The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MICHIGAN From Page lB "Why? They've been doing the same shell drills for two, three, four years. They really work at this and they are really good at it" Michigan's swagger slowly evaporated - shots that were usually taken from deep weren't taken, passes into the lane were timid and drives to the basket led to turnovers more often than not. It all came down to turnovers: the Buckeyes capitalized by forc- ing 13 of them against a team that averages 9.3 a game. Michigan had nine in the first half alone, and ten minutes into the game, the Wolverines had more turn- overs, seven, than points scored, *six., xn five different games this year, the Wolverines have com- nitted less than seven turnovers. ?n Sunday, they had seven less tlhan 11 minutes into the game. "They came out and beat us up a bit," saud junior forward Tim Hardaway Jr. "We have to know how to control the pressure and play better." Michigan looked lost offen- STREAK From Page 1B "The thing about Jenny is that she is so smart that she knows (when) nobody else is scoring, (and) nobody else is looking to score (she) knows (she) needs to step up and needs to make plays," Barnes Arico said. "Tonight she knew that. we needed her to score, and she did what she had to do to help us find a way to win. She was incredible tonight. "We have a group of seniors that really dedicated themselves. They (were) here all summer really working on tryingto create something special. They deserve all the credit and I kind of want them to enjoy the moment but not get caught up in it." The success of the seniors has been the story for this team all sively in the first half, unsure of what to do against the contact and pressure of the home team. It scored just 22 points in the first half - a season low - and even that was after a 14-5 run to close the half. All in all, starting the second half down 12 was pretty reason- able considering how poorly the game had started for the Wolver- ines. Slowly, Michigan started to chip away in the second half. Cutting down on the turnovers helped - it committed just four. in the second half - but it also started to crash the boards with a little more ferocity and to take some of those shots it was pass- ing up earlier. "In the second half, I think we came out the way we should have came out in the first half," Burke said. "It was too late. It was two or three possessions too late." Going into the game, the big matchup was between Burke and Ohio State point guard Aaron Craft, who is regarded as one of the best defenders in the country. Burke played fine, ending with a team-high fifteen points, but he also had four turnovers to go along with just four assists. He season. When Michigan starts out slow, its seniors pick up the pieces. . Responsible for 80 percent of the Wolverines' offense, the five seniors have led this team all season. In the first half, 18 of Michigan's 19 points came from the seniors - the lone point belonged to sophomore guard Brenae Harris. Overall the seniors accounted for 44 of the 54 points scored on Sunday. Through the first 15 games of the season, Michigan ranks sev- enth in the nation in field-goal percentage at 47 percent and third nationally in 3-point field- goal percentage at 41-percent. The Badgers were able to con- tain Michigan's red-hot offense by forcing the Wolverines to use most of the shot clock dur- ing their possessions. In the first half, Michigan hit just one 3-pointer on seven attempts and wasn't able to drive as well as usual, and Craft was in his face all night. "Craft is as good as there is, as good as I've ever seen," Beilein said. "He's tremendous." Added Craft: "Any time you get to play against a great guy like. (Burke), you have some incentive to go out and see what you can do. Our defense did what it needed to do today, and that really helped." Still, Michigan found other ways to score. Burke's backup, freshman Spike Albrecht, con- tributed seven first-half points, and Hardaway contributed 12. But Hardaway needed 15 shots to score those 12 points. Burke needed 13 shots to score his 15 points. Freshman forward Nik Staus- kas, who averages almost 14 points a game, didn't score. As a team, the Wolverines made less than 40 percent of their shots, in a season where they average more than the 50 percent from the floor. "We had five freshman play. almost double-digit minutes, and they did not have a freshman see the floor," Beilein said. "It's adversity. At this time of the year, we are seeing our first top-level ended the game with a season low two 3-pointers on 13.3-per- cent shooting. Senior forward Kate Thomp- son, who normally leads the. way on the offensive side of the court, was held scoreless in the first half. She ended the game with just six points on the day on 20-percent shooting, well below her season average of 16 points per game, on 48-percent shoot- ing. Thompson did not hit her first field goal until nine minutes into the second half. The slow offenses of both teams made way for the defenses to steal the show. As they have been all season, the Wolverines were plagued by turnovers, com- mitting seven in the first 10 min- utes of play and 14 overall. Ryan committed six. Michigan was able to compensate for missed shots and turnovers with its quickness to get back on defense. teams on the road." It was close at the end. Michi- gan got to within one point with more than six minutes left in the game. Then, a fast break, one- handed alley-oop by Ohio State forward Sam Thomson lit the crowd on fire. Robinson, calmly, sank a three at the other end to tie the game. But Buckeye forward Deshaun Thomas, who led all scorers with 20 points, responded with a dunk of his own at the other end toput Ohio State back in the lead, and that was the closest Michigan got. Even to the bitter end, Michi- gan never stopped clawing. Burke had the ball with a chance to win the game, down two with 20 sec- onds left. He shot a deep three - again, with Craft in his face - as the shot clock was winding down and eight seconds left in the game. The shot went halfway in, but spun and rattled out. Ohio State made its free throws down the stretch to seal the game. Burke and the Wolverines had a chance at the end, in a game that looked out of hand from the beginning, but couldn't finish in their quest for the nation's top spot. "As much as we talk about Wisconsin's defense, our defense really kept us in the game because we weren't scoring so we had to get stops the other way," Barnes Arico said. "(But when) we weren't scoring at least they weren't scoring. So I felt a little bit better about that." Added Ryan: "Luckily our conditioning kind of came through, and we were able to get up and down the court a little bit more. We just settled in. The first half we just couldn't really find a rhythm, none of our shots were going in. I think at halftime we talked about making a new day, and that's what we did." The rebounding battle and the overall defensive stand kept Michigan alive when it was unable to find the basket. The Wolverines out rebounded the Badgers 20-15 in the first half and 35-27 overall. ALBRECHT From Page 1B And without a care in the world, Albrecht started to run the show, playing like he was the most experienced member of the Wolverines. He drew a quick foul on Ohio State guard Aaron Craft. On the next possession, he took the ball to the hole and earned Michigan's first free- throw attempts of the contest. The momentum started to slowly shift. Two minutes later, two more free throws by ,Albrecht, and the deficit was cut to 16 points. "It was great to see him out there getting his teammates involved, playing good defense and having fun," said junior swingman Hardaway Jr. And with the sparsely used reserve in command of the team, Michigan found new life. A dunk from redshirt junior center Jor-. dan Morgan followed by two more Albrecht free throws. Afewmomnentslater,Albrecht confidently stepped into a three- pointer at the top of the key to cut Michigan's deficit to 14. With the 5-foot-11, freshman on the floor, the Wolverines fin- ished the stanza on a 14-5 run. With all the big names on this roster, and all the highly-touted freshmanthathave made aname for themselves in the early going of this season, it was Albrecht who was conducting the resur- gence in the mosthostile of envi- ronments, leadingthe team with a career-high of seven points as it entered the locker room. "He definitely gave us a spark Monday, January 14, 2013 -3B out there," Hardaway Jr said. "We're happy that he came out here and just tried to play his game and play in the flow of the offense, and that's what we need from him continuing on." It was that spark that caused Beilein to substitute Albrecht into the game with less than four minutes gone by in the sec- ond half. With the Wolverines facing a 13-point deficit, the reserve stuck to his role. Play- ing alongside Burke, he moved the ball around on offense and created havoc on defense, even intercepting a pass that led to a layup from freshman forward Mitch McGary, which narrowed the deficit to eight points. "He was terrific in there," Beilein said. "He was very steady when he was in there and when we played the two little guys in there together, that was even better." Though Albrecht's statistical contribution in the second half was miniscule'- he only had a rebound and a steal in four min- utes - his handprints were all over the ignition of Michigan's attempted comeback, which got as close as two points in the waning seconds of the contest. The coaches rewarded him with his most playing time since the second week of the season. And even when he appeared to play outside of himself, the coaching staff took it as an encouraging sign "He took a step-back three in transition, which probably isn't (what he does best), but you've got to applaud that - he's not wilting, he wants to make it hap- pen," Beilein said. WANT TO WRITE FOR THE DAILY? 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