Wednesday January 28, 2004 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com PRheTSiclCgn Btilg 9 . . ......... ... .. Free throws could give life ol to 'M' offense By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer It was obvious against Indiana. Against Wiscon- sin, too. It's obvious if you look at the season stats, or at Bernard Robin- son's numbers in the Big Ten season so far. Michigan has to get to the foul line more. When the Wolverines >' . . take the floor against Time pr Iowa tonight, they'll be CrilerArna facing a team that has ESPN-phi made 320 free throws this year. Michigan has only attempted 323 all season. Coach Tommy Amaker described that differential as "incredible." "I do think that we need to utilize the free throw line better," Amaker said. "Certainly, if we're going to have more success in our conference this year, we're going to need that." Without getting easy points at the stripe, the Wolverines have struggled on offense. They are seventh in the Big Ten in scoring, averaging 68 points per game. Add eight or 10 more points from the charity stripe each night, and they'd be up near the top of the league. Without foul shots, Michigan's offense comes and goes based on how well the team shoots from the floor. And it can be hard to drop in shots at a high per- centage for an entire 40-minute stretch. In their home loss to Indiana, the Wolverines fell behind by 10 at halftime, shooting a frigid 28 percent and attempting zero foul shots in the first 20 minutes. Brundidge seizes chance to inspire young swimmers TONY DING/Daily Michigan wing Bernard Robinson has shot just three free throws since the start of the Big Ten season. Robinson, who handles the ball a lot for Michigan, has taken only three foul shots in five Big Ten games. He led the team with 56 attempts during the non-con- ference season. It's something that he's been very conscious of late- ly, but has had trouble trying to overcome. "I think it's tougher when you try to go out there and draw more fouls," Robinson said. "I think a lot of things go the other way (when you do that), which maybe has been my downfall." Instead of trying to force a whistle, Robinson said that he's going to try and get back to playing his game. Sophomore Lester Abram agreed that his team shouldn't go overboard trying to incite the refs. "I'll take whatever the defense gives me," Abram said. "I don't have a mindset to just go to the basket every time (to draw fouls). If I'm open for a jump shot, I'm going to take it." The next offensive test is tonight against Iowa. It's a game that's crucial to the Wolverines' Big Ten title hopes. Every home game down the stretch will be. A team can't win the conference title without defending its backyard, especially if it's trying to rise up from seventh place, like Michigan. "I don't think we can lose any more home games," Abram said. "I think we let one slip away against Indi- ana. It's tough to win road games in the Big Ten, so you have to take care of your home court." COURTNEY LEWIS Full Court Press .Clinique Brundidge's talent in the pool is remarkable. The Tact that the sophomore came to Michigan on an academic scholarship, not an athletic. scholarship, is remarkable. So is the balancing act she pulls - swimming for an elite NCAA Division I program while majoring in materials science and Engineering. The fact that Brundidge is black is not remarkable. It's just her skin color. But it certainly makes her unique. Jim Richardson, who has guided the Wolverines since 1985, can recall coaching just one other black swimmer at Michigan. Currently, there are two black female swimmers in the entire Big Ten - Brundidge and Indiana's Jinji Fraser. But for Brundidge, who grew up in Southfield, it has always been like that. Her parents put her in swimming les- sons as a child for safety reasons - they knew several people who had drowned. Brundidge took to the sport and joined a YMCA team in Detroit that had all black swimmers. She soon switched to a more competitive team, and since then, she has almost always been the only black swimmer. She could have felt isolated or intimi- dated or discouraged. But Brundidge didn't let that happen:She hasn't just accepted being one of just a few black swimmers; she has embraced that role. "I have two different worlds," Brundidge said. "My friends from home and from (school), and then my swim team. And I don't know if it would be okay if I had like a birthday party, and they all came together. It might be uncomfortable. "But that's just how it is. And I don't look at it as a negative. I look at it as a positive. I can teach (one group) some stuff that they don't know, and I can learn something new that I can take back to my other friends." Richardson said Brundidge, who this year switched from sprints to middle- distance races and started swimming the 200-yard butterfly for the first time, has fit in just fine with her teammates. "She's very comfortable, I think, with who she is," Richardson said. "I think that allows her to - in groups of peo- ple that have their heads screwed on straight about the quality of your char- acter versus the color of your skin - blend right in beautifully, because she's a wonderful person." Brundidge said that, for the most part, people throughout her career have been welcoming. But sometimes it's not easy to be different from everyone else. At a young age, "White people would look at me and say, 'oh she's black. I'm not used to black people.' So I was a representation of all black peo- ple. It's kind of a lot of pressure. Still, people are looking at me all the time." And that can be an opportunity - as well as a sign of progress. When Brun- didge was growing up, there was no one to look to. Except for at one camp she attended in Colorado, she rarely met other highly-skilled black swim- mers. So she's keenly aware of what it can mean to have a role model, and she gladly takes on that responsibility. "I try to be inspirational to other black people to come and swim, too," Brundidge said. Brundidge goes back to Detroit to talk to young swimmers, and when she's at school, she sometimes calls the kids to see how they're doing and to encourage them. She said she emphasizes not just her swimming skills, but also the fact that she's an aspiring engineer. That's a heavy load - swimmer, student and the sole role model for young, black swimmers. But rather than weigh her down, being in that position motivates her. "I'm setting a good example, and that makes me not want to quit, because I See LEWIS, Page 10 Kaleniecki scraps his way to success on ice By Sharad Mattu Daily Sports Writer He tried to hold back - which is usually easy for him - but his first words made it clear: Brandon Kaleniec- ki would've loved to be on the ice when a fight erupted at the end of Saturday's game against Western Michigan. "That's great," the sophomore for- ward said of the melee during Michi- gan's 7-0 thrashing. "Well, we don't want to say it's great. I think everybody on our team would be willing to do it. But it's good to see." That's because, although he's only 5- foot-9, there isn't a more scrappy and confrontational player on the team. It's a fact that may surprise oppo- nents. Although Kaleniecki, at 193 pounds, has plenty of weight to throw around,.opponents tend to overlook him - literally and figuratively. "Not being very big has its advan- tages," Kaleniecki said. "When people come at you, you're already low to the ground. If they come at you nonchalant- ly, you can hit them pretty hard, and they aren't expecting it." While he has the ability to knock a player on his back, Kaleniecki also does something else for the team. He puts the puck in the net. Ten current Wolverines have been drafted by NHL teams, but it's Kale- niecki who leads the team in goals with 10. His goals, don't come from one-on- one brilliance or breathtaking speed. He leaves that to his current linemates, Milan Gajic and T.J. Hensick. Instead, his focus is on creating opportunities for himself and others with physical play and smart spacing. His three goals this weekend were scored in that fashion: Kaleniecki hid behind unsuspecting Broncos during a line change and got a breakaway, snuck behind a defense- man for an easy slapper and trailed the puck expertly on an odd-man rush for a one-timer. See KALENIECKI, Page 10 CH ICK-FLICK CLICKER: