Thursday September 30, 2004 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com SPORTS 1OA Punter balances life as engineer Basketball is back, so let's do this BIG By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Editor Adam Finley often finds himself caught between a rock and a hard place. He is a football player, but receives grief from his teammates because he is the punter. He is a graduate in biomedical engineering student, but doesn't like to tell his classmates that he plays football because of the negative stigma that comes with it. But one thing Finley can talk about with pride is the consistency that he has provided for the Wolver- ines since the 2002 season. While the placekicking game has yet to find that groove since the graduation of Hayden Epstein, Finley has aver- aged a solid 41.7 yards per kick in his career. After last Saturday's game against Iowa, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr made a special effort to complement the fifth-year senior and point out how far the punting unit has come along since it was terrorized by Miami (Ohio) returner Ryne Robin- son in the season opener. "If you look at the net punting, it's not very good because of the block and returns that we have had," Carr said. "But if you look at the punt- ing average, Adam Finley has been punting the ball as well as any punter we've ever had here." Carr also added something else. "Adam Finley is as smart as any guy I have ever coached," Carr said. While Finley doesn't like to make a big deal about being a football player and a biomedical engineer- ing student, it is a rarity for any col- lege football player to take on both pursuits. ICE HOCKEY Finley says he has a real passion for the subject, and that he wants to enter into research and development if a career in the NFL doesn't work out for him. To manage school work along with a 25-hour practice week and trips around the Midwest, Finley cuts down on his credits during the season so that he has one difficult class and two others that aren't as challenging. Finley doesn't often tell his classmates of his other life on the gridiron, but he said that it's difficult to keep it secret. "Eventually people are going to know if I have to leave at 2 o'clock for practice every day," Finley said. As to analyzing situations on the field, Carr has praised Finley's abil- ity to explain exactly what happened after each time he kicks the ball. But Finley just attributes it to the expe- rience of punting the ball so many times. "It's one of those things that you do hundreds of thousands of times, you develop that muscle memory in the way (the kick) feels," Finley said. "So of course you're going to know what you've done wrong." Finley came to Michigan as both a punter and kicker, but he said that the coaching staff told him to focus on his punting from the beginning of his career. While there is so much that can go wrong with each punt attempt, Finley has attempted to focus on his own game and let others worry about their blocking. "It's something you learn over your career," Finley said. "Early in my career, I tried to pay attention to it. As I have gotten more com- fortable, I've gotten to just feel and sense it even though you are concen- FILE PHOTO Michigan senior Adam Finley has been the starting punter since 2002, and has averaged more than 40 yards a kick throughout his career. trating on all the normal technique stuff." Although the punting unit had its problems against Miami (Ohio) and Notre Dame - where it gave up a blocked punt - there was clear improvement shown on Saturday against Iowa. Finley said that there has been more emphasis put on the punting game this past off-season than in years past. "We've really tried to attack it as a team," Finley said. To his teammates, Finley will still be known as the punter. But he says it's all fun and games. "It's always going to be a little bit tougher because we're not down in the trenches like those guys," Finley said. "But at the same time, I hang out with all of those guys. You're always going to get the grief for being the punter or being the kicker, but it's all in a joking fashion." SHARAD MATTU Mattd Brute n March 14, I knew what was coming. The Michigan basketball team wasn't going getting invited to the NCAA Tourna- ment, and would have to settle for the NIT. I thought the NIT be a waste of all our time. Luckily, I've never been so wrong. Michigan won the whole thing, and in the process put a positive spin on the entire season. Sure, the Wolverines got some breaks, but give the team credit. They bounced back from the disap- pointment, won three home games and then went to New York City and won two more games. And give us, the fans, some credit. There weren't many of us at that first-round game, but the Maize Rage and company were loud. Afterwards, when it was announced that tickets for the next game would be on sale 30 minutes later, I raced through the snow on Elbel Field (thankfully I lived just five minutes away), went to mgoblue.com and clicked refresh over and over until.tickets were available. I did the same thing after the second game, too, and I'm pretty sure I wasn't alone. For those last two games, we pretty much packed Crisler. The point is, Michigan basket- ball is BACK, and this needs to be celebrated. I'm worried that in the six-plus months since, we've all forgotten how caught up we were in this team (let me say this again: we were actually running home from Crisler to buy tickets so we could go back there two days later). The bottom line is, last season ended BIG, and this season needs to begin BIG. We can't have a letdown. To accomplish that, I think I've got the perfect idea. Midnight Madness. Sadly, many Wolverine fans don't even know what this is. There's a date where college basketball teams can officially begin practice - this year it's Oct. 16. At Kansas, Mary- land and many other schools (includ- ing Michigan State) the first practice is held at midnight in an arena packed with fans. In Kentucky, it's televised live across the entire state. During my three years at Michi- gan, the basketball program has come a long way. The aftermath of the Fab Five is long forgotten. And most importantly, thanks to coach Tommy Amaker and his Duke ties, the students matter. We got courtside bleacher seats, which are now free (by the way, I bought season tickets - could you hook me up with some courtside seats?). Heck, Amaker even acknowledges the student section before every game, which is something Lloyd Carr and Red Berenson can't say they do. So Midnight Madness is just the next step. Another great reason to have this is to get the women's basketball team in the spotlight. Last year coach Cheryl Burnett was looking for all the fan support she could get. Well, there wouldn't be a bet- ter opportunity than this. She's got a young team that may struggle at first, but soon it'll be good. They deserve the exposure, sharing Crisler Arena would give it to them. Wouldn't it be fun to see them have a 3-point contest or mix the teams up and scrimmage for a little while? I believe this can happen, but everyone tells me that two weeks and two days is too soon. Well, I don't have the patience to wait one year, two weeks and two days, so let's give it a shot now. The collaboration that goes into every basketball game by the Maize Rage - from the weekly meetings to the flyers that tell us who's been arrested and who nearly bombed his SATs - is amazing. Even against a horrible team like Penn State, the fans show up. For that game some- one made a 10-foot poster of the Nit- tany Lions' seven-foot, 200-pound twig, Jan Jagla. So for the next two weeks, Maize Ragers, let's direct our time and energy towards this project. Trust me, the athletic department won't make this happen. I really believe Amaker and Burnett would want this. But at the same time, Michigan is always about tradition. It's why we may never see a Michigan football night game, and it's why this hasn't happened already (because it should have). So it's on us. The question is, how bad do we want it? I still haven't found a reason not to have it, and trust me, I'm look- ing. I'm not asking them to dunk off trampolines, so they aren't any more likely to get injured. And Coach K at Duke does something along these lines every couple years (he appar- ently doesn't like the term "Mid- night Madness"), so Coach A doesn't have that excuse. I've also been told that Michigan will hold the Maize and Blue Scrim- mage on Oct. 30, following the football team's slaughtering of Michigan State. But that's exactly my point. It's time for the basketball team to stop piggy-backing off the football team. It deserves its own day. The hoops squad deserves all the support the fans are willing to give it, and the fans deserve this stage to support the team. Sharad Mattu plans to be waiting outside Crisler Arena around 10p.m. on Oct. 15. He grew up watching Big East basketball and believes the Wol- verines' continuity will enable them to make the Sweet 16. He can be reached at smattu@umich.edu. .Rule forces captains to lead workouts By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer When the Michigan hockey team takes the ice this weekend against Windsor, it will do so without having had any full practices with its coach- ing staff. A new NCAA regulation, passed in 2001 but implemented this year, forces coaches to stay off the ice until Oct. 2. For Michigan, the date coin- cides with its first of three exhibition games this year. Michigan head coach Red Berenson is not pleased with the new rule, which leaves his team's captains in charge of practices. "We were not in favor of it," Beren- son said. "Most coaches in the west - in our league and the WCHA - were not in favor of that. It was driven mostly by the conferences in the East. They pushed it through, so we have to abide by it. Doesn't mat- ter what I think of it, but I'm not in favor of it. "For us, more is better. Our play- ers come to school and they're anx- ious to skate, they're anxious to play and they like to play more hockey, not less." In the past, coaches were allowed to show up as soon as captains' prac- tices began in the middle of Septem- ber. But schools in the ECAC, which generally begin their season almost a month later than schools in the CCHA, were upset that CCHA pro- grams were getting a head start. Berenson said that some of the ECAC programs - he wouldn't specify which ones - worked hard to make sure that the NCAA regulates when the coaches are first allowed to come onto the ice to practice with their teams. Michigan's practices, though missing the leadership of the coaches, are pretty much business as usual. They are led by senior See PRACTICE, Page 13A 0) 0 CAREER PRESENTATION & RECEPTION Date: Monday, October 4th Time: 5:00pm-7:00pm Location: Hale Auditorium/Assembly Hall IkwIL"Am H LIum1 UI INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS International Internships English Speaking Programs I A/_ L. _ . _ R A A . f! !1 .." x I i f I A t I rnnrlrnn ;'eino n own t~n~~[iihlin /!1irklaInriI nc InnnIAC WaIchnntnn nIr I r