Utbe AlitriguujoaiI, SPORT Si2 February 10, 2003 SECTION B i:!: i I I Wil I il RON: I I WMI Back on top MICHIGAN 70, 'M' title run dependent on defense of Crisler The National Champions of 1988-89 didn't do it. Neither did the NIT Champions of 1997 or the Fab Five (although according to the official Univer- sity record books, the Fab Five didn't do much). In fact, it's been 26 years since any Michigan team has done it. But this year's Wolverines -the sudden toasts of Ann CHiS Arbor, that loveable BURKE bunch of scrappers that no one gave a Goin' to snowball's chance in work hell at the start of the season - have the chance to run the table at home in the Big Ten. And if the Wolverines are serious about giving Rudy Tomjanovich's retired No. 45 jersey some company with a Big Ten Championship banner, then they had better do just that. With a 70-62 come-from-behind victory over Iowa on Saturday, the Wolverines grabbed their 11ith straight home victory, and, more importantly, moved to 5-0 on Crisler Arena's floor in the Big Ten. Forget the missteps against Central Michigan and Western Michigan earlier this year, because they really mean absolutely nothing in the long run this sea- son - Michigan has figured out how to win at home. And the Wolverine faithful (13,274 strong Saturday) are responding. "There is a lot of basketball to be_ played, but a team always has to hold court in their own building," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "It is important for a team in a conference like the Big Ten to win in their home arena in front of their home crowd." Amen to that. After this weekend's play, just four of 11 Big Ten teams have fewer than four confer- ence losses: Michigan, Purdue, Illinois and Wisconsin. None of them has lost a home game. Winning on the road in this conference is far from being a given - it's an enor- mous bonus. Take, for example, Penn State and Northwestern. The lowly Nittany Lions and Wildcats are the only two teams in the entire Big Ten with home records below .500 and - surprise, surprise - they are dragging up the rear in the conference. But even Northwestern held serve in Evanston last Wednesday, stunning an Indi- ana team that's dropping faster than a bungee jumper without the bungee. "It feels good to be back on our home court," said forward Bernard Robinson after Saturday's victory. "The whole sup- port felt good - it was great to go play out there in front of the cheering crowd." And it's amazing how much difference it can make when that crowd is cheering for you. Michigan was given a harsh lesson in how difficult conference road games can be when the Wolverines dropped two tough games at Illinois and Minnesota last week. Saturday, Michigan won a game that it very well might have lost if the game been played in Iowa City. Don't fool yourself. Michigan didn't play great basketball against the Hawkeyes. The Wolverines shot 50 percent from the free throw line, they were sloppy and spo- radic offensively in the first half and they trailed an undermanned Iowa team that dressed just nine players, 46-40, with 14 minutes left. But if the miraculous Michigan come- back against Wisconsin proved anything, it's that games canchange in a heartbeat at home. After the loss at Illinois, Amaker said his team "came apart at the seams."But on Saturday the reverse was true. Michigan stayed composed, hit a few key baskets and got the crowd back into the game. And Iowa came undone. After grabbing that six-point lead, the Hawkeyes scored four points in the next 10 minutes. They were firing up wild shots and turning the ball over, leading to several easy Michigan baskets. See BURKE, Page 5B Wildcats annilate Wolveines By Gennaro FiCe Daily Sports Writer During a 31-0 run in the first half of Northwestern's 67-38 shellacking of Michigan, Wildcats radio announc- er Dan Owen expressed his feelings about the jaw-dropping spurt: "I have never seen the Northwest- ern Wildcats play like this." Truth is, before yesterday's 29- point blowout against Michigan, nobody, especially the Wolverines, had. Entering yesterday, the Wildcats had lost 52 of their last MICHIGAN 38 53 confer- ence games. H NORTHWESTERN 67 Michigan had defeated Northwestern (2-10 Big Ten, 7-16 overall) on 10-straight occasions, including the Wolverines' 65-50 win at Crisler Arena earlier this season. But none of these numbers had any significance in the game's result. Yesterday's outcome was decided in an extremely one-sided first half. The game began with both teams feeling each other out and struggling to put the ball in the hoop. Six min- utes into the game, Michigan (2-8, 11-10) trailed Northwestern 7-6. But, in the ensuing 13 minutes, the Wild- cats took advantage of an unbeliev- able Wolverine drought, scoring 31 unanswered points. Northwestern coach June Olkowski believes the run occurred because of her team's solid work on the boards. "I just kept telling them they have to rebound," Olkowski said. "Michi- gan was going to go over the back, they were going to keep driving. It's about rebounding the ball in that situ- ation." While Northwestern enjoyed a huge first-half output (40), the Maize and Blue had to score six points in the final 1:22 to reach double digits in points (12). While the Wildcats shot a scorch- ing 65.4 percent from the field (17- 26, including 6-of-8 from beyond the arc) in the opening 20 minutes, Michigan produced a dismal 13 per- cent mark (3-23). Olkowski credits her team's early dominance to their commitment to See WILDCATS, Page 3B BRETT MOUNTAIN/Daily Michigan senior LaVell Blanchard collects one of his 12 rebounds in Michigan's win over Iowa. Cagers survive sluggish start, retake control of Big Ten By Naweed Sikora Daily Sports Editor Having time off can be a blessing, but it can also be a challenge to come back playing with the same timing and exe- cution as before a -IOWA 62 break. With no game Wednesday, Michigan M MICHIGAN 70 had a few days of extra rest to prepare for Saturday's game against Iowa - and it looked like that was going to hurt it. After looking as sluggish and void of energy as it had all season in the game's first half, the Wolverines' extra rest finally kicked in as they put the Hawkeyes on lockdown defensively in the final eight minutes to win 70-62. The win snapped Michigan's two-game losing streak, and gave it some added momentum as it heads into Bloomington Wednesday to face the Hoosiers. "I really thought that our second-half defense was the key to pulling this one out;' Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "I thought our play defensively allowed us to get into their passing lanes and get some fast-break points." Poor execution was Michigan's biggest prob- lem in the first half. The Wolverines shot just 37.5 percent from the field and committed nine turnovers. These miscues led to lapses in the zone defense, lapses during which Iowa was able to work the ball inside and score many easy layups. Seven of Iowa's 10 first-half buckets were scored in the paint. But because the Hawkeyes shot just 37 percent from the field, Michigan was able to enter halftime with a 31-29 lead. "We are concerned with the lack of execution," Amaker said. But the second half was a different story. Junior Bernard Robinson and freshman Lester Abram seemed to have an infinite amount of energy coming out of the lockerroom. Both put relentless pressure on the Iowa offense, picking up a combined five steals for the game. The defensive heat translated into several fast break opportunities for Robinson, who filled the box score with a game-high 21 points, six assists, six rebounds and two assists. "I hit my first jumpshot, and then I opened up a little bit and got more confidence," Robinson said. "I was able to get to the basket today and find those other players, and we finished on our shots. I played well but the team really boosted me. They were able to find me and everybody was looking for each other." Lester Abram, who finished with 14 points, See HAWKEYES, Page 5B Icers fly over Wildcats for huge sweep By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer For one night, Michigan freshman forward Andrew Ebbett was the Great One. The Vernon, British Columbia native camped behind the Northern Michigan net and whipped holes in the Wildcats j NORTHERN MICH. 1 defense like Wayne Gretzky. Ebbett passed his way to three MICHIGAN 5 assists, leading to a 5-1 Michigan win and its first-ever series sweep of Northern Michigan. "We're going to add the other nine back there this week for practice, for the 99 back there," forward Milan Gajic joked after the game of Ebbett's jersey, which as of now bears a No. 19. While he may not be as good as the NHL's all-time leading scorer, Ebbett seemed pretty comfortable behind the goal. "If no one's forcing me, I'll sit there all day," Ebbett said. The freshman's line on the powerplay, which also fea- tured sophomores David Moss and Gajic, dominated the Wildcats penalty kill to the tune of three powerplay goals. Michigan coach Red Berenson put them together after the Wolverines went 0-for-5 on the powerplay Friday night. In total, Michigan had a whopping 13 powerplays on Sat- urday, as Northern Michigan racked up 74 penalty minutes. Moss put Michigan on the board early with a powerplay ana in A-1intn ~±-~the. first nrirl iHefn~iind na nn,,,nnek In the game, Moss had a career-high three points on two goals and an assist. He scored his second goal later in the first period with two Wildcats in the penalty box. Moss was the beneficiary of Ebbett's prettiest assist of the game. The freshman ripped a pass around the goal, and Moss bounced the puck off of his stick and into the net to give the Wolverines an early, but comfortable, 3-0 lead. "The start of this game, I thought, was going to be huge;' Berenson said. "Certainly Northern wanted to come back and right the ship. They played well last night with how close they were. We knew how close the game could be if we let them get going." The Wolverines continued their assault early in the sec- ond period on a sharp drive by captain Jed Ortmeyer. Senior John Shouneyia found his linemate in the slot from behind the net. Ortmeyer stopped the puck with his skate and ripped a slapshot just inside the far goalpost. The goal was Ortmeyer's 11th on the season, keeping him one ahead of Moss for second on the team. Gajic added his second goal of the game late in the sec- ond period to put a cap on Michigan's scoring outburst at 5-0. Ebbett found him with a pass from behind the net that was eerily similar to his assist to Moss earlier in the game. Gajic also had two goals last Friday against Ferris State. He now has nine goals on the season, but no hat tricks. "It's kind of funny, it kind of looks like I'm afraid of it o~r Rnebnr Giie. Raidnf Pttmng three crnaikin a I