8A - Wednesday, January 13, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com What is wrong with Michigan basketball? On Monday, I wrote a column addressing the Michigan basketball team's need to focus on what it is about the team that causes it to shoot itself in the foot. I said tack- ling those internal strug- gles should be the Wolverines' main focus JOE right now. In response, STAPLETON I received plenty of comments on the article asking the same relevant, obvious question: so what are these internal struggles? It's a good question, and one that's extremely tough to answer. But let me outline for you what I think the problems are, and what I think the problems aren't. Defensefrom offense This is a generalization, but really good teams - teams that go to the NCAA Tournament - create offense from their defense. If shots aren't falling, good teams buckle down on defense and create fastbreak opportunities and easy buckets through steals, blocks, or long rebounds. Why do great teams operate this way? You can't have an off day on defense - you're either trying or you're not, and that holds true with the even talent level in the Big Ten. Even if you're shooting poorly, you can rely on your defense to create layups. Yeah, I know, sounds like some- thing you heard from your 4th- grade YMCAbasketball coach, but it's true., Unfortunately, the Wolverines appear to be working on the oppo- site premise-their at times lacka- daisical defense seems to stem from missingshots. When their offense isn't work- ing, their defense breaks down. This was painfully apparent against Northwestern on Sunday. As Michi- gan began to have serious trouble cracking the Northwestern zone in the second half, the team's frus- tration showed on the other end. In the first half, the Wolverines allowed the Wildcats to shoot just 34 percent from the field. The second half? 56 percent. "Because (Northwestern's zone) took us out of rhythm (on offense), our defense in the second half was not good," Michigan coach John Beilein said after the game. "We just got distracted by our lack of offense, and that's the story of this team." So, there's the major problem with the defense. But if the defense is lacking when the offense slips up, why has the offense been strug- gling so much this season? If the Wolverines could find consistency on offense, they presumably would play much harder on defense and they'd be a pretty good team -' maybe the team people expected to see at the beginning of the season. The pointguards I'm pretty sure you know who I'm talking about, but I'll say it anyway. The freshman, Darius Morris and the shooting guard, sophomore Stu Douglass. Morris was declared the starter at the beginning of the season because of the promise he showed in high school. He's quick, has great vision, can penetrate and can dish. But he's still a freshman, and we can't all be John Wall. He has shown flashes of bril- liance, and fans can see him devel- op every game, but he's not quite ready to lead a college team at that spot yet. I'm confident he will be capable, just not yet. So instead of Morris, Beilein went with his next-best, and safer, option - Douglass. Douglass handled the transition from shooting guard very well, cut- ting down drastically on his turn- overs during the season, improving his defense and providing the Wol- verines with a steady, experienced hand on offense. Unfortunately, Douglass is not a point guard - he doesn't slash and he doesn't drive-and-dish. He's simply a shooting guard who was 'asked to play point guard. The result? Michigan is still without an experienced point guard. How important is having an experienced point guard? Ask almost any recent NCAA Tourna- ment Champion: 2009 North Caro- lina - Ty Lawson, junior; 2008 Kansas - Mario Chalmers, junior; 2006 and 2007 Florida - Taurean Green, sophomore and junior; 2005 North Carolina - Raymond Felton, junior. The position is a lot like quarter- back in football, and Michigan fans know all too well what it's like play- ing with a freshman quarterback. Starting an inexperienced point guard leads to two intertwined issues: not only is there no one who can get the ball in to DeShawn Sims in a way that puts him in a posi- tion to score, but there is also no one who can penetrate, draw the defense and kick out for wide-open shots. Good entry passes are abso- lutely essential to a player like Sims, who goes one-on-one in the post with bigger players most nights. And when there's no point guard who can penetrate and draw the defense away from the shooters, the Wolverines end up taking more contested shots, which leads nicely to my next point... 3-point shooting To be fair, Michigan's shooting has improved lately, but the team is still shooting a mediocre 29 per- cent for the season. The shooting woes on this team have been so widespread that I'm going to tackle the worst offenders on the team player-by-player. For the sake of brevity, I'm making a SO-shots-or- more rule. Stu Douglass (32 percent from 3-point line, 33 percent from the field) - Here's my argument, with little statistical or anecdotal back- up: playing point guard threw off Douglass's shot. As a spot-up shoot- ing guard, it's critical to develop a catch-and-shoot rhythm during games. It's a mentality more than anything - "IfI get the ball and I'm open, I'm shooting it." Douglass being forced into a playmaking role, one that doesn't suit him switched his mentality from shooter to dis- tributor, and all of a sudden, he started missing open shots. He just stopped looking comfortable. Manny Harris (28 percent, 46 percent) - Hamstring. Hamstring, hamstring, hamstring. I know it sounds like a convenient excuse, but it's much more than that. Imag- ine going up for a jumpshot, except when you jump, you can only jump off of one leg. You think that would throw you off a little bit? That's what Harris has had to deal with, especially at the beginning of the season. And while it is healing, he's still dealing with it now. Now, you may be thinking, "But Joe, that's not really Manny's game. He's a slasher, right?" You're right, per- son I just made up, but consider this: When Harris has the ball, defenders usually have to think about three things -1) is he going to shoot? 2) is he going to drive? 3) dang it. When Harris can't hit his shots, all defenders have to think about is his ability to drive, which allows them to play off him, making him easier to guard. Laval Lucas-Perry (35 percent, 39 percent) - Tough to criticize, since he's been the team's best shooter, but at the same time he did barely cracked the 50-shotbarrier with 54. And while Lucas-Perry started the season strong, notching 18 points in Michigan's first game of the Old Spice Classic against Creighton, his shooting has disap- peared in some important games. Utah - zero points, 0-1. Kansas - two points, 0-2. Indiana - zero points, 0-2. Of course, against Penn State he had 16 points and led an improb- able comeback effort. Lucas-Perry's problem is consistency, and, as weird as it sounds, his problem is not shooting enough. Take another look at those stats - lots of 0-i's and 0-2's up there. Generally, when he shoots more, he makes more. His best games? Creighton -18 points, 4-6. Penn State - 16 points, 4-8. More shots seem to lead to more makes. Lucas-Perry needs to adopt more of a shooter's mentality. The only way to make shots is to take them, so when the redshirt sopho- more catches the ball at the 3-point line, just fire away. That way, he gives himself a chance to develop an in-game rhythm. Lucas-Perry is simply not aggressive enough, and the numbers show that when he asserts himself, he makes shots. Zack Novak (28 percent, 38 percent) - OK. Him I'm having trouble with. Last year, Novak shot 34 percent. This year, he's tied with Harris for last in this group. And I'm just as stumped as he is. He does have an unorthodox shooting motion, one that leaves him fad- ing away almost every time, but he doesn't need to change up his form justbecause he's having a bad year-it's obviously worked for him in the past, it will work for him again. Fortunately, my inability to make sense of Novak's poor shoot- ing leads us to my next point. While Michigan is shooting the ball very poorly frombeyond the arc this year, they didn't exactly shoot the lights out last year. Thir- ty-three percent? Not great. The bigger difference is that last year, the Wolverines made shots when they absolutely needed them. Remember Douglass's two huge triples against UCLA? Or the four from Novak againstDuke? While Michigan didn't light the world on fire frombeyond the arc, they made them when they needed to. For some reason, that's not happening this year. No, it doesn't appear to me that there is any sort of internal conflict on this team. It's not like I hang out with these guys every day, but I do have more access than most, and this does seems like a group of guys that like each other. After games, nobody complains about touches, the play of their teammates, the coaches or anything like that. These guys seem to havebought into Beilein's philosophy, and they're just as confused as the fans are about what has happened s6 far this season. The really unfortunate part of all this is that while I believe this outline pretty clearly explains the troubles Michigan is experienc- ing this year, time may have already run out. Join the Daily in "The Duel of Disappointment" a two-part analysis of the men's basketball and hockey teams. Which season has been more painful? Wash your hands for O at least 20 seconds.. (ABOUT AS LONG AS IT TAKES TO SING THE ALPHABET.) Cover your cough. and sneezes. (NO TISSUE? HEY, YOU HAVE A SLEEVE.) Stay home if you're sick. (YOUR FRIENDS WILL LOVE YOU FOR IT.) Get the flu vaccine. (C'MON DON'T BE A BABY.) To learn more about fluprevention, including vaccines, contact your health care provider, local health department, or visit michigan.gov/flu or call 2-1-1. cia t eren V I Men *ot JanefGs: w, Directo Read two Daily Sports Editors' arguments in tomorrow's print edition and sound off in the Daily's Live Chat on michigandaily.com @ 6 P.M. on Thursday. 4 Don't count Blue out The Michigan hockey team couldn't have been too excited when coach Red Berenson had his players to gather at TIM the south end ROHAN of the rink towards the On Ice Hockey end of Tues- day's practice. They knew what was coming. Berenson held a stopwatch and made sure that when each group of players approached the red line, they understood their goal. The Wolverines started the workout rigorously - they had to skate down and back twice in the time designated by Berenson - but exhaustion soon set in. Players bent over to regain their breath. And sophomore David Wohlberg, who missed last Fri- day's game due to illness, had to stop and skate to the bench. A trash can stood in front of him. When Wolverines began to pour off the ice, team trainer Rick Ban- croft stopped Wohlberg to remind him that he still had to do the last interval he had missed. Without hesitation, the sopho- more forward turned around and skated the rounds he still owed Berenson. Wohlberg and his teammates know that it's gut-check time for the Wolverines. Don't give up on this team just yet. Michigan (7-7 CCHA, 12-10 overall) still has a chance to turn its season from ordinary to NCAA tournament-bound, and it starts this weekend against Alaska. In the past four years, four CCHA teams have made the 16-team tournament each season, and Berenson has repeatedly made it clear that one of the team's goals is to finish the season in the top four of the conference. But there isn't much room left for error. Michigan faced a similar situ- ation a year ago when it was 14-6 after the Great Lakes Invitational in December 2008. Granted, the Wolverines had four more wins, but they dominated the second half of the season and lost only three games the rest of the year. "They were expecting alot of things from us (last year)," senior captain Chris Summers said. "We expect a lot of things from our- selves as well. Just fine tuning things and having the right atti- tude I think is the most important thing." Michigan is taking the right approach to the uphill climb they face in the last 15 games of the season - treating each game as if it's the most important one of the season. And it's easy to talk the talk, but now Michigan has three season-defining chances to walk the walk. Currently, the Wolverines are smack dab in the middle of a tight CCHA race, in a three-way tie for seventh place in the conference with Nebraska-Omaha and Notre Dame. But Michigan faces a slew of conference contenders in the next three weekends: No. 1(tied) Ferris State, No. 3 Michigan State and No. 4 Alaska. The Wolverines have backed themselves into acorner due to early-season splits with Ohio State and Bowling Green. And getting swept by Michigan State and Miami (Ohio) sure didn't help. Now, Michigan cannot afford to get fewer than four or five wins in these upcoming six games. A 23-14 record is within the Wolverines' reach and would put them on par with those teams from the CCHA that have made the NCAA tournament in recent years. But that would mean Michigan could only lose four games the rest of the season. The 2009-10 Wolverines haven't had a winning streak longer than three games, though. And Michi- gan hasn't shown that it can per- form against the conference's best. Those skeptical of a bigturnaround have all the evidence they need. The Wolverines have also been inconsistent in all phases of five- on-five hockey this season. Still, all it takes is one solid weekend, one sweep - or maybe three - to turn around a season. It is still possible. A top-four finish in the confer- ence would also give the Wolver- ines a first-round bye in the CCHA tournament. The momentum of a second-half surge could push Michigan to win the Mason Cup and an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Now, all the Wolver- ines have to do is win 11 of their last 15 games. Berenson said his freshmen have grown up and his seniors are realizing their time is running out. Like last year, the team is starting to get it. And the CCHA is strong enough this year that Berensonbelieves up to five teams from the conference could make the NCAA tournament "If you finish in the top four at least you're putting yourself ina position to do well in the playoffs, Joe Louis, and then see what hap- pens," Berenson said. "Because how we do from here until the end, every game is just as important." Crazier things have happened. With Berenson in charge, we do know that no one will cut any corners - or miss a sprint for that matter. 4 4 4 4