I Thursday October 7, 2004 sports.rmichigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com PORTS 1OA . ................ . . . . ............ 'M' ready for running onslaught By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Editor Whether it's the shovel option or the fake punt, opposing teams seem to always come into their game against Michigan this season with a trick up their sleeve. But this week, the Wolverines know exactly what's coming. It's just a question of whether they can stop it. "We know they're going to try and run the ball," Michigan linebacker Lawrence Reid said. "We just have to go out and try to defend it." There are currently two running backs in the Big Ten that average more than 100 yards per game on the ground. Both will be on the field this Saturday, and both will be wearing maroon and gold. The Golden Gophers' "starter" at running back, junior Marion Barber III, is a 215-pound power back that likes to run between the tackles and plow through his offensive line. He averages 120.4 yards per game, good for 11th in the nation. The Golden Gophers' "back-up," sophomore Laurence Maroney, is Barber's speed counter- part, and happens to average almost 14 yards per game more than Minnesota's starter. Either Barber or Maroney has had a 100-yard first half in four of the first five games the team has played this year. "(They have) maybe the best running game I've ever seen in 25 years in the Big Ten conference," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "When you look at the yards per game, it's outstanding especially in a day and age when people are having trouble running the football." Carr said that what makes the Minnesota run- ning game so great is the running pair's ability to see the field, and the offensive line's ability to create necessary green space. "They've made a lot of plays where the .ball cuts all the way outside to the tight end to the left, which really takes great blocking and great vision on the part of the ball carrier," Carr said. The Wolverines come into the week as the No. I rush defense in the nation, giving up just 47.2 yards per game. But they came into last year's matchup with Minnesota also doing very well against the run. Then the Golden Gophers ran for 424 net-rushing yards, with Barber picking up 197 yards on 21 carries. No team had ever run for that many yards against the Wolverines. For Michigan to prevent a repeat performance, it's going to have to fight off the excessive number of chop blocks that Minnesota throws at opposing defenses. "That's what happened to us a year ago," Carr said. "We had too many guys on the ground - or turf." While the Wolverines implement the same WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY This year doomed from outset for Cubs Minnesota running back Marion Barber 111 leads the Gophers with seven touchdowns this year. strategy on occasion, most teams typically try to block defenders high in. The Golden Gophers, on the other hand, want to take would-be tacklers out from underneath. This allows for the two-headed Minnesota running attack to have plenty of room to storm down the field. "The instinctive thing to do is to look up," Carr said. "You know there's a guy back there with the ball. When you look up, now you're vulnerable, and he gets to your legs. Once he gets to your legs, you're on the ground and you're done." Despite the fact that the Denver Broncos have made the scheme famous in the NFL, not many of Michigan's opponents have that philosophy. "The difficulty, even if you use that scheme, is how do you teach it without getting a lot of guys hurt?" Carr said. "A lot of credit goes to their coaching staff. They've done a great job of being able to get that system taught and implemented. Nobody has enough players that you could go out Tuesday and Wednesday and do those blocks live, where everybody is on the ground. If you've got a guy 300 pounds, and he goes to the ground 50 times a day, something is going to give." The Wolverines have tried to prepare for the scheme with occasional drills throughout spring practice and this fall, but the team understands the task at hand. "I think we'll know a lot more about our defense after we face the challenge that this Minnesota team presents," Carr said. RUN, GOPHER RUN Minnesota leads the Big Ten in rushing with its one- two combo of running backs, Marion Barber III and Laurence Maroney. Here's a look at how the two backs have performed in the team's first five games: BOB HUNT Unleashed s the baseball playoffs begin this week, one of the sport's most popular teams will be sitting at home. With the National League wildcard in their grasp, the Cubs lost seven of eight games in the final week and a half of the season to be eliminated from playoff con- tention. At this time last year, the Cubs became the team of bandwagon jumpers everywhere, sending rat- ings into the stratosphere. They were poised to become the story of the sporting year, needing to win just one out of three games to win their first pennant since 1945. They lost all three. But 2004 was a new year. The foul ball snatched by Steve Bart- man was gone - literally. The ball was blown up in public display on national television, beginning the team's downward spiral in the eighth inning of the 2003 National League Championship Series. Forget the old Cubs fan phrase "Wait 'till next year," 2004 was sup- posed to be the year where the team would make and advance in the playoffs. Sports Illustrated picked the Cubs to win the World Series (even though this was probably just done to sell magazines, but I digress). Cubs tickets became more popular than ever before, as the entire regular sea- son sold out before the home opener. Chicago, and much of America, believed the hype. Yeah, the Astros were improved, but the Giants hadn't done anything during the off-season, the Braves were the weakest team to come out of Atlanta in years and the Dodgers had no offense. And the Cardinals. Heck, they didn't have any pitching. The Cubs couldn't miss the series this year! As it turned out, the hype ended up being like watching one of those infomercials for a Jujitsu knife at 4 a.m. It sounds great, but once you get it, it doesn't seem to slice and dice the way that guy who had drank way too much coffee told you it would. Frankly, the fact that the Cubs had the opportunity to lose five straight games at home in the final week was a miracle in itself. The season ended up being one fiasco after another off the field, something few teams could recover from. Yes, many Cubs com- plained so much that the media have labeled the team a bunch of whiners. While almost every team in every sport at every level has to face some type of adversity in order to succeed, what occurred this season gave me the feeling that maybe this wasn't the year everyone made it out to be. For those of you who weren't pay- ing attention, these are some (there are more) of the things that happened to those Cubbies this year: " Starting with Mark Prior's nagging Achilles tendon in spring training (and later, his elbow), almost every important Cub spent some time this year watching from the dugout. Kerry Wood missed a month with a bad elbow. Sammy Sosa injured his back while sneez- ing. Yes, sneezing. Third baseman Aramis Ramirez had a strained groin. Second baseman Mark Grudzielanek had his own Achilles injury. Even Nomar Garciaparra, the team's major mid-season acqui- sition, spent weeks at a time on the bench for various reasons. The list goes on... * At the request of his art-lov- ing agent, Prior agreed during the off-season to make a promotional appearance at "Just Ducky," an arts and collectables store in the western Chicago suburb of Naperville. He supposedly agreed to sign a bunch of $300 handcrafted porcelain replicas of Wrigley Field. The problem is, the event happened to fall the night before Prior's first start of the season, which was following a two-month stay on the disabled list. Prior tried to get out of the event, but the store declined after putting thousands into advertising. The pitcher, who rejects all media requests any day before he takes the mound, freaked. He left over an hour before he was supposed to, forsaking people who bought something just to get Prior's signature with an expensive desk item and others who didn't know about the purchase requirement, furious. The store sued Prior, and it has yet to be resolved. Richard Daley, Chicago's Mayor and a White Sox fan who has never set foot in Wrigley Field, threatened to cancel home games at the last min- ute twice because of falling concrete in the ballpark. Daley fought with the Tribune Company - which owns the Cubs - throughout the entire year, and the Cubs put up protective netting around the stadium. The two groups, which have squabbled over the Cubs' proposed ballpark reno- vations and the expansion of night games for years, still aren't in agree- ment as to Wrigley's status for next season. " In September, the Cubs left for Miami to play a three-game series against the Marlins. They ended up taking the weekend off because of the arrival of Hurricane Frances. This forced the Cubs to play 26 games in the remaining 24 days of the season, which definitely could have led to team's final-week collapse. " Putting the cherry on top of the sundae of disaster, Sammy Sosa, whose me-first antics-wore thin as his performance diminished, decided that he couldn't take it anymore. After the Cubs were officially elimi- nated from the playoffs last Saturday, Sosa decided to skip town - without permission - before the season fina- le. This capped a feud between Sosa and manager Dusty Baker that was just one of the disputes Cubs players had this season. Almost no one was spared. Management, coaches, broad- casters and umpires were all involved in verbal fisticuffs with Cubs this season. In the end, the Cubs finished three games behind the resilient Astros, and light years behind the Cardinals. The season ended like the season finale of a primetime soap, with plenty of issues yet to be settled before next April. Play-by-play announcer Chip Caray has already announced that he's leaving for Atlanta. Sosa trade rumors are flying everywhere. Garciaparra's and Alou's chances of re-signing look dim. Now a team looking to build a multi-year run doesn't know where it will be next week. What will happen to these Cubs? Well, like most years, fans are just going to have to wait 'till next year. Chicago-area native Bob Hunt hopes that he won't have to wait 13 hours online next year when Cubs tick- ets go on sale just so he can purchase weekday games in August. He can be reached at bobhunt@umich.edu. I Bark~ $ arlber M a oeTo t a l Att. 106 98 Yards 602 670 Avg. 57 6.8 TD Avgffr 7 120.4 5 134.0~ ,T 1 2 2 5 4 .4 204 1,272 6.2 1 ,... Kohimejer transitioning to highest level By Katie Niemeyer Daily Sports Writer How do you go from being the undisputed top runner in your school and Canadian province to just one of many? Friendly and upbeat cross country freshman runner Alyson Kohlmeier looks at it as a challenge that can be overcome with a little balance and a lot of hard work and, in the end, will make her a better runner. "I have a lot of room for improve- ment," Kohlmeier said. "Being in an environment like this, I can see myself improving a lot." Kohlmeier was the star runner at St. Patrick's High School in Sarnia, Ont., but she never had a real team to run with and compete with. Now, she looks forward to having strong runners around her to push her and make her better. "I've never had a team before," Kohlmeier said. "In my high school, we never had other strong runners, so it's really nice having the envi- ronment where you have 10 girls doing a workout together. It's really different, but I like it a lot." Michigan coach Mike McGuire believes that how well Kohlmeier makes this transition will be a key to her success in college, and he thinks she has all the tools to make this adjustment. "I think her development indi- vidually will be a byproduct of how she transitions into working within a team environment," McGuire said. "We're looking for her to transition smoothly and feel like she can con- tribute without the weight of the world on her shoulders. We've got other outstanding athletes to pull from, train with, race with, and help her in the adjustment to col- lege level running. All that would facilitate her getting the individual accolades I'm sure she strives for." She was four-time provincial cross country champion in Ontario without the help of strong runners pushing her every day in practice. McGuire believes that she has the capacity to be even better. "I think if she stays healthy, she can be as good as anybody we've had here," McGuire said. "Obvious- ly we've had a long line of outstand- ing All-Americans and Big Ten Champions, and she's more than capable of achieving those types of accolades." Kohlmeier wants to improve her times and achieve personal success, but team success is just as impor- tant to her. "I just hope our team can do really well at (the NCAA Champi- onships) this year, because we have a really strong team and most of us are healthy right now," Kohlmeier said. Kohlmeier has already begun to contribute to team success. As the third Wolverine to cross the finish line (with a time of 17:11), she con- tributed to a second-place team fin- ish at the Notre Dame Invitational on Friday. Kohlmeier looks forward to the next race tomorrow and fur- ther improvement, but in the mean- time she's enjoying her first year with the Wolverines and learning as much as she can from the older runners. "I really like the team because I think the girls are really balanced," Kohlmeier said. "Even though we have to train hard and be serious at practice, we still make it really fun. We don't dread coming to practice every day. It's something to look forward to." Gajic looking to step up role in final campaign By Ryan Sosin Daily Sports Writer Milan Gajic is serious. OK, not that serious. But the senior forward wants to make his last season in Ann Arbor his best yet. After three roller coaster seasons on and off the ice, Gajic aims to put everything out on the ice en route to what he hopes is Michigan's first National Championship since 1998. "If we don't win it this year, I think, hockey-wise, my four years will be much of a disappointment," Gajic said. This season marks an important crossroads to his career. After two-and-a-half years of underachieving, Gajic finally began to live up to the hype in the middle his own shots - almost to the point of passing up on too many opportunities. "He makes good plays in the offensive zone, but I want to see him score goals," Berenson said. "When he gets his chances, he's got to bury them." While Gajic feels that the younger players need to learn some things on their own, he knows he has a lot to share. "You just show them the way - they ask questions and you try to give them your advice," Gajic said. "It's a nice compliment from the coaches when they think you can help out those guys." Gajic quickly points out that his role on the team is to score goals. Many critics have pointed to his lackluster defensive play over his career. But he feels that as long as the goals are coming, he doesn't need to stand out in his to suspend twice. This season gives Gajic a chance to not only finish his stay in Ann Arbor on a high note, but also to put himself in a good position when he reports to the Atlanta Thrash- ers organization -which drafted him in the fourth round in 2001 -next September. With all the focus on a national championship, Gajic still manages to keep things simple: "That's what I do, I score goals." 6 1