Thought last weekend was bad? Scott Bell examines this week's coaching-search debacle. Page 2B The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I December10, 2007 ; ,? ;:: :.; -_ , = r' :R1 f .r V 4 } rpp afs " yr._ j Duke trounces Blue in lowout By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer DURHAM, N.C. - It would seem on paper the Michigan men's basketball team finally caught a scheduling break. They traveled to the unfriendly confines of Cameron Indoor Stadium on a week's rest, but the Wolverines, who play seven freshmen or sopho- mores, went up against a Duke team relying pri- marily on its own seven underclassmen. Unfortunately, what's on paper can't always transfer to the court. In its 95-67 loss to the Blue Devils Saturday, Michigan not only learned how farthis team has to go this season, butexactly how far this program needs to climb in the long run to one day measure up to the likes of Duke. "We do have some upperclassmen who know the system," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "For (Michigan), everybody is a freshman, really. It's new. And they'll keep getting better and bet- ter. At this point in the season, it's not instinctive, where our guys have a greater chance of doing that because our guys know what we want." Make no mistake, though. This wasn't like the Georgetown blowout earlier in the season, where it became clear early on the young Wolverines were in over their heads. The Blue Devils allowed Michigan to hang around in the game's opening minutes. Duke missed its first seven shots of the contest and the Wolverines even held a 10-8 advantage with 14:34 remaining in the first half. Then the Blue Devils showed exactly why they are poised to be one of college basketball's jugger- nauts come March. Duke went on runs of 9-0 and 14-0 to give itself an18-point cushion heading into halftime. The Wolverines never recovered and, in the process, lost for the sixth time in seven games. "It was the transition," redshirt junior C.J. Lee said. "They were getting out and getting buckets, and you can't do that, especially on someone's home floor, because that's going to get the crowd involved." Many of Duke's fast-break points came cour- tesy of its work on the other end of the floor. The Blue Devils' pressure man-to-man defense made things hard on Wolverine ballhandlers, who had trouble even getting the team into its offense at tunes. See DUKE, Page 5B MA X COLLI NS, Freshman Matt Rust scored a shorthanded goal in the first period Saturday to put the Wolverines on top early. Michigan is 11-1 in CCHA play as the first half of the season comes to an en' Ugly vitories for Hockey team Michigan demands attention By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Writer BOWLING GREEN - The Michi- gan hockey team's accomplishments from its home-and-home weekend series sweep against Bowling Green: . First place in the CCHA standings? Check. Shot at a No. l ranking? Check. Outplay the other team? Not so much. "I think we were lucky," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Whether it's holiday hockey or what it is, it's not the kind of hockey that we're trying to play." The third-ranked Wolverines (11-1 CCHA, 16-2 overall) snuck away with a 4-2 win Friday and 3-2 victory Sat- urday behind strong play from junior Billy Sauer and freshman Bryan Hogan. Sauer helped Michigan end a two-game losing streak in Bowl- ing Green with 27 saves Friday, and Hogan had some eye-popping stops of his own in his second-career start Saturday. The two, who led the sing- ing of The Victors in the locker room after the game, compensated for the struggling forwards. Hogan just missed a rare goal in a late-game clear with the Bowling Green net empty, which Berenson jok- ingly suggested was one of the best offensive moments of the game. "We didn't think we had a good period in the game," Berenson said. "And you saw what kind of a game it was - our goalie had a better chance of scoring than our forwards." The Wolverines were outshot through two periods Saturday night, See FALCONS, Page 4B BOWLING GREEN - This year's Michigan hockey team wasn't supposed to be good - not by Michi- gan standards at least. This team wasn't sup- posed to be first in the CCHA halfway through the NATE season. SANDALS This team _ _ wasn't supposed. Enter to win 16 of its Sandman first 18 games. But it's time to start paying attention. Here we are at the end of the fall semester, and all of those things are no longer pipe dreams. They're reality. Be a little amazed. Everyone else is. "It's obviously surprising," Michi- gan coach Red Berenson said. "I don't think anyone in this room, myself included, would have predicted this team could have pulled that off. But that's the one thing about coaching, that's the one thing about playing - you never know until you play the game." Now get past the shock. It's time to look forward and realize this is one of the most enjoyable Michigan teams to follow in recent years - in any sport. Senior captain Kevin Porter is the clear favorite for the Hobey Baker Award, college hockey's Heisman Trophy. His 29 points leadthe nation, See SANDALS, Page 4B Michigan coach Mark Rosen and the Wolverines ended their postseason run by losing to Penn State Friday in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. Historic run ends with loss to top team Late free throws seal'M' win By.ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer Michigan's biggest win of the season wasn't without drama. As a senior at LaSalle high school in St. Ignace, Michigan senior guards4,4 Krista Clement missed a free throw to cost her team a win in the region- al final. A similar scenario surfaced late in Saturday's game against Ken- tucky, but this time, Clement had better luck. Up two points with the clock winding down, Michigan center Krista Phillips blocked Kentucky guard Samantha Mahoney's layup attempt. The ball landed in Clement's hands, and the guard was fouled with four seconds left. Clement stepped to the charity stripe and calmly knocked down both free throws to seal the Wolver- ines' victory.A "If you saw during the game, everyone was coming around me," said Clement, who scored 12 points, pulled down a career-high nine rebounds and committed just one turnover. "They were joking about how ever since I was in first grade, I've dreamed about making- the game-winning free throws. We ROB MIGRIN/Daily were making jokes about it, so it was Sophomore Krista Phillips blocked a Kentucky layup attempt late in Saturday's nice to be relaxed when I was up game en route to Michigan's biggest win this season. there." Michigan not only beat Ken- as frustrated as Michigan coacha overs. tucky 63-59 on Saturday, it beat the Kevin Borseth, who at one point Three times Skrba committed a Wildcats (4-5) while committing 22 walked down to the end of the turnover after grabbing a defensive turnovers, the most the Wolverines bench and threw both fists onto an rebound. have had in a win all season. empty chair. "Coach spoke to me even during Simply put, the Wolverines made Four Wolverines committed the game and after and (he said) bad pass after bad pass. three or more turnovers, including 'Just chin the ball and then look The contest was marked by Stephany Skrba, who almost had for your dribble,' " Skrba said. "But countless grunts from the 2,000- a not-so-great triple-double - 10 what I tend to do is just get the ball plus Crisler Arena crowd that was points, 10 rebounds and seven turn- See WILDCATS, Page 3B By NICOLE AUERBACH DailySports Writer STATE COLLEGE - Michigan won six of the final seven points in the NCAA volleyball regional semifinal against No. 1 Penn State Friday night. But it couldn't win the most important one - match point. The Michigan volleyball team upset No. 21 Colorado State last weekend to earn the program's first berth to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament, but the his- toric high didn't last long. In less than 90 minutes, Penn State defeated the Wolverines 3-0 (30-15, 30-18, 30-18) at State Col- lege. The teams had never met before in the NCAA Tournament, but Penn State took both regu- lar-season matchups between the two. "There weren't a lot of scary moments," Penn State coach Russ Rose said. If there were any, the Wolver- ines' six-point run at the end of the third game might qualify. For Michigan, the run concluded the season on a solid note despite a tough loss. "We just went after it hardcore," senior co-captain Lyndsay Miller said. "We were going hard the entire game, but we wanted to fin- ish playing Michigan volleyball." Unfortunately for the Wolver- ines, Penn State controlled the rest of the match. The Nittany Lions dominated from the start, jumping out to a 10-4 lead in the first game and not lookingback. Michigan was on the defensive for the entire match. The Wolver- ines couldn't mount a consistent offensive attack, behind many attack errors. "Penn State caused the errors," Michigan coach Mark Rosen said. "Theyhad 16.5 blocks. They served tough. I don't think our team was unprepared, and I don't think they played poorly." The kill-to-attempt ratio was negative (-.033) for Michigan in the first and third games - the . The Wolverines were just 7-for- 30 in each game. Michigan tallied 27 total kills compared to Penn State's 48. See VOLLEYBALL, Page 2B