": .- . 8 - Friday, February 23, 2007 Once again, turnover bug bites Blue in Minneapolis The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com By DAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer Sometimes, less is more. The Michigan women's bas- ketball team committed 25 MICHIGAN 53 turnovers in MINNESOTA 661 a 66-53 loss at Minnesota last night. The Wolverines entered the game last in the Big Ten with 19.2 turn- overs per game. But it wasn't always that bad. Michigan averaged slightly more than 13.3 turnovers per game over a four-game stretch from Dec. 31 to Jan.11. Last night's 25 giveaways, well above Michigan coach Cheryl Bur- nett's goal of 15 per game, were the climax of a fairly steady climb in the category since the aforementioned four-game span. Burnett said she was impressed with her team's offense - that is, when it wasn't turning the ball over. "We were getting really good looks at the basket," Burnett said. "I thought our kids were staying very confident. In the midst of so many turnovers, that's a pretty tough thing to do." Michigan (3-12 Big Ten, 10-18 overall) got production from several playersinthefirsthalf.Twelveofthe 13 dressed players saw action (the exception was sophomore forward Ashley Jones) and seven scored. But once again, less would have been more. The even playing time was due to foul trouble. Eight players picked up first-half fouls (six players had two). Michigan's carelessness sent the Gophers to the charity stripe 17 times. Minnesota, the Big Ten leader in free throw attempts, made just seven of its first 13 freebies. But the Gophers eventually found their groove, making their last four as part of a 15-6 run to close the half, taking a 38-27 halftime lead that negated a rare strong start by the Wolverines. Michigan stormed out to ab7-2 to lead before Minnesota scored the next nine points. The Wolverines managed to hang around until the 15-6 run. Michigan sophomore forward Stephany Skrba opened the second half with an old-fashioned three- point play, and the Wolverines cut the Gopher lead to eight with about 14:40 left. Minnesota (7-8, 15-13) answered with a basket, then stole the inbounds pass and scored again. With the Gophers holding a 14- point lead shortly thereafter, Michigan went on a 6-0 run to get within eight. Minnesota once again answered the Wolverine spurt with a 6-0 run of its own, and Michigan never got back in the game. Michigan won its first three road games this season, but it has now lost its last eight away from Crisler Arena. The Wolverines haven't wort a Big Ten road game in more than three years. And, unfortunately for the Maize and Blue, less road wins aren't more. Is your life STRUCTURED? If so, you can help us. Sophomore Stephany Skrba scored nine points and added six rebounds in last night's loss. Michigan turned the ball over 25 times in its road finale. ICers balance effort and rankings 6 I V 6 By NATE SANDALS Daily Sports Writer Join the team at The Michigan Daily Depending on who you ask, the by becoming the Ad Layout Manager. Michigan hockey team is either the seventh-, Layout the ads for all Daily papers, including the ninth-, 10th- Classifieds. Determine the size and shape of each or 11th-ranked Michigan at squad in the Ohio State paper we publish! Work behind the scenes of a nation. Like many Matchup: student-run college newspaper! other college Michigan sports, college 22-11-1; Ohio hockey has a State 13-14-5 Without you, the paper wouldn't exist! bevy of systems When: Tonight Y aprto rank teams 70PM and predict tour- nament seedings. Where: Value Availability between 1 & 3 pm, M-F is highly College hock- City Arena ey's answers to TV/Radio: recommended. Ability to work withcomputers and the BCS are the WTKA 1050 a strong sense of order is a must! Pirgs(wr,te Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) and Ken's Ratings for American College Hockey (KRACH), which is named after co-creator Ken But- ler. - - - All the systems have different E-mail Brittany at brimaroc@umich.edu Al e es avdr iffwrng ingredients: round robin winning 11 percentage, teams inder consid- eration and strength of schedule, to name a few. So with all these competing methods, where should you turn for answers? Sophomore Andrew Cogliano, for one, is a PairWise fan. "The higher you get (in the Pair- Wise), means you're inthe Tourna- ment," Cogliano explained. "Right now we're seventh, and we really didn't think we'd be that high, so that's a good thing." But ask Cogliano about the RPI (Michigan is ninth) or KRACH (Michigan is 11th), and you get a different reply. "I don't know what those really mean," he admitted. With a NCAA Tournament by no means guaranteed, one thing every Wolverine understands is the importance of this weekend's series at Ohio State. No. 10 (in the USCHO.com/ CSTV poll) Michigan goes into tonight's game at Value City Arena just one point ahead of Miami (Ohio) for second place in the CCHA. With first-place Notre Dame out of reach, the Wolverines have just one goal in mind. "We need these wins to get sec- ond place," junior Kevin Porter said. "So that's what we've been thinking about, and that's most important to us right now." Miami travels to 10th-place Northern Michigan for its final regular-season series. Even though the difference between second and third seems trivial, it will determine which team gets home ice should Michi- gan and Miami meet in the CCHA semifinals or finals. The higher- seeded team will have the final line change, a subtle but important advantage in hockey. Before each faceoff, the away team puts its players on the ice first, giving the home team the chance to respond with its own line. Michigan (17-8-1 CCHA, 22-11- 1 overall) has already clinched a first-round bye in the CCHA play- offs, so this weekend's games will be its last until March 9. But the Wolverines know Ohio State won't bend over to become the first weekend of a two-week break. The Buckeyes (11-11-4, 13- 14-5) feature a number of talented players, most notably forward Jeff Fritsche. The junior missed the season's opening month while suffering from ulcerative colitis, but he has played well since returning after Christmas, with eight points in 14 games. Ohio State averages more than three goals per game, which statistically is no match for the Wolverines' nation-best 4.18 goal average. But Michigan has scored just 13 goals in its past five games, well below its season average. Nomatterwhatthe averagesthe polls or the experts say, Michigan coach Red Berenson knows there's just one thing above the jurisdic- tion of opinions or equations. "The only thing we can control is our games," Berenson said. "We have to give ourselves a chance by winning our games." Whether Michigan is a bubble team like KRACH says or a sure- fire two seed as PWR asserts, there's no question the Wolverines would benefit from winning both games this weekend. i ... W Y°"' t,.w. i ( ., ., 1 i .........1...... i t ,,, _. {. E; -a SI{ i) dt f ek;). t; }; M f PV s 1 P1 p E f ° :?'R:s F xwwxewmas I seapR'inmee.e. k f _ . vi 11 MTN ME I' NEW ONLY IN THEATRES FEBRU ARY 23 _._. rs.a$Jisac cstro sem t ot t er sooe IiI' A ' I I 'I ' I I I i