4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsTuesday - January 21, 2003 Check it out The Wolverines have gone from rock bottom to tops in the Big Ten. How has it happened? Michigan begins the season 0-6 - its worst start in the history of the program. Michigan is now 11-6. Following their loss to Duke, the Wolverines have rattled off 11 straight victories, and are first place in the conference heading into their game against Minnesota tomorrow. How, you ask, has this happened? How can a team go from doing nothing right to look- ing like one of the better teams in the nation? Who is responsible for all of this madness? Can they keep it up? Can they get back into the top 25? Check it out. No fun in the suY Nov. 25, 2002 St. Bonaventure 89, Michigan 68 Virginia Tech 65, Michigan 53 Kansas State 82, Michigan 71 The Paradise Jam Tournament was unkind to the Wolverines, as they begin their sea- son by digging a hole. The games were characterized by poor shooting, turnovers and mental mistakes. Michigan is hoping a return to Crisler will turn things around. See ya! Nov. 27, 2002 Michigan junior Avery Queen is dismissed from the team for vio- lating team rules. His departure would open the door for Daniel Horton, wh begins Queen playing almost 40 minutes per game. Spanked by two directional schools Dec. 3, 2002- Western Michigan 56, Michigan 52 Central Michigan 85, Michigan 78 The Wolverines have now officially got- ten off to the worst start in the history of the program-and they can't pin- point the problem. The offense sputters against Western, while the defense is hurting against Central. Heading into Duke, the Wolverines have nothing to build on. Westward bund 0 uhore P~rmanc Igerson IIPPR I4'ewants houids ta l es that hei rfrat the en O te fal snster He 'rWta#fy ad&s Ingerson Sarl 3ran so. / nSen 'to Duk / ,/',Devi behind. / / Wolveri r/ /7/or / 1 \ M~ chq~ ga Road to respect U Jan. 18, 2003 Michigan 61, Ohio State 50 Michigan 77, Northwestern 70 Michigan make it 11 with two monumental road wins. The first is in Columbus, where the Wolverines shoot well at the free throw line and play tenacious defense to lock up the victory. Against the Wild- cats they come from behind. 1 2"t? 01 Freshman torche the Bru ins for seven 3-pointers and 24 points as he led the Wolverines over UCLA 81-76. It was Horton's third 20-plus point performance of the season. DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily ppy Blue Year Jan '4, 2003 Mic *gan 85, E tern MichigAi 57 Michigan $1, LA 76 Michigan 74, n Francisco 64 Michigan 84, PUI 79 While most students are at home opening presents, the Wolverines are on the war path. The break is high- lighted by their win over UCLA at Pauley Pavilion, one of their best noncon- ference wins in several years. The scene below took place on the floor at Crisler Arena after the Wisconsin vic- tory. Wolverine fans rushed the court and mobbed the players imme- diately after the final buzzer sounded. BRENDAN O'DONNELL/Daily , a 0 eyvrole Signs of life ; l'i' December 21, 2002 Michigan 83, Bowling Green 57 Michigan 84, Charleston Southern 53 Michigan 70, Vanderbilt 66 Things finally begin coming together for the Wolverines, as LaVell Blanchard and Horton begin to find the stroke. Michi- gan's gritty, hard-fought win over Van- derbilt is the highlight of this stretch. The Wolverines struggle, but do all the little things right to win. LaVeli BI " - 6 i 7,5 sIJgnited ck againinin straight 3-pointers with less than five minutes remaining. a Scored 23 points and nabbed 10 rebounds in Michigan's first win of the season over Bowling Green. . was a perfect 10-of-10 from the line in Michigan's win over vanderbilt Daniel Horton 17.4 2.3 36.7 a Drained a season-high seven 3-pointers in Michigan's road win over UCLA. . With under 20 seconds to play against Wisconsin, Horton nailed a short jumper and blocked a shot on the other end to lock up the win. Scored a season-high 26 points, including 24 in the first half, in Michigan's win over Bowling Green. Bernard Robinson 13.5 6.1 31.0 Held Ohio State guard Brent Darby to 2-of-12 shooting in Michigan's win over Ohio State. Scored a season-high 18 points against the Bruins and kept the Wolverines in the game early on with defense. Lester Abram 9.2 4.6 32.1. Hit two crucial second-half 3-pointers against Northwestern to tie the game at 45." Held UCLA star Jason Kapono to just five points in Michigan's win over the Bruins. Scored a season-high 20 points against IUPUI, going 7-of-8 from the field and 6-of-6 from the foul line. Chris Hunter 5.9 4.0 19.2 Blocked a 3-point attempt late in the second half against Ohio State to spark a fast break opportunity. Scored 12 points and pulled down five rebounds vs. San Fran- cisco. Checkpoint Dec. 7, 2002 Duke 81, Michigan 59 The Wolverines fall to Duke, as expected, but it is an encourag- ing loss. For the first time in three years, they hold Duke under 100 points. Tommy Amaker decides to wipe the slate clean and start over. In his eyes, Michi- gan is now 0-0. This frame of mind seems to inspire the Wolver- ines, who have a heavy burden lifted from their shoulders. 4 'I ior OaVell Blanchard during Michigan's 81-59 lD e. Blanchard put up only nine ponts against tis h c a thiees n w yth o v rnsSn e h tl s ,B a c ar a e h hBg i e ,p a i g ih m r i e u deuheor s tngf o o g r n e TONY DING/Daily Graham Brown 5.5 4.4 Scored a season-high 14 points in Michigan's win over Charleston Southern. 19.2 DRAWING THE LINE By Seth Klempner Daily Sports Writer The Michigan basketball team is running away. Running away from its 0-6 start, its 22- point loss to Duke, the off-court troubles that have stuck to the program like shoes to a movie theater floor and embarrassing double-digit losses to its biggest rivals. It is running away, and like Lott fleeing Sodom, refusing to look back for fear that it will turn into a pillar of salt. Just weeks prior to the start of the season , in which coach Tommy Amaker would begin his sophomore campaign with his much bally- hooed freshman class, it was delivered a blow. University President Mary Sue Coleman announced in the Michigan Union that the team would be placed under self-imposed sanctions, foregoing a postseason for the transgressions committed before any of the current Wolver- ines had graduated junior school. The Wolverines proceeded to lose their first three games at the Paradise Jam, drop their first two home games and were beaten on national television by Duke. At 0-6, the 2002-03 Michi- 2an basketball team was off to its worst start in Amaker used the motivational technique of starting the season over. The Wolverines embraced this, and started playing like the team that people thought they would be. They were playing help defense and making the extra pass on offense. Before anyone knew it, Michigan had won its seven remaining nonconference games with the highlight coming in a five-point win over UCLA on the road. It was Michigan's first non- conference road victory since 1998. Michigan then showed the refusal to quit that it hasn't shown in past seasons when it fought back from halftime deficits against Wisconsin, Ohio State and Northwestern. It became evi- dent that players were buying into Amaker's system and were focused working hard to improve as individuals and as a team. "They respond in their own way," said Amaker of his teams response to adversity. "What I love about this team is that when I need to jump them or get them fired up in prac- tice or during the game. I think they recognize er's willingness to break from his man-to-man style and play a zone defense to get a better matchup. In addition, according to senior tri- captain Rotolu Adebiyi, the Wolverines also recognized that they can't let opposing teams work harder than them and must be more will- ing to hit the deck for loose balls. "We started winning games when we started playing defense and stopped giving other teams easy shots or transition buckets and points off of turnovers," senior tri-captain Gavin Groninger said. "I knew we "There is ai had a good half-court defense, just on being a U at times when we gave up buckets years ago, w it would deflate us. But now we much talent are not allowing that to happen." but people This style of play has come to been as focu form the identity of the team, . which bases itself on hard work, been ito it hustle and a blue-collar mentality. - This attitude has given theC Wolverines a toughness that had been absent in the previous year and was often pointed at as the cause for blowout losses to Michigan State and Ohio State. The team-first attitude has also helned pro- t v r t t kind of in a sticky situation, all the fresh- man give their input and how they feel we can win the game because we have all been in those situations before." Speaking up on the part of the freshmen is something that the coaching staff has stressed to the team. Abram also felt that at the start of the season, the freshman didn't feel they had as much to say because the team was losing. But the team started winning, the freshmen felt they could add to what the older lot more focus players were saying. This acted eam now. Four to create an egalitarian environ- we had just as ment, allowing, everyone to with my class, contribute and has led to the might not have teams success by increasing :used or have their trust in each other. for themselves." Becoming team leaders has also helped the freshmen Michigan senior become more confident in, Gavin Groninger their on-court ability. Three of the freshmen start regularly while all five freshmen are in the rotation, making crucial contributions to the 11- game winning streak. The most integral freshmen is point guard leading scorer and rebounder with 17.2 and 7.1 per game, respecfully, and for the first time in his Michigan career, he seems to fit into his role on the team as a leader and captain. "None has been bigger than LaVell Blan- chard," Amaker said. He is a "senior captain who is our best player and best worker. He has produced for us. I start with him, and that has been the reason why we have been able to make things go our way so far." In addition, this is one of the first times that the team has been absent of personnel prob- lems which have marred team chemistry. Whether it was players transferring (Brandon Smith, LeLand Anderson, Marcus Bennett and Dommanic Ingerson), academic problems (Josh Moore, JaQuan Hart and Kelly Whit- ney), dismissals from the team (Kevin Gaines, Maurice Searight, Avery Queen) or NCAA violations (Jamal Crawford), the team had previously been surrounded by distractions and smeared with scandal. "The cohesion is a lot better now," Groninger said. "There is a lot more focus on being a team now. Four years ago, we had just as much talent with my class, but neople might not have been 0