The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Thursday, February 17, 2011- 7A Illinois' size, McCamey prove This one hurt, but too much as Blue falls short not all is lost 'M' struggled from opened up an i-s lead, the Illini (7-6, 17-9) went on a 14-4 run beyond the arc, but and eventually took an 11-point lead into halftime. still had chances to In the second half, Morgan made his presence felt on-both win down stretch ends of the court after making. some adjustments. And it was a By LUKE PASCH battle in the paint to the end. Daily Sports Writer Tisdale was held to just five second-half points, en route to CHAMPAIGN - The relative- 12 on the night. Morgan also ly undersized Michigan men's didn't miss a field goal in that basketball team was probably half, also finishing with 12 relieved MICHIGAN 52 points. Tisdale registered eight to hear on ILLINOIS 54 rebounds on the night, while Wednesday Morgan had seven. night that 7-foot-1 Illinois center But whatever Morgan Mike Tisdale wouldn't be start- brought to Michigan's inside ing for just the second time all game, it wasn't enough to off- season. set the Wolverines' miserable But whatever solace the Wol- shooting performance. The verines found didn't last long. team shot just 2-for-18 from Seconds after checking in early beyond the arc - including one in the first half, Tisdale post- make from junior guard Stu ed up underneath the basket, Douglass (1-for-8 from 3-point where Fighting Illini forward territory) and one from fresh- - Mike Davis found him for the man forward Evan Smotrycz easy layup. Michigan had trou- (1-for-5). ble dealing with Illinois' height Nonetheless, Michigan made advantage all night long, and the game interesting in the sec- the Wolverines fell on the road, ond half, bringing the contest 54-52. within one point on a drive to "I let them get some oppor- the hoop by sophomore point tunities that they probably guard Darius Morris with 15.8 shouldn't have, Tisdale espe- seconds remaining. On the next cially," Michigan redshirt fresh- play, Smotrycz fouled Bill Cole E ROMDaiy man center Jordan Morgan in the remaining seconds, who Illinois senior point guard Demetri McCamey scored 18 points on Wednesday. said after the game. "At the hit one of his two free throws. same time, I thought I can play In the Wolverines' final worked on that maybe a little bit 11 points, seven assists and six with them. I'm not intimidated possession, Smotrycz missed too much." boards. But to no surprise, Mor- by bigger size or them being a potential game-winning Senior point guard Demetri ris claims he wasn't focused seniors." 3-pointer with four seconds McCamey was Illinois' leading on the much-hyped matchup Michigan (6-8 Big Ten, 16-11 remaining. scorer on the night, tallying 18 against McCamey at the point. overall) got off to a quick start Then Douglass got the offen- points on 7-for-15 shooting from "It's never about individuals," in the contest, as reigning Big sive rebound and missed his the field, including four 3-point- Morris said. "It's Michigan ver- Ten Freshman of the Week Tim own 3-point attempt as the ers. But Michigan limited his sus Illinois. (McCamey's) a good Hardaway Jr. put on an impres- clock expired. ability to distribute the ball, as player ... But I really don't mea- sive shooting display early. "That (shot) hung up there for the Wolverines held one of the sure by that. If you want to say Hardaway registered seven - it seemed like - 10 seconds," nation's top assist-men to only anything, their team won, so he points over the first four min- .Douglass said. "I thought it was one on the night. won." utes of the game, including an going in ... I knew I had to-get-it M Ca ey's counterpart, With the loss, Michigan's and-1 on a flashy drive to the up there. I mess around maybe a Morris, put orth another well- chances of a berth in the NCAA hoop. But after the Wolverines little too much in the gym, so I rounded effort, finishing with Tournament took a serious blow. CHAMPAIGN - f there's one thing Darius Morris can count on every game, it's having a significant size advantage over his counter- part. Most point BEN guards hover ESTES around 6-feet tall - almost none On Men's can claim to be Bosketboll 6-foot-4, which is what Morris measures inat. But as the sophomore found out Wednesday night - and as Michi- gan itself found out - Illinois is a different animal. Staring across at him on every possession was Fight- ing Illini guard Demetri McCamey, a 6-foot-3 physical specimen who wasn'tgoingto let Morris just dance his way into the lane like he does so often. And even if he did manage to get into the paint, Morris had a trio of skyscraper Illinois forwards stand- ing in his path. It's no surprise then that Morris went just 4-for-12 from the field, that the Wolverines shot just 37.3 percent for the game or that Michigan made just 2-of-18 of its 3-pointers. The Wolverines couldn't pull this one off, missing agreatopportunity to collect a Top-50 RPIlwin on the road and put themselves solidly, on the NCAA Tournament bubble. Instead,they're leftwalkingthe same tightrope they were already on, just with even less margin of error. But Michigan can live with that. From the beginning, Illinois, with its army of lengthy bigs and its top-ranked Big Ten defense, was going to present a different kind of challenge. Michigan coach John Beilein knew it would take a monu- mental effort for his team to spring the upset. Every time the 7-foot-1 Mike Tis- dale casually reached over a Wol- verine defender to snatch a pass out of the air and put it in the basket, you were reminded that thiswas perhaps the worst possible matchup for Michigan in conference play. Beilein's team thrives on hitting 3-pointers - those are a lot harder to convert when players like junior guards Stu Douglass and Zack Novak find opponents as many as five-to-six inches taller than them leaping out to contest their shots. The Wolverines live on Morris and otherball-handlerspenetrat- ing the lane and puttingup tough layups - when you have to wait until you've almost fallento the court again on your shot attempt just to getseparation, those aren't goingto fall with anyregularity. Heck, even No.2 Ohio State is abettermatchupforthisteam - Jared Sullinger is one of the best players in the country, but at least Jordan Morgan can lookhim straight inthe eye when trying to deny him in the post, instead of staringup at someone like Tisdale, helpless to do anything once the ball reaches his hands. So while Michigan iswell past the point oftakingsolace in playing hard and just being able to compete with teams better than it, the Wol- verines needn't worry about this one too much. Instead, they should be worrying about that road finale at Minnesota next week. The Fighting Illini and the Golden Gophers are very similar teams in terms of issues their sizes propose. But Michigan knows it can beat Minnesota - itlost by just four pointsin the teams' previous meet- ing this season, and it topped the Gophers the last four times before that (meanwhile, the Wolverines' haven't won atAssembly Hall for 16 years). Looking at Michigan's final five games going into Wednesday night, it appeared it had to win three to give it asolid shotof makingthe NCAA Tournament. Just four games are left, but the fact remains the same - the Wol- verines need three wins, and their best opportunities for nabbing them are still out there on the schedule. Thiswin would have helped immensely, which is why much will be made of the last possession, when Beilein's squad nearly made two desperation shots to win the game. "I was looking just to get (the last shot) oft," Beilein said. "I don't know (what would've happened) if (Douglass) would've had just a little bit more time to set his feet. That would have been a great way for Michigan to win in Champaign." It would have been - but a win in Iowa City is just as important at this point. So,too, are potential victories over Wisconsin, Minnesotaand Michigan State. The Wolverines' Big Dance hopes suffered a blow Wednesday in Champaign. But after losing to a eam that, realistically, itshould've lost to, Michigan is far from dead. The tightrope, though, just got a little shakier. ENTRIES DUE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21 iRTS BUILDING, 10:00 AM TO 4:00 PM ger's Meetings Wednesday, February 23 ames begin Monday, March 7 L Yost Ice Arena entry fee: $130/team Coliseum UU LI entry tee: $90/team Even though there are just four games left in the regular season, Michigan coach John Beilein and his crew are still determined to make a push. "We're looking forward to Iowa, and we have no doubts we can win out the next four games and go onto the Big Ten Tournament and make a run," Douglass said. campusfood.com USE YOUR MOUTH Get $5 OFF your next order. ' . Enter coupon code at checkout. MICHS your next meal --.---------- Limit one per customer. Min. $15 First 2000 customers. Only valid for online orders at participating restaurants through Campusfood.com. No cash value. Expires 2/23/11 ViE I ILLEYBALL entry fee: $1 10/team For more information, call 734.763.3562 or visit recsports.umich.edu/intramurals ST MARY' CENTER FOR EETHICS IN ;PUBLIC LIFE itiERSnnuM~imtss Father Gabriel Richard Lecture Series 'The Moral Imperative of Higher Education in the Ecumenical Century' Thursday, February 17th, 4:10pm Rackham Amphitheater John Sexton, Ph.D., J.D., President and Professor of Law, New York University RA