The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com December 10, 2007 - 5B CRASHING THE BOARDS NOTABLE QUOTABLE "For Michigan, everybody is a freshman, really. It's new. And they'll keep getting better and better. At this point in the season, it's not instinctive. ". n- Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski DUKE 95 - MICHIGAN 67 DUKE DOMINATION PLAYER OF THE GAME Kelvin Grady GUARD The freshman guard had nine points and two assists. More importantly, he had no turnovers in 30 minutes. He consistently drove to the basket, creating open looks for his teammates. It's not his fault they couldn't convert them for points. GAME STATS Michigan 67 Player PTS FG FT REB A TO MIN M-A M-A O-T G- Grady 9 3-7 2-2 2-6 2 0 30 G- Harris 8 2-9 4-4 0-3 4 5 28 F- Coleman 4 1-5 1-2 2-5 0 0 26 F-Simi 12 5-11 1-2 1-5 0 4 26 C- Udoh 8 4-9 0 0 5-10 1 2 28 Gibson 11 4-8 2-3 0-2 0 0 12 Shepherd 6 2-4 1-2 0-1 1 1 12 Morris 5 2-6 0-0 1-1 1 2 13 Lee 2 1-4 0-0 0-2 2 1 14 Wright 4 1-3 0-0 2-2 0 0 14 Merritt 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 5 Block 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0 2 TEAM 67 25-66 11-15 14-41 11 15 200 FG%: 37.9 FT%: 73.3 3-point FG: 6-19,250 (Coleman 1-4, Morris 1-3, Grady1-2, Gibson 1-2, Shepherd 1-2, Sims1-1, Lee 0-2, Harris 0-1, Wright 0-1, Udoh 0-1). Blocks: 6 (Udoh 4, Sims 2). Steals: 3 (Harris, Udoh, Morris). Udoh shines in first start of the season By IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Writer DURHAM, N.C. - In Michigan's first eight games, sophomore Ekpe Udoh has brought his energy and defensive presence off the bench. On Saturday, NOTEBOOK Michigan coach John Beilein decided to start with that intensity. For the first time this season, Beilein went with Udoh over redshirt sophomore Zack Gibson in the starting lineup. Udoh seized the opportunity - he finished the game with eight points, 10 rebounds and four blocked shots. When Michigan kept the game close early on, it was Udoh's defensive prowess inside that altered Blue Devil shots and forced misses. "You can see the game started off a lot differently than it has in the past," redshirt freshman Anthony Wright said. Udoh saw his start as a sign Beilein has more confidence in him. "We talk every now and then," Udoh said. "He gives me words of encouragement to just go out and play how I play" Whereas Beilein acknowledged Udohhas made improvements, he justified his deci- sion to start Udoh over Gibson as a tactical move to counter Duke's pressure defense. "(Against) a team like Duke, you have to have excellent passers," Beilein said. "You have to have excellent drivers." Even though Gibson didn't start, he had one of his best games of the season. In 12 minutes off the bench, Gibson tied a season high with 11 points. IT'S A FAMILY: If Tommy Amaker was still Michigan's basketball coach, Satur- day's game wouldn't have happened. Amaker was a player and assistant coach at Duke before becoming a head coach at Seton Hall and then Michigan. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski avoids regular-season games against his former players and assis- tants. "I don't want to beat my son," Krzyzews- ki said. "I don't want my son to beat me." Aside from Amaker's five years at the helm, Michigan and Duke have faced off every December since 1989. I LIKE YOU, MAN, BUT YOU CRAZIES: Duke freshman Taylor King came off the bench just two minutes into Saturday's game. Although he was the Blue Devils' first sub, Udoh didn't label him their sixth man. "Their crowd is their sixth man, really," Udoh said. "It's crazy" From the moment the Wolverines stepped onto the floor during pregame warm-ups until the final buzzer sounded, the crowd at Cameron Indoor Stadium was raucous. It made a point to remind the Wolver- ines of last week's loss to Harvard and that redshirt junior guard C.J. Lee's full name is Cecil Brian Lee. But even though Michigan Was the oppo- nent Saturday afternoon, the crowd target- ed North Carolina in numerous chants. Duke students started camping out on Thursday for the best seats to Saturday's game. Some tried to camp out on Wednes- day, but school officials said it was too early. "It was exciting, if anything," redshirt freshman K'Len Morris said. "Cameron is a place, growing up, you always wanted to play in. So, it was really cool, coming in and actually getting to experience it firsthand. During the game, you really don't focus on it too much." SMITH'S STATUS IN DOUBT: Junior point guard Jerret Smith decided not to travel to Duke to complete academic obliga- tions, according to the athletic department. "We'll meet when we get back home as far as what he can do, but, obviously, it's an extremely important issue that he shores up the academic issues that he currently has in front of him," Beilein said. Earlier in the season, Smith was sus- pended one game for violating the team's class-attendance policy. Injuries and suspensions have limited Smith, the team's most experienced guard, to just five games this season. He is aver- aging four points and two rebounds per game. DUKE 95 Player PTS FG FT REB M-A M-A O-T A TO MI i i i i i6 G- Paulus G Hender- F- Nelson F- Singler F- Thomas Kng Smith Scheyer Zoubek McClure Davidson 8 12 10 9 18 17 10 7 2 0 3-7 5-14 4-10 3-6 1-4 7-12 7-9 3-6 3-5 1-1 0-1 0-0 1-2 -0 0-0 0-0 1-2 2-2 3-4 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-7 1-5 1-6 2-2 3-5 1-S 2-4 3-S 0-2 0-0 6 4 3 0 0 3 0 2 - 0 0 0 0 0 24 28 27 17 14 20 20 29 13 6 2 0 1 FG%: 49.3 FT%: 71.4 3-point FG:11-27, .407 (King 3-8, Pau- lus 2-5, Nelson 2-3, Singler 1-3, Smith 1-3, Henderson 1-2, Scheyer 1-2, Davidson 0-1). Blocks: 3 (King 2, Henderson). Steals: 7 (Nelson 3, Paulus 2, Scheyer, Zoubek). At: Cameron DMichigan...............3 54 - 95 Indoor Stadium Duke """ 54 Attendance: 9,314 SEASON STATS Player GP Min Pts R A Harris 9 30.9 15.7 4.1 3.2 Sims 9 24.7 12.3 4.2 0.7 Grady 9 22.9 7.2 1.9 2.6 Coleman 9 32.0 7.0 5.4 2.0 Gibson 9 16.7 6.7 3.4 0.2 Udoh 9 23.3 5.7 4.0 0.6 Smith 5 13.2 4.0 2.0 1.2 Wright 9 16.2 2.8 3.2 0.7 Lee 9 9.2 2.0 1.4 0.9 Shepherd 8 6.5 1.8 1.0 0.1 Morris Merritt Block Puls 9 9.7 1.7 1.0 3 3.0 0.0 0.3 2 1.5 0.0 0.5 0.4 0.0 0.0 } ,! Duke guard Gerald Henderson and his teammates ran over redshirt junior C.J. Lee and the Wolverines Satuday afternoor 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 o.o Despite blowout, Michigan made progress DURHAM, N.C. - There will be a time when the Michigan men's basketball team will have to hold itself more accountable, when inexperience stops being an excuse and execution starts being the norm. But not yet. The Wolverines made some promis- ing strides against H. JOSE Duke Saturday. BOSCH Well, more like baby steps. Michigan was The Bosch winning five min- Watch utes into the game. Sure, the Blue Devils shot just 37 percent from the DUKE From page 1B Michigan committed 15 turnovers to just 11 assists, a stat that has irked the team all season long. "Our skill level and things like that just break down at different times against a great defensive team, and their defense just took us out of what we want to do," Michigan coach John Beilein said. At his press conference earlier in the week, Beilein was concerned with the bal- ance of the Duke offensive attack. Enter- field in the first half. Sure, Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski made adjustments and shut down the Wolverine offense. Sure, Michigan eventually lost by 28. Sure, it was the second straight game a school has the Wolverines' number on the court and in the classroom. But give this team some credit. Michigan is taking its licks and mov- ing on to its next opponent. What doesn't kill the Wolverines can only make them stronger. "We learned a lot, and we came home alive," Beilein said: "I mean we came home and we got better during that time, and then we'll use those same situ- ations when we're at those places that are notorious for great crowds in the Big Ten." It's great the Wolverines got this ing Saturday's contest, the Blue Devils had six players averaging nine or more points per game. But the man behind Duke's runs wasn't among those six. Freshman Nolan Smith, a highschool teammate of Michigan soph- omore Anthony Wright at Oak Hill Acad- emy in Virginia, had 11 first--half points, including a stretch where he scored nine points in just more than two initutes. Smith and fellow freshman Taylor King scored 17 and 08 points, respectively, off the bench to spark the Blue Devils after their stagnant beginning. The Wolverines didn't help by shooting experience under their belt, because now they have to refocus on the small things. With four weeks until confer- ence games begin, the little improve- ments (learning the system and playing fundamentally sound basketball) are much more important than big-picture improvements (wins). One week wasn't enough for the Michigan men's basketball team to prepare for Duke. One month probably wouldn't have been adequate. Because that's how difficult Beilein's job is right now. He's trying to teach a system to a group that hasn't grasped its concepts and doesn't have the proper skill sets (making perimeter shots) to succeed. It's like sitting with your back to another person and trying to instruct 25 percent from the field in the first half, which included misses on several wide- open looks. Michigan did show some signs of life in its third loss against a ranked opponent this season. In the second half, it scored 44 points. Leading the way for the Wolverines were sophomores DeShawn Sims and Zach Gibson with 12 and 11 points, respec- tively. Gibson came off the bench for the first time this year. Sophomore Ekpe Udoh, who finished with a game-high 10 rebounds, started in his place. But there can only be so many upsides him how to build a Lego model - only you can'tuse colors or shapes to describe the pieces and the other person has his hands tied. And even that is easier than Beilein's job. But even with far less experienced players learning a complex system, the Wolverines boldly took the court against vaunted Duke. And despite all that was going against Michigan Saturday - youth, inexperi- ence, the Cameron Crazies - they made it a game for the first 12 minutes. Considering I thought Michigan would be out of the game when Duke hit its first basket, that's improvement. - Bosch can be reached at hectobos@umich.edu. to a 28-point loss. Even with Michigan's improved play after halftime, Duke still put up 55 points in the second stanza and eight Blue Dev- ils finished the game with at least seven points. "Even though we've got sophomores and juniors out there ... they've all been role players," Beilein said. "And I don't think one of those guys at Duke has been a role player in their life. "We're still learning that we have to do some other things to help the team. And only experience will help them go from that role player to really helping us win."