The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 29, 2012 - 7A Duke blows past Blue Loss serves as reality check for Michigan By GREG GARNO Daily Sports Writer In the opening seconds of the Michigan women's basketball team's game against No. 4 Duke on Wednesday, senior guard Kate Thompson dribbled near the top of the key only to be swarmed by a pair of defend- DUKE 71 ers. Both MICHIGAN 54 reached for the ball until it was ripped away from Thompson and the whistle blew for a jump ball. It set the tone for a 71-54 defeat in which the Wolverines were out-muscled, out-hustled and out-played from start to fin- ish. "I think we showed signs of being a really good team, but we just have to get that consis- tency," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. "When you play a great team like that scoring is sometimes a problem when you turn the basketball over as many times as we did." Michigan's lack of height con- tributed to its defeat. The Wol- verines were unable to establish a presence in the paint with senior center Rachel Sheffer or senior forward Nya Jordan, who start- ed for her first time this season. Sheffer and Jordan scored eight points despite the fact that both played for more than 30 minutes The Blue Devils rout contin- ued after the early jump ball, as they raced out to an early 11-2 lead. Thanks in part to Duke's. full-court pressure in the open- ing minutes, Michigan was left scrambling, looking to settle in and set up their strong-shooting offense. "It's a savvy quickness," said senior guard Jenny Ryan. "(Duke) kind of gets you into places on the court where you don't want to be and then they trap hard. They use their length pressuring us. They were so physical, and we weren't able to do anything. When we turned the basketball over, they got easy baskets in transition." Duke also returned to form at the beginping of the half, extending its lead back to 10 just three minutes in on another bas- ket from inside the paint. The Blue Devils' quickness continued to contribute to easy baskets in transition, making the most of the Wolverines' lack of depth. The Blue Devils continued their run, using a 3-pointer from Shelby Grey to make the score 52-38. Michigan, in an effort to claw back into the game, fired shots off without taking the time to fully set up - a style of play that ultimately hurt the Wolderines. "Our quick shots were almost the same as turnovers because our quick shots resulted in them taking off the other way," Barnes Arico said. "When we ran the shot clock down we had more of an opportunity to set up our defense the other way." The game slowed down after the opening minutes of the sec- ond half, as Duke meticulous- ly worked the ball down low. The Blue Devils also limited Michigan's leading scorer, Kate Thompson, to just 10 points and 6-15 shooting, and Michigan's second-leading scorer. With 7:21 remaining, Duke opened up its biggest lead, 64-43, taking advantage of the Wolver- ines' 20 turnovers and 0.6 assist- to-turnover ratio. Michigan's lone bright spot was Ryan, who finished with a team-high 18 points and three assists. Sophomore guard Nicole Elmblad ended her night leading the team with seven rebounds. But the Wolverines have little time to reflect on the lopsided loss, with Florida traveling to Crisler Center on Saturday. By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer It'sback to reality for the Mich- igan women's basketball team. After winning five of their first six games of the season, the Wol- verines were reminded that there is work to be done. They were reminded of their shallow bench. And they were reminded why they are still unranked. on Wednesday night, No. 4 Duke (5-0) did everything in its power to remind Michigan (5-2) that the Wolverines are still far from complete. The Blue Devils were more aggressive, constantly trapping Wolverines on the wing. On every offensive possession, Michigan would find itself backed into a corner with two Duke players pressuring. In addition, the Wolverines were forced to use most of the shot clock on every possession in the first half, unable to find an open look to the basket. Knowing the Blue Devils were going to pressure proved to be lit- tle help for the Wolverines. Duke played fast, converging on the ball on every Michigan possession. In the first nine minutes of play the Wolverines had eight turnovers - 20 total on the game. The Wolverines rallied at the end of the first half cutting Duke's lead to as little as two points on a 15-1 run to end the half by hold- ingthe Blue Devils without a field goal for the last 6:41. "(The fact) that we were down, stuck together, were able to rally back, and didn't quit showed a lot of fight and a lot of perseverance," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. But the Blue Devils didn't let that momentum last long. They came out in the second half with the same fire they started the game with, outscoring Michigan 11-2 in the first 2:42. The Wolver- ines didn't give up, fighting Duke every step of the second half despite a double-digit deficit, but the Blue Devils were too aggres- sive, too big, too strong and too good. "We did a bunch of good things, but obviously their pres- sure really affected us," Barnes Arico said. "They're a No. 4 team in the country filled with a team of All-Americans, so it was nice to see in the first half when we did get down we were able (to stay) together and (rally) back and we fought. There were a lot of posi- tives." If the direction of this team was ever in question it isn't now. The Michigan women's basket- ball team has character, heart, and promise. The Wolverines aren't far off from where they want to be, put- ting that on display when they made a run to tighten the game late in the first half. "I'm proud of our team for that run that we made," Ryan said. "It showed we had a lot of fight. It showed that we are proud of who we are and what we stand for. It's good for the future." In their first four games the Blue Devils held their opponents to 45 points per game while scor- ing 89 points per game of their own, but Michigan scored 54 points and held Duke to a season- low 71 points. In addition, the Wolverines kept the Blue Devils' rebounding in check - Duke only, out rebounded Michigan by one, winning the battle on the boards 32-31. "There's a lot of good signs (from' the game)," Barnes Arico said. "A lot of good positives that we can take from the night. We showed signs of being a really good team." Senior guard Jenny Ryan scored 18 points and registered three assists in Mich- gao's 71-54 loss to Duke at Cislnr Center on Wednesday. and their athleticism really well, and I think it's not so much quick as smart is how they get you." Duke continued to extend its lead throughout the first half until Ryan snapped the hot streak with back-to-back bas- kets. The Blue Devils took advan- tage of Michigan in transition, and held its biggest lead of the half at 6:41 when they doubled the Wolverines' 17 points. But suddenly, as if it had just awoken, Michigan fired back, as Jordan hit a bucket at 6:21 to begin a 15-1 run to close the half. Thompson hit a 3-pointer to pull within single digits with less than three minutes to go. With less than 30 seconds to go in the half, Sheffer made the score 34-32 to bring Michigan's run to a close. "I don't think (Michigan) did anything differently," said Duke coach Joanne McCallie. "When you turn the ball over four straight times you open the door a little bit." The Wolverines walked into the locker room at halftime down three, but they were unable to carry the momentum after the break. Michigan mustered just. 22 points in the second half, half of which came with less than eight minutes to go when the game was already out of hand. "I think to start the second half, they went back to that man (defense)," Barnes Arico said. "That really gave us our most difficult time when they were * Error-free, selfless play characterizes M' By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer During the first two posses- sions for the Michigan men's basketball team in its 79-72 win against North Carolina State (4-2) on Tuesday, the Wolverines played the way some experts believed they would play prior to the sea- son - ine--perienced, with fresh- man mistakes. Two turnovers and a Wolfpack dunk later, Michigan stopped its careless play. During a 25-minute stretch that spanned across the first and sec- ond halves on Tuesday, the third- ranked Wolverines (6-0) played mistake-free basketball and bust- ed open what was' once a close contest. Michigan turned the ball over just six times all game, and sophomore point guard Trey Burke, didn't cough the ball up once. For junior guard Tim Hard- away, Jr., those numbers were quite surprising. "We only had six?" Hardaway asked. "Dang. I thought we had more than that. N.C. State did a good job trying to deflect passes, strip the ball and running in the passing lane like they did in the first two possessions." The Wolverines easily won the turnover battle and continued this season's trend of rarely turn- ing over the basketball. Through the first six games last season, the Wolverines averaged 12 turnovers per game, but this season, Michi- gan has kept giveaways to a mini- mum, averaging less than 10 per game. Hardaway and head coach John Beilein credit this downward trend to unity and recognition of what isn't working. "In practice we really empha- size (no turnovers)," Beilein said. "As long as we have the ball, good things can happen." A lot of the change has come from Burke's confidence level and his improved ability to spread the ball. Last year, Burke took it upon himself to be a scorer, even when the reads weren't there - he'd force a shot or turn the ball over while trying to make a play. This year, things are completely differ- ent. In the first halves against Kan- sas State and North Carolina State, Burke was silent. The sophomore point guard found himself a new role in looking for the open shoot- er - namely Hardaway and fresh- man guard Nik Stauskas, who have been the bulk of the Wol- verines' offense lately. Burke is averaging almost eight assists per game, doubling his average from last season. On Tuesday against the Wolf- pack, Burke tied his career-high in assists with nine in the first half alone. Though he went on to have 18 points, his 11 assists - a career- high and good for his first career double-double - were the high- light of his game. "This year I know we have more weapons and guys who can score and that kind of opens me up," Burke said. "It's a matter of mak- ing the read the defense gives to us. What was there was getting deep into the paint and kicking it out to Nik and Tim early," Beilein said Burke continues to work on his ball control and limiting turnovers in practice by making the right adjustments after a performance with which he's unsatisfied. Burke said that he also spends time working with assistant coach LaVall Jordan on making good reads and keeping poised and patient while running the offense. But how different is Burke's play compared to last year's? Would last season's team be able to win without the scoring contri- bution from Burke, as this year's squad has done? "That would've been difficult," Beilein said. "But that nine assists though, he was finding the open men. ... He wants to win, and whether he has to score points - because they were locking up the rails on Nik and Tim (on Tuesday) - he just goes to work. He's got that ability that only the best point guards have to jump it in from 15 to 20 feet." Janecyk deserves a chance in net he Michigan hockeyteamc in has luxury between the Berenson needs to have the pipes. S abilityto ride the hot hand and I'll give you a second to wipe rreward whomever performs best the coffee off your keyboard in practice. before I explain how one of the But this isn't a two-pony race Wolverines' most glaring weak- anymore. It can't be when nei- nesses could easily be a strength. theris getting the job done. And It's no Berenson is coming around to secret thatathat. neither of the ."I told the goalies, 'I'm not two freshmen - ruling anyone out,"' Berenson goaltenders, said. "There's no question.... Jared Rut- - (Blackburn) and I will have a ledge and talk.(Blackburn) and the goal- Steve Racine, 'ies will have atalk, and we'll see has done TTwhere we are thisweekend. But I much good MATT ywouldn't rule anyone out." since they SLOVIN As a coach, it's tough to break arrived in PAULHEROMAN/Oaly the confidence of two freshmen, Ann Arbor. Junior goalie Adam Janecyk has yet to see game action this season. one of who came to Ann Arbor Rutledge, the presumed start- age and a .899 save percentage. There probably isn't going to with the starting job promised er entering the season, allowed Middle-of-the-pack numbers, be a single answer in net this sea- to him. But if thrown into the seven goals against Michigan but at least he has that experi- son, nor should there be. Michi- rotation, Janecyk might be able State in East Lansing on Nov. 10 ence under his belt and has gan coach Red Berenson has to produce where the other two and hasn't seen the ice since. spent more time working with four goaltenders on the roster for have failed. Racine started the year 3-0 but goaltending coach Josh Black- the first time in years, counting his lone win since came against burn. So isn't it fathomable that injured redshirt sophomore Luke - Slovin can be reached Bowling Green, and he was most- the lone Grand Rapids native on Dwyer, who has never seen game at mjslovin@umich.edu. ly untested in that game. Most the Michigan roster is the very recently, against No.13 Cornell person who could carry the team at Madison Square Garden, there, where the NCAA Tourna- Racine quite pathetically filled ment West Regional will be held 2012/13 Orren C. Mohler Prize Lecture the crease typically occupied by in March? New York Rangers' All-Star net- Blackburn said Racine plays Friday, November 30, 2012 * 7:00pm minder Henrik Lundqvist, allow- a "dirtier" style in net than ing five goals in the loss. Rutledge, which explains those Racine is ranked last in the heart-attack moments for Michi- F e'a CCHA in save percentage. If Rut- gan fans when he just does barely ledge had played enough minutes make it back to the crease in time to qualify, that dubious honor and those times when he, well, would be his. doesn't. So how can Michigan, which It's not easy to play goalten- Ae Black H oles went from having a goaltender der for Michigan as a freshman. who could steal games in Shawn Blackburn knows that from his Andrew Fabian Hunwick to having two who playing days. are constantly at risk of blowing "I can tell you from being Ilstitulte of Astronomy, Cambridge them, possibly take comfort in there, it's a lot of pressure when fellow of the Royal Society any of its goalies? you come here as a freshman," Easy. Because it has three of said Blackburn, who certainly them. didn't show it in the 1998-99 Michigan fans know junior season when he recorded a How a central black hole can Adam Janecyk only as the former 2.28 goals-against average and central backup to Shawn Hunwick, the a 25-10-6-3 record. "All three control agalaxy. brick wall that played goalie for of our guys can play. I see it in the Wolverines last year. them, I know that they can play." He appeared in five games last So give the third one, the non- season, including the boxing- freshman, a chance.Cn match-turned-hockey-game in "Before Hunwick, if you 1210 Chemistry Bldg., 930 N. Univ. Ave. Marquette when Hunwick got would've asked me I'd say, 'You ejected and a mid-season contest know, maybe we'll get (Janecyk) Sponsored by the Department of Astronomy against Lake Superior State when in if we can,"' Blackburn said. http://goo.gl/Wd5D5 1734) 764-3440 he made his first-career start. He "But bottom line, Janecyk can posted a 3.17 goals-against aver- play." aly, t A A