The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, January 29, 2007 - 3B Charity stripe kind to Blue Icers near perfect for month By DANIEL BROMWICH Daily Sports Editor BLOOMINGTON - The Michi- gan men's basketball team followed the popular coaches' logic NOTEBOOK espoused by ESPN commentator and former coach Rick Majerus that if you attempt more free throws than 3- pointers, you should win the game. But the Wolverines encountered an unforeseen problem. Three points is more than one. And since Indiana made more than 50 percent of its long-range attempts, the Hoosiers had no trouble running away with the victory Saturday afternoon. "They spread the floor and leave the inside open for (senior D.J.) White, and then they have the shooters and the drivers on the perimeter,"senior Dion Harris said. "That wasn't a surprise to us - they just did what they do today." And they did it well. Indiana made 8-of-14 first-half attempts from long range, en route to sinking 10 attempts from beyond the arc in the game. Michigan made an adjustment by halftime, holding the Hoosiers to just two 3-point- ers in the second frame by mixing in several zone defenses. But the damage had already been done. With the Wolverines paying extra attention to the long ball in the second half, Indiana had no problem settling for shorter, easier shots. Their percentage certainly didn't suffer, as the Hoosiers knocked down 7-of-8 attempts to begin the second half (none of which were from outside), and extended the lead to 20 in that short span. SEASON HIGH/LOW: Michigan recorded season bests in two criti- cal categories on Saturday, as it attempted 35 free throws against Indiana and converted on 29 of those chances. The previous high for Michigan in both categories came against Davidson (Nov. 11), but many of those free throws were a product of Davidson fouling late in the game. Against the Hoosiers, the Wolverines sought to attack the aggressive Indiana defense, and get to the free throw line, where they would have easier opportuni- ties to score. Fou r Michigan starters attempt- ed at least five free throws during the game, and each of those play- ers shot better than 80 percent from the line. Junior Ron Coleman was 9-of-9 from the charity stripe, senior Courtney Sims was 7-of-8 and Harris was 5-of-5. While Michigan was able to get to the free throw line seemingly at will, a difficult task on the road, it didn't have the expected influence on the game's outcome. "If someone had told me (the number of free throws we shot and made), then I would have predicted that we would probably have been a lot closer, if not been able to win, this basketball game," Amaker said. "We werethe aggres- sor, I thought. We tried to use the foul line as a weapon to score, and that was the only way...we cer- tainly weren't able to get too many threes, and not being able to score from the floor in the paint was dif- ficult for us." Michigan set a season-low in field goals against the Hoosiers, converting on just 15-of-43 tries (35-percent). INJURY - UPDATE: Sophomore point guard Jerret Smith didn't travel with the team to Blooming- ton. He stayed behind to recyver from a mild concussion suffered in Michigan's loss Wednesday at Wisconsin. Amaker professed no knowl- edge of Smith's situation or when the Romulus native would return. The Wolverines certainly could have used Smith's help against the Hoosiers. After playing two of his best career games against Penn State and Purdue, the injury comes at a bad time. Smith provided a contribution in the scoring column in those two games, but his biggest contribu- tion against Indiana might have been freeing up his teammates to score. With Smith on the floor, Harris can play more of his natural position, shooting guard, where he is more comfortable and effective. "(Smith) would have helped me to get off the ball a little bit," Har- ris said. "I was mainly on the ball the whole time today, setting up things, and couldn't really carry the mgin spoting load tonight." ByAMBER COLVIN Daily Sports Writer Winter blues? Midseason slump? Forgotten New Year's resolutions? Not for this hockey team. The Wolverines fin- ished the month of Janu- NOTEBOOK ary with an almost perfect 6-1 record, the lone blemish coming from a 2-1 home loss to lowly Northern Michigan. After a disappointing first half of the sea- son, culminating with a major letdown in the Great Lakes Invitational, many players vowed to vault the team to where it belonged in the second stretch. Aside from the loss to the Wildcats, it seems like the Wolverines took that resolution to heart.' "This is the time of year that Michigan teams need to be at their best," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Let's face it: We are a pretty good team. We underachieved in the first half, and we need to have a good second half - a real good second half." Michigan outscored opponents 37-14 this month. In December, the Wolverines were outscored 15-22, going 1-3. The key to the new year has been a revamped emphasis on defense - lowering the goals against average from 3.57 in 2006 to 2.0 in 2007 - while maintaining a booming offense. Though the Wolverines seem to be hitting their stride at a crucial part of the season, they have yet to face a ranked team in 2007. Two of their five remaining opponents are currently ranked. Michigan has eight games leftin the regular season and sits one point shy of second place in the CCHA. Notre Dame leads the league with 32 points, followed by Miami (Ohio) (29), Michigan (28) and Michigan State (25). The Wolverines have played the same number of conference games as the Irish (20), while the RedHawks have played two more, and the Spartans one less. The top four teams get a first-round bye in the CCHA playoffs and home-ice advantage in the second round of the tournament. Michi- gan hasn't finished outside the top four since 1988. "This late in the season, we do not have any games to waste," senior captain Matt Hun- wick said. "We have to win every one." HELPING HENSICK: It's a rare night when senior T.J. Hensick doesn't tally a point. On Saturday, with less than two minutes remain- ing in the game, it looked like it would be one of those atypical nights - until a Jack John- son slapshot zoomed into the net. Hensick's assist on the goal moved him into sole possession of fifth place on the Michigan career assist list. His 135 career helpers are also the most of any active NCAA player. The Hobey Baker Award hopeful leads the country in assists (34), assists per game (1.2) and points (46). Hensick is also on the cusp of 200 career points after his three-assist weekend put him at 199 points. No Alaska? No problem: After staying home during lastweekend's trip to Fairbanks to rest his injured knee, freshman defenseman Steve Kampfer rejoined the lineup Friday. The Jack- son native didn't notch any points, but he made his presence known at the other end of the ice with a team-leading four blocked shots. JOHNSONS EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK: Sopho- more defenseman Jack Johnson may have wowed many with his first career hat trick Friday night, but he wasn't the onlf member of the Johnson family entertaining the crowd at Yost Ice Arena. Minutes after Johnson scored his second goal of the night, the second intermission arrived, and his younger brother Kenny took the stage in the Score-O competition. The lit- tle Johnson put the biscuit in the basket with a little assistance from those holding the Score- O board. Soon after, Johnson's father did his usual second-intermission dance, accompanied by football players Jake Long and Adam Kraus. Johnson helps D' create '' By NATE SANDALS Daily Sports Writer You couldn't talk to anybody involved with the Michigan hockey program without hearing it: "We've got to do better with goals against." Michigan coach Red Berenson said it every time he met with reporters. Players spewed the mantra like politicians with talking points. Defense was clearly the Wolverines' top prior- ity. This month, Michigan has played like a defensive juggernaut, allowing just two goals per game. Surprisingly, the biggest benefit of improved defense might actually be diverse offensive production. And much of the credit for the Wolverines' varied goal scoring goes right back to Michigan's blueliners. As if to let off some steam from their efforts in the defensive zone, senior captain Matt Hunwick and sophomore Jack Johnson spent some time this weekend contributing on the offensive end. On Friday night, Johnson recorded his first career hat trick - including two shorthanded tallies. On Saturday, he used his -blistering slapshot to light the lamp twice more. All told, Johnson had eight points in the two games against Ferris State. "I just kept firing," Johnson said after Sat- urday's game. "The past 10 games or so, they were not going in for me, but I had the men- tality to keep shooting, and eventually one of them is going to go in." Or five. Johnson's goals came primarily from the point, but Hunwick jumped up on the attack for his marker. Hunwick, trailing the offensive rush, received a backhand pass from sophomore Brandon Naurato. With Ferris State goalie Mitch O'Keefe leaning the wrong way, Hun- wick buried the puck, giving Michigan its first goal on Saturday. "(The forwards) are always talking about helping the 'D' out as far as coming back," Naurato said. "If (defensemen) can jump up in the play and then still get back, that's even bet- ter. It helps us a lot." Goals from defensemen had been scarce up to this point in the season, with just 12 of the team's 107 goals tallied by the blueliners. Equally rare, at times, were goals from the third and fourth lines. But those have come more regularly in the past two weekends, too. Even afterswitching from the top line to the third, sophomore Travis Turnbull has kept up his solid offensive output. The Chesterfield, Mo., native deposited a goal in each game this weekend. He now has points in four straight games. Naurato, also a third liner, had three assists on the weekend, and his point streak stands at four games, too. "I just love playing with Turnbull and (sophomore Tim) Miller," Naurato said. "I think we've got pretty good chemistry going. Hopefully we can keep up as a unit every weekend." Saturday night, the goals weren't coming from the usual suspects. Of Michigan's top- six goal scorers going into the weekend, only sophomore Andrew Cogliano managed to beat O'Keefe. Even for an offense as star-studded as Michigan's, there's a benefit in evenly distrib- uted scoring. "It helps out our team when guys like Nau- rato and Miller and guys like that can score," said junior Kevin Porter, who is tied for the team lead in goals with 18. "It's huge for our team; it gives us confidence." But as happy as Porter was with the offen- sive output, all he really wanted to talk about was allowing fewer goals against. CAGERS From page 1B senior, guard Dion Harris, tied for the team lead with 12 points, but failed to score until just nine minutes remained in the first half Abram and junior Ron Coleman also mustered 12 points. "Before the game, (Michigan) coach (Tommy) Amaker was tell- ingus that they were going to come with their best shot," Coleman said. "He told us that the first four minutes of the game were going to be important, and the first four of the second half were going to be important." But Michigan didn't heed the warning.- After three minutes of basket- ball, it trailed 11-0. The Wolverines (4-3 Big Ten, 16-6 overall) fell into the early hole due to their inability to defend the 3-pointer. The Hoosiers sank three shots from beyond the 3-point line in the game's first four minutes, and went on to sink 8-of-14 first- half attempts from behind the arc. Each time Michigan threatened to tighten the game, the Hoosiers (5- 2, 15-5) responded with a dagger from downtown. "We really felt it was going to be an emotional start for them, and I was hopeful that we were going to have a chance to match that," Amaker said. "But we weren't able to do it, and they hit the first few buckets and the first few threes, and it really got things rolling for them." The Wolverines responded to the early deficit, however, as they cut the deficit to five on a Courtney Sims lay-up. But Indiana coun- tered with a 3-pointer by junior A.J. Ratliff to extend the lead to 16-8. Michigan continued to rally, reducing the lead to six twice in the half But both times, late defen- sive rotations by Michigan allowed Indiana senior Roderick Wilmot to knock down a 3-pointer and push the lead back to nine, where the margin stood at halftime., "We'll make a play, but then we would come down on offense and wouldn't score, and then they would come back down and score," Petway said. "So that would put us right back where we were. We just couldn't get over that hump, and that's what we need to address. We just need to find a way to get over that one hump." The Wolverines appeared unready to start the second half, too. Indiana junior D.J. White began the half with a quick base- line jumper that started the Hoo- siers on a 14-3 spurt. That run extended the lead to 49-29, and the deficit proved too much for Michi- gan to respond to. "(The) start of the second half, that was the difference in the bas- ketball game," Amaker said. Michigan threatened to catch up to the Hoosiers late, cutting the margin to eight with three min- utes to play. But Indiana junior Mike White put back his ownmiss after Petway pinned it against the backboard. Courtney Sims was late coming over to box out, and committed his fifth and final foul on White as the junior finished the play. That started the exodus of Wol- verine seniors, as Petway and then Abram followed Sims to the bench with their fifth fouls. The loss in Bloomington is another example of Michigan's troubles winning on the road this season. Its road record stands at 2- 5, and 1-3 in Big Ten play, with the lone win coming against a North- western team with just one con- ference win. "I think it's the same game (as the other road losses)," Harris said. "I just don't know what to say about how we perform on the road. I haven't figured it out yet." If Harris and the rest of the seniors don't figure out how to'win on the road soon, they're probably going to end up arriving late for yet another event. And the doors of the Dance don't look kindly upon stragglers. BOSCH From page 1B types of mistakes that continue to bury the team on the road. "I'm concerned with that," said Michigan coach Tommy Amaker of his seniors' performance. "There's no question we addressed that ear- lier in the season, and it's certainly something that hasn't gone away completely.". With another road loss under the Wolverines' belts, one wonders if the seniors are going into road games expecting to lose. The class continues to fall deeper into a losing culture on the road, and the remaining road schedule only gets tougher. Amaker must think of something drastic and it may require shuffling the starting lineup again. While it's unrealistic to expect a team to be completely oblivious to a road environment (they are, after all, just kids), with four seniors in the starting five, Amaker should expect a little more than a complete break- down from his most experienced players. One game, it might be turnovers. Another game, it might be a lack of rebounding. Or (as was the case in the loss to the Hoosiers) it may be a porous defense mixed with lackadai- sical starts to each half. It doesn't matter which road loss you look at, there's always some aspect of the game that the Wolver- ines severely underachieve in. And since the seniors have talked about carrying the team in the past, the blame of Michigan's shortcomings should be placed on them. "I just don't know what to say about how we perform on the road," senior Dion Harris said. "I haven't figured it out yet." Maybe it means starting freshmen Ekpe Udoh and DeShawn Sims and bringing Courtney Sims and Brent Petway off the bench. The younger players are still raw but their inten- sity has impressed many this season, and with the ship sinking faster and faster, why not give them a shot to prove themselves? Maybe it means starting Jerret Smith at the point to allow Harris to play his natural shooting guard position. Smith may not be the con- ference's best point guard, but until his injury against Wisconsin, he'd strung together a couple of good per- formances. Smith may not average 11 points, six boards and seven assists (his totals against Purdue on Jan. 20), but if Harris can catch fire, Michigan won't need Smith to score. Making Abram, Petway and Sims come off the bench wouldn't be the end of the world. A reduction in min- utes may be what they need to play sharper basketball. By introducing some true competition rather than symbolic competition, Amaker may. finally get the best out of these play- ers. This column could've been about the first time the Wolverines had won in Bloomington since Nickelodeon still aired new episodes "Guts" and "Legends of the Hidden Temple." Instead, it must question why Amaker is still loyal to the seniors. Have they earned the "benefit of the doubt?" In four years, has this class done anything to give the fans rea- sons to believe that Amaker should stick with them? It's not that the seniors aren't try- ing. And Amaker shouldn't consider benching them solely to send a mes- sage. They know they played poorly, and they remember all to well their up-and-down past. The time has come to try some- thing new. During the second half of the game, three Indiana students dressed as Flintstones characters held up a sign that read "Beating 'M' is so easy, even a caveman can do it." Unfortunately for the seniors, that has become their legacy: an easy home win for the best teams in the Big Ten. At least give the younger players a chance to forge a new identity. For themselves and for the pro- gram. - Bosch can be reached at hectobos@umjch.edu. BULLDOGS From page 1B Hunwick, Johnson's part- ner on the top defensive pair- ing, also showed how potent the defense could be in the offensive zone. He notched five points this weekend, including a career-high tying three assists on Friday night. Although the scoreboard read a convincing Michigan triumph on Friday, the play. on the ice told a different story. After jumping out to a 4-0 lead in the first period, the Bulldogs controlled play in the second, outshooting the Wolverines 24-6. "They came out in the see- ond period and put on a clin- ic," Berenson said. "We are lucky we survived the period. ... I can't tell you it was in doubt, but it was in doubt the way we were playing." If not for a few fortuitous bounces that led to break- away chances for Michigan, Friday night's contest could have been much closer than the final score would indicate. In fact, Ferris State outshot Michigan 40-30 on the night, and Berenson considered pulling sophomore goalie Billy Sauer after the second period to give him some rest. But a sweep-hungry Michi- gan squad controlled play for the onset on Saturday, jump- ing out to a 2-0 first-period lead with the aid of a 12-4 advantage in shots. This weekend's games mark the team's final home weekend series of the season. The next time the Wolverines will have the opportunity to rock out to Elton John in the locker room to mark a home weekend sweep would be after a CCHA playoff win. SOONERS From page lB, improving," sophomore Scott Bregman said. "Last week, we thought, 'How are we going to top this?' And then we come out and go four points higher." For the third week in a row, the Wolverines jumped out to the lead after one rotation and remained there throughout the meet. Once again, all six com- petitors on the first event, floor exercise, scored a 9.0 or higher. Bregman set a new team record with his 9.8 score, which won him the Newt Loken award for best performance of the night. Despite some difficulties on pommel horse and vault, Mich- igan - maintained a slim lead through four rotations. Elkind took home the individual hon- ors on rings with a 9.65. And after the penultimate event, parallel bars, the Wol- verines had the competition in the bag. But they still put on a show for the final apparatus, sending the fans home glow- ing. The Wolverines will need all the momentum they can garner from the decisive vic- tory because their next big test is just around the corner. Next Saturday, Michigan will take on No. 2 Penn State in State College - a far more hostile environment than Cliff Keen Arena. "We should be confident going in there, but it's always a lot easier at home," Golder said. "When everybody's say- ing, 'Let's go, Blue,' it's a lot easier than when you're hear- ing that Nittany Lion roar. That'll be the big challenge. I think we can beat them. ... We better come away with a victory." 0 HOOSIERS From page 1B perimeter shots, as Michigan came into the game shooting just 28 percent from 3-point range. "The statistics say they aren't a great 3-point shoot- ing team," Legette-Jack said. "We took our chances not coming out and defending as quickly as we should have. But today was their day, and it was their time to come back." Without Michigan's lackluster start, the team's dra- matic comeback may not have been necessary. Just eight minutes into play, Michigan fell behind 18-3. The Wolverines turned the ball over 15 times in the opening frame alone. Indiana's hot shooting put the Hoosiers ahead and kept them there during the opening half Indiana connected on three of its first four 3-point attempts and shot 48 percent from the field. Improved play toward the of the first period helped chip away at the deficit, but the Wolverines still trailed 34-23 at the break. Though the team was behind, there was a differ- ence in the team's mentality at halftime - at least for freshman LeQuisha Whitfield. "I didn't want to lose," Whitfield said. "I told my team at halftime, 'Guys, we're not going to lose this game.' We were down by 15, and I still had faith." Despite that conviction, Michigan struggled might- ily to start the second half The Wolverines missed their first seven shots of the period, and the Hoosiers used a 6-0 run to take their biggest lead of the game, 40-23. But that was when Michigan turned it on, and the Hoosiers began to tire. Two things gave the Wolverines a chance to win down the stretch. After turning the ball over 15 times in the first half, Michigan committed just three turnovers in the sec- ond frame. The other factor was Whitfield, who scored a team- high 15 points - all of which came after halftime. The forward nailed two clutch 3-pointers down the stretch. The first trey tied the game at 59 with just under three minutes to play. The next one brought the crowd to its feet, giving the Wolverines a 64-61 advantage they wouldn't relin- quish with 1:17 remaining. "I just played intense and with passion," Whitfield said. "I was really confident in what I was doing." That poise lifted Michigan to its first two-win sea- son in the Big Ten since the 2003-2004 campaign. Even though the victory marked the Wolverines' largest comeback of the year, Burnett claims she always had faith in her team. "My favorite quote is from Winston Churchill," Burnett said. "He said,'Never, ever, ever give in.' Even when we got down, these kids were being competitive, and I'm happy they pulled it off." ti