9 - Tuesday, February 6, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com Min need of upset By DANIEL LEVY Daily Sports Writer Out of the frying pan and into the fire. For the Michigan men's bas- ketball team, it's more like out of the Michigan at frying pan, Ohio State into the fire Matchup: and then Michigan 16-7; bashed in the Ohio State 20-3 headwiththe When: Tonight same frying 7:00 P.M. pan for good Where: Value measure. City Arena The Wol- N verines enter the second half of their Big Ten schedule on a three-game losing skid after collapsing at home to Iowa last Wednesday. To make things worse, their remaining confer- ence schedule only gets tougher. Michigan will face a giant in Columbus tonight, both literally and figuratively, in the form of 7- foot center Greg Oden and No. 3 Ohio State. The Buckeyes enter the game tied for first in the conference (8-1 Big Ten, 20-3 overall) and are riding a seven-game winning streak. Allthree Ohio State losses have come on the road to teams currently ranked in the top five (No. 1 Florida, No. 4 Wisconsin and No. 5 North Carolina). "They have a lot of weapons," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "When they have it click- ing together, they're pretty darn *good and as good as anybody." Oden is a nightmare matchup for any team. The 280-pound freshman has steadily developed on the offensive end since recov- ering from an early-season wrist injury, and the work has shown over Michigan State last week, and before that, he poured in 29 against a hapless Iowa squad - the same Hawkeye team that took it to the Wolverines last Wednesday. "Oden is a force by himself on the interior on both ends," Amaker said. "He's become a better offensive player as he's gotten healthier." Even when he isn't scoring, Oden can impact a game. He averages 9.6 rebounds and 3.5 blocks per contest. And that doesn't include the numerous shots he alters or prevents from being attempted in the first place. "I think (Oden) is a bigger opponent on the defensive end," senior Courtney Sims said. "He shuts down people and some- times even the whole team." At 6 foot 11, Sims will be vital to the Wolverines' chances of upsetting the Buckeyes. Michi- gan will need Sims to attack Oden on offense and play aggres- sive defense without picking up fouls. With the status of fellow senior Brent Petway undisclosed (he injured his left knee against Iowa), the Wolverines could be without one of their best interior defenders. Petway said an MRI revealed no major injury, but that he wasn't sure he could play tonight. Freshman Ekpe Udoh will most likely get the start if Petway is unavailable tonight. That means if Sims gets into foul trouble, the Wolverines will have to collapse on Oden to force the ball out of his hands and pro- tect Sims. This would leave Ohio State's deadly mix of Daequan Cook, Ron Lewis, Jamar Butler and Ivan Harris wide open to do damage from downtown. Last season, the Buckeyes nailed 15 Finally, Michigan will have to find a way to slow down point guard Mike Conley Jr. His quick- ness allows him to penetrate the lane and set up teammates for open looks - the main reason the freshman sports an impres- sive 3-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio. "It helps a lot (that I've faced Conley Jr. before)," said sopho- more Jerret Smith, who has faced the Buckeye point guard numerous times playing in the AAU circuit. "But he's improved every year, so we have to study what he does now." And what Conley Jr. does now is put opposing defenses to the test. The freshman is also capable of finishing around the rim when given the opportunity, which forces defenses to make a difficult choice when he heads to the basket. Michigan senior Dion Harris will be called upon to defend Conley Jr. Harris is coming off a 0-for-11 shooting effort in the loss to Iowa, but doesn't see that game affecting his performance tonight. "I haven't thought about (the game)," Harris said. "There's eight games (left) for me in the Big Ten season. I've got to put certain things behind me and move on." Win or lose, the Wolverines (4-4, 16-7) know they eventually need to steal a game or two on the road to make up for the loss to Iowa if they have any hope of getting back in the thick of NCAA Tournament talk. After tonight's game, Michigan faces Michigan State twice, an Indiana team that has had Michigan's number, Illinois on the road and Ohio State once more. The Wolverines have lit their own fire. Tonight, we get our Senior forward David Rohlfs celebrates after scoring a shorthanded goal to put Michiganup 2-1 in Saturday's contest. Shorthanded success By NATE SANDALS Daily Sports Writer A dive, a block, a physical sacrifice. Those efforts usually describe a successful pen- alty kill. But on those rare occasions when the defensive stalwarts NOTEBOOK transform their efforts into offensive glory, the course of the game is inevitably changed. Those shifts were constant last weekend as Michigan and Western Michigan combined for three shorthanded goals. The most important man-down goal came cour- tesy of senior David Rohlfs. On Senior Night, the Northville native dove to knock the puck out of the Michigan zone, then outskated one Bronco, stole the puck from another, before backhanding the puck under the crossbar to give Michigan a 2-1 lead. "It was sort of a broken play," Rohlfs said. "Bill (Sauer) was telling us between periods you just gotta get it up, because (Western Michigan goalie Riley Gill) goes down. I got it up, and it went in." It was Rohlfs's second shorthanded goal this sea- son. As a team, Michigan is no stranger to scoring while a man down. The Wolverines lead the CCHA with 12 shorthanded goals this season. "All we're talking about is killing that (power play) when it's 1-1," sophomore Brandon Naurato said. "Then Rohlfs goes down and gives a second and third effort and buries it. That's just huge for the team." Western Michigan freshman standout Mark Let- estu did his best last weekend to give the Broncos momentum. On both nights, Letestu's shorthanded goals tied the game and put Michigan back on its heels. With the two tallies, Letestu upped his season total to four, tied for first in the nation. No GOALIE, BUT GLORY: Two Wolverines broke into the goal column for the first time this season against Western Michigan. And the Bronco goalie never had a chance to make the save, because both times he had left the ice in favor of an extra attack- er. On Friday night, senior Jason Dest scored from the neutral zone to ice away a 7-4 win. It was Dest's fifth career goal, but first of the season. Freshman Chris Summers lit the lamp Saturday for the first time as a Wolverine. Summers, who usually skates as a defenseman, played forward in the third period to replace Brian Lebler. Hunker- ing down to hold off the final Western Michigan attack, Summers received a pass in the neutral zone with nothing but open ice and an empty net in front of him. After the game, Summers joked that he didn't even know he had scored until he heard the crowd cheering. Summers isn't a newcomer to playing up front. He played forward as a member of the U.S. National Team Development Program last season. - "He's been anxious to try (forward)," Berenson said. "Now he's a goal scorer." ROAD'TRIPPING: In the last four weeks, Michigan has moved from sixth in the CCHA all the way up to second. But now the Wolverines hit their tough- est stretch of the season, with the final six regular- season games away from Yost Ice Arena. Michigan will travel to Bowling Green Friday, and then will face off against Michigan State at.Joe Louis Arena Saturday night. The last two weekends feature travel north to Sault Ste. Marie (Lake Supe- rior State) and south to Columbus (Ohio State). in recent games. Oden averaged triples in an action-packed 94-85 first clue as to whether they can 17.5 points per game in two wins win in Crisler Arena. put out the flames. Art Monk worthy ofHall Tf you look at the two players, both changed the game - just in different ways. One opened his mouth. i The other hardlygave interviews. One redefined his position. The othertt~ . 'hanged the atti- nude required to KEVIN fill that position. AIBCfr One was named to the The Sixth Man 1990s All- Decade Team. The other made the 1980s All- Decade Team. So why did it take Michael Irvin two years to get inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame while Art Monk is still patiently waiting his turn since his retirement after the 1995 season? The reason: people remember Irvin. The Cowboy receiver played the game with flair and arrogance. He started the current trend of self-pro- AP PHOTO motion and cockiness that wideouts Michael Irvin was one of the five inductees into the NFL Hall of Fame this year. Chad Johnson and Terrell Owens have continued. And, last week- end, the Hall of Fame Committee cemented Irvin's legacy. I'm not saying Irvin doesn't deserve a bust in Canton, Ohio, but is he really more deserving than Art Monk, who has been on the ballot seven years? Monk made the first cut - from 17 to 11 candidates - but couldn't push through to the final five. And it couldn't have been because of his stats. In his 16 seasons, Monk caught 940 passes for 12,721 yards and 68 touchdowns. He's currently sixth on the NFL career reception list and 11th on the NFL career receiving yards list. Monk's critics will tell you that his numbers resulted from his lon- gevity, but they forget his role on those Redskin teams, that went 134- 82 and won the Super Bowl in 1983, 1988 and 1992. Drafted 18th overall by Wash- ington in 1980, Monk usually lined up in the slot. Redskins coach Joe Gibbs used him as a possession receiver to complement the deep threat posed by fellow wideout Gary Clark. Monk picked up the tough yards over the middle and moved the chains to keep drives alive. But the problem remains: No one really knows the truth behind M C H OAN Monk's career. Many of today's fans just want to see stars like Irvin, the flashy playmakers. Meanwhile, Monk sits on the outside looking in even though he stayed in the league for more than 15 years. He once held the record for receptions in a sea- son (broken by Chris Carter), most consecutive games with at least one catch (broken by Hall of Famer Jerry Rice) and career receptions (also broken by Rice). Irvin talked up his game and backed up. See WRIGHT, Page 10 ATTENTION FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES, AND JUNIORS * Sell advertising to local and national businesses - Manage your own account territory * Earn money working with a student-run organization - Flexible hours that work around your class schedule Comeby audipckoup avv appfcatrv at theStudnt PWqcou catrBmaadi TIOIDAYI 1 The Michigan Daily . 413 E. Huron For any questions please call 764-0554 for more information i I