8 - Friday, December 11, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'M' has serious problems to fix Icers need a'W' By GJON.JUNCAJ Daily Sports Writer It has been easy to trace the deteri- oration in John Beilein's outlook over the past three weeks. He said the Michigan basketball team's loss to Marquette on Nov. 27 was a wakeup call. He seemed to feel the last-second defeat to Alabama as unfortunate luck. But after the Wol- verines were thrashed by Boston Col- lege's flex-motion offense last week, Beilein and histeam seemed discour- aged and confused why they had not showed signs of improvement. Now with Wednesday's 68-52 loss at Utah, the Wolverines' coaching staff has to grapple with a question that seems preposterous to ask just eight games into the season: Is this a talented (but flawed)team in a slump, or just a bad team alto- gether? The Wolverines have repeatedly said they must approach this season with the same "hunter's mentality" they adopted after upset victories against UCLA and Duke last season thrust them onto the national scene. But even with two NBA-caliber play- ers injunior Manny Harris and senior DeShawn Sims, it's become brutally obvious that Michigan still has no consistent third weapon on offense. The struggles of sophomore Stu Douglass (whose shootinghas dipped from 37 percent last year to 24 per- cent this season) is well-documented, while sophomore Zack Novak and redshirt sophomore Laval Lucas- Perry have yet to show significant improvement fromlast winter. Mean- while, freshmen guards Darius Mor- ris and Matt Vogrich have attempted just a combined seven shots per game as they gradually adjust to Division I basketball. Although the schedule has been tough - with the Old Spice Classic in Orlando on Thanksgiving and the trip to Utah this week - Michigan still shouldn't have done so poorly. None of the Wolverines' four losses have come against ranked competi- tion, and Michigan still must travel to top-ranked Kansas and face No. 14 Connecticut in the next six weeks. What's most discouraging is how handily the Wolverines seem to have been beaten this fall. Opponents are shooting a whop- ping 52.4 percent inside the arc against Michigan, thanks to con- sistent guard penetration and big- ger frontcourts that can easily grab offensive rebounds andscoregarbage buckets. The Wolverines are also dead last in the Big Ten in rebound- ing margin, at -5.1. Northwestern is next highestwith -1.7. Although Beilein will likely keep his four-guard lineup - especially after Sims and fifth-year senior cen- ter Zach Gibson combined for just 4-of-14 shooting and six rebounds Wednesday -he appears to be hoping the perimeter shooting deficiencies even out over the next month before conference play begins. "Our guards are just so young," Beilein said Wednesday. "We just got to continue to get more experience and keep teaching them. "What do you do? We just got to continue to play people and see who needs to improve the most. Right now, the guard play is not real good, and we just keep working at it. It's not the biggest evil right now. There's a lot of issues right now we need to get better at." Michigan has an elite dribble- drive slasher in Harris, one of the, more skilled post players in the con- ference in Sims, and players who all have well-earned reputations as sharpshooters. Still, that has resulted in an offense that is just eighth in the Big Ten in scoring (70.6 points per game) and last in field goal percent- age (41.3) and three-point shooting percentage (29.3). Beilein is right to encourage his perimeter shooters to fire their way out of their slump. But until that happens, defenses will have no issue clogging the paint to try to take away Sims and discourage dribble pen- etration. The Wolverines also aren't doing a very good job off the ball - either the team has no one who can set hard picks to free up the guards off curls for open looks, or the back- court players aren't moving with enough discipline. Either way, with the Wolverines cold from the perim- eter, theyare not difficult to defend. This is a group that, at its current level of play, seems destined for the National Invitational Tournament right now. Considering the team narrowly made last season's NCAA Tournament with 12 regular-season losses, four defeats before the win- ter break gives the team virtually no margin for error in a conference that features four top-20 teams. And with Sunday's game against Detroit the lone tune-up before Kan- sas, Beilein may not have to wait very long to see if this slump turns into something much more disappoint- ing. By RYAN KARTJE Daily Sports Writer A.J. Treais knows how to keep his friends close. His best friend on the U.S. National Development Program Under-18 Team, Kyle Palmieri, lived next door to him last year. The two were nearly inseparable. But with Treais, a freshman forward on the Michi- Notre Dame gan hockey team, now in at Michigan Ann Arbor, N and Palmieri Matchup: ND 7-7- playing for 4; Michigan 4-6 Notre Dame, *When: 7:30 p.m. Treais may Where: Yost just learn to Ice Arena keep his ene- mies closer Twitter: when the two @michdailysports face off for the first time this weekend. Treais said the two "chirped" at each other on the phone all week about the upcoming series. "Him playing on the other side is going to be different," Treais said. "But it's not like we're going to be friends on the ice. ... I just have to approach him like another player this week." With both the Wolverines (4-6 CCHA, 8-8 overall) and Fighting Irish (4-4-4-2, 7-7-4) limping into this weekend's series with .500 records, there's a lot to gain in this home-and-home series - the last series for both teams this semester. "It'sa big game no matter what the stakes," sophomore forward Luke Glendening said. "And right now, we're two .500 teams fighting for better position. These games are as big as any in the season." The teams' records aren't where the similarities end, either. They boast two of the best penal- ty-kill units in college hockey, with Michigan holding the top spot (91.7 percent success rate). The Fighting Irish are only one percentage point behind the Wolverines. With two teams who are domi- nant against the man advantage, Michigan coach Red Berenson knows that if Michigan doesn't capitalize on the few chances it is given, it could be another long weekend. "We know there's not going to be much opportunity for points," Berenson *said. "We have to be really sharp on the power play. If you're lucky, you score one. It's another game within a game for us." As part of the nation's top pen- alty kill, Glendening reflects the same sentiment. "If it comes down to a spe- cial teams battle, it's going to be tough," Glendening said. "Hope- fully we just play five-on-five-most of the night." Since both teams are so adept at limiting opponents' opportunities, it's a surprise to find that neither has turned that proficiency on the penalty kill into their own scoring chances. Michigan's offense has improved lately, inching up to 27th in the country in scoring after win- ning four out of its last five games and notching 18 goals in that span. But Notre Dame's offense hasn't been so lucky. Ranked seventh-worst in Divi- sion-I college hockey, the Fight- ing Irish managed just one goal against No. 1 Miami (Ohio) and were swept by the RedHawks in convincing fashion. If Michigan can capitalize on the few scoring chances it will get against Notre Dame, the Wolver- ines could head into their 16-day break with a plus-.500 record for the first time since sweeping Lake Superior State at the end of Octo- ber. A series sweep would give the Wolverines much-needed momen- tum heading into the break with the Great Lakes Invitational loom- ing atcthe end of December. Last year; that's when Michigan exploded. After last year's GLI, the Wolverines lost just three regular season games. "We have sixteen long days of break," junior defenseman Tristin Llewellyn said. "You don't want to be thinking you could have, we should have. We want to leave thinking, 'We did our job, we did everything we could, and we're setting ourselves up for the next half'" And that's exactly what Treais hopes to prove to his longtime friend when he comes to Yost Ice Arenaon Friday. "He told me to be ready. I told him to be ready," Treais said, refer- encing the friends' phone conver- sation this week. "And that's all it comes to." Blue outlasts opponent for third consecutive win on the road By ALEX HERMANN Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's basketball team continues to astonish its doubt- ers, surprise its critics and defy the odds. The Wolverines, picked last in the Big Ten preseason by both the media and the coaches, won their third consecutive road game last night, all over major-conference opponents. The statement-making, 76-70 victory at Boston College is the first time Michigan has won three straight road games in Michigan coach Kevin Borseth's three-year tenure. In fact, the Wolverines have done it just three times this decade, the last coming in 2006. In last night's win, Michigan (1-0 Big Ten, 7-2 overall) once again fea- tured a balanced scoring attack. And for the second time this season, five players scored in double-figures. Junior guard Veronica Hicks led the teamwith14 points, and although foul trouble relegated senior cen- ter Krista Phillips to the bench for much of the game, she still managed to score 11 points. While the 6-foot-6 senior was on the bench, Michigan's guard play dictated MICHIGAN 76 the tempo BOSTON COLLEGE 70 of the game, reeling in 31 fast-break points off of 21 Eagle turnovers. "They were our savior I think," Borseth said regarding the turn- overs. "Our offense didn't look very good in my opinion. I thought we were very scattered, very disorga- nized at times. I think the fact that we had turnovers and got some steals, and got some easy baskets, it really helped us. We put 76 points on the board, and I'm not really sure how we did it." Michigan's two starting freshman guards, Jenny Ryan and Dayeesha Hollins, continued their poised and assertive playin the sixth game of an eight-game road stretch. The back- court duo combined for 25 points, seven assists, eight rebounds and seven steals. Both also contributed a pair of free throws with under a minute remaining to help solidify the Michigan lead, which is an encour- aging sign of their ongoing adjust- ment to the college level. "Right after the game I commend- ed both of them on that, because those were very important plays for us." Hicks said. "The freshmen, you know, they're ripe. And they do understand that it's just basketball in. the end and it's just putting the ball in the hoop." Sophomore guard Courtney Boylan came offthe bench to score 12 points in 10 minutes on perfect 5-of- 5 shooting. Boylan's 3-pointer gave the Wolverines their first lead of the game with just over three minutes to go in the first half. From there, the Wolverines would relinquish the lead just twice before building an 11-point margin midway through the second half Michigan then withstood a late rally by Boston College (5-4) as the Eagles pulled within a basket on sev- eral occasions inside the four-minute mark. The close matchup marks the second consecutive road game the young Wolverines have won in the waningminutes. But as difficult as winning three consecutive road games was for the Wolverines, winning the fourth will be a much greater challenge. No. 8 Xavier is Michigan's next test on Monday. "They're by and far the best team we've played so far, without ques- tion," Borseth said. "We have got our hands full." IiP' GOING TO THE AIRPORT? EXPERIENCE THE CUSTOM TRANSIT DIFFERENCE " Affordable: Half the price of a taxi. " Convenient: Door-to-door service. " Fast: You're at the airport in one hour guaranteed! " Reliable: We track your return flight so we're there when you.need us. 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