The Michigan Daily j michigandaily.com I January 30, 2012 TATTOOED IN COLUMBUS Michigan 49 0 Ohio State 64 OSU proves too strong at home for M By BEN ESTES remaining in the second half, and Daily Sports Editor primary backup Evan Smotrycz also picked up his fourth shortly COLUMBUS - With 4:28 left after that. With a diminished in the game on Sunday, No. 20 lineup, the Wolverines couldn't Michigan was barely clinging to answer on the offensive end. its last hopes of a late-game come- Down 12 points when Smotrycz back, down nine points and with exited, Michigan actually cut the two starters on the floor with four deficit by three before Smotrycz fouls. and Morgan re-entered. But it Freshman point guard Trey wasn't enough to stop the Buck- Burke, making a return to his eyes' momentum. hometown, drove the right side of "Sullinger's ayear older, Craft's the lane and forced a shot while ayear older," said Michigan coach leaning on the big body of No. 4 John Beilein. "They do a really Ohio State's Jared Sullinger. good job, and (William) Buford It missed, as did the two fol- really understands defense. low-ups by redshirt sophomore They have more experience, but forward Jordan Morgan and their length is really important. senior guard Zack Novak - the They're as long as anybody." two starters in foul trouble. The The Michigan offense strug- Wolverines were left flailing gled throughout the game on helplessly around the rim. And Sunday, shootingjust 3.S percent they were helpless to stop Sull- from the field. Buckeye guard inger, who followed his defensive Aaron Craft, known as one of stand with a fast-break dunk to the best on-ball defenders in the clinch the win. Michigan couldn't country, proved his worth. The muster much the rest of the way, combination of Craft's defense fallingf64-49. and the Ohio State big men jam- The final score belied the true ming the lane on screens kept progress of the game, as the Wol- Burke from getting much breath- verines were in it for most of the ing room, forcing the freshman afternoon. Down just three points into five turnovers. if at halftime, Michigan quickly And the Wolverines weren't tied it at 26 with a 3-pointer by strong enough on the glass, los- senior guard Stu Douglass. But ing the rebounding battle, 38-29. the Buckeyes responded with a Buckeye guard Lenzelle Smith's 3-pointer of their own and never performance typified Michigan's relinquished that lead. struggles. Throughout the game, Morgan picked up his fourth the 6-foot-4 Smith managed to ja foul with just over 13 minutes See OSU, Page 3B PHOTOSYER NKRKLAND/Daily MEN'S BASKETBALL Buckeyes bully bigs on the road Michigan s inexperience reemerges in loss to Ohio State By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - No. 4 Ohio State challenged the Michigan basketball team to play hard-nosed, rough- and-tumble basketball in the paint, and Michigan responded - with a 0 whimper. The Buckeyes physically domi- nated the 20th-ranked Wolver- ines inside, leaving 14 offensive rebounds, 16 second-chance points and dire foul trouble for Michigan in their wake. "They have tremendous ... tal- ented guys," said Michigan coach John Beilein. "What might work as a box out against another team does not work against them. You have to finish every possession with a legal, strong box out. It's just a couple (rebounds) that we could have con- trolled that really would have been important in this game." * Standing at 6-foot-3, Ohio State guard Lenzelle Smith Jr. punished the Wolverines with eight offen- sive rebounds and a game-high 17 points. His 12 rebounds were also a game high. "I knew that was goingto be our edge, rebounding and just doing the little things," Smith said. "I stuck to that early and just got myself in a position where I could get the rebounds. We weren't mak- ing many shots, so it was a better chance on getting rebounds." Smith has forwards Jared Sull- inger and Deshaun Thomas to thank for his success. The two sophomores bullied Michigan's big men and cleared the path for Smith to get extra looks on weak-side rebounds and tipped balls. "I just try to know the angle and where the ball is going to bounce depending where they shoot," Smith said. "When Jared got his second foul, my eye lit up. I knew it was go time and needed to go to work." The Buckeyes' toughness also got the Wolverines in foul trouble. See BIGS, Page 3B COLUMBUS - Stop me if you've heard this one before. The Michigan basket- ball team, coming off a recent big win over rival Michigan State, heads down to Columbus to take on a top-five Ohio State team. The Wolverines battle the whole way through. After a low-scoring opening, it's a one- possession game at halftime, BEN and it stays ESTES close until pretty late in the second half. But at that point, the more talented Buckeyes assert their will and Michigan can't answer their run, eventually dropping the game by a final score that isn't indicative of how close the matchup truly was. Yes, I'm talking about No.20 Freshman forward Trey Burke scored 13 points in his return to Columbus. Mich Michigan's 64-49 loss to No. 4 Ohio State on Sunday after- noon. ButI could also be talk- ing about the Wolverines' trip down here on Feb. 3 of last year - it was pretty much the same story, except Michigan had the halftime lead. Last year, my colleague Luke Pasch wrote in this space that while the Wolverines battled admirably, they were still too young and in need of a talent- and-experience upgrade that rigan lost the contest, 64-49. the next season promised. (He also predicted that Michigan would win this game this sea- son, onthe assumptions that Darius Morris would return to Ann Arbor and Jared Sullinger See INEXPERIENCE, Page 3B A DESERT, ICED OVER BARWIS' BOYS " Luke Moffatt's journey from Arizona Former Michigan strength coach Mike to Michigan is far from typical in college Barwis is training five Wolverines for the hockey. Page 4B upcoming NFL draft. Page 2B