The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 16, 2004 - 5B alkin' the talk "We watched a great team play a great game." - Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett, after losing to Penn State by 29 points. Michigan has only lost this badly one other time during the season - to Michigan State by 34. YESTERDAY S GAME Michigan 44 Penn State 73 Players of the game Kelly Mazzante (Penn State) Mazzante, as usual, led the Nittany Lions in scoring with 16 points and four steals. The senior holds the Big Ten record for career scoring. Jennifer Smith (Michigan) Smith scored half of the Wolver- ine's 44 points, pushing her into third place on Michigan's career scoring list. Nittany Lions take out frustration on Wolverines By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - Coming off its worst loss of the season at Minnesota last Sunday, the Penn State women's basketball team had seven days worth of frustration to take out on Michigan. Conversely, the Wolverines had just two days of rest following their loss to Michi- gan State last Thursday, in which Michigan blew a 17-point lead at home. "We had just played Michigan State - a great game at home, we should have won," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. "It is very difficult sometimes for a young pro- gram to emotionally emerge the next game against a very good team like Penn State." Michigan (4-9, 11-15) and Penn State were teams at opposing ends of an emo- tional spectrum, and they played like oppo- sites. With the extra time off, Penn State was able to refuel before its push towards a Big Ten Championship. "I think it helped us refocus," Penn State's Jess Strom said about the team's time off. "We had more time to think about what we were doing. I think we might have wanted to play this game (last) Thursday." Michigan might have wished they could haye played the Nittany Lions next Thurs- day instead of yesterday. The Wolverines have dropped six of their past seven game, and are 2-4 on the road in the Big Ten, losing by an average of 22 points. "We've got some things to work out and we've got to step it up," sophomore Niki Reams said. "It's getting toward the end of the season. We need to move on and let this game go." Burnett admitted the team struggled in practice after the loss to Michigan State. "There's no question we were flat in a lot of ways today," Burnett said. "The last two days of practice for us have been horrible." Freshman Kelly Helvey, who played a season-high 37 minutes against the Spar- tans, admitted she was fatigued following that contest. "I had never played that many minutes before," Helvey said. "My legs were shot, but I came out (today) and tried my hardest." Not many of the other Wolverines seemed to feel that the backlash of the Michigan State game had anything to do with yesterday's less-than-stellar loss at Penn State. "I think this game was completely differ- ent from the (Michigan) State game," sen- ior center Jennifer Smith said. "I thought we were really prepared for State. I would- n't want to blame it on (emotion)." Despite their slow start, the Wolverines did not just give up. Penn State (11-1, 19-4) only out-scored Michigan by six in the second half, and the Wolverines were trapping on the game's final possession. Michigan held the Big Ten's leading scorer, senior Kelly Maz- zante, to 16 points on 4-of-10 shooting. "We have three games left and hopefully we can turn it around," Smith said. SUNDAY'S GAME MICHIGAN (44) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Pool 16 0-7 0-0 0-0 0 4 0 Helvey 16 1-2 2-2 0-2 0 2 4 Smith 36 4-12 13-173-10 2 1 22 Hauser-Price 18 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 Gandy 34 1-4 1-2 1-3 1 0 4 Andrews 4 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Carney 22 1-2 0-02-4133 Reams 16 3-7 3-5 0-2 1 3 10 Burlin 21 0-2 0-0 1-3 0 2 0 McPhilamy 17 0-1 1-2 1-2 1 2 1 Team 1-2 Totals 200 1040 2028929 6 20 44 FG%: .250. FT%: .714.3-point FG: 4-17, .235 (Pool 0-2, Smith 1-4, Hauser-Price 0-1, Gandy 1-3, Carney 1-2, Reams 1-3, Burlin 0- 2). Blocks: 1 (Reams). Steals: 7 (Gandy 2, Pool, Hauser-Price, Andrews, Carney, Reams). Tumovers: 24 (Smithr4,Helvey 3, Gandy 3, Carney 3, Burlin 3, Pool 2, Hauser- Price 2, Andrews, Reams, McPhilamy). Tech- nical fouls: none. PENN STATE (73) MIN Brungo 28 Russell 17 Mazzante 31 Strom 36 Wright 34 Brown 18 Joseph 11 Schwab 7 Harris 18 Team Totals 200: FG%: .500 FT%:. FG M-A 5-9 2-4 7-17 3-8 7-10 2-6 2-2 0-1 2-3 FT M-A 0-0 0-0 0-3 4-6 0-0 0-2 1-2 0-0 6-6 REB 0-T 2-5 4-9 1-3 0-3 2-5 3-6 2-2 0-0 0-1 1-3 A F PTS 1 4 10 0 3 4 1 0 16 12 2 10 1 1 14 0 1 4 0 20 0 2 10 PAT LITTLE/Penn State Collegian Senior center Jennifer Smith's offensive efforts were not enough to keep the Wolverines afloat against the Lions. 3060 11-1915371519 73 .579. 3-point FG: 2-12, .167 (Brungo 0-1, Mazzante 2-6, Strom 0-4, Harris 0-1). Blocks: 4 (Russell 2, Brungo, Wright). Steals: 15 (Mazzante 4, Strom 4, Russell 3, Wright 2, Brungo, Harris). Turnovers: 11 (Wright 4, Strom 4, Russell 2, Mazzante). Technical fouls: none. Lady Lions drain life from Pool Reams back on the offensive end; Lions sell out the house Michigan ....:......15 Penn State ..........38 29 - 44 35 - 73 At: Bryce Jordan Center, State College Attendance: 15,389 BIG TEN STANDINGS By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - For the first time this season, ward Tabitha Pool was held scoreless. The junior was 0- for-7 against Penn State, and played just 16 minutes. Pool didn't Michigan for- that was effective against Penn State's zone-to-man defensive tran- sitions. "It's frustrating but I never do blame my teammates for it," Smith said. "We have a lot of things to work on. That's just one of them. We always need to come back after a loss and get mentally prepared. We just didn't do that (today)." SoLD our: Michigan played before a packed house of 15,389 yesterday. The attendance mark set a Bryce Jordan Center record, and was the first sellout ever for the Lady Lions in the arena. "As the opposing coach, I just feel badly that we couldn't be more com- petitive in such an incredible envi- ronment," Burnett said. "It's an incredible accomplishment for Penn State." Inside the spacious and modern Bryce Jordan Center, the game had more of a Big Ten Tournament feel than just an average conference road game. The crowd was the largest the Wolverines have played in front of since their 67-33 pounding at the hands of Michigan State in the Breslin Center on Jan. 18. Team Purdue Penn State Michigan State Minnesota Iowa Ohio State Illinois 14 Michigan Indiana Wisconsin Northwestern Conference Overall W L W L 10 1 20 2 10 1 18 4 9 3 19 4 7 4 18 4 7 4 13 9 6 5 14 8 4 7 10 12 4 8 11 14 3 9 10 13 2 10 8 14 1 11 8 15 attempt a shot until Michigan trailed 15-3 with 14 minutes remaining in the first half of the game. "We must have done something to her or she must have done some- thing to herself," Penn State coach Rene Portland said. "Burnett didn't play her in the second half." A month ago, Pool played one of her most complete games of the season against Penn State at Crisler Arena. She scored 19 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and had five assists in a 68-56 loss to the Nittany Lions on Jan. 15. But this season, Pool has strug- gled in conference road games. She averages just eight points-per-game on the road compared to 19.6 points-per-game at home. Burnett didn't start Pool in the second half. She sat on the bench for 14 of the game's final 20 minutes. Pool's minimal playing time not only hurt the Wolverines on offense. The power forward is one of Michigan's best defensive play- ers. With Pool out of the picture, Penn State exposed Michigan's interior defense. They outscored the Wolverines 48-10 in the paint. WHO CAN SCORE?: Michigan's 15- point first half was its second-low- est point total in a half this season. Trailing by 23 points at halftime, the Wolverines used their bench for most of the second half. Sophomore Niki Reams scored 10 points in just 16 minutes of action. Reams has come off the bench lately because of an injured left foot. Starter Jennifer Smith scored a game-high 22 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in the losing effort. With the exception of Reams, Smith was the only scoring option BRETT MOUNTAIN/Daily Senior captain Stephanie Gandy contributed a mere four points and one rebound to Michigan's total yesterday afternoon. Poor shooting and abundance of turnovers plague Michigan SCHEDULE & RESULTS Sunday's Results: PENN STATE 73, Michigan 44 NORTHWESTERN 48, Indiana 36 Iowa 87, WIScONSIN 82 (OT) Michigan State 84, OHIO STATE 70 Thursday's Games: Illinois at Purdue Michigan at Indiana Minnesota at Iowa Northwestern at Ohio State Wisconsin at Penn State Sunday's Games: Penn State at Iowa Indiana at Wisconsin Illinois at Ohio State Michigan State at Purdue Northwestern at Minnesota Key Stat 15,389 The sell-out crowd at yesterday's game was the largest at a women's basketball game in Penn State's his- tory. These fans' noise guided the Nit- tany Lions to an easy victory. UP NEXT: INDIANA Michigan was able to hold off the Hoosiers at Crisler earlier this season, but this time the Wolverines must travel to the storied Assembly Hall. Indiana is the worst-shooting team in the conference, and after two tough losses, Michigan will be eager to exploit this weakness. NITTANY LIONS Continued from Page 1B "We were turning the ball over incredibly large amounts in all differ- ent ways," Burnett said. "We'd get a defensive stop and throw the ball to the outlet, and they're getting the steal. They were getting one-pass- away steals." Altogether, Penn State outscored Michigan on fast breaks 22-0. The Wolverines created almost zero offense from their defense, something they had done well in last Thursday's close loss to No. 17 Michigan State. The Lady Lions, conversely, scored a whopping 29 points off of turnovers. Mazzante and Strom each had four steals, all in their own style. Maz- zante's steals often came as Michigan h1an to acdvance the hall uncourt. ing defense, led all scorers with 22 points. She shot only 4-for-12 from the field, but converted on 13 of her 17 trips to the free throw line. Sophomore Niki Reams turned in the only other productive performance for Michigan, contributing 10 points on 3-for-7 shooting. Reams was one of the few aggressive players left for the Wolverines in the closing minutes, when she picked up most of her points. "When I got in there, I wanted to do anything I could to help out the team," Reams said. But what may have concerned Bur- nett more was the lack of production that came from two of her star players, senior Stephanie Gandy and junior Tabitha Pool. Gandy scored just four points in 34 minutes of plav. and mustered only a DANNY MOLUSHOK/Daily Junior Tabitha Pool, usually a standout, was unable to put the ball in the hole, and spent the entire second half on the bench due to foul trouble. HOW THE WOMEN'S AP TOP 25 FARED Team 1. Texas 2.Connecticut 3.Tennessee 4. Duke 5. Purdue 6. Louisiana Tech 7 Texas Tech Record 21-2 18-2 19-2 18-3 19-2 17-2 20-3 This weekend's results Beat Colorado 51-45 Beat Rutgers 66-43 Beat Vanderbilt 94-88 Beat North Carolina 89-79 Beat Northwestern 80-45 Beat San Jose State 82-51 Beat Texas A&M 59-58 This week's games at Texas Tech; Baylor Pittsburgh; at Boston College Florida; at Mississippi Virginia; at Maryland Illinois; Michigan State at SMU at Missouri; Texas