The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 7, 2005 - 3B YESTERDAY'S GAME Minnesota 76 Bolden Broback McCarville Calhoun Schonrock Podominic Roysland Lacey Alsdurf TEAM Totals FG FT REB MIN M-A M-A 0-T A F PTS 20 2-3 0-0 0-1 2 2 4 13 3-5 1-1 1-3 2 1 7 33 9-12 3-6 1-15 2 1 21 33 1-5 0-0 0-3 5 1 3 k32 1-2 2-2 0-1 3 2 5 k27 4-5 5-6 1-4 1 3 14 20 2-5 6-6 1-2 1 3 12 7 2-2 0-0 0-2 0 2 4 15 2-5 0-0 0-0 0 0 6. 1-2 20026-4417-21 5-33 1614 76 WHAT DID YOU SAY? - Michigan sophomore Kelly Helvey on driving against Minnesota senior Janel McCarville. Minnesota YESTERDAY'S SCORE 76 55 Blue and Ill on different paths Michigan Foul FG%: .591 FT%: .810 3-point FG: 7-14, .500 (Roysland 2-2, Alsdurf 2-5, Calhoun 1-1, Podominick 1-1, Schonrock 1-2, Bold- en 0-1, Broback 0-2). Blocks: 2 (McCa- rville 2) Steals: 4 (Bolden 2, McCarville, Podominick). Turnovers: 15 (Calhoun 3, Podominick 3, Bolden 2, Roysland 2, Schonrock 2, Alsdurf, Broback, TEAM 1). Technical fouls: None. MICHIGAN 55 FG FT MIN M-A M-A Pool 35 8-15 0-0 Helvey 37 6-13 4-5 Walker 18 0-4 4-4 Clement 17 0-6 0-0 Cooper 30 1-4 2-2 Flippin 25 3-7 3-3 McPhilamy24 0-4 3-4 Starling 14 2-3 0-0 TEAM Totals 200 20-5612-14 R EB 0-T A F PTS 2-5 0 3 16 0-5 1 1 16 1-1 1 5 0 0-0 1 3 0 1-2 0 0 4 0-2 5 1 11 2-3 0 1 3 0-0 1 3 5 3-5 9-23 917 55 FG%: .357 FT%: .857 3-point FG: 3-15, .200 (Flipping 2-5, Starling 1-2, Helvey 0-1, Walker 0-1, Clement 0-3, Pool 0-3). Blocks: 4 (Pool 3, Helvey). Steals: 6 (Helvey 2, Walker 2, McPhilamy, Star- . ling). Turnovers: 12 (Walker 3, Flippin 2, Helvey 2, Pool 2, Clement, Starling, TEAM 1). Technical fouls: None. troubles Walker By Jack Herman Daily Sports Writer Midway through the second half of Michigan's 76-55 loss to No. 14 Minne- sota, Michigan freshman Ta'Shia Walker received a pass on the baseline, made a perfect drive and found herself wide open for a layup. She missed it. This was typi- cal of the entire day $O 0 for Walker, who $00 struggled to find her game and did not score a point. "(Foul trouble) kind of limited how aggressive she could be - took her out of her game." Minnesota senior Janel McCarville said. "She's a better player than she played tonight." Walker committed two fouls within the first 12 minutes of the game, and Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett sat her on the bench for the rest of the half. The problem persisted in the second half, and she eventually fouled out with three minutes remaining. The foul trouble prevented Walker from settling into the game. She missed all six of her shots, including a wide-open 3-pointer from the top of the key. "I don't want to necessarily say it took me out of my game, because that's mak- ing an excuse, but it didn't help," Walk- er said. "I did not play above the foul trouble, so, therefore, that was my fault. Mentally, I just got to get tougher and go out and play no matter what the circum- stances are." Burnett noted how Walker's difficul- ties appeared to be just another obstacle preventing the Wolverines from finally putting together a complete game. "It just seems like, in every Minnesota..................33 Michigan:....................27 43 - 76 28 - 55 DAVID TUMAN/Daily Freshman Ta'Shia Walker went scoreless in yesterday's 76-55 loss to Minnesota. At: Crisder Arena Attendance: 3,265 BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Ohio State Penn State b Michigan State Minnesota Purdue Illinois Iowa Wisconsin Northwestern Indiana Michigan Bid Ten Overall 9' 9 9 8 6 5 4 3 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 5 6 6 7 9 10 22 14 20 18 13 13 15 9 5 9 5 2 8 3 4 9 8 6 11 18 12 17 game, we have somebody that doesn't get to produce for us at a high level," Burnett said. "For us to play with a Penn State or a Minnesota, we've got to have all players on all cylinders playing extremely well." NoT-So SWEET REVENGE:: The last time the Wolverines faced the Gold- en Gophers, Michigan senior Tabitha Pool saw her 18 game double-digit scoring streak come to end. This time, it looked like she was poised to take control of the game after 10 first-half points, but her level of performance did not continue in the second half. Pool came out of halftime just like she ended the first frame. On the Wolver- ines' second time down the court, Pool drove by Minnesota junior Shannon Bolden on her way to a layup. Two pos- sessions later, Pool drove to the baseline before pulling up for a jumper and buck- eting her fourth point of the half. But the shots stopped dropping, and Pool would not score again until there were just 22 seconds left in the game. Much of Pool's difficulty can be attributed to improved defense by the Golden Gophers in the second half. Bolden - who shut Pool down in the previous matchup - sat out much of the first half due to foul trouble. After Pool's initial scoring spurt to open the second, Bolden clamped down defen- sively and forced Pool to take some poor shots. Burnett said that the extra post player Minnesota ran at Pool when the shot clock was winding down also gave her trouble. "We're just now understanding where to get her the basketball," Burnett said. "She's getting a lot of looks, but getting a lot of attention from the competition. NOTES: Michigan sophomore Kelly Helvey netted 16 points, tying her career-high ... Pool blocked three shots, bringing her career total to 63 and moving her into sole possession of 10th place all-time in Michigan's record book. She is now just one block shy of tying Penny Neer for ninth place ... The Wolverines committed just 12 turnovers, their second-lowest total all season. il and water ... Black and white ... Night and day ... Heaven and Hell ... Fox News and an unbiased report ... a pre-bar Pancheros "El Gordo" and a post-bar Pancheros "El' Gordo" ..., Michigan and Illinois. Polar oppo- sites come inG GENNARO many different FILICE forms. And The SportsMonday when the top- Column ranked Fighting Illini come to town tomorrow for their only scheduled showdown with the Wolverines this sea- son, Crisler Arena will host a contrast of the most glaring degree. Illinois enters the game as college basketball's darling. The Illini boast a perfect record, having rolled off 23 straight wins (including nine in Big Ten play). They lead the conference in everything but practicality of uniform color: points per game, scoring margin, field goal percentage, 3-point field goal percentage, 3-point field goals made, assists, turnover margin, assists/turnover ratio and attendance. Arguably the best group in America, their backcourt was the subject of a five-page feature in last week's Sports Illustrated. And their coach, Bruce Weber, has emerged as a front-runner to be this season's confer- ence and national coach of the year. Michigan enters the game as - at least in recent weeks - college basket- ball's laughing stock. The Wolverines have lost six straight games (including five by double digits). They lead the Big Ten in turnovers. Arguably the thinnest group in the Big Ten, their regular back- court rotation features as many walk-ons as scholarship players (three) and is the subject of constant ridicule around Ann Arbor. And their coach, Tommy Amak- er, has emerged as a front-runner to be next season's conference and national coach on the hottest seat. It wasn't always this way, though. In fact, these teams were quite comparable the last time that Illinois made the trip to Ann Arbor, just two years ago. Entering that March 1, 2003 game, the teams shared identical Big Ten marks of 9-4 (tops in the confer- ence with Wisconsin at the time). Although each side boasted a dynamic senior - Brian Cook for Illinois and LaVell Blanchard for Michigan - the promising, mature-beyond-their-years underclassmen truly defined both teams. Illinois started four underclassmen - sophomore Roger Powell and fresh- men Dee Brown, Deron Williams and James Augustine - and brought sopho- mores Luther Head and Nick Smith off the bench. The Wolverines started the freshmen trio of Daniel Horton, Lester Abram and Graham Brown and played freshmen Sharrod Harrell and Chris Hunter. The tightly played game thrilled all 13,507 in attendance from start to finish, but Dee Brown - who was edged out by Horton for the media and coaches Big Ten Freshman of the Year awards - hit a short jumper that ignited a 7-0 Illinois run in the game's final minute. This 11th-hour rally gave the Illini an 82-79 win and snapped Michigan's 12- game home winning streak. But in hind- sight, the game seems to carry a much bigger significance, as it sent the teams in completely opposite directions. Michigan went on to finish third in the conference and suffered a season- ending (the Wolverines were banned from NCAA tournament play) first- round loss to sixth-seeded Indiana at the Big Ten Tournament. Last season, Michigan struggled throughout confer- ence play. While the Wolverines did get it together and won the NIT, this sec- ondary tournament's only real signifi- cance lies in the belief that it primes the winner for a subsequent breakthrough season - obviously a myth in the eyes of Michigan faithful as the 2004-05 campaign winds down. After its win in Ann Arbor, Illinois finished second in the conference behind Wisconsin but won the Big Ten Tournament and gutted out a win in the NCAA tourney. Last season, Illinois took the Big Ten's regular-season title and made it to the Sweet Sixteen before losing to Duke - an eventual Final Four squad. And this season, the Illini have obviously taken a Yao Ming-sized step forward. So while Orange Krush members eagerly anticipate packing their bags for St. Louis in late March, Maize Ragers consider possible coaches to supplant Tommy (I've heard people mention everyone from Rudy Tomjanovich to Bobby Knight) and mull over which group of five Michigan football players could beat the Wolverines' current start- ing lineup. I'm not foaming at the mouth, calling for a Braylon Edwards-Gabe Watson pick-and-roll. And I'm wasting my time trying to analyze why Michigan has completely diverged from Illinois, because my editor only gives me so much space. I just long for the days when Illinois needed seven unanswered points in the game's waning seconds to steal a win from a competitive Michigan team - days that existed just two years ago. Gennaro Filice would give his left baby toe for Bruce Weber to don his bright orange suit coat tomorrow. He can be reached at gfilice@umich.edu. THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS: Minnesota 76, MICHIGAN 55 PURDUE 50, Penn State 44 MICHIGAN STATE 68, Illinois 59 OHIO STATE 78, Indiana 59 Wisconsin 88, IowA 78 THURSDAY'S GAMES ! Michigan at Ohio State Michigan St. at Minnesota Illinois at Wisconsin Indiana at Penn State Iowa at Northwestern YESTERDAY'S GAMES Michigan State at Wisconsin Indiana at Northwestern Penn State at Illinois Ohio State at Iowa Purdue at Minnesota 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 1:30 p.m 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2:05 p.m. 4 p.m. KEY STAT 75 Minnesota's shooting percent- age on its way to 43 second-half points. Minnesota's pressure defense led to seven second- half turnovers for Michigan. The easy looks helped pad the Gophers field goal percentage. GOPHERS Continued from page 1B well, and a post player that passes the ball so well; it's very hard to get any help from anywhere," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said of the Gophers (8-2 Big Ten, 17-4 overall). "Janel just does a great job of keeping a defender on her back, rooting them right underneath the rim and really getting some very easy looks." But McCarville controlled the game with more than just her offense. Ten minutes into the second half, McCarville sent a no- look bounce pass to forward Jamie Broback along the baseline. Broback sank the layup to give Minnesota an 18-point lead, its largest of the game to that point. McCarville finished with just two assists - two fewer than her season average. But the senior had 15 rebounds, including 14 off the defensive glass - the same number of defensive rebounds as the entire Michigan squad. "It's scary," sophomore Kelly Helvey said of driving into the lane against McCarville. "You kind of just want to pass it out. You never know what she's going to do." In addition to intimidating Michigan's guards, the 6-foot-2 center shut down forward Ta'Shia Walker, the Wolverines' sec- ond-leading scorer. The much larger McCarville forced Walker into early foul trouble and held her scoreless for 18 minutes. Walker came into the game averaging 13.1 points. Michigan appeared to catch a break when Broback got hurt five minutes into the first half. Pool drove to the basket and knocked down Broback, who held her leg and writhed in obvi- ous pain. In her absence, Minnesota center Liz Podominick came off the bench and contributed 14 points. Broback returned to the floor later in the half. "I think a great thing about our team is, when we're facing a little adversity out there on the floor, that we have other people that really stepped up," Minnesota coach Pam Borton said. "That's what happened in the first half, and that carried over into the second half." Michigan (1-10, 5-17) gave up six straight points to start the game before Helvey hit a layup off an inbounds pass from Flip- pin. That ignited a 10-2 run, giving the Wolverines their only lead of the game. Helvey notched half of her 16 points in the first frame to keep the score close early. But after the Gophers built a 26-16 advan- tage with just over five minutes remaining in the half, it was Pool who almost single-handedly brought the Wolverines back into the game. In a 50-second stretch, Pool scored three consecutive baskets to pull Michigan within four. Pool finished the half with 10 points and three rebounds but added just six points and two boards in the second half. Her largely quiet second-half performance reflected Michigan's ten- dency to fade as games progress, a trend that continues to puzzle the Wolverines. "It's a mental thing," Flippin said. "We have one turnover, and we want to stop it right then and not have two or three in a row." Said Helvey: "It's a question we talk about everyday. We can't find out what it is we're not doing. We have to bring to the table what we brought in the first half, and it's kind of hard for some people to do that." RYAN WEINER/Daily Maize Ragers are looking for Michigan to snap its six-game losing streak. But the Illini head to Crisler Arena leading the Big Ten in most statistical categories. Road woes sink inconsistent 'M' cupid # Ojrarn shown: rose a.ctual' . A s.: i: 2.2$ .: ' x ma . t#o te.d x SS5'.i b:EA SGt 3Stei: 10 5 By Daniel Levy Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's tennis team. coasted by Maryland, 6-1, on Saturday in its neutral-site match in Columbia, S.C. The win improved the Wolverines' record to 3-3 and helped salvage a disap- pointing weekend. Having been upset by South Carolina, 4-3, on Friday, the No. 21 Wolverines needed to shake off the loss and get back on the winning track. Despite getting the victory over Mary- land, Michigan's play was far from impressive. Four of its five singles players needed three sets to beat an overmatched Maryland squad. Michigan senior co-captain Michelle DaCosta got off to a slow start and dropped the first set to junior Ramona. But DaCosta came back to win, 1-6, 6-4, 7-5, at No. 1 singles. Sophomore Eliza- beth Exon, senior co-captain Leanne Rutherford and junior Nina Yaftali also were pushed to the limits in their wins at No. 2, 4 and 5 singles, respectively. Soph- omore Kara Delicata took a straight-set singles victory, and, earlier, the Wolver- ines took the team doubles point. then DaCosta stormed past South Car- olina's Christyn Lucas, 6-2, 6-1, to give Michigan a 2-0 lead. But South Carolina fought back and the lead vanished. Exon, Delicata and Rutherford fell at No. 2, 3 and 4 singles respectively, and South Carolina had a 3- 2 lead that left Michigan clinging to life. The match rested on the racket of Yaftali and the outcome of the No. 5 sin- gles match. South Carolina's Fallon Koon took the first set, 6-4. Yaftali fought back to take the second set but found herself in a seemingly insur- mountable hole - down 5-1 in the final set. Reaching for all she had left, Yaftali came back to win the third set in a tie- breaker and even the dual match, 3-3. The match hinged on freshman Allie Shafner at No. 6 singles. Shafner fought hard to force a third set, but she ultimate- ly fell to Maryland's Justine Walsh, 7-5, 3-6, 6-4. "We have a tough nonconference schedule," Delicata said. "We are play- ing a lot of quality teams so we expect the matches to be close. We just have to focus on getting the job done every match." Michigan's tough loss to South Caro- -:,, ,., I., -t~t. .,, >.o.li.r;.. and got pummeled, 7-0. Michigan knows it will have to improve away from home if it is to be competitive in the Big Ten and nationally this year. While technically a neutral-site match and not a road match, Michigan can take its win over Maryland as the first step to better results away from Ann Arbor. "The key (to winning on the road) is to take the double point early," Delicata said. "Then, we need to use that momentum and hang in the tough individual battles." Two bright spots for the Wolverines during the weekend were the play of DaCosta and Exon. DaCosta won her singles and doubles matches against both teams, while Exon recorded her first sin- gles victory in dual match play in 2005. The Wolverines will look to step up their road play as they head to Knoxville to take on the Tennessee Volunteers on Feb. 13. :i i I < < 5 sn t