S-por-tsM( 4B - Monday, December 8, 2008 STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers predict what will happen in the 2008 college football season. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Dan Courtney Feldman Ratkowiak Ian Robinson Nate Bob Sandals Gartland No.lAlabama(9.5)vsNo.ZFlorida Alabaaa Florida Alabama Alabama No.4Oklahoma (-17) vs. No.19 Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri Oklahoma Oklahoma No. 5 Southern Cal (-33) vs. UCLA UCLA UCLA Southern Cal UCLA UCLA No.B12eall State (-15) vs. Buffalo Buffalo Ball State Ball State eallState.Ball State No.13 Cincinnati (-7.5) at Hawaii Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati.Cincinnati Cincinnati No. 18eoston College (PK)oVirginia Tech Virginia Tech BostonCollege Boston College Boston College.Boston College No. 23Pittsburgh (+3) atlConnecticut Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh esteBet Virginia Tech Cincinnati Soutern Ca...Boston College Oklahoma Record This Week 4-3 (1-0) 2-5 (0-1) 2-5(0-1) 3-4 (0-1) 3-4 (1-0) Overall Record 170-137-6 (8-5-2) 157-150-6 (10-4-1) 173-134-6 (11-3-1).168-139-6 (6-8-1).158-149-6 (6-8-1) In addition to the four Daily football writers and guest picker Bob Gartland, a special contributor made his picks this week. To watch Bentley the dachshund make his picks, head to www.michigandaily.com. 6 i s steps upin iggestgame of his car tolea d' 'astDuke By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer As a kid, junior DeShawn Sims never dreamed of beating Duke. "Idreamed aboutbeing at Duke," the power forward said. "So just being able to beat a team that's so superior as the Duke program, you can definitely tell the story for the rest of your life." Before Saturday's game against the fourth-ranked. Blue Devils, Sims knew he would need to have a good game if the Michigan men's basketball team was going to pull off the upset. In last month's 71-56 loss to the Blue Devils, Duke held Sims to a season-low 10 points. Saturday, he had 11in the first half and finished with a career-high 28. "Definitely biggest game of my career," Sims said. "Biggest game I ever played." Sims came out firing, scoring Michigan's first two baskets. He missed a number of seemingly easy layups earlier in the game, but it didn't affect his confidence. In New York, Sims was pushed around by Duke's big men and wasn't an offensive threat inside. Saturday, Sims pushed back. He outmaneuvered the Duke defense in the paint all game. About five minutes into the game, Sims received a pass on the left, block and backed down Blue Devil forward Kyle Singler for an easy hook shot. A few possessions later, he showed his range, draining a 3-pointer. Last year, Sims played more on the perimeter to spread the oppos- ingteam's defense. Michigancoach John Beilein moved Sims closer to the basket this season. The move allows him to play more of a 15-foot game, but still allows him to step out for occasional 3-pointers. "Last year, we tried to make him a perimeter four," Beilein said. "It was helpful because he has more skill than before, but he really loves that middle of the floor whether it's in the block or whatever. He's passing the ball. He's getting more comfortable with what he has to do." Moving Sims inside has forced him to be a more physical and com- plete player. Michigan has strug- gled to grab rebounds this season, but Sims is leading the team with 8.4 per game. He tied his season high with 12 rebounds Saturday. "He played with a lot of matu- rity," Duke coach Mike Krzyze- wski said. "I thought a couple of rebounds in the first half were huge for them. He came up with some bigtime rebounds and a cou- ple really nice passes, and that's not something he's been doing as well." As the final seconds ticked off the clock, the Michigan students stormed the court and Sims found himself pushing through the crazed crowd. After making his way through the crowd, Sims jogged into the tunnel towards the locker room, stopping to hug Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez and some other friends. Later, as the media poured into the locker room and surrounded Sims, he cracked a smile, telling the story of the big- gest game of his career. "I've never been through a stam- pede," Sims said. "The only thing I heard about a stampede is a guy passing out because it was too hot, so I just tried to get out of there. But I'd rather a stampede than guys going home, walking to their cars mad at another bad Michigan performance." BLUE DEVILS From Page1B get the crowd into it a little bit - a momentum swinger. I think that's my job - come in, hit open shots." Novak was one of four Wolver- ines to tally nine or more points, including sophomore small for- ward Manny Harris who had 17. But the game's standout was junior power forward DeShawn Sims. Before the matchup, Sims had a message for his team about the competition: "They're fast, but they're not a Ferrari." Sims echoed the confidence this team has had since October. The Detroit native led Michi- gan with a career-high 28 points and tied a career-high with 12 rebounds, but his performance was part of a team-wide effort to put the brakes on Duke's speed. From tipoff, Michigan kept Duke from looking like a national championship contender. The Wolverines outrebounded, out- hustled and outplayed the Blue Devils in the end. Duke never led by more than six points, and the Wolverines held their largest advantage, 10 points, with fewer than 30 sec- onds to play. The Blue Devils didn't help their cause by attempting a sea- son-high 33 3-pointers and con- necting on just seven. Duke's dismal performance from behind the arc allowed Michigan to successfully fight for, defensive rebounds and run its transition offense. "They're very difficult to score against in half court," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "They lock you up, make you go back door, make you dribble-drive, and we were a little better at that this time than we were last time. ... Our transition offense has been very good to us this year, just like it's one of Duke's fortes as well." Sophomore point guard Kelvin Grady took control in the second half, matching the Blue Devils' speed by finding open lanes and teammates. He finished with a 4:0 assist-to-turnover ratio. In the game's final minutes, he hit 5-of-6 crucial free throws, partofMichigan's18-for-22 effort from the charity stripe. Following the game, Beilein said he was "stuck for words." Krzyzewski wasn't. "They deserved the victory," he said. I 6 Stop by for a tour and apply the same day and we'll WAIVE YOUR $150 SERVICE FEE! Sign a lease within 24 hours of applying and recieve N IPHONE $200 GIFT CARD & FREE LUNCH! I I MAX COLLINS/Daily Michigan fans rush the court after the Wolverines upset No. 4 Duke on Saturday. REID From Page 1B gan free throw - my ears were ringing as if I were at a rock con- cert. Although I may have sustained some minor inner-ear damage, it was worth it to see Michigan fans excited about the team, the same squad that desperately struggled to sell student tickets just a few months ago. Freshman Zack Novak stood triumphantly in the locker room after the game, his maize-colored jersey smeared with blue body paint. Eight students had painted themselves blue and, with yel- low-painted letters, spelled out "MICHIGAN." They gave Novak congratulatory chest bumps and hugs after rushing the court. While Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski and the Blue Devils were being led off the floor by police, Michigan fans trampled the benches on their way to the court, leaving a heaping pile of chairs, popcorn and spilled pop in their wake. They sang "The Victors," jumped around and cel- ebrated with the team duringthe mosh pit at midcourt. "It was crazy, but it was sweet," said Novak, still beaming about the whole postgame experience. It was quite a scene. There's no doubt about that, but does it ulti- mately amount to anything? What are the chances that Crisler Arena is as crazy next Saturday as it was against Duke? "It's a good arena, but we get everyone's best shot," Coach K said. "You know, it's party time when we come, everywhere. I watched the (Michiganvs.) Savannah State tape, and you didn't have many seats filled at all. Come here all the time and do that. That's when you have a really great arena." Krzyzewski said that with an almost daring tone, calling on the Michigan fan base to get behind this team. And nothing is going to create a spark in Beilein's pro- gram like wins - and he already has two against top-five teams this season. Michigan needs to build off this momentum and fin- ish the nonconference schedule strong so this victory doesn't fade in the minds of fans. And the Wolverines will. With the senior leadership from pre- game speech-givers C.J. Lee and David Merritt, the sheer talent of Manny Harris, the tenacity of DeShawn Sims and the pure shooting ability of Zack Novak, Michigan is poised to do enough on the court this season to help build that atmosphere at Crisler for every game. If you're kicking yourself about missing the Duke game - don't. The Wolverines are goingto pro- vide more than enough celebra- tion-worthy moments this season. - Reid can be reached at andyreid@umich.edu. I 4