c~Jbz £ibilan it3tIg SPORTS IAA October 15, 2003 SECTION Edwards: I'll be back here next season By Naweed Sikora Daily Sports Editor After weeks of keeping quiet and dodging reporters, Michigan wide receiver Braylon Edwards decided it was time to speak out about his early-season disciplinary struggles with Lloyd Carr, his future with Michigan football, the Michigan offense and the way he wants Michigan fans to perceive him - and his message was loud and clear. "I'm a good guy, and I just want people to know that," Edwards said. "I respect Lloyd Carr to the fullest, and I would never do any- thing to disrespect this program. I'm not an arrogant or selfish individual, and I don't want to be perceived that way." Edwards' biggest statement dealt with his future with Michigan. The junior said he has no plans to leave the program after the end of this season. His decision to come back for his senior season was based on several factors. "I want to win the national championship, and that's not going to happen this year," he said. "If I have to stay six years to win the championship, I'll stay. Secondly, I love Michigan football, and I'm not ready to leave yet. I love the college atmosphere, it's fun, and I have to get my degree in time." Carr's displeasure over Edwards became public earlier this season, when he stated that the two were "not on the same page." After the loss to Oregon, Carr said his major problem with Edwards was that he had trou- ble being on time. Then, Edwards sat almost the entire first half during the win over Indi- ana. Edwards said that during two-a-days in August, he was late for a meeting that began at 8:30 in the morning. "I made a mistake, I was a little bit late, and you just don't do that," he said. "When you're a veteran guy, especially after just get- ting the No. 1 jersey, you can't make mistakes like that, and I understand that. "That's where all the problems came from. It all started from that one meeting." Since the issue became public, Edwards says he has been dealing with a lot of adversi- ty surrounding assumptions that have been made about his selfish attitude and its sup- posed negative effect on the team. "Some things are opinions, like when people say that I don't "I'm not ai deserve the No. 1 jersey, and I selfish ind can't worry about that," he said. don't'i "But when speculations come out based on assumptions about perceivec what Coach Carr said, his words-- get misconstrued. Then they say things like, 'He's a disruption to the team' or 'He's no good for the program,' and that both- ers me. "I feel like people are attacking my integrity." Edwards says he fully understands that the public holds him to a higher standard, espe- 1it Nd cially since he asked to be switched to No. 1, and he is willing to accept the increased responsibility that comes with it. He has not doubted his decision to switch for one sec- ond. "I knew it would be hard," Edwards said. "Coach Carr warned me about it, but I told him that I love pressure, so I was ready." Edwards has also been crit- arrogant or icized for dropping the ball, a Vdual, and I problem that has plagued him ever since he came to Michi- mnt to be gan. Still, he says that that way." although he has dropped raylon Edwards passes this year, he does not feel like he has dropped too many. Carr says Edwards has played brilliant football the last two weeks, especially without the ball. When asked if the two were currently on the same page, Carr had just one word to say: "Absolutely." See EDWARDS, Page 4B DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Michigan's Braylon Edwards claims that he will return for his senior year. Icers salvage split in Miami By Sharad Mattu Daily Sports Writer OXFORD - The Michigan hockey team isn't accus- tomed to total meltdowns like the one it had Friday night, but it can take solace in the fact that it knows how to respond to one. After allowing Miami to score five goals in the first 10:22 of the third period and convert 4-of-5 powerplays en route an 8-3 victory, the Wolverines bounced back Saturday with a 2-1 win. Junior forward Charlie Henderson scored a goal just 2:19 into the game, and freshman forward David Rohlfs added one less than five minutes later. From there, Michigan (1-1 ( ) CCHA, 2-1 overall) focused on pro- IGANL" tecting its lead. Michigan shut out MIA_ _ (OHIO) 8 Miami (1-1, 1-3) on its nine power- play chances, and sophomore goaltender Al Montoya bounced back with 33 saves. "Montoya was the difference in the game," Berenson said. "He came up with the kind of goalkeeping that you need on the road." -Montoya,,who had never before allowed six goals and was pulled 5:50 into the third period on Friday, thought the Wolverines' focus on killing Miami's powerplays made a large difference. "Right off the bat we never gave up," Montoya said. "Even though we kept getting penalties, we just kept going at it. We knew their only life would be (on the powerplay). So if we shut that down, we shut their team down." The Wolverines - now ranked sixth and seventh in the U.S. College Hockey Online and USA Today/Ameri- can Hockey Magazine Polls, respectively - felt relieved to have an early lead after trailing nearly all of Friday's game. Henderson did everything himself on Michigan's first goal. With Miami about to clear the puck out of its zone, Henderson stole the puck and attacked down the right side. He fired a low shot that Miami goalie Steve Hartley stopped, but the rebound came right back to Henderson, and he fired it into the net. "After the game last night, we all just sat there and couldn't believe we played so badly," Henderson said. "We knew we had to come out and get something started early. The first shift was really important." The second goal came off another great individual effort, this time by Rohlfs. On the powerplay, freshman defenseman Matt Hunwick fired a pass toward the goal. With a Miami defender draped over him, Rohlfs raced to the red line and batted the puck toward the goalie. Hart- ley, who had hesitated clearing the puck, was out of posi- tion and allowed the goal to score from a nearly impossible angle. As the puck trickled past Hartley, Rohlfs, who fell as he was shooting, collided violently into the boards. He suffered a concussion and did not play the rest of the game. Buoyed by the early lead, Michigan held on with great goaltending and some luck as well. While killing a powerplay with less than three minutes left in the first period, Montoya easily gloved a soft shot See REDHAWKS, Page 3B Freaky Friday MICHIGAN 38, MINNESOTA 35 TONY DING/Daily The Wolverines celebrate their 15th straight victory over Minnesota by raising the Little Brown Jug. Friday's game was the 100th anniversary of the Jug's introduction to the rivalry. Can you believ.,e it? Wolverines'-. stunning comeback saves season ar= INNEAPOLIS - No chance. No way. Not going to happen. You had to be thinking that. dmit it. Even you diehards out there must have started to doubt. Michigan was getting smoked on the road against a ranked team. The offenses was going nowhere. Ther defense was stopping noth- ing. Fourteen to nothing at COURTNEY halftime? Twenty-eight LEWIS to seven in the fourth Full Court Press quarter? You don't come back from that, not if you've had two road-game comeback bids fall short already this season. It's O.K., it's hard to blame you for thinking that. The Michigan players weren't thinking it. But then, they couldn't. "We didn't give up," freshman cornerback Leon Hall said. "That whole game, our mentality was just like, 'We're going to come back. It's going to be the greatest comeback."' It had to be. The whole season was on the line here. If the Wolverines could somehow claw their way back and beat Minnesota, they'd still be in the Big Ten title hunt, and maybe they could use the vic- tory to vault themselves back into being contenders. And if they couldn't, they would have nothing left to play for, not really. With three losses in seven See LEWIS, Page 4B TONY DING/Daily John Navarre scored the first receiving touchdown of his career off a pass from sophomore Steve Breaston to get the Wolverines on the board. ' Offensive outburst leads Michigan over Spartans By Ellen McGarrity Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Seconds after scoring a goal against Michigan State, senior Mike White celebrated with aMCHA short jog around the goal. Along the way, he deliberate-_ ly flashed his Michigan jersey to Spartan fans, hold- ing it out from his chest triumphantly. "I wanted to show some pride," White said. "I like to think about it the Wolverines (1-1 Big Ten, 9-4 over- all) netted to rise above the rival Spar- tans 4-2. Even though Michigan won on the scoreboard, this game easily could have been smeared by its opponent's green-and-white determination. During the first half, the 1,086-per- son crowd was forced to look back and forth from goal to goal. "Because you're doing so much chas- ing (against Michigan State), it was tough to get your rhythm and build out of that," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "You've got to be a team now that can play over all that pressure." relief," Taylor said. Burns cited Taylor as one of Michi- gan's keys to winning. With his 6-foot-5 frame, Taylor headed many balls back toward his opponent's side of the field. Taylor did all this even with fans harassing him about his dreadlocked hair. The Michigan State soccer fans are known to be some of the Big Ten's harshest. "When the crowd got on him for looking like Whoopi Goldberg, he had a smile on his face, and we knew he was going to have a huge game," Burns said. n't hurt the Wolverines' confidence. "I think Knox Cameron did such a good job for us," Burns said. "He was a physical force, a goal-scoring presence and a dominant player in the air." But two Michigan State goals in the next 10 minutes quickly caused Michi- gan to lose its sense of security. After more almost-goals by Michigan State, Michigan finally got its breathing room. Freshman Kevin Savitskie made his first collegiate goal in the 77th minute of play to give the Wolverines a two-goal lead. The team sustained that lead to give it its second-ever victory -,1v-- I f w. 4 I