The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 8, 2004 - 3B Players of the game FRIDAY'S GAME Katie Gearlds Purdue The freshman was on fire in her first Big Ten Tournament, nailing three key 3-pointers in the sec- ond half that buried Michigan. Jennifer Smith Michigan Smith played her final game as a Wolverine on Friday. She fittingly led all scorers with 19 points and pulled down nine boards. Michigan 55 78 Talkin' the talk "Our players believed in this game, that we could win. It hasn't been like that all year." - Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett on her team's attitude. Purdue MICHIGAN (55) FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Pool 35 6-13 1-3 1-7 1 4 15 Gandy 37 4-12 0-0 1-2 3 3 8 Smith 33 7-14 5-6 3-9 2 3 19 Hauser-Price 30 3-6 1-2 00 1 2 8 Helvey 23 1-2 0-0 1-3 1 4 2 Andrews 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Carney 9 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 Reams 23 1-2 0-0 2-6 3 2 3 Burlin 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 McPhilamy 7 0-1 0-0 1-1 0 0 0 TEAM 1-2 Totals 200 22-52 7-111.0-30 12 20 55 FG%: .423. FT%: .636. 3-point FG: 417, .235 (Pool 2-5, Hauser-Price 1-2, Reams 1-2, Gandy 0-5, Smith 0-1, Helvey 0-1, Carney 0-1). Blocks: 5 (Reams 3, Helvey, Gandy). Steals: 3 ( Pool, Smith, Andrews). Turnovers: 18 (Gandy 4, Smith 3, Pool 3, Carney 2, Reams 2, Hauser-Price, Helvey, Andrews, Burlin). Technical fouls: none. Purdue (78) Burnett left to ponder first season Hicks Wright Heikes Jones Valek Gearlds Mays Lawless Duncan Webb TEAM Totals MIN 25 25 15 29 33 32 6 18 8 9 200 FG M-A 4-8 4-15 3-6 1-3 3-4 5-13 1-1 5-7 0-0 0-0 26-57 FT REB M-A 0-T A F 0-0 2-4 3 2 8-12 8-9 3 0 2-2 0-2 1 3 4-5 0-1 3 1 0-1 0-3 3 0 2-2 2-7 2 0 0-0 0-1 0 1 2-3 1-3 0 4 0-0 1-2 0 3 1-2 1-1 0 1 0-4 19-2714-371915 By Megan Kolodgy Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - On Friday evening, Michigan women's basketball coach Cheryl Burnett walked off the court with a hoarse voice and a weary look. Her team had just finished playing out a 23-point defeat against Purdue, and it seemed that this game was another one of the Wolverines' cookie-cutter losses that occurred consis- tently throughout the season. But this particular loss was different. It marked the end of Burnett's first season as Michigan's head coach. When Burnett was hired last April, the hope was that she would usher the pro- gram into a new and successful era. At Southwest Missouri State, Burnett had led 10 of her 15 teams to the NCAA Tourna- ment and two as far as the Final Four. She won or shared 10 regular season confer- ence titles, and compiled a record of 319- 136 over her 15-year reign. So how does Burnett feel about her first bunch of Wolverines, who fell short of the .500-mark with a 14-17 overall record (6-10 Big Ten)? "Coming into the year, the goal is to make the NCAA Tournament," Burnett said. "We weren't close to that, and that's disappoint- ing, because that's what my expectation is." Still, Burnett and her coaching staff made several tangible marks on the program. Michigan doubled its conference win total from last year, and in its final game of the season, beat then-No. 12 Minnesota. Burnett also went to great lengths to increase the Wolverines' fan base. She even left automated messages on Ann Arbor res- idents' answering machines, inviting them to games. She encouraged her players to meet fans and thank them for attending, and she frequently called to the crowd as a sixth man at critical times during games by waving her arms and stomping her feet, a trademark move. Her efforts paid off, as attendance at home games toward the end of the season soared over the 2,100-fan average. When Michigan State came to Crisler in February, 4,611 people showed up to cheer, and set a new attendance record. "I think we have some good building PTS 10 16 8 7 7 15 2 12 0 1 78 blocks," Burnett said in reference to the attendance record and an increase in confer- ence wins. "But (the coaching staff) wanted to have more success than this." Although this was not quite the season Burnett and her staff had in mind, few would disagree that a handful of Wolverines did blossom this season under Burnett's guidance. Senior captain Jennifer Smith had a break-out season, averaging 21.2 points-per- game, compared to 14.6 last year. The senior holds the school record for single-season scoring, and sits in second for career scor- ing. Junior Tabitha Pool went from a strug- gling shooter to a key cog in Michigan's offensive scheme. Senior captain Stephanie Gandy gained the ability to emotionally lead for the entire game, as evidenced by her gutsy performance against Illinois in a first- round Big Ten Tournament win. "Our maturity of understanding strategic things - I can't even compare to where we started, because we've just made magnifi- cent leaps," Burnett said. "We've also made tremendous strides in intangibles - leader- ship, competing. It's night and day." FG%: .456. FT%: 704. 3-point FG: 7-13, 538. (Gearlds 3-5, Hicks 2-3, Valek 1-1, Jones 1-3, Wright 0-1). Blocks: 1 (Valek). Steals: 8 (Valek 3, Gearlds 2, Hicks, Heikes, Lawless). Turnovers: 8 (Jones 2, Gearlds 2, Lawless 2, Wright, Duncan), Technical fouls: none. Purdue.................................33 45 - 78 Michigan.........................30 25 - 55 At: Conseco Fieldhouse Key Stat 11 Michigan's current losing streak ver- sus the Boilermakers. Purdue has bumped Michigan from the Big Ten Tournament five years in a row. TOURNAMENT RESULTS Thursday, March 4 No. 9 Indiana 57, No. 8 Wisconsin 39 No. 7 Michigan 62, No. 10 Illinois 58 No. 6 Minnesota 68, No. 11 Northwestern 47 Friday, March 5 No. 1 Penn State 79, No. 9 Indiana 66 No. 5 Michigan State 81, No. 4 Iowa 54 No. 2 Purdue 78, No. 7 Michigan 55 No. 3 Ohio State 58, No. 6 Minnesota 50 rn Yesterday No. 1 Penn State 58, No. 5 Michigan State 54 No. 2 Purdue 67, No. 3 Ohio State 61 First-year head coach Cheryl Burnett couldn't take Michigan to the NCAA Tournament, but her future still looks bright. Future uncertain without Smith, Gandy By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - How will the Michigan women's basketball team replace its two departing seniors - future WNBA player Jen- nifer Smith and emotional leader Stephanie Gandy - next season? According to Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett, it won't. "I never think you replace players," Burnett said. "You have to do things differently with each team. So we will not replace a Stephanie Gandy and we will not replace a Jennifer Smith." Never mind the statistical impact created by the loss of Smith and Gandy - the two combined for more than 50 percent of Michigan's scoring this season - it's the absence of leadership that will hamper the young 2004-05 squad. "(Losing Smith and Gandy) will be a major change of leadership, because they've been such strong leaders," Burnett said. "We'll have to start training all over again the new leadership of the team." The seniors' exit forces junior Tabitha Pool into the spotlight, the team's second-leading scorer. Pool averaged just over 13 points per game this year, but has lacked the offensive consistency that Smith and Gandy provided. Earlier in the year, Pool shot just 1-of-14 from the field in a loss to Drake, but scored 33 points against Xavier two weeks later. "She's got a lot of pressure right now," teammate Kelly Helvey said. "So as long as she performs, the pressure will come off of her." Besides Pool, the scoring options for next year's team are slim. Forward Niki Reams was expected to have a break-out year this season, but injuries slowed the sophomore and she averaged just five points per game. "Coach expects a lot out of Niki," Pool said. "(Reams) didn't have a great year this year, but she is a really great player." Michigan's other scoring options next season will include Kelly Helvey and Sierra Hauser-Price. Both averaged less than four points per game this year, but showed flashes of offensive capability. A more pressing concern for the Wolverines will be the gaping hole at center created by the loss of Smith, the Big Ten's leading scorer. Backup center BreAnne McPhilamy, a 6-foot-2 junior, had difficulty playing in the paint this season - a major reason Smith logged more than 36 minutes per game. The second-tallest returning player on next year's team will be the 6-foot-l Pool, whose flexibility as a player may tempt Burnett to use her at the center position. "I never played (center) in high school," Pool said. "But (power forward) is similar to (center)." With the loss of Smith and Gandy, Burnett will add four strong freshmen next season. "I think next year, starting off, (Burnett's defense) will be a lot easier to get used to, because this year we all had to learn it," Reams said. "Next year, we'll all understand it, and obviously the girls coming in must play the kind of style that coach Burnett likes." Today No. 1 Penn State vs. No. 2 Purdue 7 p.m. Rankings indicate seedings in Big Ten Tournament Junior Tabitha Pool will be one of the few returning sources of offense and leadership next year for the Wolverines. 'M' STATS Player Smith Pool Gandy Reams Hauser-Price Helvey Carney Burlin McPhilamy Andrews G 31 30 31. 28 31 31 27 26 30 25 Min 36:1 32.1 34.8 24.4 26.0 20.9 12.1 7.2 6.0 9.4 A 0.8 2.2 2.0 2.2 1.7 1.7 1.0 0.5 0.1 0.7 Reb 7.4 7.8 3.6 5.2 1.8 2.7 1.3 0.8 1.2 0.8 Pts. 21.3 13.3 11.6 5.1 3.5 3.5 1.8 1.2 0.8 0.4 Backpacks? Hostels? 3 Cities in 4 Days? BOILERS Continued from Page 1B "They outplayed us in the first half." But even though Michigan outshot Purdue from the field, at the line and behind the arc in the first half, there were definite signs of the disaster that was about to unfold. With 6:52 to go in the first half, Pool was benched after committing her sec- ond foul of the game. Smith and fresh- man Kelly Helvey also finished out the half in foul trouble with three and two fouls, respectively. "That was really the first time that we had gotten three of our prime-time players all in foul trouble," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. "That real- ly changed the complexion of the game for us. Then we had to play a lit- tle bit tentative, just because they're trying to play smart." Senior Stephanie Gandy, who was one of three Michigan players to score in double digits in Friday's victory over Illinois, notched just four points in the first half. A good measure of how a Michi- gan game will end up has been the performance of the team in the first five minutes of the second half. In Friday's game, Purdue outscored Michigan 9-4 in this time frame, extending its lead to 42-37. Then Purdue pulled away. Gearlds made three triples in two minutes, putting the Boilermakers ahead by 13. At that point, Michigan began to unravel. Pool committed her third and fourth fouls, and looked hesitant on defense. Meanwhile, Purdue stepped up its defense. Michigan found it difficult to pass or find an open look, and had to toss up many bad shots with the shot clock nearing zero. Turnovers also plagued Michigan. 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