0 8A - Wednesday, February 3, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 Second-half meltdown dooms 'M' in Evanston ARIEL BOND/Daily Junior Manny Harris said in a Facebook status he was "forced" to talk about his plans. Harris says he wi1l return for senior season By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily SportsEditor EVANSTON - After Michigan's decisive 67-52 loss to Northwest- ern last night, a bit of positive news came out of the locker room for the Wolverines. Pressed by reporters about his intentions, junior guard Manny Harris said after the game that he would return to the team for his senior season. But a post on Harris's Facebook profile from later in the night casts doubt on the legitimacy of that statement. "The media is crazy," Harris wrote in his status. "They force me to talk about stuff then take what they want out of it!!!!" Harris had been widely expect- ed to declare for the NBA Draft at the end of the season, forgoing his last year of eligibility. "A lot of these guys gotta come back, you know what I'm saying, like myself, gotta come back and play next year," Harris said. He, said it was important to contribute as a leader on a team that is losing one of its best play- ers in senior DeShawn Sims after this year. When pressed for more details, Harris declined to com- ment, saying only that he was confi- dent that he would come back next season. Harris leads the Big Ten in over- all scoring, averaging 18.7 points through Michigan's 22 games. But due to the team's overall troubles, Harris compared this year to his freshman campaign, in which the Wolverines won just10 games. "It was definitely disappoint- ing to go through a year like that," Harris said. "We've won one more game right now than we did back then, but it's still the same feeling right now. I've just got to try my best to shake off that feeling by coming in and working hard and making sure the team's working hard to still get more wins." Many experts believe that with the Wolverines' drop-off after their surprising NCAA Tournament run last season, Harris' draft stock has plummeted as well. Some mock drafts have lowered his projections from a potential first-round pick to a second-round selection, while others project him out of the draft altogether. One of the reasons for this drop has been his inconsistent play. Last night, Harris scored just 11 points against the Wildcats, well off his average. His poor shooting percentage, particularly for his jump shots and 3-point attempts, has been a concern for NBA scouts. Yesterday, Harris finished the game just 4-for-14 from the court and 2-for-7 from behind the are. While his skills as a slasher are unquestioned, the NBA requires a more refined jump shot since defenses are much quicker and the players are more athletic. While one of the reasons for this season's disappointing record is a lack of leadership after the loss of C.J. Lee and David Merritt, Harris said that by returning next year he can provide that senior leadership that would be expected of him. "We've only got two real seniors so everybody else on the team has got to come back and keep working hard," Harris said. By GJON JUNCAJ Daily Sports Editor EVANSTON - Entering the second contest of what players have called a "10-game season," the Michigan men's basketball team brought with it renewed hope - thanks in large part to its improved defense NORTHWESTERN 67 and reli- MICHIGAN 52 ance on senior forward DeShawn Sims. And in a stretch of just nine minutes, Michigan's "second sea- son" was thrown into a tailspin. The Wolverines were outscored 17-4 in the first 10 minutes of the second half at Northwestern last night, letting a four-point deficit swell to 17 as the Wildcats ran away toward a 67-52 victory. The defeat gave Northwestern a sea- son sweep - its first against the Wolverines since the 1966-67 sea- son - erased whatever momen- tum Michigan hoped to sustain heading into the final stretch of the regular season. "We didn't have any jump," junior forward Manny Harris said. "We weren't making shots. We lost focus on defense and they made shots. That's basically all." Northwestern forward John Shurna helped Northwestern grab firm control of the contest five minutes into the seond half, knocking down a pretty turn- around jumper over Michigan (4-6 Big Ten, 11-11 overall) for- ward Zack Novak, then slapping a missed shot off the glass and through the net two possessions' later. With the Wildcats (4-6, 15-7) up 11 and the crowd at Welsh- Ryan Arena ready for the kill- shot, freshman Drew Crawford once again became a one-man highlight reel. Crawford knocked down two triples and a short jumper on three straight possessions, effec- tively putting the game out of reach and closing the door on Michigan's third consecutive road loss. "Crawford continues to just amaze me," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "Just absolutely amaze me. For a freshman to play with the skill and the strength, at the level that he's playing at, he's a great player." It wasn't the first time Craw- ford's sharpshooting hurt the Wolverines. The Wildcats' swing- man tallied 25 points against the Wolverines in Ann Arbor on Jan. 0 0 Senior DeShawn Sims struggled against the Wildcats, missing seven of his nine shots and finishing with four points. 10 in a game in which North- western pulled the rug out from underneath Michigan. But the Wildcats took all the drama out of the rematch, shoot- ing 54 percent while nailing 10 3-pointers, including five triples on five consecutive possessions in the first half. Hot perimeter shooting, crisp ball movement and effective drib- ble penetration from the likes of Crawford and pointguard Michael Thompson created a nightmare for the Wolverines, both when they stuck with man-to-man and when they went to their 1-3-1 zone defense. "They just run everything hard," Harris said. "They run everything to perfection. They don't seem like they have any breakdowns in their offense. You just have to be prepared to guard them for 35 seconds. "You just have to be mentally tough with them." Harris struggled mightily throughout the night, hitting just 4-of-14 from the field while being swallowed up by the Wildcats' second and third defenders when- ever he drove through the lane. Though the Wolverines held onto the ball fairly well and creat- ed a lot of open 3-pointers against the Wildcats' zone defense, the bricks piled up before the game finally slipped away in the final 15 minutes. Michigan took more than half of its shots from behind the arc Tuesday, making just 8-of-28 attempts. With the shooters once again ice cold - the Wolverines made just six field goals after halftime - Michigan couldn't find any- thing in the paint to keep within striking distance. Sims was harassed in the post all night, missing 7-of-9 shots as the long arms of 6-foot-11 Luka Mirkovic (along with the Wild- cats' help defenders) disrupted his timing and his touch. "(Sims) had a rough night," Beilein said. "Mirkovic is really improved, and he really plays great post defense. ... He's not a great shot-blocker, but he plays great position defense in the post, and (Northwestern) always had another helper in there." Though the players were clear- ly deflated after letting the sec- ond half spiral completely out of control, some were still thinking in terms of the team's second sea- son. "You still got eight games left," freshman point guard Darius Morris said. "There's no time to mope around. You just try to get better every day. I know it sounds a little repetitive, but that's just what we've got to do - keep our heads up." Tough 10-day stretch will show Blue's worth Pruitt proves his strength in Michigan's field events By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Writer The Michigan hockey team has already played Boston University, Lake Superior State, Miami (Ohio) and Michigan State, all teams in NOTEBOOK consideration for the NCAA Tournament, on succes- sive weekends. But their toughest stretch is still to come. Oddly enough, it features just one ranked team as well as the eighth and 11th placed teams in the CCHA. In a stretch of 10 days, the Wol- verines will play five games. This includes a pair of weekday games against Bowling Green sandwich- ing their outdoor game against Wisconsin at the Camp Randall Classic on Saturday. "The game is just as mentally draining as it is physically," junior forward Matt Rust said. "Playing five games in 10 days is tough on the body, but it's going to drain you mentally and with school as well. We're going to have to be focused to be ready for it." After playing in two World Junior Championships, in which seven games are routinely played in eleven days, Rust is a veteran at playing successive games. But it has been a year since his last World Junior appearance. "It's been a while since I've played a schedule like that," Rust said. "I'm familiar with it, person- ally I knowhow to get ready myself. I know a bunch of guys on the team have played in similar tournaments and similar atmospheres. I think it all comes down to the individual player and him knowing what he needs to do." Senior captain Chris Sum- Desp in h thr ite no experience bested by Ohio State's Max May's in the weight toss by a tenth of a ammer or weight meter in part one of this season's - ri excels "The Dual." But most fans were OW, Prui ex unaware that Pruitt threw just a with training couple meters short of his person- al best with a partially torn liga- ment in his shoulder. And Mays By LUKE PASCH needed to beat his previous best Daily Sports Writer by a meter and a half just to com- pete. JAKE FROMM/Daily Junior Matt Rust has experience with playing multiple games in a short time span. mers has also played in the World Junior Championships, and nearly everyone else on the team played in junior leagues before coming to Ann Arbor that demanded multiple games in a short amount of time. Because many of the Wolverines are far removed from their junior days, Michigan coach Red Berenson does plan to make some changes. "I don't think fatigue will be an issue because we'll shorten up practices," Berenson said. "We may even have a day off where normally we wouldn't. I think this will bring the best out in our team rather than a big change. I think the change is good." The change, and the competition may be coming at the right time for Michigan, as it sits currently sits on the outside of the NCAA tourna- ment picture. COACHING AGAINST THE ELE- MENTS: When Michigan takes the ice in the Camp Randall Classic Sat- urday to take on No. 3 Wisconsin, it will still be hockey, but there will be a lot more unknowns heading into the game. It's the unknowns that Berenson may have to account for, more so than anybody who steps on the ice. The coaching staff will be the only carryovers from the "Cold War," Michigan's first outdoor game in 2001. These coaches will have to make the adjustments necessary for the outdoors. "We might have to make some adjustments, like don't stickhandle the puck, for example," Berenson said. "If you can't see it, just get it at the net, or whatever. Who knows what the lighting will be like. We'll just have to take everything and see what strategy, if any, we'll have to change, but I'm not overly con- cerned about that." Goaltending coach Josh Black- burn, who played in the "Cold War," said the puck moved a lot faster in his outdoor game. Berenson expects that to be the case again. "The ice is going to be a lot bet- ter than all the ice I played on out- side," Berenson said. "It's not like it's hosed down over a bunch of bumps with snow out there. But it will be different. It might be windy, it might be snowing out, it will be different." Anyone who's ever been to a track and field event knows where to find the guys with big guns. They're not the pole vaulters, who exhibit tremendous upper body strength, or the sprinters with generally perfect all-around musculature. They're the guys that are built like the Incred- ible Hulk (but with a more stable psyche)-the throwers. Picture a 6-foot-4 inch, 300- pound athlete, slap a mohawk on his head and a sizeable beard on his face, and you get the most intimidating human specimen of Big Ten track and field. His name is Sean Pruitt, a redshirt senior for the Wolverines. More intimidating than his appearance is his performance inside the oval. As the only big name in Michi- gan's throwing events, Pruitt was forced to become a jack-of-all- trades. He's had no difficulty doing so, as he's excelled in the shot put, the 35-lb. weight throw, the ham- mer throw and the discus throw. In fact, he was a Big Ten Cham- pion in the weight throw last sea- son, and he has become a national force in each of the events. And don't get any false notions from his slightly sub-par perfor- mance early this season. He was "I'm just trying to aggravate my shoulder as little as possible, and I have no worries right now." Pruitt said. Apparently, sending a 35-pound ball soaring through the air for over 60 feet is what Pruitt does when he's not trying to aggravate a nagging shoulder injury. 'We knew we could teach him those (events) from scratch' Throwing coach David Kaiser prescribes this treatment - the same coach that was enamored with Pruitt when he was. a senior in high school. Almost imme- diately, Kaiser knew that Pruitt had not only the size, but also the technique to be a star at the col- legiate level. "Sean was pretty much a self- taught rotational thrower," Kai- ser said. "In high school Sean had never thrown the hammer or the weight, but we knew we could teach him those from scratch." And Kaiser's coaching has paid off - Pruitt posted school records in both the hammer and weight throw last season for a storied Michigan track and field program that dates back to the turn of the 20th century. Yet possibly the most intrigu- ing aspect of Pruitt's game is his potential. According to both him and Kaiser, his ceiling is far beyond his personal records. They say the only feasible impediment between Pruitt and his Olympic aspirations in the future is his versatility. That's right, Pruitt may be too talented for his own good. The team knows him as "the kid" who drives himself to work harder and achieve more in every event he competes in. The prob- lem is that Olympian track and field athletes are specialists that tend to only thrive at one event. And Pruitt knows he will even- tually have to choose among the four he's grown to love. "You can ask anyone in the Ath- letic Department - they've prob- ably seen him out throwing in the snow and the ice," Kaiser said. "But it'll help Sean when he can get to a point where he can focus on one event." As of now, it's too early to tell which event Pruitt will choose. In high school, he was the top discus thrower in the nation. Last sea- son, he proved he could beat some of the best weight-throwers in the NCAA. And Kaiser thinks he couldbecome a tremendously suc- cessful shot putter. Whatever path he chooses, keep an eye out for him when he departs from Ann Arbor. And with his size, one shouldn't have to look too hard. 0