Thursday September 23, 2004 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com ahbe idiiTj*in ]DuU SPORTS 1OA . .. .. .. ... .. .. .. . Blue's farm boy makes By Sharad Mattu Daily Sports Editor As Saturday's game against San Diego State wore on, and Michigan ran the ball more and more, just about every carry went to the right side. Even though their star on the offensive line, All- American candidate David Baas, plays left guard, the Wolverines put their trust in right tackle Jake Long - who was making his first start - and right guard Matt Lentz. "It's pretty fun when they're calling it to your side, because you just pin your ears back and go after them," Lentz said. And that's exactly how Lentz would prefer it. He can worry about production on the field while not having to deal with attention off of it. "I like where I'm at," the redshirt junior said. "I can stay out of the limelight, sneak in and out, let (Baas) get all the credit and handle the press. It's nice to stake underneath and get away from all that." It's a good mentality for linemen. Especially since, as Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said on Mon- day, "except for their girlfriends and their family, nobody is watching them." Lentz has much more than just his mentality going for him. At 6-foot-4, 300 pounds, he's obviously big - but not very big for a lineman. Still, Lentz is one of the stronger players on the team, if not the strongest. Though he scales back during the season, Lentz leg presses more than 1,000 pounds, bench presses three sets of five at 405 pounds and curls more than 200 pounds. "The other guys say they can always tell when I Buckle up: Blue vs. Hawkeyes a wild ride TONY DING/ Daily Matt Lentz (67) prepares to run onto the field before a game at the Big House. Lentz, who grew up on a farm, has retained his love of nature while dedicating most of his time to football. leave a weight machine," Lentz said with a laugh. "They either have to take a lot of weight off, or they just skip it and go on to something else." When he was younger, Lentz grew up on a 21- acre farm in Ortonville, and took care of anywhere from four to 12 horses. Lentz would train for football season by drag- ging his father's pickup truck up hills. While his size doesn't stop him from doing any- thing on the football field, on the farm it makes horseback riding pretty difficult. "I'd say when I was around 10, I was a little too big for that," Lentz said. "The horses can handle it, but they don't like when you put around 300 pounds on their back." If he wasn't busy with any of his football activi- ties, Lentz would probably be marveling at the foliage before the winter weather comes along. "I like to just relax," Lentz said. "Everything's so hectic during the season that I never get to relax and enjoy the outdoors. "It's nice to get outside every now and then. Growing up on a farm, I'm just used to the out- doors. Inside just isn't the place to me." Though Lentz spent most of his summer in Ann Arbor working out, he got a couple of chances to get away and took advantage of them, going to Tra- verse City State Park. But right now Lentz is preoccupied with Michi- gan football and making sure the running game continues to improve. "It's definitely not where we want it to be," Lentz said. "But we should always be improving, and last week was definitely a step in the right direction." CHRIS BURKE Goin' to work o yourself a favor and watch - very closely - the Michi- gan-Iowa game on Saturday. Not because it should be a good game or because it's an important Big Ten contest or because that's what people do on weekends in the fall. Watch it because you will probably see something that you cannot believe. Games between the Wolverines and Hawkeyes tend to get buried beneath Michigan's matchups with bigger rivals like Michigan State, Notre Dame, Ohio State and the rest. But the last five games between these two Big Ten com- batants have almost defied explanation. The slogan for this game every year should be: Michigan versus Iowa - we have no idea what's going on. This weekend will mark the sixth game since 1997 involving Michigan and Iowa, and - if Saturday's game follows the pattern - it will probably look something like Looney Tunes meets "Remember the Titans" meets an Alfred Hitchcock movie. Drama, suspense, great football and a whole lot of cartoon zaniness. Alright, let me start with last year. Speaking of games getting buried ... there are probably Michigan fans who plum forgot about this one since the Wolverines lost to Oregon the week before it and then went on to win the Big Ten title after it. But last year was just a little sampling of what this game has become. Michigan had a 20-10 lead, but gave up a touchdown after a 43-yard punt return by Ramon Ochoa was ended with a late hit by the Wolverines. Michigan held a 20-17 halftime lead (cue "Remember the Titans" halftime speech). The Hawkeyes came out of the lockerroom and promptly tied the game at 20 after an interception (cue Hitch- cock-suspense music). Then Iowa took the lead when Michigan punter Garrett Rivas rolled out... on a punt ... and had it blocked (cue Vile E. Coyote blowing himself up withan ACME bomb). Iowa won, 30-27. Now, how coild you have forgotten that? Fine, maybe you didn't - heck, the game almos single-handedly got Michigan a new special teams coach. Well, then, lei me take you back to 2002. Michigan was ranked No. 8 in the country and Still very much in the hunt for the national title. This one, unfortunately for the fans, lacked the creativity of the 2003 game. This one looked more like a professional body builder arm-wrestling a 10-year-old. Iowa outgained Michigan by over 200 yards, scores 24 unanswered points in the second half and sent a packed Michigan Stadium crowd home early in a 34-9 win. Crazy? Not really - unless you account for the fact that the Wolverines suffered their worst home loss in 35 years. Oh, and Michigan's longest run of the day was a 39-yard scamper by quarterback John Navarre, on a play that happened about as quickly as a Baywatch lifeguard run- ning to the water. And that disappointment for Michi- gan probably washed away the memory of 2001's dramatic Wolverine victory in Iowa City. In that one, Iowa jumped out to a 20-7 lead when the Hawkeyes ran a reverse - on a punt return - for a 67-yard touchdown. Michigan finally took the lead on a touchdown when wide receiver Marquise Walker went "Go-Go-Gadget-Arm" on a pass that looked like Navarre was throwing into the 15th row of the stands for a touch- down. That play was set up by a B.J. Askew 14-yard run on the rarely-used fumble-rooskie play (it's sort of like the "Annexation of Puerto Rico" play from "Little Giants" for those of you stuck in movie and TV mode). The Wolverines finally put the 2001 game away when tight end Shawn Thompson caught his only touchdown pass of the year for a 32-26 Michigan win. Whew. I'm tired. There's a break between 1998 aAd 2001 when Michi- gan and Iowa didn't play, so I'm going to catch my breath for a second. See BURKE, Page VA *I N MEN'S GOLF Unorthodox practice inspires Sapp's squad By Dan Ketchel For the Daily The sun was low in the afternoon sky, beating down on 12 necks assembled in a circle. The Michigan men's golf team held a formation that didn't seem quite right at a golf practice. No drivers, irons or putters were anywhere in sight. No golf carts, no putting greens, no fairways - not even so much as a spiked shoe. This was not the ordinary routine that Michigan coach Andrew Sapp conducts. The golfers held their circle patiently until they finished strategizing and decid- ed to take action. In a flash, each athlete switched positions with the teammate directly across from him, careful to touch the center of the circle on his way and to avoid brushing another teammate pound- ing through the circle in a different direc- tion. The first few tries ended in chaos, but once they got their timing synchronized, it looked as elegant as the perfect golf swing. Next, the golfers moved on to an activi- ty conducted on two elevated wires angled in a 'V' shape. They took turns going in pairs, starting off with their feet on the wires closest to one another and their hands pressed together. Slowly they scaled down to the wider part of the wires, pushing against one another's palms, keeping each other balanced across the gaping space in between. Why is it so important to travel to a ropes course and build teamwork skills like these in a sport such as golf, which is so individually driven? "Trust," senior Jimmy Wisinski said. "On these wires, we have to be able to trust each other or we'll both fall off. On the golf course, if one of us is having an off day, we have to trust and depend on each other to pick that guy up and make sure he has a better day tomorrow." Sapp prescribed this type of afternoon See GOLF, Page 12A 0 0 0