4B - November 18, 201- in loss, a silver lining: McGary By SIMON KAUFMAN* Daily Sports Writer AMES, Iowa - With 16:17 remaining in the first half, Mich- igan basketball fans rejoiced as sophomore forward Mitch McGary entered the game for the Wolverines to make his season debut. At the 14:50 mark, Michigan coach John Beilein nodded his head as McGary went up for a defensive rebound and came back down with the ball in his hands - a familiar sight for the big inan who averaged more than six rebounds per game last year. A little more than two min- utes later, the Wolverines' bench stood up when McGary put up an offensive rebound for his first points of the season, then fol- lowed it up 18 seconds later with a steal and finish on the other end. With 11:5 on the clock in the first-half, McGary fell backward while trying to make a defensive play. He lay on his back - the back that until Sunday night had been injured and kept him side- lined this year - and for just a moment, Michigan waited. The 6-foot-10 forward shot up his hands, but not in pain, and he reached for the hands of team- mates who pulled him up. McGary stood up, and the maize and blue breathed a collec- tive sigh of relief- a little longer this time, a little more stress- free. Before the season started, the country was told to keep its eyes on McGary. He was one of five players named to the AP preseason All-American team, and on Sunday night in Michigan's game against Iowa State, McGary found out that the country listened to the pre- season predictions - he was a target. He endured tough physi- cal defense, and perhaps an even ,more grueling assault of verbal abuse thrashed out by the stu- dent section at Hilton Coliseum where lowa State (3-0) upset No. 7 Mchigan, 77-70. "They have great fans. It's a little shaky when they single out one person," McGary said. The insults didn't seem to faze him, but his presence alone on the court couldn't propel Michi- gan toward a win in its first road BASKETBALL From Page1B gan away down the str Iowa State forwar Ejim, just like McG questionable for the go like Michigan's star pla made a big impact. Hec jump shot to dwindle State deficit to three that marked the last Wolverines would hol The Canadian scored on 14 shots. McGary, too, woul blend in with the envirt his return, making his felt on both ends of.th his first game back fro injury. He cleaned up a: rim, finishing with ni: and six rebounds. H hands on defense helper momentum early in th half when Michigan gr lead, and he finished with four steals. He also tol- " erated chants V against him t throughout the game, W namely one bearing his last name with an The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com orMitch or Spike or Carisor any- body." Six minutes into the half, Stauskas drove on the left side and gently banked a shot that -etch. bounced around the rim before d Melvin dropping in to extend the Wol- ary, was verine lead. On the opposite ame. And end, he grabbed a Cyclones miss, yer, Ejim dribbled the length of the floor drained a and kicked out to sophomore the Iowa forward Glenn Robinson III for - a shot the 3-pointer to put Michigan up time the 53-45. d a lead. A few minutes later, with 22 points a hand in his face, he drained a.3-pointer from the left side. dn't just Later, with the shot clock wind- inment in ing down, he flew through the presence left side of the lane and soared e floor in from yards away from the rim to m a back slam it with his right hand. round the Trouble was, he didn't have a ne points lot of help. Robinson and LeVert is active combined to shoot 6-for-23 and d turn the 2-for-10 behind the arc, and me second freshman point guard Der- abbed the rick Walton's jump shot wasn't steady. "Obviously I think we're Ve're a better a better team when we're eam when making threes, ,1 . but we were e re making getting really good shots threes.' today," Staus kas said. "And those are shots Sophomore forward Mitch McGary made his season debut after sitting out the first two games of the year with a back injury, game of the season. It did, how- ever, allow for a sneak peek of what's to come from the Ches- terton, Ind. native in his second year. , Michigan (2-1) 'started the game with the same lineup it had used in its first two games, but McGary came in early to replace redshirt junior forward Jon Hor- ford who has started at center in McGary's absence. He made a quick impact, putting in eight points in the first'half. McGary had only one point in the second half, but still he brought elements to the game that Horford and fifth-year senior forward Jordan Morgan simply cannot. He scrapped for tough rebounds, fighting off sev- eral Cyclones by himself around the rim, and came up with four steals, grabbing and clawing at Iowa State players with the ball. "It was great to be back," McGary said. "(I'm) just trying to find the chemistry on the court. It's difficult in the first game." Some parts of McGary's game did look rusty. He struggled at times to keep up with the Cyclone's fast pace and his tim- ing on offense appeared delayed - all byproducts of not having played at game speed since April. "Now he's got to get into shape to be able to play," Beilein said. "The bigs can't play for more than three to four minutes any- how because of the fact of how busy the game is for bigs right now. So he'll go in, and he'll go out, but the timing is the thing that he's got to work on now." Certainly, this is a different Michigan team with McGary healthy. If he's able to adjust his timing and show the same dominance that brought him the spotlight during his perfor- mance in the NCAA Tournament last season, he'll quickly learn to embrace being the target. BY THE NUMBERS MtGary's 2013-14 debut 22 Minutes played. McGaryentered less than four minutes into the-first half and playedforthe mjaority ofthe game. 9 Points,on 4-of-7shooting. Rebounds,including two offensive boards. -for4 - unkind, four- letter word preceding it. "It was alittle shakywhen they single out one person," McGary said about the crowd. "But they got a good atmosphere." Down the stretch, an inability to secure the ball doomed Michi- gan. Passes were tipped, dribbles were interrupted, and even if the Wolverines retained possession, their rhythm was thrown off, and they couldn't get open shots. Sophomore guard Nik Staus- kas did what he could to keep the Wolverines in it. With no clear option on the team to make the difficult shot, Stauskas seemed ready to take the responsibility. He led the team with 20 points and six assists. With sophomore wings Glenn Robinson III and Caris LeVert struggling to find the basket, Michigan coach John Beilein started to call plays for Stauskas. "Mitch had just one full prac- tice under his belt," Beilein said. "Glenn was not having his best day. He'll have better days ahead of him. So Nik had the hot hand, it made sense. We'd do the same thing if Glenn had the hot hand that guys nor- mally make. So we're not going to be to worried about it. Hopefully next game those shots go down for us." After the Iowa State lead advanced to 69-63, Stauskas tried to bring Michigan back with an off-balance 3-point make and a nifty bounce pass to assis a Robinson layup, but the offense came to ahalt there. Down five, Robinson missed a 3-pointer and after a Staus- kas offensive rebound, LeVert missed another one. The Cyclones would close the game out from the free-throw line, and then the Cyclone faithful would spill onto the court. Fans danced, they held up signs. Iowa State coach Fred Hoiberg cracked jokes after- wards, and the home players left smiling. It was an occasionto celebrate, and Michigan was unlucky to be excluded from the afterparty. "It was an awesome environ- ment for anyone that loves the game of basketball," Stauskas said. "I think both teams had a lot of fun out there." THE MICHIGAN DAILY TOP-10 POLL Each week, Daily sports staffers fill out ballots, with first place votes receiving 10 points, second-place votes receiving nine, and so on. 1. ALABAMA (29): 2. FLORIDA STATE (3): 3. OHIO STATE: Carlos Alabama beat an The Seminoles were , Hyde had more rushing unranked Mississippi ruthless. They wouldn't yards than Illinois had State by only 13 points. , even let Syracuse score as students in attendance. Nick Saban may be on the many points as letters in hot seat. its name 4. BAYLOR: The Bears' raided Texas Tech, rushing for 340 yards and scoring over 60 points. 9. STANFORD: Remember the last time you saw USC rushing the field after beating Stanford? Neither do we. S. OREGON: Guess Utahns really don't like olives, huh? They didn't even come close to Oregon. 10. LSU: Les Miles spent the bye week smiling because he wasn't L coaching Michigan. 6. AUBURN: Nothing 7. MISSOURI: Missouri's special happened. Tigers holder could really learn win over Georgia. something from Drew Dileo. 8. CLEMSON: Georgia was seen leaving with yellow jackets on to comfort themselves after.. UNDER THT 0 I visit store.michigandaily.com to place Posters are also available for purchase Monday - Fri Office of Student Publications, 420 Mayn 4 t 4