0 8A - Wednesday, February 17, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Key shots late lead 'M' to road victory at Iowa 0 Blue finds its stroke from downtown in clutch win By GJON JUNCAJ Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY - Ina helter-skelter season for the Michigan men's bas- ketball team, there is still some- thing to_ be said MICHIGAN 80 for the IOWA 78 impor- tance of momentum. The Wolver- ines brought the confidence earned from last Thursday's win at Minne- sota with them into Carver-Hawk- eye Arena last night. The hot three-point shoot- ing carried them early. And with Michigan staring at a potentially gut-wrenching road loss, DeShawn Sims carried the team on his back. The senior forward nailed a game-tying triple with six seconds left in regulation, giving the Wol- verines a second chance. Sims and the Wolverines made good on the opportunity, stealing a thrilling 80-78 victory from Iowa. Sims shot 8-of-18 from the floor and pulled down eight rebounds in the game's final 25 minutes, includ- ing his biggest shot of the season - when few in the arena were expectingit. "My thought there was that (the Hawkeyes) were really going to sit on our three-point guys," Michigan coach John Beilein said of the play- call atnthe end of regulation. "There's one guy that they're not going to sit at. ... It was a quicker-hitting play as well. I thought they'd be sitting on a lot of our other stuff. "It was just a hunch, and it worked. If it doesn't, you're all say- ing, 'Why the heck did you go to DeShawn Sims?"' Sims was quiet in the first half, knocking down just two jumpers while being defended by Hawkeye center Jarryd Cole. But with the game going back and forth through- out the second half, the Detroit native became exceptionally aggres- sive in the post, going directly at Cole and Hawkeye forward Eric May. Sims shot a season-high 25 attempts, seven more than his next- highest mark. "I didn't have very good position-. Two 3-pointers late against Hawkeyes lift the Wolverines in overtime contest By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY - After strug- gling through much of the season with its three-point shooting, the Michigan men's basketball team finally had a big night. Senior forward DeShawn Sims hit the game-tying shot that forced overtime and sophomore forward Stu Douglass's triple ulti- mately gave the Wolverines the lead for good. Perhaps most crucial was the effort by junior guard Manny Harris, who not only made Michi- gan's first shot in overtime, but also made two key threes late in the second half when the Wol- verines (6-7 in the Big Ten, 13-12 overall) were battling to keep it close. Midway through the second half with Michigan down two, Harris drove to the basket, missed his shot but got the rebound and drained it to give Michigan a 48-46 lead. "He hit a huge three when we needed him to, off a broken play," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "So he's still got a lot of courage, we just try to channel that in the right direction. Against some teams he runs into a wall when he's courageous, but today he real- ly showed some great courage." Over behind 20 poir from d "Tha shows shootin ward Z and we But cashed overall the arc its com In th distrib their st ized or wh sh instead leading sophot who hi point a verines first ha Soph nailed one. "It f ting to just wi in prac fidence In ti -all, Harris shot 4-of-7 from Lucas-Perry couldn't miss. Even the arc and accounted for when the sophomore took ill- nts. Michigan shot 14-of-27 advised shots, they seemed to fall. owntown in the contest. On one possession, Sims blocked at was nice, this kind of a shot and the ball fell into the what we can do when we're hands of Harris who passed it ag well," sophomore for- upcourt to Lucas-Perry. Instead ack Novak said. "We shot it of drawing out the possession, he got the win." hesitantly pulled up and rattled it wasn't just Harris that home his first three of the contest. in from deep. It was the After gaining confidence in his team shooting frombehind shot, Lucas-Perry went on to hit that propelled Michigan to two consecutive threes, extending e-from-behind victory. Michigan's lead to 10 with 7:29 to e first half, the Wolverines play in the first half. uted the ball to nearly all of But Michigan's success from arters and they all capital- three-point land was matched n their opportunities. And by Iowa (9-18, 3-11) and sopho- more Matt Gatens, who made five threes, and, for a time in the sec- This shows ond half, the Hawkeyes were hot. After struggling from deep for at we can do most of the year, averaging slight- ly above 29 percent on the season, when we're the Wolverines have picked it up of late, shooting exactly 50 per- ooting well" cent in their last contest against Minnesota and 52 percent yester- day against Iowa. Although it is a good sign for i of either Harris or Sims Michigan, the success comes late the way in scoring, it was in the season after several close sore Laval Lucas-Perry, losses when those shots could it three of his four three- have altered the team's post sea- ttempts who led the Wol- son destiny. with nine points after the "I think the last two games if. we've shot 50 percent back-to- homore Stu Douglass also back and that's what we're capable two threes and Novak hit of," Beilein said. "We've had some really disappointing losses, if we elt like everyone was hit- make two more threes, there's a night," Harris said. "It's whole different picture where we hat we've been working on are in the standings. If we make tice and we had a lot of con- one less today, we're in here won- today shooting the ball." dering what's wrong. When it's he first half, it seemed like there, we've got to take it." oRiAN RAY/APt Junior Manny Harris made two 3-pointers late in the second half to keep Michigan close against Iowa. He finished with 20 points in the 80-78 victory. ing (in the first half) as far as scoring angles," Sims said. "It just became better by the lastminute, minute and a half. I just wanted to take over the game." For Michigan (6-7 Big Ten, 13-12 overall), it was the second consecu- tive game at Iowa that was decided in overtime. And though last year's loss nearly derailed the Wolverines' season, the team saw last night as a chance for salvaging a 2009-10 cam- paign that seemed like it was spiral- ing out of control just a week ago. "Last year, we were fighting for an NCAA berth," sophomore for- ward Zack Novak (nine points) said. "On the other end, we were start- ing to working our way out (last year), and then they embarrassed us in overtime. So I said 'Hey, they embarrassed us, so we've got to fight and return the favor.'" Sims and junior guard Manny Harris played solidly all night despite heavy defensive pressure from the collapsing interior defense of the Hawkeyes (9-18, 3-11). They combined for 47 points on 17-of- 42 shooting. Harris finished with 20 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists. He also tallied five points and two rebounds in overtime, despite playing the entire extra session with four fouls. "He doesn't foul much as it is," Beilein said. "In fact, he's got to learn to play more aggressively and still not foul. ... You worry more about the charges with him than you worry about fouling on defense." The win marks the first time the Wolverines have tallied back- to-back road wins this season. Having put in solid 40-minute efforts away from home twice in the past five days, the players' con- fidence is swelling with five games left on the schedule. But despite the wire-to-wire drama, there was stillmroom for caution anidst the optimism. "We're getting better," Beilein said. "Whether it's good enough to continue and keep winning, I don't know." Learn more about the Peace Corps. Attend an information session. Wednesday, February 17th 6:30 p.m. U-M International Center, Room 9 800.424.8580I www.peacecorps.gov Life is calling. How far will you go? MAX COLUNS/Daly Michigan coach Red Berenson has led the Wolverines to19 straight NCAA Tournaments, but maybe not this year. Withfour ames left, Michigan still 'ha"s. some hope for Tourney It hasn't been a black and white season for the Michigan hockey team, to say the least. If one weekend the power play couldn't convert on its handful of scoring chances, the follow- ing series the goaltending was suspect. If the team was fighting T neck-and- " neck during w the course of a game, leave it to someone MARK to take an ill- BURNS advised pen- alty and cost the team a win. And all bets are off if the Wolverines could string together a few weekends of solid defensive hockey. Through 33 games, the Wol- verines have compiled a sub-par 17-15-1 overall record, just good enough for seventh in the CCHA. And with four games remaining in conference play, it's despera- tion time for a team that had lofty expectations. One weekend they look like a team that could play with anyone in the country. Other weekends, well, they look like a team poised to finish in the bot- tom tier of the CCHA. And despite the five-game losing streak in mid-November, the loss to RPI (who?) in the first round of the GLI and two series sweeps more than the last two years com- bined, the Wolverines still have the opportunity to gain a first-round bye in the CCHA Tournament and make the NCAA field of 16 for the 20th-straight year. Is it far-fetched for an underper- forming team? Eh, probably. But could it potentially happen? Yes. Would I be surprised if it did, in fact, occur? No. I've been scratching my head for the last few months trying to decipher what went wrong with this Red Berenson team that had so much promise. It returned a core group of play- ers, led by senior captain Chris Summers, junior forwards Louie Caporusso and Carl Hagelin along with goaltender Bryan Hogan. And after finishing in second place at the end of the previous regular season, the likelihood of contend- ing for a regular season title for the second time in three years looked that much better. After Michigan finished the first half of the season with a 10-10 record and a third-place finish at the Great Lakes Invitational, a conference title was out of the question. But over the next 11 days, Michi- gan will square-off against North- ern Michigan - currently situated in fifth place - and Notre Dame, which sits in 10th. And three of those contests are in the friendly confines of Yost Ice Arena, with the final game of the season in South Bend. The Wolverines are 7-0-1 since Thanksgiving in front of the Michigan faithful and couldn't be in a better position to clinch a top- four position in the CCHA. So, Michigan can forget about its past failures, its handful of upsets and inability to rise to the top of the CCHA. Because, with two sweeps or even three wins, the Wolver- ines would finish in the top four. You're probably thinking, 'Well, that sounds a lot easier said than done.' And while you're right to an extent, Michigan has the tools necessary to reach the NCAA Tournament. It's led by one of the most respected and revered coaches in all of Division I college hockey, whose two National Champion- ships and 10 Frozen Four appear- ances speak volumes about his coaching. Caporusso, a Hobey Baker Award finalist last year, looks like he has found his stride down the stretch, scoring four goals in as many games. And if Hogan can play up to his potential, there's no telling how far this team.could go. How's that for black and white? 0 Following his return from South Bend next week, Burns will be in Fort Wayne watching the Mad Ants ina D-League Basketball affair. He can be reached at burnmark@umich.edu. I