Spikers salvage weekend with upset win VOLLEYBALL 3B Herman contrasts undefeateds RU and UM SM COLUMN 2B THE MICHIGAN DAILY Monday, November 6, 2006 michigandailI Wake-up call should help Blue T his wasn't how it was supposed to he. Eight points wasn't supposed to be the margin of victory, not with the spread set at 33. Part of the second-string defense was expect- ed to play late in the fourth quarter, but in mop- up duty, not on the game-defining drive. And after 665 consecutive carries without a fumble, running back Mike Hart wasn't supposed to cough it up in the end zone for a safety. That fact was clearly etched on LaMarr Woodley's face as he walked off the field following Michigan's goal- KEVIN line stand. W IG~ Mouth guard hanging from his mouth, eyes turned The Sixth Man heavenward, all he could do was shake his head in disbe- lief with a look that simply said, "How could we let this happen?" While Saturdayscared Wolverine nation, every championship team has to be tested. You never know when it will come, but you can be sure it will happen. An unheralded team will sneak up and spark public criticism. The 1997 Michigan squad had Iowa push it to the brink. The 2005 Texas unit barely fended off a pesky Texas A&M team. The 2001 Miami National Champions nar- rowly defeated Boston College. These Wolverines, by their own admittance, desperately needed a wake-up call. Since the Notre Dame game, they've slowly toned down their level of play from their complete domina- tion in South Bend. True, Michigan definitely missed Mario Man- ningham's ability to stretch the field, and the weather in Ann Arbor last weekend limited the offense's continuity. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr thought his players looked tired in the unimpres- sive 17-3 victory against Northwestern. After adopting the 12-game schedule, the Wol- verines don't have a bye week this season, but someone forgot to tell them. Because Saturday, it sure looked like Michigan was in the first stretch of a two-week bye. No matter how many times they spew the overused mantra, "We're taking it one game at a time," it's clear that the Wolverines had already glanced past Ball State and Indiana. Just ask quarterback Chad Henne. "You could tell that guys were just like, 'Aw, this is going to be a blowover,' " Henne said. "Ball State played a heck of a game." The Cardinals might have played their best game of the season, but Ball State doesn't really deserve the credit for the final margin of victory. Michigan should never have let Saturday's game get as close as it did. Carr and the players have shrugged it off as nothing more than an isolated phenomenon. Even after the game, some of the players still maintained their focus on each week's game. But the play on the field doesn't reflect the talk. Dropped balls, false starts and holding penal- ties are all keys to killing drives, and the Wolver- ines did their best to employ them all, especially in the second half. Carr pointed to the benefit of playing the second-string defense late in the game, but the score forced Henne to take every snap from center. See WRIGHT, Page 53 MICHIGAN 34, BALL STAT 26 NEARLY UPENDED 'M' barely wins, staysunbeaten By STEPHANIE WRIGHT Daily SportsEditor In what should have been a blowout win, Michigan showed how the nation's No. 2 team can almost lose to an unranked Mid-American Conference opponent. Commit eight penalties. Drop easy passes. Keep playing inexperienced defenders with a two-score lead. Get burned on a pair of deep throws. Miss tackles left and right. Get caught red-handed look- ing past an opponent. If not for a late defensive stand (which also included mul- tiple penalties), the Wolverines' undefeated season might be over. Instead, Michigan kept its National Championship hopes alive with a 34-26 victory over Ball State in Michigan Stadium on Saturday. "I definitely believe it was a wake-up call," senior co-cap- tain LaMarr Woodley said. "We've got to remember who we were at the beginning of the season. We were that team that was ranked No. 14. Now we're a team that's ranked No. 2. "Coming into this game, everyone was talking about the hype about Michigan-Ohio State and kind of overlooked a team like Ball State. If you disre- spect ateam, (it's) goingto come out here and give it (its) all." That'sjust what the Cardinals did. After the Wolverines built a seemingly comfortable 31-12 lead midway through the third quarter,they started bringingin their second-string defenders. Ball State (3-3 MAC, 3- 7 overall) wasted little time exploiting their inexperience. Cardinal receiver Dante Love blew past cornerback Johnny Sears to grab a wide-open, 54- yard touchdown pass from Ball State quarterback Nate Davis. Even though Michigan's lead hadbeencuttojust12 points,the backup Wolverines remained in the game. And the Cardinals burned them again. Davis found receiver Terry Moss for a 62- yard completion to the Wolver- ines' two-yard line. This time, freshman cornerback Stevie Brown was caught out of posi- tion. Two plays later, Ball State had pulled within eight points with just under nine minutes to go. "We played some young guys that we wanted to see play, and they made some mistakes," MIKE HULSEBUS/Da defensive coordinator Ron TOP: Senior Steve Breaston had seven catches for 50 yards on Saturday. See CARDINALS, Page 5B BOTTOM: Junior Mike Hart rushed for 154 yards and a touchdown. Finally, Icers top Spartans By AMBER COLVIN Daily Sports Writer Afteranempty-netgoalsealedMichigan State's 7-4victoryinthe fadingmoments of Friday night's game, the Munn Ice Arena crowd decided to stretch the Wolverines' wounds a little wider and let the salt pour right in. "YOU c't MIC HIG AN 4 Scant , beat MICHIGAN STATE 7 us!" the sell-out MICHIGAN STATE 2. audi MICHIGAN 6 ence jeered. It was true. No. 9 Michigan couldn't beat its archrival, not once in nine games and almost two years of competition. The Wolverines had an hour-long bus ride from East Lansing to let the Munn crowd's taunting ring in their ears. Back in Ann Arbor, the team had a late- night meeting. Something had to change. "(It was) miserable," senior alternate captain T.J. Hensick said. "We knew that Stickers must wait after shocking loss RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Alternate captain T.J. Hensick had a goal and three assists in Michigan's 6-2 win over Michigan State on Saturday. For the weekend he tallied five points as the Wolverines split with the Spartans. wasn't our best showing. That's what frus- serving his game disqualification the night trates this team. When we don't go out and before. play with our capabilities, we're not going But the biggest difference between Fri- to get good results." day and Saturday might have been in the The next night, in the friendly confines first intermission. of Yost Ice Arena, Michigan (2-2-0 CCHA, Friday, the Wolverines notched two 5-3-0 overall) put together an impressive scores in the first seven minutes of the team effort for a 6-2 win over No. 5 Michi- game. But somewhere between ending the gan State - its first victory over the Spar- first period up 3-1 and taking the ice for the tans in two years. second stanza, they lost it. Sophomore goalie Billy Sauer stood And the Spartans (2-2-0 CCHA, 4-2-0 strong in the crease. Offensive pairings overall) got it. They outshot Michigan 13- clicked left and right. Star defenseman 4 that period, tallying four consecutive Jack Johnson was back in the lineup after See ICERS, Page 6B By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer Call it mojo. Call it luck. Whatever you call it, the fourth-seeded Michigan field hockey team didn't have it during its frigid Big Ten Tournament opener on Friday. No one associated with the team expected its tournament showing to end so abruptly on the first day of play. Many players, especially the seniors, cried openly as the game ended a minute and a half into overtime, a 2-1 loss to unranked, fifth-seeded Iowa on Michigan's own Phyllis Ocker Field. For the seniors, their final competi- tion at home came two days too early. The game might have been the last of their careers as well, if Michigan (4-2 Big Ten, 11-9 overall) isn't selected for an at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament. The Hawkeyes (2-4 Big Ten, 11-8 over- all) almost ended the game on a corner opportunity, with the scoreboard show- ing no time left in regulation. Though the ball found the back of the net, the goal was waved off, and the game went to overtime. Iowa made its next corner count. Lau- ren Pfeiffer, who had scored Iowa's first goal, blasted a shot from the top of the circle past goalie Beth Riley at 72:28, end- ing the game and No.16 Michigan's run in the Big Ten Tournament. The Hawkeyes drew first blood, fin- ishing on a corner at 17:23 of the opening half. Though the Wolverines played with an almost desperate sense of urgency throughout the match, Iowa contained them. Senior tri-captain Mary Fox, who nor- mally weaves through multiple defenders as if they're standing still, couldn't pene- trate Iowa's defense. Leading goal-scorer Lucia Belassi was held to just two shots on goal. And though, as usual, Michigan out- cornered its opponent (9-7), the Hawk- eyes were the team capitalizing on those chances. The Wolverines demonstrated their usual gritty spirit, fighting Iowa all the way to the end. Finally, with about 12 minutes left in regulation, freshman Kelly Fitzpatrick knotted the game at one goal apiece. She pounced on a rebound near the Iowa cage, stuffing it past Iowa goalkeeper Lissa Munley as she fell to the turf. "Every time (Fitzpatrick) steps on the field, she's able to finish," Michigan coach See FIELD HOCKEY, Page 2B