igJbe ait uJ& PORTS Sports desk: 763-2459 sportsdesk@umich.edu SECTION B ------------- --- - ---- ---- - -1--l- --I- I - I - - I I I I ;) n - - - - - - ---- ---- -- - www.michigandaily.com/sports Ann Arbor, ust a little Second half surge comes up abt short w By David Hnor Daily Sports Editor INDIANAPOLIS - You.don't know what you've got till it's nearly gone. This week at the Big Ten Tour- nament, the Michigan basketball team - knowing that its season was slipping away, grasped at the last few grains of sand before it slid through the hourglass. With a sense of urgency and an emotion that has been all but absent from the team this season, the Wolverines put ~ MICHIGAN 68 together what was probably RIO STATE 75 their most impressive loss, a O 75-68 defeat at the hands of Ohio State in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tourna- ment. Ohio State went up 15-2 to start the game, but could not build on that lead despite maintaining offensive pressure. "We could have had an opportunity to be up by dou- ble figures at the end of the half," Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien said. "But they (Michigan) hung in there." Coming out of the lockerroom after halftime, Michi- gan took control of a game that it trailed at that point, 42-35. Junior forward LaVell Blanchard led his team for the second straight game with 13 second-half points and 24 for the game. Over a stretch midway through the second half, Blanchard scored 11 of Michigan's 17 points as the 10th-seeded Wolverines hung with the conference's co-champions, eventually working the Ohio State lead down to one point. After a dunk by Ohio State's Velimir Radinovic brought the Conseco Fieldhouse crowd (most of who wore scarlet rather than maize and blue) to its feet and another Radinovic field goal increased the Ohio State lead back up to five, Michigan junior guard Gavin Groninger knocked down a 3-pointer to keep Michigan within two with under three minutes to play. Following the Groninger 3-pointer, Ohio State guard Brian Brown and Blanchard traded field goals. With less than 40 seconds to play, Michigan could see the See BUCKEYES, Page 5B comes months too late behind LAUREN BRAUN/Daily Michigan freshman Ryan Bertin was one of Michigan's more pleasent surprises as he fought his way to a final round 5-3 loss to Minnesota's No. 1 Luke Becker. 'M' wrestlers struggle, fihtidat Big Tens WRESTLING I 0 . CHAMPAIGN CHAMPIONSHIPS By Rohft Bhave Daily Sports Writer CHAMPAIGN - The 2002 Big Ten Championships belonged to No. 1 Minnesota. In the process of win- ning the Big Tens by a 45-point margin, the Golden Gophers had seven finalists and four individual champions. While Minnesota monopolized first place with 174 points, the sec- ond-place slot was clearly up for grabs between No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 Iowa and No. 5 Ohio State. With seven wrestlers seeded third or better, No. 2 Michigan had an excellent chance of staking its claim as the Big Ten's second-best team. But seedings mean little when you underachieve. Iowa, the victor of this second- place free-for-all, won close match- es and scored upsets over favored opponents. As their loud fans cheered surpris- ing performances from young wrestlers like No. 6 seed Luke Eustice (second place at 125 pounds) and No. 6 seed Luke Moffitt (141 pound champion), the Hawkeyes won two individual titles and beat out the. disappointing Wolverines 129-121.5. "They had a lot of young guys step up," said McFarland.. The Wolverines, even with all their high seeds, appeared tentative and emotionally flat. With 133-pounder Foley Dowd and 125-pounder A.J. Grant seeded third in their draws, it appeared that Michigan would get off to a strong start in the quarterfinals. Instead, a 4-1 upset loss by No. 3 seed Dowd to Illinois' No. 6 Chad Hay left the Wolverines staggering out of the gate. Afterwards, McFarland admitted the quarterfinal upset "affected us right off the bat." While Dowd struggled to a sev- enth-place finish and Grant finished fourth, Michigan staved off Ohio State for third place by relying on its veterans. Undefeated and top-ranked 174 pounder Otto Olson continued his streak by beating Iowa's Taylor Nixt, 3-2. Although Olson appeared uncomfortable wrestling defensively in the final, the senior won his second consecutive individual Big Ten title by scoring a takedown early and rid- ing the lead until the end. Senior captain Andy Hrovat landed in the final against Minnesota rival Damion Hahn by handily winning the quarterfinals and semifinals, 13-1 and 10-4. Locked in a tight match, Hrovat needed a takedown in the third period, behind 5-3. Although Hrovat took shot after shot at Hahn, the Min- nesota wrestler refused to yield. Instead, Hahn took advantage of the lunging Hrovat with counter- moves and scored a clinching take- down with one minute left, winning 8-4. While Hrovat expected to be in the final, freshman Ryan Bertin (157 pounds) turned some heads as he bat- tled his way to a finals showdown with Minnesota's No. 1 Luke Becker. Bertin, down 5-3, made a furious effort to score on Becker, but the favorite used his strength to hold off Bertin and win. Despite the loss, Bertin's teammates were optimistic about his future prospects. "The kid's going to be outstanding - he'll be competing for the title the next three years," Olson said. Bertin typifies "what the Michigan athlete is about." On another positive note, Michigan senior heavyweight Matt Brink over- came his midseason knee injury and a difficult draw to finish fourth. Brink's narrow consolation semifi- nal loss to Minnesota's No. 3 Garrett Lowney indicated that the senior could make noise against top compe- tition at nationals in two weeks. INDIANAPOLIS -There were definitely some red, puffy eyes in the Michigan lockerroom after the Wolver- ines' heartbreaking 75-68 loss to Ohio State in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament. And for once, the tears weren't just falling from the face of senior captain Chris Young. Whether it was the six seniors, whose careers JOE ended that night S - most of whom were playing in The One and their final game ')nly of organized bas- ketball - or the freshmen who tasted their first-ever postseason defeat at this level, there were definitely feelings of disappointment. This time, the Wolverines were actu- ally visibly upset that they didn't win. They were disappointed that they put it all on the line, played their hearts out and had nothing to show for it. It was a feeling that Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said his team hasn't felt in "a long time." And why shouldn't they feel like that? When Ohio State jumped out to a 15-2 lead and was scorching from the floor, Michigan didn't buckle. Even when the Wolverines shot a dismal 1-9 to start the game, they didn't lay down and die like they have in the past. Instead, they dug deep, took some pride and as Amaker said "played to win" instead of playing "not to lose." Not that it makes up for another frustrating season, another ugly record (11-18), or another 10th-place finish in the Big Ten. But it put some warm, fuzzy feelings in the hearts of Michi- gan fans and gave them some optimism for the future. "They get credit for battling at a time where people were giving us up for dead - thinking that we'd thrown the towel in," Amaker said. "We knew that we hadn't done that all year. They responded very well and made our fans very proud of an ending to a season that wasn't necessarily a great one for us." It's easy to give credit to a team play- ing inspired basketball for six seniors, who have been so instrumental to the team the past four years. It's easy to lay it on the line when your own season is in danger of ending. It's easy to get motivated when the slate is wiped clean and you're playing in a "new sea- son," as most of the Wolverines called it. It's easy to feel desperation when "your backs are against the wall." But good teams - the Dukes, Marylands and Kansas of the sport - don't wait until their season is on the line to play inspired basketball. They don't need to wait until the final game of the season to play for the seniors. And a "new season" for them is the one that begins in early November, not March. And therefore, their backs aren't against the wall in the first round of a conference tournament. "We took the approach that we all were seniors, and that it was all of our See SMITH, Page 5B Hockey survives upset, advances to Super 6 By SeO tKlempnsr Daily Sports Writer When the No. 6 Michigan hockey team went to bed last night, it was sure to thank the hockey gods for the return of junior Mike Cammalleri in time for the CCHA playoffs and for last-place Lake Superior's (4-22-2 CCHA, 8-27-2 overall) inability to muster enough offense to pull off an upset. Lake Superior entered this weekend on a 10-game winless streak (0-9-1) and held the worst record in the CCHA, with just four conference wins all season. The Lakers had been playing the worst hockey in the CCHA and had only faint dreams of upending CCHA regular season champion Michigan (19-5-4, 24-10-5). "Right now we are a 12th-place team trying to get into can with what we've got." But despite these obstacles, Lake Superior was able to put up a fight and push the best-of-three series to the limit before falling 4-1 in last night's deciding game. Michigan, which lost the first game 4-3, bounced back Saturday night 4-1to even the series at one game apiece. Yesterday, after 19 minutes of scoreless hockey and with Michigan on a 5-on-3 advantage, Cammalleri faked a shot from the right faceoff circle that sent Lake Superi- or goalie Matt Violin to the ground. This allowed Cam- malleri to walk in for his fourth goal of the weekend. Cammalleri went on to score once more to complement his hat trick the night before. Cammalleri "is obviously a special player," Michigan captain Jed Ortmeyer said. "He just adds that much more depth to our team and it is a huge bonus to have him back offense, Lake Superior hung around until it was able to draw within one early in the third period. Aaron Davis made the score 2-1 after slipping a weak wrist shot past senior goaltender Josh Blackburn, who was possibly starting his last home game. Less than three minutes later, the Lakers had a strong chance to tie the game, but a two-on-one was wiped out by an offside call. Five minutes later, Michigan freshman Eric Nystrom cemented the win for the Wolverines when he scored on a 3-on-2 with a backhand shot from the circle. "We had to have a 'live to see another day attitude' today," Cammalleri said after yesterday's game. "I think it helps our team when we have to play with desperation. When a team has its back against the wall and can find a way to win, it shows some character." 4I/ -' /I TOM FFDKAMP/Dally F I