The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - December 13, 2004 - 5B WHAT DID YOU SAY? "One thing you can't get into is changing what you are. That's when teams get in trouble." - Junior tri-captain Sherrod Harrell on Michigan's role changes. SATURDAY'S SCORE PLAYERS OF THE GAME :P fSouth Florida 62 71 Terrence Leather (South Florida) The forward spent 25 minutes on the floor and scored 28 of the Bulls' 62 total points before fouling out with 2:06 left. Chris Hunter (Michigan) Michigan's solid 23-29 performance from the charity stripe was due large- ly to the sophomore's 10-for-10 run. Michigan Unsung cagers filmigm the gaps By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer South Florida served as the perfect example of what Michigan does not want to become in Saturday's 71-62 win at Crisler Arena. Terrence Leather scored 28 points for the Bulls in limited play due to foul trou- ble. His play was sensational, but - save for 13 points from his teammate Brian Swift - it was the only source of scor- ing that South Florida could find on most possessions. Down at Michigan's side of the court, it was anyone's guess which Wolverine would be putting the ball in the basket. When injuries arose that will keep juniors Lester Abram, Graham Brown and Daniel Horton on the bench for an extended amount of time, the possibility of sophomore Dion Harris - Michigan's leading scorer - being the first, last and only scoring option became very real. But in Michigan's first two games as a depleted unit, that danger has not been reality. "It's no surprise to us," junior Sher- rod Harrell said. "We practice every day, and we know what we have in this locker room. We know what we can do with these guys. Just because a few guys go out doesn't mean that somebody can't step in the spot and do the same thing." Harrell is one of the players doing his part to patch up the holes in the lineup. He scored a career-high seven points and added five rebounds in Saturday's vic- tory. Four Wolverines scored in double fig- ures. Harris led the way with 22 points, a positive sign following his 8 points on 3- for-13 shooting in last week's 67-53 win over High Point - Michigan's first game without Abram, Brown and Horton. But the biggest story revolved around SATURDAYS GAME Everyone needs to South Florida 62 shine in new roles FG FT MIN M-A M-A 25 11-15 6-7 REB 0-T 2-5 A F PTS 1 5 28 JASON COOPER/Daily Junior Chris Hunter shouldered his share of the scoring load for the Wolverines. He finished with 16 points and a 10-for-10 mark from the free throw line. who scored besides Harris. Forward Chris Hunter followed a career-high 22- point night against High Point by drop- ping 16 points on the Bulls. The junior did most of his damage at the free throw line, where he went 10-for-10. Sophomore Brent Petway and fresh- man Ron Coleman also chipped in 10 points each. It was Coleman's second double- digit effort in his young career.Despite troubles early in the season, the wing has proven to be a solid contributor when his jump shot is on. The performances of Michigan's role players were exactly what the doctor ordered in the absence of some of Mich- igan's top scorers. After being thrust into the spotlight, they seem to have passed the initial tests so far. "Do we need those players just to be solid or do we need them to make con- tributions?" Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "We need them to make contributions, and they're good enough to do that for us." The Wolverines are even getting other contributions from players that don't score. Senior J.C. Mathis played eight min- utes at forward and logged two rebounds and an assist. Junior Ashtyn Bell saw played 10 minutes, a career-high and the first time he has ever played with the game still in doubt. He filled in for junior Dani Wohl, who played 30 minutes against High Point but went down with an elbow injury in practice on Thursday and is out indefinitely. With so many players getting a chance to play, the experience could pay divi- dends for the Wolverines down the road. "All these guys are getting this expe- rience on the court, and this helps our team out," Coleman said. "Whenever we' have to look to the bench to get our play- ers to play hard, we'll have the chemistry down pat." BRIAN SCHICK Schick Happens ooking over the postgame notes from Saturday's win over South Florida, numerous players tal- lied career-highs in various statistical categories. But it wasn't your usual suspects, such as Dion Harris and Courtney Sims - it was Sherrod Har- rell, Ashtyn Bell and Ron Coleman. For better or for worse, this will be a record-breaking season for the Wol- verines. I don't want to keep beating the injury drum, but it's definitely going to be the story of the season. Every player on the Michigan basketball team has seen his role on the team change, and Michigan coach Tommy Amaker is looking for everyone to take more responsibility. Guys who figured to be role players on the team now have to step up, and the remaining starters now have to carry the load. Amaker has said on numerous occa- sions that he is proud of his team's depth. Well, we're getting a good look at Michigan's bench, and chances are we'll be seeing more of them as the season progresses. I take that back - I shouldn't even call them bench players anymore, since they're going to be the guys who will have to fill in for Daniel Horton and Lester Abram. I applaud Amaker for recruiting players who want to stay for four years, as opposed to the growing number of players that support the "one-year-and- done" mentality. While it's tough to recruit quality players to ride the pine for a few years, it seems that Michigan will need to start looking for players who won't be just role-players any- more. All that aside, the players don't seem to think anything is different. Har- rell doesn't feel any of his teammates' roles have changed, stating that he believes that players shouldn't change their game, or that will have disastrous results. Well, I'm not sure if I agree, but, if that's what it takes to keep winning, I'll accept that. I think they're just try- ing to downplay the injury bug without admitting these players were "role- players" before. And even starters like Harris have a different role on this new team. Harris saw his responsibility change last season as he moved off the bench into the starting lineup. Now he's moved from being a second or third option behind Horton and Abram to being the go-to guy on this squad. He's also assumed the duties of point guard, as well as being the floor leader and motivator. That's asking a lot of a sophomore who has started just 20 games at Michigan. "For me to run the point, I have to be active and have energy the entire time, no matter how good or how bad it's going," Harris said. "I just have to stay active and keep everybody energized, and that's what I tried to do today." Harris has slowly stepped into the role of team leader pretty well. He might have notched the quietest 22-point game in Michigan history - despite shooting 6-for-17 from the floor. Coleman has also quietly moved into a prominent position on the squad, going from playing single-digit min- utes in his first few games to playing 39 minutes on Saturday. Not much was made of Coleman during the offsea- son, and more focus was on the high school players who didn't commit to Michigan. But he has slowly improved from the beginning of the season, and it appears Amaker has rewarded him with more playing time. "I just went out there," Coleman said. "Coach told me to go out there and have fun and play hard and battle. And that's just what I did. I was out on the court for a long time, but I just have to fight through it." Bell might be the one who has seen his situation on the team change the most dramatically. From being a walk- on and not making the team his fresh- man year, he played a career-high 10 minutes against the Bulls, defending their best guard, Brian Swift. Bell was also bitten by the injury bug, suffering a broken nose. He sported a Rip Ham- ilton-style facemask over the weekend. This was the first situation where he saw meaningful minutes and had the responsibility of attempting to slow down a South Florida comeback late in the second half. Bell also mentioned that some teams that suffer injuries the way Michigan has could easily fold under the pressure and start losing games they shouldn't. Up until this point, Michigan has man- aged to pull out wins against teams it was supposed to beat when the season started. The bigger tests loom on the horizon with a road trip to UCLA over winter break and the start of the Big Ten season in January. The outcome of these games will show if these players can adjust to their new roles - wheth- er they will acknowledge them or not. Leather Dennis Jones Bryant Swift Brigman Prekevicius Capko Holmes Diarra TEAM Totals 23 1-4 1-2 1-3 1 2 3 31 3-4 1-2 1-11 0 4 7 25 1-4 0-0 0-2 14 3 2 40 6-17 0-0 0-2 6 4 13 13 1-2 0-0 0-2 0 3 2 24 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 20 2-6 0-0 0-1 1 0 5 9 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 2 0 3-3 200 26-568-117-29 14 23 62 FG%: .464 FT%: .727 3-point FG: 2-13, .154 (Swift 1-8, Holmes 1-2, Dennis 0- 2, Prekevicius 0-1). Blocks: 3 (Jones 2, Bryant) Steals: 5 (Leather 2, Jones 2, Dennis). Turnovers: 14 (Prekevicius 3, Holmes 3, Bryant 2, Swift 2, Leather 2, Jones, Dennis). Technical fouls: None. MICHIGAN 71 FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS Andrews 12 0-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 Hunter 29 3-1110-10 4-8 0 3 16 Sims 15 3-4 0-0 1-2 2 1 6 Harris 37 6-17 7-10 0-2 5 3 22 Coleman 39 4-8 2-2 3-7 1 0 10 Bell 10 0-0 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 Harrell 22 2-3 2-2 0-5 0 0 7 Petway 28 4-7 2-3 0-2 1 2 10 Mathis 8 0-1 0-0 1-2 1 0 0 TEAM 2-5 Totals 200 22-5223-2911-33131171 FG%: .423 FT%: .793 3-point FG: 4-15, .267 (Harris 3-9, Harrell 1-2, Coleman 0-2, Hunter 0-1, Andrews 0-1). Blocks: 4 (Petway 2, Sims, Coleman). Steals: 6 (Harrell 2, Petway 2, Coleman, Har- ris). Turnovers: 12 (Coleman 3, Petway 2, Andrews 2, Harris 2, Hunter, Harrell, TEAM 1). Technical fouls: none. South Florida......32 30 - 62 Michigan.......... 34 37 - 71 At: Crisler Arena Attendance: 10,135 ,M' STATS Player Harris Horton Sims Hunter Petway Abram Brown Coleman Andrews Harrell Wohl Mathis Bell Ba Min 37.2 33.1 23.1 17.4 23.6 28.7 21.0 18.4 18.4 12.9 12.0 7.7 5.5 1.0 A 3.2 4.3 0.3 0.4- 1.0 1.3 1.0 1.1 1.5 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.5 1.0 Reb 2.8 3.1 6.2 3.6 5.9 4.7 6.3 2.3 1.9 1.8 0.7 2.3 0.0 0.0 Pts 15.0 11.7 10.2 9.6 7.3 6.7 4.5 3.8 3.4 2.0 1.3 0.7 0.0 0.0 Injuries provide chance to grow BIG TEN STANDINGS By Megan Kolodgy Daily Sports Writer Junior Sherrod Harrell insists that his role hasn't changed. "One thing you can't get into is changing what you are," Harrell said. "That's when teams get in trouble. Just because we had a few guys go out, guys still have to do what they do." This assertion might be true as far as duties as tri-captain of the Michigan men's basketball team is concerned. But Harrell's 0 " . $0 presence on the court and on the stat sheet has become much more prominent in the last few weeks. "He's a very unselfish person and player," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "I think his contributions - you won't see them so much in the stat sheet - but it's in how he plays in practice and how he helps the guys along." On Saturday, Harrell proved that he could make signifi- cant contributions, with both subtle and explicit plays. He scored a career-high seven points, easily surpassing his previous high of four. His shooting was conservative but also quite accurate, as he shot 2-for-3 from the field includ- ing 1-for-2 from beyond the arc. Harrell also managed to sink both of his free throws. His play was both aggressive and plentiful, as he grabbed five rebounds and remained on the floor for 22 minutes. "He is our only healthy captain for us, and Sherrod is a terrific leader," Amaker said. "He's a team-first player - a person players respect. He's a tough guy. He's mentally tough. He's going to fight through things, and he's willing to do anything for his teammates." While his teammates are relying more heavily on his lead- ership, Harrell still looks to the other captains for guidance. "I asked Lester (Abram) tonight while we were sitting on the bench, 'Les, why can't we get open on the wings?' " Har- rell said. "He told me what to do, I spread the word, and we went out and did it. We still use them." HIT THE WOHL?: Just when the Michigan faithful hoped the injuries that have inflicted several key players would cease, they received more bad news - junior Dani Wohl is out indefinitely with an elbow injury. The guard fell on his elbow at practice on Thursday, and his status remains unknown. He will receive an MRI later in the week. "I was disappointed for a kid like Dani Wohl, who has worked all his life to get to the point where he'd get the chance to play in a game like this, and he gets hurt just before we're supposed to play," Amaker said. Wohl had seen very few minutes in his Michigan career until Tuesday's game against High Point, when, in the absence of junior starter Daniel Horton, Wohl got the chance to play 30 minutes. He scored four points, snatched two rebounds and committed four turnovers in his time on the court. The upside to Wohl's injury is that sophomore Ashtyn Bell, another nonstarter, saw a significant spike in playing time on Saturday. The junior notched one assist in 10 min- utes on the court. "It felt good," Bell said. "I've been waiting for this oppor- tunity for a long time, so I wanted to take advantage of it. I went out there and did the best I can." His game may have been hampered by the protective, plastic mask that he had to wear in order to prevent re-injur- ing to his nose, which he broke in practice at the beginning of the season. "The one I was playing with was real bad," Bell said. "I couldn't see anything. But I'm getting one on Monday fitted to my face, so it should be better." Team Illinois Iowa Ohio State Wisconsin Michigan State Michigan Minnesota Penn State Indiana Northwestern Purdue Bl Ten Overall 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 8 6 5 5 6 5 5 2 2 2 Brian Schick can be reached at bschick@umich.edu. THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS: MICHIGAN 71, South Florida 62 KENTUCKY 73, Indiana 58 Illinois 83, OREGON 66 PITTSBURGH 84, Penn State 71 MICHIGAN STATE 78, Stanford 53 MARQUETTE 63, Wisconsin 54 OHIO STATE 78, Portland State 54 MINNESOTA 77, Central Michigan 63 PURDUE 69, Colorado State 68 TUESDAY'S GAMES BOSTON UNIV. AT MICHIGAN 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Chicago St. at Minnesota 7 p.m. Wisc.-Milw. at Wisconsin 8 p.m. DePaul at Northwestern 8 p.m. THURSDAY'S GAME Ohio State at Texas Tech 9 p.m. 0 1 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 5 JASON COOy/ iy Michigan coach Tommy Amaker called on sophomore Ashtyn Bell on Saturday in place of junior Dani Wohl, another Wolverine who has succumbed to injury. SATURDAY'S GAMES Delaware St. at Michigan St. MICHIGAN AT UCLA Seton Hall at Northwestern West. Carolina at Iowa Evansville at Purdue 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 8:05 p.m. TBA AP TOP 25 Week 4 (Dec. 6 - Dec. 12) Team: 1. Illinois 2. Kansas 3. Georgia Tech 4. Syracuse 5. Oklahoma State 6. Wake Forest 7. Connecticut 8. North Carolina 9. Duke 10. Kentucky 11. Pittsburgh 12. North Carolina State 13. Louisville 14. Texas 15. Arizona 16. Washington Record: 9-0 6-0 6-0 8-1 7-0 6-1 4-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 7-0 7-0 5-1 6-1 6-2 7-1 Last game: Beat Oregon, 90-73 Beat Louisiana Lafayette, 96-51 Beat Air Force, 64-42 Beat Binghamton, 86-56 Beat UAB, 86-73 Beat Richmond. 90-73 Lost to Massachusetts, 61-59 Lost to Loyola Chicago, 82-43 Beat Kentucky, 91-78 Beat Beat Indiana, 73-58 Beat Penn State, 84-71 Beat Liberty, 94-60 Beat Florida, 74-70 Beat North Texas, 86-57 Beat Utah, 67-62 Beat Loyola Marymount, 100-93 BULLS Continued from page 11B guys and we continue to execute, then we will be all right," Hunter said. Up 34-32 at halftime, Michigan exchanged buckets with South Florida until just under 14 minutes remained in the sec- ond half, when Leather picked up his fourth foul. With the senior on the bench, the Wolverines went on a 10- 3 run. Leather returned with 8:38 remaining and scored five quick points to cut Michigan's lead to 57-53 - the closest the Bulls would get in the game. "When (Leather) is not in there, it's a weapon offensively that we don't have," South Florida coach Robert McCullum said. "It makes it easier to defend us when he's not in the game." Even with Leather off the court in the waning minutes, the Bulls would not give in, as they ate away at Michigan's narrow lead. But a pair of free throws from Hunter and Harris iced the game for the Wolverines. "We need to do a better job of closing out the game," Amaker said. "(Things like) handling the basketball, running late-game offense - that stuff. We need to manage the clock better and need to play the game situation better. And (with- out) a player like a Daniel Horton - who's been in (difficult) situations a lot - hopefully those things will be easier." Despite leading the Wolverines with 22 points, Harris - who has become the de-facto offensive leader for Michi- gan with Horton, Lester Abram and Graham Brown sidelined - admitted he could have done a better job handling the close game. "Tfhnt a- a te nnint nrd T haa t+ rnntn,-it n;it ;+. SUNDAY'S GAMES Indiana at Missouri 2 p.m. Morehead St. at Ohio State 4 p.m. KEY STAT 5 The number of fouls committed by South Florida's Terrence Leather. The senior fouled out with 2:06 remaining in the game. UP NEXT: BOSTON UNIV. Last season the Terriers (5-2) shocked the Wol- verines 61-60 in Ann Arbor. This year, seniors Rashad Bell and Chaz Carr are each averag- I - ~ ~5~j I