-I 2B - The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL SATURDAY - October 18, 2003 w lV )w )4 The Michigan Daily - FOOTBAL ,__ Projected depth chart vs. Illinois M" Perry 23 r Underwood 5EFB Duy B 32 Dudley 35 Thompson SE 1 Edwards 15 Breaston27Bl FL 8 Avant 27 Bell 7 Solomon RT 67 Lentz 65 Henige RG 79 Stenavich 76 Kolodziej LT 88 Massaquo 14 Mignery TE Gbe £ich Football Fall Saturdays iAnnAr bor are a special tine for Michigan Wolverines fans. On these rare weekend mornings, as the colors-slowly being to change and leaves gradually accumulate on the ground below, Michigan alumni, students, chil- dren and local residents gather at Michigan Sta- diumwithonepurposeinmind- towtchtheir Wolverines participate in a battle and come out victorious. This is Football Saturday. We here atThe Michigan Daily have worked to provide fans with a look at what's to come on this glorious afternoon. Inside Football Saturday, you'll fond a taste of the exensive football coverage we bringto Michigan fans throughout the season. Enjoy the game. Naweed Sikora U J. Brady McCollough Courtney Lewis Kyle O'Neill Football writers g7 is S aturday PRODUCTION CREW Kyle O'Neill J. Brady McCollough Courtney Lewis Naweed Sikora Football Witers Louie Meizlish Editor in Chief J. Brady McCollough Managing Editor Tony Ding Photo Editor Cover Photos Anne Sause Business Manager Leah Trzcinski Display Manager Adrienne Barclay Ad Design Manager Display Sales Account Executives: Jeffrey Braun, Lynne Chaimowitz, Tera Free- man, Sarah Hoopfer, Ahrim Hwang, Erin Ott. Special thanks to: Megan Kolodgy. Jim Weber LE 98 Strong 52 Garret LCB 5 Morton 21 Jordan U 91 Gils 74 Ma OLB 46 Mason 27 Myers T RT RE strap 58 Ruffin 90 M loney 97 Matha 95 R OMB 54 Taylor 45G~~ ~ 27 Myers -S kson 28 Williams aoey 10 Kleckner E Moss obinson RCB 22 Abdullah 21 Jordan Ss 1 Jack 3 McG Halsey 26 M. Mason 23R' SE 86 Hurst 84 Jones 3 F B 2 ai 7 Beutfer QB. 75aisTon 71 Koct T 63 i'bfracd 72 Schm-ettgoecke 5' C: LG FL 6 Hayden 19 Kornfeld 1. 2003 Michigan Roster X'S AND (ky(e) 0'S Michigan Daily Sports Editor Kyle O'Neill is not a collegiate athlete, nor is he a collegiate coach. But he was a starting wide receiver for his winless team at Garber High School, was third in Bay County in receptions his senior year and claims to know something about the game of football. So, in this special edi- tion of X's and O's, we'll let him break down Michigan's offense to see what has and has not been working. NORMAL SET SHOTGUN SET X X = I-X X X X X X X X X 00zzzz 0 0LJ Ua -7 0 000 0O CORNERBACKS EITHER 0 DROP INTO ZONE OR MANI Explanation: Michigan has had some great successes the past few weeks in the no-huddle/shotgun offense. While it would be easy to think that it is because opposing defenses just drop into prevent defenses, that is not the case. In fact, in many situa- tions - including Braylon Edwards' touchdown last weekend - Minnesota was in either a straight-up man-to-man, or a cover-two defense. On the left, you see what Michigan was primarily facing in the first half. At any time, Michigan would face up to eight defenders in the box - a credit to the Golden Gophers' ability to read whether Michigan was passing or running. More often than not, Minnesota's corners would play man-on-man against the wide receivers. And more often than not, Michigan's wideouts were able to burn them on talent alone. But, Minnesota dropped its linebackers and safeties back into zone coverage anytime they saw pass. This allowed the Golden Gophers to not guess on its play calling, and just react. By pass rushing four (at most five), Minnesota took away from its chances of getting a sack and left Michigan's short passes wide open. BUT, by running the defense they did run (which was similar to Iowa's, except for Iowa safety Bob Sanders being a much bigger playmaker than Min- nesota's safeties), Minnesota was able to deny Michigan most of the 10- and 12-yard pass routes that had been making the Wolverines so successful. Enter the shotgun, along with Minnesota's confusion on how to stop it. To give the Golden Gophers credit, they did not retreat into the prevent. They stuck with what had got them there. Unfortunately, in doing so, the linebackers were no longer the factor they once were. They were forced to guess instead of react to the play they were seeing, meaning the first five yards off the line of scrimmage were usually wide open for screen, swing passes, or draws up the middle to Perry. This is where Michigan's depth at wide receiver pays off. If the linebackers did not commit to the pass right away, they were taking the risk of allowing a big play. The double-edged sword brought Minnesota down, as it was this over-commitment to the 10-yard pass that allowed Perry the freedom he got. ^ Season Averages MICH "L M I C H I G A N PASSING Player Navarre RUSHING Player Perry Underwood J. Jackson Rembert RECEIVING Player Edwards Avant Perry Breaston First Downs Rushing Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss c-A Yds TO Int 148-259 1843 13 7 Att 156 36 10 17 No. 43 28 27 21 26 1 5.4 Yds 859 208 86 66 Yds 575 454 222 288 Avg 5.5 5.8 8.6 3.9 Avg 13.4 16.2 8.2 13.7 Lg 63 35 41 18 Lg 48 71 21 36 TD 9 2 O 3 TD 7 1 2 3 t 22.57 23.6 179.3 110.6 282.3 244.3 77 82.2 461.6 354.9 107.7 30.5 69/157/7 174/276/9 .57/.86 6/4 43/45.43 35/277 31:14 29;19 KEY STATISTICS 70 Babcock 64 O'Donnell RT 67 Maddox 62 Kruger RG 73 Bubin 57 Simmons LT 81 McClellan 88 Bryant TE No Name Pas. Ht. Wt. Year/Eli . LCB 21 LeSueur 29 Hall LE 13 Stevens 9 95 van Alstyne 9 OLB 99 Woods 58 Manning DT 90 Heuer 96 Harrison DT 60 Bowman 93 Ofili RE 95 Kashama 94 Massey 6 eLBs 42 Pett'43 Diggs 37Kafm:ar1 6 Burgess RCB 30 Curry 4 Hood Ss 25 Shazor 28 Stewart FS 3 Jackson 19 Barringer lI~ . 1J 4 rI"r 1 Braylon Edwards WR 6-3 205 Jr. So. 2 Shawn Crable LB 6-5 223 Fr. Fr. 2 Mark Spencer P 5-11211 So. So. 3 Marlin Jackson CB 6-1 189 Jr. Jr. 3 Ross Ryan P 6-0 203 So. So. 4 Darnell Hood RB 5-11188 So. So. 5 Dave Underwood RB 6-0 220 So. So. 6 Prescott BurgessS 6-2 215 Fr. Fr. 6 Alijah Bradley RB 5-6 152 So. So. 7 Spencer Brinton QB 6-5 224 5th Sr. 8 Jason Avant WR 6-1 206 So. So. 8 Matt Wilde QB 6-2 191 So. So. 9 Tyrece Butler WR 6-3 213 5th Sr. 9 Anton Campbell RB 5-11188 Fr. Fr. 10 Troy Nienberg PK 6-2 171 5th Sr. 10 Clayton Richard QB 6-4 220 Fr. Fr. 12 Brandon Williams CB 5-11186 Sr. Sr. 12 Matt Gutierrez QB 6-4 212 So. So. 13 Jeff Kastl QB 6-3 214 So. So. 13 Larry Stevens DL 6-3 261 Sr. Sr. 14 Andy Mignery TE/P6-3 250 5th Sr. 15 Jonathan Borden LB 6-1 222 Sr. Sr. 15 Steve Breaston WR 6-1 169 So. So. 16 John Navarre QB 6-6 228 5th Sr. 17 Carl Tabb WR 6-2 171 So. So. 18 Jermaine Gonzales WR 6-2 210 Sr. Sr. 19 Willis Barringer DB 5-11193 So. So. 20 Mike Kaselitz QB 6-4 214 5th Sr. 20 Pierre Rembert RB 6-0 203 So. So. 21 Jeremy LeSueur CB 6-1 199 5th Sr. 22 Jon Shaw FS 6-0 202 5th Sr. 22 Ross Kesler WR 6-2 200 Sr. Jr. 23 Chris Perry RB 6-1 220 Sr. Sr. 24 Jerome Jackson RB 5-11197 Fr. Fr. 25 Ernest Shazor DB 6-4 218 Jr. So. 26 Mike Carl DB 6-0 195 So. So. 26 Ryan Mundy S 6-1 193 Fr. Fr. 27 Calvin Bell WR 6-1 197 Sr. Sr. 27 Quinton McCoy CB 5-9 160 Fr. Fr. 28 Jacob Stewart DB 6-0 204 Fr. Fr. 29 Leon Hall CB 6-1 170 Fr. Fr. 30 Markus Curry CB 5-11181 Jr. Jr. 31 Zia Combs CB 6-0 182 Sr. Jr. 32 Kevin Dudley FB 6-1 232 Sr. Jr. 33 Charles Young WR 5-11195 Sr. Jr. 34 Philip Brabbs PK 6-2 200 5th Sr. 35 Brian Thompson LB 6-2 212 So. So. 36 Brian Lafer W R 5-11190 Sr. Jr. 36 Scott McClintock LB 6-2 243 Jr. So. 37 Zach Kaufman ILB 6-1 234 Sr. Sr. 38 Garrett Rivas PK 5-10180 Fr. Fr. 39 Adam Finley P/K 6-4 206 Sr. Jr. 40 Obianna Oluigbo LB 6-0 224 So. So. 41 Tim Bracken RB 5-10 207 Sr. Jr. 42 John Spytek OLB 6-4 240 5th Sr. 43 Carl Diggs ILB 6-1 247 5th Sr. 45 Phil Brackins 46 Nick Upchurch 49 Brent Cummings 50 Jeremy Van Alstyne 51 Mike Kolodziej 52 Ross Mann 52 Kolby Wells 54 Mark Bihl 55 Andy Christopfel 55 Jeremy Read 56 LaMarr Woodley 57 Dave Pearson 58 Roy Manning 59 Joey Sarantos 60 Grant Bowman 62 Courtney Morgan 63 Derek Bell 64 Jeff Gaston 65 Leo Henige 66 Andrew King 66 Paul Sarantos 67 Matt Lentz 68 Patrick Sharrow 69 David Schoonover 70 Dan Simelis 71 Tom Berishaj 72 Rueben Riley 74 Demeterius Solomon 75 David Baas 76 Mike Kolodziej 77 Tony Pape 78 Gabriel Watson1 79 Adam Stenavich 80 Chris Matsos 81 Brent Cummings 82 Mike Mandich 83 Adam Kraus 84 Kevin Murphy 85 Dave Spytek 86 Jim Fisher 88 Tim Massaquoi1 89 Tyler Ecker 90 Norman Heuer 1 91 Rondell Biggs 1 92 William Paul 1 93 Alex Ofili 94 Patrick Massey1 94 Matt Studenski 95 Alain Kashama1 95 Mike Mandich 1 96 Chris Matsos 1 96 Larry Harrison[ 97 Luke PerI 99 Andy Stejskal 1 99 Pierre Woods I TE WR CB LB TE LS LB OL OL LB LB OL OLB LB DL OL OL OL OL LS LB OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL DL OL WR WR TE TE TE TE TE WR TE DL DL DE DL DL TE DL TE WR DL PK WR DL 5-7 180 5-11190 6-4 235 6-7 300 6-1 220 6-2 229 6-4 278 6-3 295 6-1 227 6-2 261 6-3 291 6-2 238 6-3 217 6-1 290 6-3 298 6-5 267 6-5 287 6-4 318 6-1 245 6-4 252 6-6 301 6-3 270 6-3 274 6-7 283 6-4 313 6-3 318 6-6 297 6-5 320 6-7 304 6-6 305 6-4 358 6-5 302 6-0 206 5-11193 6-3 242 6-5 269 6-5 240 6-7 250 6-5 249 6-4 231. 6-6 240 6-5 288 6-2 261 6-2 255 6-3 262. 6-8 260. 6-4 190. 6-5 259 6-3 241. 6-0 206. 6-3 321 6-0 206 6-4 198 6-5 238 5th Sr. 5th Sr. So. So. So. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. 5th Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. 5th Sr. 5th Sr. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. So. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So.,So. So. So. 5th Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. 5th Sr. So. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. 5th Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. So. So. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. So. So. 5th Sr. So. So. So. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. PUNTING Player Finley Rivas KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. LeSueur 6 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Breaston 13 Hall 4 DEFENSE Player Curry Reid Jackson Woods Diggs PASS DEFENSE Player Int LeSueur 2 Curry 2 Shaw 1 Shazor O Stewart 2 Yds 404 18 Solo 17 30 29 28 23 Yds 87 0 0 0 I Lg 87 0 0 Brk- 4 6 2 3 6 Avg 16.8 4.5 Asst 3 12 9 14 10 Lg TD 55 O 12 O Tot 20 42 38 42 33 up TD 2 O 0 0 0 6-4 231 5th Sr. PROCRASTINATION STATION ILLINOIS MICHIGAN 0 35- No. Yds Avg Lg 26 1010 39.8 50 3 105 35.0 38 Yds Avg Lg TD 155 25.8 45 0 For this week's matchup, coach Kyle O'Neill led the Fighting Illini and J. Brady McCollough took the helm for the Wolverines. PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES: A P] PA R EIL o 8weat~khirt,, Fonts . more? Michigan coach J. Brady McCollough: To a man, I kicked Coach O'Neill's ass today. In his defense, nobody could have beaten me. I had a chip on my shoulder, and after the last game I played against O'Neill - he was up 35-0 when I quit the game - I had my back against the wall. I knew O'Neill would come out with his patented no-huddle attack, and I was ready for it with my "Cover MAX" zone defense. When we won the toss, I chose to kick the ball off to him because I wanted to show him what we were made of early, and we did. DE No. 13 was outstanding, and the secondary played a wonderful game. It was S No. 3's 12th best game since he's been at Michigan. Last night in the team hotel, I was making my rounds and I came upon the room of FB No. 32. I said, 'FB No. 32, I had a dream about you last night, and you scored three touch- downs in tomorrow's game.' FB No. 32 said, Coach, I'll do my best to score three touchdowns, but you have to give me the rock.' And sure enough, I gave him the rock and he scored three touchdowns. I have a lot of dreams. Dreams about football, running the football, some- times with the fullback, sometimes with the running back, sometimes on a reverse ... what? Illinois coach Kyle O'Neill: Well we entered this game with a lot of goals. We met two of them: Have good break- fast - I had steak, over-easy eggs and fresh-squeezed orange juice - and get Michigan WR No. 1 to autograph my hat - which he did ... nice guy. Questions? Coach McCollough went into a nice zone defense, and Michigan DE No. 13 made It impossible to run any type of offense. That was over-easy eggs, yes. And no, I have nothing against scrambled. No, this was not my most embarassing loss ever. I lost by three points once to for- mer Seattle Seahawks coach Brian Camp- bell, of the University Towers Conference. I did not have my pregame ritual of listen- ing to Sting's "Seven Days." We listened to that "Its getin harder to breathe" song instead'... I mean, shit, it's on the radio so much ... how in the hell am I sup- posed to get it out of my head? Cause you know, it's cold outside, and I've prob- ably got no one to love (insert'some crap- py lyrics here) and like, woah I'm just from the windows to the walls going crazy. I mean where has the good music gone?!?! No, I am not done with this press conference. Get your hands off me ... Everybody's workin for the weekend ... everbody wants to ... AHHHH!!!! # I EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 2003