c~be Alicbr~n dIlq SPORTS michigandaily.com /sports sportsdesk@umich.edu TUESDAY JANUARY 29, 2002 9 . ......... ..... Mason to take on new role in East Lansing By Chris Burke. Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - After 36 years (23 at Michigan State) and 916 wins, Michigan State hockey coach Ron Mason decided that he had had enough. The 62-year old Mason officially announced that he would step down from his current posi- tion effective at the end of the season in order to be named the 16th athletic director at Michigan FState. "It was a difficult decision to give up coaching Spartans are no taking 'M igt By Steve Jackson Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - There is no fear in East Lan but the struggling Spartans know that their upco game with Michigan will not be another gift-wral blowout. "The balance of power has definitely evened Michigan State forward Adam Ballinger said. "I'm that they feel like they have a great opportunity to here -and they should." The Spartans have won the last seven games agains Wolverines, and the last six have been blowouts, in( ing a humiliating 114-63 loss two years ago. But graduation and early departures to the NBA whitttd down the talent pool for coach Tom Izzo. This year's inexperienced and often injured Mich State team has struggled to meet its expectations. Y starting the year at No. 15, the team is precariously c to last plao6 in the Big Ten. The Spartans (11-8) can't afford to lose many r games if they hope to make the NCAA Tournament. But they really can't afford to lose this rivalry g, especially considering that this will be their only cra the Wolverines all year. "This game is for all the bragging rights," said fi man and Indiana-native Chris Hill, who got a crash cc in the rivalry from his mentor, Marcus Taylor - a I ing native. "Since we only play once, the winning te fans are going to talk about it all year, so we have tc this one." Michigan State's primary concern in the big game familiar problem for Michigan as well - foul trouble "Michigan has some real weapons in the front cc Ballinger said. "If it means giving up a layup, than I what we have to do." That's hardly the rough and tough attitude of Mich St-te's championship teams. But this season's team has been softened by inji. Six-foot-nine junior Adam Wolfe is out for the year w torn hamstring, Ballinger is playing at "80 percent' Izzo says Jason Andreas' tailbone less than 80 percent That leaves the Spartans - and the Wolverines - just one healthy scholarship player over 6-foot-7 apie Things have gotten so desperate in Spartyville tha football team's freshman quarterback Aaron Alexa has joined the team to build depth in practice. "He's crazy," Ballinger said. "He's jumping arounc fouling everybody - but that's a good thing for us." Michigan State still holds a home-court edge, bui air of invincibility that surrounded the Breslin Cent gone, thanks to a 64-63 upset by Wisconsin on Jan that ended the Spartans' 53-game 'home winning strea "We learned it's not automatic," Taylor said. "We just suit up and expect to win because we are at home and it will always be a major part of my life," said Mason at a press conference held yesterday. "I'm very excited and proud to be the athletics director at Michigan State." "You always wonder when the time to stop coaching is going to be - if you had asked me in September, I would've said that I'd coach as long as I can." The current athletic director at the university, Clarence Underwood, will retire, allowiV, Mason to assume administrative duties as of July 1. "It became clear that the candidate who fit our requirements and even more was Ron Mason," Michigan State President M. Peter McPherson said. "We were looking for an athletics director and we got a legend." Mason holds the title as the winningest coach in college hockey history, with an overall record of 916-376-81. That includes a 627-266-67 mark in his 23 years heading the Spartans. "One thousand victories would have been nice to get," Mason said. "But it was never something that was a major thing for me - my goal has always just been to win the next game." The selection of Mason to inherit the athletic See MASON, Page 10 JON SCHWARTZ It's still too soon to expect a Breslin win When Michigan hired Tommy Amaker to run its basketball program, it was a decision met with nothing but jubilation - except in East Lansing. It was a decision that showed Michigan's determination to find success on the hardwood, a realiza- tion that Michigan wasn't willing to play second fiddle anymore.. Michigan fans were ready to buy back Crisler from its neighbors at State. More importantly, they were ready to celebrate in East Lansing. Some probably circled Jan. 30 - tomorrow - on their calendars. Well, here's the thing: Michigan probably won't win tomorrow. Michigan might not win in Breslin next year. Maybe not the next year, or the year after that. But sometime, in the not too dis- tant future, a trip to East Lansing won't be a two-hour prison sentence. Michigan fans, the NCAA Tour- nament is a pipe dream this year. Next year, it might be, too. But sometime, in the not too dis- tant future, Michigan fans will still be cheering well into March. And it won't just be for the team playing Michigan State. Back in April, when Amaker was making his welcome tour, speaking at every function in the greater Detroit area that would allow him, I asked him a question about the not too distant future. I commented that he was all smiles, offering nothing but excitement for the prospects of Michigan's future. But could we expect that in February? He told me that it would depend on the team's record. But, he added, he was once told by an elderly woman whose name he didn't even. know, that she respected him because she could never tell by his face if he had won or lost. Well February is just three days away. And Michigan State is just one. But knowing Amaker, the two should not be at all connected. Amaker is a rock. He does things his way, and doesn't give a damn what people think about him. He faces criticism for starting players with Hall-of-Fame heart but junior- varsity talent, and he doesn't budge. People question his team's perform- ance, and he doesn't make excuses. He smiles because of his plan. His plan isn't about this year, and it might not even be about next year. He smiles because of the not too distant future, and what his program - it's not just a team, but a program that he's building - will do. Michigan might lose by 30 tomor- row. If things go well, it might lose by five. And if things go ridiculous- ly well, it might even win. But a win over Michigan State does not mean that Amaker's work is done, just as a blowout loss doesn't make him a failure. Fans are always going to be fickle. The same students who avoided Crisler Arena like the plague over the past three years will be waiting in line for tickets if Michigan can get a win tomorrow night. Fans view this as the game of Michigan's season. There aren't two this year, so this is the one. Even with an 8-9 overall record, this is a one-game season in the minds of many. But in my mind, it's the least important Michigan game in a long time. If the Wolverines win it doesn't mean that a tournament invite is coming. If Michigan loses - well, Michigan is supposed to lose. There's no surer sign of a downtrod- den program than comments like "but we did beat Michigan State" when asked to explain a sub-.500 season. I hope that Amaker realizes this. I hope that after the game - win or lose - he's still smiling, still think- ing about the many tasks that lay ahead. This team's revitalization will come soon - Amaker and all Michigan fans will accept nothing less. It will come in the not too distant future. But not tomorrow. Jon Schwartz can be reached at jlsz@umich.edu. DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Michigan's Lavell Blanchard soared above Vermont, but a bigger challenge lies ahead tomorrow night. Big Ten does 180; Hoosiers, Buckeyes on top Daily Sports Editor When asked his opinion on the "most surprising team" in the BASKETBALL Indiana coach Mike Davis couldn't help but feel a lit- tle biased. "Indiana," Davis said with a chuckle. No one else in the conference is laughing -- especially the three teams predicted to finish atop the Big Ten. Illinois, Iowa and Michigan State each find itself in the bottom half of the conference, while the upstart Buckeyes and Hoosiers are overachieving and taking the early lead with 6-1 records. "It's a different league because everyone wins at home, and it's tough -X to win on the road," Davis said. Everyone, that is, except for the Hoosiers. While accumulating the tra- ditionally strong home performances, Indiana has proven to be one of the leagues only road warriors - stealing three games away from Assembly Hall, including a 77-66 victory at Iowa on Jan. 13. Only Indiana (3-1) and Ohio State (2-1) have winning records on the road, Which is a major reason they are lead- ing the conference. On the other end of the spectrum, the Spartans, Hawkeyes and Fighting Illini have combined for a uncharacteristically dismal 1-10 record away from home. Another key to the Hoosiers' success is the inspired play of co-Big Ten Play-, er of the Week Jared Jeffries. Last sea- son's Big Ten Freshman of the Year, Jeffries shared his third weekly honor of the season with Minnesota's Tavarus Bennett. Bennett scored a career-high 21 points in helping the Golden Gophers upset Ohio State, 89-71, in Minneapolis - ending the Buckeyes' nine-game winning streak and handing them their first Big Ten loss in more than a year. But Davis said that no player is as important to his team's success than Jeffries, who has led Indiana in scoring and rebounding in 10 of its 19 games averaging 17.9 points and 7.8 boards. Iowa coach Steve Alford thinks the sophomore forward has the entire package. "He's the only player in the Big Ten that can play all five positions," Alford said. "He can shoot from 21 feet out, he can take it to the hole, he can pull up or post up, he plays solid defensive- ly and is a weapon in transition - he can hurt you in a lot of different ways." Davis said that Jeffries has never been a "go-to-guy" in his playing career, but is adjusting to the role. With other teams often double and triple- teaming Jeffries, Indiana's perimeter players like Dane Fife have been able to exploit, opposing defenses from the outside - shooting 40 percent from 3- point range. The Hoosiers set a school and Big Ten record with 17 treys in their 88-57 thrashing of No. 12 Illinois on Satur- day, which left Indiana players like Fife admittedly "laughing" and Illinois coach Bill Self to somberly say, "the loss made us feel like we were a ways behind them." IOWA WoEs: After losing four of their past five Big Ten games, including road games at Northwestern and Pur- due, the Hawkeyes are reeling - right out of the conference race. "We're not in the title hunt," Alford said. "So we're going to try to finish in the top half of the league." Alford said his struggles stem from several factors. He's disappointed that his star Luke Recker is still struggling to get back into shape after coming into the season overweight, he's frus- trated with his team's inability to stop anyone defensively and is "discour- aged" with the inconsistency of his vet- eran players. Alford also placed some of the blame on himself. "I'm doing a poor job communicat- ing how I want things accomplished," Alford said. LOOKING FOR GREAT INTERN HOUSING THIS SUMMER IN NEW YORK CIT. .: :, ; t Kwmw'&V Ww'