8B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, December 4, 1995 Watson has less talent as Titans' head man MEN'S BASKETBALL Michigan-Detroit matchup a reunion By Brent Mcintosh DJy Sports Editor .DETROIT - Perry Watson has a much more limited squad of troops to fight his wars than he did three years ago. When Watson was an assistant to Steve FfseratMichiganfrom 1991 to 1993,he coached, among others, now-Washing- to Bullets' Chris Webber and Juwan Heward, and now-Denver Nugget Jalen Rose. At present, as head coach at De- troit, he deals with so-called Titans like iyApo Montgomery, Webber's high school teammate, and Leon Derricks, who transferred from Michigan. It showed inthe Titans' 20-point loss at the hands of the Wolverines Saturday night. TWe can't put All-Americans out there like they can," Watson said. "But we can compete like All-Americans." Before the Wolverines ran away with the game - the preferred way to win games played in Detroit-the game was surprisingly close. The Wolverine lead was only six with less than six minutes to play; the Titans had tied it at 29 with 16 minutes left. -"We had a 10-minute game where our stength and height and depth was able to show," Fisher said. SINKINGLIKTHETITAN-Ic:Michigan's triumph handed Detroit their 20th loss in ai'w at the hands of Big Ten teams. The last Titan win was a 77-67 victory over Minnesota in 1984. It was also the Titans' eighth straight loss to Michigan; they last beat the Wol- verines during the 1981-82 season. WHO TAUGHT HIM TO TIE HIS SHOES?: Two minutes into the game, a melee under the hoops resulted in a Michigan possession and Derricks' losing a shoe. Derricks picked up the shoe and tried to get the referees to stop the game by wav- ing it in one's direction, then threw it to Detroit's bench. The former Michigan sub then played the next possesion in one shoe, postingup Maurice Taylor, who called for the ball, turned and hit a jumper over Derricks, and drew the foul. Derricks eventually fouled out of the game, which might not have happened had he not fouled Taylor- but the ensu- ing free throw allowed the Titan senior to retrieve his shoe and tie it more tightly. OLD PALS: Fisher, on why the game against Detroit was one of three this sea- son in which the Wolverines will face one of their former assistant coaches: "I thinkyouhave friends whoare friends whether they are on your side coaching or on the other side. When one of them goes to Duke, I'm not going to play them. That's how I'll get out of the Duke con- tract." By Michael Rosenberg Daily Editor in Chief DETROIT-All together now, with feeling: Detroit guard Iyapo Montgomery played high school basketball at Bir- mingham Country Day, where he was a teammate of former Michigan star Chris Webber, who joined the Wol- verines in 1991, the same year Perry Watson became a Michigan assistant, in which capacity he helped the Wol- verines recruit Leon Derricks, before Watson took the head coaching job with the Titans, where he then re- cruited Derricks again when the for- ward decided to transfer to Detroit, where he starts in the frontcourt with Carl Pickett, a graduate of Ann Arbor's Gabriel Richard High School, where he was not seriously recruited by then-Michigan assistant Watson but almost tried to walk on with the Wolverines, much as his Richard teammate, Neal Morton, would do (although Morton, like Pickett, now has a scholarship), although Pickett is now arguably the Titans' best player, starting at forward alongside Kamau Alexander, who played high school ball with former Michigan star Jalen Rose at Detroit Southwestern, where the coach was ... Perry Watson, who in his time as the Titans' coach has tried unsuccessfully to recruit the last two winners of the state of Michigan's Mr. Basketball award, Willie Mitchell and Robert Traylor, who now play together for Michigan but who were high school opponents in Detroit Pub- lic School League playoff battles, which were held at Cobo Arena, where Mitchell and Traylor helped Michi- gan beat Detroit, 68-48, Saturday is a little confused. "It felt different at fist, seeing the blue and gold out there otr the other side in warm-ups," said Derriscks of his first game against his former team. "But after that, I just played Imll." Just playing ball wasw't as easy for Derricks as it might seesi. Foul trouble limited him to 21 minules, downT from an average of40.5 in hisfirst two games for Detroit. He eventuly fouled out. But even 21 minutes would have been a dream for Derricks at Michigan, where it would have taken him-weeks to amass that total. "I think Leon could have had a sig- nificant role in success at Michigan," Wolverine coach Steve Fishersaid. "But he decided he wanted W play more than that. He wanted to be the man. And he is. I'm happy for Leon." Taylor was the mtan for Michigan Saturday night, scoiamg 20 points and pulling down eight :rebounds. Unlikq Mitchell and Traylor, Taylor was mak- ing his Cobo debut. "I was looking fmrward so much to playing because I noever played here;" said Taylor, whose: Henry Ford High School squads were a notch below Mitchell's Pershingpeams and Traylor' s Murray-Wright outfits. "My team was- never good enough to make the play,, offs." Taylor was so eocited that he scored Michigan's first seven points. In his battle with Derric ks, Taylor clearly had the upper hand. "I never want to lose," Derricks said: "A loss is alwaysgoing to hurt." Derricks said 1e spoke to Fisher be- fore the game and his old coach had wished him good luck. Thankfully, thermeeting was brief. If everyone took time out to chat with old acquaintances, the game never would have gotten undrway. Michigan's Louis Bullock blocks the path to the basket as Maurice Taylor jockeys for position. Detroit Mercy's Leon Derricks (41), a former Wolverine, looks on. ci NTOSH Cntinued from page 1B the boards. But the scoring issue re- mains: Michigan cannot live by Bul- lock and Taylor alone. Pretty soon one will foul out, or hit a cold streak, or run into a player who can defend him. When that happens, Michigan will be in trouble. Who's going to pick up the burden? gugan Fife? Sorry: Fife does all the neessary intangibles - tough de- fee, diving after loose balls, rally- ing the troops when Michigan is off- tk - but scoring in double figures csistently is not his lot. Dugan is our veteran, senior cap- t04," Michigan coach Steve Fisher sid. "He's been there before. He's ssted 61 games in a row, but he tkii't started the last couple. He wants t Ntart." -Robert Traylor as the Wolverines' cr scorer? Not yet: Traylor could eventually dominate inside, but he's solidly entrenched in the learning pro- cess at present. Maceo Baston? Baston has put the ball in the basket this year, but he mysteriously disappeared against Detroit, scoring a lone point and get- ting a goose egg in the rebounds col- umn. Make no mistake, Baston is an essential element of the Wolverines' mix, but limited post moves and his size mean that his importance is greater when the other team has the ball. Willie Mitchell has yet to prove he can be a force at this level, and neither Travis Conlan nor Albert White has shown that he is the consistent scorer that the Wolverines need. The two fit better in other roles for now. They combined for only eight points against Detroit. And Jerod Ward played like ... well, like Jerod Ward does against patsies. In Michigan's four casual wins this season, Ward is averaging double dig- its; in the Wolverines' more trouble- some games - two losses and a 12- point victory over DePaul - the Mis- sissippian has accounted for a grand total of seven points. That might be misleading, though. Ward's disappearance in New York was of Hoffa-esque proportions, but "Jero came the benc an gave us a big kick Michigan basketball player D - Maurice Taylor on teammate Jerod Ward after Saturday's game f y his contributions in the other five games can certainly be construed as evidence that he indeed does have the talent to score in the Big Ten, and frequently. "New York was New York," Ward said. "Everyone has off-nights." Ward had an on-night Saturday, however, scoring nine points and snagging seven rebounds. "Jerod came off the bench and gave us a big kick," Taylor said. Ward is the obvious candidate to provide the scoring punch that draws defensive attention from Taylor and Bullock. He obviously knows which side of the hoop the ball is supposed to go in - now he just has to put it there consistently. Who's going to pick up the burden? It has to be Ward. He has the tools; now he needs the attitude. He needs to realize that his team desperately needs him to be a threat. "I feel I've picked up a little bit on the offensive and defensive ends," Ward said. And he's right. He has improved, on both ends of the floor. But for the Wolverines to win anything signifi- cant - for example, a Big Ten title or a couple tournament games - Ward must shoulder the burden and be the player he's capable of being. Otherwise, the Wolverines will con- tinue to depend on Bullock and Tay- lorto provide their only scoring punch. And the box score will be a lot shorter. - Brent McIntosh can be reached over e-mail at mctosh@umich.edu. night. You got that? If not, don't feel1 bad. Even Derricks MICHIGAN (68) FG FTR RE MIN MA M-A OT A F PTS Mitchel 19 1.6 0-0 0-2 0 0 2 Taylor 31 8-11 4-7 2-8 1 3 20 Gaston 16 0-1 1-2 0-0 0 3 1 conlan 28 2-3 0-0 0-2 4 0 5 Bullock 28 6-9 3-4 0.4 2 218 DeKuiper 1 0-0 0-0 04) 0 0 0 Fife 19 1-5 0-0 0-0 20 2 Morton 100 00 00 00 0 Oliver 1 0.1 1-4 1-1 0 0 1 Ward 25 4.7 0-0 07 1 3 9 White 15 0-2 34 1.1 0 0 3 Traylor 16 1-2 5-6 2-3 1 4 7 Team Rebounds 2-3 Totals 200 23.47 17-27 8.31 1115 68 FG%: .489. FT%..630. Three.-ont goals: 5-13,-385 (Bullock 3-4, Coneanl-2, Ward 1-4, Matchell 0-1. Fife 02). Blocks: 1(Baston). Turnovers: 19 (Taylor 5, Conlan 3. Mitchell 3. Baston~ 2, Fife 2, White 2. Bullock 1. Ward 1). Steals: 9 (Bullock 2, Mitchell 2. Traylor 2. Conlan, Fife, Ward). Technical Fouls: none. Mcign...... 27 41 - 68 Detrit ...23 25- 48 At: Cobo Artn; A. 10,709. DETROIT (48) too FT REB MIN M~A M-A O-T A F PTS Alexander 19 a7 2-2 0-0 0 2 6 Legardy 17 j3 0-0 2-3 1 1 4 Derricks 21 44 0-0 3-405' 6 Pickett 30 3-:11 2-2 1-2 3 3, 9 Jackson 38 5-2 1-2 1-3 2 1 13, Jenkins 24 3-8 0-0 2-4 1 1 6 Alexander 5 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Montgomery 15 :2-3 00 1-2 0 4,.4: Porter 3 40 0-0 0-0 01 j 0 Robinson 26 '05 0-1 2-6 0 1 0 Domke 1 ~- 0-0 0-0 0 0.'0 Smith 1 - 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Team Rebounds 0-3 Totals 200 20,153 5.7 12-29 720 48 F(3%:377. FT%:.714I. Three-polnt goals: 3-12. ;250: (Jackson 23. Picker 1-3, Alexander 0-3, Jenkins O-1, Montgomery 0-1, RcOinson 0-1).Blocks:3 (Derricks, Montgomery. Porte .Tunovrs: 25 (Alexander 4, Jackson 4, Jenkins l, Dericks 3. Montgomery 3, Robinson 3.Legardfp 2, Pickett 2). Steals: 9 (Robinson 3. Jacksi 2,Pic-ett2, Derricks. Montgomery). Tectw~klca Fouls: team/bench (1). -k , El I I Bo I, Power Macintoshff200/75 w/CD 8MB RAM/500Mt3 bard drive, PbuerPCP 601 prmoreuad )eed CD-ROM drive, 15 color monio Fhyboard and mouse. 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