Hawaii article...

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Confident UH meets Michigan in NIT game


Less than 24 hours after revving past Nebraska at the Stan Sheriff Center, the University of Hawai'i men's basketball team arrived in the Motor City yesterday.

The Rainbow Warriors will play Michigan in a quarterfinal game of the National Invitation Tournament today at 4 p.m. (Hawai'i time). The game will be televised live on ESPN2.

"Considering the situation, the travel was perfect," Hawai'i head coach Riley Wallace said. "At this point of the season, you don't complain about things like travel or the short turnover (between games). You just keep playing."

The 'Bows departed Honolulu at 11:40 Monday night for a six-hour flight to Salt Lake City. After a two-hour layover, they made a three-hour flight to Detroit, followed by a 30-minute drive to Ann Arbor, where the Michigan campus is located.

"I think we're used to (the travel) by now," junior forward Jeff Blackett said. "We've traveled a ton, so I don't think it really makes a difference."


Instead of worrying about the jet lag, the 'Bows are riding a jet stream of confidence.

Hawai'i has played arguably its two best offensive games of this season in the NIT. The 'Bows shot 61.8 percent from the field in an 85-74 first-round victory at Utah State, then 61.2 percent in an 84-83 second-round win over Nebraska.

"Basketball is a strange game that way," Wallace said. "One guy gets hot and it starts to be contagious. This is the best energy we've had all year, so we just need to keep it going."

Hawai'i will need to be at its best today in what Wallace is describing as the biggest road game for a Hawai'i team in more than a decade.

"The only one I can compare it to is when we got sent to New Mexico (in 1990)," he said.

Fourteen years ago, the 'Bows lost a NIT quarterfinal game at New Mexico.

A victory today would send Hawai'i to next week's NIT final four at historic Madison Square Garden in New York.

Hawai'i has made seven previous NIT appearances, but never got past the quarterfinals, where it is 0-4.

"We want to be the ones to do something no other (Hawai'i) team has done," senior co-captain Phil Martin said. "And this is our chance."

It's not going to be easy against a Michigan team that will have tradition and a rowdy crowd on its side.

The Wolverines are 20-11, including NIT home victories over Missouri and Oklahoma. They tied for fifth in the Big Ten Conference at 8-8.

"Don't know much about them, but they probably don't know much about us, either," Wallace said.

Even though NCAA sanctions wiped out the official records of some of Michigan's best teams of the 1990s, many of the Hawai'i players grew up in that era admiring the Michigan program.

"I think for all of us, it's like a childhood dream (to play at Michigan)," sophomore forward Julian Sensley said.

But the crowd at Crisler Arena could turn it into a nightmare. The arena has a capacity of 13,751, and at least 11,000 are expected to attend today.

Hawai'i got to practice in Crisler last night, and will have a one-hour shootaround today.

"It's enough time to get a feel for it," Wallace said. "But we know it's going to be one of the best atmospheres around come game time."

The 2,500-seat student section ? located at courtside ? is called The Maize Rage. All students wear maize-colored shirts and stand and cheer the entire game.

"We are confident when we play here," Michigan head coach Tommy Amaker said. "In terms of getting postseason victories, I think it is going to do worlds of wonders for the confidence of our kids. It is a really nice atmosphere."

On the court, Wallace thinks the 'Bows could match up well, especially if Michigan leading scorer Lester Abram continues to sit out.

Abram, a 6-foot-6 forward who averages 13.4 points and 4.3 rebounds per game, has missed the last three games with an injury to his left (shooting) shoulder. He is listed as doubtful for today.

"They've got some size to match us," Wallace said. "But if we keep shooting it like we have been, we're hard to stop."
 

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Michigan article...

Michigan article...

U-M hosts Hawaii in NIT quarterfinals

Rejuvenated Harris peaking for Wolverines
March 24, 2004








Michigan plays Hawaii in the National Invitation tournament quarterfinals tonight, which means the Wolverines must contend with record-breaking Hawaii guard Jason Carter.





Did we say record-breaking? We meant sign-breaking.

Carter suffered a hand injury Monday night when he punched a courtside sign after a foul call in Hawaii's 84-83 victory over Nebraska.

"I think that's great," said Hawaii coach Riley Wallace. "It shows emotion. The kid's fired up. We don't want him breaking signs, but it shows you what kind of heart he has, and he's down there playing hard."

Carter still scored 21 points in 17 minutes. Now he and Hawaii get a tough assignment: 46 hours after their game ended in Honolulu, they tip off against Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Hawaii (21-11) would be an underdog anyway. The Rainbow Warriors had lost six of eight games before winning two at home in the NIT. Hawaii finished fifth in the Western Athletic Conference.

Michigan has won four out of five, its best stretch since early in the season. The Wolverines are also 15-3 at home, and the three losses came by a combined six points.

U-M fits the mold of teams that historically do well in the NIT: a young team, as talented as any in the field, unlikely to dismiss the NIT as the Not Invited Tournament.

Michigan missed its chance to go to the NCAA tournament, but this is still the first postseason play for any of the Wolverines. The atmosphere Monday at Crisler Arena, when Michigan beat Oklahoma, was impressive.

"We're not thinking about what tournament it is," U-M coach Tommy Amaker said. "It's postseason. It's still survive and advance. They are playing their hearts out to continue their year."

One player who seems rejuvenated lately is freshman Dion Harris. Harris has scored in double figures in each of the last five games and averaged 14.6 points in that stretch. In the five games before that run, Harris failed to score in double digits in any of them and averaged 4.8 points.

Harris' improved play began when Lester Abram gave him his starting spot to help him regain his rhythm. Abram suffered a shoulder injury in the following game and has not returned. He has resumed shooting, however, and could return at some point in this tournament.
 

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Michigan article...

Michigan article...

NIT: Preview

U-M faces fatigued Hawaii







ANN ARBOR ? How bad does the NIT want Michigan in the semifinals Tuesday at Madison Square Garden in New York?

Real bad.

Michigan (20-11) will play host to its third straight NIT game when it plays travel-weary Hawaii (21-11) at 9 tonight in a quarterfinal game at Crisler Arena.

While the Michigan players got to sleep in their own beds Monday night following a 63-52 second-round victory over Oklahoma, Hawaii players slept on a plane.

Following Hawaii?s 84-83 victory over Nebraska Monday night, the team hustled to board a plane leaving Honolulu at 11:40 p.m. (4:40 a.m. Detroit time). The team, after a stop in Salt Lake City, was scheduled to arrive in Detroit around 4 p.m. Tuesday. Hawaii had a shoot-around at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday night at Crisler Arena.

Coach Tommy Amaker said his Wolverines are in for a fight and he hopes his team doesn?t buy into the talk that Hawaii could be suffering from jet lag.

?This is going to be a challenge for us,? Amaker said. ?Hawaii has a veteran team and starts four seniors. Hawaii beat a ranked Utah State team at Utah State in its NIT opener.?

The Rainbow Warriors are led by three seniors, 5-foot-10 guard Jason Carter, 6-5 guard Michael Kuebler and 6-8 forward Phil Martin, and two juniors, 23-year-old, 6-8 junior Jeff Blackett and 6-9 Julian Sensley. Carter made 6-of-7 three-point shots and scored 21 points in the one-point victory over Nebraska.

While Michigan will have had the advantage of playing all three NIT games at home, it has had the disadvantage of playing without sophomore guard Lester Abram, U-M?s top scorer and best outside shooter, the last three games. Abram has done some light stuff in practice but his status for Hawaii is questionable.

?Lester wants to play but we?ll have to see,? Amaker said. ?He?s feeling better. But a lot depends on how the game is going. We don?t want to rush him.?

If the Wolverines beat Hawaii, they could be matched against Notre Dame in the semifinals. The Irish play in the quarterfinals against the winner of tonight?s game between Oregon and George Mason.
 
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