SportsWednesday - October 18, 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 b Carr's demeanor following the game and the hypemeter measures the fans' game performance. DEFENSE-O-METER CARR-O-METER 4 If we had room for more Woodleys, they'd go up -the defense was simply ballin'. Michigan's 'D' picked up seven /4 sacks and held Penn State to negative rushing yards. Plus, LaMarr the Wolverines knocked out two Nittany Lion quarterbacks. Woodleys 4/ Entering the press conference room, Lloyd Carr could 4 hardly hide the smile creeping onto his face. Through- out the press conference, Carr was downright giddy, Lloyd especially since his team is still undefeated. Carrs HYPEMETER /4 What an incredible atmosphere for a football game. The / weather was cool and crisp, the bright lights were on and / Penn State's students were there hyping it up two hours Student before game time. At times, the press box was shaking. T-shirts STAFF PICKS Predictions against the spread for Oct. 16 University alum, lecturer, radio host and author John Bacon takes on the Daily football writers in this week's edition of staff picks. Kevin Stephanie Wright Wright Scott Matt Bell Singer John Bacon No. 4 Michigan (-7) at Penn State Penn State Michigan Penn State Michigan Michigan No. 1Ohio State (-15) at Michigan State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State No. 2 Florida (Even) at No. 11Auburn Auburn Florida Florida Florida Auburn Arizona State (+19) at No. 3 Southern Cal Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Southern Cal Arizona State Syracuse (+25) at N. 5 WestVirginia Syracuse WestVirginia West Virginia Syracuse Syracuse Baylor (+29) at No. 6Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Cincinnati (+27) at No. 7 Louisville Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati Louisville No. 10 California (-8.5) at Washington State California California California California California Temple (+44.5) at No. 12 Clemson Temple Clemson Clemson Temple Temple Kentucky (+26) at No. 14 Louisiana State Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky Louisiana State No. 15Iowa (-18) at Indiana Iowa uwa owa Iowa lowa Vanderbilt (+14.5) at No. 16 Georgia Vanderbilt Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia SEMissouriState (+35) atNo.17 Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas UCLA (+10.5) at No. 18 Oregon Oregon Oregon Oregon Oregon Oregon No. 19 Missouri(-2.5) at Texas A&M Missouri Texas A&M Missouri Missouri Texas A&M No. 20 Boise State (-26) at New Mexico State New Mexico State Boise State Boise State New Mexico State Boise State No. 22 Nebraska (-10.5) atKansasState Nebraska Kansas State Nebraska Kansas State Nebraska No. 22 Virginia Tech (-3) at Boston College Virginia Tech Virginia Tech VirginiaTech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Iowa State (+19.5) at No. 23 Oklahoma Oklahoma Iowa State Iowa State Iowa State Oklahoma No. 24 Rutgers (+1) at Navy Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers Rutgers Minnesota (+8.5) at No. 25 Wisconsin Minnesota Wisconsin Minnesota Wisconsin Wisconsin Purdue (-7) at Northwestern Purdue Purdue Purdue Purdue Purdue Ohio (+6.5) at Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Best Bet Penn State Arizona State California owa Ohio State Record 14-8-1 (0-0-1) 11-11- (1-0) 10-12-1I1-0) 102- 1(0-1) 14-8-1 (1-0) Overall Record 63-53-6 (2-3-1) 57-59-6 (2-4) 56-60-6 (5-1) 56-60-6 (3-3) 71-45-6 (3-2-1) Bacon's bite matches his bark as celebs continue to show up football beat. While teaching his history of college athletics course last week, lecturer John Bacon claimed that "even a blind monkey could go .500 in Staff Picks." The Michigan alum and author backed up his claim this week, going 14-8-1 while most of the rest of the writers hovered around the .500 mark once again. Only Scott Bell, the target of his criticism in class last week, was able to put up a respectable record. He, too, went 14-8-1. Bell's week puts him six games above his closest com- petitors within the Daily, but he still trails the impressive mark set by the celebrities this year by eight games. Kevin Wright continues to ride California as his best bet, with noticeable success. Someone should tell him it would be a good idea to get other games right, too. Besides teaching his popular class, Bacon is also currently writing a book with legendary Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler, which is due out in August 2007. He also hosts a radio show Sun- day mornings on WTKA. LIONS Continued from page 1B rushing yards. And the Michigan offense, sans speedy wide receiver Mario Manningham, bounced back from a shaky first quar- ter to silence the second-largest crowd in Beaver Stadium his- tory for much of the game. After a disappointing five- loss season, the Wolverines (4- 0, 7-0) have already matched last season's win total with five games remaining. And Sun- day, Michigan, fresh off the road victory, sits in third place behind Ohio State and South- ern Cal in the first edition of the BCS rankings, a feat which last year's squad never imag- ined. "Right now, we've had an incredible stretch of games," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "I don't remember a sea- son with the schedule like the one that we've just come through, with still Iowa going in here next week. We've been through the gauntlet." The failures of last year seem to resonate the most with the defense. Many of the cur- rent players suffered through the embarrassments and took it upon themselves to prove that this Wolverine team was back. They demonstrated it at Notre Dame and cemented it Satur- day. With 1:53 left in the game, the Michigan offense stalled and had to punt it away to a Penn State team brimming with momentum. The crowd took it to another noise level. And the defense, unlike to so many times last season, made a fourth-quarter stand. Starting at the Nittany Lions' 24-yard line, third-string quar- terback Paul Cianciolo could muster just one completion as Penn State gained a mea- sly four yards on four plays to effectively end the game. "I have confidence in my defense," senior wide receiver Steve Breaston said. "There's nothing in the back of your mind that says they're not going to get it done. You just kind of feel that they're going to go out there, and it's going to be three-and-out." In a much-anticipated home- coming, quarterback Chad Henne calmly managed the Wolverine offense and the hatred from a riled-up Beaver Stadium. He started in the second quar- ter with a seam pass between two Penn State defenders to wide receiver Adrian Arrington on a 25-yard touchdown pass for Michigan's first score. Even though that was the Wyomissing, Pa., native's lone touchdown, Henne, who fin- ished the day 15-for-30 for 196 yards, showed why he's been such a solid play caller for the Wolverines during their seven- game winning streak. "He showed tremendous poise," said Breaston, who also enjoyed playing in his home state for the first time in his Michigan career. "You're not always going to get a blowout, and he just was out there mak- ing great calls and checks, and he did a great job getting the ball to our receivers." Ever-consistent running back Mike Hart took the ball 26 times and racked up 112 yards, his sixth 100-yard rush- ing game of the season. None of the yards were more important than the 23 he had in the waning moments of the contest. Against a stingy Penn State front seven, right guard Alex Mitchell didn't think Michigan reached the century mark until after the game when he called some people from home. "It was really satisfying," Mitchell said Monday. "I didn't know until after the game that we'd rush for over 100 yards. I didn't think we'd had that much during the game." The Wolverines have enjoyed the national spotlight ever since their win at Notre Dame, but they remain undeterred by rankings and hype. A ranking of second in the nation and third in the BCS hasn't changed the motivation that drives Michigan. Arrington didn't even know the Wolverines moved up in the poll until reporters told him on Monday. "I honestly don't care," Arrington said. "Our ultimate goal is just to win, so if we win every game, everything has to fall into place. There's no way that it can't, really." THE MICHIGAN DAILY TOP 10 POLL T6. Louisville: Starting quarterback Brian Brohm returned from injury, but the Cardinals didn't impress anybody last week. Lowly Cincinnati came within 16 yards of ending Louisville's perfect sea- son, but the Cardinal defense held firm when it mattered the most. s. sunorn s..ar iseems teerojans love maiug mtngs difficult for themselves. Southern Cal once again barely fought off a strong challenge from a subpar opponent. It's unclear how long this squad can keep playing with fire withoutgetting burned. T1. West Virginia: Yawn. The Mountaineers rolled over a hapless Syracuset eam,racking up aninsane 457 yardsan the ground. Qurarterback Patrick W hite rshed for four touichdmwns. But we're waiting for the showdmown with Louisville. 5. Texas: Hook 'em Horns are back in styleafter Texas rattled off its fifth-straight victory, a dominating win over Baylor. If they keep it up, the Longhorns look to be a prime candidate to sneak up in the BCS standings if winless teams keep faltering. F . Forida: Only a great team could possibly survivethe rigors of this year's SECundefeated. Last Saturday proved thatlthe Gators are notthat team. Chris Leak had fits withthe Tigers' D,passing for just 108 yards. Cue the Tim Tebow hype in Gainesville. Also receiving votes: Notre Dame, Clemson, Arkansas, Florida International. SINGER Continued from page 1B Saturday night, with the bright lights on at Beaver Stadium, in front of 110,000- plus fans screaming their lungs out, the front four delivered its most emphatic statement yet. Michigan's defensive front wasn't picking apart measly opponents like Vanderbilt and Central Michigan. It was taking on the big, bad Penn State line - a unit that had given up just six sacks all season coming into Saturday's game. The Wolverines finished with seven. Plus countless quarterback hurries. Plus two apparent quarterback concussions. From the press box,I couldn't actually see the Wolverines' eyes light up as they closed in for free shots at Nittany Lion quarterbacks. But from the looks of things, triple-sevens were lining up in the minds of Michigan's defensive linemen as they closed in for vicious hit after vicious hit. Taylor's first career sack started the Wolverines' hit parade. Early in the second quarter, backup defensive end Tim Jamison appeared to have Morelli - who was look- ing downfield after faking a handoff - in his sights. But then Taylor, a portly 305- pounder, came barreling through the line and zipped toward Morelli at light speed, drilling the quarterback and stealing the sack from his teammate. And the Wolverines kept coming. On the very next play, senior captain LaMarr Woodley jumped the snap, ran right past Penn State's tackle and literally threw Morelli to the turf for a 14-yard loss. And the Wolverines kept coming. After Michigan marched down the field for a field goal, Morelli dropped back again on first-and-10. And, again, Woodley slaughtered him in the backfield, forcing Morelli to fumble momentarily at his own five-yard line. And the Wolverines kept coming. When it was all said and done, Woodley and fellow defensive end Rondell Biggs tal- lied two sacks a piece, while Taylor, Jamison and linebacker Shawn Crable (who often lines up as a defensive end) notched one sack each. And, oh yeah, the defensive front domi- nated against the running game, too. Star Nittany Lion running back Tony Hunt gained just 33 yards on 13 carries. So far, the Wolverines have given up just 32.6 yards a game on the ground. That's more than 15 yards better than Texas, the second-best team against the run in the nation. So, Michigan's front four is good. How good, you ask? Here's a little tidbit for those on the com- pare-this-team-to-1997 bandwagon: This year, Michigan has 24 sacks - 17 of which have come from the defensive line. Seven games into the 1997 season, the Wolverines had 16 sacks ... total. Wow. Even though Michigan fans can't help but compare this year's squad to the famed 1997 team, the Wolverines' rock-solid defensive front knows there's plenty of football to be played before that comparison holds water. Asked how it feels to be 7-0, Branch turns serious. "It feels great,but we're not done yet" Branch said. "We don't want to take it too much, because we know what we came here for, and that's for that crystal ball (awarded to the BCS national champion). We gotta keep winning, do what we do" I'm not much of a fortune teller, but my crystal ball shows this: Branch and the rest of the Michigan front four crushing helpless quarterbacks all season long. And maybe, just maybe, that's what the Wolverines need to finally nab that precious crystal ball. - Singer is grateful that the IM team he quarterbacks doesn't have to face Michigan's defensive line. He can be reached at mattsing@umich.edu. i