SPORTS michigandaily.com/sports sportsdesk@umich.edu FRIDAY MARCH 8, 2002 9 Playing time for team's Bring on the Buckeyes Six-game skid ends for Blue as Blanchard shines ,a By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor vtI t~ JJU)/K) UJJ NDIANAPOLIS - Michigan played the best game of its season yesterday because its five best players played 35 minutes (or more) each. It's about time. All season, coach Tommy Amaker has tweaked his starting lineup depending on who has been hustling in practice, who deserved the honor of starting. He has done so because he wants to create a program where hard work is rewarded and laziness is not. I' applaud Amaker for that. But yesterday, in the first round of the Big DAVID Ten Tournament, HORN Amaker put his five best basketball players Tooting My on the court, left them Own there nearly uninter- rupted for the entire game and watched them mop the floor with a team - North- western - which should never have been a problem for the Wolverines in the first place. Michigan won by 21 points and allowed fewer points (51) than they have all season. I don't know who has been working hard behind closed doors recently. I don't know if LaVell Blanchard is making faces at Amaker at practice, or if Chris Young is blowing off team meetings to play video games, or if Dommanic Ingerson is prank calling the assistant coaches. I don't care, at least not this weekend. It's March, and if a team is not disciplined by now, it probably won't happen; you might as well go out there and try to make a mira- cle. If Michigan was going to lose yesterday, it was going to lose with its best players. The injury to point guard Avery Queen in last weekend's final regular season game gave Amaker a chance to play the lineup he could have been playing all season: Young, Blan- chard, Bernard Robinson, Leon Jones and * Ingerson. He could have played that lineup if he were less vehement about instituting a sys- tem of accountability. In the long run, his vehemence will pay off for this program. In the short run (this week- end), Michigan would benefit from allowing this lineup not just to start, but to play as many minutes as they can without collapsing from fatigue. INDIANAPOLIS - Maybe it was because LaVell Blanchard was not satisfied in his recent third team All Big Ten selection by the media. Maybe it was because Blanchard was sick of people calling his season a disappoint- MICHIGAN 72 ment. Maybe it was just NORTHWESTERN 51 because six careers and a season were on the line. Either way, Blanchard led the Wolverines with a season-high 26 points - 17 in the first half alone - as the inspired 10th-seeded Wolverines played their best game of the sea- son. Michigan trounced No. 7 seed Northwest- ern, 72-51, in a half-empty Conseco Fieldhouse in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament. Freshman Dommanic Ingerson made his first career start in the absence of Avery Queen, who sat out the entire game with an ailing knee. Michigan coach Tommy Amaker played his starting five - Ingerson, Blanchard, Chris Young, Leon Jones and Bernard Robinson - for more than 35 minutes for the first time all season. His Wolverines responded by playing with the most mental toughness and grit they have all year long. In doing so, Michigan (5-1.1 Big Ten, 11-17 overall) snapped its six-game losing streak and will move on to play No. 2 seed and co-Big Ten champion Ohio State tonight at 6:40 p.m. Amaker says he expects Queen to play. Northwestern (7-9, 16-13), committed an uncharacteristic 16 turnovers and let Michigan shoot 61 percent from behind the 3-point arc. "This is not the way we wanted to finish our year," said Northwestern forward Tavaras Hardy, who scored 17 points. "Not the way we played." A lot of the credit should go to Blanchard, however, who scored nine straight points early in the first half to give Michigan a 12-point advantage. And he didn't stop there. Blanchard, who scored over 20 points for just the first time this season, shot a scorching 5-for- 7 from 3-point range and did everything from taking charges to grabbing offensive boards to getting key defensive stops. "It was nice for him to have a break-out type of game," Amaker said. "You could tell he had an extra bounce in his step, and once his first few shots went down, he had a ton of confi- dence and that spread throughout the entire team." After Northwestern cut the lead to four late in the first half, it was Blanchard who drained two consecutive 3-pointers to help give Michigan some breathing room and a 36-28 halftime cushion. Blanchard hit a jumper, took a charge and hit a 3-pointer in three consecutive posses- sions early in the second half to give Michigan a 17-point lead. And when Northwestern made its final run, cutting the lead back down to six points with seven minutes to go, it was Blanchard who took another charge and then tipped in a Bernard Robinson miss to extend the lead back to eight. With such a slow-moving, deliberate offense that depends on back cuts and 3-pointers, Northwestern didn't have the firepower to come back. The Wildcats beat the Wolverines on back cuts just twice for layups and shot 26 percent (8-for-30) from 3-point range. . "This is the first time we've put an entire game together,"Young said. AP PHOTO Michigan center Chris Young's career was extended by at least a day, thanks to the gutty performance by teammate LaVeli Blanchard, who finished with a season-high 26 points. CONSECO FIELDHOUSE What: No. 10 seed Michigan vs No. 2 seed Ohio State When: 6:40 p.m. Latest:Less than one week ago, Ohio State defeated the Wolverines 84-75 at Crisler Arena to clinch a share of the Big Ten title. YESTERDAY'S GAME MICHIGAN (72) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Robinson 36 3-9 1-2 0.7 2 3 8 Blanchard 39 9-14 3-3 3-6 0 4 26 Young 35 5-11 4-5 2-10 1 3 14 Jones 35 2-3 4-6 1-4 3 2 9 Ingerson 35 4-11 4-4 1-4 3 2 13 Gibson 1 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 Bailey 6 0-1 0-0 0.0 0 0 0 Godfredson 9 0.1 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 Groninger 9 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Adebiyi 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 24.52 16.20 9-36 9 17 72 FG%:.462. FT%: .800. 3-point FG: 8-13, .615 (Blanchard 5-7, Robinson 1-1, Jones 1-2, Ingerson 1-3, Blocks: 2 (Young, Bailey). Steals: 8 (Blanchard 3, Jones, Ingerson, Young, Robinson, Bailey). Tumovers: 11 (Robinson, Inger- son 3, Jones 2, Blanchard, Groninger, Young, ). Technical fouls: none. NORTHWESTERN (51) -FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Blake 34 4-11 2-3 0-3 2 4 12 Hardy 37 6-15 1-2 1-4 3 3 17 Jennings 22 0-4 2-2 1-3 5 2 2 Young 31 3-8 1-2 2-3 2 4 7 Drayton 16 0-1 0-0 3-5 1 2 0 Soltau 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Jenkins 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Vukusic 17 1-1 1-2 0-4 0 0 4 Long 11 0-5 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Burke 32 3-6 2-3 1-4 1 3 9 Duvancic 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 17-51 9.14 8-27 1419 51 FG%: .330. FT%: .643. 3-.polnt FG:&830, .267 (Hardy 4-10, Blake 2-6, Vukusic 1-1, Burke 1-3. Blocks: 6 (Hardy 3, Jen- nings 2, Burke 1). Steals: 5 (Blake, Soltau, Vukusic, Long, Burke). Turnovers: 15 (Blake, Hardy, Jennings 3, Young, Long 2, Vukusic 1, Burke 1). Technical fouls: none. Michigan....................36 36 - 72 Northwestern..................... 28 23 - 51 At: Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis "I'll go play right now," Ingerson said immediately after yesterday's game, regarding when he would be next ready to play another 35 minutes. Ingerson was the X-factor for the Wolver- ines, as the other four had been regular starters in most games. The absence of Queen meant that he and Jones shared responsibili- ties at the point, and the freshman played well in that role, showing more patience and disci- pline than he usually does. He benefited from not having to look over his shoulder for a substitute and not feeling the need to score quick points to stay in the game. The Wolverines benefited from his constant presence on the perimeter, where the Northwestern defense was forced to commit attention that is ordinarily not needed for Queen. Amaker was able to keep his starters on the floor for so long because of the style of bas- ketball Northwestern employs: A slow, methodical half-court game that does not wear down the opposition physically. The Ohio State team that Michigan faces tonight will not be so forgiving, but it's March, so I say you run these same five kids for another 35 minutes and see if they can steal another win. "We came here to be here for a few days," Amaker said. Coach, if you're talking years, reward hus- tle and hard work. If you're talking days, reward your best ballers. David Horn can be reached via e-mail at hornd@umich.edu. WRESTLING CH S IP CHAMPAIGN CHAMPIONSHIPS Wrestlersf ace nation s best in Big Ten tourney Sluggish performance in 1-0 win motivates icers By Rohnt Shave Daily Sports Writer In the 2002 Big Ten Wrestling Championships this weekend, top- ranked Minnesota, No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 Iowa and No. 5 Ohio State will butt heads. The victor earns bragging rights in the nation's premier wrestling confer- ence. Michigan coach Joe McFarland has tapered workouts so his team can peak. "Our guys will be strong, and they will be fresh," said McFarland. Because tournament scoring rewards dominant performances, the Wolverines need favorites like Otto Olson and Andy Hrovat to win their weight classes. Michigan certainly has other wrestlers capable of making the finals. Aside from top-seeded seniors Hrovat and Olson, the Wolverines boast seven wrestlers seeded in the top four of their weight classes. These include second- ' seeded freshman Ryan Bertin, and No. 3 seeds A.J. Grant, Foley Dowd, Mike Kulczycki and Kyle Smith. "We have to have guys fighting to get into the finals," said McFarland. The performances of the five other highly-ranked Wolverines will deter- mine Michigan's chances. Fortunately for the Wolverines, these five have been Collecting momentum heading into Big Tens, using their intensity and killer instinct to win matches decisively. Instead of simply trying to advance to the next round, Michigan wants to keep Nick Velissaris will compete hard, but his inexperience will hurt Michigan. But McFarland points out that "there are a lot of other factors thrown in," the Big Ten tournament. Something plaguing McFarland's team in its fourth-place finish last year was inexperience. This year, Michigan has an abundance of battle-hardened veterans ready to thrive under pres- sure. "Four of our starters will be wrestling their last matches as Wolverines," said senior captain Olson. "That pressure will cause all of us to have high expec- tations of going out with a bang." TEEKE CHAMPAIGN What: Big Ten Wrestling Championships When: 1 p.m. tomorrow. noon Sunday Latest: Michigan could be hurt by the absence of Clark Forward (141 pounds), who won't compete because of a staph infection. By J. Brady McCollough Daily Sports Writer When Michigan coach Red Berenson watched the tape of his team's 1-0 victo- ry over Lake Superior on Feb. 2, he concluded that "it probably should have gone the other way." His Wolverines, who were fresh off a 5-0 stomping of the Lakers in Sault Ste. Marie, couldn't muster any offense at Joe Louis Arena. After defenseman Eric Werner's goal just over two minutes into the contest, the Lakers' defense clamped down, and goaltender Lance Mayes stoned 29 shots to keep the Wolverines at bay. "They had more chances than we did," Berenson said. "They played a bet- ter game, a smarter game. But they did- n't capitalize on their chances. We were lucky - really lucky." "We did a lot of things that we shouldn't have done," forward Milan Gajic said. "It showed us that they could play with us. It's a big motivation." Motivation will be useful for Michi- gan when it hosts the 12th-place Lakers this weekend in a three-game series that will determine which team advances to the CCHA Super 6 Tournament at Joe Louis Arena next weekend. "They've got nothing to lose, and we've got the world to lose," said junior Mike Cammalleri, who returned last weekend after being sidelined with mononucleosis. The Wolverines, the CCHA regular season titleholders, have won nine straight conference games heading into their clash with the Lakers - a far cry from Lake Superior's 0-8-1 record in that span. Michigan moved up to No. 4 in the pairwise rankings (which mirror the NCAA Tournament selection process), which means any loss would hurt its chances of earning a possible first-round bye in the NCAA West Regional at Yost Ice Arena. "We know what's at stake and what the consequences are," Gajic said. "We have to take care of business." Berenson feels that the Lakers match up well with his team "when you throw out the stats and everything else." Lake Superior coach Frank Anza- lone, who led the Lakers to their first National Championship in 1988, has instilled "the Lake Superior work ethic" in this year's team - even though the numbers may not show it. "For a team that seems like it had a tough year and not a lot of wins, I was impressed with how hard they actually played," said Michigan associate head YOST ICE ARENA Who: Michigan (19-5-4 CHA, 22-9-5 overall) Lake Superior (4'22-2), 7-25.2) When: 7:35 p.m. tonight, 7:05 p.m. tomorrow, 7:35 p.m. Sunday (if necessary) Latest: Saturday's game will be televised on Fox Sports Detroit beginning at 7:05 p.m. coach Mel Pearson of his team's 1-0 victory at Joe Louis Arena. "They skat- ed hard, they checked hard, they stayed in the game. They still think they have a chance to come down here and beat us." The Wolverines will be without freshman forward Jason Ryznar, who is out with an injury to his hand. 00 v Enjoy; exper featui Show Admis the Ar Sundaye Afternati a night of Ann Arbor's high-energy imental jazz fusion on Saturday March 9th ring: Lotus / Jake Woorly-Hood starts at 8 p.m. sion is $5, $3 for students, with proceeds benefiting nn Arbor Hunger Coalition evening Jazz Mass at 5 p.m. ive worship featuring live music by Stephen Rush and Quartex L .-J S721 E. H uron" (734) 665-0606 www.umich.edu/~canter 1 1__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ahris1 In the5Passovr Passover is one of the most sgnifiant of all the Jewish holidays, and it was celebrated by the most sgnfieantJew of all time-Jesus. Come see and hearlews for Jesus unfold the stoy o redempion from the Exodus to Cavary in Ch ri n thePassover. I ;:;;: I ~'v'u~ j r T ~ ~ I ~,. m