8 - Tuesday, February 26, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 8 - Tuesday, February 26, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Playoff picture will be an uphill battle for the Wolverines TERESA MATHEW/Daily Sophomore point guard Trey Burke is averaging less than two turnovers per game while averaging almost seven assists a game, good for seventh in the nation. ehinday Burk M i i iC Pe R R R11 y By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's bas- ketball team just finished its toughest two-game stretch this season - at home against then- No. 24 Nebraska and at then-No. 7 Penn State in the span of four days. The Wolverines fell short in both games to end their season 1-4 against ranked oppo- NOTEBOOK nents. Their lone win came at then-No. 13 Purdue on Feb. 10. Losses to the Lady Lions and the Cornhuskers leave Michi- gan (8-6 Big Ten, 19-8 overall) in sixth place in the Big Ten, only one game behind fourth-place Illinois. The Wolverines need to place no lower than fourth in order to earn a first-round bye in the Big Ten Tournament. "We just had to play the top two teams in our league back to back, and that's very difficult," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. "We obviously want to be one of the top teams, and in order to be the top, we have to beat the top." Michiganhas two more games to play, one at home against Northwestern (5-9, 13-14) and one on the road against Ohio State (4-9, 14-12). With two mid- dle-of-the-pack opponents on the horizon, the Wolverines still need help to earn their bye. "We better finish strong," Barnes Arico said. "I just think (Penn State and Nebraska) set the bar and hopefully our kids see that if you want to be at the top of our conference, this is where we have to be." Michigan State (8-5, 20-6) sits a half-game above Michigan in the fifth spot with three games to play. The Spartans still have to face the Buckeyes and No.25Pur- due on the road before returning home to face Wisconsin. Illinois (9-5, 16-10), which the Wolver- ines beat earlier this season, still has the Boilermakers and Ohio State on its schedule. THOMPSON EXPLODES: Senior forward Kate Thompson has had a roller coaster of a sea- son. Most recently, against the Lady Lions, Thompson exploded for a career-high 25 points and grabbed six rebounds, though she committed a team-high six turnovers. Behind Thompson's offensive outburst, Michigan was able to stage a .rally on Sunday - get- ting to within four points on a 3-pointer from senior center Rachel Sheffer - but neither team scored for four minutes before Penn State rallied to push its lead to nine. "I liked our fight, and I liked how we came back," Barnes Arico said. "We're happy with our fight, but we would've liked to come away with a victory." Thompson's season has had its ups and downs. The first-time starter averages a team-high 15.4 points per game, but her shoot- ing has been streaky. At one point, Thompson was first in the nation with 3.96 3-pointers per game, but her shooting percent- ages have fallen, and she now averages 3.7 triples per game on 42-percent shooting from behind the arc. "It's important not to put too much emphasis or overthink things," Thompson said. "We had to come out (against Penn State) and get the win, but we couldn't, * but now we have to move on." Thompson holds program records for most career 3-point- ers as well as 3-pointers ina sea- son. She currently has 101 this year, becoming only the fifth player in Big Ten history to hit at least 100 in aseason. DOUBLE SUCCESS: Senior for- ward Nya Jordan has recorded six double-doubles this season, including a 14-point, 10-rebound performance against Penn State on Sunday. She's scored in dou- ble digits in six straight games, the longest streak of her career. Jordan has been a huge asset for the Wolverines this season. She made her way into the start- ing lineup six games into the sea- son and hasn't budged from the spot since. Jordan leads the team with 7.3 rebounds per game, while also adding 8.1 points on 50-percent shooting. S The forward played 40 min- utes against the Lady Lions, marking the first game in her career that she played the entire contest. "What really helped us (against Penn State) in the sec- ond half was that we started making shots," Thompson said. "Nya got to the basket and that was a (huge) part of it." Jordan also had a huge pres- ence against Nebraska, when she scored 12 points and grabbed a career-high 16 rebounds. By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor The number everyone wanted to talk about after the Michigan men's basketball team's 71-58 win over Illinoiswas 1,000. That's how many points soph- omore point guard Trey Burke surpassed with a second-half free throw, becoming just the seventh Wolverine to reach the milestone as a true sophomore. Burke fin- ished with 26 points, giving him 1,013 career points, and eight assists. But it's another number that often draws a lot less atten- tion and what makes Burke so importantto his team: one. For the seventh time in 14 con- ference games (his zero-turnover outing last Sunday against Penn State), Burke turned the ball over only once on Sunday. He's had three-plus turnovers in just three Big Ten games, giving him an eye- popping 1.6 turnovers per game against opponents from the best conference in the nation. "He'sjust really a special player and we just love what he's brought to the team," said Michigan coach John Beilein. "His handle is so sure, even in crowds. He doesn't try to do too much, either. "His combination ofbeing both a playmaker and a shooter and ines lead the nation in turnovers per possession, turning the ball over just 14.6 percent of the time. Burke, Michigan's primary ball handler, is essentially the Wol- scorer has been Burke ranks 11th in the coun- try at 6.9 assists per game but of the 10 play- ers ahead of him, none turn the ball over less than twice per game like Burke doe for the season), more than 3.4. Thanks to B second in the c onto the ball, t 9.5 times per g sin, at 9.4 turn better, but a big attributed to ti ciatingly slow propensity for I tempo style of big for us." verines' sole distributor. After Burke, no Michi- gan player aver- ha dl i ages more than 2.2 "His handle is assists per game. Burke accounts so sure. ... H e for almost half of , the Wolverines' doesn't try to do 14.7 assists per too much." e, which puts too much." Mihigan 51st in the country. But thanks to Burke, the team's 1.57 s (he averages 1.8 assist-turnover ratio is third inthe while nine average country. "You have to trust your point urke, Michigan is guard, and we trust him 100 per- ountry at hanging cent with the ball and we wouldn't urning it over just want nobody else," said junior ame. Only Wiscon- guard Tim Hardaway Jr. "It's overs per game, is great to have a point guard that part of that can be makes plays for yourteam and can he Badgers' excru- go out there and make a play for tempo. Despite a himself as well." playing with an up- Burke's consistently efficient play, the Wolver- numbers don't stop with his assists and turnovers. He's the only player in the Big Ten to score 15-plus points in every conference game (he averages 19.4) and he's shooting an impressive 48.9 per- cent from the field on the year. And as Beilein highlighted fol- lowing Sunday's win, Burke is a reliable option from the free- throw stripe, making him the prototypical player to handle the ball with a late-game lead. Even when trapped or double-teamed, Burke has proven that he won't turn the ball over, forcing teams to send him to the line, where he's shooting 81.3 percent in confer- ence play. Against the Fighting Illini, Burke connected on eight of his 10 free throws, including a 5-for- 6 stretch with less than two min- utes remaining to seal the game. "Here's what I love about Trey: at the foul line, he's been abso- lutely terrific," Beilein said. "We needed to win that game from the foul line with the way they can shoot 3s, and he did what he needed to do then because we obviously want the ball in his hands." ICE HOCKEY 'M' embraces playoff mentality R Yt i t C i7 pp,-1 M f . d l $.. _ r. 1 ' \ t D iF ' . .. .. .::.. Sr.'' 1 . Vf " a d - . . ., .: J+g . ,' - ° By LIZ VUKELICH Daily SportsEditor In a perfect world, the Michi- gan hockey team wouldn't have waited until the penultimate weekend of the regular season to get its first road series sweep. But the Wolverines are more than content with their sweep over rival Ohio NOTEBOOK State in Colum- bus this past weekend. And if there were any ideal time for Michigan to get hot, it would be right before the play- offs. Back in January, Michigan coach Red Berenson started preaching the importance of playing "playoff hockey" to the Wolverines as a way to try and break them out of their slump. Before this weekend, there' d been glimpses of this mindset but Michigan still had trouble putting one full game togeth-. er, let alone two.Finally, that changed this weekend, "I think the thing that we took a huge step in this weekend was facing adversity," said sopho- more forward Andrew Sinelli. "(Ohio State) would score a goal and we'd jump right back and score again. In playoffs, there's going to be adversity and you have to know how to face it, so we're finally starting to figure that out." The most notable improve- ment for the Wolverines was the lack of a third-period collapse. In addition to better defensive- zone coverage, much of the Wolverines' success in the final frame of Saturday's game has to be attributed to freshman goal- tender Steve Racine, who held the Buckeyes scoreless. Without that steadfastness in net and from the forward corps which buried the hatchet on Saturday with three goals, Berenson believes the weekend would've had a completely dif- ferent outcome. "We saw a little bit of (play- off hockey) but we're not there yet," Berenson said. "We played in two close games. If you had to put the whole weekend in perspective, you'd say the third period on Saturday decided the weekend. That was good." GUPTILL'S MANY FACES: The Alex Guptill who played this weekend was a far cry from the Alex Guptill who played for the Wolverines a few months ago, The sophomore forward is coming off two ga-ahead goals against the Buckeyes and was named CCHA Offensive Player of the Week on Monday - a complete turnaround for some- one who was a healthy scratch in December for having a less- than-desirable work ethic and a poor approach to the game. "The attitude goes along with your play," Berenson said. "We've been after him to work harder. You can have talent, but you have to work hard and play the whole game." As the coach explains, some- one like Guptill might play for around 20 minutes a game, but only have possession of the puck for 30 seconds. It's what a play- er does with the 19-and-a-half minutes that he doesn't have the puck that makes him a better hockey player. "You've got to be working in our zone, in their zone ... tak- ing care of business and being a complete player," Berenson said. "That's what we try to do with all our players. (Guptill) has been challenged this year, and I think he's getting some of that." SINELLI SCORES: Sinelli hasn't always been a consistent presence in Michigan's lineup, appearing in just 16 of 32 games. But Berenson's gamble to play him in place of senior Lindsay Sparks paid off on Saturday night when Sinelli's snipe from the circle gave the Wolverines a comfortable two-goal lead over the Buckeyes. "I think (I just fed) off the energy from everybody," he said. "My goal was pretty lucky to be honest," he said. "The goalie just misplayed it, and I was fortunate to get the puck in the net." Black Bean& Chipotle Burger 4 ,r.. , . -. . °; > ,: k t HKILL Volcano Tecol Spicy Tuna Rol and Morer @umichunions http://myunionsare.tumblr.com XtJ Rkw MvMe t' I I