Page 4- The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - January 28, 1991 BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK Attempt to spark Crisler crowd fails by Theodore Cox Daily Basketball Writer In yet another attempt to excite the less than enthusiastic Crisler Arena crowd, someone placed fliers in the student section before last Thursday's Indiana match-up. The fliers implored the fans to get involved in the game and gave examples of certain chants fans could use to do so. "Enough has been said about the lack of enthusiasm of the fans in Crisler Arena. It is time to quit talking, and generate some noise in support of our team and their efforts," the notice began. Apparently, the arena staff didn't think too highly of the work. Security tried to collect as many fliers as they could before the game began. The seats were, however, covered with Maize and Blue pom-poms. ALL WRAPPED UP: Michigan guard Kirk Taylor had his right wrist taped up during the Illinois game Saturday. He apparently sprained his thumb against Indiana last Thursday, but says it shouldn't affect his game in any significant way. HANGING ON: The Wolverines turned the ball over only 12 times against Illinois. This is much improved from the time early in the season when the team averaged 20. MISSING THE MARK: Michigan center Eric Riley has been struggling of late from field. He was 3-8 against Illinois, and 1-8 vs. Indiana. His frontcourt mate Sam Mitchell is having shooting problems as well. But his are not in the paint, rather they are from the free throw line. Mitchell missed three straight against the Hoosiers. SALUTING OUR TROOPS: The Fighting Illini added small American flags to the front of their uniforms in support of our troops in the Persian Gulf. Illinois Assistant coach Jimmy Collins has a son who is presently in Saudi Arabia. "That's just our little way of showing our support," coach Lou Henson said. Big Ten Through Jan. 26,1991 Men's Basketball Standings Conference Games All Games TEAM WL PCT. W L PCT. Ohio State 7 0 1.000 17 0 1.000 Indiana 6 1 .857 18 2 .900 Michigan St. 5 3 .625 12 6 .667 Wisconsin 4 3 .571 10 7 .588 Illinois 3 3 .500 13 6 .684 Purdue 3 4 .429 11 6 .647 Minnesota 3 4 .429 10 7 .588 Iowa 2 4 .333 13 5 .722 Michigan 2 6 .250 9 9 .500 Northwestern 0 7 .000 5 12 .294 .:* }:* }*.1:" ": :...1.'::*'tiY:*:"*.:'"t:: :'::"":"::'..t:.':'. ..Y.** .1.{.:*: :V '::.":: ::":;:.." ..1 :'Y. '}".":'t:{: t1.: . : Tolbert Taylor Both guards Tony Tolbert of Michigan and Brooks Taylor of Illinois wear the same number, are the same height, and look similar. We could have sworn the two were brothers until Taylor passed the ball. Michigan forward Sam Mitchell posts up against Deon Thomas. Mitchell scored six straight points for the Wolverines. GOTTESMAN Continued from page 1 Every other player - overall and in league games only - is shooting below the .500 mark. All of that means a Wolverine basket on any particular shot is an exception and not the rule. Not a good sign - especially in the Big Ten, where shooting percentages average around 50 percent. In fact, Michigan is dead last in shooting percentage. Dead last: that is, behind even Northwestern and Wisconsin, who the Wolverines beat. Indiana and Ohio State lead the conference at about 55 percent shooting. Now back to the original statistic. Michigan is 4-0 when shooting over 50 percent from the field and'5-9 when shooting under 50 percent. The victories came against Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Chicago State and Marquette - not exactly teams against whom 80 percent shooting is necessary to win. And the five triumphs where the Wolverines hit under 50 percent didn't exactly come against UNLV: Utah, Boston University, Pennsylvania, North- western and Wisconsin. Against Illinois, Michigan shot 44.8 percent from the field. Time and time again the Wolverines went to the hoop, only to see their shots bound off the backboard, then the rim, then usually the floor -- and not by way of the net. Even free throws weren't dropping; Michigan shot 58.8 percent from the line (10 for 17). Missing that many free throws just won't cut it. Demetrius Calip is a good case study of the Wolverines' shooting woes. While he led Michigan on Saturday with 25 points, he shot only 41.7 percent from the field. Now, shooting 41 percent every so often isn't all that bad - especially if you're scoring that much - but winning teams seem to have at least one player a game who goes absolutely nuts. Kind of like Illinois' Larry Smith. Here's a guy who entered Saturday's game averaging 12.3 points per game on 44.9 percent shooting. Against Michigan, he bombed away for 28 points on 9-of- 14 shooting from the floor (64 percent) and 10-of-11 from the line. He brought Illinois the victory - and Michigan just doesn't have a similar capability. Just to add some perspective, poor shooting is a new phenom- enon for Michigan. Two years ago, they nearly set an NCAA record for shooting percentage en route to a national championship and last season they shot a respectable 51.3 percent. I guess it really is true that to win consistently, you need to shoot consistently. Or was that obvious before we started? Smith shoots down Wolverine comeback by Andrew Gottesman Daily Basketball Writer Michigan may have controlled the first half of its game with Illinois Saturday afternoon, but the Illini seemed to be missing something. That something was Larry Smith, who exploded for 22 second half points en route to a career-high 28. Smith also had 10 rebounds, seven in the second frame, and four assists. Smith's flurry was, without a doubt, the key to Illinois' 72-67 victory. "A couple of things were crit- ical factors," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "Let's start with the obvious: Larry Smith. "He did an excellent job in penetrating. We had (Demetrius) Calip and (Michael) Talley on him - smaller guards that he was able to take advantage of." The senior from Alton, Ill., entered the game averaging 12.3 and 5.6 rebounds per game. But Saturday, he brought the Illini back from a halftime deficit, helped hold off the Wolverines, and sealed the game by hitting two free throws with 9.7 seconds remaining. "The last two or three weeks I've been doing a good job in practice taking shots that were there for me," Smith said. "(Before) I was taking bad shots, like I was forcing the issue." Smith definitely forced the issue after halftime Saturday. He scored 22 of Illinois' 40 points during the second half, including 20 of its last 28. At one point, he scored six in a row to give the Illini their first lead, 50-49. Three more times, the Wolver- ines would pull ahead and three more times Smith put Illinois back on top with four- or six- point spurts. Calip FREDDIE Continued from page 1 I've grown smarter and wiser. I make sure that I get what I need to get done, done." Last fall Hunter proved this. Over the summer, he demonstrated to the Michigan coaching staff that he could play basketball. But, he still had to prove'to the Big Ten that he was progressing towards his degree at an appropriate pace. Too often, he took classes part time so he could Work to pay tuition. This was his fourth year of school, and he had only junior standing academically. So while Hunter was learning the ropes of Michigan basketball, he also was taking 18 credit hours towards his degree in industrial psychology. He assured the con- ference he would take 15 credit hours this winter and he would take classes over the spring and summer. On top of this, he surrendered a $1,000 check he received in August from winning the Gus Macker Slam Dunk contest in Port Huron. At the time he won it, Hunter knowing of his aspirations to play for Michigan, refused to cash it. "It was a shock just looking at it and seeing Frederick Hunter and $1,000," Hunter said. "I'd love to cash this, but I didn't want to jeopardize any future. I decided it was best to wait. I was hard to give up, but if I had to make the decision over again, I would have done the same thing." - He eventually donated the money to his alma mater, U of D High. He made all of these commit- ments without even knowing wheth- January 9 was the date when Hunter was cleared by the Big Ten to play for the Wolverines with junior standing. A day later, Fisher gave Hunter his first stab at Big Ten action against Iowa. He did everything he was supposed to: set picks, grab re- bounds, and play defense. Fisher quickly saw that Hunter was the missing forward he so desperately needed. Although he is only 6-foot- 5, Hunter is strong and a good leaper. He is also one of Michigan's smartest players. He rarely turns the ball over - a Michigan nemesis this year. "Freddie Hunter is a gift from heaven," Fisher said. "He might be our best player believe it or not, right now. He's very athletic. He plays as hard as you can play every second, and he plays with a great deal of intelligence." Slowly his playing time has increased, until a week ago he started against Wisconsin. It was the first time a Michigan basketball walk-on has started a game since Paul Groffsky in 1953-55 and Hunter's defense was instrumental in Michigan's comeback 69-68 over- time victory. For the game he grabbed eight rebounds and chipped in three points. After the game a grin from ear-to- ear emerged from Hunter's face and he exclaimed: "It can't get any better than this." It is a grin Hunter has been wearing all semester. He unterstands the odds he has beaten, and words can't express how thankful he is. "You can see him smile everyday when he puts on his practice plays basketball, like pick-up games. I know a lot of people, names and faces, from playing pick- up, recreational basketball here the last three years. It's good to know they're rooting me on." Hunter's notoriety has came a long way since the fall when Fisher didn't even know his name. He was discovered by student managers Dave Balza and Roger Harvey who, while involved with the Gus Macker tournaments and campus intramurals, noticed Hunt- er's ability. Hunter's basketball story, how- ever, begins before this. In high school Hunter did the same things for his team he does now. At 6-foot- 3, his ability was slightly better than average. His strength, as it always has been, was defense. He was always assigned to cover the top offensive player. Near the end of his senior year in high school, almost overnight, Hunter's leaping ability increased. "We had our last league game of the season, after that I wasn't jumping," Hunter said. "We had a break after that game, a day of rest. Then the next day we had a practice and I just came in and I was doing two-hand reverses. Six inches wouldn't be an exaggeration as to how much more I was could jump." The change was too late for colleges to notice him. So when he came to Michigan, he worked on his game by playing four days a week anywhere he could find competition. He and his hallmates at Bursley formed a team named the Dungeon and the group went on to win the residence halt championship. The ILLINOIS Continued from page 1 Lou Henson said. "That was the difference - he played great." Opposing coach Steve Fisher concurred. "Here's a fifth-year senior, and you talk about the importance of experience," Fisher said. "He was the guy that when the money was there, and it was needed, he delivered." Michigan's own comeback fell short, as Illinois (3-3, 13-6) shot 820 percent from the free throw line down the stretch. In addition, the Wolverines failed to recapture the lead on several occasions, after cut- ting the deficit to within one basket. "We're down two or three at the end of the game and we throw it away on the swing," Fisher said. "This is a hard loss for us." One bright spot for Michigan was Sam Mitchell. The rookie power forward erupted for three straight baskets during one stint in the second half, prompting an Illini timeout. "I told Sam I've liked what he's done against Wisconsin," Fisher said. "I thought I should have used him more against Indiana, and I thought he played well today." However, the Illini returned from the timeout and silenced Mitchell's offensive burst. "Sam got tired, but when you score two or three times in a row, they tightened up on him," Fisher said. "We felt (Mitchell) could hurt us if he had that opportunity," Henson said. "We wanted to get our defense going on him." Fisher started a bigger lineup that featured three true frontcourt players - Freddie Hunter, James Voskuil and Riley. While improving the team's low-post play, the new lineup also affected Michigan's defensive scheme. "I feel like me and Hunter were a good three-four (small forward- power forward) tandem," Voskuil said. "Freddie can defend the other team's scorer, and then we switch to make me the scorer on offense." Voskuil thought he and his teammates excelled defensively, but he showed concern for the fouls. "Aggressive 'd' is always gonna give us more fouls," he said. "But aggressive, smart defense won't." MICHIGAN (67) Playe TFG Fr R A PF TP Michigan forward Freddie Hunter shows off some of his offensive skills against Illinois forward Scott Pierce competition that Balza noticed him. "I saw him in a dunk contest and that's where I was really impressed," Balza said. "The other manager Roger, he had always talked about him because he ref'd him at his IM games. He said, 'He can play with us.' I said, 'I've seen him play IM and I'd have to see him play against member sitting in conditioning just on the side. I was kind of in awe. It felt good that I was there seeing all these players that I'd seen on T.V. - big time recruits and all that. "But they were nice because I remember after the first day of conditioning we needed to go back to Crisler and I was all prepared to walk har and it r [N-m~rin 'rnlh Hunter 1-1 1-1 4 0 0 3 Voskuil 1-1 0-0 3 1 3 3 Riley 3-8 4-5 6 4 3 10 Calip 10-24 3-5 2 4 4 25 Talley 6-13 1-2 2 5 5 15 Taylor 1-3 0-0 1 2 4 2 Tolbert 0-1 0-0 0 0 1 0 Mitchell 4-7 1-4 6 1 3 9 Pelinka 0-0 0.0 0 0 1 0 Totals 26-58 10-17 29 17 24 67 3-pt goals: 5-12 (voskuil 1-1, Calip 2-6,Taley 2- 4, Tolbert 0-1 )FG%- .448, 3-ptFG%- .417, Fr%- .588. Bks: 7 (.Voskuil 2, Riley 4, ,ihell 1). Turn- overs: 12. Steals: 7 (Hunter 2, Voskuil 1, Riley 1, Talley 2, Mitchell 1). wr