The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, January 4, 2008 - 9 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, January 4, 2008 - 9 Udoh plays tough D' in losing skid OHIO STATE 66, MICHIGAN 42 OUTNUMBERED By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach John Beilein warned everyone this season would feature plenty of growing pains as he attempted to mold the Wolverine program to his Michigan coaching style. at Purdu But over the past few weeks, the reality of what Matchup: has become a forgettable Purdue 9-4; season has finally hit the Michigan 4-9 Wolverines square in the When: Tomor- jaw. The Maize and Blue w : TPMr has dropped nine of its row, 2 P.M. past 11 games after start- Where: ing the season 2-0. Mackey Arena It's become clear that TV: players are growing frus- BTN trated with the notion of taking their lumps this season in hopes of a better future. One player who seems most distraught over the mounting defeats is sophomore Ekpe Udoh. "You really can't take any more moral victories," Udoh said after a 70-54 loss to Wisconsin Wednesday. "You have to stop that. This is a new year and you can't bring that into the new year. We just have to ante up and become men." Udoh and the Wolverines (0-1 Big Ten, 4-9 overall) will get another chance to start fresh tomorrow when they travel to West Lafayette to face Purdue (9-4). But the Edmond, Okla., native hasn't allowed his disappointment to effect his play, especially defensively. Udoh leads the Big Ten in blocks with 38 through 13 games. And after averaging four blocks per 40 minutes a season ago, Udoh already ranks ninth all-time in blocked shots at Michigan (105). Those stats are even more impressive considering Udoh was not a regular starter until the Dec. 8 game at Duke. As a result, opponents and coaches are starting to take notice. "The one thing we'd like to do is estab- lish a low-post presence regardless of who we're playing," said Purdue coach Matt Painter during his weekly teleconference. "That being said, Udoh is one of the lead- ing shot blockers in the country. He does a very good job of patrolling their defense and helping them out." Unlike other prolific shot blockers, who rely largely on athleticism and jump- ing ability, Udoh's talent stems from his impeccable timing and 7-foot-3 wing span. His propensity for blocking shots has not affected his playing time, either. Udoh has stayed out of foul trouble, while contesting most shots at the rim. Despite his length, the sophomore isnstill underweight in the paint. Listed generously at just 230 pounds, Udoh is usually 30-to- 40 pounds lighter than opposing centers. UCLA took advantage of this in a big way during its Dec. 22 win over Michigan, having a field day in the interior. Bruin freshman Kevin Love tallied 17 points and 16 rebounds, while power forward Luc Ri Mbah a Moute had 12 points and 13 rebounds. On Wednesday, Wisconsin followed the same script, outreboundingthe Wolverines by 10 and getting several easy putback bas- kets from freshman Jon Leuer and junior Marcus Landry. Udoh's size has given him trouble estab- lishing offensive position in the post, too. Part of the problem is the team's slow adjustment to Beilein's complicated offense. Players are still uncertain when to pass and when to shoot, leading to missed opportunities. Against the Badgers, Udoh was able to establish position in the paint, but the Wol- verines' guards couldn't or wouldn't pass him the ball. As a result, Udoh attempted just two shots. "I think too many times guys just don't know if they should score or not or if they should run the offense," senior Ron Cole- man said. Blocked shot after blocked shot without any sort of reward on the offensive end? You'd be frustrated too. Frosh rewarded with ugly goal in return to ice By H. JOSE BOSCH break. The work paid off, and the freshman Daily Sports Editor is ready to contribute in a big way during the second half of the season. DETROIT - Even after six weeks off "The first couple of practices were tough the ice, Michigan freshman forward Louie for me," Caporusso said Caporusso is still the luck- last week. "Getting back iest player on the team. NOTEBOOK into shape was definitely During his first shift tough, but I feel like I'm back from a knee injury last Friday against just getting my legs back Providence, Caporusso notched his second right now." career goal with alittle help from the Friars' THE UNKNOWN MILE- defense. STONE: Senior captain Standing to the left of the goaltender and Kevin Porter has 31 with his back to the net, the Toronto-area points this season - an CAPORUSSO native spun around and sent the puck across indication he knows the top of the goal crease - hardly a threat- a scoring opportunity ening shot. when he sees one. But the puck ricocheted off the skate of But Porter was unaware of the milestone a Providence defenseman and slowly slid he reached during Friday's game against across the goal line for Michigan's first Providence. So was his coach. goal. When asked about his captain surpassing "It was awesome," Caporusso said. "It the 150-career point mark, Berenson paused wasn't the greatest goal, but to know you a moment. can get right back into the game and feel like "No, I didn't know it," Berenson said. "But you really belong out there right away was I think he's having a career season." definitely something special." Going into the season, the Michigan Caporusso is no stranger to serendipitous coaching staff predicted Porter would build goals. At the Ice Breaker Invitational in St. on an already impressive career, Berenson Paul, Minn., he notched an overtime game- said. winning goal when the puck ricocheted off Despite appreciating the accomplish- the skate ofBoston College forward Andrew ment, Porter, as he's apt to do, shifted the Orpik. attention from himself. Eagles coach Jerry York said he wasn't "I guess there's not much to think about, sure that Caporusso even touched the puck. " Porter said. "But it's a team game, so as But the freshman forward will take a goal long as we keep winning, that's the most whether it's from a well-placed shot or an important thing." awkward bounce. NOTES: Junior defenseman Mark Mitera "They don't draw pictures on the game was named an alternate captain prior to the sheet," Caporusso said. "You have to think GLI, replacing junior forward Tim Miller. a goal is a goal." Berenson called the switch a reward for While Friday night's goal might have Mitera rather than a punishment for Miller. come by luck, Caporusso's ability to play in ... Junior goalie Billy Sauer was named the the Great Lakes Invitational was the culmi- RBC Financial Group CCHA Player of the nation of weeks of hard off-ice work. With- Month for December. Sauer went 3-0-0 to out teammates to practice with or coaches close out 2007. ... The Wolverines extended to provide structure, Caporusso relied on their winning streak over Michigan Tech himself to get back into shape. to seven games.... Sauer, Mitera, Porter and He found his own practice rink near his junior Travis Turnbull were named to the home during Michigan's brief Christmas GLI's All-Tournament team. ROB M iG RIN/Dail Junior Jessica Minnfield was the only Wolverine to pose an offensive threat to Ohio State, scoring 18 points in Columbus yesterday. ne player alone can't stop Buckeyes By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - It was a one-woman show for Michigan last night. But when the other four players on the court hardly contribute, it doesn't mean much. Junior Jessica Minnfield was the lone bright spot in the middle of a bleak eve- ning for the Wolverines. She scored 18 points and sparked an early 8-0 run for Michigan in a 66-42 loss to No. 21 Ohio State. Michigan (1-1 Big Ten, 8-4 overall) opened the game poorly and quickly found itself down 9-0. Minnfield chipped in the next eight points for the Wolverines, bringing them within one, the closest they would get to Ohio State (10-3, 1-1). She stole the ball three times, scored three baskets and had an assist on a layup by junior Carly Ben- son. But her spark was fruitless in what was otherwise a team-wide breakdown. "We were terrible," Michigan coach Kevin Borseth said. "She was the only kid to show up to play. We played one player on the floor, one. We got beat in every aspect of the game." Minnfield shot 50 percent from the field and went 7-for-9 from the charity stripe, while the team shot an abysmal 26.4 percent and made just over 57 per- cent of its free throws. "It's always going to be very frustrat- ing if we don't get good shots," Minnfield said. The Buckeyes' domination extended to the glass, where they held a 17-rebound advantage over Michigan. The Wolverines never really had a chance to rebound from their poor play in the first half. The relentless Buckeye defense forced Michigan to take abys- mal shots. The Wolverine offense was nowhere to be found, scoring just seven points off set plays. The highlights were few and far between. Minnfield made a nice 3-point shot despite tough defense, and junior Stephany Skrba was able to get a solid shot down low that gave her an easy bucket. Center Krista Phillips was ineffective after two early fouls. Even when she was on the court, Phillips couldn't back down into the post against Buckeye center Jan- tel Lavender. Borseth looked to the bench in desperation and came up empty with equally poor performances by senior Ta'Shia Walker, who missed three inside shots, and junior Melinda Queen, who was 0-for-4 in the first half. "We like to move the ball cutting, setting picks," Minnfield said. "But we weren't doing any of that today. We were just standing on the 3-point line, not mov- ing, not communicating." The second half wasn't any better. The Buckeyes extended their lead to as many as 29. Lavender continued her dominance, finishing with a double-double (14 points and 14 rebounds). The Wolverines scored the bulk of their points during two runs, one generated by Minnfield early in the first half and another fueled by free throws. With the Buckeyes up 51-22, Michigan was able to draw to within 19. By that point, though, the game was already over. The loss was even more devastating considering the Wolverines' impressive win over Iowa on Dec. 30 to begin the Big Ten season - their first victory in a con- ference opener in six years. For everyone other than Minnfield, this loss is one Michigan would prefer to forget. "It was a bad game, we've got to recov- er from this," Minnfield said. "We can't dwell on the loss." New faces and enthusiasm lead to surprise intrasquad competition win By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer On Dec. 15, the Michigan men's gymnastics team got a head start on exceeding expectations in the gymnastics community. Ranked sixth in the preseason poll after finishing fourth at the 2007 NCAA Championships, the Wolverines showed in their annual Maize and Blue intrasquadthattheywill, once again, be full of surprises. The undermanned Maize team, with its lineups depleted by inju- ries, shocked the "stacked" Blue team, dominating the competition from start to finish. "Maize won, and Blue didn't think it was possible," Maize fresh- man Chris Cameron said. The Maize team was without the services of senior co-captain Paul Woodward, who sprained his ankle two weeks ear- lier. Cameron, normally an all-around- er, competed in just fourj events. Another SANTANDER all-arounder, freshman Ben Baldus-Strauss, was only able to compete on floor due to a wrist inju- ry. The one-handed performance - his cast came off the previous day - drew cheers of amazement. The intrasquad not only intro- duced the eight-man freshman class to Michigan gymnastics fans, but introduced many fans to a new scoring code, with the best scores stretching into the 15s. To further complicate matters, team scoring was modified, too. Instead of counting the top four marks in each event, all routine scores were added together and divided by the number of healthy competitors in the event. The average was then multiplied by four for the event total. Though the Blue team won four of the six event titles, the Maize team won the meet by a score of 329.07-326.266. But the team rivalry was short- lived. As the meet wound down, all the gymnasts gathered in a corner of the floor to watch the final few competitors perform on the par- allel bars. With everyone in their warm-ups, it was impossible to distinguish the teams. The Wolverines kept up the intensity in Cliff Keen Arena all night, celebrating hit routines with uninhibited delight. Following his breathtaking pommel horse set, which drew excited cheers from the crowd, Cameron screamed, pumped his arms and ended up bouncing through a crowd of his teammates and off a padded wall. Even normally reserved sopho- more Mel Santander, who took the all-around title with an 85.75, joined in fun after his 14.0 routine on high bar. Assistant coach Scott Vetere was excited by the freshmen's competi- tive spirit. "Chris Cameron, he knocked it out on his events," Vetere said. "He knew he was going to hit. That's a great thing to have and I think our team needs somebody like that." Appropriately for the youthful team, its younger members took all the event titles. Juniors Jamie Thompson, Ralph Rosso and Joe Catrambone respectively won floor, pommel horse and rings, respectively. Sophomore Torrance Laury tied Rosso for vault honors with a 15.55, and Santander bested all comers on parallel bars. Fresh- man Thomas Kelley's near-flawless routine was tops on high bar. But the Wolverines still have plenty of room to improve, espe- cially with consistency and endur- ance. If the intrasquad had been scored like a regular competition, counting the top four scores, the team would have finished with a 351.0. On several events, Michi- gan counted sub-14.5s, something coaches hope they won't do by the end of the season. "We did really well tonight but it's not good enough," Thompson said. "It's a great start, and we have a month or so before we have to compete again. Plenty of time to go work in the gym, relax a little bit, focus on basics, details, and we'll have a great season." t I x