Thursday February :10, 2005 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily. com uR £iditun aitiG SPORTS I 8A Leading scorers m1Sove to By Jake Rosenwasser Daily Sports Writer This Friday, when Michigan's right wing Mike Brown lines up for a faceoff and looks to his left, he'll probably smile. To his imme- diate left, at center, will be T.J. Hensick, who is tied for eighth in the nation in scoring with 36 points. And if Brown looks a little further to his left, he'll see Jeff Tambellini lined up at left wing. Tambellini is tied for 18th in the nation in scoring with 34 points. After 1-1 and 2-2 ties over the weekend against Michigan State, Michigan coach Red Berenson decided to shuffle his lines. And for the first time since the first four games of the season, Michigan's two most lethal scor- ers - Hensick and Tambellini - will be on the same line. "We're going to take a look at them," Berenson said. "We're going to let them play together a little bit. And if they can get something going, then that's good. If they catch fire, it would be a great thing for our team." One reason that Berenson decided to pair the two is because of Hensick's recent strug- gles. In his last four games, Hensick has just one assist and zero goals. "I was brought into this environment to score big goals in big games," Hensick said. "I did that earlier in the season, but I didn't do it this past weekend against Michigan State. I got eight shots Saturday night and not one of them found the back of the net. So you know I can't fault my effort or the team effort, but, when it comes down to it, I have to bury my chances." Hensick led Michigan in scoring last sea- son and has scored 35 points in his first 23 games this season. In response, many CCHA coaches have started making adjustments to deal with his scoring capability. "The other teams have been trying to match him with their best defensemen or their best defensive forwards," Berenson said. But it will be harder to focus solely on If only Crisler could be like that every night ... i 've heard just about every complaint one could come up with about Crisler Arena: The upper bowl is too dark, the padded seats absorb noise, the highest seats are too high and the cheering gets lost in the rafters, etc., etc. All of these fac- tors are supposed to combine to make Crisler a ter- rible atmosphere - an equation that makes a legitimate home court advan- tage for Michigan almost impossible to achieve. CHRIS BURKE Goin' to Work TONY DING/Daily' Center T.J. Hensick leads Michigan in scoring with 36 points and is tied for eighth in the nation. Hensick if Tambellini, the conference's lead- ing shot-taker, is on the ice as well. "(I put Tambellini with Hensick) to give Hensick a player who has really good offen- sive instincts," Berenson said. "But whether or not they play the whole weekend together remains to be seen." If the pair doesn't produce in Friday's game at Nebraska-Omaha, then Berenson may separate the talented pair again. "If they don't score and the other team puts all their defensive attention on them, then we'll break them up," Berenson said. "Instead, we'll have four lines that can score." In the first four games of the season, the two were paired with mixed results. Tam- bellini tallied a goal and five assists, and Hensick had a goal and four assists in that span. But Berenson has changed his lines frequently, and the two have been separated since. The "X factor" on the line may be Brown. The sophomore will return to play this Fri- day after missing four games while getting over a bout with mononucleosis. Brown is not a big scorer, but Berenson recognizes his value. "Brown gives the line some speed, some power and some toughness," Berenson said. "He's had a history of playing well with Hen- sick even though they may not have the puck between them. It seems like Hensick gets to see the puck more when Brown is playing with him." Hensick is looking forward to getting as many touches as possible in this weekend's series. "If Tambellini and I come to play, then we should be fine," Hensick said. "We should carry the offense. We should be able to put the puck in the net." You want to know something? It's a lie. The downfalls of Crisler's construc- tion aside, when people actually show up and make their voices heard, Michigan basketball has as much of a home court advantage as any team in the country. Yes, you read that right ... but here it is again, just to be sure: When people actually show up and make their voices heard, Michigan basketball has as much of a home court advantage as any team in the country. And on Tuesday night, with No. 1 Illi- nois in town, you saw that effect. With the Wolverines mired in a six- game losing streak and Illinois demor- alizing teams every game, there were all the makings of a national television embarrassment for Michigan. That potential disaster was even more glar- ing in light of three straight blowout losses for the Wolverines where they had played with as much heart as the Tin Man before his trip down the Yellow Brick Road. But a sellout crowd showed up at Crisler on Tuesday and was exuberant from the get-go - and suddenly Michi- gan was hanging with the nation's best team. If you watched any of the contest on ESPN, you didn't see an arena inca- pable of generating an advantage for the Maize and Blue. You saw Crisler nearly packed with excited basketball fans. You saw the Maize Rage (as usual) making its presence felt all game long. And you heard ESPN commentators Brent Mus- burger and Steve Lavin having to yell over the decibel level in the building. "You can't beat this atmosphere!" Mus- burger said during one timeout. Ask anyone who was there on Tues- day night - it was absolutely electric in Crisler. It's the same situation that led Michigan through three NIT wins last year and to a victory over Michigan State two years ago. And when you leave Crisler after one of those games, when the Maize Rage is packed and the nonstudents in the crowd get off their hands and clap as well, there are just two thoughts lingering in your mind: That was awesome ... and ... Why can't it be like that every game? Therein lies the problem. It's really a problem that encompasses Michigan Sta- dium as well. Every once in a while, the Michigan crowd is so loud and so enthused that it's a major factor in the game. But most times, the exact opposite is true. Too often, those in attendance simply act as if they've paid to see a play - they cheer at the end if Michigan wins, and maybe at the start, but for the rest of the time they just sit back and enjoy the show. Which is what makes a situation like Tuesday night's as frustrating as it is thrilling. Sure, it's nice to generate that home court advantage when an Illinois or Michigan State come to town. But it would also be nice to maintain that advantage throughout the season. Thankfully, the Maize Rage has ensured that - even for an early Decem- ber nonconference tune-up against Podunk State - there will be some mea- sure of excitement within Crisler's walls. It helps to offset the thousands of empty seats, if only slightly. Michigan's opponent next Saturday, Michigan State, has seen the benefits of a rambunctious crowd, becoming almost unbeatable in East Lansing. Illinois has done the same in Cham- paign. Wisconsin, Duke, North Carolina and Kansas have also seen the benefits of playing in front of packed houses every night. See BURKE, page 9A I, I' I. I. sex ii Full-speed practices key to success for Burnett's teams T T l T T T T T T'ti !1 T l^T1 T T INIERNATIONAL PROGRAMS By Stephanie Wright Daily Sports Editor AUSTRALIA Sydney CHINA Beijing ENGLAND London FRANCE Grenoble Paris IRELAND Dublin ITALY Padova PERU Ayacucho & Lima SPAIN Madrid With her team in the middle of the most difficult stretch of an exhausting schedule, Michigan coach Cheryl Bur- nett only wishes she could work her players a little bit harder. Sort of. T:;. According to Burnett, "'"' the one aspect of her N'. 2 C program that players say" separates it from others they have played in - Va'ue C whether it be high school or the WNBA - is prac- tice. As much as possible, Burnett likes to create a game-like environment. She'll put time on the clock and points on the scoreboard - anything to push her players just a little bit farther. The only problem at Michigan is the schedule. With games on most Thursdays and Sundays, Burnett said she has just one day each week - Tuesday - in which she can run the style of practice that she prefers. "If we're traveling on Thursday, we're coming in and getting home at two in the morning," Burnett said. "What are we supposed to do on a Fri- day that's of high intensity? It's really difficult." In the Missouri Valley Conference, where Burnett coached at Southwest Missouri State for 19 years, teams play on GU ' Thursday and Saturday. anat It's a difference of just one o State day, but that small change has been a big adjustment for Burnett. y Are'nS "We would play some- times on Saturday at 2 p.m.," Burnett said. "Our kids would be done and have all of Saturday night and all of Sunday as a day off." Burnett laments the fact that her players never get a day away from both school and basketball. The team doesn't practice on Mondays, but the players have classes. On the weekend, the team often has to travel and compete. "They never get one day that they can just go to the dentist or do anything else," Burnett said. "It's very grueling." Michigan's lack of depth compli- cates the situation further. Burnett plays just eight players on a regular basis, two fewer than what she believes to be an ideal line-up. She likes to have one player to substitute for each of the starters. So keeping players fresh, both in and out of games, has become even more important than usual. Burnett may attribute Michigan's four-game losing streak to its tough schedule, but her players have a dif- ferent idea. The Wolverines (1-10 Big Ten, 5-17 overall) think their struggles have been more mental than physical. After Sunday's loss to No. 12 Minne- sota, guards Kelly Helvey and Becky Flippin seemed genuinely confused as a to why the team has fallen apart late in games. All they knew for sure was that the team didn't give the same effort at the end of the game that it gave at the beginning. Freshman Janelle Cooper echoed their thoughts at practice this week. "Sometimes we do back off, and that's what we're trying to work on," Cooper said. "We have to come in and say we're going to play hard for the whole game - and that's all we're going to do." While the players believe their effort has faltered at times, Burnett sees a different reason for their late-game breakdowns. And in a way, it all comes back to practice. In both the game-like atmosphere of Tesday practices and the tough moments of real games, Bur- nett said her players begin to look at the scoreboard and then panic when they see that they're losing.a It's the one area Burnett wishes she could work on most. "(When we get down), our team is speeding up and then it's changing the way we play, which it shouldn't," Bur- nett said. "I'm trying to instill in the team that the focus is always on the possession. It's through creating those great possessions that the end result gets on the scoreboard." This is B.U. This could be you. STUDY ABROAD SUMMER 2005 INTERNSH IPS LANGUAGE LIBERAL ARTS BOSTON k { 2 Nm mmum m~ m Ewam us ahwrnE - -~ ~ -