GENNARO FILICEj No video games? No Natty Light? Must be Valentine's Day. PAGE 3B The SportsMonday Column GENE POOL The Vanderkaay brothers bring three times the power to the pool for the Michi- gan men's swimming program. PAGE 6B SPORTS DAY February 14, 2005 lB i:ii;i::I: 1 &H !Ill,::! abe atch, 1994, State of Emergency C MICHIGAN 49 Spartans hand 'M' eighth straight loss By Brian Schick Daily Sports Writer For the second straight game, the Mich- igan basketball team tried implementing a slow-down offense in an effort to beat a top-25 team. This time, the strategy wasn't as effective as it was against No. 1 Illinois last Tuesday. No. 13 Michigan State (8-2 Big Ten, 17- 4 overall) was able to gain an early lead on Saturday to keep Michigan (3-8, 12-13) at arm's length for the rest of the game, and the Spartans handed Michigan its eighth straight loss of the season, 64-49. Sophomore Dion Harris scored 22 points for his second straight 20-point game, but none of his teammates were able to score more than seven apiece. As a result of the slow-down offense, Michigan took 11 fewer shots than Michigan State, and the Spartans made the most of their chances, hitting 51 percent from the field. Michigan State used great off-the-ball movement that allowed it to score easy points in the paint, with 16 points com- ing off dunks or layups. This allowed the Spartans to amass an 11-point lead by the second media timeout. "I thought the startofthe gamewasbig for us," Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "I thought, after Michigan played so well against Illinois, the carry-over was going to be big, especially in our rivalry game. I thought the start of the game we got our fast break going - we got some easy bas- kets, which was important." Michigan State's bread and butter this season - clutch 3-point shooting - was noticeably absent from the game, as the Spartans shot just 3-for-14 from behind the arc. But it proved to be unnecessary due to the ease with which they played in the paint. Four Spartans scored in double figures, with guard Alan Anderson leading Michi- gan State with 16. Michigan State was also more aggressive on the boards, outrebound- ing Michigan 28-18, with just four offensive rebounds for the Wolverines. This was an especially crushing blow, as Michigan fea- tures bigger forwards. "I was disappointed that we didn't do a better job on the glass," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. As a result, the Spartans were able to shut down Michigan's frontcourt, hold- ing Graham Brown, Chris Hunter and Courtney Sims to a combined 10 points for the game. In the first half, each had two points while Harris carried the team with 12. "We really didn't get many opportu- nities inside," Amaker said. "They did a nice job of clogging. The ones we did get we didn't complete and didn't finish, and that certainly hurts because you're not going to get a lot of them anyway." Michigan State also made the most of Michigan's 17 turnovers. While the num- ber isn't ridiculously high, the Spartans cashed in with fast-break points and 21 points off turnovers. Michigan State had eight players dishing out 14 assists. "Sometimes we have mental errors, and we need to think more," forward Brent Pet- way said. "We need to start carrying over what we do in practice into the game." w Michigan showed it had a little life toward the end of the game, when it cut into the 17-point deficit, and, with the help of Harris, hit two key shots to bring the score to 54-46. But then Anderson decided to shut the door by scoring six of the Spar- tans' final 10 points to secure the win. Harris's 22-point performance was just two points short of his career high and continues his scoring explosion of late. See SPARTANS, page 5B RYAN WEINER, JASON COOPER/Daily The Wolverines had trouble on both ends of the floor Saturday evening. LEFT: Kelvin Torbert notched seven points against Michigan. RIGHT: Courtney Sims, who led the Big Ten In shot-blocking last season, has a shot knocked down by Michigan State's Drew Naymick. Slow -down offense just won ven as Michigan tied the longest losing streak in school histo- ry - a stretch that included total point outputs the football n team could match -I have to admit that, for a tiny win- dow of time, Mich- ' igan coach Tommy JOSH Amaker made me a HOLMAN believer., I didn't believe Part Icon, Whole Man that Michigan was still in the hunt for an NCAA Tourna- ment berth or that the Wolverines could W." even compete without junior guards Dan- iel Horton and Lester Abram. I didn't believe anything that implausible. I sim- ply believed that Michigan had found an offensive system that worked and would at least keep them competitive. Last Tuesday, the Wolverines played No. 1 Illinois to a 57-51 loss, holding the Fighting Illini to their lowest scoring out- put of the season. Amaker found a way to keep the Wol- verines in the game, by slowing the game down to a turtle's pace. On Saturday, Amaker came out with the same game plan. It seemed like a logical conclusion. Michigan State averages 78.9 points a game and is a far more athletic team than Michigan, just like Illinois was. "If the game is going to be scored in high numbers right now with our team, it's prob- ably not one that we feel we could come out on top," Amaker said. "So we certainly tried to see if we could shorten it." The Wolverines had nothing to lose. Except their eighth straight game. The Spartans threw a wrench into Michigan's new-look offense from the get-go. They scored the game's first six points in frus- tratingly easy fashion - a layup and two dunks. It was a sign of things to come. The Wolverines just couldn't handle Michigan State's transition offense, which made easy bucket after easy bucket. The clinic 't work f only highlighted just how inflexible the slow-down offense can be. Put yourself in Michigan's shoes. For each 35-second -possession, Michigan poured all its effort into two points, not even shooting until the shot clock had less than 10 seconds remaining. Compare that to the 10 seconds the Spartans would use up before they scored some of their points. Imagine that you're the kid who studies two weeks in advance for a midterm, only to see the kid that doesn't go to class get just as good a grade as you. Deflating and frustrating. It worked like that all day for the Wol- verines. Take this as an example. Each time r Cagers sophomore Dion Harris hit one of his three 3-pointers in the first half, the Spar- tans came back and scored immediately afterwards - seven, eight and 13 seconds after Harris's threes to be exact. It was apparent early that the slow- down wasn't going to get the job done if the Wolverines couldn't stop the counter- punch. "You always just got to do the best thing to win," junior tri-captain Graham Brown said. "We are always out there fighting, trying to improve, trying to find things that work. And we are getting there. Some games are a little better than others." See HOLMAN, page 5B to Icers remain in first with sweep 0 WRESTLING Frosh Tannenbaum lights up the mats By Jake Rosenwasser Daily Sports Writer OMAHA - Not everyone on the Michigan bench knew, but T.J. Hensick did. In fact, his hearing might be as keen as his knack for helping Michigan score late-game goals. With 12 minutes remaining and I Michigan tied 3-3 with Nebraska- Omaha on Sat- urday, the PA announcer at the Qwest Center read off some Rol; the CCHA. "T.J. made a great play in the corner," Moss said. "The goalie robbed me on the first save, but I just took a couple of whacks at the rebound, and it found its way home." Hensick did more than just feed Moss for the game-winning goal. He almost single-handedly brought the Wolverines (19-3-2 CCHA, 22-7-3 overall) back from a 3-1 deficit in the second period. With five minutes gone in the second period, Michigan goalie Al Montoya caught Nebraska-Omaha (11-10-3, 15-12-3) on a line change. He flipped the puck all the way to the Mavericks' blue line, where freshman Chad Kolarik was waiting. Kolarik centered the puck to Hensick while There comes a point during the wrestling season when unassuming victories stop going unnoticed, and the public becomes aware of a wres- tler's accomplishments. For redshirt freshman Eric Tan- nenbaum, yesterday appears to have been his coming out party. With his 3-2 minor decision over No. 5 Iowa wrestler Ty Eustice yes- terday, Tannenbaum propelled the No. 5 Michigan wrestling team to an impressive 21-11 victory over the No. 10 Iowa Hawkeyes (4-3 Big Ten, 9-5 overall). By Mark Glannotto Daily Sports Writer up a stalling warning in the middle of the first period. "I just went out there and wrestled my match," Tannenbaum said. "Last year, (Ryan Churella) wrestled (Eus- tice), so I knew he liked to wrestle at a slow pace. But I didn't let that dictate how I wrestled. I wanted to be the aggressor." With this victory, Tannenbaum illustrated for the Big Ten and the rest of the country that he will be a force to be reckoned with come NCAA tournament time. "I just really liked how he wres- tled," Michigan coach Joe McFarland said. "He just came out on the mat and took it to (Eustice). There were a CCHA scores. Hensick heard the one that mattered: Ohio State 3, Bowling Green 2. The Buckeyes had taken over the lead in the CCHA by one i i 'i