MM I Tuesday October 28, 2003 www.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com P;ORTS 8 40 Spartans wary of Blue receiving trio State constantly relies on element of surprise By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Editor EAST LANSING - In one fashion or the other, this weekend's Michigan- Michigan State game will come down to which team can through the air. Considering Michi- gan State will rely heavily on the air attack through its spread offense, it will probably be Michi- move the ball gan's passing game that will be the dif- ference maker as a complement to its running game. And the Spartans know that this game will come down to whether its David of a secondary can compete with the Goliath of a trio the Wolver- ines have in Braylon Edwards, Jason Avant and Steve Breaston. "On paper the matchup is incompa- rable," Michigan State defensive backs coach Paul Haynes said. "They do have a lot of talent." Haynes also went on to say that this Michigan receiving core was "by far" the best he had seen this season. "They've got a good stable of wide- outs ... as good as you'll see anywhere in the country," Michigan State head coach John L. Smith said. Given that this stable of horses is able to break a big play at any moment, it will be up to the four or five defen- sive backs to contain Edwards, Avant and Breaston, so that the other six or seven defenders can focus on Chris Perry and Michigan's running attack. One aspect that the Spartans have already begun preparing for in the sec- ondary is the physical play of Edwards and Avant - either in down-field blocking or stiff-arming opponents to gain extra yards. Two plays that exemplify this were Edwards' bull-rush of a Minnesota defensive back for an extra four yards and a first down (setting up Breaston's throw-back to Navarre), and Avant's stiff arm of Purdue's Jacques Reeves, turning a one-yard gain into 34. "They better be," said Haynes of his cornerbacks' preparation for the game. "I mean they have to be. With this game, everything is thrown out the window. Guys elevate their games." Elevation is one thing Michigan State is concerned with. Against Min- nesota two weeks ago, the secondary, led by cornerbacks Darren Barnett and Roderick Maples, gave up 377 yards in the air. "They've made improvements," said Haynes of Barnett and Maples. "Early in the season we had communication problems. We got that situated, and I thought they were improving. Then two weeks ago, I challenged them again and they didn't play that well. They took two steps back against Min- nesota. The thing about those two guys is that they don't have a lot of game experience. I challenge them week by week, you don't want to take those steps back." The Spartans' secondary is going against scout team members to simu- late the play of Michigan's trio. "Our scout team has done a great DAVID TUMAN/Daily Michigan punt returner and receiver Steve Breaston has combined with Braylon Edwards and Jason Avant to form one of the best wideout trios in the country. job," Smith said. "Whether it's dressing (for an award), they fight for it. You can't put a number on the equation of how important that is. If your scout team is good, your other guys have to work to stay good." But even though Michigan State's scout team has stepped up to the chal- lenge of running the right routes, there are other things that can't be emulated. "As far as the actual receiver, I don't think we can get that," Haynes said. MEANWHILE ... A FEW MILES SOUTH: Michigan coach Lloyd Carr announced that Big Ten Preseason Defensive Play- er of the Year Marlin Jackson would be back in action this weekend. He had been bugged by a muscle pull in his right leg against Minnesota. Jackson didn't dress against Illinois and could have played against Purdue, but it was- n't necessary. Also, Carr said defensive end Alain Kashama would be "ready to go." The senior, who had been seeing signifi- cant playing time early in the season, will return after not dressing against Purdue. Hoops conference turns into pigskin roast KYLE O'NEILL The Daily Janitor f Michigan gets 24 points, I they'll beat us. The only way the Spartans are winning this game is if they keep it a low-scoring game. That was in 1995, and those were the words of my father before we watched the Michigan-Michigan State game down in our basement. For much of the game, I was dis- gusted with the way Michigan was playing. Brian Griese - pre-nation- al championship form - was hard- ly as good as injured starter Scott Driesbach and was showing it in the first half, as he and the Wolverines fell behind 14-3 at the half. I was more concerned with how Michigan could manage any offensive touch- down, let alone three to get the fabled 24 points. The Wolverines, behind the run- ning of Tshimanga Biakabutuka, clawed their way back into the game, and after a Griese-to-Mercury Hayes touchdown pass with just minutes left, Michigan was up 25-21. Then I did something I regret to this day. I trusted a Spartan. I believed my dad's claim that 24 points would be enough. The 13- year-old me eyen fell for my father's throwing of the white flag in defeat after the Michigan touch- down. "Well, you got your 24," he said to me. I should have known better. Michigan State thrives on doing the unexpected. I expected them to lose when Michigan hit 25 points. Tony Banks had me and the rest of the Wolverines right where he wanted us. He would need just 2:14 seconds to drive 88 yards of the field and connect with Nigea Carter for the winning touchdown. Michi- gan would muster nothing after that. I would muster nothing after that for the next few hours - aside from the few tears I would always have at that age from a Michigan loss. The Spartans had once again done the unexpected, and as always, I was caught off guard when I saw it. But those who have graced the green and white have always caught me off guard: my father, my friends' and those who compete in those colors. For instance, take my friend Cara DeSanto. Her boyfriend came in from Colorado, went into East Lansing and proposed to her during a football game. What game you may ask? Not Notre Dame. Not even Iowa. But Rutgers. That's right, the punching bag of the Big East and a few Division II teams was the right scene for a life- altering question. Now me, personally, if I were ever to propose to a girl at a Michi- gan game, it's Ohio State, the Rose Bowl or not at all. Even in Min- neapolis they have their proposal- timing corrected. A guy named Mark waited until the Michigan game a couple weeks ago before he proposed to his girl, Jamie. I guar- antee he wasn't going to do that during Louisiana-Monroe or Troy State. But that's what makes Michigan State so special. They take the norm and completely reverse it. Oh, despite the lack of a good game against the Scarlet Knights, Cara said, "Yes" and I wish her and her fiancee the best - even if they should have waited for nationally televised exposure before popping the question. Then there is my friend Charlie Doriean. He's easily the smartest person my age that I know. He was, and still is, almost a lock for any Ivy-league school that he could want. Instead, he went to East Lansing. Not because it was a step down, but because he had won The Alumni Distinguished Scholarship, thanks in part to a test featuring knowledge on anything, including the architec- ture of Egyptian buildings from hundreds of years ago. That's not even the unexpected part, though. He's a pro-wrestling fan. The same guy who will talk to me about topics that are over my head, will chat with the same fire about how Vince McMahon is using Stone Cold Steve Austin poorly in storylines. I guarantee the Alumni Distinguished Scholarship Test asked nothing about that. Spartans just know how to throw you for loops better than anyone else in the business. Take last season. Michigan State had so much talent and expectations of a Big Ten title. Then the Spartans fell apart in dramatic fashion. Head coach Bobby Williams was fired after the Michigan loss and two of the team's captains were removed from the team - one permanently. Enter John L. Smith. He was expected to have a rebuilding year. He was expected to be mediocre at best. He was expected to have a mess of a situation that would be impossible to clean up in one year. Well, I don't think I need to go into what has happened since then. The Spartans, with the same talent from last year (sans Charles Rogers), have begun to look like the Big Ten Champions they were sup- posed to be. I'll admit it, I've been surprised by the Spartans. I should know better by now. - Kyle O'Neill would like to tell all Michigan State fans that the Spartans can expect to win should they score 24 points against Michigan.He can be reached at kylero@umich.edu. 0 r: By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Writer CHICAGO - In the town that created the "Super Bowl Shuffle" the one topic everyone wanted to talk about was the "Conference Shuffle." Big Ten commis- sioner Jim Delany was doused Sunday with questions, as the future of almost every football conference in the country seems to be in doubt. However, there was one thing that made this media frenzy different: This was supposed to be about basketball. "How'd we get into football, I thought we were going to do all basketball," Delany said after his dis- cussions with the media as Big Ten media day trans- formed into a forum on the future of college football. Delany is known as one of the most powerful peo- ple in college football. But in a time when new oppor- tunities are arising, Delany doesn't really want any. When asked about possible expansion, including the mention of Notre Dame, or a conference title game, the commissioner wasn't very excited. "Unless we can add another Penn State, we proba- bly are where we are," Delany said. When the league's basketball and football coaches and athletic directors met last spring, they came to the conclusion that they wanted to play each other more, not less, and adding a 12th team would contradict that. As for Notre Dame joining the conference, Delany said, "I have no idea." He restated that the conference talked with Notre Dame in 1999 and that was the last conversation they had on the matter. According to Delany, the Big Ten is under zero pressure to add a conference title game. While there are obvious advantages to having a title game, Delany stressed many of the negatives. He cited the additional hurdle the game creates to the Bowl Championship Series title game, the effect the losing team receives on its bowl prospects and the season-ending rivalries that would be undermined by the game's presence. Delany also said the recent addition of multiple con- ference title games makes the games less meaningful in terms of television revenue. "While there's money there and some marketing and promotional value, it's not (as) appealing (to) us as it us to others," Delany said. Delany is unsure of the impact the recent exodus of Big East teams to the Atlantic Coast Conference will have. "I'm not sure that at the end of the day what comes out is an improvement," Delany said. Delany said that while he felt people understood the addition of Miami, Florida State and Penn State from independent status and the merger of the Southwest- ern Conference and the Big VIII, he does not feel the same about the ensuing movement in the ACC, Big East, Conference USA and WAC. "Other people can disagree, and maybe 10 years from now we'll look at it and have a different view," Delany said. "But I see a lot of dislocation, a lot of consternation and a media public relation that is not a positive one." Delany did say, though, that this type of movement has been going on for 20 years without the commer- cialism involved. He discussed the move Arizona and Arizona State made from the WAC to the then-Pac-8 in 1978 and how that cost the WAC its Fiesta Bowl bid. Delany also commented on the controversy over mid-major conference access to the BCS, which he said wasn't an issue until the mid-majors started to receive some access "No one had a problem with Northern Illinois not going to the Rose Bowl from 1947 until about two years ago," Delany said. "No one ever received money from the Rose Bowl, and now it's an issue. Everybody's saying that there's not additional access, but anyone's who ranked number one in both polls will go." Delany also said he had no idea that the BCS would grow into the monster it has become. He said the sole idea of the BCS was to create a clear No. 1 vs. No. 2 title game each year. Decisions over the future of the system, he said, will continue over the-next several months. Delany, in this basketball-turned-football press conference, did say one thing: "The only thing the BCS is not responsible for is SARS." 'Sponges' soaking up Burnett's intense style By Ellen McGawrity Daily Sports Writer CHICAGO - Three years ago, Michigan welcomed new men's basket- ball coach Tommy Amaker to Crisler Arena. This season, the athletic depart- ment has proven it can get from point A - A as in Amaker - to point B - B as in Burnett - quickly and smoothly. Cheryl Burnett is the new face on the sideline, taking over as the new women's basketball coach after Sue Guevara's resignation last season. Bur- nett, the former Southwest Missouri State head coach, began practices with her team at the beginning of October. Being the new girl in town isn't easy, but Burnett seems to be making the transition well. Not surprisingly, Amak- er has been one of her main sources of information and direction while she has found her footing in Ann Arbor. "Our relationship so far - I'd like to think it's been great," Amaker said. "I think she's going to add a tremendous amount to our women's basketball pro- gram, the athletic department and our university. I think she's taken this place by storm." Burnett said she is in his office two to three times a day conferring on prac- ~1LI&1L~ji~f ": f. . tice times, speaking engagements and recruiting, among other things. "It's wonderful," Burnett said. "I feel so good about (the relationship) because Barry Hinson was the men's coach at Southwest Missouri State. We had such a great relationship, and I was hoping it would be the same way (here)." In the past, Burnett has often learned. from her relationship with other men's coaches such as Dean Smith, former coach of North Carolina, and UNLV's Charlie Spoonhauer, who coached at. Southwest Missouri State with her early in her career. During her time off between coaching at Southwest Mis- souri State and Michigan, Burnett also spent a lot of time learning from former Kansas and current North Carolina coach Roy Williams. Both Amaker and Burnett have also made a habit of attending each other's practices - something the women's players said did not happen in the past. Even the men's players have had the chance to meet Burnett. "It seems like she's straight forward, and she works the players a lot harder," forward Bernard Robinson said. "She's this Fi sellFre more involved with the program. She's tried to say hello to us. I definitely plan to go see how she works. I could proba- bly learn a few things from her, too." Burnett's own players have also been receptive to their new coach. After a less than pretty season last year - the team went 3-13 Big Ten, 13-16 overall - Burnett's tough and up-tempo coaching style has been welcomed by the team. "I don't want to compare her to last year's coach, but she's definitely really intense," senior center Jennifer Smith said. "She's highly motivating and pushes us as far as we can go through- out the entire practice. I think the team has been very responsive to her style." Senior forward Stephanie Gandy also likes that her new coach is focused more on the team developing as a whole instead of individually. "She pushes us as a group," Gandy said. "She's very team oriented" Burnett has been overwhelmed by the team's openness to her and her style. "The effort, the intensity, the willing- ness to learn and to work hard - they're just like sponges," Burnett said. By Gennaro Filice Daily Sports Writer Three weeks ago, the Michigan hockey team kicked off CCHA play in shocking fashion: Miami (Ohio) pum- meled the Wolverines in Goggin Ice Arena, 8-3. The win snapped a 14- game Miami losing streak in the series that stretched back to the Clinton administration, pre-Starr Report (Jan. 24, 1998 to be exact). Though many deficiencies in Michigan's play stood out that night, the most glaring statistic was the Wolverines' penalty kill - or lack thereof. The RedHawks completed an astounding four of five powerplay opportunities. Ranked second in the NCAA last year in penalty killing with a success rate of 89.2 percent (189-of-212), Michigan obviously struggled to replace some key special teams players. last year like (juniors) Dwight Helmi- nen and Eric Nystrom, who are proba- bly two of the premier penalty killers in college hockey," Pearson said. "But, in the time being, we've used some new guys like Mike Brown - (who has) done a nice job as a freshman, and we're slowly getting him involved - and some other guys who haven't killed a lot of penalties in the past like (sophomores) Andrew Ebbett and Brandon Kaleniecki and (junior) Michael Woodford, (who) all have done a nice job for us." The Wolverines have flourished in keeping opponents' opportunities to a minimum, especially last weekend when Northern Michigan could muster just nine shots and no goals on eight powerplays. "We really did a good job of pres- suring them in their own zone on the breakout, and I think that really helped so they didn't spend a lot of time in Penalty kill coming through for 'M' icers one stop sles We ok you up ith: - d c nt stud nt an j uth air are " budg t hotels and h tels .- - -- I L ' - - _ _ London ..............$379 Paris ................$457 Rio de Janeiro ...$61 1 Boston .............$218 Las Vegas .......... $230 Fare is round trip from Detroit. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. . * ... - - .'1 A A