8 - Tuesday, January 29, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily com Top scorers receive the "Jordan treatment" Harris and Sims struggle against stout Spartan defense By MARK GIANNOTTO and IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Writers EAST LANSING - Both fresh- man Manny Harris and sopho- more DeShawn Sims would never dream of mentioning themselves in the same breath as Michael Jor- dan - especially after losing to a bitter rival. But after his team held the bud- ding stars to a combined 5-for-21 from the field, Michigan State coach Tom Izzo did it for them. "We just wanted to give the Jor- dan treatment," said Izzo of how he stopped the duo in the Spartans' 77-62 win over Michigan Sunday. "To be honest with you, that's what we do with great players that have the ability to shoot the three and have the ability to put it on the floor." Izzo knew the only way the Wolverines could muster an upset over his tenth-ranked Michigan State squad was if Harris duplicat- ed his performance from last week - he exploded for a career-high 26 points in Michigan's 64-61 loss to Wisconsin. By applying constant pressure and having extra men focused on help defense, the Spartans elimi- from beating an intra-state rival. nated Harris as a threat, holding Led by the Izzone, Michigan him to just 11 points and three State's basketball student section, free-throw attempts. the crowd erupted into a "little Michigan State was intent on brother" chant, referring to the keeping Harris off the charity comments Mike Hart made about stripe. Much of his success this Michigan's recent football domi- season is due to an ability to draw nance over the Spartans. Seconds fouls penetrating to the basket. later, a "little sister" chant arose. Neither Harris nor Sims could Michigan coach John Beilein do much of anything from the tried to distance himself from the start in front of a near-capacity situation,claiminghewasunaware crowd at the Breslin Center. In the of the cheers. game's opening minutes, both had "I don't even hear it," Beilein clean looks from 3-point range, but said. "I've done this enough that I both missed badly. Harris's initial really don't get into those kind of attempt was long, careening off things." the backboard and rim wildly. If he wanted to feed into the Sims's day began even worse. He rivalry, he could have reminded didn't even hit the basket, some- the Spartans of Michigan's 91-71 thing the crowd didn't let him for- lead in the all-time series between get quickly with constant "airball" the two schools. chants throughout the first half. INJURY UPDATE: Senior Ron The Detroit native has struggled Coleman was back in the lineup shootingthe ball lately. Even in the Sunday and said his ankle was 100 encouraging loss to the Badgers, percent. he shot a dismal 4-for-19 from the He subbed in at the first media floor, scoring just 10 points. timeout of the game and hit a 3- Against Michigan State, Sims pointer two minutes later. was a disappointing 1-for-7, col- It was his only field goal in 16 lectingsix points and never finding minutes of play. He also grabbed an offensive rhythm. Considering two rebounds. Sims and Harris are the Wolver- Coleman suffered a sprained ines' best scoring threats, it didn't ankle in the second half against bode well for Michigan's hopes in Indiana on Jan. 8. He sat out the game. for the next two games, against MORE SIBLING RIVALRY: With Northwestern and Wisconsin, and more than three minutes left in played sparingly against Iowa and Sunday's game, the two teams Illinois. gathered for the last media time- Junior Jevohn Shepherd has out. The Spartan fans used the started five straight games in his break to revel in the joy that comes place. Freshman Manny Harris was held to just 11 points in the Wolverines' loss to Michigan State last Sunday. Failure to foul foils 'M' comeback attempt Spartan goalie gets revenge by stifling Blue's powerful offense Miscommunication sealed loss to Iowa By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer IOWA CITY - Michigan coach Kevin Borseth thought it was obvi- ous, but his team didn't get the mes- sage. Down by three with 30.8 seconds NOTEBOOK left in the game, Michigan needed to force a turn- over or foul to stop the clock. During the timeout, Borseth set up a play to trap Iowa and force a turnover but forgot to mention to foul if the trap failed. "That's the only thing we didn't say in the huddle," Borseth said. "Obviously you need to spell every- thingelse." Seconds earlier, Michigan junior Jessica Minnfield drilled a 3-point basket, bringing the score to 64-61. Michigan called a 30-second time- out to set up its defense. After the timeout, Iowa suc- cessfully inbounded the ball and proceeded to pass the ball around the floor as the Michigan defend- ers scrambled to recover from the failed trap. "We said, 'hang on, because they're going to foul you hard,"' Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said. "When we sawthey weren'tgoing to foulus, we said, 'spread theball out and play keep-away."' When Iowa junior Wendy Ausde- more received the ball off the inbounds pass, she chose to pass the ball . off, milking the ' clock rather than sealing the win with anoth- er score. BENSON "That was tempting for her not to put that one down," Bluder said. "That was smart. I was happy to see they saw they were playing against the clock and not against Michigan." Even when the ball was dished down low, the Wolverines failed to foul with two defenders near the ball. "I don't know why we didn't foul," Borseth said. "I would think you'd want to foul them. That would make sense." Even with Borseth screaming, "Why aren't you fouling?" the Wol- verines took until 1.2 seconds left in the game to commit a foul, when junior Melinda Queen pushed into Iowa's Kristi Smith. Smith stepped to the line and made both free throws, putting the game out of reach. "The Big Ten Network prob- ably thinks I'm an idiot and they're right," Borseth said. BENSON SHINES AGAIN: For the second game in a row, Carly Benson led the Wolverines with 22 points. But Sunday was the first time this season Benson scored over 20 points in a losing effort. "She makes things happen when she's in there," Borseth said. "She has a lot of confidence. But right now she's probably boiling, and she should be." Benson turned in her best shoot- ing performance of the season against the Hawkeyes. She shot 7-9 from the field, 3-3 from beyond the arc, and 5-5 from the free throw line. Benson scored 15 of her points in the second half. From nailing a three-pointer on one possession and slashing to the hoop for a lay up on the next, she consistently kept the Wolverines close. "Benson is an outstanding floor player that can come out and hit those threes," Bluder said. "She's a hard one to match up against." By ANDY REID type of team that if you give them Daily Sports Writer a little life, they're going to keep on steamrolling you." EAST LANSING - Jeff Lerg Although Lerg is listed at just probably wouldn't mind forgetting 5 feet 6 inches tall, he was huge the last time he stood between the in net all night, stopping all 26 pipes opposite maize-and-blue Michigan shots. Lerg's ability to winged helmets last season. minimize rebound opportunities In that game, the semifinal made him especially effective. of the CCHA tournament last Michigan has excelled this sea- March, Michigan scorched the son in finding rebounds off goal- Michigan State goalie, netting ies' pads for easy poke-in chances, four goals on just 20 shots before but Lerg never hesitated to ice the Lerg was pulled in favor of an puck, limiting the Wolverines' empty net. offensive production. And with the way this season's The shutout was the first-ever schedule was set up - the Wol- win at Yost for anyone on the verines and Spartans didn't play Spartan roster. each other in the first half of the "Unbelievable feeling, obvious- season - the junior had to wait ly," Lerg said. "I struggled here more than 10 months to exact last year, and it's really nice to get revenge. a win here, especially for all the When the opportunity finally seniors." presented itself last weekend, Things didn't get much easier Lerg took advantage of it. for the Michigan offense in Sat- Michigan (15-2-1 CCHA, 22-3-1 urday night's 2-2 tie at Munn Ice overall) was shut out for the first Arena. The Wolverines tallied a time this year in Friday night's 1- man-advantage goal in the sec- 0 loss at Yost Ice Arena. It was the ond period, and in the waning first time the Wolverines haven't minutes, the Spartans suffered tallied a goal on their home ice an own-goal when junior Matt since Feb. 23, 2003. Schepke batted the puck past "We played a really smart Lerg, knotting the game at two. game,"Lergsaid. "We didn'tmake Lerg's performance was good any costly turnovers. They're the enough to win his fourth consec- utive CCHA Goalie of the Week award. He's just the second-ever CCHA player to pocket a Player of the Week honor for an entire month. Ferris State's Mike Brown won the Defensive Player of the Week award four consecutive times in 2002-03. Michigan coach Red Berenson wasn't inclined to give Lerg too much credit for the win. Beren- son said the Wolverines' woes began with poor shot selection and execution on their best scor- ing chances, which often flew wide of the net or were deflected by the stout Spartan defense. Senior Kevin Porter's troubles finding the net were especially apparent. The Hobey Baker hope- ful tallied just four total shots on goal in the series. Most of Porter's attempts hit the glass behind Lerg. Though Lerg is playing what could be the best hockey of his career, Berenson isn't ready to put him on a pedestal above his own goalie. "Lerg's agood goalie,butI'llput (Michigan goaltender) Billy Sauer against any goalie in the league," Berenson said. "He's going to give us a chance every night, just like Lerg gives them a chance." T H 0 R I G[ N A L 512 E. William (734) 663-3379 LIMITED TIME OFFER For Our Friends at The U CUSTOMER APPRECIATION Lunch Buffet M-F 11-2pm $2 OFF our Lunch Buffet With Beverage Included Just Present Your U of M I.D. Offer Expires: 2/29/2008 T HE O R iG iN A L 512 E. William (734) 663-3379 WEEKDAY HAPPY HOUR at bar only 0 MONDAY-FRIDAY ' 3:00 PM-_7:00 PM P4 PRICE APPETIZERS PINTS OFe TImA 0 4 Michigan has its cake and eats it too in meet celebrating legendary coach By RUTH LINCOLN Daily Sports Writer Former Olympian Red Simmons, one of the pioneers of Michigan women's track and field celebrated his 98th birthday in high style this weekend. Simmons, the coach of Michi- gan from 1978 to 1981, enjoyed his TAURO namesake, the Harvey- Simmons Invitation- al, from the finishline at the Indoor YEAR: Freshman Track HOMETOWN: Building on Manahawkes, Saturday. Simmons NJ. sat, green SPECIALTY: flag in hand, Distancerunner smiling at the success of his team. The meet officials honored the track legend with a birthday cake before events got underway. The Wolverines had their cake and ate it too. Freshman Danielle Tauro got things started in the mile with her first-ever win as a Wolverine. The freshman crossed the finish line in 4:50, just two seconds off the NCAA provisional qualifyingtime. With the level of competition spread thin, Tauro ran uncontested much of the race. "I'm not used to going out and running a really fast time by myself," Tauro said. "I'm happy with the 4:50. It's a good start." Tauro's first-place finish was one of 11 Michigan victories in the 15- event non-scoring meet. Red Simmons may have been on- site, butthe Wolverines' opposition seemed to be missing. Competitors from intra-state teams Central Michigan, Detroit Mercy, Ferris State and Eastern Michigan joined the Wolverines, but the visitors didn't make their presence felt. The Wolverines easily grabbed victories, consistently demonstrat- ing their focus and speed despite the limited competition. Junior Geena Gall won the 800- meter run with an NCAA provi- sional qualifyingtime of 2:07. The meet's 800-meter race was named after former Olympian and Michigan coach Francie Kraker Goodridge. "We take special pride in that event because it's named after Francie," Michigan associate coach Mike McGuire said. "We wanted to make sure we put our best Michi- gan representative in there." Gall stepped up to the start line ready for action. The Grand Blanc native pushed the pace from the start and ran tall and strong in front of the large home crowd. Tiffany Offili added to the vic- torious campaign and made great strides from her performance at last week's Akron Invitational. The junior co-captain captured three titles, including a win in the long jump (19-10). Offili's perfor- mance was a 2-foot improvement from her jump at Akron. "She's just tapping her potential as a top-notch long jumper," Michi- gan coach James Henry said. Offili attributed her progress to changes in her steps down the run- way. With her steps in place, Offili connected from the takeoff board and landed for her farthest jump this season. "I'mdefinitelypleased,butIhave a lot of work to do," Offili said. "I'm not comfortable by any means." The Wolverines will host the Michigan Intercollegiate this Fri- day and Saturday at the Indoor Track Building. 6 $ 10 i