Tuesday November 15, 2005 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com abE leidigzn ail PORTFS 11 For sake of unity, Blue Out wins What do you get when you convince 25,000-plus stu- dents at Michigan Stadium to all wear maize for a Michigan football game? A pretty kick-ass stu- dent section. What do you get when you con- vince them all to wear blue? A slightly less awesome group of fans. But I guess the bottom line is that either of these options is better than the alternative of an unor- ganized mash of Maize and Blue. So I'm ready to begrudgingly endorse the plan for a Blue Out at Michigan Stadium this weekend against the Buck- eyes. I'm willing to join the athletic department, Michigan Replay and the Detroit Free Press, all of which have supported Saturday's blue outfits. H Especially to the fans Ca who know, like I do, that a in t Blue-Out is second fiddle, I implore you to reconsider this weekend and dig up that blue Michi- gan shirt. A united student section - heck, a united stadium if every- thing works out - would be a sight to see at Michigan Stadium. Like many of you out there, I don't like wearing blue to football games. I don't like that it doesn't show up on television like Notre Dame's bright green or Wisconsin's scarlet red student sections do. I don't like that it feels as if the Maize Rage is just doing this because the Athletic Department said so - probably just so Bill Martin's crew can honor its contract with the M-Den or something stupid like that. I don't like that there are so many cool things 112,000 people could do with colors, but instead the powers that be chose to go simple. (For the record, in the future Michigan Sta- dium could be divided into a maize student section and blue everywhere else. Or the people who sit on the 'M' at the 50-yard line could wear maize shirts, which would look ridiculously awesome). And I don't particularly like that Vince from the Maize Rage sends out an e-mail calling me a "moron in a pink shirt", I ER: he just because I realize all this and he doesn't. But I'm willing to put all that aside for one game of true solidarity among Michigan football fans. Ohio State is currently favored by 2.5 points, even though they have to travel to "enemy territory." So because Michigan Stadium can be pretty tame, the Wolverines need all the help they can get. I never thought I'd write a col- umn directing Michigan fans what to do, but I've heard some cool ideas over the last couple of days, and this is the best forum to share them. This isn't a typical list about cheering when Michigan is on defense or not doing the wave - ever - so take a few BERT minutes to look over ght up some novel ideas to Game make Michigan Stadium a little more hostile this weekend. Towels: I heard that the athletic department has bought - I use the term "bought" loosely because they probably got them sponsored - 25,000 maize towels to wave. This looks cool. Trust me. If there is a towel on your seat when you get to the stadium - or if someone hands you one when you come into the stadium, wave it as much as pos- sible. The great thing about towels is that you can yell while waving them. Genius. I would even support students bringing their own towels or yellow shirts to the game to swing around your head like a helicopter. Ah, the wisdom of Petey Pablo. Bottles with coins: Some students told me about their plan to bring bottles of water and a pocketful of coins to the game, drink the water and put the coins in the bottle. This is an excellent noise-maker, and I support it fully as long as the coin- filled bottles stay in the stands and don't find their way onto the turf at Michigan Stadium. That means that even if there is a bad call, you have to resist chucking the bottle at the ref. This is kind of like waving the keys See HERBERT, page 12 EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily Senior Carl Tabb, seen celebrating with fellow wide receiver Steve Breaston, quietly anticipates another showdown with the neighbors to the south. oRivairy gan By Matt Venegoni Daily Sports Editor When it comes to what's at stake this Saturday, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr put it best. "I don't think as a coach you ever get away from the immediate competition," Carr said of the game consuming him. "The people that you are competing against, whether it be in recruiting, whether it be on the field, it's a job that is con- suming. If it isn't consuming, then you shouldn't be in it." It's "The Game." Michigan and Ohio State is often cited as the best rivalry in college football, and Monday's press conference revealed that, as much as play- ers and coaches try not to worry about the game before the week of the contest, it happens. Le crafts grea But this year - just like many of the past matchups - the Big Ten title is potentially on the line. With a little help from a Michigan State victory over Penn State, either the Buckeyes and Wolverines can take the title with a win in the Big Ten's preeminent rivalry. That fact is not lost on veterans of this showdown. "Well, if we don't win the Big Ten title, it's not the best of a season," Barringer said. Added senior Carl Tabb: "One game can make or break a season just like one play can make or break a game. I say that to say that every game is important." All the players know that the victory over the Nittany Lions helps turn their season around, but the game against Ohio State usually means even more. Senior left tackle Adam Stenavich admitted that for many seasons, the Ohio State game deter- it memories mines whether the year was a success or not. Noted at the onset of yesterday's conference was that every one of the players was an upper- classmen that had played - at least a little bit - against the hated-rival. With the experience, players know what to expect. "There's something definitely to being a senior and there's something definitely to being the role of being a leader on the team," Tabb said. "And when you've been here three, four, five years you tend to learn the things that you can and can't do, and you tend to not fall for some of the things that get thrown your way." It usually takes a little while for the importance of this game to set in - nothing can substitute for actually playing a role in the game. See MEMORIES, page 12 * WOMEW~S BASKETBALL Coming to America, Miss Canada doesn't miss a beat By Sara Livingston Daily Sports Writer Stephany Skrba made a trade-off. Forgoing a chance to spend her first summer as a Wol- verine in Ann Arbor and practice with her new team- mates, Skrba stayed at home in Canada to play with the Canadian Junior National Team for the second year in a row. Skrba missed out on crucial team bonding time and group workouts. Instead, she played against the some of the greatest players in the world. After arriving in Michigan, Skrba barely missed a beat with the team's work out regimen, and she has done everything possible to fully acquaint herself with the ins and outs of the Michigan women's basketball program. "I just think Skrba has done a tremendous job since she has come in," coach Cheryl Burnett said. "I think she has really accelerated, and in the last two weeks she has really come on really well in everything." In the team's first two exhibition games, Skrba has averaged nine points while grabbing four rebounds and picking up three fouls in each game. Though she didn't start either game, Skrba increased her playing time by 11 minutes in the team's second exhibition game against the Ohio Legends. The Wolverines went 1-1 to start the regular season at the Women's Sports Foundation Chal- lenge, where Skrba came off the bench in the loss against No. 21 Temple to score eight points in 23 minutes while collecting four rebounds. In the team's second game - a win against St. Francis (Pa.) - Skrba earned her first start of the season, scoring 19 points and grabbing eight rebounds in 30 minutes. After her domination in Oregon, Skrba was named Big Ten Player of the Week for the week of Nov. 14. "Mr NOTE new en Women's golf team M bags two blue chips A piece in the puzzle fell into place yesterday when women's golf coach Kathy Teichert signed two highly tout- ed recruits, Ashley Bauer and Andrea Ratigan. With the departure of seniors Kelly Skrba's lack of adjustment tribulations can be largely credited to the positive environment her teammates cre- ated and their efforts in making sure Skrba was comfort- able upon her arrival. When she came to campus, she was greeted with open arms from her teammates. In her words, "made it seem like I was here the whole summer." They also took the time out to teach Skrba various team drills that she was unfamiliar with and show her what her new role is in practice. "(Knowing Skrba was coming) made us work harder," freshman guard Jessica Minnfield said. "It made us thinkj that 'OK, she is going to come up here, and she is going to come into the program, and we have to get her ready.' Everybody knew they had to stay focused." In addition to Skrba's teammates, Burnett and the coaching staff were extra careful in insuring that Skrba didn't feel like a pariah on her own team. New NCAA legislation enacted this year allowed Burnett to work with the whole team starting in September - something that has been illegal in past years - which also helped Skrba, giving her more time to adapt to the team's offense with Burnett there to walk her through it. Additionally, Burnett made sure that her transition on the court went as smoothly as her transition off it. "I think we as a coaching staff and we as a team were very proactive of when Skrba came," Burnett said. "It's the simple things, the socialization of it, where players would be talking about something that happened this summer and she was the only one that didn't really know what they were talking about. But we made sure that didn't happen." Luckily for Burnett, Skrba was already ahead of the pack in terms of her understanding of what playing at See SKRBA, page 12 NSA is Coming to Your Cam pUS Join us and learn about NSA ...where intelligence goes to work. 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