Wednesday December 7, 2005 sports. michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com ReTSidiiganBaiiy 10 01 Helvey explodes for 30 in victory Public coaches' polls make forfun By Ian Robinson Daily Sports Writer Back-to-back. Last night with a 77-59 win over Uni- versity of Maryland Eastern Shore (1-3) at Crisler Arena, the Michigan women's basketball team put together consecu- tive wins for the _MES _ 59_ first time since last November. The Wolverines (4-4) held the advan- tage from the opening possession, when sophomore Krista Clement found for- ward Kelly Helvey in the right corner for an open three - the first basket of her career-high 30 points. The junior put together her second consecutive double- double, grabbing 11 rebounds as well. "We knew we needed to get a good start," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett. "I was proud of our team's execution against the zone early." Helvey set up Michigan's next hoop on the ensuing possession. After snag- ging a rebound, she pushed the ball up the court and saw sophomore Ta'Shia Walker streaking up the right sideline. Helvey launched a pass to Walker, who put in a lay-up to help the Wolverines with a 16-2 run to open the game. UMES sophomore Kristi Velt- kamp - a Michigan native who was recruited by Burnett - responded by scoring 14 of the Lady Hawks' first 16 points, trimming the Michigan lead to 23-18. Including a stretch where they scored five 3-pointers in just over a minute, the teams traded baskets for the next six minutes. Over the course of the first half, both squads relied heavily upon the long- distance shot. Each team went 7-for-10 from 3-point land. Michigan freshman Carly Benson fin- ished that run of 3-pointers with a bomb from the top of the key as part of the Wol- verines' streak of eight straight points. Clement - who finished the game with a career-high nine assists - fed Benson on all three field goals. Benson posted a career-high 15 points. UMES cut the lead to 45-41 at the break with a 10-2 run that included two baskets from well beyond the arc by the Lady Hawks Tori Kennedy. "I told the team, 'She's a 3-pointer waiting to happen,' " Burnett said. Four Michigan scorers recorded dou- ble-digit points in the first half, combin- ing for the team's second-highest first half total this season. Even though the first half was dictat- ed by 3-point shots, the defense buckled down in the second frame. "At halftime, we said that we need to get down on defense and stop the other team from scoring," Michigan sopho- more Janelle Cooper said. After the Lady Hawks shot 48 per- cent in the first half, the Wolverines allowed them to shoot just 16 percent in the second. Michigan held Veltkamp - who scored 15 points in the first half - score- less in the second half by preventing her See UMES, page 12 CAITLIN KLEIBOER/Daily Junior Kelly Helvey, usually a defensive star, dominated on offense last night. ver wonder where L ranks Michigan whe out his ballot for the U coaches' poll? Or for that m high - or low - any of th coaches who participate in the poll place their own team? Thanks to an unprec- edented display of forth- rightness on the part of these particular pollsters, you no longer have to - at least for a week. All 62 ballots were published in Monday's edition of USA Today, the first time the coaches have elected to make their votes public. Not that the coach- es made the decision on their own. BCS officials requi the coaches disclose their vo the 2004 season, when Texas support in the coaches' pollI berth and California was releg Holiday Bowl. Something sme and - for once - the BCS to That's all well and good, bu publishing the ballots begin the poll's secrecy if no onet analyze them? That's whereI Even though some of you hav scoured the ballots for proofo acy a la 1997, I'm sure most] campus are too consumed wit follow suit. So in the grand tradition Sinclair, I'm going to hold the accountable and see what I about balloting bias along thev Let's start with Michigai record, Carr ranked his to - one spot higher than in 1 poll. But that placement i able, especially when you that Carr has Wisconsin a The Badgers beat Michigan ished with a better overallr they should be ranked highe Wolverines. And none of the t placed below Michigan - Flo Boston College, Clemson,I South Carolina - can really c much better, even though theS found their way into a BCS b As is to be expected, most off es put No. 21 Michigan s between 20th and 22nd, wit ful placing it 19th or 23rd. Si didn't rank the Wolverines at, is fine with me. Maybe I'm s frustrated with all the late-ga downs, but I'm not sure if deserves a top-25 ranking eith And then there's Indian Hoeppner, Arkansas's Housto Northwestern's Randy Walke methodology only they can tr loyd Carr stand, those three coaches ranked the n he fills Wolverines 14th, 15th and 16th, respec- JSA Today tively. A four-loss team is the 14th-best atter, how squad in the nation? Sure, and Max Mar- e 62 head tin is a lock for the Heisman this year. I'm guessing Hoeppner and Walker were just a tad influenced by the way Michigan dominated their teams en route to two of its most convincing wins of the season. Their bal- lots make one thing clear: If a decent team destroys your squad, you're probably going to inflate its ranking. STEPHANIE As for Nutt ... his last name WRIGHT seems to say it all. And then there's my Uright on Target favorite pollster - Troy State's Larry Blakeney. nested that First, his ballot reflects a wacky reshuf- oting after fling of teams that deserve to be in the rode late top-25, such as making Ohio State the to a BCS No. 9 squad in the nation. And then on ated to the top of that, he includes a number of teams elled fishy, that make you scratch your head. In one Kok action. of several odd moves, he gave Toledo its it how will lone point by voting the Rockets in at to erode No. 25. Blakeney was also one of those bothers to eight coaches who didn't rank Michigan. I come in. I might be down on the Wolverines, but e no doubt I still think they're better than the sec- of conspir- ond-best MAC team (no disrespect to people on Toledo). h finals to And I guess Blakeney's placement of Nebraska at No. 24 indicates that his of Upton money is on the Cornhuskers come Dec. e big boys 28. His ranking exemplifies an addition- can learn al norm of balloting: If you don't coach way. in one of the BCS conferences, you have n. For the permission to make your ballot a little eam 20th off-the-wall. the actual So what has this examination of bal- s reason- loting practices taught us? Blakeney's consider singular pursuit of originality aside, t No. 19. most of the coaches' polls looked pretty n and fin- similar, and most of them refrain from record, so ranking their team 10 spots higher than r than the it deserves to be. In almost every case, I eams Carr doubt the conspiracy theories were true. rida State, More than likely, Texas rose in the rank- Iowa and ings last year because it deserved to, not laim to be because there was a widespread conspir- Seminoles acy against California. owl game. Now that the coaches' ballots have the coach- been made public, the knowledge that omewhere their voting practices could be disclosed h a hand- at any time is probably a good safeguard x coaches against any coach participating in cor- all, which rupt behavior in the future. till a little Too bad Phil Fulmer wasn't held me break- accountable in 1997. Blue's trey-bombs spark blowout win By Sara Livingston Daily Sports Writer With nine minutes remaining in the first half, junior Kelly Helvey ignited a flurry of Michigan 3-pointers, and the Wolverines went on to hit three consec- utive shots from beyond the arc. Helvey knocked down the wide-open trey from the right wing after sophomore Krista Clement dished her the rock from the top of the key. The team finished the run with four triples over five consecu- tive trips down the hardwood, giving it an 11-point lead late in the first half. "I think it was good at any point for (3-point shooting) to be happening because we usually go on a 10-point run and then let them catch up," freshman Carly Benson said. "But this time, we were able to keep the lead for a while, so that was excellent." The Wolverines lit it up from beyond the arc in their 77-59 win over Universi- ty of Maryland Eastern Shore last night. For the first time all season, Michigan made more than half of its 3-pointers, draining seven of its 10 treys in the first half alone. Clement, Michigan's go-to shooter, failed to hit 3-pointer, let alone a field goal all night. UMES's defense focused on containing Clement - who leads the team in both attempted and made 3-pointers - but that left the rest of the Wolverines unguarded along the perim- eter. Helvey - who posted a career- high 30 points - went from beyond the arc after the Lady Hawks ignored her as an offensive threat. "I just kept getting passes from my teammates," Helvey said. "They know I can shoot, and I haven't been shoot- ing lately. I was open, and, if they aren't going to guard me and respect me, then I'm going to shoot it." Benson, who was 3-for-8 from 3- point range heading into this game, was also left alone beyond the arc. When the Lady Hawks defense collapsed to guard sophomore forward Ta'Shia Walker down low, she would quickly dish the RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Sophomore Katie Dierdorf and the Wolverines fought for an Impressive home win. ball outside to Benson for a wide-open trey. Benson, the only freshman starter, went on to finish the game 3-for-5 from beyond the arc. "(Benson) is just very fundamental," Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett said. "Again, she did a great job of being con- fident and getting wide-open looks and getting that rhythm jump shot going." The Wolverines established them- selves from beyond the arc in the first three minutes of the contest. In the team's fourth trip down the court, soph- omore Janelle Cooper hit Michigan's second trey of the night, draining a wide-open three from the top of the arc after a bounce pass from Helvey. "We work in practice on getting the ball around and getting the ball to the open players," Cooper said. "When my teammates would dribble penetrate, I would try to spot up (where) I knew the defense wouldn't be." By the second half, UMES revised its zone - allowing just two 3-pointers on the Wolverines' eight attempts. But by then the damage was already done. Then, Walker hit her only trey - the team's last of the night. The Wolverines sported a 16-point lead and had already sealed a victory with nine minutes left to See TREY-BOMBS, page 12 Michigan ter. ia's Terry n Nutt and r. Using a uly under- - Stephanie Wright thinks Texas coach Mack Brown should have ranked his Longhorns ahead of Southern Cal. Stand up for your boys, Mack. She can be reached at smwr@umich.edu. " 0 MEN'S BASKETBALL Cagers hope to rewrite history vs. Hornets By Jack Herman tough. But if we didn't go through that, we wouldn't be I Daily Sports Writer the team you see now." The seniors have a chance to reverse their fortunes Senior Daniel Horton described it as the worst trip from three years ago when it hosts Delaware State of his life. At the start of the 2001-02 season, the current Michigan seniors - then fresh- man - were offered a rude awakening to the world of college basketball. The team traveled to the Virgin Islands for a tournament in which it dropped three straight. Then, after losing two close home games to intrastate rivals Eastern and Cen- tral Michigan, the Wolverines suffered a crushing 83-57 defeat at the hands of No. 4 Duke. Just like that, Michigan was 0-6. f jTlON F:. tonight at Crisler Arena. A win would improve the Wol- verines' record to a perfect 6-0. "It's ironic," Michigan coach Tommy EGHT Amaker said. "When you think about that, that's pretty significant given where these kids were at one point with the self- imposed sanctions and all the things that we went through. So I'm hopeful that we can see things come full circle." It was Horton who turned in a team- high 26-point showing to lead Michigan to its first win of his freshman season, an 83-57 romp over Bowling Green. The senior has also been critical in Michigan's current start, almost single- handily winning games against Boston University and Butler. But the Wolverines are unlikely to need a game- changing performance by Horton to emerge victorious tonight. About all Michigan must do is avoid tripping over its own feet. Coming off nationally-televised wins against Miami and at Notre Dame, the Wolverines need to make sure they don't overlook the Hornets - who are 2-5 but employ a slow-down offense that can confound top teams. "Winning on the road is difficult, and you treasure those moments, and I think now we're guarding against a letdown," Amaker said. The key to tonight's game will most likely lie within the paint. Delaware State's tallest player - 6-foot-9 Aaron Fleetwood - averages just five points and three rebounds per game. As a team, the Hornets average four fewer rebounds per game than their opponents. Michigan will look to big men Graham Brown and Courtney Sims to put the team on their shoulders. Brown excelled in Michigan's win over Notre Dame See HORNETS, page 12 ICE HOCKEY Captains looking to jumpstart By H. Jose Bosch Miami captain Andy Greene, who Daily Sports Writer then scored. The game-winning goal for then-No.2 Wisconsin during the Kermit the Frog once said it's College Hockey Showcase occurred not easy being green. But for the when the Badgers' Adam Burish took Michigan hockey team, it isn't easy the puck from the neutral zone and being blue. split the defense before pushing the Players and fans alike aren't too puck past goalie Noah Ruden. happy with the team's recent per- But Michigan hockey coach Red formance - back-to-back weekend Berenson isn't worried about these sweeps - but a quick look on the ice problems. at Yost Ice Arena reveals the hockey "That's a split-second thing that team isn't skating with its shoulders happened once," Berenson said of the down. Instead the players seem to Cook pass. "I thought we came out have hops in their steps and smiles on of our own zone really well against their faces. But that's not to say the Miami's forecheck, and then, that one team isn't upset. play, (happened and) Cook missed his "At first, there wasn't a word said pass. In hockey, sometimes you miss on the way home (from Miami)," your shot and sometimes it doesn't go sophomore Chad Kolarik said. "We right, and that's what happened. had a team meeting set up by the cap- The captains have been the calm- tains, and (senior Andrew) Ebbett set ing force on the team, making sure the record straight and let everyone that everyone steps up in practice know that we can't play like this. But this week. Even though the fresh- he said that we have to have fun at the man have played well this season, the same time." upperclassmen know they will have to According to Kolarik, the team has jumpstart the team and get it back on been trying to do too much on and off track toward a possible CCHA title. the puck. This week in practice, the "It pisses you off a little bit," alter- team will just try to simplify things nate-captain Brandon Kaleniecki and have some fun. said of the four-game losing streak. Michigan has to work on the defen- "It's kind of embarrassing when you sive lapses that lead to easy break- look at it. You don't want to be a part aways and needs to improve on its of anything like that, especially at a sloppy passing in the defensive zone. winning program like this. Things "(The Virgin Islands) was a beautiful place and a nice place to go on vacation, but it was terrible getting beat bad," Horton said. "Then to come home and lose games here and go to Duke and get blown out again, it was B i am .. sa-'am a TRUE RQFTALSU? " Animals have languages much like human languages " Deaf children go through the same stages of language development as hearing children * English is like so degenerating before our eyes (ears) * Inuit languages have hundreds of words for snow * The average high school graduate has approximately 45,000 I All MFit trainers have degrees in exercise science. | 1 IW