The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 4, 2002 - 3B WOMEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS INDIANAPOLIS FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 67 Purdue 74 THURSDAY'S GAME Knockout: Purdue drops M' in OT RAPHAEL GOODSTEIN Michigan Illinois 83 63 THE DOWN-LOW GUEVA-RANT: On Purdue's two offensive rebounds in one possession that resulted in a ,three-point-play to tie the game: "At that point, when you're still up three points and the ball hits the floor, you dive on the floor, you go get the ball. (Instead), we were just watching." -KEY STAT: ,,Purdue's 17 second chance points, 14 of which came in the first half. - TURNING POINT: Purdue's 11-3 run to tie the game at 61. The run was capped by a three- point play by Laura Meadows with two minutes remaining. YOU KNEW IT WAS OVER WHEN: Kelly Komara hit an uncontested jumper with a minute remaining in overtime to gave Purdue a five-point lead. THE DAILY'S MVP: Jennifer Smith: She scored game- highs against Illinois and Purdue, combining for 46 points and 19 "rebounds in the tournament. She shot 57 percent from the field and 86 percent from the charity stripe. FRIDAY'S Box SCORE Despite loss, Blue finally shows heart By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - Michigan had finally come alive. The Wolverines started playing last weekend like the team that was picked along with the Boilermakers by Big Ten coaches to finish at the top of the standings, instead of the team that finished with a 6-10 con- ference record. Trailing Purdue by 10 points early in the second half, the Wolverines didn't let the game get away as they had in many of their conference games. Instead, they fought back with a 34-16 run to take an eight- point lead with four-and-a-half min- utes remaining. The Wolverines played more aggressively than they had all sea- son, constantly falling for and get- ting loose rebounds and making some key defensive stops. The unforced errors that plagued Michigan all season long were gone. The team turned the ball over just 11 times against Purdue (a season low) and 13 times against Illinois, well below its average of 18 per game. And then things fell apart. Michigan stopped hustling. The Wolverines allowed Purdue to get two offensive rebounds on one pos- session which led to the Boilermak- ers tying the score. The turnovers resurfaced. Alayne Ingram traveled with 12 seconds remaining in a tie game and her team in position to win the game. The defense broke down. Michi- gan allowed Purdue to score 13 points in overtime and couldn't make a stop when it needed one. Down by three with one minute left in over- time, Purdue's Kelly Komara was left wide open for a baseline jumper that ended Michigan's chances for a comeback. Despite the late breakdown, Pur- due coach Kristy Curry thought that Michigan's gutsy performance showed it deserved an NCAA Tour- nament bid. "You've got to take a look at Michigan if you're the NCAA Tour- nament Committee," Curry said. "I think they deserve to get in." Pardon the Interruption A P iPHO Michigan forward Jennifer Smith could not lead Michigan to an upset despite 22 points and 10 boards. If Michigan had played all year until they arrived at Conseco Field- like it did this past weekend, it would house that they played like there was be a lock for the NCAA Tourna- no tomorrow. ment. For this year's underclassmen, "We played two good back-to- Guevara hopes last weekend will be back games," Michigan coach Sue a learning experience. They should Guevara said. "We showed that we realize now that in order to win in were one of the top 64 teams. the Big Ten and in the postseason, "But I think it is too late." they need to go all out every time But because the Wolverines did they step on the floor. not play with the intensity and confi- "That's what I hope all these dence during the conference season, underclassmen understand," Guevara they will probably have to settle for said. "You need this kind of effort the WNIT. Michigan failed to dis- against the Ohio States, against the play this do-or-die intensity when it Penn States, against the Purdues. It's lost to an Ohio State team that only not turn on, turn off." dressed seven players or when it lost And that hunger can't just start in by 20 to Penn State on senior day. March. "I think we would have had a lot "That starts in the very beginning. better record if we would have That starts in September," Guevara played this well (throughout)," sen- said. "And that's what was never ior Heather Oesterle said. understood on the team." After starting out the season 10-1 But for the seniors - Oesterle, and playing well this weekend, the Ingram, and Susana Jara - they can Wolverines can look back and won- only look back wish things took a der what could have been. It was not different course. ESPN here With Major Leaguers report- ing to spring training, Arkansas firing Nolan Richardson, and the Big Ten Tour- nament mercifully ending another pathetic season of Michigan basket- ball - all happening in a small amount of time'- I found myself with too many topics to write about for just one column this week. Thus, in ESPN's Pardon the Interruption form, I'll cover all of them. There was a First topic: spring training There was a time rebirth and hop when spring train- another chance ing was a time of York Yankees to rebirth and hope. they're the best Now it's just if you've got so another chance for about it, don't - the New York Yan- and sign anothe kees to prove that they're the best team in sports. If you've got something to say about it, don't - or they'll go and sign another All Star. Losing the World Series to the Arizona Diamondbacks caused a few people to make com- ments like, "It's the end of the dynasty." Owner George Steinbrenner responded to these claims the way he usually does - getting out his checkbook and offering more money than anyone else can. The Yankees improved their offense this offseason by signing Jason Giambi - maybe the best hit- ter in baseball - outfielder Rondell White - who, when healthy can play at an All Star level - and trad- ing for Robin Ventura while third- base prospect Drew Henson learns how to hit a curveball at Triple-A Columbus. I spent the better part of an after- noon in Mexico trying to figure out a problem with this team. Could it be the pitching? Nope. Roger Clemens, Mike Mussina and Mariano Rivera are as good as anyone. Could it be the hitting? Well, it was last year. But this year's team has Giambi, which means that Bernie Williams and Derek Jete will be better. We all know it won't be the man- aging, as Joe Torre is one of the all- time greats. Finally, after computing statistics, searching almanacs, and interview- ing some of the best baseball minds of our time, I found a weakness - www.yankees.com. That's right Yankees fans, your website is a tad too busy. Oh, and finding the team roster is tougher than it should be. Bing! While searching for a weakness with the Yankees, a couple of friends started forecasting the Detroit Tigers season. One asked me if I thought there was any chance that this team fin- time when was a time of e. Now It's Just for the New prove that team in sports. mething to say - or they'llgo r All Star. Even if all of this happened, the Tigers would still need some of their play- ers, who all seem to be first basemen/des- ignated hitters, to become legitimate Major League pitch- ers. In other words, MICHIGAN (67) M'N FG MIN M-AI Gandy 45 4-13 Smith 45 9-17 Bies 30 4-14 Jara 19 0-3 Ingram 41 414 Pool 27 - 2-3 ,Oesterle 18 2-5 'Totals 225 25-69 smy take ishes above .500. I'm still left wondering what pre- scription drug he was on when he asked me. Under his scenario, outfielder Bobby Higginson would hit 40 home runs in the spacious Comerica Park; Jeff Weaver would win 20 games (which would require 20 shutouts) and first baseman Dmitri Young would become an All Star. FT' M-A 4-4 4-4 2-2 0-0 3.3 2-2 0.0 REB 0-T 4-6 5-10 3-7 1-1 1-3 1-4 0-1 A 3 0 3 1 4 3 2 F1 4 4 4 1 4 0 3 PTS 12 22 11 0 11 6 5 fans won't have too much to get excited for about until draft time. But hey, Cecil Fielder's kid, Prince, apparently, is quite the power hitter. Bing! The University of Arkansas bought out the remainder of basket- ball coach Nolan Richardson con- tract after he publicly commented that he's treated differently from white coaches in the SEC because he's black. Arkansas proved Richardson right by essentially firing him. A southern state treating a black employee differently than it would have treated a white employee? Shocking. The reality, sadly enough, is that this is an old story. A black man gets a job in the South, and, despite his success, his crotchety white boss finds a reason to fire him. All this shows is that the "New South" is still the South. Bing! Next topic, Michigan basketball. Why is it that every team at this University - except the field hockey team - is worse today than it was when I received my accept- ance letter here nearly four years ago? In case you didn't already know - and chances are you didn't because you don't care - the bas- ketball team finished in 10th place again this year. The most exciting thing Michigan basketball fans have to look forward to is Daniel Horton playing in the McDonald's All America game - the first Wolverine to be selected to play in it since LaVell Blanchard three years ago. But hey, at least the Big Ten Tour- nament will give Michigan one last chance at beating Big Ten power Northwestern. 915-1515-3616 20 67 FG%: .362 FM% 1.000 3-point FG: 2-13,_154 (Bies 1-2, Oesterle 1-3, Gandy 0-2. Ingram 0-6). Blocks: 3 (Smith, Bies, Pool) Steals: 5 (Oesterle 2, Gandy, Smith, Ingram). Tumovers: 11 (Smith 2, Bies 2, Ingram 2, Oesterel 2, Jara, Pool). Technical Fouls: none. Purdue (74) Meadows Wright .Noon Komara Valek Hicks Jones Heikes Totals MIN 38 43 29 45 41 9 6 14 225 FG M-A 5-12 5-10 7-13 4-15 46 0-0 0-1 1-4 FT REB M-A 0-T 1-2 3-6 10-12 3-12' 1-2 1-5 4-6 2-9 0-0 3-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-5 A 1 3 0 3 6 0 2 0 F PTS 4 13 2 20 5 15 1 14 3 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 15 74 Con-psycho Fieldhouse Indianapolis has gone crazy for Big - Gym class: They studied the way athletes train, diet and sleep. They also Ten Basketball. The city has studied the psychological side of sport. renamed streets for the conference schools, placed Big Ten banners - Math class: They calculated their team's scoring average, win-loss percent- throughout the city and assigned age and assist-to-turnover ratio from looking at the box scores. 2,400 middle schoolers to different teams to follow throughout the sea- - Music class: Schools that followed Michigan (Crispus Attucks and St. son. Here is what the students did: Andrew) taught their students "Hail to the Victors." 26-6116-221443 15 FG%: .426 FT%: .727 3-point FG: 6-17, .353 (Valek 2-3, Meadows 2-5, Komara 2-8, Jones 0-1). Blocks: 6 (Wright 4. Meadows, Noon). Steals: 6 (Meadows 2, Valek 2, Hicks, Heikes) . Tumovers: 15 (Mead- ows 3, wright 3, Noon 3, Valed 2, Komara, Hicks). Technical fouls: none. Michigan.............24 37 6 67 Purdue.................32 29 13 74 (OT) At: consecc Fieldhouse, Indianapolis Attendance: 6,324 THURSDAY'S BOx SCORE Michigan (83) MINN Gandy 39 Smith 33E Bies 20 E Jara 22 C Ingram 39 Pool 20 4 Hauser-Price 1C Oesterle 22 Mason 3 9 McPhillamy 1 C Totals 200 FG M-A 2-8 8-13 5-7 0-0 6-16 4-9 0-1 2-6 1-1 0-0 FT M-A 2-3 8-10 4-5 0-1 3-3 2-2 0-0 3-4 2-5 0.0 REB 0-T 0-4 3-9 1-7 2-4 0-3 1-5 0-0 1-3 1-2 ~0 A 5 0 2 4 3 1 0 6 0 0 Ff 2 4 4 1 3 4 0 1 1 0 PTS 6 24 14 0 17 10 0 8 4 0 BOILERS Continued from Page 1B First, Kelly Komara got her own rebound off a missed 3-point attempt. She missed again but the ball wound up in the hands of Laura Meadows, who converted with a three-point play at the two-minute mark to tie the score. Guevara could not believe her players were unable to come up with a rebound. "At that point, when you're still up three points and the ball hits the floor, you dive on the floor, you go get the ball," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "(Instead), we were just watching." Neither team scored again in regulation. After a Purdue miss, Michigan regained possession with 40 seconds remaining. Guevara later blamed her- self for not calling a timeout to get everyone on the same page. "I should kick myself in the head because I do not believe in calling a timeout to let the other team set up," Guevara said. Guevara called a play from the bench: "Two High." It's the play that Michigan usually runs when the shot clock gets down to 10 seconds. It's a play designed to get the ball to center LeeAnn Bies. With 10 seconds left on the clock, point guard Alayne Ingram had the ball, and it never left her hands. Ingram tried get off a shot against Komara - the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year - but traveled. "I had just called the play and it did not get executed. And that is the bottom line, it did not get executed," Guevara said. I Purdue's Meadows also had a chance to win the game in regulation, but missed as time expired, sending the game into overtime. Michigan's Tabitha Pool scored the first bucket of the extra session, but the Wolverines did not score for the next three-and-a-half minutes as Purdue scored. seven unanswered points. Michigan missed all four of its 3- point attempts to close out the game. Guevara was not pleased with the way her team played in the last eight minutes, in which Michigan's post players had just two points and the team had just six. "(The players) wanted to get it done individually instead of going to what got us there, which is getting the ball inside," Guevara said. The Boilermakers knew they could come back to beat Michigan as they did in Ann Arbor just two weeks ago. "I never saw in those kids' eyes in the second half and overtime that we were going to lose," Purdue coach Kristy Curry said. "I know that .it could have been a reality, but they just really believed in each other. There was never any doubt." Wright, who scored 40 points against Michigan the last time out, led the Boilermakers with 20 points. Four other Purdue players scored in double figures. Michigan's Jennifer Smith had a game-high 22 points on 9-of-17 shooting to go along with a team-high 10 rebounds. As a team, the Wolverines weren't as effi- cient, shooting just 36 percent from the field. Michigan trailed the entire first half but closed the gap to one with three minutes remaining in the half. But Purdue responded with a 9-2 run to take its largest lead of the game (10) heading into the break. Michigan battled back to tie the score at 60 points apiece at the 14-minute mark, stretched the lead to eight points and did not trail again until overtime. Raphael Goodstein can be reached at raphaelg@umich.edu. The Michigan Daily Display Team babb, pT fit O 28-6124-3014.412120 83 FG%: .459 FT%: .800 3-point FG: .300 (Ingram 2-6, Oesterle 1-4). Blocks: 2 (Jara, Pool) Steals: 13 (Oesterle 3, Gandy 2, Sith 2, Bies 2, Ingram 2, Jara, Pool). Tumovers: 13 (Jara 3, Gandy 2, Ingram 2, Pool 2, Oesterle 2, Smith, Bies). Technical Fouls: none. ILLINOIS (63) Vana Dallas Marcauskaite Hunter Williams Guthrie Issenmann Yanni Hagberg Totals MIN 34 22 26 30 37 22 15 11 3 200 FG M-A 1-8 2-8 6-14 2-7 3-11 2-5 2-4 0-2 0-0 FT M-A 8-8 2-4 7-7 2-4 0-0 5-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 REB 0-T 1-7 4-11 1-4 1-2 4-6 3-3 0-1 0-1 0-1 A 4 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 F1 2 5 5 3 3 3 1 1 1 PTS 10 6 19 7 6 9 6 0 0 63 Corner of 1st and Huron St. Downtown AA (734) 623-7400 www.damatos.com Big Ten Tournament Here are the results from this sea- son's Big Ten Tournament. 18-59 24-2919-4410 24 FG%: .305 FT%: .828 3-point FG: 3-11, .273 (Issen- mann 2-4, Hunter 1-3, Marcauskaite 0-1, Williams 0-3). Blocks: 4 (Vana, Marcauskaite, Hunter, Williams). Steals: 6 (Hunter 2, Dallas, Mar- causkaite, Williams, Yanni) . Turnovers: 19 9 (Williams 4, Dallas 3, Marcauskaite 3, Vana 2, Hunter 2, Issenmann 2, Hagberg 2, Guthrie). Techni- cal fouls: none. Michigan ...........39 44 83 Indiana ....................28 35 63 At: Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis First Round (Thurs.): No. 9 Michigan No. 8 Illiinois No. 7 Ohio State No. 10 Michigan State No. 6 Wisconsin No. 11 Northwestern Second Round (Fri.): No. 5 Indiana No. 4 Iowa 84 63 89 82 60 58 78 76 74 67 HEY MICHIGAN WOLVERINES, MAKE YOUR CLIMB TO THE TOP A WHOLE LOT SHORTER. START YOUR CAREER OFF ATA HIGHER LEVEL. ( i ,- -A t\Al r 1'-n crk n I ra'o aU f ris nt tmaker of Ouicken and 'M' STATS Through Mar. 2 Player G Bies 29 Inrarm 28 Min 31.5 38.1 A 2.0 4.1 Reb 8.2 3.0 Pts 16.0 15.4 No. 1 Purdue No. 9 Michigan Aln 7 Donn Q+n+o 7n