6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 16, 2004 Blue has to redefine season goals SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan (61) DAN BREMMER Garden State of Mind While watching the beginning of the Michigan basketball team's practice last Monday, I was talking with two other reporters who also cover the team. We all had one question in mind about Michigan's chances of making the NCAA Tourna- ment: Will the team allow reporters to come to Crisler Arena for the Tourna- ment's selection show on Sunday, March 14? With its loss to Iowa on Saturday, it looks like the answer to our question won't matter. After suffering two straight losses on the road, the Michi- gan basketball team can probably kiss its hopes of earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament goodbye - making the selection show on Sunday worthless for Michigan fans, just as it has been for the past couple of years. But that doesn't mean that there is nothing left to play for this sea- son - which is why Michigan needs to refocus. At 12-9 overall and 4-6 in the Big Ten, virtually the only way Michigan could finish with a good enough record to earn an at-large bid would be to run the table over its last six games. The second half of the Wolverines' confer- ence schedule isn't as intimidating as the first half. But with home games against Michigan State and Wisconsin, and road games at Indiana and North- western, it's almost a guarantee that Michigan will drop at least one of its last six. The only other way for the Wolver- ines to play their way into March Mad- ness is to earn an automatic bid by winning the Big Ten Tournament - a tournament where every Big Ten team will compete. This is Michigan's best chance at this point, with almost a month for the team to get its act together. And historically, the first-place Big Ten team has strug- gled in the tournament, and a lower- seed comes away with the automatic bid. A team like Michigan - loaded with potential firepower - could get hot and surprise some teams in Indi- anapolis. Back in 2001, sixth-seeded Iowa took home an automatic bid after winning four straight in the conference tournament. So at 4-6 in the Big Ten, where does Michigan go from here? First, it has to redefine its goals for the season. Ever since Michigan won its appeal over the postseason ban with the NCAA in September, the team has spoken about reaching the NCAA Tournament as a goal. While it's tech- nically not out of reach at this point, it's unlikely, unless they can go on a run at the Big Ten Tournament. In order to do that, Michigan needs to look at some interim things to accom- plish along the way. Here's a few suggestions: 1) Stop the bleeding. Michigan's loss on Saturday was its second-straight loss and its sixth in nine games. Of the three games it has won over that stretch, none of those wins came against great teams. The Wolverines knocked off Penn State on the road. The game was note- worthy because it was Michigan's only road win since Big Ten play began, but at the same time, Penn State's program right now would lose to most MAC teams. Michigan also knocked off a Pur- due team playing without Kenneth Lowe, its star. While Courtney Sims's buzzer-beating tip made everyone cel- ebrate after the game, it also erased the memory of Michigan blowing a 16-point lead - something which Michigan shouldn't have forgotten about so easily. With its next game coming against Penn State on Wednesday, a win - any win --would help Michigan erase the memory of two straight Ts on the road. 2) Get smarter. Michigan has been about as consis- tent as Bobby Knight's mood this season. During conference play, Michigan has struggled with playing entire games from start to finish. The Wolverines have a knack for going on scoreless droughts or field-goal droughts of six or more minutes each game, which has consistently hurt them. The team's poor decision making in the face of adversity has led to these runs. Instead of keeping their cool when they sees an opponent make a run, the Wolverines get erratic, forcing up bad shots quickly when they should, instead, take time to work the ball for a quality shot. By focusing on playing smarter bas- ketball and taking better shots, Michi- gan can thwart an opponent's run before it gets out of hand - something it will need to do as it heads down the stretch. 3) Win another a road game (or two) The Wolverines are young - 12 of the 15 players on the team are freshmen or sophomores - so every game they play has a long- term implication. After its four- game home stand at Crisler, Michigan will hit the road to close out the Big Ten season against Indi- ana and Northwestern. Those 12 freshmen and sophomores Robinson Sims Brown Abram Horton Harris Bell Harrell Petway Mathis Dill TEAM Totals FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS 38 3-9 3-4 1-6 2 2 9 22 3-7 1-2 1-4 1 2 7 19 3-4 2-3 2-4 0 2 8 25 3-9 7-8 6-10 1 5 13 24 1-7 4-6 0-3 2 5 7 30 3-13 1-2 1-3 2 4 10 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 8 0-3 2-2 0-2 0 2 2 22 2-3 0-0 3-6 0 2 4 11 0-1 1-2 2-5 0 1 1 0+ 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2-5 200 1&5621-29184882561 I I FG%: .321. FT%: .724. 3-point FG: 4-20, .200 (Abram 0-3, Horton 1-5, Harris 3-9, Har- rell 0-3). Blocks: 3 (Sims 1, Petway 2). Steals: 9 (Horton 3, Robinson 2, Harris 3, Harrell). Turnovers: 21 (Sims 2, Harris 3, Robinson 3 Brown 3, Abram 5, Petway 2, Harrell 1, Mathis 2). Technical fouls: none. IoWA (69) Pierce Worley Brunner Horner Boyd Brownlee Spurgeon Hansen TEAM MIN 37 38 28 38 39 1 5 14 FG M-A 4-9 4-12 4-6 6-11 3-10 0-1 0-2 0-4 FT M-A 3-7 4-5 1-2 4-6 6-7 0-0 2-2 0-0 REB 0-T 2-5 2-7 2-4 1-4 0-2 0-0 1-4 0-2 1-4 A 8 3 2 4 1 0 0 0 F PTS 0 11 3 13 5 9 3 20 3 14 0 0 1 2 4 0 DANNY MOLOSHOK/ Michigan guard Daniel Horton and his teammates suffered a blow to their NCAA Tournament hopes with Saturday's 69-61 loss to Iowa. I I will play at least 20 more road games together over the next two years. Win- ning one or two to end their Big Ten season this year could give them a boost heading into the conference tour- nament and could even have long-term implications. If Michigan is looking for inspiration in making a Big Ten Tournament run, it can look back to 1998, when the Wolverines won the tournament as a No. 4 seed. Reaching the NCAA Tournament this season has become a longshot. But the team's success of 1998 should BIG TEN STANDINGS AND RESULTS UP NEXT: Conference Overall Team Wisconsin Michigan State Illinois Purdue Iowa Indiana Northwestern Michigan Ohio State Penn State Minnesota w 8 8 7 6 6 6 6 4 3 3 1 L 2 3 3 5 5 5 5 6 7 7 10 w 17 13 16 16 13 12 11 13 11 9 9 L 4 9 5 8 9 10 11 8 12 12 14 Tuesday's Game: Purdue at Michigan State Wednesday's Games: Penn State at Michigan Wisconsin at Illinois Minnesota at Indiana Iowa at Ohio State Saturday's Games: Northwestern at Michigan State Purdue at Minnesota Illinois at Penn State Ohio State at Indiana Sunday's Game: Wisconsin at Michigan Next Tuesday's Game: Michigan State at Michigan encourage Michigan not to abandon all structure and to keep playing for something. By making several adjust- ments to play better basketball, Michi- gan could help put itself back on track. The Wolverines would be ready to go when the Big Ten Tournament comes around. Because if Michigan doesn't make some changes, this season threatens to go down in the books as a failure. Daniel Bremmer can be reached at bremmerd@umich.edu. HAWKEYES Continued from Page 1B Amaker said. "They turned the tables on us, and we weren't able to get any rhythm." Michigan was also hurt by anoth- er barrage of turnovers. The Wolver- ines gave up the ball 21 times, with seven players turning over the ball at least twice. Michigan had nine turnovers in the game's first 10 minutes, which allowed Iowa to jump out to an early nine-point lead. The Wolverines also committed 20 turnovers on Wednes- day in Minnesota's come-from- behind win. "Certainly the turnovers killed us," Amaker said. "We didn't value the basketball." All of these woes occurred against an Iowa team that failed to get one field goal from its bench and had four players play more than At: Carver-Hawkeye Arena, Iowa Attendance: 16,618 4 Totals 200 21-5520.299-321819 69 FG%: .382. FT%: .69. 3-point FG: 7-20 .350 (Homer 4-5, Boyd 2-6, Worley 1-4, Pierce 0- 3, Brownlee 0-1, Spurgeon 0-1). Blocks: 5 (Brunner 1, Hansen 4). Steals: 11 (Pierce, Worley 2, Brunner, Horner 2, Boyd 5). Turnovers: 15 (Pierce 3, Worley 2, Brunner 3, Horner 4, Spurgeon 2). Technical fouls: none. Michigan..................32 Iowa........................ 28 37 minutes. Iowa was also dominat- ed on the glass, as the Wolverines held a 48-32 rebounding edge and pulled down 18 offensive rebounds. Michigan held a similar advantage in its earlier road loss to Illinois. "I thought it was just a gritty per- formance from our guys," Iowa coach Steve Alford said. "I thought they really hung in there." Michigan will now try to get back on track this week as it begins a four-game homestand on Wednes- day against Penn State, the one team it has beaten on the road this season. The homestand also includes game against Wisconsin, Michigan State and Ohio State. The Wolver- ines are 10-2 at Crisler Arena this year, with close losses against Indi- ana and Boston University. "We have a chance to get home and, hopefully, to regroup and get better," Amaker said. 29 - 61 41 - 69 Saturday's results: IowA 69, Michigan 61 MICHIGAN STATE 69, Minnesota 58 NORTHWESTERN 69, Penn State 51 PURDUE 84, Indiana 70 WISCoNSIN 78, Ohio State 48 Penn State's Ben Luber (middle) FENN STATE The Nittany Lions are the one team that the Wolverines have beaten on the road this season. To win on Wednesday, Michigan is going to have to stop Jan Jagla, Aaron Johnson and Marlon Smith. The Wolverines also need to keep the turnovers down. Wisconsin's Devin Harris (left) WISCONSIN Michigan stuck with Wisconsin into the second half in Madison, but then the Wolverines' offense went into a standstill, and rarely- used guard Clayton Hanson lit things up. The Badgers are not the same on the road, but Sun- day's game will be a challenge. I I I M WATER POLO 'M' runs table at Princeton Invitational By Harold Fogel Daily Sports Writer The water polo team was looking to share a little Michigan love this week- end. Unfortunately for Michigan's opponents, it wasn't the type of Valen- tine's Day love they were looking for. The Wolverines (10-3 overall) went undefeated at the Princeton Invitational this weekend, soundly defeating all four teams they faced. It was exactly the kind of pick-up the squad needed com- ing off a rough outing at the Stanford Invitational last weekend. "The girls understood what these games meant," coach Matt Anderson said. "We were here to re-establish that we are a very good team, and I am - extremely pleased with how things turned out." The main event for the Wolverines, and perhaps the entire invitational, was their Saturday evening contest against No. 17 Brown. The Bears, who were undefeated entering the invitational, had knocked Michigan out of the 2003 Eastern Conference semifinals. There 125th ums seasn n . for Stud ents $10 Rush Tickets on sale 9 am-5 50% Rush Tickets on sale pm the day of the performance beginning 90 minutes before or the Friday before a weekend the event at the performance event at the UMS Ticket Office, hall Ticket Office. located in the Michigan League. Children of Uganda Thu2/l97pm Sat 2/218pm Power Center .3 Cecilia Bartoli mezzo-soprano ;xMf r. Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment was no question No. 8 Michigan had long awaited an opportunity at revenge. The game began in a deadlock as both teams fought for possession and control. Three minutes in, though, Michigan's offense came alive with goals from junior Erin Brown and freshman phenom Shana Welch. From there, the Wolverines never looked back, taking a 7-1 lead into halftime. While the second half was more bal- anced, Brown could hardly mount a sig- nificant comeback due to Michigan's impervious defense and stellar goal- tending by junior Betsey Armstrong, who registered 12 saves in the game. In the end, Michigan enjoyed the sweet taste of revenge, defeating Brown 9-4. The other ranked opponent on Michi- gan's schedule was the host of the Invi- tational, Princeton. While the game did not have the same emotional atmos- phere as the Brown contest did, it nonetheless was a crucial game to win. "We came out here most concerned about Brown and Princeton," Anderson said. "Everyone knows you have to beat Brown and Princeton to get through the East, so we wanted to make sure we made a statement this weekend against those two teams." The team made more than a state- ment, defeating No. 19 Princeton 10-4 Sunday. Amidst another solid team per- formance, Welch demonstrated not only that she can score, but that she is just as good on the other end of the pool. "Shana is already establishing herself as a great player," Anderson said. "She has been scoring (consistently) and her defense is great as well." Michigan's other two games came against unranked opponents. In their first challenge Saturday afternoon, the Wolverines dominated George Wash- ington, winning 17-4. Senior Julie Nis- bet notched the ninth hat-trick of her career while senior co-captain Rachel