CA IE The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com DAILY SPORTS BREAKS DOWN THE WEEKEND THAT WAS 2B - Monday, January 29, 2007 'M' SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY- 1.31 M BASKETBALL VS.IOWA,8P.M. THURSDAY -2.1 W Basketball atlllinois, 8 p.m. FRIDAY -2.2 MTrack/Fieldat Meyolnvitational,TBA W Track/Field at MeyoaClassic,10 a.m. M TENNIS VS. WESTERN MICHIGAN, 6 P.M. WRESTLING VS.IOWA, 7:30 PM. Ice Hockey at Western Michigan,7:35 p.m. SATURDAY-2.3 W Tennis atOregen,.2p.m. MITENNIS VS. HAVARD, 5PM. W Gymnastics at :It5; CA SAID AND HEARD "It did kind of spark me a little bit. I was looking for some guys with their heads down, but I couldn't force it. Hopefully, I'll have better luck tomorrow night." - Michigan defenseman JACK JOHNSON on the stu- dent section's "Kill, Jack, kill" chant on Friday night. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK JENNY KUEHN WOMEN'S TENNIS The graduate senior was instrumental in Mich- igan's upset of No. 12 Vanderbilt on Saturday. The Leipzig, Germany, native rebounded after losing the first set of her No. 1 singles match to capture the dual meet-clinching win. NBA All-Star game: A model for success State of M Gymn ICE HOC 7:35 P.M SUNDA W BASK 2 P.M. W Tenni: Wrestlin WA Cc MA AT' 41: Michigan Classic, 7 p.m. ou probably didn't notice, iastics at Penn State,7 p.m. but the National Hockey -KEY VS WESTERNMICHIGAN, Y League held its all-star game last week. As a league with low ratings and a Y - 2.4 small fanbase, the NHL did exactly ETBALL VS. NORTHWESTERN, the wrong thing. it s at Washington, 2 p.m. screwed up the game. gvs.Wiscsin,2 p.m. It aired on Ver- home games in all caps sus, which, *all times EST apparently, is actually 4 a real cable station. It was also NT TO WRITE played on JACK a Wednes- HERMAN FORDAI LY day night, S ? dampening PORTS? some of the excitement that an all- star weekend can generate. And in its biggest error, the league likely rigged the vote in its waning weeks )ME TO OUR to prevent Rory Fitzpatrick - an. unremarkable defenseman who was kSS MEETING the subject of a write-in vote move- ment on the Internet - from playing, 7:30 P.M. AT eliminating the incentive for many casual fans intrigued by the "Vote 3 E. HURON. for Rory" cause to watch the game. It's a shame, too, because when the NHL gets it right, it's one of the few all-star games actually worth watching. When I think of all-star games, I expect a series of days filled with the sport's best players and biggest per- sonalities. The game should resem- ble, in some form, the sport that's. played every other day of the season. A cool skills competition doesn't hurt, either. . Baseball can't do this. Neither can football. And it's not really some- thing either sport can fix. Both sports suffer because they're not played like they are during the restofiheseason.Inanall-stargame, everyone expects to play, ensuring that the starters, supposedly the best players, have little influence over the outcome. Nobody goes to a regular- season game planning to see a team use all of its bullpen or three differ- ent quarterbacks, but in an all-star world, -it's an unwritten rule that destroys the flow of the contest. Baseball hasn't helped itself with its decision making, either. I rec- ognize there have been some great games and great moments, like Cal Ripken, Jr.'s home run in his final all-star game, but I can't help but feel the Mid-Summer Classic has lost some of its luster. The home run derby was fun when I was kid, but how many times can I watch Bobby Abreu and Ryan Howard slug it out? Can't the MLB devise some other contest, like base running or a pitch- ing game, to shake things up? And in what is surely a column on its own, the misguided attempt to give the game meaning by awarding home-field advantage in the World Series to the league that wins should end immediately. I know I would be upset if I got just three home games in the World Series because Barry Bonds opted notto turn a single into a double during the fourth inning of a mid-July exhibition. Football, on the other hand, is pretty much out of luck. You cer- tainly couldn't play the game during the season, but by the time the Pro, Bowl is played, no one really cares about football, including many of the players. The college games are plagued by the same problem, and the fact that there are more senior games than I can keep track of doesn't help, either. I thinkthey even invented some cardinal directions for some new bowl game this year. Where those two sports fail, basket- ball - and hockey, if it chooses - get things right. The NBA has it down pat. Com- missioner David Stern has trans- formed the three-hour All-Star Game into All-Star Weekend, an event. . Activities commence on Friday with the Rookie challenge, where a team oftop rookies takes on ateam of second-year stars. The games haven't been too competitive recently (the sophomores have won by at least 20 points the past four years), but still, it's a way to showcase younger tal- ent and get people ready for the next two days of competition. Saturdaynightisfilled with skills. There's two shooting competitions - the 3-point contest and "Shooting Stars," which teams stars from the NBA, WNBA and an NBA alumni - that are solid. There's also a rela- tively new skills competition that involves essentially an obstacle course of different tasks. The last four winners have been Dwyane Wade, Steve Nash, Baron Davis and Jason Kidd, so there's some tough competition in this each year. And, of course, there's the Slam Dunk contest. The event was elimi- nated in the late '90s after a few years of declining interest, but it was brought back in 2000, and Vince Carter single-handedly revived the art with a performance that includ- ed finishing a dunk with his elbow through the hoop. And if the dunks aren't enough, the reactions of the league's more veteran players on the sideline could probably be a show of its own. Most important, the NBA shines. It isn't plagued by the problem like baseball and football, because most basketball teams have a large rota- tion, so everyone is going to get in. Defense might be lacking, but recent games have been high-scoring, com- petitive and exciting. And as dissimilar as the sports may be, the two can provide similar all-star experiences. Hockey teams have big rotations, so everyone can hit the ice with- out dramatically changing how the game is played, just like basketball. The hockey skills competition is just as fun to watch than the NBA pre-game festivities. Promote it and make it Friday or Saturday like it used to be. Turnit into an event. And remember NHL, the game is supposed to be for the fans, so let them have their fun. If they want Rory Fitzpatrick to start, let him start. It's tough to argue that it will challengethe sanctity of a gamethat has gone through a number of format changes over the past few years. Do this, and I might take the time to figure out what channel Versus is. - Herman can be reached at jaherman@umich.edu. 0 No 'fast-skins', no problem for Blue WotpS BASKETBALL Post players show range By COURTNEYRATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - You had to won- der if Brutus the Buckeyetwas stifled by the smell of chlorine - or if he was just feeling suffocated by his team's inability to win. Fifteen feet from the Michigan men's swimming and diving squad, the Ohio State mascot stood silently with a group of red- and gray-clad cheerleaders as they watched the Buckeyes lose their first-day lead over the Wolverines. During Friday and Saturday's double-dual meet, No. 12 Michigan came from behind to defeat No. 14 Ohio State, 171-163, but lost to No. 8 Northwestern, 189.5-144.5. After Friday's events, the Wol- verines trailed the Buckeyes by four points and the Wildcats by 14. "The meet got away from us with Northwestern (on Friday), so we knew that even if we had a great meet (on Saturday), it'd be hard to catch them," Michigan coach Bob Bowman said. "With Ohio State, we felt like we had a chance to get back and win, and the guys swam well to do that." Bowman said freshman Scott Spann's second-place finish in the 100-yard breaststroke "basically won the meet" for Michigan against Ohio State. Spann passed the third- place swimmer in the race's final lap. "I was really focusing on my own race, because I knew if I had a good race, it would be better than Ohio State's," Spann said. "It was a lot closer than we hoped it would be going into the last two races. We needed a guaranteed win over Ohio State in the breaststroke so that we could have confidence coming into the last relay." Also helping defeat the Buck- eyes were sophomore Matt Patton and junior Alex Vanderkaay, who set pool records in the 1,000-yard freestyle and 200-yard butterfly, respectively. For their final regular-season meet before the Big Ten cham- pionships, some Ohio State and Northwestern swimmers wore "fast skins" - swimsuits generally used for end-of-the-season meets by athletes in peak training condi- tion after tapering. Bowman said this weekend's double dual contest was not intended to be a taper meet for the Wolverines, a decision that temporarily proved difficult for the Wolverines to overcome. "They had the fast suits on, which putus at a disadvantage for nowbut it won'tlater,"Bowmansaid. "Every- one makes their own choices. It's our commitment to be focused on Big Tens and the NCAAs, and we're not going to sacrifice those goals for any steps down the line." In three weeks, Michigan will return to Columbus for the Big Ten Championships. Despite North- western's 13 first-place victories this weekend, the Wolverines were unconcerned with the possibility of a similar dominating performance by the Wildcats at the conference meet. "Northwestern is a perfect dual meet team because of the way that (dual meets) are set up," freshman Chris Brady explained. "For first place, you automatically get more points than everyone else. At Big Tens, the second, third and fourth places mean a lot more than just winning, and I think we have a much better shot there." This weekend provided the opportunity for Michigan to swim at this year's Big Ten Championship site before the meet. With the dif- ferentformatofthe conferencemeet and the added advantage of swim- ming after taper, the Wolverines believe the Big Ten championship will be marked by Maize-and-Blue victories. "I think everyone's ready," soph- omore Bobby Savulich said. "We just need to tune up a little bit. In three weeks, we're going to come out, fight like hell for Michigan and win." By ANDY REID she took. Daily Sports Writer Phillip's range added another dimension to the game which the For the Michigan women's bas- Hoosier defense had no answer ketball team, the basket felt about for. When preparing for a tall, as wide as the ocean yesterday physical presence in the post like when the Wolverines outlasted Phillips, a team can't anticipate Indiana 65- her shooting threes. The Indiana 63 at Crisler NOTEBOOK post defense was no exception, as Arena. Phillips faced little contention on The 3-point stripe was espe- her three-ball attempts. cially kind to Michigan. Another freshman post play- And for a team that ranks last er, LeQuisha Whitfield, found in the Big Ten in 3-point field goal her stroke as the game wore on. percentage, these days don't come Whitfield couldn't miss during around often. Michigan's second-half come- Three Wolverines shot bet- back, hitting three clutch trifec- ter than 50 percent from behind tas in the waning minutes of the the arc, registering a season-high game. team percentage of 44.4 percent. "I just didn't want to lose," And you might not believe who Whitfield said of her late surge. "I had the hot hands. played intense with passion, and Michigan's post players I was just confident in what I was accounted for nine 3-pointers, doing." and that's just the way that coach Whitfield had ice running Cheryl Burnett had in mind. through her veins during her last "I've always been a coach that's two triples. The Detroit native wanted a (post) player to shoot hit shots to tie the game and then the three to stretch the defense," to put Michigan ahead where it Burnett said. "One of the things would stay. we wanted was for those players BENCH CONTRIBUTIONS: While to shoot the three (today). ... We Indiana had a seven player rota- wanted to take advantage of their tion for most of the game, Michi- (defensive scheme), and I think gan went deep into its bench to we did." find some of its biggest contribu- Freshman Krista Phillips was tions. Burnett may have started on fire all game. Although she has to use her bench extensively to shown her range in a handful of ware down the Hoosiers, but the games, Phillips had only taken bench outplayed the starters in sporadic attempts from behind many ways. the stripe. The 6-6 freshman Not a single Michigan starter proved that her stroke was no recorded an assist, relying heavi- fluke, hitting all three deep shots ly on freshmen Kalyn McPherson and Sireece Bass to dish the ball around. McPherson shattered a personal best with seven assists, easily beating her old game-high of two. Bass added three more, rounding out the 10 assists tallied by the Wolverines. McPherson also added a defen- sive element the starters couldn't provide. Giving The Hoosiers fits all day, she recorded five steals. Slipping through the Indiana offense to intercept a pass on sev- eral occasions, McPherson gave the Wolverines easy transition points in the process. "I don't know. I got lucky, I guess," McPherson said of her productive afternoon. "We stressed (drop rotation) in prac- tice alot this week, and I got alot of opportunities-from that." The bench's big game wasn't lost on Burnett. While the game was up for grabs with just a few minutes left, the coach confident- ly kept four bench players on the floor. Her strategy worked, and the young players closed out the game with a win. CRISLER ISN'T SO FRIENDLY: The Wolverines may have fallen on some hard times during the past couple years, but that hasn't stopped them dominatingIndiana in Crisler. The last time the Hoo- siers left Ann Arbor victorious, "Titanic" was the No. 1 movie at the box office (Feb. 1, 1998). Since then, Michigan has given Indiana a slew of longbus rides home. The Wolverines have won six straight over the Hoosiers at home. 0 0 Winless weekend weighs heavily on struggling grapplers By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - In a matchup pitting heavyweights Michigan against Michi- gan State, no one seemed to be surprised that the dual meet came down to the final match of heavyweights. The Wolverines hoped the match would result in a victory - not a heavy weight placed on their shoulders. With Michigan down 18-17 after coming back fromback-to-back pins (133- and 141- pound) and a 15-0 deficit, redshirt junior Omar Maktabi walked up the stairs to the wrestling mat, exchanged an intense series of high fives with Michigan coach Joe McFarland, and was ready to match the intensity of the green-and-white-clad crowd. But Maktabi fell short of elevating Michigan to a win, falling 2-1 in double overtime after failingto register an escape in the final 30 seconds despite starting in the down position. The three-point deci- sion sealed a Spartan victory, 21-17, in East Lansing. "It's not Michigan wrestling," junior Tyrel Todd said. "It's not how I look at Michigan wrestling, it's not how anyone who knows Michigan wrestling looks at Michigan wrestling. It's frustrating. We got some young guys who got a lot of learning to do and just got to put in more time. Just losing in a match like this is ter- rible, especially to (Michigan) State." Maktabi had a couple of opportunities inthe firstthree periods, butwas unable to close on any of his moves. He found him- self facing Spartan Alan O'Donnell in the neutral position throughout the match. "I knew anything could happen," McFarland said. "I knew it was going to be a great match, and it was a great match. It's always nice to win those great match- es, though." The team's frustration from the result of this match, just the second loss to the Spartans in the past nine meets, was exemplary of the meet - the Wolverines simply had a difficult time scoring. "I thought we wrestled hard," McFar- land said. "(We) just didn't do enough. Just in doing enough in terms of being able to score (and) put some points up there. I thought (the 174-pound weight class) and heavyweight have to be able to score. I thought we competed well, wrestled hard, but it's just one of those things." Co-captain Eric Tannenbaumexpressed similar sentiments following the Wolver- ines' disappointing defeat. "A lot of times it comes down to heavy- weights, and it's obviously a huge match," Tannenbaum said. "There's a lot of pres- sure on the guys out there, but I was hoping Omar would push a little more offense." Competing on a raised platform at Jeni- son Field House, rare in collegiate wres- tling, Michigan was unable to bounce back from their 29-6 defeat at the hands of No. 1 Minnesota on Friday night. Sec- ond-ranked Tannenbaum (165 pounds) and Nick Roy (197 pounds) were the only Wolverines to take home wins against the Gophers, with Tannenbaum just one point shy of a major decision. No. 3 Josh Churella (149 pounds) tied top-ranked Dustin Schlatter, but the rid- ing-time advantage gave Schlatter the decisive point. McFarland thought the team had put the lopsided loss to the country's best team behind them, but after the Michigan lightweights dug a 15-point hole for the team, the match - and the season - con- tinued to spiral out of control. "It's been a rough weekend," Tannen- baum said. "It's been a rough season so far. ...(For) a couple guys, this is their first year in the lineup, so stuff like that plays into effect. I'm hoping that towards the end of the year, we can start turning around and startbeatinglteams that no one expects us to beat. There's no more pressure really on us anymore." With a 1-5-1 record (0-2 in the Big Ten) and no wins since their lone victory over Lehigh Nov. 16, the loss to the Spartans has magnified the effects of the loss of Steve Luke to an MCL injury and the youth Michigan has in the lightweights. Though the Big Ten season is just beginning, and McFarland has repeatedly mentioned thathis team is more suited for tournament competition (with five top-20 wrestlers), the Wolverines certainly have their work cut out for them this week. They will face No. 5 Iowa and No. 9 Wis- consin this weekend. "It's not where we want to be, but it is," McFarland said. "We just got to keep working hard and not get down about it. What else can we do?" I