SportsMonday - October 9, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 5B MAIZE GAUGE The Michigan Daily football writers break down the weekend's stats that don't show up in the box- score. The defense-o-meter measures the intensity of the defense, the Carr-o-meter judges Lloyd Carr's demeanor following the game and the hypemeter measures the fans' game performance. eow DEFENSE-0-METER /3 Michigan's defense dominated the first half, shutting out the Spartans and taking their running game out of the picture. Two second-half scores prevent us from rewarding LaMarr the 'D' four Woodleys, but all-in-all, a bang-up job again. Woodleys CARR-O-METER HYPEMETER Carr was happy to hold onto the Paul Bunyan trophy for The Maize Out was infull effect for the second straight home another year, but was unusually snippy following the game, and we must admit: It looked cool. For the most / game. Questions about injuries and upcoming games / 4 part, students were into the game as much as they could Lloyd didn't allow Carr to enjoy the win much, and it showed.- Student be for something that turned into a second-half snoozefest. Carrs T-shirts STAFF PICKS Predictions against the spread for Oct. 7 Popular history professor and Golden Apple winner Matt Las- siter was able to further advance the celebrities ahead of the foot- ball writers after solid week. I . :_ Scott Bell Lassiter Michigan State (+15.5) at No. 6 Michigan Michigan State Michigan State Michigan State Michigan Michigan Bowling Green (+35) at No. 1 Ohio State Bowling Green Bowling Green Bowling Green Bowling Green Bowling Green Arkansas (+15.5) atNo. 2 Auburn Auburn Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Auburn Washington (+21) at No. 3 Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Washington No. 4 Westhirginia (-25) at Mississippi State West Virginia Mississippi State Mississippi State West Virginia Mississippi State No. 9 Louisiana State (-2) at No. 5 Florida Florida Florida Florida Florida Louisiana State No. 14 Oklahoma (+4.5) vs. Noc7 Texas Okahoma Texas Oklahoma Texas Texas No. 8 Louisville (-33.5) at MiddleTennessee State Louisville Louisville Louisville Louisville Middle Tennessee State No. 13Tennessee (-2.5) at No. 10 Georgia Tennessee Georgia Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee No. 11 Oregon (+5) at No. 16 California Oregon California California Oregon Oregon Stanford (+31.5) at No. 12 Notre Dame Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford No. 15 Clemson (-17) at Wake Forest Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Wake Forest No. 17 Florida State (-10.5) at North Carolina St Florida State Florida State Florida State Flordia State Florida State Maryland (+14) at No. 18 Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Purdue (+11) at No. 19I owa Purdue Iowa Purdue Iowa Iowa Louisiana Tech (+36) at No. 20 Boise State Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech No 22 Nebraska (-7) at Iowa State Nebraska Iowa State Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska No. 23 Missouri (+4) at Texas Tech Texas Tech Missouri Texas Tech Missouri Texas Tech Northwestern (+21) at Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Penn State (-2.5) at Minnesota Penn State Penn State Penn State Penn State Minnesota Indiana (+7.5) atIllinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Indiana Best Bet Clemson Penn State California Clemson Louisiana State Record 7-14 (0-) 9-12 (0-1) 7-14 (1-0) 11-10 (0-1) 12-9 (0-1)- Overall Record 49-45-5 (2-3) 46-48-5 (1-4) 46-48-5 (4-1) 46-48-5 (3-2) 57-37-5 (2-2-1) Lassiter bests current and former students en route to furthering celeb lead. The gap is widening after another week in which the celebrity picker shows up the football writers. Not only that, but Lassiter was able to school former student Matt Singer and current student Scott Bell in the process. Bell still has a slight lead over the other writers, but a dismal 7-14 week puts him along with the rest of the pack around the .500 mark. Stephanie Wright was the lone beat member to finish the week above .500. She was rewarded for realizing Sparty couldn't hang with Michigan. The week was also a bad week for best bets, as Kevin Wright was the only person who didn't completely bomb that category. With the halfway point of the season now upon us, it's anybody's guess who will make a run at the celebrities for the title. As it appears now, it may be a race for second, as Lassiter's solid performance gives the celebs a comfortable eight-game cushion in the standings. SPARTANS Continued from page 1B think were some dumb things. I guess it's them being young maybe. ... I guess they might have done it because they had nothing to lose. I don't know what would make them say that. Maybe they had a lot of confi- dence. Maybe they thought they would come in here and just put points on our defense." Whether or not the Spartans (0-2, 3-3) actually thought they could solve the riddle that is the nation's leading rush defense is a moot point now - on Satur- day, they couldn't. The aforementioned Caulcrick had more of a challenge than he expected. The sophomore posted a measly 29 yards on 14 carries. The Spartans as a team ended the day with just 60 rushing yards on 26 attempts for a mere 2.3 yards per carry average. "They have a good front seven," Caulcrick said. "I'm not going to take anything from them now. I'm just going to say they have a good front seven." On the other side of the ball, Michigan continued its domi- nance on the ground. The team totaled 219 rushing yards, led by Hart's 122-yard game. It was the fifth time this season he has topped the 100-yard mark. "I don't know what it is," said Hart, who left the game in the third quarter with a mildly sprained ankle, but said he'd be fine for next week. "Everyone gets fired up for the game, not just me. My line does a great job blocking against Michigan State, so I did a great job run- ning. You just get up for these kinds of games." After Hart left the game, back- ups Kevin Grady and Brandon Minor maintained Michigan's momentum on the ground. The duo combined for 92 yards on 15 carries, highlighted by a 40-yard scamper by the freshman Minor, the first touchdown of his young career. But despite the gaudy numbers on the ground, it was the passing game that put the Wolverines on cruise control going into the second half. Of quarterback Chad Henne's 11 completions on the day, three went for scores. Like last week's game against Minnesota, wide receiver Adrian Arrington capped off Michigan's opening drive of the game with a touch- down grab. This week's was a 13-yarder where the junior sprawled out at the back of the endzone. It appeared as if Arrington's foot didn't stay inbound, but Michigan State coach John L. Smith didn't challenge the call. "The official told me that he had a foot inbounds," Smith said. "I guess as I look back, I should have challenged that. I expect them to get it right." Sophomore sensation Mario Manningham opened up the sec- ond and third quarters in style, leading Michigan to touchdowns on the opening possession of each. A 41-yard strike from Henne gave Michigan a 14-0 lead. Manningham's second touchdown of the game - and ninth of the season - was a 27- yard connection that was tipped by Spartan defender Demond Williams. The ball found its way in his hands and the score put Michigan on top 24-0. "The defender made a great play, and Mario created separa- tion on the cut," said Henne, who went ll-for-17 for 140 yards. "I thought I threw the ball pretty well, and he made a great play. Things happen like that, and we'll take it." Along with capitalizing on favorable bounces and bulletin board material from earlier in the week, Michigan also took advantage of Michigan State's mental errors. The Spartans committed eight first-half pen- alties, and ended the game with 11 for 87 yards compared to just three penalties (25 yards) for Michigan. Though Michigan State wasn't able to put a dent on Michigan's undefeated record, it was able to end the team's impressive streak of not allowing a rushing touch- down. Caulcrick's 1-yard blow got the Spartans on the board, and a red-zone draw from Spar- tan quarterback Drew Stanton accounted for the team's other second-half score. But by that time, the outcome was long decided. In a game where the second half's larg- est roars came when the public address announcer updated fans on the Detroit Tigers, the state- ment had already been made: If you get behind Michigan's balanced attack early, chances are you'll get buried. THE MICHIGAN DAILY TOP 10 POLL 3. Michigan: The Wolverines inched another spot closer to 9. California: The Golden Bears made it back into the Daily Top 10 arch rival Ohio State with their big victory over the Spartans. with their 45-24 thrashing of the previously hot Ducks. California's mooAM But before Michigan starts looking ahead to a potential No. weakrundefenseranked 74thcoming into the gameheldOregon's 1-No. 2 showdown against the Buckeyes, it has to travel to potent rushing attack to just 69 yards. If the GoldentBears keep it up, Happy Valley for a tough night game against Penn State. their matchup with Southern Cal in November shouldbe interesting. 4. West Virginia: the Mountaineers still hav'en't faced a t, ob 0 uun h iessfee hi is eeti oppfionent, but that didni't stop them 1romr climnbing two 7spor ts emnbarr assing fashio~n *ettin cl bhered hby unranked A l1~ansa in the Daily T01 O.est \Virgfinia has l ittle rmore than three a ยง T hm7Abr oeo aae osa~ h a weeks 4to pr~etr rits sh wdon w itLo ~uisv ille o~n Nov ' *W 5. Southern Cal: The Trojans dropped one spot after barely r holding off Washington in the final seconds. SouthernCal mighthave called on the Roman gods for some help in this one. The Huskies Also receiving votes: Notre Dame, Missouri, Clemson, Iowa looked like they were going to get off one fal play from the Trojans' 15-yard line whentime expired. How's that for alucky break? WRIGHT Continued from page1B trash talking. A less disciplined squad might have gotten caught up in a war of words, but the Wolverines seemed to put it out of their minds. They heard Caulcrick's taunting but didn't let it take them out of their game. Discipline, smarts, whatever you want to call it - Michigan's ability to tune out naysayers and supporters alike will only become more important as its wins pile up. Even in the press box, Michigan has outsmarted its opponents. Offensive coor- dinator Mike DeBord put together yet another well-called game. The Wolverines came into the contest expecting to run the ball on Michigan State, and they did just that. Michigan rushed 42 times for 211 yards, racking up an impressive aver- age of five yards per carry, and its three primary tailbacks broke countless Spartan tackles as they powered past the first line of defense. Thanks in large part to their dynamic rushing attack, the Wolverines held onto the ball for more than 32 minutes Satur- day. Michigan has dominated time of pos- session throughout the season; its average of 34:15 per game leads the nation. With the Wolverines eating up the clock so often this season, they haven't always needed to air it out in order to win. In six games, Michigan has thrown the ball just 131 times, compared with 268 rushing attempts. When the Wolverines average more than four yards per carry, there's little need for Chad Henne's arm to get a workout. Predictably, some Michigan fans see it differently. Even after Saturday's convinc- ing win, a number of message-board junkies were up in arms, complaining that the Wol- verines haven't aired it out enough this year. A sampling of the message-board hysteria: "With all of our skilled players, can you imagine how much moreffun it would be if DeBord actually attacked the oppo- nent once we had a lead?" Headwaters said. "Pounding Mike Hart to the point of injury is non-sensical. Sure, we won but we could be doing so much more w/ the weapons we have on offense." "We will have to throw the ball more," said Wolv4life!!!!. "We have the weapons, To beat OSUWe will have to put rip a lot of points." "They probably should of scored at (least) 41 points today," Michiman36 said. Those arguments are just as stupid as Michigan State's three personal fouls. DeBord has relied on his backfield a lot this season, but who can blame him'? Mike Hart has looked spectacular, gaining 794 yards and five touchdowns on 157 carries. Sophomore Kevin Grady has provided a great switch-up with his pound-it-up- the-middle style. And freshman Brandon Minor has shown off impressive speed as the third man in Michigan's rotation. It just makes sense to exploit their talent. That said, it isn't as if Henne has hand- ed off the ball on every snap. The junior signal caller has amassed 1,103 yards and 13 touchdowns and developed a nearly unbeatable rapport with receiver Mario Manningham, who has caught nine of Henne's touchdown passes. The Wolverines might not be airing it out on every play, but when they have, their deep ball has been pretty hard to stop. All season, Michigan's offensive attack has matched up perfectly with its opponent. Against easy opponents like Vanderbilt and Central Michigan, the Wolverines didn't need to pass to win big, so they racked up yards on the ground. Against a top team like No. 9 Notre Dame, Michigan implemented a balanced offense, mixing Hart's elusive runs with Manningham's deep routes. And against a (normally) potent offense like Michigan State's, the Wolverines con- trolled the clock by running the ball, keep- ing Spartan quarterback Drew Stanton off the field. At this point in the season, DeBord has given me every reason to believe he'll be able to come up with a gameplan capable of beating any team left on Michigan's sched- ule. And that includes No. 1 Ohio State. Maybe Hart shouldn't carry the ball more than 25 or 30 times a game. Maybe Michigan should throw to its tight ends more often. Maybe the play calling is still a little predictable at times. But until a team at least threatens to take down the undefeated Wolverines, that criticism is as unfounded as Caulerick's attacks. At least he stopped talking. - Wright can be reached at smwr@umich.edu. A 4