a 8A - Thursday, February 12, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Freshmen duo With'M'off target, Sims gives Blue jolt serves as lone bright spot 4 play and any ith increased on Nov. 15 at Kentucky on 4-of-4 3-point shooting. But recently, ing time, Boylan she hasn't exploded like she did in her first game. I Reynolds have "We've gone to our bench in swered the call a hurry with those three kids," Borseth said. "They give us a dif- ferent look. They give us the scor- By TIM ROHAN ing threat. Boylan and Reynolds Daily Sports Writer automatically can score." Borseth said Wednesday that Senior forward Carly Benson tapped teammate Carmen Reyn- olds's thigh when asked about Reynolds's performance during the press conference after Michi- gan's loss to Penn State Monday. It was an excited, happy motion, a "you take this one" sort of action. Reynolds, a freshman forward, might not have had to face the pressure of answering the on the spot questions before that. But she certainly knows how to handle game pressure, which has led to her increased playing time recently. In the last four games, Reyn- olds has played an average of 23 minutes per game, up from an average of 10.5 minutes in her first four collegiate games. Michigan coach Kevin Borseth initially played just one post play- er off the bench. That's when the hardworking freshman stepped in. The Wolverines (3-10 Big Ten, 10-14 overall) boast four seniors in their starting lineup, but a youthful injection usually comes midway through the first half of each game. Reynolds, fresh- man guard Courtney Boylan and junior center Krista Phillips have been the first players off the bench. The future of Michigan wom- en's basketball has been personi- fied by Reynolds and Boylan this Reynolds played with a nota- ble maturity Monday, scoripg a career-high 20 points on 4-of-7 shooting from 3-point range. She filled the stat sheet by snagging four rebounds and blocking two shots in 28 minutes. Boylan believes Reynolds's ability to score in the post opened up the perimeter game as taller defenders were forced to guard her. Borseth knows Reynolds has the ability, but the future will tell if she can consistently play at this high of a level. "She's good in traffic," Borseth said. "She can shoot well. She passes well. She sees the floor. She's got really good hands, so if you throw it in there and you collapse on her real fast she's just able to make some real quick decisions that most players aren't able to make." Boylan has been no slouch, either. She scored a career-high 18 points in her first college game before the season started he didn't even know which players he was going to play, let alone what the pair of freshmen could do. "At the beginning of the sea- son, Coach was like, 'We need more production off our bench. We need you guys to come out there and make a contribution,' " Boylan said. "And I think that's happening now." Boylan and Reynolds each believe they have learned the most through in-game experi- ence and that has translated into success. The three came off the bench early to spark a comeback at Northwestern and to provide scoring punch against Penn State, but the Wolverines lost both games. Reynolds and Phil- lips combined for 30 of the team's 56 points against the Nittany Lions. Borseth thinks Reynolds's play will continue to improve, and her presence is valuable for this team. "As a freshman, (Reynolds) is going to learn as she goes," Borseth said. "She may shine from now on in the rest of the year, but she may just complete- ly flop. ... But before this whole thing shakes out, she's going to be a very good player. "Sooner or later, you are going to throw everything at this kid including the kitchen sink, and she is going to know where it's coming from, wihen it's coming, and how to deal with it when it gets there." The Wolverines have lost eight of their last 10 games, but the two freshmen have been one of Mich- igan's most refreshing surprises. The team hasn't been consistent all year, but Borseth knows he can rely on his duo of super-subs to make something happen when they get on the court. Reynolds's ability to go inside and out and Boylan's scoring swagger would make any coach happy. "You really need to have kids coming back every year that can refuel the system," Borseth said. "The more experience they have, the better it's going to be." Even though the sun seems to be setting on the Wolverines' season and their tournament chances, their future is undoubt- edly bright. Wolverines shot just 4-of-24 from 3-point range against MSU By RUTH LINCOLN Daily SportsEditor During warmups before Tues- day's home loss to Michigan State, junior forward DeShawn Sims took a short break from layups. He walked over to the Spartans' bench and embraced Michigan State coach Tom Izzo. The two smiled and high-fived like old friends, and they had every reason to be amicable. While at Detroit Pershing High School, Sims was one of the nation's top players and heavily recruited - especially by Izzo and then-Michi- gan coach Tommy Amaker. Izzo saw Sims's agiliiy in the post, an attribute that would have fit well in the Spartans' post-ori- ented system. Sims decided to head to Ann Arbor, and Izzo signed for- ward Raymar Morgan. "I see it as, if I get one guard, (Amaker) is getting the other,"Izzo told the Lansing State Journal in February 2005, when Sims was an uncommitted high school junior. "That's just the way it kind of works nowadays. ... They're gonna always recruit well, and we're gonna recruit well. I do think this (rival- ry) is still growing and is gonna get better and better and better." In Tuesday's 54-42 loss, the Spartans earned their eighth vic- tory in the last 10 meetings in the rivalry. But if anyone was going to put a stop to Michigan State's domina- tion, it was Sims. The Spartans' defense suffocated Michigan's 3-point opportunities. Five times in the first half, the Wol- verines forced desperation shots as the shot clock neared zero. After the break, Michigan took a different approach. The Wolverines had just three assists in the entire first half. Freshman guard Zack Novak picked up three in 82 seconds, all of which went inside to Sims on con- secutive possessions and brought Michigan within eight points. "It was trust in the offense," Novak said of the second half. "I think in the first half, we got away from things too much and botched some of plays up, and we can't do that. We have to have more poise and I think that we had that in the second half." Sims finished with a game- high 18 points. Against 6-foot-10 Spartan center Goran Suton, Sims showcased the agility that's always gotten him attention. "Find somebody," Michigan coach John Beilein said of the absence of scoring options besides Sims. "It's tough right now. (Fresh- man) Stu (Douglass) got in foul trouble, our other guys are in a shootingslump. We went to (sopho- more) Manny (Harris) alot, and we went to DeShawn, and DeShawn played well." Izzo said he wanted to hold the Wolverines, who average more than 26 3-point attempts per game, to eight or nine made shots. Izzo's technique worked and the Wolverines tied a season-low per- centage from behind the arc, con- necting on just 4-of-24. Even with the extra defensive pressure, Novak said Michigan could have gotten more shots by having a quick release and using ball fakes. But the Wolverines never a 4 SA D ALSALAH/Daily Junior DeShawn Sims scored a game-high 18 points against the Spartans on Tuesday. found that rhythm from the outside shot an impressive combined 19-of- and instead relied heavily on Sims. 38 from behind the are. When the Spartans lost at home "When you don't get a lot of shots to Penn State and Northwestern - and you're a 3-point shooter, then their only conference losses of the you can never get in the groove," season - 3-pointers were the cul- Izzo said after his team's win. "I prit. thought that was the biggest differ- The Nittany Lions and Wildcats ence in the game." Pateryn adjusts to speed, agility of college game Defenseman nmay have to fight to keep ice time once Mitera returns By GJON JUNCAJ Daily Sports Writer ' When injuries to senior cap- tain Mark Mitera and junior Steve Kampfer decimated the No. 4 Michigan hockey team's defense during the season's opening week- end, the squad's deepest unit quickly became its weakest link. With the Wolverines already miss- ing freshman defenseman Brandon Burlon because of an ankle sprain, it seemed like an appropriate time for the time to panic. Fourmonths latertherehasbeen one silver lining to those nightmar- ish two nights: the development of Greg Pateryn. The freshman blueliner was forced early into a lineup that was suddenly without two of its best defensemen and has played in 26 of Michigan's past 28 games. The Sterling Heights native acknowledged having trouble adjusting to the speed of the col- legiate game, and during the first semester, Pateryn rarely exploit- ed his greatest advantage over fleet-footed opposing forwards - his size. Even at 6-foot-2 and 220 pounds, Pateryn didn't check as hard or as often as can normally be expected with such an impos- - UART AN INTERDISCIPLINARY S residency at thei FRAI May 18 - Jur Four Weeks/I Sat es the LSA Creative INFORMATIO Tuesday, Febr ry 17, 5:00pm,Art Wednesy, Feb 18, 7:00pm,I Making crew ivity an integral pa Learn more now: www.a This course is supported by the University of Michigan' r, , ,! . ' , :, - ,. ,r uo 6 6 6 CHRIS DZOMBAK/Daily Freshman Greg Pateryn logged more ice time than initially expected after injuries to defensernen Mark Mitera and Steve Kampfer. ing frame. adjustment period seems long since was only slappers. "I think it can happen with a past. As he acclimated himself to "Now, he's looking at situations lot of freshmen, (with) really a lot the speed, his mistakes became and even down in Joe Louis Arena of information being thrown at fewer. And as his confidence rose, (against Michigan State), you can them," assistant coach Billy Pow- so did the number of hits. see he was making passes, and he's ers said. "A little bit of a change "You could put him on the ice for not just burying his head and tak- in speed, (and) all of a sudden, the 14 minutes and he could be a plus ing slapshots." rushes are coming at you quicker. player," Powers said of Pateryn, Though Paterynwon't win many The counters are coming at you. who has a plus-4 plus-minus rat- sprints in practice, his instincts quicker, so you end up getting into ing. "It just lessened the load of not and anticipation have masked his more of containing and thinking having Mark (Mitera). He couldn't relative lack of agility. the game a little bit more. play Mark's minutes or Mark's role. "I think it's a little bit of hav- "I think that's what you saw Nobody could've. But it was good ing hockey sense, but also putting with Greg." that Greg was a little bit over-ready your priorities first," Pateryn said. Now, with six games left in the for this." "Make sure no one gets behind you regular season, Pateryn's extended Powers noted Pateryn's offsea- or beats you wide. That's all posi- son training last summer as a tioning, just kind of where to be at major contributor to his devel- the right time and not get yourself CJ 250 -opment. A Montreal Canadiens in situations where you need to draft pick, Pateryn attended Mon- really bury yourself ina hole just to treal's rookie camp to improve his stay on the ice." agility, his most glaring weakness For all the strides he has made TUDIO-LECTURE COURSE coming out of the United States this season, Pateryn's hold on the Hockey League. sixth defenseman spot is still tenu- Abbey of Pontlevoy, "I had a personal trainer over ous. Since Kampfer returned at the summer," Pateryn said. "We the Great Lakes Invitational Dec. C E worked on lateral quickness and 27, Pateryn has played in favor of just quick sprints, skating on the sophomore Scooter Vaughan in 10 ne 12, 2009 ice with power skaters. When I of Michigan's past 12 games. But Four Credits was in Montreal, they actually Powers said the coaching staff videotaped my skating and cri- wants Vaughan to play before the Expression Requirement tiques what I needed to work on." end of the regular season - possibly N SESSIONS: Powers said Pateryn's heavy- this weekend. footed skating was the coaching Additionally, Mitera .hopes to & Architecture Bldg. Room staff's chief concern during his return from a torn anterior cruci- Michigan Union Pond Room recruitment. The two spoke last ate ligament within the next three year about how critical the offsea- weeks, meaning there's a chance rt of students' lives and work. son would be for his development Pateryn's season will end with him trtsonearth.org/studentu on both ends of the ice. on the bench. "I see a lot of myself in him last "ThereasonIsaywehaven'treal- year, struggling with the speed," ly spoken about (who Mitera would sophomore defenseman Tristin replace) is because it should make ON EARTq Llewellyn said. "When we first got our whole defense better," Powers him, I don't think he knew how to said. "Because they all know once sMultidismipioary Learning and TemTeahing snitiative take a wrist shot or a backhand, it he gets back, no one's safe."- 0I