8 - Friday, January 26, 2007 P 4 Secon alf dooms Blue The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ast start not enough for'M' 0 By ANDY REID out of the gate really confident. ... Daily Sports Writer We came in with a very specific gameplan, and I think we did a MADISON - Apparently, the very good job of having our post Michigan women's basketball help where it needed to help." team didn't get the memo. With Michigan's fast start in InWisconsin,basketballgames the post, the Badgers began to last 40 collapse inside on defense. The minutes. MICHIGAN 60 Wolverines responded with a Last WISCONSIN 73 surprising barrage from long night range. was a classic tale of two halves, as Struggling all year from behind the Wolverines folded against the the arc, Michigan lit it up from Badgers after halftime, losing 73- downtown, scorching the nets on 60 at the Kohl Center. three consecutive possessions. From the opening tip, the The Badgers, who had slowly Wolverines were on the prowl, clawed back into the game, had jumping out to a 14-6 lead before no answer for the flurry of tri- Wisconsin could settle into the fectas, and Michigan ran into the game. In those initial minutes, tunnel with a four-point lead. the Michigan's post play looked Unfortunately for the Wolver- smoother than it had all season, ines, they had to run back out of with freshman Krista Phillips the locker room for another half. and sophomore Carly Benson Picking up where Michigan racking up points down low. left off in the first half, Wiscon- The duo accounted for 10 of sin launched 3-pointers from the Michigan's first 14 points. outset, sinking shot after shot. Even though the Wolverines As the Badgers caught fire, the has the size to compete in the Wolverines cooled down. paint with any Big Ten team, they "At halftime we said, 'We have have struggled all season to find to come out and play the same ways to get the ball to their post way, have the same mindset,' " players. Michigan coach Cheryl Minnfield said. "We started to Burnett admits her team strug- slack at the beginning of the sec- gles with post entry passes, but ond half, so that was the big dif- don't tell that to sophomore Jes- ference in the game." sica Minnfield. The point guard Michigan's post-passing prob- tallied seven assists in the first lems grew as the game wore on. half alone, finding Phillips near Michigan couldn't seem to find the basket multiple times. Phillips down low - she didn't Wisconsin came out playing make a field goal in the second much more man-to-man defense half. And after a stellar passing than the previous time these two performance in the first half, teams faced off. This gave Phillips Minnfield had just one assist an opportunity to use her height after the break. to score points in the paint. Along with the slow start, "I'm really proud of the first Wisconsin's ability to crash the half," Burnett said. "Our kids offensive glass took a toll on played really hard. They came Michigan. ByDAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer MADISON-Lastnight,Wisconsin played in its first game since return- ing from winter break. The Badgers looked antsy as they shuffled NOTEBOOK around dur- ing the National Anthem. And when Wisconsin scored the game's first four points, Michigan seemed doomed to have one of its infamous slow starts. But the Wolverines responded with a 12-0 run, benefiting from the inside play of sophomore forward CarlyBen- son and freshman center Krista Phil- lips. Still, a pair of wing players proved the deciding factor in Michigan's sustained strong play throughout the half. While Wisconsin was coming off a break from classes, Michigan was aided by a different kind of return. Senior forward Kelly Helvey and junior guard Janelle Cooper both started for the first time in five games. The veterans were instrumental in the Wolverines' 32-28 halftime lead. Cooper scored 10 points and grabbed five rebounds in 20 first-half minutes. Helvey played solid defense, notching two steals. "I'm really proud of especially the first half," Michigan coach Cheryl. Burnett said. "Our kids played really hard, came out of the gate being very confident." ONE-TWO PUNCH: Michigan got stronggamesout ofits startingguards, Cooper and sophomore point guard Jessica Minnfield. The duo played a combined 77min- utes. Cooper led the team with 19 points and eight rebounds, five on the offen- sive glass. But Burnett saw much more thanthat. "I know you as media, as fans, you'll look at her numbers, andshe has a great line of what her performance was," Burnettsaid. "But we as coaches also look at the stats we like to keep - defensive stats and screening stats and all those other stats. "Regardless of what her numbers are (on the box score), she had a tre- mendous game of what our coaches would also tally. So you add both of them together, and it's a great perfor- mance." Minnfield had eight assists and was second on the team with seven rebounds. She also bounced back from three first-half turnovers with none in the second frame. PRESIING:Burnettbroughtinjunior guard Krista Clement, sophomore forwards Ashley Jones and Melinda Queen and freshman guard Kalyn McPherson with three minutes remaining in the game. For Clement, Jones and Queen, it was their first action of the night. The unit pressed the Badgers, and Queen stole a pass but couldn't hit her shot. After a Wisconsin rebound, Michi- gan backed off to set up its half-court defense. But Burnett, with obvious irritation, called the unit forward. Burnett's urging worked. Wiscon- sin point guard Rae Lin D'Alie was trapped on her own baseline and forced to call a timeout. "I actually thought Wisconsin had a couple of unforced errors just due to our pressure," Burnett said. "Some were forced. Sometimes we have to get the rightkids out there to be agood pressingteam. As Burnett made frequent substitu- tions in the game's closing minutes, Michigan continued to press. But the Wolverines often ended up fouling Wisconsin in the backcourt, and the Badger free-throw shooting was solid enough to send Michigan homewith aloss. 0 DEREK BLUMKE/Daily Junior Janelle Cooper led Michigan was 19 points. Cooperalso posted eight rebounds in the Big Ten loss at Wisconsin. "Blocking out still plagues us," during the early minutes of the Burnett said. "We felt like we second stanza. blocked out well enough in the Michigan's solid final minutes first half. In the second half, we'd could give the Wolverines plenty guard them for 29 seconds, they'd ofmomentumgoinginto Sunday's get a contested shot, and then game against Indiana. they'd get an offensive rebound. But this loss is still going to I really think that made the dif- hurt for a while. ference." "We wanted to remember the Although the slow second-half first game (against Wisconsin)," start effectively ended Michi- Burnett said. "We wanted to gan's chances to pull out a win, prove that the end of that game the team never gave up down the wasn't the way it should have stretch. occurred. We wanted to use that Implementing an aggressive as motivation. ... This was a great press, the Wolverines chipped opportunity for us to come out away the Wisconsin lead built with a win, but we didn't." MEN'S BASKETBALL No road rest for Cagers as they enter Bloomington By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer Having just one person abso- lutely despise you is hard. Having thousands hate you - well, that's just downright mis- erable. And that's exactly what life on the road is like in the Big Ten. The Michigan men's basketball team learned that lesson the hard way on Wednesday night when it fell to No. 2 Wisconsin, 71-58, in Madi- son. But the Wolverines have no time to stew over the loss. Michigan faces another road test tomorrow when it travels to Blooming- Michigan at ton to take on Indiana No. 23 Indi- Matchup: ana. Michigan 16-5; The loss Indiana 14-5 to the Bad- When: Saturday gers dropped at noon Michigan to Where: Bloom- 2-4 from ington, lid. 24away fom TV/Radio: Crisler Arena N this sea- son. With the Wolverines firmly entrenched on the NCAA Tourna- ment bubble, Saturday represents another opportunity to capture the elusive marquee road victory - the one that impresses the tour- nament selection committee come March. "I think it would be big as a pro- gram and as a team to go in on the road, knowing we haven't had as great as success on the road as we should have," senior Dion Harris said. To defeat the Hoosiers, Michi- gan (4-2 Big Ten, 16-5 overall) must limit the silly turnovers that have plagued it in each loss this season. On Wednesday night, the Wol- verines committed 19 turnovers, including 12 in the first half. The mistakes derailed Michigan after it jumped out to a 9-0 lead. The veterans were the biggest culprits. The seniors - Harris, Lester Abram, Courtney Sims and Brent Petway - accounted for all but three of the giveaways. "We need to keep our poise and not turn the ball over," Sims said followinghis 16-point, seven-turn- over effort on Wednesday night. "I think if we eliminate that, we'll be fine. When we're winning and playing well, we aren't turning the ball over and executing what we do in practice." The Wolverines must perform better than they did against the Badgers, because Indiana (4-2, 14- 5) is no walk in the park - not by a long shot. Before their road loss to Illinois onTuesday,theHoosiershadreeled off five straightvictories, including wins over Michigan State, Purdue and at Connecticut. To make mat- ters worse, Michigan has not won at Assembly Hall since 1996. Because of the late finish at the Kohl Center on Wednesday night, Michigan's time to devise a strat- egy for coach Kelvin Sampson's squad is limited. "It's kind of hard to prepare for the future when you are prepar- ing so hard for Wisconsin," Abram said. The decisive matchup in tomor- row's contest should be the battle inside. Indiana features junior forward D.J. White, who averages more than 14 points per game and leads the Big Ten in blocked shots. The Wolverines' trio of for- wards - Sims, Petway and fresh- man Ekpe Udoh - will likely be called on to neutralize White. If Michigan double-teams him, it opens up room for Hoosier guard Roderick Wilmont, a dynamic 3- point shooter. Most important, the Wolverines must right the ship or risk watch- ing their Big Ten title hopes - and NCAA Tournament dreams - slip away for a ninth-consecutive sea- son. "Listen, we are in the middle of the conference race," Amaker said after Wednesday's loss. "We came here in second place (in the Big Ten), and we're going to be fine. Just because we didn't play well tonight, we aren't ready to tank our basketball team. We aren't. We are going to go back and compete. We're going to go to Bloomington and see if we can get a win there." I Consulting offers opportunities for individual challenge, career growth, and professional development not available in industry, government, or academia. ENVlRON will conduct interviews on Monday, February 5th. 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