4B - January 24, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ANNA SCHIL Sophomore point guard Darius Morris has struggled during Big Ten play this season after a stellar non-conference start. The question or opposing Big Ten coacheS has changed In loss, four post players fail to record rebound By ZAK PYZIK Smotrycz - who is found much Daily Sports Editor more on the perimeter than in the paint - had one rebound. Michigan men's basketball After the Wolverines shot coach John Beilein walked out 12-for-35 from beyond the arc, it of the locker room afterthe Wol- wasn't as though they had noth- verines' 69-64 loss to Minnesota ing to rebound. Michigan shot a 0 on Saturday earlier than normal. measly 34 percent from 3-point Assistant coach LaVall Jordan range and 43 percent from the stayed with field. the players, NOTEBOOK "we had some kids that holding his stepped up and rallied for own team meeting - one that the team and did some good didn't involve Beilein. things," Minnesota coach Tubby Media waited outside the Smith said. "The good things - locker room longer than usual rebounding the ball. I thought for this meeting to end, and we dominated the boards." when the doors finally opened LINEUP LIMBO: As the season every Michigan player was has progressed and as Michigan stone-faced. has continued to lose games, "He didn'tgonegative,"junior Beilein has been experimenting guard Stu Douglass said of Jor- with his rotations more often. dan's locker room speech. "He Regardless of whether the did not go overboard. Coaches reason for the lineup changes are telling it how it is. They are is foul trouble or experimen- not going to sugarcoat anything. tation, in Michigan's contest They said we really have to take against Minnesota, the Wol- pride in the jersey andtcome verines fiddled with some new together as a team ... He said looks. were just not playing together." At one point during the first The Wolverine offense has half, Michigan had just one most recently struggled to play starter - freshman Tim Hard- consistently. Missing shots and away Jr. - on the floor. Hard- making mistakes in transition away Jr. was accompanied by have haunted them. Douglass, McLimans, Christian "I don't think we're playing and sophomore Matt Vogrich, entirely selfish, but I do think who had only seen the floor as sometimes we are not playing Hardaway Jr.'s substitute. for the team," Douglass said. "We see everything in prac- "That's what we talked about." tice," Vogrich said: "At practice With the loss to the Golden we mess around with all types Gophers, Michigan (1-6 Big Ten, of lineups, it doesn't matter. You 11-9 overall) has dropped its last never know what we'll have to six games. Its next contest will do if we get in foul trouble, or come against Michigan State on maybe just something else is Thursday in East Lansing. working against what they're BIG MEN BLUNDERS: doing." Despite the fact that at least But seeing Vogrich and Hard- one of the Wolverines' four away Jr. on the floor simul- post players - redshirt fresh- taneously was not the only men Jordan Morgan and Blake oddity. Against the Golden McLimans and freshmen Jon Gophers, McLimans and Chris- Horford and Colton Christian tian were in the paint together, - was on the floor at all times, also. each of them failed to collect a "We had foul trouble," Beilein single rebound. said after the game. "Blake "(The Gophers are) just a big, (McLimans) had played pretty physical team, and they just well in practice, so we wanted asserted themselves," Morgan to give him a shot in there. We said. "It's a whole team effort. had some guys in foul trouble It's not just down low. That's and Zack (Novak) needed a rest a large part of it, but we need at that time. We couldn't go with everyone tryingtheir best to just Evan (Smotrycz) because Evan clean up on rebounds." (Smotrycz) was already in foul Minnesota outrebounded trouble, so Colton (Christian) Michigan, 38-13, which marked played. (I) thought he did a good the firsttime all season that none job. What he could do, only three of the Wolverine forwards had a or four minutes, couldn't really single rebound. Freshman Evan have a big impact." All the hype at the begin- ning of this year was about how good of a sum- mer sopho- more point guard Darius Morris had. Everyone said he was going to be the glue to bind the Michigan men's bas- CHANTEL ketball team JENNINGS together - which was fine, because that's what a point guard should be. He should be the coach on the floor, the guy that makes everyone around lPnh better. And at the beginning of the season, that's how it looked. Then he was left off the Cousy Award Watchlist - an award given to the top point guard in the country - and everyone inAnn Arbor was up in arms. But Morris didn't pay attention. He said he didn't care aboutthe personal accolades as long as the team was winning. Then the team stopped win- ning and that little nugget of doubt began to creep up in every- one's minds - maybe he's not as good as we thought, maybe he only plays well againstlesser competition, maybe his summer wasn'tthatgreat. Once the Big Ten schedule started, his numbers took a hit - he didn't appear to be the same player on the floor, he looked more reckless and less effective. In the open court he appeared to be as good as any point guard in the conference, but once the Wol- verines slowed down and tried to run an offense, Morris wasn't Morris anymore. Yes, Morris was still scoring and distributing the ball, but he didn't do it with the same flair evenly throughout the game. I began looking back at my game notes that once praised the player, but now the scribbles read: Dar- ius, turnover. Darius, bad pass. Darius, missed shot. Darius, wtf. And that's kind of how his first half performances went. Morris has averaged just two points and two assists in each firsthalf since conference play began, but in the second halves he has put up13 points and dished out four assists. His shooting percentage jumps nearly double from the first to the second half But it's not just that. Forty-three percent of his scor- ing comes in his final five minutes on the floor. And when you have a guy thatplays more than 30 min- utes a game, it's not productive to have his scoring burst come at the end - especially in games that have already been decided before the final five minutes. It's important to have your best players produce in the final min- utes. It just can't be the only min- utes they're productive, especially when you're playing quality com- petition. Because unless you're Steve Nash's coach, normally it's a bad thing for your pointguard to lead the team in points and assists. Unless that point guard is sur- rounded by an immense amount of talent, other teams can key in on a single player - whetherthat means double teaming or forcing him into early foul trouble - and essentially debunk the catalyst of the team. And those surrounding Morris have the potential to be incredibly talented, butthey haven't pro- duced as consistently as would be necessary for a winning record. Because time and time again (six times straight, to be exact) Mor- ris has been contained by other teams and not enough players have stepped up enough to win. Big Ten coaches have realized the proper question is not, "How do we stop the Wolverines?" but "How do we stop Morris so the Wolverines stop themselves?" Essentially, get rid of the gen- eral and see how the troops do on their own. This weekend against Minne- sota, they fared decently. Junior guard Stu Douglass stepped up and led the team with six assists and attacked the Gophers' 2-3 zone with precision and court vision. Morris, on the other end, looked lost. His one shot of the first half was a drive against three Minnesota players. Then when senior Al Nolen suffered an ankle injury and it was time to attack, time to be a pointguard, Morris didn't react and only passed the ball around the perimeter. In the time the Wolverines need him the most, Morris has been forced to retreat and Michi- gan has found itself ina precari- ous position asking itself, "How do we stop beating ourselves?" -Jennings can be reached at chanjen@umich.edu. MEN'S TENNIS 'M' drops heartbreaker to fifth-ranked Longhorns WRESTLING Blue tops Northwestern By MATT RUDNITSKY Daily Sports Writer Every eye in the record-set- ting 687-person crowd focused intently on Michigan freshman Shaun Bernstein, who had just recovered from a first set loss to take the second. Sophomore Evan King had just won his match at No. 1 sin- gles in the Michigan men's ten- nis team's match against No. 5 Texas, leaving the Wolverines in a 3-3 tie with the Longhorns. The fate of the match rested solely on Bernstein's 18-year old shoulders. This was no ordinary, polite- ly-clapping tennis crowd, either. The audience cheered on Ber- nstein with constant "Go Blue" cries and rousing choruses of claps, reminiscent of those heard in the Big House. After being shut out by Texas just a couple of weeks ago at the Key Biscayne Invitational, No. 25 Michigan put up a fight in Saturday's dual-match against the Longhorns, with the match coming down to a decisive third set at No. 5 singles. But Bernstein just wasn't at his best, as he was broken in the first game and never recovered. He battled throughout and the crowd cheered him on until he walked off the court, but it wasn't enough - he lost to No. 100 nationally-ranked Ben Chen, 6-2, 2-6, 6-2. Chen's win gave Texas (3-0) as Michigan lost the doubles the 4-3 dual-match victory. point with three straight, con- "I really didn't play my best," vincing losses to the Longhorns. Bernstein said. "I missed a few "In doubles, I thought they opportunities and didn't execute were better than us today," very well. Michigan coach Bruce Berque "ButI don't think the pressure said. got to me, it was just a couple of "I wish we had played a bit bad mistakes here and there that better, but we would have had decided the match. When it's to play great to win in doubles. that big of a match against that I think they're just a little better good of a player, you just can't than us there." make those types of mistakes. But then in singles play, the But it was a great atmosphere. Wolverines made an impressive comeback, with King winning at No. 1, senior captain Jason Jung at No. 2 and freshman Barrett "I couldn't Franks dominating his opponent at No. 6. believe it, how "We definitely fought back," Berque said. "Everyone fought great the really hard, but it just didn't go our way in that end. crowd was." "To have three freshman, two sophomores and one senior play- ing, with our team MVP from the last two years out of the line- "I couldn't believe it, how up, and come that close to beat- great the crowd was. I can't ing Texas is an indication of the thank them enough. They really things we can do this year if we got behind me every point I won, continue to improve." even when I was down. That The team MVP Berque is really helped me keep my com- referring to is senior Chris Mad- posure and stay excited even den, who made a name for him- when I was losing. That was self last year by clinching five unbelievable." matches for the Wolverines. The match's attendance shat- He's been sidelined all year with tered the previous Varsity Ten- a wrist injury and is nearing a nis Center attendance record by return to the court. 136 fans. Michigan could have benefit- But the crowd didn't have an ed from his experience in such a impact at the start of the match, tightly contested match. By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer The crowd in Cliff Keen Arena sat in angst, waiting for some- thing to cheer for. And for the second time in two weeks, it was freshman Eric Grajales who ignit- ed them. In the end, Northwestern was no longer undefeated. Michigan's wrestlers had already dropped their first two matches, and despite a win from junior Kellen Russell - albeit in boring fashion - the Wildcats seemed to have control of both the crowd and the match. Northwestern's 11th-ranked Andrew Nadhir stepped to the mats to face Grajales with the chance to give the Wildcats a commanding lead. But by the time the clock struck zero, the young Wolverinehad capturedthe upset - and the momentum - propel- ling No. 11 Michigan (2-0 Big Ten, 7-2 overall) to an eventual victory Friday night, 22-12. "We knew we were going to have some struggles," Michigan coach Joe McFarland said after the match. "But I'm pleased with our effort, because I knew, com- ing into this match, those guys were undefeated, they're 14-0, they were feeling good abouttheir wrestling and they had a lot of confidence. So Iknew it was going to take a great effort to get a big victory here tonight." McFarland also took note of the difference between this year's match with the 19th-ranked Wildcats (2-1,14-1), and last year's match in Evanston, when Michi- gan let an early deficit take them mentallyout of it. "No question about it, these guys are alittlescrappier,"McFar- land said. "It's a whole different team, whole different chemistry from last year. And I think we're getting better week-to-week and the guys are working hard, excit- ed. We've got some challenges ahead of us, so we've got to keep building off this." Russell - ranked No. 1 in the 141-pound weight class - got the Wolverines on the board after they'd fallen behind early, 7-0. With the win, he improved to 23-0 on the year to extend his win streak to 24. Next came Grajales. The youngster fell behind early in the match to his highly ranked foe, but went on the offensive to spark a furious rally - angering North- western coach Drew Pariano to the point of kicking over his chair. "That kid can just wrestle," McFarland said. "He's coming along. His mat sense is a lot better and he's feeling a lot better when he's out there. Everything's com- ing together for him and we're starting to see what kind of wres- tler this kid really is." And Grajales - now with back- to-back impressive weekends - can feel the momentum on his side. "My confidence is huge," Grajales said. "I think in the beginning I was hoping I'd just scramble my way out of any posi- tion, so I was letting people in my legs too much. "Now, when I put people on their heels and when I'm going after people, attacking, it'sputting people in positions I want to be in, rather than what they want to be in. I've just got to keep things going, keep the ball rolling." The Wildcats took the next match to extend their leadto 12-6, but that would be their last vic- tory. Sophomore Dan Yates con- trolled the final half of his match to earn a victory, and then junior Justin Zeerip returned in style from a knee injury, which had held him out the previous two weeks. Zeerip's 10-1 win was the Wol- verines' biggest of the night and also gave them one bonus point, pushing Michigan into a lead it hung onto for the remainder of the match. "It was killing me the last two weeks not being able to wrestle," Zeerip said. "It makes you feel left out not being able to practice. It definitely felt great getting out there and wrestling tonight. And I was happy with the way my knee felt outthere today, too." Senior captainAnthonyBiondo and sophomores Hunter Collins and Ben Apland closed the dual out for the Wolverines. The five- match win streak to close the meet sent the Cliff Keen Arena crowd home happy. But next week the atmosphere won't be as supportive, as Michi- gan heads south for two confer- ence matchups. The Wolverines first head to Columbus for an eagerly awaited dual with rival Ohio State on Friday, before head- ing to Bloomington for a Sunday dual with Indiana.