The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom February 4, 2008 - 38 Borseth's show of anger backfires in'M' loss Michigan legend Cazzie Russell needs to have more of an impact on the program for the Wolverines to turn things around. Maybe Cazzle could fix the house e built ByANTHUN Y OLIVEIRA Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Having trouble commu- nicating with his NOTEBOOK players at Michi- gan State Thursday, Michigan coach Kevin Borseth raised a clipboard over his head. That may have been a bad idea. Watching his team collapse down the stretch, Borseth called a timeout with 4:31 remaining. He slammed his clipboard to the floor, smashing it into pieces. "I get through a couple each year," Borseth said. As the debris spread around the Wolverine bench, an appalled Bre- slin Center crowd booed resound- ingly. But Borseth didn't have a problem with that. He even has a philosophy. "They paid money to get in," Borseth said. "They can scream. That's good for them. If they get a free ticket, then they can't say any- thing." The 8,287 fans in attendance remained loud for the rest of the game. GIANTS From page lB feeling," Manning said. Said owner John Maar: "The greatest victory in the history of this franchise, without a question." It was a scintillating clos- ing chapter to a crazy week that seemed to have everything: the perfect team, the upstart under- dogs, the cover boy quarterback, the kid brother in Manning. America loves an underdog, and the Giants, with their stirring vic- tory, etched themselves as one of the best this game - or any sport - has ever seen. The star was Manning, the scruffy younger brother of Pey- ton, who won his own Super Bowl last year, and sat in the corner of a skybox for this one, squirming and agonizing over every play. The antics didn't seem to inspire the Wolverines, as they continued their scoreless drought for three more minutes. But it was the spark Michigan State needed. After the timeout, Michigan State sophomore Allyssa DeHaan blocked a Jessica Minnfield jumper. Then the Spartans went on a 7-0 run in just over two minutes, claiming their first lead since the first half. FINDING HER WAY: Junior Stephany Skrba has seen her ups and downs off the bench this season. After seeing ample playing time early in the season, she's played just 12.2 minutes per game in the Big Ten season. But she's starting to find her way. Borseth and the coaching staff have worked with Skrba to find her spot on the offensive end, develop- ing a stronger inside-outside pres- ence. She has particularly struggled with her ball control. But in Thursday's contest, she was key to extending Michigan's lead to eight in the second half. She went eight-for-eight from the field, scoring eight points in each half. Even more impressive was the fact she committed just one turn- Now both Mannings have a championship and Tom Brady - well, he's still got the looks, the supermodel girlfriend, Gisele Bundchen, and three Super Bowl titles of his own, even though he didn't come out on top this time. It means New England finishes 18-1 and the 1972 Miami Dolphins remain the only team to go unde- feated from the start of the season through the Super Bowl. Their coach, Don Shula, was on hand, ready to congratulate the Patriots had they finished 19-0. Instead, he figured to be sipping champagne, continuing a tradition the Dolphins have enjoyed every year when the last undefeated team finally gets its first loss. They remain alone thanks to Manning, whose 13-yard game- winner came four plays after he somehow escaped a cadre of Patri- ots engulfing him, threw the ball over in the game. Yet in thefinalmoments of Thurs- day's game, she was on the bench. "To put her in that environment after she's starting to come around a little bit, I felt may be a bit much at this time," Borseth said. "But cer- tainly she has the ability to play in that stretch. We just have to make sure we have the right combina- tion on the floor. And she could have been one of those kids." Borseth felt more comfortable putting those who have seen crunch time situations. For Skrba, it's just a matter of time. FIRST DATE: Tonight, Michigan meets Illinois for the first time this season in Ann Arbor. That might be a good thing. In their two previous games, the Wolverines lost to opponents they've seen earlier this year, both on the road. Michigan fell 66-61 to Iowa and to 61-58 to Michigan State. Borseth said he's sure his team will have a considerable advantage at home. "I think teams are 10 points bet- ter at home," he said. up for grabs and watched receiv- er David Tyree somehow pin it between his hands and his helmet for the 32-yard reception. That kept the drive going, and it will be Manning's mastery that everyone remembers - not the coolly efficient 80-yard touchdown drive that Brady had completed only moments earlier. It was a tight, taut defensive battle for three-plus quarters - yet anything but boring. Then it was taken over by two quarterbacks - one already a star, the other yearning to escape the shadow his big brother has cast over the family, and the sport, for many years now. Yesterday he made quite the leap, capping a four-week stretch of nearly flawless football during which the Giants were underdogs in every game they played, but won them all. A s Cazzie Russell walks more detail - in fact, another around the Junge Family question was asked before he had Champions Center with a chance to finish. his infectious But the unfinished sentence laugh and speaks volumes. It seemed he kind, welcom- didn't even know why he wasn't ing voice, one helping Michigan in some way, can't help but whether by coaching or recruit- wonder how > ing, despite showing interest in this man, the head-coaching job in the past. Michigan bas- It's not clear if Russell has ketball's only H. JOSE requested to be involved. But three-time All BOSCH whether Russell last inquired 10 American, isn't years ago or 10 days ago, the Wol- more involved with the program. verines should ask him to become How a prototypical Michigan a goodwill ambassador for the Man isn't doing something - any- program. thing - to help the program that Before this season, I barely developed him into the No. 1 draft knew who Russell was. pick in the 1966 NBA Draft. After less than 15 minutes lis- How Russell, who is credited tening to him speak, I wasn't just with "building" Crisler Arena, is in awe, but I realized how much coaching a school thousands of he could help Michigan coach miles away from Ann Arbor. John Beilein rebuild the program, A school, the Savannah College too. of Art and Design, that's thrilled He helped Michigan win three just be playing in the National straight Big Ten Championships Association of Intercollegiate and make two consecutive Final Athletics. Fours. All this right after the "Someway, somehow you'd Wolverines suffered four straight love to be able to help out your losing seasons. alma mater," Russell said during He has turned a program a pre-game dinner for himself around. And he said he would and the first team ever to play like nothing better than to help at Crisler Arena. "You couldn't his alma mater. write out a better script saying, Michigan is nowhere near an 'You know what, I played here. elite basketball school. The only I'm going to get a chance to way Beilein has a chance to com- maybe experience giving some- pete is if he convinces players to thing in the form of coaching ignore the limelight of the top back.' But nothing was ever said, programs and come to Ann Arbor so ..." with the desire to build an elite His answer trailed off and Rus- program. sell looked sad. He didn't go into Russell understands this idea. Berenson said. "I'm disappointed WILDCATS we got ourselves two men short, From page lB took a misconduct. You can't do that." and senior Matt Siddall, who was Despite the penalties, the Wol- on the bench. The referees issued verines scoredjustone power-play eight minutes of roughing after goal. Sandwiched between fresh- the whistle penalties for the rare man Carl Hagelin's and Kolarik's tussle. goals, center Louie Caporusso's Berenson said he spoke to the tally was the game's lone man- freshmen after the game about advantage score, a beautiful wrist some of the bad penalties they shot from the center of the right took. circle. "The penalties I think for the But after a series like that, most part hurt both teams, but which Berenson said during the they really hurt the home team," week would be disappointing if tion in Friday night's press confer- SANDA LS ence, but a call to the Tampa Bay From page 1B Lightning, the organization hold- ing Quick's professional rights, there was no prior indication of revealed this was no simple misun- rule-breaking or wrongdoing, con- derstanding. sidering Quick seemed to be one of The Lightning are conducting the most soft-spoken, even-keeled their own internal investigation and good-natured members of the of the incident, team spokesman team, it must have been really bad. Brian Breseman said by phone Sat- "The decision was made because urday. Kevin violated our team rules and If Quick's transgression is seri- the trust of our team," Berenson ous enough to warrant an inves- said in a statement released before tigation by an NHL team, it's Friday's game. probably severe enough to have Berenson offered little clarifica- given this Michigan team pause regular season with just one loss, BUCKEYES which came against No. 1 Texas From page 1B in November. Michigan is favored to win the Big Ten Champion- Michigan, so we sort of expected ship meet later this month, but, to win it," Vanderkaay said. "But it even with victories against all alwayr feels good to win it.I was up three conference teams, the gaffes on the block and one of my team- against the Buckeyes were remind- mates was yelling 'last one, come ers that the Wolverines are not on, last one.' There was a little perfect. Michigan lost five events, added pressure - like, I don't want including two relays, by less than to screw up my last meet here." one second. The Wolverines completed their Despite some of the mistakes, He spurned the nation's two best teams at the time - Cincinnati and UCLA - to start something new with the Wolverines. There is no one better to show recruits that coming to Michigan is worth it. It's not fair to Russell or to Michigan that his gravitas is now limited to major basketball reunions. It'd be foolish to say Michigan would be a winning team if Rus- sell had been hired as head coach after Tommy Amaker or even several years ago. Transitions are almost always rough, especially with so little momentum heading into the new regime. The Wolverines need someone to remind recruits about Mich- igan's rich basketball tradition before the Ed Martin scandal and the Amaker era. They need a connection to years past, when Big Ten Championships weren't a pipe dream. Like they did more than 40 years ago, the Wolverines need Cazzie Russell. "I watched the other night, Michigan-Michigan State, I turned it off," Russell said. "It's tough to be one of the top pro- grams in the country and then you go through that period." Many fans have already tuned out this season and maybe even the entire program. Russell is the man who could help everyone tune back in. - Bosch can be reached at hectobos@umich.edu. Michigan came away with just one victory, it's simply time to reload. "I think we'll bounce back," Berenson said. "Our players are resilient and they'll be refocusing this coming week and we know we got a tough test in Miami. This will be a good test for us. So I don't know how we'll match up with them, but I think we'll play better next weekend." As he left the press conference, unprompted, Berenson even con- fessed, "We have to play better next weekend." going into the biggest weekend of the year. This four-game winless streak and Quick's dismissal make it clear a number of questions remain unanswered. Something is miss- ing. Michigan has four days to find itself, or the questions will keep piling up. Even worse, the magic of the first 24 games will continue to trickle away. - Sandals can be reached at nsandals@umichedu. Savulich said he isn't worried about his team being prepared for the Big Ten Championship meet. "Everything is there, all the training, we just have to get men- tally down to it and be ready to go," he said. "We weren't as sharp as we're going to be at Big Tens, and we know that. and (Ohio State) is going to find that out in about a month." Next time, they won't need a speech from Bowman. Taya, Recruiter Schlumberger is the leading oilfield services provider, trusted to deliver improved exploration and production performance for oil and gas companies around the world. We employ more than 76,000 people of over 140 nationalities working in more than 80 countries, University of Michigan = Ann Arbor Information Session: February 4, 2008 * 6:30 p.m. 1200 EECS BS Degrees: All Engineering disciplines, Ceoscience, Chemistry, Physics, Math Schlumberger is an Equal Opportunity Employer Success without boundaries www.slb.com/careers