0 4B - January 25, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom rady likely to rejoin basketball team- Beilein says Grady will remain on foot- ball team, practice with basketball By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - Current Michigan football player and for- mer Michigan basketball player Kelvin Grady has met with coach John Beilein about the possi- NOTEBOOK bility of return- ing to basketball, Beilein said in a press conference after the team's 69-59 loss to Purdue on Saturday. "Kelvin contacted us, asked if he could help us out," Beilein said. "We're having trouble on scout teams, guarding quickness. Kel- vin's volunteered to help us as a scout team guy. That's probably all it will be." Beileinsaid Grady would remain on the football team, and that they would have to work around sched- uling conflicts with spring football practicen. "He'n not giving up football," Beilein naid. "He known our nys- tem. He's asked us to do it. We talked with him. We love Kelvin, and we said, 'You know what, we can use that.'" A short bench and inexperience at point guard mean Grady's see- ing playing time this season isn't entirely out of the question, espe- cially considering the Wolverines have had three recent departures. Walk-on Eric Puls left the team in December to focus on his engi- neering degree while redshirt sophomore Ben Cronin's playing career is likely over - the 7-footer left the team due to complications from a surgery he had on his hip last season. And most recently, freshman the reserves took plenty of shots, especially with junior guard Manny Harris suspended. But they had essentially the same effect, going a combined 5-for-13 for the game, with most of those made shots coming when the game's outcome was all but decided. They also went 0-for-4 from beyond the arc. Senior forward DeShawn Sims took all of Michigan's shots for the first seven minutes of the game. He made most of them, but it meant a lot of standing around for the rest of the Wolverine offense, which struggled once called upon to shoot. "I think that pressure that they put on us in the first half, we weren't used to it and that's hard to substitute in practice for the new guys like me and Matt," Mor- ris said. "But at halftime, we made adjustments. ... I think we just learned a little too late." EARLY GLASS TROUBLES: It's no secret that the Wolverines have struggled to grab rebounds all sea- son. They've been outrebounded in nearly every game. But during Saturday's game against Purdue, it became painful- ly obvious how offennive rebounds can be game-changern. In the first half, Michigan shot 55 percent from the field, compa- rable to Purdue's 58 percent. But the Boilermakers' seven offensive rebounds gave Purdue a multitude of chances to build a 16-point lead by the half. In fact, in the first half, the Boilermakers had more offensive rebounds than the Wolverines had total rebounds with six, all defensive. Even though the second half brought better results on the boards, Michigan's first-half struggles had already given Pur- due complete control of the game. The stat sheet might have looked better by game's end, but the dam- age had been done early. 0 (LEFT) CLIF RttDE/Da y (RIGHT) SAM WOLSON/Daily Redshirt Junior Kelvin Grady started 33 of 64 games in his career on the basketball team. This year for the football team, Grady contributed as a slot receiver. guard Eso Akunne was ruled aca- demically ineligible to play this semester. Sure, those three players weren't exactly seeing the major- ity of the team's minutes, but their absence leaves the Michigan bench thin. In a handful of games this sea- son, the five Wolverine starters logged over 35 minutes of play. Beilein has said he wants to go to his bench more, but he wants more production from his bench players if they're on the court. Grady, who started 33 of 64 career games and averaged 4.9 the role of Michigan's point guard. points per game, could fit right in. That's another area where Grady can help. His knowledge of the position, Beilein's offense and gg other Big Ten teams could be valu- "We love Kelvin, al. and When Grady played the posi- vvWe can tion for the Wolverines last year, use that." he distributed the ball well and controlled the offense, but last year's seniors at the position, C.J. Lee and David Merritt took away a Two young and inexperienced great deal of his playing time. guards, freshman Darius Morris Grady would be quicker and and sophomore sharpshooter Stu tougher to guard than the current Douglass, have been struggling in scout team guards, Beilein said, and more likely to prepare the Wolverines for the talented Big Ten point guards they will face. If Grady does end up playing in games, he would have one year left of basketball eligibility. His two years of eligibility left for football would remain. BENCH IMPACT: In last Wednesday's loss to Wisconsin, Michigan's bench didn't attempt a single field goal. Morris made a free throw, and that was the only point the bench accounted for in the entire game. On Saturday against Purdue, With Harris out, Blue struggles to find scorers By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - It's never good to go into a key matchup on the road missing any players. But without the Big Ten's leading scor- er - junior forward Manny Harris - Michigan's chances to upset No. 15 Purdue seemed handcuffed from the get-go. Citing "an act of unsportsman- like conduct," Michigan coach John Beilein announced that he had sus- pended Harris before Saturday's game at Purdue. Harris had started in 85 straight contests. "Manny has made great strides both on and off the court over the last three years," Beilein said in a statement through the athletic department. "Unfortunately he used poor judgment on Friday. We will meet with Manny and the team again when we return to determine if he has learned enough from this suspension to rejoin the team for Tuesday's game. I am confident that this learning experience will be valuable in the future to both Manny and our basketball pro- gram." But it was clear that without their .star in action, it would be a long day for the Wolverines. Michigan struggled without Harris, particularly in the first half. With redshirt junior Anthony Wright starting, the Wolverines couldn't find a scorer to comple- ment senior forward DeShawn Sims. In fact, Sims scored the team's first 13 points. And it wasn't until sophomore Zack Novak hit a 3-pointer with 7:28 to play in the first half that someone other than Sims had even registered a point. "I think early on we were pret- ty darn good getting the ball to DeShawn Sims," Beilein said. "I mean really good getting the ball to DeShawn, then they shut some- thing down that we were doing and for usnto adapt, it was difficult." Perhaps the biggest challenge for Michigan was being forced to adapt to Harris's absence just one STAPLETON From page 1B to at least get a good shot. With- out his security blanket-like pres- ence, the Wolverines looked lost at times near the end of the shot clock. Harris is the only player on the team (I'm excluding fresh- man Darius Morris, who certainly seems to have the skills to be a playmaker, because he still seems about a year away) who can consis- tently take his man off the dribble and create open shots with the ball in his hands. He is an invaluable asset - a player who can create his own shot - particularly so for Michi- gan, which doesn't have a wealth of those kinds of players. So does this mean Michigan, which will in all likelihood lose Harris to the NBA in the summer, is doomed next season? No, no, no. It means Michigan, as it should, struggled without one of its stars. Does it mean Michigan relies on Manny a little too much? Probably, but that's normal for a team with a player of Manny's caliber. Son as a g future Her smart when would couldr and w its las little t M sho V game. best player Nex had an his te ne may look at this game without its two superstars from limpse into a Manny-less the year before. . ,The players, too, will have had e's why that's not very an entire offseason to prepare not we're not entirely sure only physically but mentally for a the team knew Manny season in which their roles will be not be playing, but it larger. n't have been for very long I'm not a coach, so I don't know as probably near the end of exactly what the changes in the t practice.That's woefully offense will entail, but my best ime to prepare for an away guess is that Darius Morris will start, the scoring will be more evenly distributed, and the offense will move in an even more guard- ichigan, as it oriented direction. Clearly, the Wolverines are uld, struggled unlikely to find a hugely effective post player in the offseason to fill Without one Sims' void. The rest will depend on the S S recruits Beilein brings in and what he sees when school starts. Predictions for next year are for another day. against one of the Big Ten's But I can tell you this much teams without your star for certain: While the Wolver- r. ines struggled in a big way with- :t year, Beilein will have out Manny against Purdue, next entire offseason to prepare year's team will look nothing like am for life without Manny the one fans saw on Saturday. 0 or DeShawn. Yes, this is a bad year so far, but John Beilein is still one of the best coaches around and he will have next year's team prepared to play Stapleton hopes Manny is back for Michigan vs. Michigan State on Tuesday. Email him your thoughts at istaple@umich.edu Junior Manny Harris was suspended from Saturday's game against Purdue. day after the incident at practice took place. As the Big Ten's lead- ing scorer, any gameplan is going to involve Harris, but with little time to adjust their strategy, Michigan really struggled keeping pace. "Outside of guarding DeShawn Sims for the first 20 minutes, we did a really good job guarding everyone else," Purdue coach Matt Painter said. "They obviously took a huge blow with Manny not playing this game, and that's 20 points just ripped off your lines. It's a difficult thing to count on somebody and they're not there." And in many cases it seemed that Michigan's only option was to force it to Sims, even when he wasn't there. "I think I was really looking to get the ball to DeShawn," Wright said. "That was pretty much my first option." It wasn't until the second half that Michigan finally found that alternate scorer, but by then Purdue was firmly in control of the game, stretching their lead to as many as 27 points. Novak contributed 16 points for the Wolverines on 6-for-11 shoot- ing, but scored 13 of those in the second half when Michigan was already out of the game. Perhaps more important, without Harris in the lineup, the Wolverines forced their offense, committing 15 turn- overs, and losing the rebound battle to Purdue 16-6 in the first half. It wasn't the first time Harris has created mid-season contro- versy. Last year, Beilein benched his star in a key overtime game against Iowa - which Michigan lost - down the stretch when the Wolverines were chasing an NCAA Tournament berth. Beilein has not announced whether Harris will play against the Spartans. He said it would be a team decision. PURDUE From page 1B juniors Robbie Hummel, E'Twuan Moore and Johnson combined for 37 points on 16-of- 25 shooting in the first frame. The Boilermakers tallied 13 assists in that span, easily working around the Wolverines' defensive pack- ages and cutting to the rim for layups. "We just had trouble with how efficient they are on offense," Beilein said of Purdue's 22-5 run in the first half that blew the game open. "There's not a whole lot of people that can even come here and get 60 points (to keep up)." And with Purdue throwing extra defenders at Sims to disrupt him in the post, Michigan's four- guard lineup - without Harris - looked helpless. The Wolverines turned the ball over nine times in the first half, which helped Purdue generate 10 more shot attempts. "They're so stingy," Beilein said. "You can call whatever you want in the huddle, and they're going to make you run something else. So countering and reading it and doing things like that very quickly. Very experienced play- ers can do it, and we had trouble with it. "You really have to have great experience to be able to handle that." Novak said the Wolverines' TOREHAN SHARMAN/Daily Senior DeShawn Sims goes up for a shot against No. 15 Purdue in West Lafayette on Saturday. Sims scored the Wolverines' first 13 points in the loss. 0 0 6 6 first-half turnovers were the dif- ference in the game, and that the team had a lot of problems against a defense so fiercely dedicated to "pass denial." Even simple fun- damentals like reversing the ball around the perimeter looked at times like a chore. Purdue's lead swelled to as many as 27 points in the second half before Michigan took advan- tage of the Boilermakers' reserves and closed the gap to 10 in the final score. The team saw some silver lin- ing in the fact that role players like redshirt-junior Anthony Wright and freshman Matt Vogrich saw extended time. In the context of a puzzling season growing dimmer for the Wolverines with each loss, the team tried to muster up some shreds of optimism after its latest setback. "This is definitely a game we can grow from, because it gives people a lot of valuable time," Novak said. "Give them credit. Guys from the bench fought back, and we didn't just roll over and die." But in the end, the post-game focus was on Harris, who had played in all 85 career games before staying behind when the team traveled to Purdue. With no one to slash to the basket or snag an offensive rebound, the Wolver- ines were overmatched. Asked about the incident that led to Harris's suspension, Beilein told reporters to refer to his Ath- letic Depertment statement. i Daily sports? rkartje@umich.edu