waftt. . ~ Coaches salute Horn Jason Horn, Michigan senior defensive lineman, was named to the American Football Coaches Association All-American Team yesterday. He is joined by four Big Ten opponents: running back Eddie George and offensive lineman Orlando Pace, both of Ohio State, linebacker Pat Fitzgerald of Northwestern, and offensive lineman Jeff Hartings of Penn State. The Associated Press All-Americans will be announced Dec. 6. Page 9A Thursday, November 30, 1995 'M'needs to follow Bulock s example By Paul Barger Daily Sports Writer MUNCIE, Ind.-The one truth about the Michigan men's basketball team is that it has been consistently inconsis- tent. Inexperience and high expectations have led to lackluster play and disap- pointing performances. The Wolverines have simply not been able to find the chemistry necessary to become a successful team. Many of the players have had individual moments of brilliance, but as a unit Michigan has shown very little. Last night against Ball State, the Wolverines jumped out to a 21-4 lead, but an incredible amount of mental mistakes allowed the Cardinals to stayin the contesto throughout the1 first half. It seemed that every time down the court a Michigan player would throw a bad pass or get called for travelling. By the end of the evening the Wol- yerines had amassed 34 turnovers. This type of erratic play has to be eliminated if the Wolverines expect to contend for the Big Ten title. It is clear that Steve Fisher's squad has a long way to go and a lot of matur- ing to do. Last night's victory was very impressive, especially the defensive effort, but it was over a Mid-American Conference team that was playing in its first game of the year. Still, the defensive performance was nothing short of outstanding. Michigan held the Cardinals to 52 points on 28.6 percent shooting. "We're pleased with how we played on defense, but we are not satisfied," sophomore Jerod Ward said. "We have to maintain that defensive intensity for 40 minutes. We have to keep playing hard and playing good defensively." Last night was a glimpse at how good the Wolverines can be if they can com- bine their intensity with intelligent de- cision making. Michigan has as much raw talent as any team in the nation, but it must learn f' keep its composure on the floor. It often looks like Louis Bullock, a freshman, is the only player on the team that keeps his head about him for the duration of the contest. Bullock is quickly establishing him- self as one of the top first-year players in the nation, and his steady play may be the key to Michigan's season. He had another outstanding perfor- mance last night and continues to make believers out of both teammates and opponents. Bullock tallied 14 points to load Michigan, the fourth time this sea- son he has accomplished that feat. He is 6-for-6 from beyond the 3-point arc in his last two games. ' Stats alone do not tell the whole story. Whenever the Wolverines need a bucket or a stop on defense, it seems that Bul- lock is instrumental. The Laurel, Md., native is talented, confident, aggressive and will only get better with time and experience. After Wolverine defense smothers Ball State Bullock, Traylor score 14 in 80-52 victory By Barry Sollenberger Daily Sports Editor MUNCIE, Ind. - Ball State is squarely on the nation's college basketball map. The Cardinals have reached the NCAA Tourna- ment three times and postseason play six of the past seven years. Coach Ray McCallum's team looks to compete for a spot in the tournament again this season, as Ball State returns three start- ers from a squad that reached the NCAAs last March. But while McCallum and company boast a solid program, they learned a valuable lesson last night. It's not wise to schedule a Big Ten power, such as No. 24 Michigan, for your season opener. "We were excited to have Michigan in here (before) the game," McCallumsaid. "I don't know about that now." The Wolverines (4-2) blew out the Cardinals (0-1), 80-52, in front of 11,500 angry fans. The crowd expressed its displeasure with the lopsided affair by tossing ice onto the floor midway through the second half. The home team was rewarded with a technical foul. It hardly mattered - Ball State was already dead by that point, trailing 62-34. The Cardinals looked like they were aiming at anything but the basket all evening long and shot just .286 from the field for the game. "Michigan playing their (sixth game) and Ball State playing their first game," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "I think that definitely had an impact." Michigan buried Ball State with 66-percent field-goal shooting on the night and fast starts to both halves. Leading 36-24 at intermission, the Wolver- ines used a 15-2 run to start the second half. Maurice Taylor's three-point play with just under 15 minutes remaining put the game out of reach at 51-26. From then on, it was statistic-padding time for Michigan. The Wolverines' shooting percentage was the sixth-best in school history. Freshmen Robert Traylor and Louis Bullock each chipped in 14 points to lead five Wolverines in double figures, and Michigan's height advantage down low en- abled the Wolverines to almost double Ball State's output on the boards, 46-24. We were excitedsto have Michigan in here (before). I don't know about that now. - Ray McCallum Ball State basketball coach The only major disappointment for Michigan came in the turnover department. The Wolver- ines committed 34 miscues on the night - an incredible number, considering the final score. "I can't get over those 34 turnovers," Ball State's Randy Zachary said. "They handed it to us and we did not take advantage of it." Even though the Cardinals were never in the game, Fisher was not pleased with his squad's generosity. "We're not going to win many games turning it over 17 times a half," Fisher said. "But I liked our defense and think that if we can defend like we did tonight, we'll have a chance to be a very good team." The start of the game was pivotal in the Wolver- ines' romp. Robert Traylor's turn-around jumper in the lane gave the Michigan a 13-4 lead, and McCallum was forced to call timeout just six minutes into the game. It didn't help. Michigan's Louis Bullock hit a three and Travis Conlan followed with one of his own 90 seconds later. After a Cardinal miss, Dugan Fife banked in a 15-footjumperand thelead was 21-4. McCallum was forced to call time again with 11:40 left in the half. That did help. Momentarily. LaSalle Thompson broke a 19-0 Wolverine run with a pair from long range, but then Maceo Baston connected on two foul shots and a layup in the lane for Michigan. The Wolverines led, 28-12, with 7:56 left before halftime. Ball State closed to within nine, but could not find the basket over the last 3:36 of the half, and Michigan's lead was 36-24 at intermission. "We were so caught up in Michigan being here," McCallum said. "We were in anotherzone." NOPPORN KICHANANTHA/Daily Jerod Ward, shown here In Monday's game against St. Francis (Pa.), had 10 points In last night's 80-52 Michigan victory over Ball State. The Wolverines held the Cardinals to .286 shooting from the floor and held a 46-24 edge in rebounds, but turned the ball over 34 times. only six games he has established him- self as Michigan's top scoring threat from the perimeter and its most clutch shooter. Bullock is a leader on the floor and is taking initiative that few freshmen would be willing to take. In the biggest game of his very young career, Bullock single-handedly kept Michigan in shouting distance of Ari- zona. He showed nojitters at all, finish- ing the game with 22 points. Against Ball State he controlled the tempo of the second half and put the Wolverines in a position to put the game away early. Michigan's play on the perimeter, suspect all last season, is rapidly be- coming one of the team's strengths. Sophomore Travis Conlan has clearly stepped up his play, but Bullock is the difference. His ball control and decision mak- ing, combined with his obvious ability to shoot, may be exactly what the Wol- verines have been looking for. If the rest of the team can follow his example and play intelligently and within themselves, Michigan is going to be tough to beat by the time the conference season begins in January. BALL STATE (52) FQ FT REB MIN MPA M 0A O-T A F PTS Wells 29 5-16 3-7 2-5 5 3 13 Reed 31 2-7 041 4-6 1 2 4 Martin 23 1-3 0.0 2-3 1 4 2 Zachary 28 311 3-4 0-1 0 0 9 Norris 20 0-8 0-0 1.2 1 2 0 Johnson 17 1-3 0-0 1-2 1 1 2 Ray 1 0-0 0-0 00 00 0 Smith 8 1-3 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 Thompson 25 5-10 2-2 0-0 1 0 16 Mason 12 2-7 0-0 3.4 1 1 4 Smith 6 0-2 0-0 0-000 0 Totals 200 2470 -14 14-24 1114 52 FG%: .286. FT%: .57 1. Three-point goals: 4-27, .148 (Thompson 4-8, Smith 0-1, Zachary 0-3, Wells 0-4, Mason 0-4, Norris 07). Blocks: 2 (Wells, Smith). Turnovers: 19 (Wells 8, Norris 6, Martin 2, Mason 2, Reed). Steals: 8 (Wells 4, Reed, Martin, Thompson). Technical Fouls: Bench. MICHIGAN (60) MO FT RED MIN M-A M-A O0T A F PTS Mitchell 22 2-7 0-0 0-1 1 4 5 Taylor 20 5-8 1-3 1-7 2 2 11 Baston 18 4-4 5-6 1.6 0 2 13 Conlan 23 1-1 1-2 1-2 6 0 4 Bullock 19 4-4 3-4 0-4 3 0 14 DeKuiper 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Fife 26 2-2 0-0 0-4 14 5 Morton 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Oliver 3 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 0 0 Ward 23 4-8 1-4 1-7 1 2 10 White 19 2-5 0-2 1-3 3 0 4 Traylor 23 7-8 0-0 1-7 1 1 14 Totals 200 31-471.1-19 8-46 2.92.6 80 FG%: .660. FT%: .579. Three-point goals: 7-12, .583 (Bullock 3-3, Conlan 1-1, Fife 1-1, Ward 1- 2, Mitchell 1-3, White 0-2). Blocks: 4 (White 2, Mitchell, Traylor). Turnovers: 34 (White 8, Conlan 6, Bullock 5, Ward 5, Taylor 4, Baston 3, Traylor 2, Oliver). Steals: 3 (Baston, Conlan, Traylor). Technical Fouls: none. Ball State ........24 28 - 52 Michigan......36 44 - 80 At: University Arena; A: 11,500 U I We invite all University of Michigan Seniors to get to know our people and career opportunities INVESTMENT BANKING PRESENTATION Tuesday, December 5, 1995 at 7.:00 p.m. Pendleton Room Top teams next for Blue women swimmers By Chris Murphy Daily Sports Writer The schedule-maker must have been crazy. Today, the Michigan women's swim- ming team faces off against Stanford, Texas and Southern Cal, three teams that are ranked in the nation's top 10. Going into the season, the Michigan was ranked No. 1. The Wolverines faced an extremely tough slate of competition throughout the early part of their season. Instead of padding its record by taking on lesser competition, Michigan have chosen to take adecidedly different route. This weekend's opponents includeNo. 1 Stanford, No.4 Texas and No.7 Southern Cal. Throughout the first two months, Michigan has faced off against such na- before." If facing top-flight programs boosts the team's ranking, then the Wolverines should find themselves right on top after this weekend. The meet spans three days of long- course events. The extended competition should test the Wolverines' stamina. It should also give Richardson an opportu- nity to compare his team's training progress against that of the three nation- ally-ranked opponents. Against Stanford, Michigan will be looking at several familiar faces. Three swimmers, Claudia Franco and co-captains Lisa Jacob and Jane Skillman, were instrumental in the Cardinal's de- feat of the Wolverines in October. Despite Stanford's success, Richardson remains upbeatabout Michigan's chances the difference. Michigan has been keep- ing up a rigorous training schedule throughout the fall. This usually results in the team racing while fatigued. But with the postseason in mind, Richardson plans on retaining the same training schedule that landed the team the No. 2 spot in the nation at last year's tourney. "(Training hard) is what we did last year at this time and we were successful with it." Richardson said. "I see no reason to change last year's plan." Last year's plan also included the same slate of nationally ranked opponents. The schedule-maker has not changed that either. ITW T ~ TA1 e44 *0in 'I