PINNED: Nick Roy helps wrestling cruise past rival Ohio State PAGE 2B THE SPORTSMONDAY COLUMN: Sharad Mattu discusses Michigan football's recent coaching changes PAGE 3B CLOSE BUT No CIGAR: Women's gymnastics falls just short against No. 2 Utah PAGE 6B February 13, 06 be d3an Thi 1B PURDUE 84, No. 22 Michigan 70 efense I SS Last-place Boilermakers best Cagers By Matt Singer Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - Just two weeks ago, it appeared that the Michigan basketball bus was heading straight for Bracketville. But Saturday's 84-70 loss to Purdue - Mich- igan's third in a row - made it clear that the wheels have fallen off. The injury-plagued Wolverines were out-shot, out-hustled, out-defended and out-smarted by a last-place Boilermaker team. Although a desper- ate late-game Michigan run made the final score appear less lopsided, there was no doubt who was the better team at Mackey Arena. "They showed a lot of savvy beating us, because they're going through the same thing we're going through, losing starters, and they lost even more," Michigan center Courtney Sims said. "So you've got to give them a lot of credit." For a brief moment, it looked like Michigan stood a chance. After the Wolverines controlled the opening tip, forward Graham Brown posted up, drew a double-team and dished the ball to Sims for the wide-open slam. On its first defensive posses- sion, Michigan hounded the Boilermakers, forcing an awkward miss by Purdue forward Matt Kiefer as the shot clock expired. Those first two possessions would be the Wol- verines' highlights. And that 2-0 lead would be their last. During the rest of the first half, Michigan may have played its worst basketball of the season. Offensively, the Wolverines struggled to convert open looks and committed eight first-half turn- overs. Defensively, Michigan looked even slop- pier. Purdue's undermanned squad blew by the Wolverines and took advantage of a seemingly never-ending supply of open lay-ups and jumpers RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Michigan coach Tommy Amaker did his best to motivate his team, but for the third straight game, his defense failed him. by shooting 65 percent in the first half. "I thought we had good shots - we just didn't make them," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "When those baskets weren't going in, you could just see the energy being drained from our defense. Having said that, we've got to get tougher and fight against that." With the Boilermakers asserting their superior- ity on both ends of the floor, it didn't take long for their lead to balloon. The situation already looked bleak when Purdue held a 30-19 lead with six min- utes to go in the half. It looked bleaker once Purdue super-sub Marcus Green took over. The freshman caught fire in the last 5:27 of the half, drilling three triples and outscoring the entire Wolverine squad, 13-8, during that span. The coup de grace came in the closing seconds. With the shot-clock winding down, Green drove from the top of the key, stepped back, and swished a 17-footer, giving Purdue a 47-27 halftime lead. "We sort of beat ourselves on defense," Sims See BOILERMAKERS, page 5B Herrmann takes job with Jets By Scott Bell Daily Sports Editor The coaching changes promised by Lloyd Carr are finally becoming a reality. Jim Herrmann, Michigan's defensive coordi- nator for the past nine years, has accepted a job with the NFL's New York Jets. His departure opens the door for Ron English to step in as defensive coordinator. English left the team last Monday to take ajob as the Chicago Bears' defensive backs coach, but he reneged three days later to rejoin the Michigan coaching staff. The athletic department would not confirm reports that he returned to become the defensive coordinator, but yesterday's move created a void English is expected to fill. Michigan will also enter the 2006 season with a new offensive coordinator. Mike DeBord, last season's special teams coach and one-time offen- sive coordinator (1997-99), was promoted to his old post when incumbent offensive coordinator Terry Malone left to coach tight ends for the New Orleans Saints. Yesterday, Carr told The Detroit News he was sad to see his longest-tenured assistant coach leave. "(Herrmann) is a great football coach and a great person'" Carr said. "I hate to lose him, but it's something he has wanted to do. He's got a great career in front of him, and he'll do a great job in the NFL,just as he did at Michigan." Herrmann, a Michigan graduate who spent 20 years on the sideline as a football coach in Ann Arbor, begins his duties as linebackers coach today in Hempstead, N.Y. Although he said he is excited to begin coach- ing in the professional ranks, Herrmann told The Detroit News that he'd always remember his roots. "This place will always have a place in my heart," Herrmann said of Michigan. "Every Saturday afternoon, I'll be preparing for a game, but deep down I'll be pulling for the Wolverines." Herrmann was promoted to defensive coordi- nator before the 1997 season, the year the Wol- verines won their last national championship. He coached six All-Americans during his tenure and received the Broyles Award as national assistant coach of the year in 1997. But Herrmann - who earned three let- ters as a linebacker when he played for Michigan in the early '80s - camne under harsh criticism during the past few years for the defense's performance. In both the 2004 and 2005 seasons, the Wolverines struggled mightily at times on defense. In 2004, the unit's was unable to stop mobile quarterbacks. Michigan State's duo of Drew Stanton and Damon Dowdell, Ohio State's Troy Smith and Texas' Vince Young rushed for a com- bined 449 yards against Michigan that year. This past season, the defense had problems finishing games. Michigan allowed late scores against Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio State and Nebraska - all losses for the 7-5 Wolverines. According to The Detroit Free Press, the team's worst performance in nearly two decades brought Carr to tell his staff that "changes were coming." More than a month later, those changes are finally being implemented. There may not be many new faces filling the voids at the coordina- tor positions, but the current personnel are assum- ing new roles at nearly every critical assistant spot on staff. Purdue forward Marcus White dunks the bail as Michigan guard Ron Coleman looks on. The dunk was part of Purdue's first-half burst where they out-scored Michigan by 20. Clock tckng for veteran Cagers to turn iy around WEST LAFAYETTE - 0at a difference a week makes. Seven days and three defensively 1 acking losses before this Saturday's 84-70 defeat at Purdue, Michigan must have had dreams of the NCAA Tournament dancing in its head. One hundred and sixty-eight hours later, the bubble has not yet burst, but it sure is deflating quickly. In some ways, things are starting to look a lot like they did last year. Perhaps luck has once again claimed the Wolverines as victims. Exhibit A: The injuries. First it was Lester Abram. Then it was Abram, again. Jerret Smith was next, followed by Dion Harris. And, for a few minutes on Saturday, it seemed like it was Daniel Horton's turn. Exhibit B: A crushing road defeat in West Lafayette. Although not quite as bad as the Wolverines' loss at Purdue last year, this was not exactly a game that makes for a fun ride home. But there is one piece of evi- dence, permissible as Exhibit C, that exonerates the defendant, oldx Lady Luck. These players are all one year" older - and, hopefully, wiser. A veteran squad shouldn't leave its fate to the basketball gods. . A veteran team like this needs HE to take a proactive approach to O dealing with the injuries and all the adversity they bring. In the cliched world of sports, Purdue is one of those teams players and coaches say you can't count out and can never look past. The Boilermakers might be last in the Big Ten, but they always hang in there. Last time, they took Michigan right down to the wire. And this year, for all Big Ten teams, every conference game on the road is a tough win. But let's be honest. If Michigan plans on making a run in the tour- CK nament, it can't lose to a team that was 8-14 overall and 2-9 in confer- MAN ence. And, if Michigan plans on Tap even making the tournament, it certainly can't.lose like it did on Saturday. Statistically, the Wolverines were walloped. Purdue, ranked 10th in Big Ten scoring, dropped 84 points on a helpless Wolverine defense. It became the third-straight Michigan opponent to light up the net by shooting more than 60 percent from the field. Things were just as grim, if not more so, for the Wolverines' offense. The key word was "worst." The Boilermakers held Michigan to just 35.3 percent field-goal shooting; its worst performance all year, and it happened against the worst defense in the Big Ten. Every time down the court, it seemed as though the Boilermakers' offense was always one step ahead, one millisecond quicker than Michigan. At times, it looked like a game of six-on-five: Somehow a Boilermaker was always open. See HERMAN, page 5B AC RI n N WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Skrba tries, but can't " carry team alone Blue survives must-win game By Daniel Bromwich Daily Sports Writer Trailing 50-47 to No. 7 Ohio State with 11 minutes left in the game, the Michigan women's basketball team finally got tired. The shots finally EHIEN stopped fall- ing, and the Wolverines (0-12 Big Ten, 6-18 overall) finally fell to the Buckeyes (20-2, 10-1) by a score of 74-55 on Friday night. But it took a lot longer than anybody expected. Freshman Stephany Skrba, who Cheryl Burnett said. "We did become a bit stagnant. I'd like to think that if you have 10 to 12 (players) and you can sub freely, you don't have those lapses. But we don't, and we just accept it and try to fix it." Skrba did as much as she could, finishing with 17 points and 13 rebounds in playing all but one minute of the contest. Michi- gan needed her to play all those minutes, as the roster shrank to seven players for Friday's game with sophomore Katie Dierdorf's season-ending hip injury and for- ward Ta'Shia Walker's impend- By Daniel Levy Daily Sports Writer Playing in what the team considered to be a must-win game, Michigan captain Andrew Ebbett and fellow senior alter- nate captain Bran- don Kaleniecki A*r 'i$Iro stepped up big time for the No. 7 LAKE S$BK£ % Wolverines. The two combined for three goals and three assists in the first period of Michigan's 4-2 win over No. 19 Lake Superior State at Yost Ice Arena on Saturday night. Berenson said. "We should be desperate every game we play from here on in." Four minutes into the game, Ebbett took advantage of a Lake Superior turn- over. The captain found Kaleniecki open in the right slot, and the senior sent the puck off sprawled-out Laker goalie Jeff Jakaitis to give Michigan a 1-0 lead. Midway through the first period, the two were at it again, taking advantage of another Lake Superior State giveaway. Ebbett stole the puck at the blue line and sent a pass to Kaleniecki, who was alone in front of the net. Instead of unleashing his famous wrist shot, Kaleniecki threw Jakaitis for a loop when he fell flat on his