0I OeR TShigan atg SPORTS michigandaily.com/sports sportsdesk@umich.edu THURSDAY JANUARY 31, 2002 8A Not yet JOE SMITH 6 Young's fouls take him out of game early By Steve Jackson Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - The Michigan offense needs Chris Young, and it needs him badly. After the Spartans stormed out with an 11-0 run early in the first half, Michigan made a point of getting the ball to Young, who scored on consecutive possessions to drain the crowd's intensity - although only for a moment. Then Young was sent to BASKETBALL the bench after Notebook picking up his second foul, and everything went downhill from there. "Without him in the game we are a different team," Michigan point guard Avery Queen said. Michigan coach Tommy Amaker admitted that without Young, his team was "outmanned on the frontline." "When Chris went out, it really shook us," Amaker said. "That allowed them to really lock in and use their strength and size." The Big Ten has always been a rough and tough league and Michigan needs to be ready for that night after night. "I don't see them as especially physical," said Bernard Robinson, who was held to just four points on 2- of-7 shooting. "I just see it as them playing great defense and stopping the plays that we are trying to run." Young's inspired play and consis- tent improvement made an impres- sion on Michigan State's four-time national coach of the year. "He's done what everybody wants to see," Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "He's improved each and every year." GIFT WRAPPED: Last night Izzo cele- brated his birthday in his usual fash- ion, beating his in-state rivals from Ann Arbor. Last year, Izzo traveled to Crisler and the Wolverines had a present waiting for him - an easy 91-64 win. This year, the 47-year-old coach got to celebrate his special day with a 71-44 victory in front of 14,759 of his closest friends at the Breslin Cen- ter in East Lansing. But Izzo's focus was far away from cake and ice cream after the game. "I'll probably just watch 10 hours of Illinois tape to celebrate," Izzo said. SURPRISE: Only one thing surprised Tommy Amaker in his first game against Michigan State. It wasn't the crowd, it wasn't the physical nature of the game, and it wasn't the blowout score of 72-44. "I just thought we would play a lit- Michigan man Chris Young keeps head high BRENDAN O'DONNELL/Daily Michigan center Chris Young fought was outmatched by Spartans Adam Ballinger and Aloyslus Anogonye all game long. State wins eighth-stralght over EAST LANSING-- Chris Young couldn't even put into words his feelings after yet another loss to the Spartans last night. "I'm breathing, that's the only good thing that I can say right now," a somber Young said. He isn't joking. The loss came in admittedly the "biggest game of his life," and the ramifications of the lat- est 27-point drubbing went far beyond what any box score could indicate. "For me personally, it was not just another game," Young said. "This was one of the biggest games of my life, and I can't believe that I might gradu- ate from the University of Michigan without beating Michigan State." Barring any unexpected matchup with the Spartans in the Big Ten Tour- nament, Young will be a member of the only senior class in the program's 93-year history that did not beat the Spartans at least once in their career. To make matters worse, for most of the first half the only thing that Young could do was sit and watch. Two quick fouls forced him into the uncomfortable spectator position for most of the first half, as the senior helplessly yelled at his teammates - to no avail. "It was extremely tough,"'Young said. "I was sitting next to Leon, and we were going crazy because we both had fouls and couldn't do anything about it." Young fought and willed Michigan back to within five points with just over 10 minutes to go in the first half, but that was as close as the Wolver- ines would get the rest of the way. The Spartans went on a 19-6 run to end the half - with Young on the bench for all but 30 seconds of the run.. "Chris is the bread and butter of our team," said junior Gavin Groninger, who is also Young's room- mate and one of his best friends. "And when he's not in, we're not the same." Young is more than the bread and butter, he's the heart and soul of the Michigan basketball team. He's the glue that keeps the Wolverines togeth- er in the tough moments, probably because he's been through more than anyone could ever imagine. Steve Fisher, the coach who recruit- ed Young, was fired before the Ply- mouth native could ever don the maize and blue. But Young didn't waver. He's a Michigan man, and that was never going to change. No one ever questions his heart, dedication or effort. "I wish everyone could play with the heart that Chris does," Groninger said. "Then outcomes would be a lot different." Young's been through three head coaches, an Ed Martin scandal, two losing seasons and four of the five worst losses in the program's history. He's sacrificed a lot for Michigan, even up to this year. Tommy Aniaker is trying to rebuild the program, pleading for patience from everyone. But that's hard for Young to give, since he doesn't have that much time left. His time has run out with Michigan State, but even after suffering four- straight 20-point losses to the Spar- tans coming into this game, last night was still the toughest for Young. It was admittedly his best chance to beat them - on their own floor. But it didn't happen, despite Young's 13 points. Without him in the game, the Michigan offense sputtered and hud- dled around the perimeter - record- ing a season-low 44 points.-d In a few months, Michigan won't have Young on the floor anymore. He's 19 credits from graduating and will leave with an empty feeling. Young said he'd never return to Bres- lin unless one of his kids plays for Michigan. That very well could happen. Well before then, the Michigan- Michigan State rivalry will be com- petitive once again. The Wolverines could even knock off the Spartans next year in Crisler. The gap is clos- ing - regardless of what the 27-point margin indicates. But it'll be too late for Young, who admits there's only one thing that can complete - or save - his career. "A national championship," said Young. "From where I sit and where I'm at, that's the only thing that can." It's just too bad it won't happen for Young - a true Michigan man. Joe Smith can be reached at josephms@umich.edu By Steve Jackson Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - This was supposed to be the best chance in years for the Wolverines to conquer their archri- vals. But this loss in East Lansing, MICHIGAN 44 just like all the others of late, was far from close. Michigan State led MICHIGAN ST. 71 for the final 34 minutes, cruising to a 71-44 victory. "It didn't seem like a game that we should have won by 27 points," Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "Neither team played very well or very poorly. We just grinded it out, scored a couple extra points, made a couple putbacks and they just missed some shots." The Wolverines missed plenty. Michigan shot less than 30 .percent from the field for the game. "You can look at a lot of things in a game like this," Michi- gan coach Tommy Amaker said. "But if you shot a percent- age like that you're not going to beat anyone." After scoring just 47 points against Ohio State, Amaker called it "the worst performance of the year." But last night he sang a different tune. "I thought it was a competitive game," Amaker said. "That's just my opinion but I thought the guys gave us a lot of effort tonight." In the first half, the Spartans nearly doubled up Michigan after guard Marcus Taylor hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to make the score 31-19 heading into intermission. The East Lansing native drilled it right in the face of Michigan's hometown boy LaVell Blanchard. "That was a huge shot," guard Avery Queen said. "That really gave them a lot of momentum for the rest of*the game." The Wolverines started out strong, scoring the game's first five points, but shortly thereafter their offense went into hibernation. Shot clock violations and airballs showcased the, team's inconsistent offensive execution. "We weren't moving," Queen said. "Everybody was just standing around the perimeter playing dead - everybody." At one point Michigan had four trips down the court with- out a shot so much as hitting the rim. The Spartans took advantage -using an 11-0 run to put the game away early. Adam Ballinger's 14 points led a balanced attack for Michigan State, which had four players in double figures. Chris Young was strong inside for the Wolverines, scoring 13 points despite getting into early foul trouble. "We really need Chris to keep our offense going," Gavin Groninger said. "We need to be able to get the ball inside. Keeping him out of foul trouble is going to be a key for us all year", After scoring just two points on 1-of-S shooting in the first 20 minutes, Blanchard stepped up his play in the second half to finish with a game-high 16 points, but it was in vain. Michigan State's early charge was just too much to handle. "We knew that we needed to come out with a run right away," Blanchard said. "We just never got much of a run going." The rest of the Wolverines struggled too much offensively, as only Blanchard and Young were able to post more than five points.'Adding insult on top of insult, Michigan State football player Aaron Alexander and crowd favorite Matt Ish- bia scored the game's final five points. Michigan never got closer than 14 points in the second half, hardly closing the gap on this recently one-sided rivalry. "You watched all those games," said a frustrated Blan- chard. "Did you see any improvement?" YESTERDAY'S GAME MICHIGAN (44) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T :R 'F PT Robinson 31 2-7 0.1, 0-3 2 4 4 Blanchard 37 6-16 1-2 5-8 1 2 16 Young 29 4-8 5-7 1-3 1 3 13 Jones 26 1-5 2-4 4-4 3 3 4 Queen 33 0-5 0-0 1-3 0 2 0 Ingerson 13 2-8 0-0 0=0 0 0 5 Godfredson 7 0-0 (1 0-0 0 1 0 Groninger 10 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 Bailey 13 .1-3 0-0 0.1 1 0 2 Adebiyi 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 16-54 8-14 132s 8 17 44 FG%:.269. FT%:.571. 3-pont FG: 4-21,.190 (Blan- chard 3-6, Ingerson 1-6, Queen 0-4, Groninger 0-2, Robinson 0-1, Jones 0-1,B alley 01). Blocks:1 (Robinson). Steals: 5 (Jones 2, Young, Blanchard, Robinson). Turnovers: 9 (Groninger 3, Godfredson 2, Ingerson, Young, Robinson). TechnIcal fouls: none. Michigan State (71) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Anagonye 26 3-5 4-4 1-4 0 3 10 Ballinger 20 6-8 0-0 2-7 0 3 14 Taylor 35 4-12 0-0 1-6 5 2 10 Anderson 30 3-6 6-6 3-6 1 4 12 Torbert 24 3-7 0.1 1-3 3 2 6 Hill 25 2-5 2-2 0-1 1 3 8 Alexander 2 1-1 0-0 0-2 0 0 2 Ishbia 3 1-1 0-0 0.0 1 0 3 Bograkos 16 1-1 0-0 1-5 0 1 2 Andreas 16 11 2-2 0.1 1 1 4 Westrick 3 0.1 0-0 0.1 0 0 0 Totals 200 2548 14-1512.41 12 19 71 FG%: .521. Fr%:.933 3-point FG: 7-16,.438 (Ballinger 2-3, Hill 2-4, Taylor' 2-6, Ishbia 1-1, Tor- bert 0-2). Blocks: 5 (Anagonye 3, Andreas 2). Steals: 1(Anderson). Turnovers: 14 (Hill 3, Anagonye 2, Taylor 2, ishbia 2, Anderson, Taylor). Technical fouls: none. Michigan ..........19 25 - 44 Michigan State .........37 34 - 71 At: Breslin Center, East Lansing Attendance: 14,759 I 6 Uw - .u - m w.in ~u M. This Weekend in Michigan Athletics Presented by: :t cingularN WIRS LESS. ...... .... 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