The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 4, 2010 - 5A The Michigan ....Daily.- m i ha n ay o mh r d y Feury4200-A Grady gives 'M' quiet support by NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Editor He's entirely behind the scenes. Kelvin Grady, former Michi- gan point guard and current slot receiver for the football team, is impacting the Michigan men's NOTEBOOK basketball team behind closed doors in his return as a scout-team player for the Wol- verines. And after nearly two weeks of basketball practices with Grady in attendance,, those on the inside are giving Grady rave reviews. After Michigan beat Iowa last Saturday, sophomore point guard Stu Douglass, who matches up against Grady each day in practice, gave a lot of credit to the Wolver- ines' scout team for preparations during the week. He said Grady, in particular, has helped simulate the speed and talent of Big Ten point guards. "No disrespect to (freshman walk-on) Josh Bartlestein, but it's a lot different with Kelvin Grady," Douglass said after beating Iowa. "You know, I was setting up for a screen one time, and I was wait- ing for him to come off it a little methodically, and he just went right into the lane, and I was just sitting there lost. "He's helped us tremendously, especially playing (Michigan State guard) Kalin Lucas and (Iowa guard) Cully Payne here." Douglass added that he has enjoyed having Grady back off the court, too. It's likely the intangible benefits, like a positive personal- ity back in .the locker room, that made it easy for Michigan basket- ball coach John Beilein to welcome Grady back to the program. So far, the only complaints Beilein has had about the entire situation surround scheduling dif- ficulties because of Grady's partici- pation in both programs and NCAA regulations on practice hours. "We're still working that out," Beilein said last week. "It's more complicated than people would think. I'm sure back in the old days, some guy would just show up for basketball practice, a football play- er might just show up for basket- ball practice and scrimmage and nobody even knew he was on the team. It's different." If Grady sat on the bench dur- ing a game, it would count as three hours toward his weekly allowable total. On the other side of things, Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez has also taken a positive approach to Grady's multi-sport interest. "When we talked, I could tell he really wanted to, and he probably missed it," Rodriguez said during halftime of Saturday's basketball game. "As I told him, 'If you can feel you can contribute and have fun doing it, then why not?' John (Beilein) and I talked about it, and I'm all for those guys as long as they can contribute and as long as they don't affect their studies, and it doesn't seem to be affecting his studies at all." SIZE MATTERS: Basketball ana- lysts like to say that Beilein's Wol- verines "live or die" by their 3-point shooting. And since Michigan has struggled to score this season when its outside shooting has gone cold, that critique doesn't sound like such a stretch. "To score points, we don't have a lot of other options right now," Beilein said last week. "We're not the biggest team. We're not the quickest team." Speed and agility can be improved, but size is something that the Wolverines don't have. Michigan's tallest starter, senior forward DeShawn Sims, is listed at 6-foot-8. At one pointrin the not-so-distant past, it didn't look like the Wolver- ines would have a roster lacking height. Two years ago, Beilein was recruiting two guys for his sys- tem, and they were tall: Germany's 6-foot-10 Robin Benzing and 7-foot Ben Cronin. Benzing didn't qualify academi- cally for Michigan, and Cronin redshirted last year and had hip surgery, which he hasn't recovered from. Currently, Benzing is tearing up Wolverines look for fourth straight win Michigan seeks ines surged to come within three points - but it wasn't enough. revenge in Evanston That was more than a month ago, and the Michigan squad against Wildcats heading to Evanston tonight is not the same team the Wildcats by AMY SCARANO beat handily in their first meet- Daily Sports Writer ing. For one thing, history may Before beating No. 23 Penn be on Michigan's side. The last State in State College on Sunday, time the Wolverines won three it had been six years since the conference games in a row, the Michigan women's basketball streak started when the team team strung together three wins beat Northwestern at home. in conference play. The Wolverines' confidence That is, the last time the Wol- and morale may also be at an all- verines won three consecutive time high at this point in confer- conference ence play. Despite being stuck in games, senior a rut for much of January after center Krista Migan at losing six of their first seven Phillips was Northwestem conference games, they were a sopho- able to beat Indiana at home two more in high Masterno1rth- weeks ago to begin the winning school and ' streak they continue to ride after the team's Michigan 13-8 knocking off No. 23 Penn State six freshmen When: Thursday Sunday. were in sev- 7 P.M. CST "We never had any doubt that enth grade. Where: Welsh- we wouldn't be able to come Michi- Ryan Arena back," sophomore forward Car- gan heads . men Reynolds said after the vic- to Evan- Caeandailycomc tory over the Nittany Lions. "We ston tonight never give up." in hopes of The Wolverines came out extending strong after a shaky first half that winning streak to four. against Penn State in which they The three wins have pro- struggled to find a rhythm. The pelled the Wolverines out of their team tends to play one half of perennial basement position in quality basketball and sleepwalk Sthe conference standings and through the other. But as the into sixth place. Tonight, they go Wolverines get more conference up against a team bringing up the wins under their belt, they are rear in the Big Ten - Northwest- learning to find rhythm and put ern (4-7 Big Ten, 13-9 overall). together two solid halves of bas- The Wildcats gave Michigan ketball. (5-6,13-8) trouble at Crisler at the In two of Michigan's last three end of December, defeating the victories, against Penn State and Wolverines 63-59 and handing Indiana, the team picked up its them their first home loss of the play in the second half, and when season. Northwestern's defense they traveled to Champaign to made it difficult for Michigan to play Illinois, the Wolverines went find any offensive rhythm. up early and never let up. The Wolverines shot a season- As long as it can get going early low 33 percent and trailed for tonight in Evanston, Michigan most of the game. When Michi- should have no trouble beating a gan was down by twelve with team that is last in the conference two minutes left, the Wolver- standings. RedshirtJunior Kelvin Grady has already made a gdiflerence on the Michigan bas- kethall scout learn, using his quickness to simulate Big Ten yuint euards. Germany's professional basketball league with a near-12-point per game stat line, and Cronin's basket- ball career is likely over. "Those two were goingto be two very good players for us this time with size," Beilein said. "Probably one SAT question away or a few, and an injury away from having that type of presence." Even after those two major set- backs, Beilein isn't done searching for a strong big man who can han- dle the ball well. "It hasn't changed. We've always been looking for that (big man)," Beilein said. "But we had an inju- ry (with Cronin). In Robin's case, I've never taken a kid who didn't already have the score. That was the one chance I took, and it didn't come through." NOTES: Sophomore Stu Dou- glass injured his ankle against Northwestern, forcing him to leave the game for a time. After the game, Douglass said his ankle hurt, but that it would be fine ... The game time has been announced for Mich- igan's game at Minnesota on Feb. 11. It will air on ESPN with a 7 p.m. EST tipoff. HPV Fact About will get genital warts after having any kind of with someone infected. HPV Fact U You have to actually have sex -the virus that causes to get a Why risk it is your campus health center. MERCK CopyrightOll2010 Merck & CoIne Alrights reserved. Pnnted in USA 21050004(40)-01/1 l-GO