2B - January 28, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Here's a proposition... Whether you're excited for the Super Bowl itself, the halftime show and commercials or just the simple fact that a week from now Tom Brady's ankle, will no longer be front-page news, nearly everyone has a vested interest SCOTT in this Sunday's BELL Patriots-Giants matchup. Me? While those are enough to get me excited, I truly love the Super Bowl for another reason. Prop bets. When else is it socially accept- able to put money on whether the coinflip will be heads or tails? (Tails never fails, obviously.) Does the idea of winning money for correctly guessing the length of the national anthem intrigue you? (Always take the over, nobody sim- ply sings the traditional anthem anymore.) Wouldn't you be excited to be rewarded for simply predict- ing the first person the Super Bowl MVP thanks after the game? (The early favorite: God.) Let's be honest - Sunday's game won't be that good. Despite what 40.5% of ESPN.com's visitors (and a lot of delusional New Yorkers) say, the Giants don'thave much of a chance. Since the pageantry of the Super Bowl can only entertain you until the Patriots take a double- digit lead, prop bets are a great way to stay awake as the confetti falls and the post-game celebration begins. Does being bored through games where the outcome is pretty much already determined hitclose to home for you? If you're a Univer- sity of Michigan student, it should. So instead of helplessly watch- ing the Michigan basketball team limp across the finish line this season, I'm offering you a variety of odds to spice up your Michigan sports viewing experience. Case in point: Yesterday's Michigan-Michigan State hoops game. Most of Wolverine Nation was probablyupset over the 15 point loss. Me? I was high-fiving my roommates after Michigan's buzzer-beater made the margin 15 points (the spread was 16.5). Pathetic? Of course - but I'm a Michigan basketball fan. I'll take any silver lining I can find. Of course, I don't condone gambling for cash - you should be wagering M&M's or high fives or anything else I need to say to cover my butt. With that disclaimer aside, if you're up for something new, here are some starter lines to enhance your Michigan sports experience: Michigan football: Number of innovative plays in Michigan's home opener this year vs. total number of innovative plays in the past 13 years. (Early favorite: home opener). Michigan women's basketball team: Total wins this season vs. total home attendance this season. (Early favorite: Total wins). Michigan men's basketball team: Moral victories vs. actual victories. (Early favorite: Moral victories - by a lot). Michigan hockey: Kevin Por- ter's chances at winningthe Hobey Baker award vs. the field. (Early favorite: Porter). Michigan hockey: Number of curse words coming from the Yost crowd at the next hockey game vs. number of letters in the alpha- bet multiplied by 1,000,000 plus grains of sand along the Pacific Coast. (Early favorite: curse words at Yost). Michigan/Michigan State interaction: Number of MSU students who say "Who's little brother now?" in the next week vs. number of Michigan students who respond with "Hey, at least I still go to Michigan." (Early favor- ite: Push). Michigan football: Michigan landing the nation's No. 1 recruit Terrelle Pryor vs. Ohio State get- ting Pryor's commitment. (Early favorite: Ohio State). Michigan graduation: Seniors graduating in the Big House vs. seniors graduating in Anchorage, Alaska. (Early favorite: Anchor- age). Michigan football: Number of angry Michigan students if Ter- relle Pryor goes to Ohio State vs. number of angry Michigan stu- dents if graduation isn't at the Big House. (Early favorite: Push). West Virginia/Michigan interaction: West Virginia fans with rational arguments plus West Virginia fans with full sets of teeth vs. number of former Mountaineer coaches at Michi- gan. (Early favorite: Number of former Mountaineer coaches at Michigan). - Bell can be reached at scotteb@umich.edu. Up and down weekend for Wolverines Low giVE I Inco weight the No. all se son. TI week- end's p: of du meets Cliff Ki Mich tiers pu an earl victory But Saturda Lara an couldn' "We muchi Joe Mc gling a have ki fidence er weight classes there and fight." Lara and Diehl suffered early e opponents 'too pins and Michigan couldn't recov- er. Despite eventually closing a nuch respect' 15-point deficitto three, Michigan fell to the Golden Gophers, 24-15. By IAN KAY In the meet's opening match, DailySports Writer Minnesota's No. 1 nationally ranked 125-pounder Jayson Ness nsistency at the lower took just 1:13 to pin Lara. At 133, classes has been an issue for Michigan faced a similar fate 6 Michigan wrestlingteam against another highly ranked a- -- -- opponent. No. 2 Mack Reiter his MINNESOTA 24 stacked up Deihl and pinned him MICHIGAN 15 at the 1:26 mark of the first peri- air 'PURDUE 12 od. ial MICHIGAN 24 The two falls gave Minnesota at a 12-0 lead that they didn't relin- een Arena revealed why. quish. sigan's two lightest wres- The Wolverines were shut out dled the Wolverines out of until eighth-ranked Josh Churella y hole en route to a 24-12 turned in the Wolverines' stron- over Purdue Friday night. gest performance of the day at 149 against No. 4 Minnesota pounds. ay, 125-pounder Jason Churella recorded two take- id 133-pounder Chris Diehl downs and six back points before t repeat their success. finally pinning his opponent in just gave them way too the second period. The fifth-year respect," Michigan coach senior captain recorded more than Parland said. "We're strug- four minutes of riding time in the t 125 and 133 because we 4:13 match. ds that are lacking in con- "I was trying to get our team and aren't ready to go out back on track after we fell down pretty hard in the first two weights," Churella said. Churella's win did just that, spurring Michigan's best rally of the day. All Americans Eric Ten- nenbaun, Steve Luke and Tyrel Todd each earned decisions. Mich- igan trailed by only three points with just two matches remaining. But the Wolverines' momentum wasn't enough to carry them to victory. Redshirt freshman Ryan Selley appeared outmatched filling in for classmate Anthony Biondo at 197 pounds and at heavyweight, redshirt freshman Matt Guhn was unable to secure the pin needed to tie the dual. "We have some guys who are not wrestling with great intensity," McFarland said. "Maybe they just don't understand what intensity is, but it's hurting us in some of these dual meets." Michigan's inability to com- plete the comeback was even more disappointing because the Wol- verines had rallied from a similar deficit the night before against Purdue. Against the Boilermakers, Michigan found itself facing a 9- During the game's last media timeout, the crowd burst into a "little sister" chant, referring to Michigan football player Mike Hart's "little brother" comments after Michigan beat the Spartans this fall. Michigan hasn't won in East Lansing since 1997. The 14,759 in attendance provided a rau- cous atmosphere for Beilein's first experience in the intra-state 0 deficit after 14th-ranked Biondo was forced to retire with a hyper- extended elbow and Guhn lost a close heavyweight match. But Michael Watts turned the tables against Purdue in the 125- pound match. The junior outlasted his opponent to score a 2-0 deci- sion and start a Wolverine rally. At 133 pounds, Diehl scored three takedowns and accumulated more than two minutes of riding time in a solid decision. The back-to-backvictories were especially encouraging because Watts and Diehl came into the dual with a combined 19-25 record for the season. "We needed those wins," McFarland said. "I knew 125 and 133 were critical matches for us because we needed to get back into it." Following Diehl's win, the Wol- verines overwhelmed Purdue in the middle weights. Michigan won five of the meet's final six matches. With such dominance at 165,174 and 184 pounds, Michigan doesn't need dominance from its lightest wrestlers. What the Wolverines need is consistency. rivalry. "I don't think there's (a rival- ry) that's better than this," said Beilein, who has been coaching college basketball since 1978. "We just have to improve so that we can make it a game right down to the end and sneak out of here with a win one of these years." After winning just four of 40 minutes yesterday, that might not happen for a while. Clock management mishap seals road loss to Hawkeyes Iowa senior Solverson torches Michigan with 28 points By ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer IOWA CITY - The Michigan women's basketball team looked helpless during the final 30 sec- onds of yesterday's game at Iowa. Although Michigan was still in the game, trailing by three, the Wolver- inesfailed MICHIGAN 61 to foul to IOWA 66 stop the clock. The mental error cost Michi- gan a chance to tie and the Wol- verines eventually lost, 66-61, to the Hawkeyes Sunday at Carver Hawkeye Arena. The game wouldn't have been that close if Iowa senior forward Johanna Solverson hadn't carried the Hawkeyes on her back. She carried, lugged and hauled her team to a victory. Michigan helped her cause, too. The Wolverines committed 18 turnovers in addition to falling apart defensively in the waning minutes. "As poorly as we played we still could have won that game down the stretch," Michigan coach Kevin Borseth said. BASKETBALL From page 1B into East Lansing. But Harris, the hero of last week's game for the Wolverines, couldn't get anything going yes- terday. And the other primary source of Michigan offense, Sims, had even more trouble. The Spartans gave the duo what Michigan State coach Tom Izzo called the "Michael Jordan treat- ment" on defense and held them to 5-for-21 from the field and just 17 points. The 3-point shooting that kept the Wolverines in the game in the first half went cold in the second. A 2-for-18 performance beyond the are kept the Spartan lead in double digits for the rest of the game. Before the matchup, Michigan and Iowa were part of a five-team logjam tied for second place in the Big Ten. Michigan forward Carly Benson did her best to make sure the Wol- verines didn't drop in the stand- ings, but her 22 points weren't enough to rescue Michigan from the "Solverson Show." The 6-foot-2 redshirt senior, who chipped in just three points when Michigan beat Iowa in December, scored a season-high 28 points yesterday. It was her best game since her return from two knee injuries that cost her the last two seasons. "I've been working really hard," Solverson said. "This game just put me right up where I want to be and hopefully, it continues." Michigan tried to prepare for Solverson's dominance, but its efforts came up short. "We definitely knew she was a shooter coming in," Benson said. "Her size was a difficult matchup for us." Michigan (5-4 Big Ten, 12-7 overall) led 10-4 after five minutes, led by Benson's seven points. And then the show began. Over the next six minutes, Solv- erson rallied for 15 points. She hit three 3-pointers during the stretch and single handedly kept Iowa (6- 3,13-7) in the game. Michigan relied on its sharp three-point shooting to counter its sloppy play in the first half. The Wolverines gave up 11 turnovers. The Wolverines went into the locker room up 27-26, unaware that another Iowa player was about to have a "Sol- verson-like" performance. At the beginning of the sec- ond half, Iowa forward Wendy Ausdemore stepped up. The Big Ten's best 3-point shooter scored 11 of the Hawk- eyes' first 16 points, including three from behind the arc. To add insult to injury, Solv- erson wasn't finished. In the final 5:44, Solverson scored 10 points by hitting six shots from the charity stripe and beating the lackluster Michigan defense to the rim on layups. Despite a disappointing ending, Benson proved, once again, she can take control when needed. After scoring seven points in the first five minutes, Ben- son was quiet the rest of the half. She started the second half as she did the first, scoring Michigan's first eight points on an array of shots. But instead of letting up, Benson stayed aggressive and kept the Wol- verines in the game. Solverson's hot hands dropped Michigan to sixth in the Big Ten standings and gave the Wolverines their fourth loss in eight games. 6 0