Friday October 13, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com SPO fRTiSan aild 8 4 Varsity could find pitfall in PSU Nittany Lions By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Editor It will be a homecoming of sorts. Quarterback Chad Henne and wide receiver Steve Breaston will play in their home state for the first time since they came to Michigan. They will face a pumped Bea- ver Stadium crowd and a Penn State team that is coming into its own. The last time Michigan start- ed a season 6-0, it won the 1997 national championship. That team went into Happy Valley and domi- nated a Nittany Lion squad led by current New York Giants line- backer LaVarr Arrington 34-8. This Wolverine team hopes to do the same. Michigan rushing offense vs. Penn State rushing defense Each week, the opposing team knows what the Michigan offense is going to do. Still, running back Mike Hart has racked up at least 100 yards on the ground in all but one game. Tomorrow the Wolverine ground attack will face its toughest challenge yet. Penn State features a great set of linebackers, especially with Paul Poslusnzy anchoring down the unit. With the Nittany Lions already planning to put eight men in the box, Michigan might struggle to pick up yards. Edge: Push Michigan passing offense vs. Penn State passing defense Losing wide receiver Mario Manningham hurts Michigan's ability to stretch the field, but receivers Adrian Arrington and Steve Breaston should be able to carry the load. Michigan has focused on establishing the run all year, so Manningham's absence doesn't mean as much as some think. On the other side, Penn State features sophomore Justin King, who scorned Michi- gan to don the Nittany Lions' blue and white. If the Michigan run game struggles against the Penn State front eight, Henne will have to continue to show the accuracy he's displayed over the last few weeks. Look for Michi- gan to use Arrington to stretch the field while keeping Breaston short for his speed routes. Edge: Michigan Michigan rushing defense vs. Penn State rushing offense The Wolverines feature one of the most dominating front fours in college football. With Alan Branch and Terrance Taylor anchoring the middle, opposing running backs have had a tough aim for revenge By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Editor Last year, one second decided the game. Penn State coach Joe Paterno made a point of it at Big Ten Media Day in August when he told Michi- gan coach Lloyd Carr he had three minutes to speak, not 3:01. Jokes aside, tomorrow's game between Michigan and Penn State could be a potential stumbling block for the Wolverines (3-0 Big Ten, 6-0 overall). No. 4 Michigan travels to Beaver Stadium to face a struggling Penn State team in a game that features a major role reversal from last season. A year ago, Michigan played the spoiler against a Penn State team that was poised to make a run at a perfect season and the national championship game. This year, Michigan has reached 6-0 for the first time since its 1997 national championship season, and the Nittany Lions have yet to play at a consistent level. Last year's contest was one of the few bright spots of the Michi- gan season, but Carr knows that game means nothing. "I've always believed that the idea of what happened last year is, with very, very few exceptions, a dead dog" Carr said. "It doesn't matter whether you won. It doesn't matter whether you lost. It's really about the concentration that you have on this game this week." Having lost star quarterback Michael Robinson to graduation, Paterno turns to Anthony Morelli, who looked good at times this season. While a Robinson-less team may not scare many Big Ten opponents on paper, the Nit- tany Lions (2-1, 4-2) return two dynamic sophomores - wide receiver Derrick Williams and wide receiver/cornerback Justin King. Along with that duo, run- ning back Tony Hunt has racked up yards on the ground. He's aver- aging 111.5 yards per game. "They have probably more speed at the skill positions than anyone we've played this year, and a quarterback that gets better every game," Carr said. "So Penn State, offensively, gives you a lot of problems." The Wolverines' key to offensive successhas been the running game. Junior running back Mike Hart has paced the Michigan offense, aver- aging 132.3 yards per game; But the Penn State defense fields the best set of linebackers that Michigan has seen this sea- son. Featuring defending Bednarik Award winner Paul Posluszny, the Nittany Lion defense has allowed just two teams to rush for more. than 100 yards against them. "Their linebackers certainly have a lot of talent with Posluszny," Henne said. "He was an award- winner last year. (Junior linebacker) Dan Connor is just as good." The Michigan offense has gone to the air more in recent weeks. But tomorrow, Henne won't have his trusty sidekick Manningham. Instead, Michi- gan will look to either redshirt sophomore Adrian Arrington or fifth-year senior Steve Breaston to step up as a deep threat. In the past three games, Arrington has continued to get comfortable in the offense. He caught two touchdown passes against Minnesota and picked up one acrobatic score against Michi- gan State. "Right now, there are no wor- ries," Breaston said. "Everybody's doing something, and they're doing something to contribute to winning football games." ANGELA CESERE/Daily Junior Chad Henne will play in his home state of Pennsylvania for the first time in his collegiate career tomorrow. time finding room to run. Michi- gan ranks No. 1 in the nation in rushing defense, and opponents average just 1.7 yards per carry and 40.3 yards per game on the ground. Meanwhile, running back Tony Hunt, with 669 yards in six games this season, leads the Penn State rushing attack. But the Wolverine defense wants to make the opposing offense one-dimensional, and they should succeed against the Nit- tany Lions' rushing attack. Edge: Michigan Michigan passing defense vs, Penn State passing offense This season, the Wolverine secondary has yet to find con- sistency. Both Minnesota and Michigan State moved the ball through the air with relative ease. But Morgan Trent returned last week against the Spartans, so the Michigan secondary should be more stabilized. With first-year starter Anthony Morelli leading the Penn State offense, the Nit- tany Lion passing game has been inconsistent at best. Still, speedy receivers Derrick Williams and Deon Butler have helped Penn State average 215.3 passing yards per game. Edge: Penn State Special Teams Michigan punter Zoltan Mesko has improved for the Wolverines. With his punts booming farther and higher than in the first few games, Mesko has pinned opposing teams deep in their own end. Meanwhile, kicker Garrett Rivas started strong this season but missed a short field goal against Min- nesota. For Penn State, kicker Kevin Kelly has struggled, mak- ing just 12-of-17 attempts. Out- side of 30 yards (where all of his misses are), Kelly can't seem to find any kind of consistency. Edge: Michigan Intangibles Last year, Michigan ruined Penn State's perfect season. Now the Wolverines travel to Beaver Stadium to face a team looking for payback. Nerves could very well be a factor for Henne and Breaston, especially early in the game. Those nerves could be just enough to give Penn State the momentum it needs to win the game. Edge: Penn State Penn State 20, Michigan 17 4 PROCRASTINATION STATION MICHIGAN 22 PENN STATE 21 Before every football game this season, two of the Daily's football writers will take the weekend's matchup to the Play- Station 2 and then let you know what happened. " Play of the game - With Michigan clinging to a one-point lead and less than a minute to go, Penn State drove it to the Wolverine 23-yard-line. But Penn State coach Scott Bell wasn't satisfied with the field position and aired it out, allow- ing Michigan CB #5 to come up with the clinching interception. " Player of the game - CB #5 stepped up after replacing CB #14 - who was burned repeat- edly in the first half. CB #5 broke up a few passes, picked off one, and forced a fumble. PRESS' CONFER ENCE QUOTES: Penn State coach Scott Bell: "First, I would like to congratulate coach Singer on a big win." "I'm not here to make excuses, I'm above whining like that. ... But if I were to make excuses, I'd certainly bring up the faulty controller given to me by coach Singer that caused four straight offsides penalties and an ill-advised pitch by HB #26 to an offensive lineman. But like I said, I don't complain about trivial stuff like that." "A sore loser? Me? (Wipes tears from eyes.) I am not a sore loser." Michigan coach Matt Singer: "Some might say that we got a few lucky breaks. But it takes a championship team to take advantage of those opportunities, and today, that's what we did." "ROLB #56 is hereby stripped of his captaincy. Celebrating a sack by doing push-ups is unacceptable - especially on 4th-and49 in the last minute of a tight game." "I don't think my reaction to that play was over the top. I'm an emotional coach. Shrieking like a little girl is completely appropriate behavior, I think." II WE KNOW YOU LOVE STAFF PICKS, BUT WE JUST DIDN'T HAVE ENOUGH SPACE TODAY. CHECK THEM OUT AT WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM. I