The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 13, 2006 - 38 .Desperate Cagers get unexpected aid Changes on Carr's staff By Ian Robinson Daily Sports Writer With 15.2 seconds left in the first half, Michigan coach Cheryl Burnett looked to her newly expanded bench to put someone in the game to protect Ashley Jones, who already had two fouls. Before Friday's game, Burnett would've had trouble finding some- one to fill in because i O B O Kelly Helvey, Ta'Shia Walker and Katie Dierdorf all suffered season-ending inju- ries, cutting the active roster to seven players. But the assistance of three volleyball players and two walk-ons expanded the roster to 12. On Friday, Burnett called on sopho- more Lyndsay Miller, who holds the vol- leyball program's record for most blocks in a season, to spell Jones. "I was pretty nervous," said Miller, who was named to Michigan's All-State basketball team in high school. "We just went to practice (Thursday), so we weren't sure what we were doing. We didn't know the offense. We knew a little bit of what to do when we're warming up." Wearing a No. 52 jersey without a name on the back, Miller entered the lineup to cheers from the more than 3,000 spectators. "It's funny because you know they have athletic talent, but you never think (that they would be on the basketball team)," said junior volleyball player Danielle Pflum, who was in attendance to support her teammates. After freshman Stephany Skrba con- verted a free-throw attempt to make it a two-point game, Miller guarded forward Alice Jamen. Miller played off her oppo- nent to assist with help-side defense as Ohio State brought the ball up the court. After Ohio State's Brandie Hoskins BUCKEYES Continued from page 1B "It's like, 'Oh my gosh, we're going to be playing with seven? What if we get in foul trouble? If somebody goes down, what are we going to do?' " Except for the final 10 minutes of the contest, most observers wouldn't have known that anything was wrong. The bench was filled, the Wolverines were competing hard, and the game was close. It all began with Michigan's hot start. After opening their Jan. 6 contest against Ohio State 0-for-13 from the field, the Wolverines' shooting couldn't have got- ten much worse. In fact, it got much bet- ter. Michigan doubled its field-goal output from the first half of its previous game with the Buckeyes and knocked down 5- of-9 attempts from beyond the arc. "They made shots," Ohio State coach Jim Foster said. "Because of their inju- ries, they know they are going to get a significant number of minutes. And then you just go out and play, and it's like bur- den-free basketball." After closing the first half of the teams' first meeting by letting Ohio State go on a 9-0 run, the Wolverines was whistled for traveling, Jessica Min- nfield set up for a last-second shot, but she lost the ball out of bounds as the first half ended. Miller's 15.2 seconds to close out the first half was the only time that any of the five new players received. Although she did not play any basket- ball this year before going to practice on Thursday, Miller and the other two vol- leyball players on the basketball team - middle blocker Megan Bowman and setter Mara Martin - had successful high school careers. According to vol- leyball coach Mark Rosen, Miller could have pursued a collegiate basketball career if she hadn't chosen volleyball. The most competitive basketball that the trio has played since high school was intramural basketball, where they finished second last year. WHO'S WHO OF THE WHO'S THAT: In addition to the three volleyball players added, two walk-ons were added to the roster prior to Friday night's game. One of them was Renee Dean, who served as a team manager before she donned a uniform. The other walk-on was Lind- say Sklar. The Franklin native was on the team roster last year and earned University Athletic Academic Achieve- ment honors but did not play. BENSON RE-EMERGES: It took just 11 minutes before Carly Benson scored her 10th point of the game on a floater in the post. It was the first time the fresh- man hit double figures in points since her 12-point performance in a Dec. 13 victory over Fordham. Benson finished Friday's game wvith 12 points in just 17 minutes of play. Eight of her points came in the first six minutes, when Michigan led by four. Double duty's been done before: The last Michigan athlete to compete on both the basketball and volleyball teams was Anne Poglits. Poglits lettered in volley- ball from 1996-99 and in basketball in 1996-97. reversed course in this game. Down 31-21 following Buckeye junior Brandie Hoskins's lay-up, the Wolver- ines shut down Ohio State's offense and went on a run of their own. They closed the first stanza with a 9-1 run and entered the break trailing by just two points. And Michigan didn't let up after the intermission. Sophomore Janelle Cooper nailed a three to open the second half and give Michigan a 33-32 lead. That was the last time the Buckeyes trailed. Immediately following Cooper's triple, Buckeye center Jessica Davenport con- verted a three-point play. After a turn- over by Wolverine sophomore Melinda Queen on the ensuing possession, Ohio State countered with a 3-pointer from senior Ashley Allen. But Skrba and Michigan would not go away. The Ontario native made a lay-up off a Cooper dish. The Buckeyes weren't fazed and extended their lead to nine points with a 3-pointer from sophomore Marscilla Packer and consecutive buckets from Hoskins. Skrba came right back with a soft jumper in the lane to cut the lead to seven, and Cooper followed that with a anythin, g ANGELA CESERE/Daily but trivial n a recent interview, White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen essentially said that there's no such thing as a good coach. All that matters, he insisted, are the players. Guillen then cited Joe Torre who had a losing record until he joined the Yankees, and Phil Jackson, who won with Jordan in Chicago and Shaq in Los Angeles but now struggles to survive with just" Kobe, as examples. While Guillen goes too far, I do believe that coach- ing doesn't make all that bigS SHARAD a difference - at least when MATTU it comes to the professional The Sports ondct ranks. TeSot~na In college sports, however, Column it's all about the coaches. Lloyd Carr and his coaching staff don't just pick the plays. They also pick the players. The players on the field five years ago, this year and five years from now were, are and will be completely differ- ent. But the coaches can stay the same. It's why, when you think of Duke basketball and Penn State football, you first think of Mike Krzyzewski and Joe Paterno instead of J.J. Redick or Michael Robinson. Redick and Robinson will be long gone next year, but Coach K and JoePa aren't going anywhere. And this is why, as soon as Tyler Ecker was tackled to end the Alamo Bowl, one thing mat- tered more than anything else: What would hap- pen to the Wolverines' coaching staff? It took an entire month-and-a-half, but every- thing finally seems to have sorted itself out. Last season's offensive and defensive coordina- tors, Terry Malone and Jim Herrmann, are leaving to coach tight ends and linebackers for the New Orleans Saints and New York Jets, respectively. It's not clear whether Malone and Herrmann chose to leave or fled before they could be fired or demoted, but the two have deserted Ann Arbor nonetheless. Defensive backs coach Ron English, widely viewed as an excellent coach and recruiter, was on the verge of joining the Chicago Bears, but instead will step into Herrmann's role. Mike DeBord, who was the Wolverines' offen- sive coordinator in 1997 when they won the national title, will replace Malone. The past two seasons, he has served as Michigan's special teams coach and recruiting coordinator. And, perhaps most importantly, quarterbacks coach Scot Loeffler isn't going anywhere. There had been rumors that the New England Patriots had contacted him to be their quarterbacks coach. On the surface, these changes seem pretty under- whelming. Although Carr never ended up havingto fire or demote anyone, I had hoped that if changes were necessary, Carr would find someone new who was daring enough to shake things up. But to call the changes that did happen a mere reshuffling wouldn't be fair, either. And in English and Loeffler, Carr might have two up-and-coming coaches who have already done a lot and have the chance to make a difference for years to come. In 2004, on his way to becoming an All-Ameri- can, safety Ernest Shazor often credited English for helping him develop into a star. Last season, Michigan's secondary was young and banged-up all year long, yet English's .unit found a way to put together a solid campaign. And without Loeffler, Michigan's Rose Bowl run in 2004 may not have been possible. When Chad Henne was forced to start at quarterback as a freshman, the Wolverines seemed destined for an up-and-down year. But instead, Loeffler helped Henne not just survive, butthrive. Henne's num- bers that year were about as good as senior John Navarre's were the year before. When last season ended, everyone on the mes- sage boards said that Malone and Herrmann had to go. In the end, the two did just that. But it may end up being the two coaches that aren't going anywhere who make 2005 nothing more than an aberration. JEREMY CHO/Daily TOP: Jessica Minnfleld goes up for a jumpshot during the Wolverines' loss to Ohio State. ABOVE: Mara Martin and Lyndsay Miller watch the action from the bench on Friday night. three to cut the lead back down to four. The deficit was trimmed to three a few minutes later, after a Skrba put-back. "She's a good player," Davenport said of Skrba. "She played really well tonight both offensively and defensively. She brought a lot of energy." Said Burnett: "Stephany really had some great moments, and her final (stat) line tonight was incredible." But then fatigue set in. After its scorch- ing first half, Michigan hit on just 2-of-12 second-half treys and went without a field goal until Cooper's driving layup with less than seven minutes to play. "(Michigan is) a resilient team," Foster said. "I've told my team since the begin- ning of the season they're going to get somebody before the season is over." Nobody would deny that Michigan played hard, just as they do every game. And with more efforts like the one on Friday night, that first, elusive Big Ten win could be just around the corner. 0 WATER POLO Blue suffers through winless trip out West By Eileen Hengel Daily Sports Writer A trip to California doesn't always prove to be an escape. The No. 7 Michigan women's water polo team (6-4) couldn't escape the real- ity of losing; their goal was to go 2-2. But even that mark proved unattainable as the Wolverines dropped all four of their matches this weekend at the Stanford Invitational in Palo Alto, Calif. In its first close game of the season, Michigan could not escape the clock; the Wolverines failed to find the time to net a goal to send the game into over- time, suffering a 7-6 loss to No. 11 San Jose State. The match's turning point came in the final stanza, when freshman Mary Chatingy scored two clutch goals from the top of the post to put the Wolverines within one. "Basically, (coach) Matt (Anderson) called a timeout," Chatingy said. "(He) said that we were going to be execut- ing a shooting play from the top with me in the shooting position. The whole team knew we needed the goals, and we all realized what we needed to do to get anyone in the position to score." The elation was short-lived, as the Wolverines were whistled for an ejec- tion that gave the Spartans an opportu- nity to run out the clock. "We weren't able to finish," Ander- son said. "(The game against San Jose State) was purely a game lost because of lack of experience. Come fourth quar- ter, if we have a good look at the cage, we have to score. We can't just shoot it and hope it goes in." Throughout the game, Michigan continued to answer San Jose State's attacks. The Spartans jumped out to a 2-0 lead because of Michigan's inabil- ity to score. The Wolverines bounced numerous shots of the post in the game's opening two frames, resulting in a 2-0 lead for the Spartans heading into half- time. Scoring the first goal for the Wolver- ines, just 34 seconds into third period, freshmen Sharayah Hernandez capital- ized off a counter-attack, but San Jose State answered the goal less than half a minute later to make the score 3-1. Capitalizing on a Michigan power play, junior captain Shana Welch netted a goal, which the Spartans immediately answered. Michigan tied the score in a span of 1:17 late in the third with goals from Welch and senior Megan Chapman to tie the score at four. The tournament brought together the nation's top women's water polo pro- grams. Michigan opened the competi- tion against the third-ranked Stanford Cardinal. After jumping out to an early lead off a shot from Welch, Michigan soon fell behind when Stanford scored the next nine goals. The Wolverines lost, 12-4. "We were leading arguably the best team in the nation," Anderson said. "We came out and got aggressive, and when we scored the first goal, we kind of stepped back and. (the Cardinal's) took that opportunity and got aggressive."m Michigan also faced tough squads in No. 2 Southern Cal and No. 11 Arizona State. The Wol- verines lost to the Trojans, one 16-3, while the Sun Devils upset Michigan 13-7.c .. . offee Prior to the tourna- soups, ment, the Wolverines. drowned unranked Cal- ifornia Santa Cruz 16-3 V on Friday. - Sharad Mattu can be reached at smattu@umich.edu. i hreated: FREE tall beverage N-w4th this coupon) , tea, lottes, frozen drinks, pastries, salads, sandwiches, and more. ve music coming in March! 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