The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, February 24, 2012 - 7 WOMEN'S BA SKETBALL Michigan bench struggles, Rayburn rolls in Purdue win AUSTEN HUFFOR/Daily Senior guard Carmen Reynolds and her family look up to the video screens in Crisler Center on Thursday during a senior-night presentation afterth e game y Purdue steamrolls senior night By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer It was senior night at Crisler Center, but it wasn't Courtney Boylan, Carmen Reynolds or Jamillya Hardley PURDUE 60 that shined. MICHIGAN 49 Rather, it was Purdue senior Brittany Ray- burn who controlled the game on Thursday night. Rayburn had a game-high 15 points and got help from teammates Chantel Poston and Courtney Moses down the stretch to beat the Wolverines, 60-49. The game was close until the final few minutes, when Ray- burn scored five straight points to extend the Boilermaker lead to seven. Moses hit a 3-pointer to stretch the lead to 10, and Michi- gan was forced to send Purdue to the free-throw line to try for a comeback. The Boilermakers went 9-for- 10 from the charity stripe in the second half and went 4-for-4 in the last minute to seal the game. But besides Purdue's final push, neither team could really find a rhythm. In the first half, Purdue struggled to make a bas- ket in a stretch of just over four minutes, while the Wolverines had nine turnovers. Neither team shot the ball You're not winning many games shooting 37 percent." Despite poor numbers from the floor, junior center Rachel Sheffer overcame her shooting struggles and ended the night with 15 points on 5-for-9 shoot- ing. Reynolds, in her final home particularly well in that stanza, but it wasn't any better for Michigan in the sec- ond half. The Wolverines went 9-for- 26, which ultimately cost them the game. Michigan coa eth made it qu wasn't turnover that hurt the tea "Field-goal what this game eth said. "(It's) that you look f consistent thin teams. And for game, posted 11 points, and junior guard "You're not Jenny Ryan continued her winning many all-aroundpro- games shooting rehounds, eight points and four 37 percent." steals. The Boiler- makers held Michigan to its lowest point total all season with ich Kevin Bors- their tough defense. Rayburn ite clear that it put pressure on the Wolverine rs or rebounds guards all night and had three m. steals, all while commanding percentage is Purdue's offense. Purdue coach is about," Bors- Sharon Versyp said that down the No. 1 thing the stretch she told Rayburn or - that's the to take control of the game like ig of winning she's done all season. It worked. us, it wasn't. ... Reynolds noted that a player like Rayburn isn't going to be completely shut down. Rather, she said, you have to contain her, something the Wolverines just couldn't seem to do. They struggled to guard her in the final few minutes, and Bors- eth didn't have an answer. "She's a hard player to guard," Boylan said. "She's extremely talented, and she hit some really tough shots off the dribble. ... At the end, we missed a couple of switches, and she got a couple of open looks, and she's going to knock those down - she's a good player." NOTE: After thegame, Boylan, Reynolds and Hardley were honored for their four years of work for the program. The three guards make up Borseth's first recruiting class at Michigan. "Those kids have meant a lot to the program," Borseth said. "I thought they've changed the culture in a very positive way, in terms of their effort on the floor, in the classroom, in the commu- nity. I thought they've been out- standing representatives of our program and our University." 'M' registers just half, the bench finished 4-for-19 for the game. Borseth said that five points off a team can't win shooting 37 percent - what the Wolverines bench, 18 points shot on Thursday. They cer- tainly can't win games when the short of average bench shoots 21 percent. Thompson, who usually revi- By MICHAEL LAURILA talizes Michigan, had one of her Daily Sports Writer worst games of the season. The Minnesota native has averaged Michigan coach Kevin Bors- 8.1 points per game but didn't eth has called on the bench to tally a single point against Pur- energize and refuel the Michi- due, going 0-for-6 from the floor gan women's basketball team in and 0-for-2 from the free-throw times of need this season. line. She logged 31 minutes, 11 The bench averages 23.3 more than her season average. points per game, which is one But at 6-foot-4, her defensive of the best marks in the confer- presence was necessary, as Pur- ence. But the bench scored just due boasts one of the biggest five points during the Wolver- lineups in the Big Ten. Specifi- ne's 60-49 loss to No. 22 Pu- cally, Borseth said Thompson due on Thursday. With 19 points played more minutes in order coming from their bench, the to guard 6-foot senior Brittany Boilermakers were right at their Rayburn. But even with Thomp- season average. son's extra height, Rayburn still "All year, our bench has real- scored 15 points. ly given us a boost," said Pur- "Some people have those due coach Sharon Versyp. "Our nights," said senior guard last couple of games, it hasn't Courtney Boylan. "I'm sure a lot been that way. Your bench has of her efforts were focused on to play well, Rayburn, and whether it's when you're the first half really focused or second half. "W e've always "on defense There's got J like that, to be some- thought (the sometimes thing, and our it's harder to bench, defen- bench) has been hit shots. You sively and can't fault offensively, a strength." her. (Thomp- did a good job son) gives a for us." 100-percent Michigan's effort all the 18-point fall off from its season time, and she's been coming off average would've been enough the bench and producing for us to secure a victory. The poor all year." showing by the bench also con- As the bench goes, so Michi- tributed to a season-low scoring gan goes. The Wolverines are total for Michigan. And along currently on the NCAA Tourna- with being near absent in the ment bubble, and with only one scoring column, the bench also regular-season game remain- tallied six turnovers. ing, the bench will continue to During the first half, Michi- play a critical role in the team's gan's bench wasn't just quiet postseason aspirations. Borseth - it was nonexistent. It didn't understands the significance of score a point and only tallied finally making the postseason, two rebounds: one apiece from along with how important the junior guard Kate Thompson bench has been to the Wolver- and junior forward Sam Arnold. ines and will continue to be. Looking for an answer in "We've always thought (the the second half to cut Purdue's bench) has been a strength for four-point lead, Borseth contin- us, and it still is, ut we've got ued to go with the ench to no to e ahle to reound from this avail. game and get those kids ready to Following an 0-for-7 shoot- play," he said. "Every game we ing performance in the first play now is important." WANT TO JOIN DAILY SPORTS? It's where the magic happens. FIRST MEETING AFTER BREAK IS AT 1 P.M. ON SUNDAY, MARCH 4 AT 420 MAYNARD STREET With conference title within reach, * Wolverines not sleeping on BGSU By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Editor Though Bowling Green is just over an hour south of Ann Arbor, the Michigan hockey team isn't making a day trip this week- Michigan end. Instead, atBGSU it will leave on Thursday for Matchup: the weekend Michigan series, hoping to 20-10-4; return as league BGSU9-20-5 champions. When: Friday, But don't Saturday expect the 7:05 p.m. Wolverines to Where: BGSU throw pillows Ice Arena and blankets Liveblog: into their bags michigandaily. along with corn their sticks and gloves. Michigan coach Red Berenson has pounded the mes- sage into their heads all week: Don't sleep on Bowling Green. As far as Berenson is concerned, the Falcons' last-place standing in the CCHA is far less impor- tant than the gigantic target that will replace the standard block 'M' on the Wolverines' jerseys. With Bowling Green already hav- ing locked up the bottom seed for the conference tournament, this weekend's series gives the Falcons a chance to play spoiler. With nothing to play for, Bowling Green would love to dash Michi- gan's title hopes, however slim they may be. "You know (Bowling Green's) going to give you your best because they're looking up at you," Berenson said. "These are the games you have to win. It'll be a good test for us." A lot would have to go right for Michigan to claim a share of its 12th CCHA regular-season title. The Wolverines must take all six points from upset-minded Bowl- ALOE FRISS/Daily Fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick and the senior class close out their firal regular season wth a short triy to 5GSU. ing Green and hope that West- ern Michigan sweeps first-place Ferris State. The Bulldogs have already clinched at least a split conference championship and need just one point to win it all for themselves. But the Broncos did sweep Ferris State in a home-and- home series earlier in the season. There won't be much score- board watching going on this weekend under Berenson's watchful eye. During Wednes- day's practice, Berenson empha- sized that if his team wants to be viewed as one of the best teams in the country, then it's time it starts doing what those teams do - take care of business late in the season. "For example, we talked to them (on Wednesday) about how, if you're going to be a good team - a winning team - you've got to win the games you should win," Berenson said. "Those are the toughest games to play." And though Michigan finds itself in the season's last weekend, the Wolverines aren't looking to stumble into the playoffs. Beren- son still seeks improvement, knowing that stagnant teams rarely fare well as the calendar turns to March. "We've got to play better than we played last week," Berenson said. "We've got to keep moving forward. We can't stay the same... we've got to playbetter." Both special teams units enjoyed a perfect evening last Fri- day against Northern Michigan. The power play capitalized on both of its opportunities, and the penalty killers held the Wildcats to a fruitless man advantage six times. Saturday, the special-teams units made another statement, capitalizing on 50 percent of power-play tries and keeping the Northern Michigan power play off the board once again. Sophomore forward Derek DeBlois, whose presence on the penalty-kill unit has been impres- sive, knows that Bowling Green is no slouch despite the Falcons' four measly conference victories. "It's like any other weekend," DeBlois said. "They've been doing pretty well in the second half. ... You can't look past any team. You've got to prepare like any other weekend (and) control our own destiny, also." The Wolverines seemed partic- ularly focused in practice. Though each player seemed to know of the weekend's playoff implications, nobody seemed too preoccupied about what goes on at Western Michigan's Lawson Ice Arena and Ferris State's Ewigleben Ice Arena. If their heads are in the right place - not somewhere northwest of Bowling Green - everything will take care of itself. "If the team talk is right, we'll be right," Berenson said. FOLLOW ALONG LIVE Checkc cottfora live blog from Bowling Green. A*