Tuesday March 21, 2006 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com POe lRTItigRTSn ilq 9 "..". Even with a second { x ry= iftcrown, this season > ~g £ would' measure up Junior Dion Harris celebrates with his team after his fallaway 3-pointer as time expired led the Wolverines to a dramatic 87-84 victory over Notre Dame. Harris's shot saves seniors' season By Scott Bell Daily Sports Editor Dion Harris wasn't ready to say goodbye just yet. "I'm just glad to be giving the seniors another opportu- nity to play in front of the home crowd and possibly (go) back to New York," Harris said. "I'm just doing every- thing right now for the seniors, because they deserve it." N M The junior hit a 3-pointer as time expirGA iy expired in the second overtime to extend Michigan's season and topple an upset-hungry Notre Dame team, 87-84 at Crisler Arena last night. The Wolverines were unable to capitalize on their first two chances to close out the game. Buzzer-beaters failed at the end of both regulation and the first overtime. "We had opportunities," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "Certainly, we had the possessions down the stretch to kind of come away with it, and we didn't. I thought we had some really good looks and opportunities to win the game." After the two failed attempts, the third time proved to be a charm for the Wolverines. Senior Daniel Horton dribbled the ball at the top of the key as the seconds ticked off as Amaker called for an iso- lation play. When Horton ran into a double team on the left elbow, he lobbed the ball to Harris, who was waiting at the top of the key. The Detroit native launched a fade- away trey that founds its way through the hoop and sent Crisler Arena into a frenzy. "I don't think we've ever had a game like that since I've been here," Harris said. "Double overtime, the crowd was great and we just kept fighting, no matter what happened I think everybody had fun out there:" The win brings Michigan (20-10) one game closer to Madison Square Garden, where the NIT's Final Four is played. The lone obstacle is Miami, which defeated Creighton by one point last night. The Wolverines beat the Hurricanes by 21 during the regular season. The two teams will face off at 8 p.m. tomorrow night. Early on in last night's game, it appeared as if the Wol- verines would not get a chance to play in the quarterfinals. Notre Dame (16-14) led for almost all of regulation. After taking the lead two minutes into the game, the Irish held the advantage until just 13 seconds remained in the second half. "They came out of the blocks early," Amaker said. "Coming back and inching our way back in, possession by possession, helped make this a memorable evening:" After Michigan slowly clawed back into the game, Horton provided the shot that looked like it would end the game in regulation. With his team trailing by one, Amaker called a time- out and designed a play for the Cedar Hill, Texas, native to shoot a 3-pointer. With 14 seconds to go, Horton got free off a double screen and drained a trey from the right wing. But Horton wasn't the only senior guard on the floor playing to keep his career alive. Irish guard Chris Quinn did everything in his power to keep his season going, answering Michigan time after time with clutch shots. His baseline lay-in with five seconds left tied the game and sent it to overtime. He finished with a team-high 18 points and nine assists, playing in all 50 minutes of the game. "He's a crafty basketball player," said Horton, who led all scorers with 29 points and also dished out eight assists. "It's tough to guard him; he has really good size for a guard." Notre Dame's swarming defense forced Michigan to settle for a Chris Hunter 3-point attempt at the end of the first overtime. In all, four Wolverines scored in double figures, with Harris, Hunter and junior Lester Abram each giving 15 points to Michigan's cause. The team effort is what has brought the Wolverines a game away from a return trip to New York, just two years after they captured the NIT championship with a win over Rutgers. "If we were to end the season the right way by winning another championship, it would mean the world to us," Horton said. If last night's game had taken place in the NCAA Tournament, it would have gone down in Michigan lore forever. The Wolverines' 87-84 NIT victory over Notre Dame had nearly every ele- ment of a great basketball game: two overtimes, a ridiculous game-winning buzzer-beater and two stars (Daniel Horton and Chris Quinn) making unbelievable plays down the stretch and refus- ing to let their teams give up. I give all the credit in the world to the fans that made Crisler Arena hop, and the players - especial- a ly the seniors - who kept their competitive spirit alive despite the disappointment p of Selection Sunday. But the game was still missingM one major thing: M Implications. SIN Last night's contest was Spittig an NIT game. Not a major nonconference matchup, not a key Big Ten game, and certainly not an NCAA Tournament game. Five years from now, no one will remember who won this tournament, and for good reason. It's a venue for also-rans and mediocre teams, and last night's exciting, well-played con- test doesn't change that fact. The bottom line is that Oral Roberts, which got rocked in the first round of the NCAA Tourna- ment, has already achieved much more this season than Michigan, no matter how far the Wolverines go. I wasn't always so cynical about the NIT. In fact, I was sitting squarely on the Michigan bandwagon when the Wol- verines made their championship run my freshman year. But a great deal has changed in the last two years. I've broken down some ways that this year's NIT trip won't live up to two years ago - even if Michigan once again comes away with the title. HOPE FOR THE FUTURE: In 2003-04, all but one of Michigan's top eight players were freshmen or sophomores. This year, the Wolverines' seven best players are juniors or seniors. It doesn't take a genius to figure out the distinction between the two seasons. Two years ago, Michigan's future seemed bright, and its five-game NIT run only added to the optimism surrounding the program. At the time, many people - myself included - believed the experi- ence of winning an NIT championship would far outweigh the experience of being blown away in the NCAA Tourna- ment. Michigan's core for the next two years had, supposedly, learned to play together and proved it could stand up to the pressures of a tournament environ- ment. The stage seemed set for an NCAA Tournament trip the next season. And, maybe, a legitimate Final Four run this year, when Michigan's veteran-laden squad would reach its maximum potential. Well, that didn't quite pan out. This year, it's hard to see what practical pur- pose the NIT serves for the Michigan basketball program. Seven seniors will be gone next year. It's hard to imagine Dion Harris, Courtney Sims, Brent Petway and Lester Abram will learn anything new from the experience. Sophomore Ron Coleman and freshmen Jerret Smith and Jevohn Shepherd have already received much more playing time than they deserved at this stage in their Michigan careers. And even if they could learn something from the NIT, Tommy kT IG g9 Amaker isn't really playing them anyway - they played a combined 22 minutes last night. So there's just no reason to believe this team will improve from its seventh place in the Big Ten, NIT-worthy performance next year. FOND FAREWELL: I have to believe that winning the NIT in 2004 was a sweet cap-off to Bernard Robinson, Jr's Michi- gan career. B-Rob saw some tumultuous times during his Michigan career - the explosion of the Ed Martin scandal and the elimination of a head coach - so finish- ing his career with a champi- onship, even in the NIT, had to be special. I can't imagine it would be the same feeling for this year's senior class. The 2004 NIT Championship was sup- T posed to be a stepping stone ER to bigger and better things, not Fire a precursor to a 13-18 season and yet another NIT berth. Last night's gutty performance proved that the seniors want to win, and I respect their competitiveness. But unlike B-Rob's squads, this team was capable of earning not just one but multiple NCAA Tournament bids. The absence of a March Madness trip is a void two NIT titles could never fill. BELIEF THAT TOMMY AMAKER WAS A GOOD COACH: When I arrived in Ann Arbor, it appeared that the Michigan basketball program and its young, media-savvy coach were brewing up something special. Tommy Amaker had recruited talented, clean-cut players to lead the Wol- verines in a new direction. An "anony- mous donation," which at the time was rumored to be from Amaker, made stu- dent bleacher seats free of charge. I admit, I was taken in by the little wave and nod Amaker gave the Maize Rage prior to every game. I even naively remarked to a friend that Tommy was "creating some- thing like Duke" in Ann Arbor. Today, I would slap my former 18-year- old self for making such a ridiculous com- ment. At this point, it's clear that Tommy Amaker isn't building anything Duke-like here. After following this team around the country, from Boston to Minneapolis (but not San Diego for the NCAA Tourna- ment, as I had hoped), I'm hard-pressed to come up with a single area where Amaker is an above-average coach. His last two recruiting classes haven't been Big Ten- caliber, his in-game coaching is suspect at best (zone defense, anyone?), his players haven't developed, and the program, while not scandal-racked, hasn't been squeaky- clean. Any lingering hopes I had about Amaker's coaching prowess evaporated in the past two weeks. He let his team fold down the stretch against Indiana and then stood on the sidelines and watched them mail in a virtual NCAA Tournament play- in game versus Minnesota in the Big Ten Tournament. Winning this year's NIT would bring Amaker one step closer to picking up the coveted "greatest NIT coach of all time" title. But I hope that's not what Bill Martin brought him here for. All the NIT championship banners in the world couldn't replace victories when it really matters - during the regular season and the Big Dance. - While MattSinger isn't excited about Michigan's NIT run, his parents are because he might be coming home next week. He can be reached at mattsing@umich.edu. N ICE HOCKEY f ICers face toug test in tore oener By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Writer One may be the loneliest number. But it sure beats zero. Since finishing a road sweep against Northern Michigan on Nov. 12., the Wolverines have not beaten a single quality opponent on the road. The team has played Tournament-bound Miami (two games), Nebraska-Omaha (two games) and Michigan State (one game) and amassed a 0-5-2 record in the process. This alarming trend can be traced throughout the entire season. Michigan is just 5-6-3 on the road, and only two of those wins came against a quality opponent, the aforementioned North- ern Michigan series sweep. Michigan coach Red Berenson didn't sound too optimistic about his team's chances heading into the NCAA Tour- nament during the team's voluntary practice yesterday afternoon. "Nothing you can look at on paper looks good for Michigan," Berenson said. "And I've tried to look at it every which way, and we just don't have a lot going for us right now." The Wolverines square off against North Dakota, the host school for the West regional, meaning Michigan will essentially be playing a road game. The Fighting Sioux have a mediocre home record over the course of the year (13-9-0), but are 8-3-0 at home since the beginning of the new year. North Dakota also boasts a four-game winning streak and a WCHA Tourna- ment conference championship. A strong road record has proven to be very important for championship teams over the past four seasons. Den- ver and Minnesota (the only national champions college hockey has seen in that time) had impressive road records (36-17-12 combined) during their championship run. Even last season's Denver squad, an underachieving team much like this year's Wolver- ines, had a 9-6-1 road record during the season. "It's a big concern," said Berenson of the team's poor performance on the road. "We're not going (into the Tour- nament) on a roll, and this might be the toughest road environment we've played in. But we can't just cancel the game and mail in the points." Berenson understands that as the most experienced person on the trip, it will be his job to "paint the right kind of picture" for the freshmen and the rest of the team. He preached the importance of getting off to a good start, which will be crucial if the Wolverines hope to quiet an oppos- ing crowd. Recent history has been kind to Michigan in playoff road games. Two seasons ago, the Wolverines had to travel to New Hampshire for the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Michigan defeated the Wildcats in front of their home crowd en route to a Frozen Four appearance. And back in 1998, the Wolverines beat Boston College to win the NCAA title in Boston. Despite a bleak outlook that has left some scrambling to find a silver lining, senior goalie Noah Ruden believes the team's not having the same anxieties. "You don't worry about that kind of stuff," Ruden said. "If you start talk- ing in your head about, 'We haven't won on the road in a long time,' ... you're going to start psyching yourself out. (You can't) worry about the fans, not worry about any of that other stuff, just worry about your game." The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts VICTOR B. LIEBERMAN Marvin B. Becker Collegiate Professor of History ANew Vw ofoEusia 8o - 18oo Saturday March 25, 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm at Dance Gallery Studio, 815 Wildt Street, Ann Arbor, Ml Busch Gardens of Tampa. Florida is now hiring performers of many talents for a variety of live show productions including an all new show to open in May of 2006. We are particularly interested in: comedic actors that can sing and/or sing and dance: Billy Crystal/ Nathan Lane/Martin Short type. We are also seeking: dancers that can sing and act (comedy), vocalists that can act (comedy) and dancers with strong jazz technique. We are also seeking kit drummers and keyboard players. You should have an outgoing personality, singing ability is a plus. No appointment necessary. Bring prepared audition and a current non-returnable resume and headshot. Also seeking technicians and stage managers. Visit our Rackham Tuesday, March Amphitheater 21, 2006 -- 4:1.0 PM .: ^..i:... fi l :x .' - .& :.:y. .:.. nv' « ~, , ?K. ,. ::_..:' . .s ... .,yap{ . ' . x . I