4B - Monday, March 10, 2008 f-14 vsportsMonda The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Hawkeyes use size, depth to dominate Blue Rotating Iowa lineup stifles Michigan in paint By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - In the Michigan women's basketball team's 58-37 loss to Iowa on Friday afternoon, size mattered. Iowa coach Lisa Bluder rotated her lineup throughout the Big Ten Tour- NOTEBOOKna- ment quarterfinal to keep her forwards rested. Iowa's depth up front allowed the Hawkeyes to dominate the glass, outrebounding Michigan 46-24. "They'rebig, and they're aveteranteam," Michigan coach Kevin Borseth said. The Wolverines had trouble penetrat- ing into the lane, especially with center Krista Phillips on the bench for much of the second half. She was taken out after playing weak defense against the Hawkeye forwards in the first half. But without her in the game, Michigan's interior offense down low was nonexistent. The Wolverines scored just four points in the paint in the second half and allowed Iowa to pick up 14 offensive rebounds for the game while getting just five of their own. The Hawkeyes' second-chance points made a 16-point difference in the .game. "They were obviously a lot bigger than some of our guards, so we just had a hard time when we got into the lane," junior Carly Benson said. "We were doing a pret- ty good job getting to the basket. We just were getting our shots blocked and get- ting pretty physical, so we weren't getting many rebounds after we shotit." While Iowa's forwards dominated the boards, they were also the cog of Iowa's offense, scoringthe majority of the Hawk- eyes' points. Together, forwards Wendy Ausdemore and Johanna Solverson and centers Stacy Schlapkohl and Megan Skouby scored 35 of Iowa's 58 points. LONE BRIGHT SPOTS: Although the Wolverines were clearly outplayed by Iowa, they excelled in taking the ball away from the Hawkeyes. The Wolverines created 17 turnovers and stole the ball 11 times. Sophomore Stephany Skrba led the Wolverines in thievery with three steals. Seven Wolver- ines had at least one steal. "I'll tell you what, we turned them over," Borseth said. "There was a stretch we turned them over quite a few times ina row. And they came down the other end of the court, and couldn't make anything." But despite the takeaways, Michigan scored just nine points off turnovers and had only four off fast breaks. GOING OUT WITH A BANG: Michigan senior Katie Dierdorf has seen little play- ing time this season, but she made the most of what she got on Friday. Dierdorf entered the game with 3:44 remaining in the second half and the Wol- verines trailingby 20. But she didn't let the score get to her, making her first career 3- pointer on her first career attempt. "Wasn't it awesome? Her first career three? That was really awesome," Borseth said. "I was really happy for her. Katie's a great kid, obviously has worked hard all year long and really hasn't really gotten her due. It's been tough for her. But she's been a great team player. And to see her make that three, her inside was probably just boiling over." S '0 0 Sophomore Krista Phillips (left) and juniors Jessica Minnfield (center) and Carly Benson (right) sit on the bench during Michigan's 58-37 loss toI lowa in the Big Ten Tournament on Friday afternoon. Three wrestlers take Big Ten titles UP cl As h the firs champi Manuel freshm, with a a A tak But too slip the ma tion be ping bo Gopher and sc down. The Six qualify for to a 3-2 victory and Michigan's first individual conference champion- )coming NCAA ship by a true freshman since 1976. The Wolverines claimed third Fhampionships place Sunday at Big Ten Champi- onships in Minneapolis. The top-seeded Russell, the Big By IAN KAY Ten Freshman of the Year, came Daily Sports Writer into the championship meet with a 26-5 season record. e scrambled on the mat in "I think he had proved through- t period of their 141-pound out the season that he was capable onship match, Minnesota's of (winning a Big Ten Champion- I Rivera caught Michigan ship)," Michigan coach Joe McFar- an Kellen Russell's foot land said. "He went out and set quick single-leg shot. the pace in his matches and didn't edown seemed inevitable. make too many mistakes." once again, Russell was While Russell's win is an early pery. He spun to counter highlight in an extremely prom- sve and established posi- ising collegiate career, fifth-year hind Rivera before wrap- senior captain Eric Tannenbaum th arms around the Golden closed his Big Ten career on a simi- 's torso to establish control lar note. ore the bout's only take- The 165-pound championship match marked Tannenbaum's third sequence propelled Russell Big Ten finals appearances. He was victorious at 149 pounds as a red- shirt freshman but lost to Iowa's Mark Perry last year. This year, Tannenbaum and Perry matched up again, but Tan- nenbaum was unfazed by the Hawkeye's mobile technique in the rematch. "Rather than worrying about trying not to get into scrambles, I just worked through them," Tan- nenbaum said. The strategy proved effective, as Tannenbaum caught Perry for a takedown late in the first period and eventually accumulated 2:20 of riding time. The match ended with the score knotted at two, but the time advantage gave Tannen- baum the victory. Redshirt junior Steve Luke also faced a familiar opponent in Minnesota's Gabriel Dretsch at 174 pounds. Luke had defeated Dretsch twice this season. Luke wasted little time in con- tinuing the trend, scoring two takedowns in the opening period of a 5-3 decision win to defend his title at 174 pounds. The individual conference championshipswill certainly make for nice hardware in Michigan's trophy case, but all three winners and McFarland were quick to stress that this weekend was about quali- fying for NCAA Championships. "I'm looking towards a National Title, hopefully," said Tannen- baum. "The Big Ten Title is some- thing I've already done before, but a National Championship in college is something I haven't experienced, so that remains the goal." In addition to Michigan's three champions, redshirt senior captain Josh Churella, redshirt senior Jeff Marsh, and redshirt junior captain Tyrel Todd placed in the top five of their respective weight classes to qualify for NCAA Championships in St. Louis in two weeks. wo"*kw Stuid entU niverse~cm I q "The professors in Oakland's master of training and development program were always willing to share their personal perspectives with the students. By relating their own experiences in the field, they helped us understand the many ways we would be able to put the skills we were learning into practice and the types of careers we would be able to pursue after graduation." Michelle Serafino Human Performance Specialist, Accenture Master of Training and Development program You'll earn the distinction. Whether you want to expand your skills, reach personal or professional goals, or make your next career move, Oakland University is the place for you. 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