PAGE 6B: COMEBACK KIDS The Michigan baseball team came from behind in all three games against Duke to sweep the Blue Devils on the road. SPOR S March 8, 2004 -------------- abE Adito n JDtti1u -I Second-half collapse averted in season finale By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Writer EVANSTON - Michigan has given up numerous second-half leads this sea- son. And for aN d= brief moment Sat- 1 urday against Northwestern, it looked like it was going to happen again. With less than two minutes remaining and the Wolverines up by two, senior forward Bernard Robinson was pres- sured by two Wildcats in the Michigan backcourt with no Wolverine close by to pass the ball to. Robinson lobbed the ball out of bounds, giving Northwestern a chance to take its first lead of the half. Then, after Wildcat forward Vedran Vukusic missed a 3-pointer, Michigan made the big play it has been lacking in many of its road losses. On the next possession, sophomore guard Daniel Horton drove inside before dishing the ball off to guard Lester Abram, who missed a bank shot off the glass. But freshman center Courtney Sims was in perfect position to tip the rebound in. Sims's putback gave Michigan a four- point lead, and Abram and Robinson hit free throws down the stretch to preserve Michigan's 63-56 victory. The win gives Michigan (17-10 over- all, 8-8 Big Ten) a fifth seed and first- round bye at next week's Big Ten Tournament in Indianapolis. Saturday's win over the Wildcats was the Wolver- ines' best road win of the season, an unthinkable fact back in early January in many respects. Although it prevailed 78-54 in the first meeting between these two teams, Michigan was an underdog going into Welsh-Ryan Arena, as Northwestern (13-14, 8-8) was playing one of its biggest games in the past decade. The Wildcats were playing to assure them- selves a National Invitational Tourna- ment bid and sending off its star senior Jitim Young. The school boasts just three postseason bids - all NIT - in the program's history. Northwestern has been uncharacteristically tough at home this year, and Michigan joined Michi- gan State as the only Big Ten teams to win at Welsh-Ryan Arena this season. "We didn't survive," Robinson said. "We won the game. Northwestern's a good team. So for us to come in here to play well against a team like that, I think we give credit to our team for hanging in there and getting that victory." Northwestern jumped out of the gates See WILDCATS, Page 5B Friday: MICHIGAN STATE 4, Michigan 4; Saturday: Michigan State 1, Michigan 0 Winless in 19 last four, leers back way into CCHA title DETROIT - After throwing away a urth opportunity to clinch the CCHA gular-season title, there was still one ay for the Wolverines to come out with e trophy. All they needed was a little lp from their good pals: The Ohio State ackeyes. When Michigan returned to the Joe >uis Arena lockerroom after its 1-0 loss the Spartans on Saturday, the Wolver- es' focus gravitated towards Colum- is, where the Buckeyes were hosting iami (Ohio). Trailing the Wolverines just one point in the CCHA stand- gs, the RedHawks allowed Ohio State score with 1:11 left in the game and lost, 5-4. "For a brief period, we were Ohio State fans," senior captain Andy Burnes joked. "That's unheard of, but that's the way it had to be." While the last four games (the Wolver- ines went 0-3-1) NN PP have demon- strated that Michi- in has a lot of work to do, the fact that nightmare over the RedHawks, the Wolverines needed a Miami loss to secure an outright CCHA title. A tie in Value City would split the title, and a Miami win would hand Michigan a runner-up conference finish for the second year in a row. Just before the Michigan game ended, I had overheard that Ohio State was winning 4-2 at the start o the third. A reporter next to me asked Tam- bell:i if he knew an updated score from Columbus. Tambellini immediately shot bac an answer as if he'd been waiting al of his life for the question: "4-3, Ohio State." Then, it happened - common sense as we know it left the Joe, an I couldn't help but think of CBS's classic black and white sci-fi mind bender ... they are conference champs is still some- thing they are proud of. "Obviously we would have liked to have won the game, but we've earned (the championship)," Michigan associate coach Mel Pearson said. "It's been a long year. We've done a lot of good things over the year, and I think the kids have really done a nice job and earned it." After a slow first period Saturday, Michigan got a pair of chances all alone in front of the Spartans' goaltender Dominic Vicari, but both Jason Ryznar and Michael Woodford came up empty. Ryznar tried to make one too many moves with the puck and had no angle to fire a shot, while Woodford didn't even manage to fire one. "It's amazing," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "(Woodford) has this breakaway and he never even touches the puck ... The puck bounced right up over his stick as he went to shoot. It wasn't like he did something and lost it. He never touched the puck and it went off his stick. Either the ice was rough or the puck was not sitting the way it should have:' The Spartans' goal that gave them the See SPARTANS, page 4B comes "You're traveling through anoth- er dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind; a journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead - your next stop, the Twilight Zone!" Said Tambellini with a joyous grin: "I'm a big Ohio State fan right f now, I'll tell you that." Fielding Yost barrel-rolled ten times in his grave. A Michigan player openly sup- porting the men in scarlet and gray? k Something has definitely gone 1 awry. And Tambellini wasn't the only Buckeye bandwagon jumper, either. The entire team shared his sentiment. They were forced to. d The Wolverines had failed to take care of business in their last two weeks of action, going 0-3-1, and in doing See FILICE, page 4B Graham Brown had seven points and four rebounds in the win at Northwestern. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Women knocked from tournament y Purdue Fielding Yost's worst GENNARO FILICE Nuthin' But a 'G' Thang D ETROIT -The scene out- side of Michigan's locker- room in Joe Louis Arena following the Wolverines' 1-0 loss to Michigan State on Saturday was a bit peculiar. Scratch that. It was strange, at times all-out bizarre - reminiscent of a Twilight Zone episode. At first, the postgame atmosphere seemed normal enough. Michigan players and coaches faced a trail from the lockerroom to the bus with the usual roadblocks: family, friends and journalists. Although they'd just dropped a tough game to the archrival Spar- tans, team members agreeably offered analysis for every inquiring mind. Jeff Tambellini addressed the media with the utmost respect, sin- cerely tackling any question thrown his way. But it was obvious that the 19- year-old's attention centered on something other than the media's inquiries. And it wasn't the possibil- ity of legal brew consumption less than a mile away across the Detroit River. Rather, Tambellini's focus was hindered by the events taking place 230 miles away in Value City Arena: Miami (Ohio) at Ohio State. Clinging to just a one-point lead By Ellen McGarrity Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - One second to go in the first half, and sophomore Niki Reams found herself with the ball at half court. With nothing to do but shoot, she " E" lobbed the ball up and, miracu- lously, it went in. The guard's triple brought Michigan within three of No. 6 Purdue in the second round of the women's Big Ten Tournament, and capped off a superb first half by the Wolverines. Unfortunately, the same could not be said about the second half. Michi- gan (6-10 Big Ten, 14-17 overall) dropped a 78-55 decision Friday to Purdue (14-2, 25-3) - it's now lost to the Boilermakers five consecutive years in the Big Ten Tournament. The 23-point loss was Michigan's worst- ever in a Big Ten Tournament game. Early in the contest, fans watching from the stands of Conseco Field- house might have guessed it was Michigan who was the sixth-ranked team in the nation, not the seventh- place team in the conference. Michigan, fresh off of a three- game winning streak, looked confi- dent and energized as it maintained a steady lead for the first 11 minutes of play. After hitting their biggest lead of the game - five - the Wolver- ines managed to keep the Boilermak- ers on their toes, edging ahead several more times and never falling behind by more than six for the rest of the half. "Pregame, (we talked about) how much (Michigan) has improved and how much they're playing together and really getting into it emotionally,; Purdue freshman Katie Gearlds said. See BOILERS, Page 3B Churella bright spot for grapplers at Big Ten meet By Eric Chan and Ryan Soam Daily Sports Writers COLUMBUS - The toughest competition that NCAA wrestling has to offer takes place every year during the Big Ten championships. Entering the final round of this year's competition, the Michi- gan wrestling team had three competitors eyeing an individual Big Ten title. Only one Wolverine came home with a title, while the team finished in fourth place. "As a team overall, I just think some of our guys need to season is a big step heading into NCAAs." Senior Foley Dowd, squaring off against third-seeded Mark Jayne of Illinois, was the top seed and favorite to win the 133- pound title. Jayne attacked first, shooting a single leg that Dowd quickly defended. The Wolverine scored first, hitting a double leg to take a 2-0 lead. Jayne took a 3-2 lead in the second period, spinning around Dowd with a low single leg. Dowd knotted the score at 3-3 in the third period with an escape, but Jayne was able to manage a third and final takedown to take a 5-4 victory. With six seconds left, Dowd hit a throw that sent Jayne flying, but was unable to score on it. The loss marked Dowd's first on the season. 157-pound junior Ryan Bertin, the defending national cham- were 165-pound senior Pat Owen and heavyweight junior Greg Wagner. Both wrestlers were seeded second. Owen snuck past his first round match with Michigan State's Matt McCarty. It appeared he had been pinned, but the referees ruled that Owen was hurt before the pin was made. The ruling was changed to a takedown with near-fall points and Owen found himself down 0-6. The time to rest helped as he stormed back with six unanswered points before putting McCarty away with five seconds left in the match, 11-9. Owen took a match from Ben Hay of Illinois before losing his next match to Minnesota's third- seeded Jacob Volkmann, 10-5. Owen battled back in his next match, crushing Kelly Flaherty of Wisconsin, 8-0. Owen once I 5Y?3~ TI