Preseason Top 25 The first AP poll of the new basketball season was released yesterday. Michigan did not make the Top 25, but go online to find out who did. rmichigandaily.comr/sports Uabe £idtgun ag SPORTS TUESDAY NOVEMBER 7, 2000 1 1 Ross resigns; Moeller to coach Lions CHRIS DUPREY By David Den Herder Baily Sports Editor Former Michigan football coach Gary Moeller accepted a three-year contract yester- day to coach the Detroit Lions. The announcement came on the heels of for- mer Detroit coach Bobby Ross' surprise resig- nation yesterday in a morning press confer- ence. The Lions dropped an embarrassing game to Miami Sunday moving the team to 5- 4 on the season and apparently motivating Ross to retire. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, who worked with Moeller from 1977 to 1995, said he was confident Moeller would eventually earn a head coaching position in the NFL. "You could never be happier for somebody," Carr said. "ie's a very smart and knowledge- able coach and nobody's going to out work him." Moeller hired Carr as an assistant at Illinois and the tandem eventually moved on to coach the Wolverines to two Rose Bowl appearances with the complement of Heisman Trophy win-. ner Desmond Howard - who now specializes in kick returns for the Lions. "Believe me, I'm very grateful to be a head coach again," Moeller told the Associated Press. "It's something that I've wanted to do. I get my opportunity now, so I want to fly with it." Moeller had served as the assistant and line- backers coach for four years with the Lions - three years under Ross. Those last three years, Detroit had compiled a 27-30 regular-season record and lost two playoff games. Lions owner William Clay Ford said in a written statement yesterday that Moeller has "carte blanche to do whatever he sees fit" with respect to personnel and the rest of the Detroit coaching staff. It has been an eventful year for the organiza- tion, which last week was granted hosting priv- ileges for Super Bowl XL in 2006. That game will be played in a new downtown dome stadi- um that the Lions are slated to move into in 2002, the final year of Moeller's contract. Hutch, Backus deserved better AP PHOTO Former Michigan football coach Gary Moeller reacts after being named the new coach of the Detroit Lions. A new era' in college tCarr praises use of spread By David Den Herder Daily Sports Editor Nobody said life was easy. Credit that line to as many parents, teachers and coaches as you'd like. But today, credit it to Michigan coach Lloyd Carr - who has the unde- sirable task of solving the spread offense before next season. "I think we're in a new era in college football," Carr said at his weekly press conference. "I don't see it going away anytime soon. I certainly don't think it's a fad." Two different interpretations of the spread style offense have given the Wolverines two Big Ten losses this year. They've also put Purdue and Northwestern atop the Big Ten standings. "I think you're always studying the trends," said Carr, who conceded that those with nothing to lose are often more likely to tty something new. Northwestern finished 10th in the Big Ten last year at 1-7. This season, the Wildcats are competing for the Rose Bowl. Carr compared the spread scheme to the advent of the wishbone-T offense - a style he said brought almost immediate success to struggling teams in the early 1980s. "Jim Young with the wishbone at West Point," Carr said. "He did something a lot of people weren't doing." See CARR, Page 12 ffensive linemen Jeff Backus and Steve Hutchinson don't deserve the fate that has been bestowed upon the Michigan football team this season. Everyone from Lloyd Carr on down, even Backus and Hutchinson themselves, say Saturday's defeat at Northwestern was a "team loss." But that's only partly true. . There are players on that Michigan sideline that did virtually nothing wrong, guys who had to ride the losing plane home because their teammates were too inept to win the game for them. Backus and Hutchinson are two of those guys. Media access to the team consists of a two-hour session on Mondays where Carr selects two, three or four players to accompany him in speaking to the press. The media is not afforded the privilege of selecting which players attend. In an effort to shield the defense from having to be held accountable for its sewage-quality performance on Saturday, Michigan brought Backus and Hutchinson to yesterday's media . briefing. The two have been frequent visitors this season the Monday fol- lowing a loss. These two future first-round NFL draft picks did all they could to han- dIe questions diplomatically. Despite playing as mistake-free a game as offensive linemen can play, they did not blame their teammates for the defeat. They did not sour-grape about how their senior seasons could end in San Antonio, after their freshman sea- sons ended in Pasadena. They were Michigan men in every sense of the phrase.y It's easy and somewhat under- standable not to feel any sympathy for this year's Wolverines. Certainly they can only fault themselves for the way the season has turned out. But Backus and Hutchinson, along with quarterback Drew-Henson and a few select others, shouldn't be judged the same as the rest of this team. They played the way All-America candidates are supposed to play; they handled themselves with class. It's not their fault that the sec- ondary is incapable of covering any- one. It's not their fault that Anthony Thomas, after using the blocks they threw to gain game-clinching first- down yardage, fumbled the football like he frequently does when it mat- ters most. It's not'their fault that the special- teamers were too lazy to make sure a team has kicked the ball deep before running downfield to block. It's not their fault that the Michigan coaching staff had two weeks to watch game film and con- struct a defensive game plan and then promptly allowed Northwestern 54 points. Backus and Hutchinson are con- cerned about their legacy, and right- fully so. They talked yesterdayabout how they "don't want to be remem- bered" for Michigan's return to Four- Loss Land. Sadly, that seems to be out of their control. It's now a proven fact that the two of them can play like the All- Americans they are, and it might not make a bit of difference. The defense is too inadequate to win games against anyone better than Indiana or Michigan State. Lumping Backus and Hutchinson in with the rest of the 2000 Wolverines is unjust. Remembrances of their careers should be unarguably fond ones. They were big-time players who showed up every Saturday and; did their jobs. Most of their team- mates were not. This team won't be immortalized as a winner. But these guys should, be. - Chris Dupr ev can be reached at cdupre@uimich.edu. Cagers host Grand Rapids Hoops NORMAN NG/Daily Michigan coach Lloyd Carr has been unable to protect against the spread offense scheme this season, drop- ping contests to Northwestern and Purdue. Eootball, hockey game tbes should not overlap Let the games begin. Tonight, the Michigan men's basket- ball team hosts former Michigan guard. Travis Conlan and the Grand Rapids Hoops of the CBA in its first exhibition game of the season at Crisler Arena. The game will be the first test for the Wolverines' freshmen against real oppo- nents. Unlike many preseason exhibition games, which present a travelling band of basketball washouts who can't give up on their dream to play professional basketball, the Wolverines will be squaring off with actual professionals tonight. "We're playing guys who are going to try and teach us a lesson," freshmanicen- ter Josh Moore said. Moore may be even more anxious than some to get out on the floor. It has been over. a year since he played in a game against someone other than his. team- mates. "Practice is good, but it is nota*od gage of where your game reall is," Moore said. "That's why we play games. I have to knock off a lot of rust." Sophomore forward LaVell Blanchard - who was named preseason frstteam All-Big Ten by both the coaches aiib4the media.- will sit out the game duo a sprained ankle. - Michael1fern y Jon Schwartz :ailv Sports Writer It's 7:10 p.m. this past Saturday night. In Evanston, the Michigan football team is doing every- 4hing that it can to HOCKEY top Northwestern's Zak Kustok and Commentary Damien Anderson. In Ann Arbor the Michigan hockey team is doing everything that it can to get a puck past Michigan State's goalie Ryan Miller. There are five minutes left in the foot- all game and the Wolverines are cling- ng to a five-point lead against one of the nation's most potent offenses. There are 35 minutes left in the hockey game and 4 e score is tied 0-0. What's a Michigan fan to watch? About five minutes before the players took the ice for the rivalry showdown, he football team scored its final touch- down. The fans in Yost went wild when they saw people in the pressbox -- where the game was on TV --start cheering loud- The band roared into "The Victors" 'nd the house went nuts. For all they knew, judging solely based on the reac- tion, Michigan had won the football game and it was time for Michigan hockev. Unfortunately, it was mainly alumni and parents that were making all of the noise - most of the students hadn't showed up yet. Looking at the student section, filled only to three-fifths of its capacity, popu- lar sentiment seemed to be leaning toward the idea that the students would start filing in, and by the time the first puck was dropped, the place would be packed. Sadly, that was not the case. The football game rolled on for anoth- er 15 minutes or so, and within the next few minutes, students began filling their seats. They had missed the first 10 game minutes, but the score was still 0-0. The obvious question is, why should a Michigan fan have to choose which way to throw his or her loyalty? Why should a Michigan team - any team -- have to come out to a less than full arena simply because another team is playing at the same time? If only there waasn't such a simple answer to the question: Fall hockey games should not start at 7 p.m., a time when they can easily be inter- fered with by football. They should start at 7:30 p.m., just like Friday night games do. There are obviously diplomatic rea- sons for the earlier start -- it's easier on families, easier on the players who don't need to wait around as long for the start of the game and easier on visiting teams that can get home earlier. On the subject of making it easier on families, Michigan's home Friday night games were kept at 7:30 when the CCHA tried to make teams change the game times to 7:00 two years ago. The rationale was that it would allow people who work late time to come to the games. So why not do the same thing on Saturday nights? Why not make an effort to make it easier on students, one of the most important parts of any team's fan base? Students run the cheers that make Yost such a popular hangout. Students bar- rage the opposing players with insults that run the gamut from amusing to downright offensive. The alumni might be able to be loud when enough of them work hard, but the students make Yost what it is. So why not make their lives easier? Michigan hockey players are well informed on how to handle media types in the most effective and careful manner. They know that the "right" answer to a question like, "should Saturday night games start later" is that they can't really focus on the fans - they have to focus on the game. But who knows what the players are thinking when the recorder isn't in their faces. It's hard to believe that skating out onto the ice and seeing an empty student section isn't frustrating. They claim that they can understand that students would want to watch the football game -- especially a game with as much riding on it as this past week- end's Northwiestern one - but they must feel that in a perfect world, no such choices would have to be made. The fact remains that the football game ended around 7:25. A 7:30 start would have been much more beneficial for fans and players and should become the norm for Saturday night hockey games in the fall. HAVING PROBLEMS with SPRINT PCS in ANN ARBOR? Contact attorney Bill Stern at bsterni213@aol.com Fall 2001 I RUND Lt 1. The center or origin of rapid, intense activity or change... 2. A college Ministry program involv- ing discussion, connection with other 1 1432 Washtenaw Ave. students and drinking coffee. I ,:_ _ _ _ -- _