Thursday January 27, 2005 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com SPORTS 5A 5A Cagers looking to slow Spartan tno Time for M'to show it 's prepared to fight By Brian Schick Daily Sports Editor For all the controversy surrounding the Michigan basketball team this week, there is still a game to be played - against its biggest rival, no less. The Wolverines are prob- ably happy to be returning to the hardcourt after a week in. which junior guard Daniel Horton was arraigned for a domestic violence charge. Coach Tommy Amaker's suspension of Horton for at vBto least tonight's game against the Spartans at the Bres- lin Center will not be easy to overcome for a struggling Michigan team that has lost two straight. "We are recognizing that we have been a team that has been in flux, and this * is another issue that is on the forefront that is going to require another one of our players to be out," Amaker said. "We are always hoping to have a full lineup and a full team, and we haven't been able to have that for a variety of reasons, and this is another reason. It doesn't help." The Wolverines (3-2 Big Ten, 12-7 overall) will look to sophomore guard Dion Harris to carry the team, just as he did earlier in the season when Horton was out with a knee injury. Michigan State (4-1, 12-3) features a dynamic trio of guards in Alan Anderson, Shannon Brown and Maurice Ager, with Ager leading all Spartans in scoring with 13.7 points per game. All three are also major threats from behind the arc - the triumvirate shoots a combined 40 per- cent from 3-point range. .. ...p. .. r;''et~ "I think this might be the most difficult game for me, going into it without Horton," Harris said. "They have athletes on the perim- eter, and I know they'll be guarding like they always do." Michigan will have its hands full in the frontcourt as well. Forward Alan Ander- son and center Paul Davis are averaging over 12 points per game and have a con- siderable size advantage over their Mich- igan counterparts. But according to the Associated Press, Davis is questionable because of a sprained ankle he sustained on Saturday in the Spartans' 69-55 win over Minnesota. "He is a tough person to play against," sophomore Courtney Sims said about Davis. "He is athletic, and he has good post moves. He is a marked man, and he has to deal with that every night. I know that must be tough because I am getting a lot more concentration from other teams. So I know that is tough on him also." RYAN WEINER/Daily Courtney Sims and the Wolverines will travel to Michigan State tonight. They haven't won at the Breslin Center since 1996. On top of the imposing matchups, the Wolverines will be heading into the unfriendly confines of the Bres- lin Center, where they haven't won since Jan. 13, 1996. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo told the Associated Press that he was going to ask the Izzone - the Michigan State student section - to refrain from making comments about Horton's suspen- sion. But that may not happen and Michigan will have to be prepared to receive considerable jeering from the green and white faithful. "It is one of the toughest places to play in the Big Ten, by far," sophomore for- ward Brent Petway said. "They have a nice little student section going on over there. They're loud, and they try to get in your head a lot. I like places like that. I play to the crowd, so I think I'm going have a lot of fun in there (tonight)." CHRIS BURKE Goin' to Work W ith coach Tommy Amaker an unwilling Lemony Snicket to Michigan's ridiculous unfortunate series of events, the Wolverines have had to traverse more land mines than should be allowed for one team during the course of a season. They've been forced to use 11 differ- ent starting lineups this season due to injuries. And that was before starting point guard and team leader Daniel Horton found himself on the wrong side of the law this week. So tonight, Michigan heads into Michigan State standing on the brink. One more nudge in the wrong direction and the Wolverines could go plummeting off the cliff- give up the NCAA Tournament dreams, lose several games on the way out, maybe head back to the NIT and chalk up the season as a disappointment. But nothing that this current roster has done in the past would suggest that they're about to throw in the towel. In 2002-03, the Wolverines were nailed with sanctions and started the season 0-6. They then finished by winning 17 of their last 24 and nearly won the Big Ten title. Last season, Michigan was snubbed by the NCAA Tournament after an 18-11 regular season - and responded by winning the NIT championship. Now, the challenges are mounting again. It looks like there's too much to overcome - like the Wolverines would be best surrendering to those obstacles. So which Michigan team will show up tonight and the rest of the season? Nobody knows. But we're about to find out. There is some part of you - whether you think Amaker is a good Big Ten coach or not - that has to feel sorry for the guy. He was brought in here after former coach- es Steve Fisher and Brian Ellerbe took the program, broke out the gasoline and burned it to ashes. Amaker arrived four years ago with about as little talent and as little hope as the Michi- gan basketball program has ever seen. On top of that, he started his second season with a postseason ban and the erasure of some of the program's greatest memories from the history books. So Amaker was faced with the gargantuan task of restoring the team to the point where it could compete for titles in the Big Ten and returning the program to respectability around the country. He's done both. There are those who will argue that now- graduated Bernard Robinson Jr. should have faced stiffer penalties after assaulting a female in 2003. And there are those that are already arguing to never let Horton set foot on the Crisler Arena court again. Here's something you can't argue with: Amaker has earned respect - from his team, in the University community and across col- lege basketball. How he's initially dealt with this Horton situation is indicative of why that's the case. With his Wolverines firmly on the NCAA Tournament bubble and heading into their biggest game of the year to date in East Lan- sing, Amaker didn't even bother to consider Horton's lingering knee injuries - instead sitting the junior down until his off-the-court issue is resolved. Amaker was asked to be the face of Michigan's revival as a top-notch basketball program and - at least off the court - he has never wavered and rarely disappointed. On the court, there is still ground for Michigan to cover. Since the Wolverines hit the skids during Ellerbe's reign, their yearly matchups with Michigan State have been the team's measuring stick. The gap between the two programs closed significantly two years ago when Michigan stunned Michigan State in Ann Arbor. It stayed tight last year when the Wolverines had the Spartans on the ropes again before watching a 12-point lead slip away. Tonight, minus Horton and injured Lester Abram and possibly banged-up Chris Hunter, Michigan could be in for a beating. It might look like Michigan State has re-established an insurmountable gap. Don't buy it. If and when this team ever gets healthy and puts its whole lineup on the floor (like, say, next season), my guess is that Michigan will be pretty darn good. And the biggest reason for that is that this current group of players - save for the Horton incident - has been exactly what Amaker wanted when he recruited them: talented basketball players, solid students and See BURKE, page 8A * ICE HOCKEY lCers aim to thaw Wildcats' stout defense By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer Something's gotta give. When the Michigan ice hockey team 'faces off against Northern Michigan this week- end at Yost Ice Arena, the CCHA's best offense will be up against its best defense. Michigan (16-2-0 CCHA, 19-6-1 overall) leads the CCHA in scoring - aver- .' aging 4.3 goals per game. At.7 times, it has looked like the Yost Wolverines can score at will. Sophomore T.J. Hensick has hovered near the top of the CCHA lead- ing scorers' list all season long and is a realistic candidate for the Hobey Baker Award, given to college hockey's best player. Hensick is second in the confer- 'm1 i :3 ence in scoring with 35 points and leads the league with 16 goals. And he's not the only one putting up points. Michigan has 13 players this season who have double- digit points, including five with 20 or more. The team has scored fewer than four goals at Yost just once all season. "You never know how many we're ever Michigan at going to get," senior chigan captain Eric Nystrom 0 p~m. said. "And that's what ke Arena our team is capable of doing. That's one of the strengths of our team, and that's why we do it. Momentum is so huge in college hockey that once you get the ball rolling, sometimes it snowballs." Last week in Columbus, the Wolver- ines scored five goals in a huge second period that led Michigan over the Buck- eyes. In fact, Michigan has scored three or more goals in a single period 13 times this season. On the other end of the spec- trum, the Wildcats score just 2.6 goals per game. But they don't have to score any more than that; they allow just 2.2 goals per game, and their style of play has the Wildcats (10-5-3, 12-7-5) third in the conference. It starts with their goalie, senior Tuomas Tarkki. Among starting goalies, Tarkki leads the CCHA in both goals against average (1.79) and save per- centage (.940). "Their good goaltending has been their finishing kick," Hensick said. "He's playing real well. He's the backbone of that team. "That puts a lot of pressure on our team to pick it up, knowing that they only need one or two goals to get the win. It's something that we've been focusing on all week." As if it wasn't going to be enough of a challenge for the Wolverines to score this weekend on the Wildcats' stingy defense, yesterday they were dealt the news that three of their forwards will not play in the series. Center David Moss - who is fourth on the team in scoring with 24 points - suffered a groin injury earlier this week and will not play. Sophomore forwards Mike Brown and David Rohlfs both contracted mononucleosis and will also have to watch from the stands. Coach Red Berenson said that they are in different stages of the illness and would be week-to-week. - With those three out, seniors Mike Woodford, Charlie Henderson and Reilly Olson will dress in their places. Olson See ICERS, page 8A