Wednesday December 8, 2004 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily. com SPORTS 01 10 . . . ............. . . . ... .. .. .. .. .. ... . . . . ... ...... .. .. ... .. .. . . .. . .. .. ... .. Panther Hunter Cagers ride center to 14-point victory.. Too early for Blue to give up on Sims By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer Welcome to Michigan men's basketball 2004-05 - take two. The Wolverines beat High Point 67-53 last night at Crisler Arena, butthey wereH T forced to do it with a MICHIGAN group of players that fans aren't used to seeing on the floor with great regularity. Michigan (5-3) was without three starters last night. Michigan coach Tommy Amaker learned over the week- end that junior wing Lester Abram would be lost for the season with a shoulder injury and junior forward Gra- ham Brown would be out for four-to-six weeks after hernia surgery. Then on Sunday, guard Daniel Hor- ton injured his knee during practice, in what Amaker described as a collision with another player. The junior is listed as being out indefinitely and received an MRI during the second half of the game. The injury bug forced Amaker to reach deep down his bench, and he was happy with what he found. "We were certainly pleased with the effort that our players gave this evening," Amaker said. "Obviously with different combinations, different lineups and things that you can't really prepare for in a lot of different ways, I thought it was a great team effort." Forward Chris Hunter made his first start of the year for the Wolverines and wasted no time in making the most of his appearance. The forward scored nine of Michigan's first 11 points. He also took a charge, recorded a rebound and hit a 3- pointer in the opening four minutes of the game, which could have been titled "The Chris Hunter Show." Hunter surpassed his career high of 13 points in the first half alone by scoring 15. ffe finished the game with 22 points on 9-for-12 shooting and six rebounds in a career-high 30 minutes. "I think I'm a very confident player," Hunter said. "The guys were looking for me and getting me the ball, so I was just strong with the ball and made quick moves. And tonight, I got shots to fall in." Hunter wasn't the only Wolverine who turned in personal bests. Sopho- more wing John Andrews set a career high in points (10) and minutes (29), while junior guard Dani Wohl set a career high in minutes (30) and tied a career mark in points (four). Andrews has started three games in Abram's absence and has suddenly become a scoring option instead of a role player. "I'm still kind of shocked, playing from the bench and going to a starter," Andrews said. "You just fill the holes. You do what you need to do to get the job done." The Wolverines did have two regular starters left in sophomores Dion Harris and Courtney Sims, but one of them was still on the bench at tipoff. Amaker decided to put in Hunter instead of Sims, forcing the center to come off the bench for the first time in his Michigan career. While Sims started slow - he didn't score at all in the first half - he fin- ished the game with 12 points on 5-of-6 shooting. But Harris had a less-than-impres- sive game, considering he has seem- ingly become Michigan's No. 1 scoring option overnight. The guard shot just 3- for-13 from the floor and finished with eight points. When Harris shared the backcourt with Abram and Horton, he was usu- ally scoring option No. 3. Fortunately for Harris, the team didn't need a lights- out shooting performance from him this time around. "Who knows what will happen in other games?" Harris said. "In particular DAVID TUMAN/Daily Forward Chris Hunter dunks for two of his game-high 22 points last night. tonight, I didn't have to score that much. good the Wolverines are against a Big Other guys stepped up and it was a great South opponent like High Point (2-6), the game for us." stretch ahead should give Amaker a bet- If the crew of walking wounded could ter feel whether the players he has left are have picked any time in Michigan's sched- enough to keep Michigan on the road to ule to miss games, this was it. After four the NCAA Tournament. games against NCAA Tournament-wor- "I think (last night) proves that we thy teams - three of which were on the have players that, in time of need, we can road - the Wolverines now play four turn to," Amaker said. "I think when you of their next five games at home against talk to our players in the locker room, unranked opponents. they'll be excited to know we can count Although it's hard to gauge just how on them." BRIAN SCHICK Schick Happens really didn't think I'd be writing this column. A week ago, I won- dered who'd want to read about why Michigan was able to crush High Point. But a lot has changed in the last week with Daniel Horton out indefinitely, Lester Abram out for the season and Graham Brown gone for more than a month. It's a brave new world for the Michigan basket- ball team. It appeared the Michigan frontcourt would be responsible for carrying most of the offense until Horton comes back this season. Reserves would be called upon to fill the void, and the remaining starters - Dion Harris and Court- ney Sims- would have a bigger role to fill. Or so I thought. Imagine my sur- prise to see Sims out of the starting lineup against High Point for the first time in his Michigan career. It seemed obvious that Harris would have to carry the load for the guards and Sims would have to carry the frontcourt. But coach Tommy Amaker decided to put Chris Hunter in Sims's spot. When asked about the decision after the game, he didn't seem to offer much insight. "I didn't think that Courtney was playing as well," Amaker said curtly. Before the game started, I really questioned the decision to start Hunter. While Hunter has made the most of his limited minutes so far this season, Sims had been Mr. Consistency so far. I figured that Michigan might get dominated in the post, as Hunter doesn't have the bulk that Sims does (Sims has 20 pounds on Hunter). He was always good for about 10 points, eight boards and a couple blocks. I was pleasantly surprised by Hunter's play, as he scored a career- high 22 points. But Sims made a statement to Amaker and the coaching staff that he wasn't going to give up the spot that easily. He scored all of his 12 points in the second half. Sims's point total was also Michigan's second-highest point total behind Hunter, despite the fact that Sims played just 17 minutes. When asked about Sims again later in the press confer- ence, Amaker offered praise for the sophomore's play, and he singled out Sims in his postgame speech in the locker room. "I thought he responded (well)," Amaker said. "He didn't hang his head. He battled and he did his job. It was a very solid game (for him)." The last few games have been somewhat of a mystery for Sims, who had seen a reduction of playing time since the beginning of the sea- son. Sims began the season averag- ing about 30 minutes per game and saw that number cut down to the mid-20s during the Preseason NIT. The last two games saw that number fall down into the teens. I'm not trying to create any con- spiracy theories, but it would seem that while Sims has maintained consistent stats throughout the season, he has done it with decreas- ing playing time. Sims indicated that the coaches didn't tell him the reason why he didn't start, but he believed it had something to do with rebounding or defense. "Anyone who competes wants to start," Sims said. "Of course I want to start. But I don't think it really matters." With Horton out for an indefinite amount of time (he was scheduled to have an MRI on his knee last night) and Abram gone for the sea- son, Michigan's frontcourt will be called upon for scoring and espe- cially offensive rebounding. The Wolverines have been fairly weak rebounding this season, pulling just 88 off the offensive glass in seven games heading into last night's contest. Perhaps the most troubling trend has been a negative rebound- ing margin, something that hurt in Michigan's loss to Arizona. Sims said that he didn't think his play showed he deserved the spot back - Hunter made a pretty strong case as well - but I think the coaches may have been too harsh on him. There has been some discussion that Sims isn't playing up to his potential and his declin- ing minutes are supposed to reflect this. But I think he's been perform- ing well in the role that was created for him: be a dominant rebounder and chip in some points from time to time. Sims is leading the team in offensive and total rebounds, while still contributing around 10 points per game - sounds like he's been playing pretty well so far. With injuries becoming a major factor in playing time this season, Michigan shouldn't be so quick to deny play- ing time to players who have been solid contributors thus far. Brian Schick can be reached at bschick@umich.edu. Backups step up for ailing Wolverines By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Writer With captains Lester Abram and Graham Brown and guard Daniel Horton out of the game because of injuries, several players usually relegated to the bench had to play significant minutes last night against High Point, and all of them made the most of that opportunity. "I certainly was pleased - with players being out - how these kids responded with their oppor- tunities," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "You never know when that opportunity is going to come. Are you going to be prepared for it? I thought this question was answered here tonight." Freshman Ron Coleman, junior Chris Hunter and sophomore Brent Petway all started their first game of the season against the Panthers. "You play the hand you've been dealt," Amaker said. "That's what we're doing, and we have confi- dence in the players that we have in our program." Sophomore John Andrews - who started in place of Abram - scored a career-high 10 points on 3-for-7 shooting. Andrews walked on to the team as a freshman last year, yet he has become one of the Wolverines' most consistent players. Over the past three games - all starts - he's shot 7-for-14 from the floor and has committed just two turnovers. "With (Andrews's) performance, he's tough and he's smart and he played that way," Amaker said. "We were very pleased with the effort that our players gave us tonight." Seldom-used senior walk-on Dani Wohl played in place of the injured Horton. Wohl contributed mostly on the defensive end, playing solid on-the- ball defense for most of the night. On his very first defensive assignment, he forced his man into a five-second call. The senior played 30 minutes - a career high. "I just tried to do whatever I could to give the team a lift," Wohl said. "I'm just trying to get us to that level that (Horton's) playing at. And obviously I can't play as well as he can, but I just try and do whatever I can to help the team." Playing alongside Wohl at shooting guard, Cole- man looked much more comfortable with his jump shot last night than he has all season. The fresh- man had to learn Amaker's system at an accelerat- ed pace but has been improving lately. He scored a career-high 11 points in Michigan's 61-60 win over Notre Dame on Saturday and added five points in 19 minutes yesterday. "I think Ron is really coming along," J.C. Mathis said. "It took him a little time to get used to our system - coach Amaker moved along pretty fast - so it took him a little time, but now he's play- ing well." Amaker did not start sophomore Courtney Sims, saying the forward has not performed as well as he would have liked lately. This decision left sopho- more guard Dion Harris as the only Wolverine to start all eight games for Michigan this season. In addition to Wohl, three other Wolverines logged season highs in minutes: forwards Hunter (30) and Mathis (8), and wing John Andrews (29). The Wolverines' upcoming player rotation appears to be uncertain. "We are going to have a big challenge on our hands because we don't know our personnel right now," Amaker said. DAVID TUMAN/Daily Junior Dani Wohl played 30 minutes in the Michigan victory - a career high. DAVID TUMAN/Daily Sophomore Courtney Sims came off the bench for the first time in his career. 1