GENNARO FILICE The tide has changed the past two years for Illinois and Michigan. PAGE 3B The SportsMonday Column RIvAL TIFs Michigan senior captain Ryan Bertin and Illinois's Alex Tirapelle continued their rivalry yesterday. PAGE 6B SPORTS OND February 7, 2005 lB E ipr tttt ti1 Fit to be tied MICHIGAN 2, MICHIGA \N STATE 2 MICHIGAN 1, MICHIGAN STATE 1 For 55 minutes each night, Montoya can't be beat ... ETROIT - With 10 minutes left in Saturday's game and Michigan clinging to a one-goal lead, I took a look around Joe Louis Arena at those fans wearing the Maize and Blue. Like you might expect after Friday's collapse, the confidence level appeared pretty low.r Looking around the hallway known as the arena's press box, the atmosphere buzzed with anticipation. The night before, most of the writers IAN HERBERT had put away their notebooks, started packing their computers and, in some Caught up in the Game cases, had their stories mostly written before the Spartans stole a point from Michigan in the last two minutes. On Saturday, every one was on the edge of their seats. So why is everyone watching the CCHA's first-place team assuming that they're not going to hold the lead? Six times this season, the Wolverines have entered the third period with a shutout. Only twice have they kept it. A team with as many great players as Michigan shouldn't have this problem. Michigan State didn't have as many great players as Michi- gan, but it didn't need them. The Spartans' goalie Dominic Vicari was more than just a great player this weekend -he was a superstar. With six seconds left in Saturday's game, freshman Chad Kolarik shot a one-timer at the Spartans' net that Vicari managed to get a blocker on. You could call it lucky. The night before, Montoya gave up the game-tying goal with 1.2 seconds left. On a centering pass from Jim Slater, the puck hit off a skate and fell on Drew Miller's stick. Miller buried the shot before Montoya had a chance to move. You could call it unlucky. On Saturday, with 3:20 left, Montoya made two good saves in traffic but left the second rebound open for Jim McK- enzie to backhand into the net. You could call it unlucky. Then, as time ran out in overtime, Tambellini fired a shot at Vicari in traffic. Vicari made the save, controlled the rebound and stifled See HERBERT, page 4B ... but valuable points elude Icers late in third period By Ryan A. Sosin Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - With a shutout still looming for Michigan goalie Al Mon- toya in a 1-0 game - and only four minutes remaining on the clock - it seemed only a matter of time before Michigan State put a goal in the net. After all, four of the six times that the Wolverines have carried a shutout into the third stanza this season, their oppo- nents have found a way to at least chip into their lead. During Friday's 2-2 tie, and 1-1 final on Saturday, Michigan didn't have the comfort of a big margin and the Wolverines ended up blowing leads on back-to-back nights. Michigan coach Red Berenson said that it will all come together soon enough and those games will eventu- ally fall into the win column. In the meantime, the second-place Ohio State Buckeyes have pulled to within one point of the Wolverines in the CCHA standings. "At the end of the year, you can learn from experiences like this, or this can be the death of you," senior captain Eric Nystrom said. "You can be out of the playoffs by not being able to capitalize on a team that's down. And that's some- thing that we'll have to see." Michigan State appeared to have scored first on Saturday when Bryan Lerg chopped at a puck that floated over Montoya and in the net mid- way through the first period. But the goal was quickly waved off because Spartan Tommy Goebel batted it in with his hand. Nystrom got the Wolverines on the board first. Early in the second period, freshman Kevin Porter laid a pass over Jared Nightingale's stick to Nystrom who simply tapped the puck past the right pad of a sliding Spartan goalie Dominic Vicari. The goal wastihe 50th of Nystrom's career. In the third, as if the script had already been written, the Spartans knotted the game up at one. With just over three minutes remaining, Montoya See SPARTANS, page 4B TONY DING/Daily Befitting the weekend outcomes, Michigan forward Jeff Tambellini and Michigan State defenseman Tyler Howells get tied up as they chase the puck Friday night at Yost Ice Arena. In 4:30 flat, Blue falls to Ohio State By Megan Kolodgy Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - A lot can happen in four and a half minutes. Unfortunately, for the Michigan men's bas- ketball team, nothing did. Michigan (3-6 Big Ten, 12-11 overall) did not make a single basket in the first four minutes of Satur-'1I day's game. Finally, a jumper ; from sophomore Dion Har- ris put the Wolverines on the board. By that point, Ohio State (5-4, 16-7) had jumped out to an 8-2 lead. After that, the Wol- verines were already rendered helpless and col- lapsed into a 72-46 defeat at the hands of the Buckeyes. This marked Michigan's sixth straight loss on a string of significant defeats. The Wolver- ines came out flat and appeared listless and a bit dazed as the sold-out crowd made Value Me Carville pulls down City Arena an even more unpleasant place to be -especially for a team that needs nothing but the numbers to remind it of how badly it is per- forming. "The fact is that we're not very good right now," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "That's probably the understatement of the year." The game was a statistical nightmare for the Wolverines. They committed 29 turnovers - 18 in the first half alone - and notched just four assists. More than half of those who played con- tributed fewer total points than turnovers, and sophomore Brent Petway was the only Michigan player who did not record a turnover. "It's not so much that they were a pressing team," Amaker said. "That's obvious when you watch the game ... For some reason, we're very shaky with the ball right now." After the opening five and a half minutes, Michigan never came within single digits of the Buckeyes. Ohio State's offensive production primarily came from center Terrence Dials's ability to throw his weight around in the paint, which largely came at the expense of Michigan center Courtney Sims's confidence. Dials went 8-for-15 from the field - all close-range shots -and led the Buckeyes with 19 points. He also went up for nine rebounds. Sims - who is about 15 pounds lighter than he was when he began the season - struggled against Dials. This was particularly true in the first half, when Sims managed just four points. Sims found his bearings in the second half. Despite being excluded from the starting lineup and was hampered by the shorter, but bulkier, Dials, he shot 6-for-9 and scored 15 points. He was the only Wolverine to score in double digits. Still, he committed four turnovers and grabbed just four rebounds. "I talked to my mother, and she said, 'Just play. Just have fun.' It didn't look like I was hav- ing fun on the court." Sims said. The Buckeyes also benefited from balanced scoring. Guard Tony Stockman came off the bench for 23 minutes and put up 16 points, while. See BUCKEYES, page 5B TOMASSO GOMEZ/Daily Michigan guard Dion Harris had nine points on 4-for-11shooting on Saturday in the loss to the Buckeyes. Michigan dropped its sixth straight game. Solid final routine helps tumblers eke out win rebounds, M' By Stephanie Wright Daily Sports Editor Two minutes into the first half, Minnesota center Janel McCar- ville snatched the ball from Michigan's Tabitha Pool at midcourt. McCarville quickly advanced the ball on a_ fast break. With Pool trailing her by 15 feet, McCarville elevated to attempt a wide-open Mme 5 layup, but the ball clanked against the front By Katie Niemeyer Daily Sports Writer Going into the final rotation on Friday night tied with No. 3 UCLA, the No. 2 Michigan women's gymnastics team turned to freshman Katie Lieberman to perform her first floor routine ever in the Wolver- ines' lineup. Lieberman - who was supposed to per- form an exhibition floor routine against UCLA - found out a couple of hours before the meet that she would actually be were good enough to give the Wolverines the victory, 196.250-195.250 over UCLA. "I think we were all very, very excited over this win," Ray said. "It was a big win for us, and we even did it with a few mess-ups. So once everything falls into place, it's going to be good." The Wolverines exploded out of the gates on vault - finishing the event with almost a full point lead over the Bruins. They posted three scores of 9.900 or better, combining for their highest team vault score of the season (49.425). Deiley won the event with a 9.950,