Thursday September 13, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com SPORTmS 5A " ESSOCCER Unlikely hero nets OT upset EMMA NOLAN-ABRAHAMIAN/Dall Senior linebacker Max Pollock (51) celebrates his first career touchdown with teammates John Thompson (49) and Johnny Sears (25) during Michigan's 41-17 victory over Central Michigan on Saturday. Pollock's TD well-eared By Jamie Josephson Daily Sports Writer Doink! That was the sound of the Michigan men's soccer team's first major upset victory of the season. With the score tied at one goal a piece at the end of regulation, Michigan and No. 14 Kentucky took their battle into overtime in Lexington, Ky. The Wolver- ines found a new hero at the 96th minute - and an unlikely hero at that. Sophomore Alex Morriset found himself wide open from 35 yards out of the Wildcats' goal. Not known as a scorer, Morriset decided to take a shot. With Kentucky's goalie leaping into the air to attempt the save, Morriset's knuckleball banked off the underside of the crossbar and snuck into the net, giving the midfielder his first career goal as a Wolverine and Michigan a huge upset win against Kentucky, 2-1. "Here's Alex, and he's not a goal scorer," said Michigan coach Steve Burns, chuckling. "He is a central midfielder that is a great defender. ... He certain- ly has more yellow cards than goals, and that's his role." Michigan (4-3) notched its first upset against a top-15 team this year in its first overtime contest of 2006. The Wolverines also served Kentucky (5-1-1) its first loss of the season. "I think more than anything, the win reinforces the belief, the confidence and the attitude that we are a good team, and we will continue to be a good team," Burns said. "Sometimes that is a challenge when you have young players on the field. They all come from winning programs, but suddenly they are thrown into an environment where they suffer a couple of losses. That's really what this victory means ... reinforcing the attitude that they can win these games." Michigan drew first blood at the 36-minute mark. Sophomore Steve Bonnell made a long run down the right side of the field and played the ball to freshman Mauro Fuzetti in the middle. The rookie dribbled to the right of a Kentucky defender, found a seam to shoot through and launched a shot across his body that went into the upper-left cor- ner of Kentucky's net. Fuzetti's first goal of the season gave the Wolverines a 1-0 lead. "Mauro is a goal scorer and one of the top three finishers on the team," Burns said. "Mauro had the keeper beat right when the ball left his foot. He's been in that situation before this year and usually passes the ball to other players. But we've been telling him, 'That's your shot. You take the responsibility and do it because you can.' " But before Michigan could blink, the Wildcats responded. Kentucky earned a corner kick just two minutes later. Off of the corner, a Kentucky player hit the ball up in the air, and the Wildcats' Riley O'Neill snapped a header toward the goal. Michi- gan goalie Patrick Sperry tipped the shot, but the deflection wasn't enough, and Kentucky evened the score at one. With the score tied, the sec- ond half became a very physi- cal, back-and-forth battle. By the end of the game, the two squads committed a total of 43 fouls. Sperry also made some great saves to keep Michigan in the game, tallying a total of six on the day. A crucial stop came in the early part of the second half, when O'Neill had the ball again, six or seven yards. off to the See WILDCATS, page 12A By Matt Singer f Daily Sports Editor At Michigan, walk-ons are lucky to get one chance to shine. Last Saturday, senior line- backer Max Pollock got his opportunity. And he took advan- tage. With just under 12 minutes to go in the Wolverines' matchup against Central Michigan, Pollock lined up for his second snap of the game. Michigan held a comfortable 34- 10 lead, and the coaches decided to give the hard-working walk-on some reps in front of the Big House crowd. What happened next was vin- dication for anyone who still believes in the underdog. Lining up as Michigan's left out- side linebacker, Pollock dropped back into coverage as Chippewa quarterback Dan LeFevour took the snap and rolled to his right. LeFe- your looked downfield and fired the ball in Pollock's direction. Pollock leaped, raised his arms and made a fingertip grab that would have made any wide receivers' coach proud. Suddenly, the 6-foot-1 218- pounder with just three games worth of garbage-time experience found himself just 12 yards away from paydirt. Pollock raced toward the left cor- ner of the endzone as Central Michi- gan wide receiver Justin Gardner gave chase. Just as Pollock reached the goal line, the ball appeared to come loose. But thereferees signaled touchdown, and pandemonium ensued as the Wolverines mobbed Pollock, celebrating a touchdown from the unlikeliest source. "I mean you always know you're going to get an opportunity some- time' Pollock said. "And you always just visualize something like that, in your fantasy or your dream. And I guess you just gotta make the most of the opportunity." After the game, Pollock said he had no recollection of the sequence of events that led him to Michigan Stadium's endzone. "Truthfully, I don't remember - I'm completely blurry about the play," Pollock said. "I really have no idea what happened and I'm still kind of blurry about it." Even though he didn't recall the details, the score was a sweet reward for Pollock's toils as a walk-on. Day-in and day- out, Pollock practices with for- mer four-star recruits and NFL prospects, with little-to-no hope of ever seeing his name on the two-deep depth chart. But the slim playing-time pros- pects don't slow Pollock down. According to starting linebacker Shawn Crable, Pollock's motor never stops running in practice. Even the biggest, strongest and fastest Wolverine linebackers are amazed by Pollock's energetic attitude on the practice field. "He plays real fast, he plays hard," Crable said. "A lot of line- backers look at him, even though he's not starting (because) when he plays, he plays with heart. I look at him, I look at the way I play, and I think I play at a high rate. But when I look at him, there's a higher rate that I can go. See POLLOCK, page 12A