In maize, BlueSg prevails on Senior perf Nightcosti NTHMEN'S SOCCER 3B 1 ~THE MICHIGAN DAILY d er supplies ect sports ime ideas SM COLUMN 2B mic l co Monday, October 30, 2006 'O'must improve be ore oSU ichigan coach Lloyd Carr said he was disap- pointed with his offense. Tailback Mike Hart thought the Wolverines could've played better. Wide receiver Steve STEPHANIE Breaston called imGHT it a step back. But the Wright on Target offense's prob- lems are more serious than that. Anyone who attended Saturday's 17-3 Michigan win - or, like a lot of students, watched it on TV - knows the offense didn't show up. The second-ranked Wolverines got away with it because they lined up against a vastly inferior oppo- nent. But that won't be the case on Nov. 18. So I'm going to say what Michi- gan players and coaches wouldn't: The Wolverines won't beat Ohio State if their offense doesn't improve. The always impressive run game aside, Michigan's offense was slug- gish, underwhelming and just plain boring against Northwestern. The Wolverines put up just 17 points on the nation's 89th-ranked scoring defense. Michigan State, which has become the laughing stock of the Big Ten over the past few weeks, scored 41 on the Wildcats last weekend, including38 in the sec- ond half alone. As unstoppable as Michigan's defense has been, 17 points prob- ably won't cut it against Ohio State's high-flying offense. The problem wasn't unique to Saturday's game. In recent weeks, many Wolverine drives have start- ed off well and then sputtered after Michigan got inside its opponents' 40-yard line. Against Northwest- ern, the Wolverines got down to the Wildcats' 23 on one drive but failed to put points on the board. On top of that, Michigan scored See WRIGHT, Page 5B TREVOR CAMPBELL/Daily Safety Willis Barringer celebrates after intercepting Northwestern quarterback C.J. Bacher's pass in the fourth quarter to seal the 17-3 win for the Wolverines. MICHIGAN 17, NORTHWESTERN 3 TOO 1'D'-PENDENT Offiense stalls in aiy.i Women take fifth straight By ANDY REID Daily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON - Michigan women's cross country coach Mike McGuire's hand has five fingers. And, after the Wolverines won the Big Ten championship at Indiana University Golf Course yesterday, McGuire now has five consecutive championship rings to fit snugly on each of those digits. JuniorErin Webster, who has led the Wolverines all year, finished as the top team runner in five events and won four events overall Yes- terday, she asserted herself imme- diately and stuck with the top tier of runners. Eventually, she pulled ahead to take the individual crown (20:23), winning the race by 12 seconds. "I've put in a lot of time and worked really hard this year," Web- ster said. "It feels awesome to see it all that work paying off." Cementing Michigan's domi- nance in the race was junior Alyson Kohlmeier, who finished in sec- ond place. Kohlmeier hung in the back of the lead pack and picked off runners as they started to tire. She eventually pulled into second place and finished in that position (20:35). No. 3 Michigan's best five run- ners on the day (which are used to tally the team's final score) all finished in the top 22, giving the Wolverines a final score of 52. Wis- consin finished in second place with 91 points. Although Webster and Kohl- meier stole the show, McGuire was especially congratulatory of senior captain Arienne Field - who has been on the team for all five Big Ten Championships. She redshirted her freshman season. "I just wanted to acknowledge Arienne because she has been such a great asset to this team as a cap- tain and a runner," McGuire said. "She has run on three Big Ten championship teams now. I just wanted to say hats off to her." Field, who finished in 18th place, See TITLE, Page 3B By SCOTT BELL Daily Sports Editor Michigan's offense - and thousands of fans - must have missed the memo: There was a football game Saturday at the Big House. Luckily for the second-ranked Wolverines and their National Championship hopes, the defense got it and answered the call once again. Michigan's defense held Northwestern to negative rush- ing yards and forced five turn- overs to help the Wolverines get past the overmatched Wildcats, 17-3. The game took place in a rapidly emptying Big House in less-than-favorable weather con- ditions. "We knew as a defense we had to go out there and kind of hold it down, because our offense wasn't really moving the ball real suc- cessfully," defensive end LaMarr Woodley said. "The defense just kinda said, 'Let's do it."' Michigan's aerial attack was slowed by weather that some Wolverines called the worst they've ever played in. Swirling winds and cold temperatures halted the passing game - quar- terback Chad Henne finished just 10-for-20 with 116 yards. And though the rushing num- bers looked good on paper (202 yards), it took nearly 50 attempts to get to that mark. On top of that, the backs coughed the ball up twice and a bruised back suf- fered in the second quarter kept Mike Hart out of action for most of the second half. "It's hard to get your offense rolling when you're playing in weather like that," Hart said. "But no excuses, we still have to come out here and perform. I think we have to get better; we definitely have to get better. I don't think we played as well as we could've today." Even when the offense did score, it was due in part to the defense. Both Michigan touch- downs were set up by turn- overs created by the Wolverine defense. Adrian Arrington's touch- down grab on the team's opening possession came after Woodley forced and recovered a fumble. Arrington, who sat out the first five plays of the game for disci- plinary reasons, caught the 14- yard touchdown pass on his first snap of the game. The Wolverines' second score, a three-yard touchdown scamper from Hart, followed an inter- ception by Leon Hall. The drive consisted of six plays, all runs by Hart. The junior finished the game with 95 yards on the ground on 20 carries. He hurt his back after running into a down marker in the second quarter, and played in just one drive in the second half - the only one that yielded See WILDCATS, Page 5B Icers can't finish; split once again Men three better this time around By JAMESV. DOWD Daily Sports Writer One of the cardinal rules in hock- ey's unwritten code of conduct is to protect your goaltender. And, if an opposing forward challenges this, expect a swift NORTHEASTERN 3 retalia- MICHIGAN 2 tion from the near- NORTHEASTERN 3 est defen- MICH IGAN 4 seman. No. 6 Michigan had the perfect opportu- nity to exact revenge on Saturday in the formofacomeback after North- eastern center Joe Vitale bulldozed Wolverines' goaltender Billy Sauer with flying knees and elbows in the second period of the 3-2 loss to the Huskies. But after sophomore defenseman Jack Johnson quickly pummeled Vitale onto the ice, Michigan (1-1-0 CCHA, 4-2-0 overall) failed to capi- talize onanynewfound momentum, going scoreless on the ensuing one- man advantage en route to an 0-for- 12 showing on the power play. "When we get an opportunity like that, to get something going before we go into intermission, it's huge," alternate captain Jason Dest said. "It's huge to be able to go out for the next period with momen- tum." Michigan started the game brim- ming with confidence from a 4-3 overtime victory over Northeastern (0-2-1 Hockey East, 1-2-1 overall) on Friday night, and opened the scor- ing Saturday when Johnson slotted a first period shot past Northeast- ern goaltender Brad Thiessen. The tide swayed in the second, when the Huskies took a 2-1 lead with a pair of goals just minutes apart. The tying goal came on a rebound that Northeastern forward Randy Guzior slapped in from the slot. Two minuteslater, after Michi- gan forward JasonBailey was whis- tied for goaltender interference, Husky center Jimmy Russo took a pass and dumped it in the backside of Sauer's net. After that point, Michigan had six more chances on the power play - including Vitale's aforemen- tioned goaltender interference call - but Thiessen continually made easy saves while the Wolverines failed to dig up any of the rebounds that have been their offensive bread and butter this season. "You have to give credit to their goalie," Michigan coach Red Beren- son said. "He made the saves he needed to make, and their defense kept us away from any lose pucks or second chances - I think we had one rebound goal in the game. They checked hard, and we rarely got more than one isolated chance at a time." With Thiessen steadily protect- ing Northeastern's lead from the crease, the Huskies netted an insur- ance goal halfway through the third period. As Northeastern moved the puck around the Michigan zone, Chad Costello received a pass in the left circle and slapped it past a confused Michigan defense and an unsuspecting Sauer. "That was a killer goal because By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON - With the Michigan men's cross country team coming off a disappointing fifth-place finish at last year's Big Ten Championships, some ques- tioned whether the Wolverines would be able to respond this year. Did they ever. Only a strong Wisconsin team was able to hold back a resurgent Wolverine squad as Michigan strung together stellar perfor- mances by sophomore Lex Wil- liams and junior Mike Woods to finish second overall. Five Wol- verines finished the eight-kilome- ter race in the top 30, helping the team rebound from its fifth-place finish last year. Michigan coach Ron Warhurst was elated by his team's perfor- mance. "I am very happy for the kids," Warhurst said. "They have worked really hard over the last four months and really deserve this result." The Wolverines ran well at one of the toughest cross country courses in the country. Williams and Woods conquered a hilly land- scape to finish with times of 24:29 and 24:41, respectively. Sopho- more Victor Gras (25:01), fresh- man Brandon Fellows, (25:24) and freshman Justin Switzer (25:26) followedbehind. The trio finished 18th, 28th and 29th, respectively. "It's a relief and a great race for me," Woods said. "I look to build upon this performance for the rest of the year." The team's second-place fin- ish was even more impressive considering Michigan's injuries. Freshman Sean McNamera, who finished second at the Michigan Open, was forced to drop during the race due to a groin injury. "When one of your top five drop out its refreshing to see our kids perform like they did," War- hurst said. The team attributes its strong performance to an intensive training program over the past four months. The Wolverines trained harder this year by closely matching the regiment set by the Badgers, who run nearly 120 miles a week. The Wolverines increased their mileage from 65 miles last year to more than 100 miles per week this year. "Starting twenty weeks ago, everyone has been putting in a ton of miles in training," sophomore James Reichardt said. "The top guys just have that extra talent to get over the top." The team then tapered training to give its understandably weary legs time to rest for Big Tens. Lex Williams and the rest of the Wolverines feel the extra work has paid off. "Every year, we have a goal to do well at Big Tens," Williams said. "This year our goal was See HARRIERS, Page 6B STEVEN TAI/Daly Goaltender Billy Sauer looks on during a Husky celebration on Saturday. goals were hard to come by," Beren- Costello's goal proved timely when sonsaid."Whetherthatwasadefen- Thiessen gave up a rebound on a sive zone breakdown, or a lapse at shot by Dest, which junior Kevin the end of a shift or it surprised the Porter knocked past Thiessen with goalie, goals like that kill you." 3:24 remaining. In the final minutes of the game, See ICERS, Page 6B