The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 27, 2004 - 3B Gotta love the A2 One of Ann Arbor's great mys- teries will be solved today. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr indicated on WTKA on Friday and after the postgame press confer- ence on Saturday that - following a month of Pentagon-esque secrecy - he will finally reveal sophomore quarterback Matt Gutierrez's current status at noonish during the media luncheon. After first catching wind of this planned announcement, my initial feeling was one of relief. For the last 23 days, my friends and acquaintanc- es have bom- barded me with inquiries about the Gutierrez (or Goo-tee- AIR-ez to the uncultured GENNARO FILICE The SportsMonday Column Midwestern folks) JOEL FRIEDMAN/ Daily Freshman Lucia Belassi came off the bench swinging in the Wolverines' 4-0 win over Ball State, registering three shots. pbes In By James V. Dowd Daily Sports Writer MUNCIE, Ind. - If field hockey were televised as widely as football or basketball, Big Ten field hockey coaches like Michelle Madison of No. 4 Michigan State or Tracy Gries- baum of Iowa would have a rough time sleeping tonight. Sun- day afternoon's game between No. 7 Michigan and Ball State exposed Michigan's most lethal weapon: depth. As the Wolverines dominated the Cardinals in the sec- ond half, Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz went to her bench, giving every one of her players significant min- utes without a fall-off in the team's quality of play. It is a dream come true for a program which prides itself on developing a complete squad. "It's something we take a lot of pride in," Michigan senior captain Kate Dillon said, "Being able to have people coming off the bench without letting the level of play waver at all." After a gritty performance in which she stopped every Ball State challenge, Dillon was relieved by junior defender Catherine Pickard. Pickard performed admirably, closing out a Michigan shutout, and making her captain proud. "I was really impressed," Dillon said. "I love having (Pick- ard) coming in for me. She's always solid off the bench when she comes into my spot." The Wolverines' defense also got a boost from freshman defender Jillianne Whitfield, who also closed out Friday's matchup with Indiana. Replacing talented Michigan sophomore Kara Lentz, one of the Wolverines' most consistent performers, is no small feat. But Whitfield proved to be up to the challenge. Whitfield was not the only Wolverine freshman that made waves on the Ball State Turf Field. Ashley Lennington, Lau- ren Conforzi and Lucia Belassi contributed in big ways to Michigan's victory. Belassi came dangerously close to scor- ing several times this weekend. Conforzi awed fans with an incredible spin move when pinned against the end line late in the game. Several Car- dinals defenders had her trapped in the corner, but with grace reminiscent of former Wolverine forward and current assistant coach April Fronzoni (Michigan's all-time leading scorer), Conforzi spun her way back towards the middle and created a scoring chance out of nothing. Flashes of brilliance like this have Pankratz excited about the prospects of her pro- gram continuing its streak of four consecutive top-10 finishes in the National Field Hockey Coaches' Association Poll. "(Michigan's freshman) are getting it," Pankratz said. "The more those guys get to play, the more comfortable they will be, and the more confident they will play." More immediately, the young and deep Michigan bench will help provide respite for regulars as the long season grinds on. The ability to replace tired and injured starters is key to success in the Big Ten and NCAA tournaments. "We're trying very hard to get everyone some playing experience," Pankratz said. "As we start getting further and further into the season, we start getting ticky-tack injuries, and we need more depth. Certainly going into the tournament, we want to be able to rely on those girls to come in and play well." situation. Just because I'm amem- ber of the media doesn't mean that I'm knockin' back Natty Lights with Lloyd on Saturday nights. With the program's concerted effort to contain all (and I mean ALL) information inside the walls of Fort Schembechler, media members cov- ering Michigan football know little to nothing more than any dedicated Wolverine fan. But after this preliminary feeling of liberation - no more questions I can't answer! - I realized that a momentary breach in Fort Schem- bechler would be detrimental to the most entertaining aspect of Michi- gan's fall semester: the Ann Arbor rumor mill. The Ann Arbor rumor mill is a product of the football program's aforementioned confidentiality. Michigan coaches and players usual- ly employ one of three responses to any media question: 1) "He's a real Michigan man." 2) "That was a real Michigan effort." 3) "I don't know about that, you'll have to ask Coach Carr" (basically, a "real Michigan" no comment). These robotic answers leave writ- ers in the dark, and the media's limited knowledge is reflected in the football coverage. As a result, Maize and Blue faithful become starved for inside information. This is what churns Ann Arbor's rumor mill. Lockdown in Fort Schembechler breeds some wild, unfathomable theories. Last year, the rumor mill was fueled by Braylon Edwards's lack of playing time at the beginning of the season and Alain Kashama's four-game "vacation." But nothing in my time at Michigan has stirred the pot as much as Gutierrez's situ- ation this fall. After the season opener, Lloyd Carr said that Gutierrez didn't play because he was suffering from "a sore shoulder." When a media mem- ber asked Carr to expand on his vague injury description, Carr gave the reporter a staredown that'd make Mike Tyson flinch. So, for the last month, it has been kept at that: a sore shoulder. Outside of Carr and Gutierrez himself, nobody (literally) seems to have a clue what the situation is. "The funny thing is, the media thinks that we're keeping secrets - the media thinks that we're just not telling you," Michigan wide receiver Carl Tabb told me on Saturday. "I don't know. So, I can't tell you any- thing because I don't know - that's something you'll have to ask Lloyd. I really do not know what's going on with Matt. I do not know who is going to start week to week. I really don't care - a quarterback is a quarterback to me. Anyone that gets me the ball, gets me the ball." But the public doesn't share Tabb's "a-quarterback-is-a-quar- terback" mentality and refuses to accept Carr's ambiguity. Here's where the fun begins. I've never been a fan of gossip, but the Ann Arbor rumor mill has spawned hypotheses so outrageous and peculiar, that it is very hard to ignore. Here are a few of the more fanatical speculations I've heard: - The Scandalous Theory: Lloyd Carr named Gutierrez the starter, but then realized that true freshman Chad Henne was a better player. Carr wanted to help Gutierrez save timor mill face oSo ht told hm to pretenid his shoulder was hurt. - The Pierre Theory: Michiman linebacker Pierre Woods violated the no-tackle policv on GiierreC in practice, injuring the shoulder. This hypothesis kills two birds with one stone, as it also explains Woods' lack of playing time thus far. - The Walk-In-A-Stramilht-Line Theory: Gutierre: received a DLI and the University is trying to keep it under wraps. - The Lloyd-Carr's-A-Bigot Theory (my personal favorite): Guti- errez is not playing because he has Hispanic heritage. No joke - I've heard every one of these and had each of the sources swear by their statement. Some folks claim they have a reliable insider. I'm not the only person who catches these outlandish conjec- tures. Many players overhear the by-products of the rumor mill and have a good chuckle. "That's about all you can do is laugh," defensive end Pat Massey said. When Gutierrez respectfully declined talking to me about his sta- tus after Saturday's game, I decided to tell him some of the Ann Arbor buzz. He expressed great amuse- ment, especially with the DUI the- ory, to which he responded, "I don't even drink alcohol, so you can throw that one out the window." Lloyd's announcement today - most likely something along the lines of "Matt needs surgery" - will put an end to one of the greater whirl- winds in the Ann Arbor rumor mill history. Although I'll enjoy a life in which I don't face the same exact question 10 times a day, I'm going to miss students throwing around answers to that question as carelessly as they toss a beer-pong ball. At least until the next thing goes slightly awry for the program and Fort Schem- bechler locks up. By the way ... Markus Curry was listed as a possible starter on the depth chart, but didn't play a down on Satur day. GO RUMOR MILL GO! Gennaro Filice can be reached at gfilice@umich.ed. U U STICKERS Continued from page 18 able to mount numerous threats, but the Wolverines found themselves in posi- tion for easy goals, a focus point for them in practice. "In the circle you want to make sure everyone is in the right posi- tions," Michigan coach Marcia Pan- kratz said. "We frame up the goal, and cover the rebounds, so it worked out that they were in the right posi- tions. Sometimes the ball goes there, and that is nice to see." The Wolverines took an early lead when Fox tipped in an errant shot by Blake. After a corner taken by Wol- verines' sophomore Kara Lentz, the ball came out to Blake, who fired a shot that was headed wide right before Fox tapped it past Indiana goalkeeper Katie Kanara. Indiana's best chance of the first half came when sophomore Lydia Schrott was tripped inside of the cir- cle. Sophomore Mallory Reabold took the penalty stroke, but Riley stood tall and denied Indiana a chance to pull within one. Michigan's second goal was almost a carbon copy of its first. Hortillosa took the ball from sophomore Kara Lentz's penalty corner, slid the ball to junior Lori Hillman, who shot it to Kanara's left. After an Indiana defender fumbled with the clearing pass, Civic was there to put it in. Civic scored her second goal of the contest after another corner. Hillman drove deep into the circle, and shot it across the goalmouth to Civic, who redirected it into the goal. From there the Wolverines appeared to be sitting comfortably, but Indiana pulled within two when senior Morgan Miller rock- eted the ball past Riley. Miller's goal came off of a textbook penalty corner. Schrott passed to fresh- man Meredith Brown who set up Mill- er's fourth goal of the season. It was only 1:26 before Michigan answered, reversing the momentum that Miller's goal had created. Blake took the ball near the top of the circle and lifted it into the upper left corner of -the goal. Pankratz was pleased with the per- formance in the Big Ten opener and her team's ability to maintain a high inten- sity level for the entire game. "I'm certainly happy with the results," Pankratz said. "Indiana is a very fast team, and they play at a high-intensity level with a lot of emotion. I thought our team did a good job matching their intensity level for the whole 70 minutes." Michigan will continue its Big Ten campaign when it hosts Northwestern on Saturday at 1 p.m. The Wolverines will face Harvard on Sunday at 1 p.m., also at Ocker Field. I NM . i INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS AUSTRALIA BELIZE CHINA ECUADOR ENGLAND FRANCE GERMANY IRELAND ISRAEL ITALY This is B.U. This nuld he vonu I I K