The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I March 5, 2012 HIAPPIER VALLEY ALDEN REISS/Daily Sophomore forward Evan Smotrycz, shown here against Oakland, scored 17 points in Michigan's 71-65 victory over Penn State on Sunday. With the win and a subsequent Ohio State win over Michigan State, 'M' earned a split conference title. Michigan tops Penn State in finale By BEN ESTES Hours after the Wolverines Daily Sports Editor defeated the Nittany Lions, the Buckeyes prevailed over the STATE COLLEGE - They Spartans, 72-70. The result? A didn't know it yet, but the Wol- three-way tie for the conference verines were champions. title, and Michigan's first share of No. 13 Michigan held on for the Big Ten Championship since dear life against the last-place 1986. team in Michigan coach John Beilein the Big MICHIGAN 71 and his players were hesitant Ten, top- PENN STATE 65 to talk about the possibility of a ping Penn league title after besting Penn State, 71-65, on Sunday afternoon. State, since it was out of their con- Its task accomplished, the team trol at that point. But they knew turned its eyes to East Lansing, what was at stake. where Michigan State was set to "Our kids will value this win tip off with Ohio State on senior very much," Beilein said. "It puts day at the Breslin Center. us in position to be in position, if the right breaks go our way, (to win) a share of the Big Ten Cham- pionship, which is something that's very important at the Uni- versity of Michigan." The Wolverines have to feel lucky they were even in that posi- tion, after nearly blowing a lead that reached 19 points in the sec- ond half. The Nittany Lions made a desperate charge on their senior day, capitalizing on Michigan's sloppiness to go on a late 13-0 run, and nearly erasing the deficit in the process. Freshman point guard Trey Burke, who led his team with 19 points, seemed to regain control for Michigan (13-5 Big Ten, 23-8 overall) with a four-point play to push the lead back to 10 points with 4:39 left, but Penn State (4-14, 12-19) answered with a four-point play of its own, courte- sy of Trey Lewis. Jermaine Mar- shall, who spurred the Nittany Lion surge and finished with 27 points to lead all scorers, made a jumper with 2:38 left and cut the score to 62-58. "When you go up by 20 with about 10 minutes to go, that's a tough position to be in, because you're not going to be as aggres- sive on offense," said senior guard Zack Novak. "You want to run some clock and they're going to turn it up aggressively.... I'm just proud of the way we fought back after they cut it down." But Penn State would get no closer. Sophomore guard Tim Hardaway Jr. hit a short jumper near the left elbow to extend the lead back to six points with 41 seconds left and then grabbed the rebound when Marshall missed the next time down the floor. The Wolverines made enough free throws to seal the game from there. It's somewhat shocking the game got as close as it did. Penn State started out hot on Sunday, making its first three 3-pointers and leading the rebounding bat- tle, 9-2, by the first media timeout of the game. But Michigan quick- ly responded and took control of the game, as a Hardaway 3-point- er with 10:37 left in the first half erased the last lead the Nittany Lions would have. Following his 25-point, 11-rebound performance at Illi- nois on Thursday, Hardaway con- tinued to show signs that he had broken out of his slump. Against Penn State, he made three of his first four attempts from deep and finished with 13 points on the day. See PENN STATE, Page 2B Russell wins fourth conference title PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Senior guard Courtney Boylan and the Michigan women's basketball team beat Illinois in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament but lost to Ohio State. Buckeyes bounce 'in tourney By LIZ NAGLE Daily Sports Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - "Two." The sound of a takedown and the referee's ensuing call for points rumbled through Mackey Arena this weekend. The bleach- ers weren't filled with their usual Boilermakers' basketball fan base, instead, they were segregated into 12 rival sections, each representing a school in the conference. After a long season of dual meets, the Michigan wrestling team came to Purdue to repeat its victories and avenge its losses. Every match mattered in the Big Ten Tournament, with teams vying to earn a spot in the upcom- ing NCAA Championships. And again, fifth-year senior Kellen Rus- sell climbed to the top to claim his fourth conference title in as many years (2008, 2009, 2011 and 2012). In doing so, he became the first Wolverine to accomplish the feat and just the 11th wrestler in Big Ten history. But on Saturday, Michigan did not get off to a great start. By the end of the first day, four Wolver- ines had already been eliminated, and the team accumulated just 50 points for an eighth-place start. "Guys just didn't wrestle up to their potential," Russell said. "It wasn't a lack of trying.... They weren't wrestling a full seven min- utes." Fifth-year senior Justin Zeerip and redshirt freshman Max Hunt- ley were No. 4 seeds entering the tournament, but both fell in minor quarterfinal upsets to fifth seeds after first-round byes. Zeerip's foe was a familiar one: Ohio State's Nick Heflin. Zeerip, ranked eighth, squared off against the No.10 Buckeyetin the 174-pound contest exactly one month ago. In February, he fell in the second tie- breaker as a result of the referee's waiver on the original reversal call. Mackey Arena played host to yet another close match between the border-state rivals. Heflin stole another win, leaving Zeerip to wrestle in the consolation bracket, where he placed seventh. Redshirt sophomore Eric Gra- jales, too, came to prove he right- fully deserved his previous wins and to take revenge on his former losses in the 149-pound category. See RUSSELL, Page 2B By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer INDIANAPOLIS - In its attempt to take down rival Ohio State for the fourth-straight time, the Michigan MICHIGAN 57 women's OHIOSTATE 48 basketball team's late push came up short. Ohio State (25-5 overall, 11-5 Big Ten), led by junior guard Tayler Hill's 16-point second- half effort, extended its three- point halftime lead to as much as 16 early in the second half. But the Wolverines weren't ready to let the game slip out of their hands. Michigan (20-11, 8-8) went on a 10-0 run - capped by freshman guard Brenae Harris' first collegiate 3-pointer - forc- ing the Buckeyes to take a time- out. Just like that, Ohio State's 16-point lead was cut to six in just three minutes. The teams traded buckets, but four free throws by Hill and senior Samantha Prahalis with just under a minute left iced the game. The Buckeyes defeated Michigan in season-low scoring efforts by both teams, 57-48. The game was headlined by both teams' defenses: The Wol- verines held the league-leading scoring duo of Prahalis and Hill to just 30 points - 11 points shy of their combined season aver- age. And Ohio State limited junior center Rachel Sheffer's production in the paint to just two points. Sheffer was up against 6-foot-5 center Ashley Adams, See BOUNCED, Page 2B UNLIKELY CAPTAIN Luke Glendening was bound for Divi- sion-Ill college football before Michigan found him. Page 4B SMC: HERE'S TO BLUE Stephen J. Nesbitt toasts the Michigan basketball team's Big Ten title with a little help from his friends. Page 2B a