Looking for more? Go Her online for exclusive son Web contenth michigandaily.com THE MICHIGAN DAILY man: Finding iething for t Sunday void SM COLUMN 2B michigandaily.com Bucks crush Monday, March 5, 2007 OHIO STATE 65, MICHIGAN 61 SEASON KILLER? upset hopes By DANIEL LEVY Daily Sports Writer What if? That pesky question has hovered over the Michigan basketball pro- gram in recent years. And Saturday's 65-61 loss to No.1 Ohio State was no different. The Wolverines had numer- ous chances down the stretch but couldn't make the plays or shots they needed in the final minutes to pull off the upset. Those closing moments soured what seemed to be a huge Michigan victory in the making. The importance of knocking off the nation's top team, coupled with the emotion of Senior Day, would have been a fitting way for Wolverine seniors Dion Harris, Brent Petway, Courtney Sims and Lester Abram to say goodbye to Crisler Arena. Instead, barring an improbable run in this week's Big Ten Tournament, the team will be back at Crisler the following week to take another crack at the NIT. "When you come so close and you know you have to get this win, (a moral victory) doesn't really mean anything," Sims said. "Slip-ups like we had at the end of (Saturday) cost us the season." Michigan's agony began when Harris sprung loose for a 3-pointer with the score tied at 61 and two minutes remaining. Harris's shat bounced in and out, and Ohio State took the rebound the other way, resulting in a Jamar Butler lay-up that gave the Buckeyes their first lead since the opening minutes of the second half. The Wolverines tried to answer on their next possession when Pet- way found Sims alone under the rim. But the senior's dunk hit the back rim and came out. See BUCKEYES, Page 3B Close loss leaves no room for error By H. JOSE BOSCH Daily Sports Editor While Michigan senior Dion Harris fielded questions from the media following Saturday's loss to No. 1 Ohio State, his eyes were glazed and he didn'thave his usual air of confidence. For the first time this season, Harris looked vulnerable. And when a reporter asked the Detroit native if coming close to winning big games and the NCAA Tournament meant anything, Harris strained to keep his com- posure. "Coming close is not good enough," Harris said. "Coming close doesn't mean anything to me as an individual. That just means you came close but you didn't get it." For Michigan, "it" will most likely be an NCAA Tournament birth. While most fans and critics wrote off the Wolverines weeks ago, last Tuesday's win over rival Michigan State gave Michigan a slim chance to dance in March. Add a win over the top-ranked Buckeyes and the Wolverines would've had one more conference win than last season, along with some momentum heading into the Big Ten Tournament. Those two wins could've given Michigan the margin it needed to be invited to the Tournament by the NCAA. Tournament Selection Commit- tee. But following what was the most frustrating four minutes in the program's recent history, that longshot has gotten even longer. Now Michigan must do one of the toughest things to accomplish in sports: get up to play a must-win game after expending all its energy in a rivalry loss. "I think we still have a shot (at the Tournament) because there are a bunch of teams out there (in See LONG SHOT, Page 4B splits with SBucks By NATE SANDALS Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - Michigan's 6-5 loss to Ohio State on Feb. 24 was the bizarro version of the Wolver- ines' 4-3 win the MICHIGAN 5 previous j OHIO STATE 61 night. - - - - Every- thing was opposite. In the first game, Michigan fought back and scored the game- winning goal with 68 seconds remaining. The next night, Ohio State erased two separate two-goal deficits and tallied the game win- ner with 90 seconds remaining. Nearly four minutes after Michi- gan sophomore Tim Miller magi- cally tied the game at five with a tally from behind the goal line, Ohio State's Mathieu Beaudoin ripped the game-winning slapshot from just inside Michigan's blue line. Beaudoin shouldn't have had the chance to take the shot, but Michi- gan sophomore Andrew Cogliano whiffed on his clearing attempt. Michigan played with a 6-on-4 advantage for the game's final 40 seconds but failed to capitalize. The emotions of the Michigan- Ohio State rivalry boiled over at the final horn with a partial melee near the Buckeye goal. See ICERS, Page 3B Badgers end Blue's season By ANDY REID guard provided the versatility Daily Sports Writer needed to open up a 19-4 Bad- - - - --- ger run on her way to scoring 22 INDIANAPOLIS - One team points on the evening. entered with NCAA Tourna- "They were getting some ment aspirations. big shots, and we were miss- The other had nothing to ing some big shots," Michigan lose. ----- coach Cheryl Burnett said. "And One MICHIGAN 59 then you're.trying to play from team WISCONSIN -_1 Bi behind against ateamthatgains made great confidence from Jolene sure it would live to fight anoth- Anderson and the things that er day. she can do." The other played without the With Anderson carryingWis- passion to do so. cousin through its lackluster As the opening game of the first half, the Wolverines (3-13 women's Big Ten Tournament Big Ten, 10-20 overall) needed wound down, it was evident a similar effort from one of its that Michigan was the latter players. team. Wisconsin cruised past But when freshman LeQuisha the Wolverines, 81-59, and into Whitfield decided she should be the second round last Thursday the one to step up, the Wolver- night in Conseco Fieldhouse. ines didn't reap the desired ben- Anyone who found a seat for efits. the tournament expecting to In just seven minutes on the see some good, fundamentally floor in the opening half, Whit- sound basketball would have field turned the ball over six been severely disappointed. The times and missed all of her free opening round game featured throw attempts. Whitfield's six two sluggish and sloppy teams missed shots were a major con- who combined for 25 first-half tributor to Michigan's miserable turnovers. 25-percent shooting. Michigan's problems'started Bygame's end, Whitfield's stat when Wisconsin settled down line was a train wreck: 1-for-11 and ran a more solid offensive shooting, justtwo rebounds and scheme. Midway through the seven turnovers in 13 minutes. first frame, Wisconsin junior Although it seemed that Jolene Anderson looked like Whitfield tried to take over the an unsupervised kid in a candy game, all she managed to do was store, sampling everything. lose control. The more negative After hitting a few open outside plays she made, the more Whit- shots, Anderson found lanes to field pushed the ball, resulting in the basket as Wolverine defend- more turnovers and poor shots. ers started keying on the perim- Despite the less-than-spec- eter. Anderson's unpredictable tacular first half - even by the shots helped her score 11 of the Wolverines' standards - they team's first 17 points. came out of the tunnel ready The first-team All-Big Ten See BADGERS, Page 3B A P P H O Sophomore Jack Johnson and the Wolverines finished second in the CCHA after splitting their weekend series at Ohio State. For Icers, the time is now COLUMBUS - As the final buzzer blared at the Schottenstein Center two Satur- days ago, Michi- gan concluded its regular season. Another sea- son in the books, and where do the Wolverines ; stand? A Second in the CCHA, but only COLVIN thanks to Miami -- (Ohio)'s loss. A Touch of Ranked 12th Dutch in the country. 18-9-1 in the CCHA, 23-12-1 over- all. And, numbers aside, almost exact- ly where they were last year. That's not a good thing, consider- ing last season has becomea measur- ing stick for the kind of mediocrity the Michigan program desperately wants to avoid. The paths were different, but the result was the same. Last season it was ahot startfollowed by a down- ward spiral. This time, it kicked off with inconsistency and under- achieving, pushed away by a steadily successful stint that carried into February. But then came the final leg of the journey, the real implosion. A loss to CCHA doormat Bowling Green. A tie - that should have been a win - with then-No. 6 Michigan State, Michigan's only ranked opponent in the second half of the season. A split with Lake Superior State. A split with Ohio State. And we're back where we started. "You hate to finish off on a note like tonight," Michigan coach Red Berenson said following the 6-5 loss to the Buckeyes. It was a sour note, for sure. Ohio State tallied the game-winner with 1:30 remaining. Fights broke out all over the ice. Senior captain Matt Hunwick jumped in the melee and he didn't even know what started it. Now the real fight has to begin, the fighteto put the past away and regain Michigan's dignity - starting now, in the postseason. The Wolverines may be hover- ing in the same position as last year. Fans are wondering which team See COLVIN, Page 3B