0. 0 0. BIG TEN BASKETBALL PREVIEW Tueday I.oveber2, 010 / Te-iciganD 3B E Bulked-up Blake McLimans ready for Big Ten spotlight THIS TEAM WILL MAKE THE TOURNAMENT THEY CAN'T AFFORD TO LOSE...: M ICHIGAN CAN UPSET IF.... Michigan St. Spartans First Matchup: In East Lan- singJanuary 27, 7 p.m. Hell doesn't freeze over and a meteor doesn' Earth. But all jokes aside, Spartan coach TomI isn't only trying to make his 14th straight tou ment appearance at the helm of Michigan State is looking to win it all this year. Senior guard K Lucas was chosen as the Big Ten Preseason Pl of the Year. It will be no surprise if the Spart win their seventh Big Ten Championship un Izzo and advance to the Final Four again, butI time they won't lose to Butler ... well, Michi State fans are hoping they won't lose to Butler. Lucas... again. The star guard is too clutc a player for the Spartans to play without. Li ruptured his Achilles tendon in March and, sidelined for five months. The injury causedI to miss the remainder of the season, and no truly knows if he'll be 100 percent come g: time against Saginaw Valley State... Maybe Lu being just 99 percent will spark a Cardinal up Though I don't see that happening any time be the Michigan football team posts a shutout, Li is a player that the Spartans seriously do not w warming the bench. The Wolverines lower the rims to throw Michigan State's shots. And even then it's a stre But last year, the Wolverines did throw the SI tans for a loop. Michigan dropped its riv matchup, 57-56, in a thriller at Crisler Arena.Y even though the chances of that happening ai are slim, junior Zack Novak said at MediaI that we shouldn't be surprised if this team p off some upsets. Novak said that the squad's in ligence could overcome its lack of athleticism games against teams like Michigan State.' extra IQ points probably won't help the Wolver too much when they tip off against Little Brot But with team chemistry, they may hang in th I ON* State Buckeyes First Matchup: In Ann Arbor, U gJanuary'12, 6:30p.m. t hit Someone can step up and replace the leadership zzo of last year's Big Ten Player of the Year Evan Turn- rna- er. Though the Buckeyes have exceptional talent, ;he whether they will have the leadership necessary alin to replace the nation's most reliable go-to-guy is ayer unclear. That guy could be senior Jon Diebler, who ans drains 42 percent of his threes. If Diebler remains a ider consistent shooter, the Buckeyes will be one of the this most versatile teams in the Big Ten. With post play- gan ers like Dallas Lauderdale and freshman Jared Sull- inger, the Buckeyes could be downright scary. Solid big men and consistent shooting will be the key for Ohio State. h of Fifth-year senior David Lighty. The guard missed tcas most of the 2009-10 season because of a broken bone was in his right foot and then missed most of the offsea- him son after re-injuring the same bone. But Ohio State one says that Lighty should be ready to play in the Buck- ame eyes' first game. Lighty will be one of the many can- icas didates to fill Turner's shoes, both as a leader and iset. running the point. For 10 seasons, Buckeye coach fore Thad Matta has guided his team to at least 20 wins, ucas and Lighty has been there for four of them. He has rant the most familiarity in Matta's offensive scheme and is the oldest player onthe team. If Lighty doesn't play, the Buckeyes will have about the same chances of making the Final Four as Boise State does making the National Championship game. off it uses its athleticism. The Wolverines aren't the tch. most experienced or the most athletic guys on the par- court. However, Michigan is faster than the mam- alry moth post players Ohio State will attempt to use to And its advantage all season. Besides those post players, gain the Buckeyes need Lighty and junior Nikkola Kec- Day man to run the hardwood. But Lighty missed a ton 'ulls of time in the offseason and Kecman is out indefi- tel- nitely after tearing his ACL in June. If those inju- a in ries continue, Ohio State may have to start women's The basketball senior Jantel Lavender. She won Big Ten ines Player of the Year for the 2009-10 season and Mich- -her. igan doesn't have the physicality to keep up. ere. PENN STATE Some call them the Nittany Lions and some call them Talor Battle. The senior guard returns for one more year ac in an attempt to regain the pride that the entire Penn co State team lost last year. After winning just three Big Ten tic games in the 2009-10 season, two of which came against ye Northwestern and one against Michigan, Battle and four Do other seniors make up a dark horse in the conference. gl, Remember, they did win the NIT just two years ago, and pr the roster still has seven players who were there during w that era. Maybe the Nittany Lions will rebound. tri Iinois Fighting Illini First Matchup: in Champagne, February 16, 7:3 0 p.m. There is any justice in the world. Seniors Deme- tri McCamey and Mike Davis are two of the most prolific players in the conference. Davis was the 2009-10 leading Big Ten rebounder after collect- ing nine boards per game, and McCamey was on last year's all-conference team and led Illinois in scoring, averaging 15 points per game. Together the two work as the sickest duo since Kobe and Shaq. Not to mention that Illinois coach Bruce Weber is in his seventh year and is one of the many Big Ten teams known to blow up brackets come March. Mr. McCamey. There is nothing more valuable to Illinois than its all-star guard. McCamey is in contention with Lucas in for the Big Ten Player of the Year award. But unlike Lucas, McCamey seems to be as healthy as ever. As last year's team MVP and this years team captain, McCamey will need to be the go-to guy for Illinois. He needs tobe the backstop for the Fighting Illini. Secondly, Illi- nois can't lose its new defensive mentality. Weber has preached nothing but 'D' throughout the offseason to avoid another 11-game slide, which caused the Illini to miss the Big Dance last season. The 1-3-1 works. If the Wolverines' aggressive defense can slow down a very fast-paced Illinois offense, Michigan has a shot. Last year, Michigan lost 51-44. But a number worse than the score was the rebound ratio. The Illini out-rebounded the Wolverines 50-35. Even with-that, Michigan kept it close by forcing 17 turnovers. That's the defense upon which the Wolverines must capitalize if they are going to upset the 13th-ranked tean in the country, and that's if those turnovers can be con- verted into points - something that Beilein has noted as a weakness of last year's team. INDIANA At Big Ten Media Day, Hoosier coach Tom Crean knowledged how difficult it is to play against a "Beilein- 'ached" team. But Crean's sincerity has reason tobe ques- oned, as few teams struggled against the Wolverines last ar. Also, Crean has a competent leader in junior guard aniel Moore, who played alongside Michigan's Stu Dou- ass in high school. Moore put up 18 points in the team's eseason scrimmage, and he should be a force to reckon ith in conference play. In the end, it may not matter how icky Beilein's scheme is. Crean has his card. By LUKE PASCH DailySports Writer Take one look at Michigan's depth chart, specifically the big men down low, and try not to shudder. It's an uneasy truth for Michi- gan fans: the Wolverines' frontcourt options are downright inexperienced. There are just five of them, none of whom has stepped on the hardwood at the collegiate level. And those five - two redshirt freshmen and three true freshmen - will match up against some of the most formidable low-post talent in the nation. The team's depletion of big bod- ies obviously wasn't planned. The coaching staff couldn't have antici- pated the career-ending hip surgery that seven-footer Ben Cronin under- went prior to last season, nor the abysmal all-around performance of last year's squad, which eventually nudged Manny Harris toward the NBA a year early. Still, Michigan coach John Beilein doesn't appear overly concerned without an established force down low to start the season. His hope is that at least one player from this humble coalition of forwards will grow up quickly to become a reliable body in the frontcourt. And he may just find his go-to guy in redshirt freshman Blake McLi- mans, a 6-foot-tO power forward from Worcester, Massachusetts. When McLimans was recruited, he had nearly all the qualities of an elite Division-I forward - he worked the post effectively, floated to the perimeter to drain mid-range jump- ers and the occasional three-pointer and averaged a remarkable nine rebounds and five blocked shots per game at Hamburg H.S. in New York (where he played for three years before moving to Worcester). He resembled a young Dirk Nowit- zki. "Dirk's obviously my favorite player," McLimans said last month. "I guess I can see myself playing like him, working the inside and outside. I've played a few three-on-three tournaments in Buffalo, and people called me Dirk's brother." But there was one significant dif- ference between McLimans and Nowitzki - bulk. When McLimans arrived on cam- pus in 2009, he weighed in at a mere 215 pounds. Scouts labeled him skin- ny, lanky and awkward - not the typical adjectives used to describe a future starter in the Big Ten. Small- framed bodies wouldn't bode well against such premier forces down low as Purdue's JaJuan Johnson, Michigan State's Draymond Green and Illinois's Mike Tisdale. But after a year of matching up against All-Big Ten stars in Har- ris and DeShawn Sims every prac- tice and a grueling offseason during which he put on nearly 25 pounds of muscle, McLimans may be ready for those key matchups. "Blake's made great strides," Beilein said at Big Ten Media Day in Chicago last Thursday. "He's getting the body of a 6-foot-10 center in the Big Ten. (He) still has not had enough experience with the lights on for us really to know what to expect ... but he's got a really nice outside shot that could help us spread the floor." And to complement his shot, McLimans will be paired with a solid talent underneath in Detroit-native Jordan Morgan, a 6-foot-8, 240- pound redshirt freshman who aver- aged more than 10 rebounds a game in high school. Morgan will be expected to make his presence felt in the key when McLimans drifts outside. "Jordan and I go at it in practice every day," McLimans said. "He makes me better, and I make him bet- ter. Even though we're competing for time, we definitely encourage each other because it's all about the team." It seems like a perfect match for the Beilein system which puts a high premium on shooting - Morgan will flex his muscles in the paint, allow- ing McLimans to show off his out- side shot, as well as some finesse in the post. That's at least the ideal scenario for the Wolverines. With such a young corps of forwards, nobody - not even the coaching staff - can offer a confident prediction of what will work and what wont. But early on, don't be surprised if it's the relatively unknown McLi- mans who starts turning heads. Want a free i Pod shuffle? Fill out the Daily's housing survey for a chance to win (off-campus residents only) www.michigandaily.com/housing-survey NORTHWESTERN o specific er, the Daily esses the ngths and aknesses of remaining Ten teams. Kevin Coble - the Wildcats' leading scorer for three years - quit the team this July, and he will not suit up for his fifth-year senior season. Coble gave Northwestern its best shot to make its first tournament in school history. Now', Coach Bill Carmody is back at square one without a definitive leader, But don't count the Wildcats out quite yet. Junior forward John Shurna returns after earning All-Big Ten Second Team honors last year. Shurna set the program record for points in a season with 619 in 2009-10, and looks to score even more this year. Redshirt freshman Blake McLimans is expected to establish his position in both the post and along the periweter this season