" # 4 0 0 0 0 04 8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 8, 2004 Mi Sept. 1 The Huskies Tak In Michigan's first gas the Wolverines travele necticut. Unsure of hog perform without Ca relied on its defense t tory. In the 81st min sophomore Kevin Savi ; game-winning goal fo Employing a new fo defenders, Michigan ng game victory wou the rest of the season. "It gave us so much c Ryan Sterba said. "W how we were going to p ferent style and sitting n 2 rb .s~ ch CF7 I i 1 . j 4 kedownI 1 me of the seas d to No. 10 CO w the team wo meron, Michig o steal a 1-0 v ute of the gai tskie scored th r Michigan. rmation with f hoped this ope ld set the pacef onfidence," jun e were unsure play, playing a d in more.' I' I ps ad ds ~f ltd-t JamieJosephson and Anne Uible on, dn- Daily Sporls Writers ,an ne, e w Sept. 4 ive Michigan i s first n- overtime a e of the for season ag i st West- e rn IT- n i U-G . for of if- I i i 4 1 I ,?' tE L Fa rI N rtd Oct. 29-31 Home Field Advantage Returning to Ann Arbor after ng the last eight of its nine games on the r , Michi- gan hoped home-field adv antage aid open up the Wolverines' attack game. Against Akron, Michigan's offen was on fire. Michigan massacred the Zipt -0, with junior Adam Bruh, Blanks and T i all con- tributing to the Wolverines' offensive effort of the year. Unfortunel against No. 19 "ea State_ two days late', Michigan was u to con- vert o its scring chances. As it turned out, neither tean made an appearance on the sc oreboaard,. A 0- result- ed after double overtime. Dubay's e t saves was just one stat in this defensive s ama. "The Peni State tie was a big for us," Burns said. "For the first 15 min of the game, we were all over them. We 've beat- en them, but we'll take that tie." NoO3 Ca' ron and Glinski re rn to the field g ag{i nst Oakland. 0 "Being on the road isj allays hard," Turpir said. "Getting a victory th re was importan1 for us. We weren't exacy n a win streak, so getting a result there WJas jretty key." AA1 J4AA Ma z' 3 guys a h ii Y U' _ I __ _ _ _ AA AAAA Sept. 24-26 Disaster in the East Rutgers was the first stop in a six-game series of road games for the Wolver- ines, who saw their six-game win streak come to a sudden halt in a 5-0 shutout. Suffering its first loss of the N season, Michigan hoped to get back on the win- ning track against' Long Island two days later. The Wolerines led the Blackbirds 1-0 the entire game. But in the last min- ute of regulation. Michigan gave ip an own goal on a Long Island corner kick. The def ltahil slipped past oalkeeper Joe Zawacki, sending t me into overtime. After two eertime periods, neit team could break the stalemate. "When i look at our wins and los es, probably the game that we are sa Eing, That should've 'en a different result' was the Long Island game," Burns :. "We were clearly the better team there." >ractice, Junor defender Chris1 semor Knox was expected to be one o ion's best players n 2004. inji . The junior was heart broken Last yea, he*sti o01record with 3pints. a a tured ankle. But Cameron tore the meniscus in his right knee in an exhibition gam ver the as just optimistic about it," Glin- summer. a ntean, You guys will be fine without _ "I put a lot of work in over the surimer to prepare for the season," Cameron said. "It G'f ski would end up sitting on the was tough not being able to play." unt IJe Oakland contest. Michigan coach Steve Burns no d to fill the void that Cameron woull jeave for ione of the fastest players on the 18 games. The 43-3 shape the team ° played in had been specifically bu'lt to work wo cause Burns to revise the Whlverin. on the strengths of Knox as an agg e forward. J e loss that hurt the most was Glnsi "Upon losing Knox ... we learnl rly on that it wasn't a shape that wol help us sai. "We realized we couldn't play the 5-3 be effective," Burns said. the speed in the backfield." - - m . . - mqpm k '1 i T Y "f f I r I J TV'j V.c t.v~ v P i ck a C ar d..- In enotio a Big Ten mtatchup, the Wolverines d ped game garst tieHoosiers, 2-1. sheated until the end, producing a tot o 8 fiv y lowcar sand two red cards between the two t a. 0 cor seq: ence of the intense physical matchup w the -of sen w sasn Steliberger. He was tadkded hard b a Ind defen er a d b -ke his right leg. "1 k ew ih when it happened that I had broken " berge sak . "I always been able to contribute to t"e field, ndrow (couldn't)." "D sonis tebiggest warrior of a player," Burns sad. "Da wasahu I forusbecausehewasontrackto p s coupl of ral big games. Without him, we lost a rti our s nd field." ect. 1? Spartan Heartbreak The Wolverines had been op fhe road for six straight games and hoped that their eCing game against Michigan State would he agaeore mbr It ended up being memorabh.6raltewograos Michigan lost 3-2 in overtim ,appang a three-game los- ing streak and giving the te ts first home loss of the season. The Spartans sored t ree of their goals off restarts, something that the Eernes had previously prided themselves on defendin. "The Michigan State tem a tuhBrssaL"W hadn't planned on that loss. e alw spread out, and we lost contact wth their fouls, ~loss liana Stell- n the wson vin a on of V T IN ii I r -1 .ki said. told (the delines for seven games chigan squad, Glinski formation once again. a broken ankle," Burns. because we didn't have > ::, i I I