The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, November 21, 2013- 7A * The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, November 21, 2013- 7A Career night earns'W' 'M' faces world's tallest teenager By LEV FACHER Nicole Elmblad and Shannon Daily Sports Writer Smith. And despite having to deal with Anderson, Goree managed 10 It took four separate scoring points and three rebounds. outbursts for the Michigan wom- Smith, easily Michigan's most en's basketball team to finally put potent offensive weapon so far away Pittsburgh on Wednesday this season, was held to eight night at Crisler Center, and even points, making just three field the fourth one wasn't a sure thing. goals on nine attempts. But the But the Wolverines responded well, as Wolverines PITTSBURGH 75 four players ended up with double held on in MICHIGAN 83 figures, more than making up for the end, Smith's off night. earning an 83-75 winthanks to the "I don't think we got as much best night of freshman guard Siera transition as we normally do," Thompson's Michigan career - Elmblad said. "But in the half she scored a career-high 22 points, court, we were able to knock down while junior guard Nicole Elmblad shots. People have been getting to tied her career high with 19. the gym and working." With Michigan (4-2) leading But despite Michigan's sharp- 4-0 thanks to a pair of baskets shooting, the lead didn't last long from sophomore forward Cyesha - the Panthers (2-2) tied the Goree, Pittsburgh coach Suzie game at 17 on a 3-pointer from McConnell-Serio found herself in Asia Logan off an assist from Cora need of a quick answer. It came McManus. in the form of redshirt freshman The Wolverines jumped out to Marvadene "Bubbles" Anderson anotherleadonan8-2 runthatwas - a 6-foot-11 center from Jamai- charged by pairs of free throws ca - who checked into the game from Ristovski and Thompson, as with 16:40 remaining in the half well as a smooth Goree jump shot The Wolverines also managed from the top of the key. to work around Anderson on the But once again, Michigan's offensive end, extending their momentum was short-lived - the early lead to 10-4 on a trio of jump- eight-point lead shrank to three by ers from sophomore guard Madi- halftime and was cut to one on a son Ristovski and junior guards Logan jumper moments into the second half. The late first-half advantage wouldn't be the last one Michigan squandered on the evening, either. After a pair of layups from Smith helped put the Wolverines up nine with 10 minutes remaining, Pitts- burgh came storming back once again, using a 7-0 run to whittle the deficit to two points midway through the half. It was the fourth Michigan out- burst of the evening that finally put the nail in the Panthers' cof- fin, but just barely - the Wolver- ines held a lead of at least seven for several minutes, but Pitts- burgh trailed only 73-69 with 1:20 remaining. "Every time we'd make a run, they would come back and chal- lenge us and push us," Barnes Arico said. "But we were able to finish it. We were able to make free throws and get to the free- throw line, which is something we've been emphasizinglately." The Panthers couldn't make a final push as the clock wound down. Free throws from Smith and then Elmblad pushed the lead to 77-69, leaving both Thompson and Elmblad with career nights and putting Michigan two games over .500 for the first time this season. By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer Before the start of the season, Michigan women's basketball coach Kim Barnes Arico said size was going to be her squad's biggest concern. So you can imagine the night- mare when Pittsburgh's (2-2 overall) 6-foot-11 redshirt fresh- man center, Marvadene "Bub- bles" Anderson, came to town. Anderson holds the title for the world's tallest teenager. The Jamaica native usu- ally starts for the Panthers, but against Michigan (4-2), she came off the bench, which allowed the Wolverines to jump out to a fast 4-0 start from a pair of bas- kets from junior forward Cyesha Goree. In response, Pittsburgh turned to its secret weapon, and everyone noticed the min- ute Anderson checked into the game. Anderson is over a foot taller than the Wolverines' start- ing backcourt and stands seven inches above Michigan's tall- est player, 6-foot-4 senior Val Driscoll. Her presence, though, didn't faze the Wolverines, who went on to beat Pittsburgh, 83-75, for their third straight win. When Anderson first checked in, it took Michigan a few min- utes to get acclimated to match- ing up against such a big player. Fifteen seconds after Anderson entered the game, she had an easy layup for the Panthers' first points of the night. But despite the unbalanced matchup in the paint, the Wolverines were even- tually able to find some offense down low, even when Anderson was on the court. "I just had to get out and run more, run and get out in transi- tion and try to get my points," said junior forward Cyesha Goree. "(On defense) I looked to take away her strength, my guards helping to dig in so she felt doubled, forcing her to kick it back out." Anderson's other-worldly size has plagued her with knee trou- bles, and it shows when she's on the court. In transition, she is usually strides behind her teammates and requires more bench time than others. Michigan used the delay to attack the paint early in PttEA MATnCW/naily Pittsburgh forward Marvadene Anderson is a presence, standing at 6-foat-li. the possession. But once Ander- son got back on defense, the Wolverines typically stuck with working the perimeter. "I thought we did a tremen- dous job tonight of making Bubbles try to come out on ball screens," Barnes Arico said. "She wasn't really leaving the paint, so we took advantage with our outside shot." Anderson found herself on the bench late in the first half, but two quick baskets from Goree, followed by foul trouble for Pan- ther forward Asia Logan, forced Pittsburgh coach Suzie McCo- nnell-Serio to turn to her red- shirt freshman earlier than she wanted. "I don't know many women that are 6-foot-11," Barnes Arico said. "And any time she got deep in the paint, we knew we were going to be in trouble, but I thought Val Driscoll did an out- standing job on her in the first half." To start the second half for Michigan, freshman guard Siera Thompson drained a 3-pointer from the right side. A quick Pan- ther turnover immediately after gave the ball to Goree who hit an uncontested bank shot from the paint. McConnell-Serio turned to her bench once again, as Goree made the basket and motioned for Anderson to check into the game. On Anderson's first pos- session, she drew a quick foul from Goree and hit an easy shot over her after the inbounds pass. Anderson's presence for Pitts- burgh is undeniable and her ceiling is extremely high, but her early production on the stat sheet has been limited because of her shorter minutes. She fin- ished Wednesday's loss with 12 points and five rebounds, just around averages nine-points and four-and-a-half-rebounds. "It was a challenge and you look at her and you're like 'wow she's tall,' " said junior guard Nicole Elmblad. "She was able to finish a lot on us and a couple times she did stuff on us that we didn't like, but for the most part I thought we did a pretty good job of boxing her out on the offen- sive end." Added Barnes Arico: "We tried to limit her touches, and we tried to double her as best as we could. Overall, I thought we did a very decent job on her. We made her turn the ball over a little bit, and we got her into foul trouble, which I thought helped us as well." In the end, the Wolverines' starting frontcourt, Goree and Elmblad, won the battle, gener- ating just enough offensive and defensive power down low to win the game. The two finished with 10 and 19 points, respec- tively. Elmblad matched her career high in points and also added six rebounds. A third-straight win was big for Michigan, but playing against the world's tallest teenager will be memorable for years to come. TERESA MATHEW/Daily Freshman guard Siera Thompson scored a career-high 22 points in Wednesday's 83-75 win over Pittsburgh. A look back on Rachael Mack's career By MATTHEWKIPNIS Daily Sports Writer In the first chapter of senior forward Rachael Mack's Michi- gan legacy, she stood on Phyl- lis Ocker Field for the first home game of her Michigan field hockey career. It was Sept., 10, 2010. Mack looked up at the scoreboard to see the Wolverines staring at a 3-0 deficit against No. 14 James ' Madison. Unintimidated by this disadvantage, Mack scored her first two goals to lead Michigan to a 4-3 victory. Only one month into her career, she was a star, and this was one of the first indicators of the successful career that lay ahead for Mack. She was born on Jan.24,1992 to Derek and Fiona Mack in Broms- grove, England. Mack grew up with a passion for sports but didn't play field hockey until the age of11 - early compared to most Ameri- cans, but late in England. "I played tennis when I was younger, and I always wanted to play a sport," Mack said. "Any kind of ball I wanted to play, and I never played hockey before I went to the (Bromsgrove) school. I started at school when I actually didn't want to play it, as I wanted to play foot- ball, soccer, instead but then I got into hockey and from minute one I really loved the game." Once Mack picked up the stick, she didn't look back. Mack played for Olton high school and a club team in England's Women's Pre- mier Division, among others, prior to coming to Michigan. When Mack started to serious- * ly consider her choices, she knew that she would somehow end up in the United States. Mack had dreamt of coming to the United States at a young age. When her father took a job working for an American company, a nine-year old Mack was afforded the oppor- tunity to live in Texas for a sum- mer, which just enhanced that dream. "It was right at that age where everything in America was amaz- ing and big so that was really fun," Mack said. "I always wanted to come to America, whether it was for hockey or for tennis. It was something I wanted to do." Mack's coach of three years at Olton, Michael Boal, gave the tip to an old coaching friend, Michi- gan assistant coach Ryan Lang- ford, that Mack decided she was going to leave England for college. "First impression was kind of a 'wow factor'," Langford said. "I saw this girl playing for England's under-18 national team, and when I saw her step on the field I thought she held such a great presence, and it looked like she had an aura around her of strength and confi- dence and that translated directly into play. She was very talented from the first day I saw her." Langford knew from that point on that he needed to recruit Mack, and invited the family to visit. Like many students who tour Ann Arbor, Mack fell in love. "We were driving up State Street, and my mum was look- ing around and she was just like 'Yeah, I think you should go here, Rachael,' " Mack said. "Every new thing I saw, every step along the way of my visit made it more prominent in my mind that Michi- gan was where I wanted to be." While Michigan was on a road trip to Louisville, Langford received a call from the future phenom - Mack was coming to Ann Arbor. Unlike most international play- ers playing field hockey in Amer- ica, Mack knew she was going to stay for four years. Some athletes may only stay for a year or two to work on their game and head home to play professionally. "I wanted to get a great educa- tion, and Michigan offered that, so I did come thinking that I would stay here four years in my mind," Mack said. "After my first year, I knew I was going to stay here because it's awesome." Not only was there the added pressure of being a freshman play- ing James Madison in front of the home crowd, but the coach stand- ing on the other side of the field was none other than the reason Mack wound up at Michigan - Boal. "I scored my first two goals, and funny enough the two goals I scored were the ones me and Michael had worked on before I came here," Mack said. "It was kind of cyclical that it would come back to that. It was really nice to have him there and be able to see my first goals even though he was the opposing coach. I told him, 'I am sorry, but I am not really sorry."' Mack finished her freshman year with 16 goals and 36 points, and led the Wolverines to the Big Ten title. She won the Big Ten Tournament MVP award, NFCHA All-American third-team honors, All-Big Ten second team, Michigan Rookie of the Year and the Michigan athletic academic achievement award. "I scored a lot of goals my fresh- man year, and my dad was like 'You should look up the record, go see it,' so I did," Mack said. "He was the one that initially set my mind that you are going to break that record by the end of senior year." And so Mack continued to score en route to the Michigan goals record. She led the team in scoring every year after her fresh- man year. Mack continued to win awards each season while getting closer to achieving her objective. It was only fitting it would finally be broken against archrival Ohio State in overtime. Redshirt junior Lauren Hauge fed Mack the ball just outside the circle, and she carried it, spun around a defender and fired a shot to the top-right side of the net to make her mark as Michigan's all- time leadingscorer. As an added bonus, Mack was awarded Big Ten Player of the Year and was a unanimous choice for Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year. In the field hockey team's final banquet, the player who held the record before Mack, April Fanzo- ni, was in Ann Arbor and present- ed Mack her own record-breaking ball she scored against the Buck- eyes. Fanzoni and Mack had been talking prior to the goal, and Fan- zoni was there cheering Mack on. "It was funny, she had scored 68 goals and I have 73 now, and she said, 'You know I am glad that you have overran my record by five, because if it was just one then it would have been painful," Mack said. "But now you have done it by a few more so I'm okay with that.' Now that Mack's career as a Wolverine is over, she looks for- ward to the senior game, as it will be her last opportunity to represent Michigan. Once she graduates, Mack hopes to join the British national team. Hav- ing played for the junior national team before college and improv- ing her game in the states, Mack is on the right track to achieve her goal. And so in the final chapter of Mack's Michigan legacy, on Nov. 3, 2013, Mack stood on Phyl- lis Ocker Field for the last home game of her Michigan career. The Wolverines were staring down a 3-1 deficit, just like her first home game. Mack scored the final two goals of her career, leading Michi- gan to a 4-3 victory and finished as the Michigan field hockey team's all-time leadingscorer. t I I