2C #•0 SPORTS/Olt Ctarlint Thursday, January 12, 2006 PanOiers aim 10 atone for Nouember flop Continued from page 1C and move on,” said receiver Steve Smith, who, with a team-record 14 catches Tex' 169 yards, was the only Panther to have a good game against the Bears the hrst time “TTiat’s what you get paid for - to make plays; not to gripe and complain about n Smith what you get. You just have to make do with what you have ” What the Panthers did n’t have in the first meeting was a running geune ~ The Bears, who had the No. 2- ranked defense in the NFL this seeison, held the Panthers to a paltry 55 rush ing yards. The good thing for the Panthers this weekend is that they are coming off one of their best overall rushing p)erformance8 of the season. Against the Giants, Carolina had 223 yards on the ground, led by DeShaun Foster’s 151 yards on 27 carries. Goings provided a spark off the bench, gaining 63 yards on 12 carries. Foster and Goings currently rank Noe. 1 and 2 among rushers after the first weekend of playoff games. “The off^isive line was real ly pumped up to get the run ning game going,” right tackle Jordan Gross said. “We know that will be important against Chicago. We have to establish the running game in the play- oflfe, if you want to be success ful.” The Panthers know that won’t be easy, consid^ing the Bears boast two players on this year’s NFL All-Pro team - linebackers Brian Urlacher and Lance Briggs. Uiiacher also was named the league’s defensive player of the year. Will another strong and con sistent running game help the Panthers against Chicago this week? “Absolutely,” Panthers head coach John Fox said. “Well, we hope.” No offense, but Carolina defense figures on intense game Continued from page 1C “Fun ‘N Gun” offense at Florida. Now, instead of facing a familiar quarterback, the Carolina defense is at some what of a disadvantage as it prepares for Grossman. Facing ex-Carolina team mate Muhsin Muhammad for the second time this sea son might be the least of the Panthers’ worries. “It’s two different (quarter back) styles,” Carolina, safety Mike Minter said, “and that makes it tough. Witli Orton, they ran the ball more. But with Grossman, he’s a gun slinger He’ll take more chances. Hell put it up. “We’ve played quarterbacks and teams like that before, but the playoffs are a whole different thing. Well really have to be ready” One positive omen is that the Panthers are coming off their best defensive perfor mance of the season. Hiey shut down 1,800-yard rusher Tiki Barber, finstrated sec ond-year quarterback Eli Manning, and shut out the New York Giants 23-0 last Sunday in the first round of the playoffs. That game marked the first time in two decades that the Giants had been held scoreless in the postseason, and the Panthers hope to build on that momen tum. “These are the challenges you live for,” Panthers comer- back Ken Lucas said of facing a passing quarterback like Grossman in the playoffs. “We know we’ve got the abili ty We showed that (last Sunday). Now, it’s just a mat ter of putting together anoth er strong performance.” If they wish for additional inspiration, the Panthers need not look any further than the other sideline, toward their defensive coun terpart. Led by this year’s defensive player of the year, linebacker Brian Urlacher, (Hiicago had the No. 2-ranked defense in the NFL. However, ear lier this year, Carolina defensive tackle Brentson Buckner said the Bears’ defense was the best he’s refused. “I stick by my word,” Buckner said in the locker room at Giants Stadium. ‘Tve seen a lot of football, and I haven’t seen a defense in the NFL that’s more impressive than that defense. “T^t puts jx^sure on us to match their int^isity as a defense. You can’t allow their {^ense to put a whole lot of points up, because it’s going to be hard for your offense to move. So whatever kind of intensity they come out with, we’ve got to be the same way We’ve got to take what we had (last Sunday) and raise it a notch or two.” Buckner ever seen Given a chance to back down fiom his statement once he found out the Panthers would be facing the Bears again, Buckner Golden Bulls vault into Division n elite Continued from page 1C reboiuids and four assists in the rematch. “They got us in Cali and I' had a bad game and 1 know to be considered one of the best players in the (confer ence), you have to play against the best teams,” Fulton said. “Tbni^t I want ed to prove that I’m one of the best teams in the CIAA.” “John has settled down a little bit. He was trying to carry the whole team on his shoulders and that didn’t work for him the first semes ter. He’s begun to settle down a little bit and started to let things come to him in a nat ural fashion.” Smith excelled at the basics, connecting on 56.4 percent of its shots, including a torrid 60.7 percent in the second half, and turning the ball over just 12 times against 22 assists. Smith stunned Union with a swarming defense that cre ated 10 first-half turnovers and set the game’s tone. The three-guard lineup of Jerome Givens, Prince Parker and Maurice Hooper is also playing better. Joyner praised Givens’ work against Union, (9 points, 6 assists) especially in running the offense and finding open passing lanes. “He’s learning the differ ence between being a point guard and being a general,” Joyner said. “(Against Union) I thought he was a general. He had good recognition of what they were trying to do defensively and kept us under control and he was cer tainly a key factor.” WDAY & SATURDAY AMATEUR RACING SUNDAY Cavs’ Jones looking far and wide for shot CRICKET ARENA By Tom Withers WFASSCX'iATtJ) rKi-:ss CJLEVELAND - Cavaliers guard Damon Jones has the distinction of being the first NBA player to sign an endorsement contract with Li-Ning, an athletic slioe and sports appeirel company fix)m Cliina. Right now, he seems to have misplaced his famed jump shot somewhere equal ly far, far away Jones, who signed a four- year, $16 million fi^ agent deal with (!!3eveland this summer to fix the team’s woefiil outside shooting, has fallen into a horrific slump at the worst possible time for the Cavs. Tlie club will be witliout guard Larry Hughes, its sec ond-leading scorer and top defender, for two months fol lowing surgery on his finger. Since replacing Hughes as a starter three games ago, Jones is just 3-for-18 on 3- pointers _ his specialty He scored 15 points - all on 3s - in a win over C^cago on Dec. 22, but has since shot 19 percent (7-for-36) and is only fi-fcx^l on 3s. “Tm human, period,’* Jones said. “I still feel the same way about my shot, still feel Pm the best shooter in the world. Fm not going to pass up a shot, because the day I pass up a shot, it would mean my confidence is gone. And we all know that’ll never happen I usually come out on the other side smelling like roses * The bouquet inside Quicken Loans Arena wasn’t 90 appealing on Saturday when Jemes was booed at home by Cavaliers fans while missing his first five 3- pointers durtng a win over Milwaukee. When he finally made his first, Jones, who normally celebrates making a long- range basket with a three fingered gesture with his hands, instead placed them over his ears to block out the cheering. “If you are going to boo, then boo,’ Jones said follow ing the game. “Don’t be fair- weather. If you’re going to be behind us when we win or lose, then you have to be behind us when a guy is going through a tough stretch. I’d rather not be applauded anymore.* On Monday, Jones toned down his remarks a little. “What I should have said after the game was that I didn’t mean everybody becaiise everybody wasn’t booing,* Jemes said. “It was just a few himdred, eind if that’s how it’s going to be, then fine.* Despite Jones’ streakiness, first-year Cavs coach Mike Brown has no plans to put Jones on the bench. And, he’s not going to put any hand cuffs on Jones, who made 43 percent of his 3s last season fca* Miami. “I want him to continue taking them,* Brown said. “Either he will shoot his way out, which I believe he will because he is a shooter, or he won’t. Anytime he’s open, he has to let it go * Jcoies plans to keep letting ‘em fly “Tm not going to change the kind of player I am,’ he said. Tm a shooter, and Fm going to shoot, make or choose him as the company’s spokesman and sign him to a multiyear deal. The compa ny, founded by renowned gymnast Li Ning, signed a marketing agreement with the NBA last year, hoping to tap into pro basketball’s unmatched popularity in Cfoina. With 2,500 stores in every province of C^foina, li-Ning has a diance to challenge Nike and Adidas at home. But there are no immediate plans for domestic sales of Jones’ shoes, which are being pushed with an ad campaign slogan of “Anything Is Possible” in the United States. Jones, who plans to visit (Tiina tliis summer, was asked if his shoe might out sell teammate LeBron James’ popular Nikes over seas. “Right now, it’s Yao, LeBron and then myself. But I’m going to shoot hi^,* Jones said with a grin before slowly saying, “Anything is possible” in Clfoinese, a phrase he practiced for six days. “I might be No. 1 by the end of the year.” NEXT WEEKEND JAN. 20-22 CHARLOTTE, NC THE BAD BOYS OF ARENACROSS Josh Demuth Shane Bess Tommy Hofmaster Josh Woods FOR TICKETS CALL TiCKETMASTER (704) 522-6500 ■5^ w www.racearenacross.com I am no longer just an observer. % miss. Jones' candor and bubbly personality are part of what led Li-Ning executives to Vamer starts year off with Par Busters win Harc4d Vamer IH won the Par Busters G^ Groiq) New Year’s Shootout at Renaissance Paik Golf C^ourse. Vamer fierd a round of 67, six shots ahead of Donald Littlejohn and Kevin Logan Robert “Greasy” Brown finished at 75. H^rbnl L. 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