag r ow1-1, Esselink 0-1, Rychart 0-3k. Blocks:,1 (Ric kert). Steals: 6 (Bennett 4, ychart 1, Holman 1). Turnovers: 16 (Burleson 5 Rychart 4 Bauer 3, Ben- nett. RickertFI eming Esselink). Techn(cal7G1s) none. MICHIGAN (71) Groninger Bailey Young Sueen otf redson Jones n rson Rtbinson Blanchard Totals MIN 17 16 37 35 3 17 23 25 27 200 FG M-A 0-4 0-1 6-13 2-3 0-0 0.2 4-11 5-12 8-10 25.56 FT REB M-A 0-T A FF 2-3 0-2 1 1 4-4 1-3 1 4 6-7 2-4 1 1 0-0 0-0 4 0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0-2 0 0 0-0 0-4 27 3 2-2 5-10 6 3 1-2 2-3 0 5 15.181.1-29 15 15 PTS 2 4 18 5 0 0 10 12 20 71 FG%: .446. FT%: .833. 3p4Int FG: 6-19, .316 (Blan- chard 3-5, Ingerson 2-6, een 1-2, Robinson 0-2, Jones 0-2, Groninger 0-2). Blocks: 6 (Blanchard 2, Youn 2, Bailey, Robinson). Steals:8 (Robinson 2, B anad, Ingerson, Queen, Young, Bailey, Groninger). Turnovers: 16 (Blanchard 3, Young 3, Bailey 2, Queen 2, Ingerson 2, Robinson 2, Gronnger, Jones). Technical fouls: none. Minnesota...........29 40 - 69 Michigan............28 43 - 71 At: Crisler Arena, Ann Arbor Attendance: 11,603 BIG TEN Team Ohio State Indiana Wisconsin Illinois Minnesota Michigan Northwestern Michigan State Iowa Penn State Purdue STANDINGS Conference Overall W L W L 5 0 14 2 4 1 11 6 4 2 11 8 3 2 14 4 3 3 10 7 3 3 7 8 2 3 11 7 2 3 11 7 2 4 13 7 1 4 5 11 1 5 9 11 PTS 3 14 15 6 17 5 3 0 6 69 By David Horn Laily Sports Writer Will the real Michigan starting five please stand up? Everything coach Tommy Amaker has said, and everything he has shown fans on the court sug- gests that a true "starting line- up" does not exist for the - Wolverines. On Saturday BASKETBALL against Minnesota, Amaker Notebook sent out diminutive point guards Mike Gotfredson and Avery Queen, sporadic 3-point specialist Gavin Groninger, freshman forward Chuck Bailey and veteran center Chris Young. It was a peculiar menagerie of size and talent, and was the seventh different starting lineup Amaker has employed so far this season. The unit struggled and fell behind early, 7-2. Less than three minutes into the game, Amaker quickly injected some scoring into his lineup, sub- bing leading scorers LaVell Blanchard, Bernard Robinson and Dommanic Ingerson for Bailey, Groninger and Gotfredson. The squad that remained on the floor - Queen, Ingerson, Robin- son, Blanchard and Young - went on a 12-4 run and spent the majority of the game together. At the beginning of the second half, Amaker uncharacteristically did not send out his first half starters. He instead allowed his "second line" (the one that included Blanchard, Robinson and Inger- son) to open the half with a 7-0 run. "We were down one at the half, and I thought that lineup gave us a nice boost," Amaker said. Those three ended the game with a combined 42 points, but Amaker was comfortable with his deci- sion to initially keep them on the bench. "We wanted to give them a different look," Amaker said. "Sometimes when guys get a chance to sit and watch it for a little bit they may get a dif- ferent perspective on the game." Queen, who enjoyed running the point for the quicker and higher-scoring line, benefited from more continuous minutes. "We had a lineup in there that was versatile (and) that could do many things," Queen said. "We just seemed to find our rhythm, our game." BERNIE JR.: The talk after the final buzzer on Sat- urday was Bernard Robinson's 15-foot runner to win the game. But that shot overshadowed what was a career-day for the sophomore guard. Robin- son had a career-high 10 rebounds (five on the offensive end) and tied a career-high with six assists. He also had two steals, a block and 12 points, including that game-winner. Saturday was his first career double-double. "I was trying to get everyone involved today," Robinson said. "I'm starting to understand more about the 'game of basketball - how it's not just all points. You can do a whole lot of things to help your team win." Amaker was most pleased with his young swing- man's consistency. "I was impressed with his line at halftime," Amaker said. "He basically doubled that (in the second half). We talked about him being the three A's: Active, athletic and aggressive. When he does those three things, we feel good things happen." But the fun on Saturday wasn't in compliment- ing Robinson's consistency or versatility. It was in marveling at how his awkward runner found its way through the rim with three seconds left. The team practices the very situation it was in (tied with less than eight seconds remaining), and the players have been instructed to "push it," rather than call a timeout. The idea is to "attack the defense." Bailey inbounded to Queen, who passed it to Robinson at halfcourt. A few steps within the are Robinson let the ball roll of his fingertips and kiss off the high glass. "It was crazy. It was pretty. I never saw nothing like it," Queen said. FASTBREAK: The Wolverines have been vulnerable to the fastbreak all season, and had not yet been able to make it work for them despite Amaker's early season comments suggesting that it would be an integral part of the team's offense (via its defense). Saturday, though, they found themselves with many more opportunities than usual, a result of an above-average eight steals and perhaps also the 10 rebounds of Robinson, whose quickness allowed the breaks to start earlier. Not all the fastbreaks were successful, however. A Bailey charge and a Robinson travel were among the slipups during fastbreak opportunities. "Sometimes people get out of control, but that's just part of the game," Queen said. Michigan ended with nine points off of turnovers, but hopes to improve its successful con- version of fastbreak opportunities in the future. "That's our game. That's mostly what we do," Queen said. "We try to push the ball as much as we can. It seems like in the past we've just not had as many opportunities." Last Saturday's results: Michigan 71, Minnesota 69 Northwestern 63, Iowa 50 No. 20 Ohio State 73, Indiana 67 Michigan State 77, Penn State 65 Wisconsin 77, Purdue 66 Today's game: Michigan State at Iowa, 7:05 p.m. Wednesday's games: Northwestern at Purdue, 6 p.m. Wisconsin at No. 9 Illinois, 8 p.m. Indiana at Penn State, 8 p.m. Thursday's game: Michigan at No. 20 Ohio State, 7 p.m. Saturday's games: Vermont at Michigan, 2 p.m. Penn State at Wisconsin, 12:15 p.m. No. 9 Illinois at Indiana, 2 p.m. Iowa at Purdue, 2:30 p.m. No.20 Ohio State at Minnesota, 4:30 p.m. UP NEXT: Brian Brown AP PHOTO The 20th-ranked Buckeyes are the hottest team in the Big Ten, surprising everyone by standing 5-0 in the conference. They are coming off a 73-67 win against Indi- ana, but are considered to be untested. NEXT WEEKEND: LESLIE WARD/Daily Chris Young takes a rare seat. vs. Northwestern Down 7-0 Young, Blanchard, Robinson, Groninger, Gotfredson i WEEKEND NOTES Northwestern 63, No. 17 Iowa 50: Winston Blake scored 16 points and Jitim Young added 13 Saturday night as Northwestern used its patient half- court game to earn a 63-50 victory over Iowa. The Wildcats (10-6, 2-3 Big Ten), who never trailed and led by as many 20 points, posted their second upset of the week after beating Michigan on Wednesday. It was their first defeat of a ranked team since beating Purdue on Jan. 27, 1999. State- into first place in the Big Ten. Brian Brown had a career-high 26 points and freshman Terence Dials scored 10 consecutive points down the stretch. Unranked and underestimated all sea- son, the Buckeyes (14-2, 5-0) won their eighth game in a row overall and their 12th consecutive conference game. "Seasons have peaks and valleys," to a 74-67 victory Saturday over No. 7 Oklahoma. "I got my mind right," he said. Only twice in his previous 44 games had Gooden not scored in double fig- ures - both times against Oklahoma. At halftime Saturday, often double- teamed by a confusing Sooners defense, the Big 12's leading scorer had one field goal, two free throws and an air ball. :4Is "1 -nn in+ n Innzn HOW THE AP Team Record 1. Duke 16-1 2. Kansas 15-2 3. Maryland 14-3 4. Cincinnati 17-1 5. Florida 15-2 6. Oklahoma 14-2 7. Virginia 12-2 8. Kentucky 12-4 9. Illinois 14-4 10. Arizona 13-4 11. Oklahoma State 15-3 TOP 25 FARED This weekend's results Beat Wake Forest 103-80 Beat Oklahoma 74-67 Beat Clemson 99-90 Beat Louisville 77-50 Lost to Georgia 84-79 Lost to Kansas 74-67 Beat Florida State 91-74 Beat Notre Dame72-65 Beat Iowa 77-66 Beat UCLA 96-86 Lost to Texas Tech 94-70 Anure AndersonAP - The Catamounts surprised everyone by putting together a 10-game winning streak, including a 5-0 start in the Ameri- can East conference. They now stand at 14-4 and are first in their conference at 7- 1. They beat Albany 71-43. 'M' STATS Player Blanchard Robinson Young Ingerson rtmnind r G 15 15 15 15 15; Min 28.4 27.9 30.7 17.8 2.n n A 1.7 2.5 1.1 1.4 11 Reb 7.1 4.4 5.5 1.8 1.A Pts. 15.1 12.7 11.0 9.7 7.9 I I