7 - Friday, January 10, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Winsconsin: Michigan survives late scare WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Goree stays out of foul trouble By LEV FACHER "She has a special knack for Daily Sports Writer offensive rebounds," Barnes Arico said. When junior forward Cyesha Thanks to her improved fit- Goree is on the court, the Michi- ness level and better defensive gan women's basketball team can discipline that has helped her to go head to head with almost any stay out of foul trouble, Goree has team in the country. been able to avoid the bench and Fortunately for the Wolver- energize the Wolverines for lon- ines, Goree does just that quite ger in each game. Thursday, she often. In Michigan's victory didn't pick up her first personal Thursday night over Wisconsin, foul until midway through the she wound up on the floor after first half and made it through the taking charges or diving for loose rest of the contest without com- balls more than the rest of her mitting another. teammates combined. Goree got involved in the ball But the trouble for the Wol- distribution as well, connecting verines, at least in the nonconfer- with senior forward Val Driscoll ence season, has been that Goree on an over-the-top lob with 16 doesn't see nearly as many min- minutes remaining in the game. utes as her fellow starters. Thurs- "I just always try to make sure day, junior guard Shannon Smith I'm active," Goree said. "It's nice played 18 first-half minutes, while to have that connection." Goree was on the floor for just 13. The three-forward look featur- That disparity is still an ing Goree, Elmblad and Driscoll improvement from what Michi- is one Barnes Arico has gone gan experienced in the season's with increasingly often as the early going. On Nov. 20 against season has progressed. Though Pittsburgh, for instance, Goree it started when Smith sustained played 22 minutes in a game that a back injury and didn't play in a remained competitive through- late-November tournament, the out the 40 minutes of play, as formation has stuck since her compared to junior forward return. Nicole Elmblad, who clocked 38. The bigger lineup usually costs "Cyesha is an energizer for us," sophomore guard Madison Ris- said Michigan coach Kim Barnes tovski, one of Michigan's leading Arico. "We need to keep her on scorers, a starting spot. But it also the court." puts Goree in a position to excel, The increased playing time for giving the Wolverines a distinct Goree was somewhat inevitable advantage in terms of rebound- - she knew she'd have ample on- ing and helping to mitigate the court opportunities on a roster effect of their undersized back- with a dearth of experience at court. And Ristovski still is on the the forward position. But instead floor when it counts - Thursday, of becoming complacent, she she keyed a late-first half run to used the offseason to drop over put Michigan ahead for good and 20 pounds. While her off-season recorded eight points on just five training-has paid dividends all field goal attempts. seaso*;s eshe seems closer than "That (look) is something ever to being able to put together we've emphasized the last cou- a full game. ple practices," Barnes Arico That showed Thursday. said. "They were coming in with Though her time was still (Michala) Johnson, who was somewhat limited, Goree was averaging 16 points per game. involved in every phase of the We spent a lot of time working on game, recording 10 points and 15 what she wanted to do and trying rebounds. to take that away." ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily Freshman guard Madison Ristovski's eight points and three assists may not stand out in the box score, but her contributions late in the first half sparked Michigan. Behind Ristovski, first-half surge, Wolverines get past By MAX COHEN Daily Sports Editor There was a pendulum-like flow to the opening nine min- utes of the Michigan women's basketball team's Big Ten home opener against WISCONSIN 62 Wisconsin. MICHIGAN 70 One team attacked and the other responded, and neither took more than a three-point lead until midway through the back- and-forth first half. Then, the pendulum broke. Sophomore guard Madison Ristovski sparked the Wolver- ines, leading a 19-5 run to give Michigan a lead that it never relinquished. The Wolverines survived a late Wisconsin rally to hold on for a 70-62 victory. After starting the run with a dish inside to junior forward Cyesha Goree, Ristovski con- tinued her personal streak, contributing to Michigan's next seven points. Following a Wis- consin free throw that tied the game at 16, she gave the Wolver- ines the lead for good by hitting a 3-pointer, the team's first of the night. Michigan (2-0 Big Ten, 11-4 overall) didn't score its next basket for two minutes, but by then it could afford the brief lapse. The Wolverines created two turnovers and held the Bad- gers (1-1, 8-6) scoreless for three minutes, leading to a 7-0 run. From then on, the pendulum rarely swung back in Wiscon- sin's favor. "They're going to get punch- es, we're going to get punches," Goree said. "It's all about who can take the hit and hit the next punch harder. We kept fighting and we got our lead, and we kept building up our lead." Ristovski continued to use her hot hand when the Wolver- ines' scoring resumed, finding junior guard Nicole Elmblad for a layup. Then, on Michigan's next possession, the sophomore scored another of her own after an Elmblad offensive rebound. The Wolverines led 23-16 and didn't slow down. Before Wisconsin forward Jackie Gulczynski made a 3-pointer with 38 seconds left in the first half, Michigan held a 33-20 advantage. By the time the run was complete, Michi- gan had forced seven turnovers in 10 minutes and had given the ball away just three times in the entire first half. Michigan displayed even more offensive firepower near the end of the first half. Fresh- man guard Siera Thompson drained a deep 3-pointer to extend the Wolverines's lead to 26-18. Ristovski made the team's second consecutive 3-pointer by hitting one in transition with 3:19 left in the half, finishing her seven-minute spurt of eight points and two assists. "When she's on the court, we're usually doing pretty well," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. The Wolverines closed out the half with a 35-23 lead, the product of the 19-5 run and the 11 turnovers they forced on Badgers defense. They hung on in the second half to improve to 11-0 this season when leading at the break. The Wolverines continued a balanced scoring effort to extend their lead to 25 on two separate occasions in the sec- ond half. Four players scored in double figures for Michigan, led by Goree with 15. "We have such a balanced attack," Barnes Arico said. "On any given night, we can have five or six or sometimes even seven kids be our leading scorer. I think that puts a lot of pressure on other team's defenses." It looked as if Michigan would cruise to victory, but the game abruptly, swung back in the Badgers' favor once the Wol- verines took a 60-35lead. Wisconsin strung together a late 23-4 run, cutting the lead to single digits for the first time since the first half. But Michi- gan halted the near-comeback with solid free-throw shooting in the final minutes to escape at home. 'M' spoils Big Ten debut of Pinnacle Bank Arena ByNEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor chance. We have been on the other end of that last year for a Big Ten Championship on the line. Road games in Big Ten play Fortunately, itwent our way." have proven to be heart-stoppers. Thursday night, Jordan Mor- And for the second straight gan proved himself capable of time, the Michigan men's basket- handling the starting role as ball team Michigan's big man, and he has could take MICHIGAN 71 Nik Stauskas to thank for it. The heart at the NEBRASKA 70 fifth-year senior, who has strug- end. After gled to find consistency with a narrow increased minutes since Mitch escape against Minnesota a week McGary was ruled out indefinite- ago, the Wolverines (3-0 Big Ten, ly, had a teammate to help him 11-4 overall) slipped by Nebraska, find it. 71-70, in Lincoln on Thursday Stauskas, the sophomore night. guard, has been the Wolverines's Down one point with 25 see- best distributor this season and onds remaining, freshman point found Morgan under the basket guard Derrick Walton drove the three times Thursday night for ball around the right side of the easy baskets. perimeter, turned left up the Morgan finished with 15 points baseline and converted the layup on 7-for-9 shooting. Throughout while drawing a foul. He missed the night, Morgan set screens and the free throw, giving the Corn- rolled to the basket, only to find huskers (0-3, 8-6) an opportunity himself alone without a Corn- to win it. husker to contest his shot. In a series that was reminis- "He can get things done," cent of the Wolverines's devas- Beilein said. "He just needs to tating loss to have confi- Indiana last dence. We season, consec- will take it if utive Nebraska "Wie have been it is him one layups rolled night and (red- off the rim. On the other end shirt junior Mercifully for forward) Jon Michigan, the of that last year (Horford) the red lights of . other night. the backboard for a Big Ten Who knows lit up to let the ,, *~ * who is going to Wolverines c hampionship get this down, know that they but Jordan was could finally really good." smile. He wasn't "The ball was up and it looked the only Wolverine to shoot at like it had a chance," Michigan a high clip. Sophomore forward coach John Beilein told report- Glenn Robinson III had a game- ers. "The next one had a better high 19 points on 75-percent shooting, including a breakaway dunk in the final two minutes to give Michigan a two-point lead. Stauskas added 12 points on nine shots, drilling two 3-point- ers and tallying four assists. Walton's game-winning play at the end might not have been possible if not for an even more impressive shot to end the first half. He capped a sluggish period from Michigan with a halfcourt prayer that found the bottom of the net as the clock hit all zeros. "We were a little bit down because they had just came back and hit a couple of threes," Robinson said. "After Derrick hit that shot, it amped us up. I thought we had great energy going into halftime." Though Michigan shot 57 percent in the half, pace of play was slow and a slew of 3-point- ers by Husker guard Ray Gal- legos helped to keep the score close. Gallegos, a thorn in the Wolverines' side the last two years, added another triple in the second half to tie the game with 4:38 left to play. Nebraska had plenty to play for in the first Big Ten game at the newly opened Pinnacle Bank Arena. Already 0-2 in con- ference play, a headlining win over the Wolverines would have done wonders for the program. Terran Petteway, playing in his first season since transfer- ring from Texas Tech, is fifth in the Big Ten in scoring and poured in 16 points Thursday, though he came two short of completing the upset. "We knew (Petteway) was going to get the ball," Morgan Freshman guard Derrick Walton Jr. scored 10 points, including a halfcourt buzzer beater at halftime, in Michigan's win. said. "He just had a downhill mindset, so it was on us to try and stay in front of him without fouling him and putting him on the free throw line and then try and get the rebound. Our guys did a really good job of that." With Stauskas guarding him, Petteway caught the ball on the left wing in the game's final pos- session. He drove to his right toward the rim, and his attempt at a game winner missed. Leslee Smith's follow-up also rimmed out, and the Wolverines's hearts could start beating again. 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