U The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I January 23,2012 HOG IED Michigan 64 Arkansas 66 Furious start , omebacfalls short cripples Blue By BEN ESTES elapsed in the game. An and-one Daily Sports Editor play by Rickey Scott made it 6-0 0 Arkansas before Michigan got on Michigan coach John Beilein the board via a jumper from sopho- will be the first to tell you that it's more guard Tim Hardaway Jr. tough to win on the road in college It was certainly a solid start for basketball. It's even tougher when the Razorbacks, but it was nothing the home team you're trying to top the Wolverines haven't seen before. simply won't miss a shot. That is, until Arkansas' Devonta That was the case in Fayetteville, Abron dunked, Julysses Nobles Ark. on Saturday in the Wolverines' drilled a 3-pointer and Scott nailed 66-64 loss to Arkansas. another jumper. Razorback guard Madracus It didn't end there. The Razor- Wade opened the scoring by drill- backs went on to convert their first ing a 3-pointer before a minute had See ARKANSAS, Page 3B Michigan's chances rim out in another defeat on the road By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor Trey Burke's 3-point attempt as the clock expired escaped the cylinder, and Michigan's hopes of completing an epic comeback found another cylin- der: the garbage can. The freshman point guard's step-back jumper skidded across the rim, and when the ball came down, the Wolver- ines (5-2 Big Ten, 15-5 overall) were still winless in true road games, losing 66-64 against Arkansas on Saturday. "We were trying to just get (Burke) downhill," said Michi- gan coach John Beilein about the last play. "Trying to get to the basket, or if they gapped, hit a guy for a three. We weren't going to get both. So when he tried to turn the cor- ner, he didn't, then he sort of went for his own, which would have been a great ending." Down 20 points in the first half, Michigan cut the Razor- back lead to 13 by halftime and then almost came all the way back in the second half. Redshirt sophomore center Jordan Morgan was instru- mental in erasing Michigan's deficit. He was constantly fed under the rim in transition for dunks, as the Wolverine deficit continued to shrink. Morgan finished with 16 points, half of which came on jams in the sec- ond half. But the Razorbacks' furi- ous shooting barrage in the first half put enough distance between them and the Wolver- ines, and Michigan's comeback attempt at Bud Walton Arena fell short. The Razorbacks (2-2 SEC, 14-5) made their first 11 shots and before the Wolverines had even attempted a free throw - to put them comfortably ahead, 29-10. They used their torrid pace to force the Michigan offense to make ugly misses, quick possessions and five turnovers in the opening min- utes. "There were some posses- sions where they hit some real- ly tough, great shots," senior guard Zack Novak told UM Hoops. "There was other pos- sessions where we didn't mark as well as we could have." Arkansas pushed its lead up See COMEBACK, Page 3B WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Michigan maintains perfect record at Crisler Center By MATT SPELICH Daily Sports Writer With 13 minutes left in the second half of the Michi- gan women's basketball game against Indiana INDIANA 48 on Sunday, MICHIGAN 66 the Hoo- siers drilled three 3-pointers in less than a minute. The Wol- verines called a timeout, even though the scoreboard read 50-31 in favor of Michigan. It was one moment of worry on the road to an easy victory over Indiana, 66-48. The Hoo- siers held the lead only once, in the game's first sequence off of the jump ball. From the next play on, the Wolverines were determined to not let Indi- ana's lead stand - the Hoosiers trailed for the rest of the game. Indiana now finds among the number of teams Michigan has beat down this season. While it was expected that the worst team in the Big Ten wouldn't give the Wolverines much trou- ble, their nine-point second- half run was significant enough to catch the attention of Michi- gan coach Kevin Borseth. "They made nine points in a minute," Borseth said. "A 30-point lead went to 20 in a minute. Add another minute to that and we could have found ourselves in trouble. You can't take anything for granted in this game. Indiana never quit. They came out hard in the sec- ond half. Luckily, we did a good job of taking care of the ball." Taking care of the ball and a solid five-men-out motion were two major keys for the Wolver- ines, who had all kinds of suc- cess inside the arc and around the rim. Junior center Rachel Sheffer had a game-high 16 points. She was followed closely behind by senior guard Court- ney Boylan, who racked up 15. "When we went five-out, we really opened up the middle," Sheffer said. "We are fortu- nate that we have a team where everyone can drive and handle the ball and dish to our shoot- ers. We had a lot of great looks today." While it may not have been a major issue given the blow- out score, Michigan struggled from the 3-point line and on the glass. The Wolverines shot just 17.4-percent from beyond the arc and had 10 less rebounds than the Hoosiers. Though Michigan came into the game with enough con- fidence to overtake Indiana, the team's size and talent were a concern. During and after the game, however, it became apparent that something was missing from this Hoosier team. "They are a big, strong team and only one step away from being truly great." Boylan said. "They have a girl who's 6-foot-6 and shoots 44-percent from the 3-point line. With a little devel- opment, she may be that one step. That's just one example of the many potential assets they have on that team." Boylan was completely serious. There is no obliga- See BLOWOUT, Page 3B MATT CASHORE/Notre Dame Athletic Department Fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick allowed just four goals in a weekend split against Notre Dame in South Bend. Wolverines earn tough split vs. TIrish By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor SOUTH BEND - Minutes before freshman forward Alex Guptill would classify the No. 7 Notre Dame hockey MICHIGAN 1 team's play NOTRE DAME 3 on Saturday MICHIGAN 2 as "dirty," NOTRE DAME 1 Michigan coach Red Berenson had to stop himself from sayingthe same. The Fighting Irish's apparent game plan - harassment of fifth- year senior goalie Shawn Hun- wick - left the coach reaching for the right words. "They play an overly - I don't know if it's overly physical, but some people would say it's - you know, there's - I'm not going to say it. But yeah, it's physical hock- ey," Berenson said. Notre Dame forward Jeff Costello skated to the penalty box a little over a minute into the Wol- verines' opening game against the Fighting Irish on Friday. He served two minutes for goalten- der interference after knocking Hunwick over in open ice. Message sent. For the remaining hour and 59 minutes of the series, differ- ent iterations of the same scene played out constantly. Hun- wick was knocked over, snowed, taunted, bumped and, once, even penalized. See SPLIT, Page 3B GETTING CHIPPY Michigan topped Central Michigan, thanks to wins in the final two rounds on Sunday. Page 4B CITY OF ANGEL(E)S Freshman Adrian de los Angeles claimed the all-around title against No.1 Penn State for the upset victory. Page 2B