The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, March 9,2011 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, March 9, 2011 - 7A Smotrycz adds dimension for 'M' with better post play Sparks cracks lineup for playoffs By LUKE PASCH Daily Sports Writer Evan Smotrycz isn't the most imposing post player in the Big Ten. After the Michigan men's bas- ketball team completed its sea- son sweep of Michigan State on Saturday, even assistant coach Bacari Alexander had to heckle the freshman forward via Twit- ter about the goofy photograph posted on ESPN.com. In the headline shot of Smotrycz celebrating, his jersey is untucked, his back is slouched and his undershirt sleeves conceal any muscle that may be hiding underneath. And then there's the hair. It's gelled to one side and curled up at the end, forming a seemingly Greaser-inspired wave of flowing locks. Smotrycz looks more like Fonzie than an up-and- coming Division-I athlete. And it certainly doesn't help that the photographer caught him as he let out a celebratory yell - because instead of depicting an exuberant battle cry, he looks more a patron at an Italian restaurant dissatis- fied with his penne alla vodka. Members of the Fab Five would've cringed. But style points aside, Smotrycz haunted the Spartans on both ends of the floor, finishing with 14 points, a block and three steals. And at times, he utilized an arse- nal of post moves and pivots in the paint that many didn't even know he was capable of. Indeed, his play underneath is a very recent development. "Evan did almost no post defense, no post moves in Sep- tember, October," Michigan coach John Beilein said after the game. "So starting in January we really started working with both post defense and post offense. The last couple weeks he's sort of attached himself to that a little bit, know- ing that people have taken away his three-game - how else can he help us?" Beilein started playing the 6-foot-9 Smotrycz - a natural for- ward - intermittently at center about halfway through season. By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor While the No. 5 Michigan hockey team was fighting for the CCHA regular-season champi- onship two weeks ago against Northern Michigan, sophomore forward Lindsay Sparks was fighting for his season. Throughout the season, Sparks struggled to get into the lineup. After starting four of the first five games, he found himself wearing a suit while his team wore maize and blue for the next nine contests. By the time Michigan headed into the stretch run, the offensively- skilled forward had played in just 10 of his team's 34 games, mainly due to concerns about his defense. Sparks got his chance in the second game of the Wolverines' second-to-last series of the sea- son against Western Michigan. The good news is that he played well, providing a spark on the third line while registering two shots. The bad news is that with the postseason approaching - where lineup changes are rare - Sparks was still fighting for a spot on the line-chart. According to Michigan coach Red Berenson, Sparks took his game to another level in prac- tice in recent weeks. It paid off. He took the ice in both games of the final regular-season series. "You've got to take the oppor- tunity every time you get it," Sparks said. "It happened to be the last weekend. I played well both games - last three games - so I've got to stay in there (and) keep playing well." By the end of the Wolver- ines' initial game with Northern Michigan, Sparks recorded an assist. It also marked the exit for senior forward Louie Capo- russo, who left the game with a lower-body injury. Two weeks removed from the injury, Caporusso will still be out of the lineup when Michi- gan takes on Bowling Green in its CCHA quarterfinals series. Barring any unforeseen chang- es, Sparks will still be in it. He's found a spot (at least currently) on the left side of Michigan's third line, next to sophomore A.J. Treais and senior Ben Win- nett. "It's been a good confidence boost for me to play three games in a row," Sparks said. "I feel like I've been playing well with Treais and Winnett and Wohl- berg last weekend, so (I'm) defi- nitely getting a rhythm going." The parallels between Capo- russo and Sparks are plentiful. Both are slightly undersized forwards - Caporusso 5-foot- 10, Sparks 5-foot-9 - with speed and quick hands who are counted on for offense first. The two even hail from the Toronto suburbs. But both Sparks and Berenson agree that it isn't Sparks's job to be a Caporusso stunt double. "He doesn't necessarily have to score,"-Berenson said. "If he gets his chances, you would like to see him make a difference in a game or put the puck in the net or do what he's good at. That's why you're out there. In the meantime don't hurt the team defensively. Be a solid player. "With Louie out, somebody's going to pick up the slack, you never know who it's going to be. I wouldn't put all the onus on a player like Lindsay Sparks." But when it comes to Friday, Sparks hopes he can do one thing Caporusso did alot of dur- ing the course of the season - help his team win games. Freshman forward Evan Smotrycz is shooting 36 percent froi He formed a platoon with fellow freshman big man Jon Horford whenever starting center Jordan Morgan found himself benched with foul trouble - still a frequent occurrence, evidenced on Satur- day when Morgan collected two quick fouls and played just six minutes in the first half. But recently, Smotrycz's min- utes at forward have been limited. On Feb. 9, against a visiting North- western, junior co-captain Stu Douglass supplanted Smotrycz in the starting five for the first time all season, as Beilein looked to install a more guard-heavy offense. And the move worked - the Wolverines racked up its high- est point total in over a month in the victory over the Wildcats (75). In turn, Smotrycz has come off the bench ever since, his playing time seemingly dwindling with the team's recent successes. But on Saturday, Morgan's foul trouble and Horford's bruised knee provided Smotrycz with the opportunity to show what he could pull off against Michigan State in the paint. And he didn't disappoint. Early in the first half, freshman wing Tim Hardaway Jr. fed the ball to Smotrycz on the low block. He faked the shot, maintained the pivot, took one dribble around his man into the paint and laid it in - all while drawing a foul from junior forward Delvon Roe and sneaking the ball over the out- stretched arms of junior forward Draymond Green. Michigan State's two most heralded post players were left scratching their heads as Smotrycz completed the 3-point play from the free-throw line. "I'm not trying to move all the way to the post, but it's defi- nitely good to have dimensions to my game because they can't just switch on screens," Smotrycz said. "I can switch and take a little guy to the post. But yeah, defi- nitely this was the first time I was sparring a little bit in the post." Smotrycz's dimensions cer- tainly make him a rising star in the Big Ten. As he continues to develop his game in the paint, some defenders will forget that they can't just crowd the lane to stop him. After all, Smotrycz was recruited primarily as a shooting forward, and after going 1-for-2 from deep and 5-for-S from the line on Saturday, he showed why he fits so well into the shoot-hap- py Beilein offense. And don't forget one of Smotrycz's best qualities on the court - how his goofy fagade can lull opponents to sleep. Sophomore forward Lindsay Sparks has one goal and one assist in 13 games this season for the Wolverines. SHADOWS From Page 8A all brought the ball up the floor. The Wolverines' only true point guard was on the bench next to Borseth, unsure of her role. Courtney was forced into the responsibility of having no stabil- ity whatsoever in terms of play- ing time, not knowing how many minutes she was going to get on any given night. Against Kansas on Dec. 9, she played 19 minutes. Four days later, against a much weaker New Mexico State team, she played just nine minutes. She kept working, hoping from her familiar seat on the bench that sooner or later she would get her opportunity. "She was one of those kids that worked while she waited. I'm not sure every one of them do that," Borseth said. "Matter of fact, probably a greater majority of the kids don't do that." She got that opportunity in the first Big Ten game of the season against Ohio State, in the form of Jordan's knee injury. Since then, Courtney has been a catalyst for Michigan's success, both through her play and through her leader- ship. The following game - the first game of 2011 - Borseth gave his diminutive point guard the start, only the second of her Michigan career. Courtney walked onto the floor with a bit of a swagger, unafraid of the challenge. She played like she had been starting all season, leading the Wolverines with 18 points in a career-high 37 minutes of play. Courtney made Iowa defend- ers look foolish at times - finish- ing at the rim amidst a swarm of towering defenders, most notably the 6-foot-5 Morgan Johnson. She sparked the Wolverines when they needed it most, and led them to an impressive third-straight win over a ranked opponent. After the game, Borseth called her the "difference in the game," using the word "outstanding" to describe her night. The high school star did what she was supposed to, leading her college team to victories, unabashed by the big stage. This is what a former Miss Basketball is supposed to do, because there are expectations that come with such a title. After directing the win over the Hawkeyes, Courtney never slowed down, and her impact has been extraordinary for the Wol- verines'season. Coming off the bench, Court- ney averaged 14 minutes, nearly four points and a little over one assist per game. Since beingthrust into the starting role, she has aver- aged 30 minutes, 10 points, and almost two assists per game in the regular season. She is rarely a liability on the defensive end, despite her height, because her feet never stop mov- ing. She has energy for all 40 min- utes - and then some. Courtney has not just been a spark plug, but she has also taken on a leadership role that she has sought since arriving at Michi- gan. Whenever there is a break in the action, it is Courtney in the middle of the huddle, makingsure everybody knows what is going on. Every other player has to look down at her to make eye contact, because physically she is small, but emotionally she commands the attention of the entire huddle. "Sometimes I look at pictures or I look at film and I'm like, 'Hey that's not me, I don't look that small out there do I?' I know that sounds crazy, but I really don't feel that small," Courtney said. "There definitely are certain things I have to do differently, but to me, on the inside, I don't feel that small." Simply put, she is not small because she doesn't feel small. Courtney is listed at 5-foot-7, but she walks out on the court as if she possesses the height of her room- mates, sophomores Rachel Sheffer and Kate Thompson, both 6-foot- 4. Her height doesn't seem to be a big deal to her, because she doesn't think of herself as small. Juniorguard Courtney Boyland has averaged 10 points per game as a starter. "Courtney is tough," Molly said. "Her height has never really been an issue." +4+ On Feb. 19, 2011, Michigan was on the road against Wisconsin. The team was in fourth place in the Big Ten, one game behind the Badgers for third, so this was a crucial game for Big Ten Tourna- ment seeding, as well as an NCAA Tournamentbid. The Wolverines had been lead- ing for most of the game behind a commanding performance from Sheffer, but they trailed by four points with two minutes left in the game. That's when Courtney took over. She scored six-straight points over the last minute and a half of the game, including the game-winning layup with seven seconds left. All six points came off drives to the basket, and all of them were made over defenders much taller than Boylan. "She's a kid that has the abil- ity to get down in the paint and score iton anybody," Borseth said after the game. "Doesn't look like she can do it, but she is very good around that basket, and she put them in tonight." Someone who thinks she is 5-foot-7 would defer to a team- mate in that situation. Someone who thinks she is 5-foot-7 would not have enough confidence to pull off such a series of events. Someone who thinks she is 5-foot-7 does not take it to the bas- ket three times in a row, making all three shots, to give her team the lead in the last seven seconds of one of the most important games of the season. For Court- ney, though, ignorance isbliss. She thinks she is tall. She plays like she is tall. She is tall. +4+ After finishing third in the Big Ten, Michigan has exceeded all expectations set out before the season. The Wolverines were not predicted to finish in the top three by anybody, including the Big Ten coaches or the Associated Press. Yet, here they are. Courtney has teammates who score more, who rebound more and who play better defense. She has taller teammates, more athlet- ic teammates and teammates who could beat her in one-on-one. She has teammates who have earned more collegiate awards than her, teammates who get more cover- age from the press and teammates with more prestigious accolades. Yet, the Michigan women's bas- ketball team would not be where they are without the girl they call 'C-Boy.' If Courtney didn't step up like she did after Jordan went down, Michigan would not have had the Big Ten season they did. Chances are, it wouldn't have earned its spot on the NCAA Tournamentbubble. The Wolverines are being led into March Madness by their diminutive leader, a leader who doesn't know she is small. A leader who did not start until midway through the season, but a leader who has been the catalyst to the success of the Wolverines this sea- son. A leader who has been wait- ing for a break since the moment she arrived in Ann Arbor, and is taking advantage of the one she has been given. "Since I got here, I have been preparing for this," Courtney said. "I can't tell you," her voice trails, as she thinks of all those hours in the gym, "A lot of people on our team put in hard work, but I think that there are certain people on our team who have put in more, and I think I am one of those people. I have just want- ed to get to this point so badly. I loved my role coming off the bench, but Lhave always wanted to be on the court." +4+ During a game against Indiana at home, Courtney gets the ball in the post, feeling the defender on her back, waiting to make a move. "Don't post up, you're too short," an elderly fan next to press row says. Right on cue, Courtney spins to her left, goes up strong on the right side of the rim and flips the ball under the net and over the left side of the rim. The fan throws her hands up in wonder, smiling and clapping. Just one more doubter proved wrong - not the first and certainly not the last. After the game and the post- game meetings, Courtney pulls on a warm-up shirt and runs back onto the court. Even though she just scored 14 points, she doesn't want to stop playing. She has made it, but she isn't satisfied. She worked then, she works now, and she will continue to work in the future. After all, in every city at every school, there will be one person who thinks she is too short. One person who doesn't think she can succeed, one person who thinks Courtney is headed right back to the bench when the Wolverines get healthy. She shoots around, just her and the basket, amid the stragglers who haven't left the arena yet. There may be some people milling around, but in Courtney's mind, she is alone. She is back in the basement, void of all thoughts and emotions. It's just her and the basket again, just like old times. She can see no one, hear no one, and can see noth- ingbut the basket and the concrete behind it. The sound of the bounc- ing ball reverberates throughout the gym, and it gets louder and louder as the stragglers begin to trickle out. She really is alone. She dribbles to the free throw line, pauses, takes a deep breath and launches a shot at the rim. This is a rim that doesn't dis- criminate against a ball shot from the hands of an undersized point guard. A rim that does not have an opinion on whether Courtney Boylan has the physical tools to be a Big Ten point guard. A rim that doesn't care what doubters say, because this rim will accept a shot that has enough will behind it, no matter if the shooter is 5-foot-7 or 6-foot-5. A rim surrounded by a vast, empty space, poorly light, seem- ingly never finished. Courtney is back at home in the basement, unaware she has becomethe starting pointguard at the University of Michigan. Even when she has invisible defenders, every shot matters.