8A - Wednesday, December 5, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SA - Wednesday, December 5, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4 WMU handled easily at Crisler Michigan transition too fast for Broncos By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer With a little more than three minutes left in the first half and the Maize Rage counting down the ticking seconds left on the shot clock, Trey Burke tried creating space for himself, going first to his left and then to his right. Five. Four. Three. Fresh- man guard WMU 41 Caris LeVert MICHIGAN 73 stood alone at the top of the key, so Burke passed to him, and out of despera- tion, LeVert heaved up the first shot of his career, barely beating the buzzer. Swish. Moments later, the situation repeated itself, this time with freshman guard Nik Stauskas launching the shot with the clock winding down. And after drawing an offensive foul on the other end, another freshman, forward Mitch McGary, finished an easy layup, capping a 15-2 Wolverine run to give No. 3 Michigan an 18-point advantage after another sluggish start to a game. After each team scored just one field goal - both 3-pointers - in the second half's first four min- utes, the Wolverines pulled away with an 11-2 run to extend their lead to 23, and hung on to win eas- ily, 73-41, over Western Michigan. In the second half, the Broncos (6-2) couldn't keep up. Michigan's decisiverunbeganwith Stauskas's second 3-pointer of the half and was punctuated by back-to-back and-1s from freshman forward Glenn Robinson III and Burke. Burke led all scorers with 20 points - two short of his season high - and also dished out seven assists. Perhaps more impressive- ly, he finished with no turnovers, while recording three steals. "He's got an edge of toughness and a pace to him that he under- stands when we need him to do more and when we need him to just find these good shooters we have around him," said Michigan coach John Beilein. Added Burke: "(The Broncos) were giving me the elbow jump shot, and that's the shot that I've been working on with Coach (LaVall Jordan). He told me that that shot would be there. Once they started taking that away, that's when I would start kicking it out." After Burke, Michigan (8-0) relied on a wealth of diverse scor- ing options, including 18 points from the bench. Just two other players - Stauskas (11 points) and McGary (10) - scored in double figures, with Stauskas knocking down 3-of-4 of his 3-pointers. Junior guard Tim Hardaway, Jr. and Robinson each struggled to find the bottom of the net, shoot- ing a combined 6-for-20. But on this night, it didn't matter as 'M' outscored - Western Michigan, 38-19, in the second half. "It's good to rotate everyone in there, because you never know who we're going to need at what point in the season," said redshirt junior Jordan Morgan. "We've got to have that 'next man up' mental- ity as Coach (Jordan) says, where the next guy's ready to step up and fill in. It is refreshing to be able to play whoever and they come in and get the job done." Despite 10 first-half points from Burke, Michigan failed early on to do what it had done so well for much of the season. The Wolver- ines shot just 3-of-10 from 3-point range in the opening stanza and were outrebounded, 16-12. The Broncos trailed by 14 at the half, 35-21, thanks largely to five first- half offensive boards that helped keep them within reach. "If you looked at our faces inthe first 10 minutes, we did not predict that outcome," Beilein said. "The ball was flying around. They've got a great scheme that they're running and they ran it with such speed and precision (that) our heads were spinning." But in the second half, Michi- gan improved on both statistics, shooting 5-for-11 from 3-point land to finish with a 38.1 percent mark and winning the overall rebounding battle, 35-31. Forward Darius Paul was the only Bronco to score in double fig- ures, finishing with just 10 points. Though 10 Western Michigan players scored, the team shot just 28.1 percent from the field, made just 2-of-17 3-pointers and turned the ball over 18 times, leadingto 22 Michigan points. NOTES: Redshirt freshman forward Max Bielfeldt sprained his ankle during practice on Tues- day and missed Wednesday's game. His status is uncertain for Saturday's game against Arkan- sas. By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer Sophomore guard Trey Burke found himself alone in Michi- gan's offensive half of the court multiple times on Tuesday. Whether it be for his third career dunk or an easy layup, he was consistently yards away from the nearest Bronco. Burke and the Wolverines' defense took advantage of West- ern Michigan's giveaways in Tuesday's 73-41 win. The Bron- cos committed 13 turnovers in the first half and 18 in total. From shot clock violations to bad pass- es to steals - you name it, Michi- gan forced them all. Though tough defense isn't normally Michigan's strength, the Wolverines played a full 40 minutes, forcing Western Michi- gan to take errant shots and force bad passes. With Burke and redshirt junior forward Jordan Morgan leading, No. 3 Michigan added 22 points off of turnovers, many times adding a dunk as an exclamation point. For Michigan coach John Beilein, this is a sign of maturation on defense. "Our fast break keyed our first half and the second half, we executed offense really well and our defense was terrific," Beilein said. "We haven't been turn- ing people over a lot. There are a couple of schools of thought, when you can really block out and defensive rebound and defend - that's sort of a turnover too, a bad shot with a rebound. I do like those because usually the turnovers are easy baskets." Though the game didn't start out crisply on defense - Western Michigan held within five points of Michigan until late in the first half from multiple shots per pos- session - Beilein credited turn- overs as the deciding factor in winning the possession battle in the first half. Many of the Broncos' turn- overs were a result of great guard play on defense. Western Michigan was forced to play on the perimeter and couldn't effectively rotate the ball to find an open man in the paint. The Broncos made bad pass- es and seconds later, Burke or another Wolverine would be on the other end of the floor to pad Michigan's lead. Western Michigan coach Steve Hawkins said that after several failed attempts to set up the outside game, the Broncos would look down low for scoring but often times forced the ball inside, which resulted in another turnover. "They're able to get out in transition because of turnovers - some were in the variety of bad passes and others we charged too much," Hawkins said. "I felt like a huge difference in the game was guard play. Trey Burke, Tim Hardaway, Jr., Nik Stauskas - they can play the game." As the ball fell into the Wol- verines' hands from bad passes or ball-handling, Michigan was easily able to go coast-to-coast for a layup or kick it out for an open three on the perimeter. Burke and freshman forward Mitch McGary recorded dunks in transition and junior guard Tim Hardaway, Jr. recorded seven of his nine points in tran- sition. Burke scored just six of his 20 points from fast breaks, but he was a pivotal player in almost every transition point scored Tuesday. Though the sophomore guard was critical of how the team played overall on defense, Burke noted that the 22 points off turnovers often started with a good defensive stop or a rebound. . "The coaches, they prefer you get steals and that's our best offense," Burke said. "Get- ting a steal and moving it ahead for a fast break layup or dunk. Stay solid on defense, make the defense get the ball to you and go from there. That's the key for us, making consistent plays on defense. "I think our transition offense is one of our best offenses (and) we did a great job tonight." -4 4 TODD NEEDLE/Daily (Top) Junior guard Tim HardawayJr. struggled shooting on Tuesday, but Michigan still had little trouble with Western Michigan. (Middle) Sopho- more guard Trey Burke was the game's leading scorer with 20 points. (Bottom) Freshman forward Mitch McGary scored 10 points and was one of three Wolverines to finish in double figures. After tough 2-game stretch, Wolverines play at Illinois State By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's bas- ketball team is on the road again. After closing out a five-game home stand on Saturday with a 59-53 win over Florida, the Wol- verines are set to face off against Illinois State (4-2) in Normal, Ill. on Wednesday. Initslasttwogames, Michigan (6-2)-has faced its two toughest opponents of the young season. The Wolverines lost, 71-54, to Michigan at No. 4 Duke last weekend. Illinois State The first Matchup: half of the Michigan game against 6-2; Illinois the Blue Dev- State 4-2 ils was close, When: with Michigan Wednesday cutting Duke's 7 P.M. lead to three at Where: Red- halftime, but bird Arena the Wolverines TV/Radio: were unable to BTN.com rally in the sec- ond half. After a two-day break, Michi- gan trumped the Gators on Sat- urday, ending its home stand with its fourth victories in five games. During that stretch the Wol- verines started senior forward Nya Jordan in place of sopho- more guard Brenae Harris. Jordan has given Michigan a much-needed rebounding pres- ence "I definitely think rebounding is an issue for us," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. "(Flor- ida) really hurt us on the offen- sive boards and that's probably where they scored most of their points, especially in the second half. "We need to have bigger, stronger kids out there, and Nya gives us that presence." Plagued by ACL injuries, the Wolverines are very thin at for- ward and have constantly looked to guards to help on the boards. Another issue this season has been turnovers, an area that Michigan improved upon against Florida. "We had some silly turnovers, but for the most part I think we handled the ball pretty well, especially late in the second half," Barnes Arico said. "Late in the game we did a nice job tak- ing care of the ball. If we limit our turnovers we limit their transition - the strength of their team." With improved rebounding and fewer turnovers, the Wol- verines are ready to hit the road. They will travel to face Illinois State Wednesday. The Red Birds features senior guard Jamie Russell - who aver- ages 17.3 points per game, 7.2 rebounds per game and three steals per game - sophomore forward Janae Smith who aver- ages 17 points per game on 54-percent shooting and adds a team-high eight rebounds per game. As if Russell and Smith weren't lethal enough, Illinois State also adds senior guard Can- dace Sykes, who has emerged off the bench to average a team-high 17.8 points per game with 5.8 rebounds per game. With a potent Red Birds offense, the Wolverines will need to continue to rely on their strong trio of seniors, guard Jenny Ryan, center Rachel Shef- fer and forward Kate Thompson. In addition, the strong guard play from Illinois State will pres- sure the Wolverines to continue forcing turnovers in Normal, something the Red Birds are suc- cessful at - they force 12.9 per game. In addition, the Wolverines will look to their experience and improved defensive presence to match the offensive firepower of the Red Birds. "Our kids know you go on the road and sometimes you have to play in front of a hostile crowd," Barnes Arico said. "We've been down this road before and (we) know we've got to keep (our) focus. "It doesn't matter where we're playing, it's about Michigan bas- ketball." 4 at