The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com J a 1 0 3 January 18, 2010 - 3B MEN'S BASKETBALL * BIG TEN ROUNDUP Here's what's happened in Big Ten basketball this past week. SUNDAY JAN.16 West Virginia 68 at No. 8 Purdue 64 Iowa 59 at No.15 Minnesota 69 SATURDAY JAN.15 Michigan 61 at Indiana 80 No.16 Illinois 66 at No.20 Wisconsin 76 Penn State 66 at No. 2 Ohio State 69 Northwestern 67 at No.17 Michigan State 71 THURSDAY JAN.13 No. 8 Purdue 67 at Minnesota 70 WEDNESDAY JAN.12 Northwestern 90 at Iowa 71 No.2 Ohio State 68 at Michigan 64 TUESDAY JAN.11 No.16 Illinois 55 at Penn State 57 No. 20 Wisconsin 61 at No.17 Michigan State 64 BIG TEN STANDINGS 1) No.1 Ohio State (5-0) 2) No. 14 Purdue (4-1) 3) No. 17 Michigan State (4-1) 4) No.18 Wisconsin (3-2) 5) No. 23 Illinois (3-2) 6) No. 15 Minnesota (3-3) 7) Penn State (3-3) 8) Northwestern (2-4) 9) Michigan (1-4) 10) Indiana (1-4) 11) Iowa (0-5) ICE HOCKEY CCHA ROUNDUP Here's what's happened in CCHA hockey this past week. SATURDAY JAN.15 No. 6 Michigan 6 at Ferris State 1 Alaska 4 at No. 8 Notre Dame 1 Bowling Green 1 at No.12 Miami 3 Ohio State 2 at Western Michigan 2 Michigan State 2 at Lake Superior State 2 FRIDAY JAN.14 Ferris State 2 at No.6 Michigan 3 Alaska 1 at No.8 Notre Dame 2 Bowling Green 1 at No.12 Miami 5 Ohio State 2 at Western Michigan 4 Michigan State 4 at Lake Superior State 0 CCHA STANDINGS 1) No. 8 Notre Dame (38 pts.) 2) No. 6 Michigan (37 pts.) 3) No.12 Miami (33 pts.) 4) Ferris State (29 pts.) 5) Alaska (27 pts.) 6) Western Michigan (26 pts.) 7) Ohio State (25 pts.) 8) Northern Michigan (23 pts.) 9) Lake Superior State (19 pts.) 10) Michigan State (17 pts.) 11) Bowling Green (8 pts.) WANT MORE DAILY SPORTS COVERAGE? Visit www.michigandaily.com AND FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @MICHDAILYSPORTS SWEEP kill, steered in on Nagle and lifted the puck top shelf forthe From Page 1B 4-0 lead. "Once we got up we got Michigan pummeled Fer- more confident, and that's ris State by an identical score really what took it to them," (6-1) against the same goal- Wohlbergsaid. ies (Nagle followed by Taylor Though the Wolverines Nelson) as it did in its last win couldn't be stopped, Ferris two years earlier. It was the State couldn't find the back Bulldogs' worst conference of the net without something loss since the 2009 matchup going wrong. and the most goals they have The Bulldogs scored three allowed all season, times during the game, but all Although they fell behind three were reviewed. The first early on Friday, the Wolver- was disallowed because the ines jumped out front in the net came off its moorings prior series finale with a pair of to the puck crossing the goal goals from senior forward Carl line. The second was ruled a Hagelin and junior forward no-goal because the puck was David Wohlberg 15 seconds kicked into the net. It wasn't apartmidway through the first until the Bulldogs' last score, period. The markers were the early in the third period, that quickest back-to-back goals of the referees sided with Ferris the season. State. "It's easier to come from Midway through the third behind at home than it is on period, freshman forward the road," Berenson said. Derek DeBlois collected his "Tonight, that first goal was first goal of his young career, important, Carl's goal and and Wohlberg wrapped up the then Wally's goal right after stat sheet by tapping in a pass that ... that really set the tone from Moffie with less than and put (Ferris State) on their two minutes remaining in the heels." game. The normally rowdy recess- The Wolverines collected es of Ewigleben Arena fell as multiple-point weekends from silent as a library after the Moffie, Wohlberg and Hagelin Bulldogs amassed a two-goal - the Swede added a goal and deficit. Moffie took the silence two assists to boost his recent as a cue to strike again, cap- totals to six goals and eight ping off Michigan's second assists in his current seven- three-goal period of the series. game point streak. The Wolverines wouldn't Never one to dwell too long need any more support, on a win regardless of the mar- but senior forward Scooter gin of victory, Berenson classi- Vaughan took a back-hand fied the performance as one pass from Wohlberg at center of the team's "stronger road ice while manning the penalty games of the season." INDIANA From Page 1B Hoosiers rebounded six of their seven missed shots in the first half. "Before anybody asks me the rebounding questions - they only missed 14 shots," Michigan coach John Beilein said after the game. "So there's not a whole lot of rebounds on 14 shots. When you have that you're never in your transition. You're not able to do a lot of things that you want to do." Struggles with rebounding caused the Wolverines to play much more aggressively at the glass. Late in the first half, fresh- man guard Evan Smotrycz tallied his third foul and walked to the bench with his face down and his hands on his head - another sign that the Wolverines were frustrat- ed in the game. Along with Smotrycz, freshman guard Tim Hardaway Jr. recorded two fouls in the first stanza, as did his backup Matt Vogrich. The foul trouble that persisted early on forced Michigan to fiddle around with unconventional lineups. "I am actually one of the guys that think we should be cleaning up the game," Beilein said. "We should be calling the game close. Several of our guys have got to learn the hard way about that. (Fouls) just disrupt us. "Whether we bench them, whether we run them, whether we just continue to teach them - they're young, they're forced to find out the hard way. We couldn't even get (Smotrycz) out of there - it's a matter of seconds and he put his hands on someone else." And as the Wolverines contin- ued to get beat on the glass and rack in fouls, it was their shooting that suffered as a result of such frustration. Michigan shot 29 percent from 3-point range and 36 percent from the field. The Wolverines scored 15 points in the first half - their lowest first-half total of the sea- son and the lowest point total that Indiana has held an opponent to this season. "(Defense) was the key to our week," Indiana coach Tom Crean said. "It was the key to all our games ... Our players understood that it began with what our defen- sive transition was going to be like because of how well they push the ball up the court and get it up the court." Being out rebounded, being in foul trouble and struggling to make shots caused a young team to put their heads down. Indiana continued to pick at the souls of the Wolverines and maintained a comfortable lead for the final 30 minutes of play. "I give credit to this team - we don't really get frustrated," soph- omore Darius Morris said after scoring a team-high 22 points. "We keep playing, but it is frus- trating at the end when you look up and you're way down. We're keeping a good attitude when we're out there on the court, and then afterwards, obviously, we're frustrated." 14 shots all game. And in fact, the Hoosiers rebounded six of their seven missed shots in the first half. CHRIS RYBA/Daiy Senior forward Matt Rustskates in Friday's win over Ferris State. PASCH From Page 1B it for the next five hours. We made fun of the officer's Midwest twang, joked about it with a gas station employee and pondered whether or not we can mark off the fine as a Daily expense. We also drew parallels and realized that our miser- able start to the road trip was awfully similar to Michigan's play on the court lately. Sure, that sounds likea stretch, but stick with me - Zak and I had a long car ride to work this out. For the most part, analysts were impressed with the Wol- verines' play againstthen-No. 3 Kansas and then-No. 2 Ohio State last week. Few predicted that they'd lose by such nar- row margins - seven points in overtime and four points, respectively. And although the players will tell you there's no such thing as "moral vic- tories," the Michigan locker room was relatively upbeat for a team riding a three-game losing streak heading into Indiana. The Wolverines (1-4 Big Ten, 11-7 overall) believed they were on the cusp of get- ting things right - if they just persisted and continued to keep games close, they could win some marquee matchups. Sure, they were still making some freshmen mistakes - picking up off-the-ball fouls, forcingshots that weren't there, not crashing the boards on the offensive end - but if they could still almost topple the second- and third-best teams in the nation, that stuff doesn't matter, right? Well, let's just say it matters about as much as speeding afterbeingpulled over and getting a warning. You think you can keep doing it and get away with it, but eventually, somebody's going to teach you that you're dead wrong. For Zak and I, that somebody was the second police officer. For Michigan, it was Indi- ana. In all honesty, the Wolver- ines did not play well against the Jayhawks. They shot just 33 percent from the field - 4-of-28 from beyond the arc - and turned the ball over 15 times. The game was close because Kansas played almost as poorly, shooting 36 percent and turning the ball over 16 times. Michigan shot better against Ohio State, but this time the Wolverines picked up foolish foul after foolish foul, and handed the Buckeyes 25 free-throw attempts. It didn't matter that they only con- verted on 68 percent of them - it's still awfully hard to win when your opponent tallies 17 points from the charity stripe. The game was close because of Ohio State's questionable play calling - for some reason, the Buckeye guards seemed more content shooting the ball than taking advantage of the Jared Sullinger-Evan Smotrycz mis- match in the paint. Unlike the Jayhawks or the Buckeyes, the Hoosiers did everything right on Saturday. No more breaks for the Wol- verines - no more warnings. Indiana shot well, cleaned up the glass and employed the perfect balance between guard play and post play. And a game that was considered one of the more winnable ones for Michigan quickly turned into an eye-opening 19-point loss to a team that was previously winless in the BigTen. So, while Zak and I returned to Ann Arbor with an important lesson from two Hoosier cops, the Wolverines came home with the same les- son from the Hoosier basket- ball team. If we don't limit our mis- takes, we'll keep losing. And that's a harsh reality, both for a couple of college kids that hate driving at the speed limit and for a young basketball team that commits too many errors on the hard- wood. Ea Want professiona experience in.. Advertising Sales -Finance Accounting !n Z And MORE? Then attend the Michigan Daily Bus in ess De pa rtment Mass Meeting Turisd a y J anuMary 20th at63p (nextto t he Stuyd e nt A ctiv it ies Bu jilding Currently seeking hard-working, detail oriented, charismatic students to fill Junior Account Executive positions for Winter 2011