8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 24, 2005 Blue falls apart at start of second half By Matt Singer Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - The Michigan wom- en's basketball team hangs close to a pow- erful Big Ten team early, hoping to earn Mj ' j" 4 a shocking upset vic- tory. Then, inevitably, it happens. The opposition explodes for a huge run, the Wolverines collapse and the final score tilts heavily in favor of their opponents. This same pattern has plagued Michigan all season long. And last night's game against No. 6 Michigan State represented the ugliest example yet. The Wolverines (1-14 Big Ten, 5-21 overall) at least competed with the Spartans in the first half, going into the break trailing 34-21. But coming out of halftime, Michigan State (14-2, 25-3) put the pedal to the metal. It scored the first 21 points of the.second half, burying Michigan with intense pressure defense, dominant inside play and soft shooting from the perimeter. Even after Michigan sophomore Kelly Helvey finally ended the run seven minutes into the half, the Spartans kept rolling. When it was all said and done, Michigan State came away with a domi- nating 77-34 victory and celebrated its second- ever Big Ten Championship in front of 8,904 fans at the Breslin Center "In the first half, we stayed within shout- ing distance," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. "But the second half was a totally differ- ent story." Michigan State senior Kelli Roehrig was the catalyst behind the Spartans' second-half explo- sion. Eleven seconds into the half, she banked in an eight-footer to get the Spartans rolling, and she didn't stop there, pouring in 10 points during Michigan State's early second-half run. Roehrig finished with a game-high 21 points on 9-of-14 shooting from the field. The 6-foot- 4 center's physical play in the paint enabled her to pull down a game-high 10 rebounds, six of which came on the offensive end. The rest of the Spartans followed suit, and they finished with a 50-31 rebounding edge. "Big girls don't intimidate our team," Michigan freshman Ta'Shia Walker said. "I think we just had to go out there and just be mentally tougher." Michigan State matched its intensity on the glass with similar effort on the defensive end. The Spartans came at the Wolverines with a variety of zones and presses, all of which gave Michigan fits. "They upped their pressure; they changed their presses," Burnett said. "We could never get into a flow offensively." Helvey and senior co-captain Tabitha Pool - Michigan's two best penetrators - had difficulty driving the lane to set up open scoring looks. Pool, especially, was thrown off by Michigan State's swarming defenders. Coming into the game averaging over 17 points, Pool was held to just seven points on 2-for-14 shooting. "Tabitha probably hasn't gotten more than three dribbles for the last 10 ball games because she has everybody running at her," Burnett said. "But it's our job as a coaching staff, and GLEN GETTY/Daily Freshman Janelle Cooper and the Wolverines allowed a 22-0 run to start the second half. certainly as a team, to figure out what to do when your leading scorers are taken out of the offensive equation." The Wolverines' overall offensive output was downright ugly, and they were frequently forced to hoist contested long-range jumpers with the shot clock winding down. Michigan shot a season-low 26.3 percent from the field, including an abysmal 3-for-21 shooting per- formance from beyond the arc. No Wolverine scored in double figures. "We're not the only ones (the Spartans) have stifled," Burnett said. "It's harder in late conference play, when you've already played somebody. We simply have a lot of weaknesses offensively." The Spartans scored the game's first six points and set the defensive tone right from the get-go, forcing Michigan to miss its first six shots. But the Wolverines would not let the game get out of hand early on. Three minutes into the game, freshman co-captain Krista Clement drilled a jumper from just inside the three-point line, putting Michigan on the board for the first time. The bucket set the trend for the first half. Each time the Spartans went on a mini-run, the Wolverines would respond with a timely basket to keep the game competitive. But the dam broke the moment the second-half whistle blew. E1HOCKEY Forward duo, Montoya play p osition swap By Ryan Sosin Daily Sports Writer Over the last three weekends, one Wolverine's name has been unusually prevalent on the score sheet. Thanks to an assist in each series, junior goalie Al Montoya was seventh on the team in help- ers during that span. But as Montoya begins to establish himself as an offensive threat, senior forwards Eric Nystrom and Milan Gajic are both trying to make their case between the pipes. As has been a tradition after practice a couple times a week, a forward dons a goalie glove and blocker and tries to stop some shots. Nystrom is no stranger to the goal, having spent some time there during summer workouts. But the senior captain wasn't really sure if his team would be better suited with him in goal and Montoya bearing down on opposing team's net. "I'm a way better goalie than he is (at forward); he can't even skate," Nystrom said jokingly. "(Montoya's) pretty good out there at forward, but I don't know - I'm a pretty good goalie." According to Gajic, his own style closely resembles a butterfly while Nystrom is more of a stand-up goalie. Both, in fact, look the same between the net. They hunch over and try to protect their cup from being cracked by a shot. "(Nystrom) can't really do the butterfly," Montoya said. Despite his seemingly unorthodox style, Gajic has the self-con- fidence and quick glove needed to at least be the team's fourth- string goalie. "I think I can do a lot of better things in the net than (Montoya) can," Gajic joked. "(I have better) overall goaltending prowess." As the competition begins to boil, Nystrom pointed to a piece of equipment he wears that makes him more of a goalie than Gajic. "(Gajic) doesn't wear the goalie skates, which is kind of cheap," Nystrom said. "The goalie skates make it so much harder." But Gajic said he would wear the skates if called upon to prove he was the best choice at goal. Freshman Kevin Porter, who is usually out on the ice at the end of practice when the seniors mind the crease, has scored plenty of goals on both his teammates. Without much hesitation, Porter pegged Gajic as the stronger of the two candidates between the pipes. "(Nystrom's) not as quick," Porter said. "Gajic has got quick hands." For his part, Montoya said the offensive thunder hasn't come because of a drastic change in his game. After going from two career assists to five in a manner of 15 days - Nystrom has three assists and Gajic has just one over the same period - the Wolver- ine junior merely tips his cap to the guys in front of him. "I've been doing the same thing as long as I can play the puck," Montoya said. "Sometimes you get (assists), sometimes you don't." Even though the clock has almost run out on their goalie careers before it has even truly started, the imaginary competition for fourth-string goalie has helped Nystrom and Gajic gain an appre- ciation for what Montoya does behind them day in and day out. "It's hard," Gajic said. "You don't know when to go down, when to get up. It's hard especially when guys are in front of you. You don't know when they are going to tip it, whether they are going to tip it. ... It's really difficult." Montoya, Noah Ruden, Mike Mayhew, Gajic and Nystrom. Not a bad group to pick from. Walker bounces back from, By Jack Herman Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - For the first time in her collegiate career, Michigan freshman and Lansing native Ta'Shia Walker returned home to play basketball. In the first half, it looked as though the return wasn't going to be too kind, but it turned around a bit after halftime. Walker got into foul trouble and played just four minutes in the first half. She ended the half with just two points and a rebound, $ ° '. Walker got going by the end of the half, and, with 5:05 left in the game, she hit a running, off-balance shot from the top of the key for her seventh and eight points. SIZE DOES MATTER: As is the common theme this season, the Wolverines came into this game at a major size disadvan- tage. Michigan State carries six players over six feet tall, and, as usual, it showed. "Michigan State did a good job," Walker said. "They knew we're a small team, and they tried to emphasize on that." The Spartans out-rebounded Michigan 51-30. Michigan State grabbed 21 offensive rebounds and converted them into 25 points. Even the undersized Spartans got into the fray. On one play in the first half, the 5-foot-9 sophomore Victoria Lucas- Perry drove baseline to the basket before missing a layup. Despite her size, she grabbed her own rebound. Michigan State dominated in the post as well, scoring 38 points in the paint. The Spartans' strong play down low also allowed them to get to the free throw line 21 times. "Part of our half-court defense that I think we really strug- gled with, and that they succeeded at, was getting the ball to the post, and, with that, getting some really easy opportuni- ties," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. ough first half CROWD EFFECTS: Senior night appeared to boost Michigan in its 78-59 loss to Iowa last Saturday, and last night, the Wol- verines had to deal with the boost Michigan State received on its own special night. A crowd of 8,904 people packed the Breslin Center, its fourth-largest total ever. It made sure to harass the Wolver- ines after every airball they shot and tried to confuse them as the 30-second clock ran down. By the end of the game, the crowd was thanking its seniors and chanting "Big Ten Champions" in support of the Spartans. "I know that in great places in women's basketball, it gives a great home court advantage," Burnett said. "But at the same time, I think players would rather play where there's a great crowd. We try to coach to say, 'it doesn't matter where you're playing, who you're playing, or what kind of court you're playing' - it's still the same game and we expect the same kind of effort and the same kind of discipline." NOTES: The 77-34 defeat is the largest margin Michigan has lost by this year ... Michigan State scored as many points in the first half, 34, as the Wolverines scored the entire game ... Michigan shot just three free throws the entire game, its lowest total all season. but, by the end of the game, she had scored eight points - a team high - and grabbed four boards. "I got in foul trouble early, and it kind of took me out of the first half," Walker said. "When the second half came, I just tried to go out there and play hard." At the outset of the second half, it didn't seem as though anything would pan out for Walker. A few minutes in, Walker missed an open jumper despite being faced up to the basket from just five feet away. The next time down the court, she held the ball at the top of the key before throwing an errant pass toward freshman Becky Flippin.