The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com December 7,2009 SAM WOLON/Daily Senior DeShawn Sims tallied 19 points and 10 rebounds to lead Michigan past Arkansas- Pine Bluff. The Detroit native led the charge for the struggling Wolverines after the team only managed to tie the Golden Lions through the first half of Saturday's gamn. Sims not Harris, is the Michigan pulls past most valuable Wolverine upset-minded Lions _ n the Michigan baspetball, ing like the dominant player he cess this season. team's loss to Boston Col- lege last week, senior and second-leading scorer DeShawn Sims notched four points and . four rebounds in just 23 minutes. Part of the issue was foul trou- ble. But the bigger issue was that Sims just didn't show up. JOE Saturday STAPLETON was a differ- ent story. At On Men's halftime of the Basketball Wolverines' 67-53 win against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Michigan was tied at 32 with an 0-5 team relatively new to Division I. And this time, Sims was the only one who played well - he had 15 points at the break. While it was great for fans to see Sims coming back and look- can be, his performance pointed to one of his greatest flaws: inconsistency. This has been a knock on Sims ever since he first donned the maize and blue - it's old news. The not-so-old news: Michigan needs him to start finding some consistency fast, because he is the single most important player on the team. The question is how can Sims, a player with talent through the roof who at times disappears in stretches during games, find a way to perform at a high level, game after game? While Saturday's game against the Golden Lions may have seemed like a ho-hum, somewhat disappointing game, it holds the answer to that question and the key to Michigan's suc- In fact, Sims himself touched on it in the locker room after the game. "They just went to me," Sims said. "Coach stressed that we play from the inside out today and we executed the game plan." There it is - inside out. A phrase Michigan fans have been dying to hear all season after watching an offense that seems to always be going outside in. Throughout the early season, Michigan coach John Beilein has said Sims is working on beinga more complete player - refining his outside shot and his ability to score from the wing-- even though he has traditionally found success down low. "We're trying to win games, but we're also, in practice, trying See SIMS, Page 4B By GJON JUNCAJ Daily Sports Writer There are still problems, and the Wolverines know that. One torrid second-half run doesn't change much. But with the Michigan men's basketball team's 67-53 win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the Wol- verines showed they can still grab momentum at any given moment. After taking just two shots in the first half and playing uncharacteristically passively on offens'e, junior forward Manny Harris tallied 14 points in the opening eight minutes of the sec- ond half to lead a 17-5 Michigan run.l A halftime tie turned into a comfortable lead and the Wolver- ines (4-3) cruised from there, but it took much longer than anyone on the team would have liked. Michigan shot just 4-of-21 from the outside in the first frame, including 3-of-15 from behind the arc. Each miss magnified the defensive lapses that allowed Arkansas-Pine Bluff (0-6) to stay within striking distance. And Michigan coach John Bei- lein seemed very concerned that several of the team's sharpshoot- ers couldn't break out of their ear- ly-season slump. "The best players that were out there were getting good shots," Beilein said. "And other guys who were out there wide open didn't make them. You tell me another day when you're going to see Zack (Novak) and Stu (Douglass) go 1-of-11 (on 3-pointers). ... People are going to keep packing it in until we get it going (from the perimeter)." Harris, Novak and Douglass - last season's primary three-point shooters - have combined to hit 23 of 93 shots from behind the arc in the team's first six games. Redshirt sophomore guard Laval Lucas-Perry, who opened Satur- day with two quick triples, has been the lone offensive bright spot from the perimeter. He has made 40 percent of his 3-point attempts this season. Beilein compared the individu- al cold streaks to a hitting slump in baseball, and admitted there's not much a coach can do other See GOLDEN LIONS, Page 3B Blue bound for NCAA Sweet 16 ICE HOCKEY After hitting new low, 'earns series split By MARK BURNS Daily Sports Writer On Saturday, the ingredients for the Michigan volleyball team to advance to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament were there: experience, senior leadership and a refuse-to-give-up mentality. But it took a 2-0 match deficit for those ingredients to start boil- ing. The 16th-ranked Wolverines squared off against Ohio Univer- sity in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday after advancing past Niagara the night before. And after two sets, the Bob- cats looked like they would easily advance to the third round. "We looked at each other (after the second set) and refused to lose," senior captain Megan Bower said. That's when Michigan's strengths began to surface. Experience. In last year's NCAA Tourna- ment, the Wolverines were down 2-1 in the first and second round and rallied to win in five sets on both occasions. Michigan (26-9) had been in a come-from-behind situation before, and this predicament was nothing new for the veteran team. All of the Wolverines' current starters played in last year's tour- nament, so everyone had the con- fidence and trust in each other to rebound from the 2-0 hole. But against Ohio, the Wolver- ines would have to win three sets in a row after losing the first two, a feat the team hadn't accom- plished all season. "This team has been playing together for two years, and we just looked into each other's eyes, and we knew we were going to win," outside hitter Juliana Paz said. The Wolverines were facing an Ohio team that upended Notre bame - the Big East undefeated regular season champion - the previous night in five sets. Michigan's offensive average was an abysmal .172 in the first two frames. Michigan coach Mark Rosen said the team wasn't running its offense at the right tempo, and SAID ALSALAH, See VOLLEYBALL, Page 3B Senior Lexi Zimmerman will play in her third straight Sweet 16 this weekend. By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - This weekend, the Michigan hockeyteamreached a low it has visited just four other times in program history.. After a 5-3 loss to Ohio State on Friday, the Wol- MICHIGAN 3 verines OHIO STATE 5 sat in last MICHIGAN 2 place in OHIO STATE 1 the con- ference, a position it hasn't finished in since the 1978 season - three years before the Wolverines joined the CCHA. To come out of the cellar, Michigan was forced with to do something it has done just two times before this season - win the Saturday game after a loss in a weekend series. The Wolverines managed to win 2-1. The weekend started out like many others this season, with Michigan falling behind early. But unlike games earlier in the season against Miami (Ohio) and Michi- gan State, Michigan showed signs of life instead of laying down. In Friday's second period, soph- omore Luke Glendening picked up a turnover at the Wolverine blue line and beat an Ohio State defen- semen to the outside. As Glenden- ing was about to go behind the net, his backhand beat Ohio State goaltender Cal Heeter over the left shoulder. "We stayed pretty positive on the bench," Glendening said. "We're confident. We were down 2-0, but it didn't seem to faze us much." Michigan scored again to tie the game, but two quick Buckeye goals to start the third period sealed the loss. Even though Michigan couldn't pull out the win, Glen- dening's goal jumpstarted the team's the offensive momentum for the rest of the weekend. The Wolverines launched 81 shots See BUCKEYES, Page 3B DEAR DONOVAN... ON THE ROAD AGAIN U Cornerback Donovan Warren is expected U The Wolverines are proving their grueling to enter the NFL Draft early, but he would be eight-game road trip to be a piece of cake. making the wrong decision. Page 2B. This time, it was in Big Ten country. Page 2B.