BELL: MARIO IS MISSIN The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com I October 8,2007 Record falls as Hart pumps 'M' By SCOTT BELL the Wolverines led East- Daily Sports Editor ern Michigan by just two points. What was supposed to During that span, the be the afternoon's only real Eagles returned a kickoff 86 drama took place about 11 yards, blocked and returned minutes into Michigan's 33- a Michigan extra point for a 22 win over Eastern Michi- two-point conversion, inter- gan Saturday afternoon. cepted a Chad Henne pass SeniorrunningbackMike and successfully recovered Hart, the 5-foot-9 Heisman a surprise onside kick. Trophy candidate, shifted Was Michigan's new all- and cut his way through the time leading rusher a little defense for a 14-yard run. nervous his record-break- The carry put him ahead of ing day might be tainted? Anthony Thomas and into "I wasn't really worried, the No. 1 spot atop Michi- because we were dominat- gan's career rushing yard- ing the whole game offen- age list. sively," Hart said. "We were But, aside from some con- moving the ball ... I wasn't gratulatory hugs and hand- worried at all." shakes from teammates and The Wolverines (4-2) coachesthe real celebration finally woke up, posted 17 couldn't begin for a couple unanswered points and more quarters. pulled away for their fourth- Nearly 30 minutes after straight win. Hart's record-breaking run, Despite the third-quarter scoring barrage, Michigan's mistakes continued. By game's end, the Eagles (2-4) had recovered another onside kick, inter- cepted Henne once again and posed more questions for a Michigan team that has rarely played well for an entire game. "We're obviously not where we want to be," line- backer Obi Ezeh said. "We want to be at a spot where we can come out and play a full 60 minutes." As the fourth quarter came around, Michigan's offense turned it up and Hart had played his final snap. His 22-carry, 215- yard, three-touchdown per- formance was enough not only to put Michigan ahead by a comfortable margin, but also give him the record See EAGLES, Page 4B Excuses? Please ike Hart shattered the Michigan career rush- ing record on Saturday by tearing through the Eastern Michi- gan defense. But after the game, no juke, spin, stiff arm or any other Hart creation could elude the JACK can't-believe- we-have-to- HERMAN ask-this-again On question. Can you tell Tap us why Michi- gan got off to another slow start? "No, I can't," Hart said. "I don't know." Luckily, while Hart gathered 215 yards, his teammates - resting squarely upon his back - had time to think of excuses. "It's difficult when you have 10 guys that are injured," quarterback Chad Henne said following the 33- 22 win. Against Ohio State, that seems reasonable. Against Northwestern, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. But against Eastern Michigan, um, well, how to put this lightly ... No! This is an Eastern Michigan team that lost to Vanderbilt by 23 points. A team that lost to Pittsburgh by 24. In other words, a team that should not trail Michigan by just two points midway through the third quarter. Yes, redshirt freshman Steve Schilling's move to right guard cre- ated some extra pressure in the backfield. And there were three fill- ins on defense. But despite Michigan coach Lloyd Carr's best try in Satur- day's post-game press conference, injuries just don't explain the prob- lems that have continually plagued the Wolverines this season. Injuries are not the reason Michi- gan keeps throwing away touch- down opportunities. They're not the reason the defense keeps sleep- walking through the first half. And they're not the reason Michigan keeps making bad-enough-in-the- first-game-but-inexcusable-mid- way-through-the-season mistakes. Henne says a defender hit him while he released the ball on his first interception. OK, but why did the senior throw into double coverage in the first place? And in the third quarter, why did he kill another deep drive with a pick? (Actually, he blamed tight end Carson Butler for that one. Did anyone catch the license plate number on that bus?) The defense says it knows it can't keep continue these sluggish starts. But the Wolverines said the same thing last week against Northwest- ern. Thanks, guys, and O.J. Simpson has a reputation problem. But what are you going to do to fix it? Carr says offensive tackle Jake Long swears Eastern Michigan jumped offsides on the first extra- point returned for a conversion in Michigan history. But Carr can't blame anyone but his team and coaches for the 14 players Michigan fielded on one punt. Or the seven silly penalties ranging from an improper formation to a Donovan Warren personal foul. Or the 86-yard kick- off return that almost ended in the Michigan end zone. At times this season, the offense has looked unstoppable. The Henne- led first drive against Northwestern looked nearly flawless, the three receivers pose a terrific triple threat, and well, Mike Hart is Mike Hart. But Henne can't keep making mis- takes on the field, wide receiver Mario Manningham can't keep making them off it and Michigan needs a reliable back-up halfback before Hart's legs fall off. At times this season, the defense has looked impenetrable. Look no further than Saturday with cur- nerback Morgan Trent's break- ups, defensive lineman Brandon Graham's bone-crushing sack and safety Brandent Englemon's fumble- inducing hit. But the Big Ten season brings much stiffer competition than Eastern Michigan and South Bend Junior High, and the defense can't keep relying on alate-game surge. And at times this season, the spe- cial teams has looked ... actually, let's just say they'll have to work on that. Muchlike on Saturday, when Hart stuck up for Manningham in his press conference, the senior running back has covered up his teammate's mistakes all seasons. Six consecutive 100-yard games will do that. But when Michigan faces a night road game against an Illinois team looking much scarier each week, Wisconsin in the terrifying Camp Randall Stadium and, of course, Ohio State, there are going to be a lot more questions. And, as Michigan learned twice early this season, there are some things that even Hart can't answer. TOP:ANGELA CESERE BOTTOM: EMMA NOLAN ABRAHAMIAN/Daily - Herman can be reached TOP: Mike Hart set the Michigan career rushing record Saturday. BOTTOM: Fresh- at jaherman@umich.edu. man Troy Woolfolk and the second-string defense allowed a late touchdown drive. Face in the crowd leads the way By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Fresh off an appearance in Sports Illustrated's Faces in the Crowd,- it would have MICHIGAN 2 been under- MICHIGAN ST. 1 standable ifa senior Lucia Belassi fell victim to the dreaded SI jinx. But, by scoring the game-winning goal in overtime of No. 6 Michigan's 2-1 win over No. 7 Michigan State, Belassi not only proved the superstition wrong - she also might have secured the Wol- away." verines a Big Ten regular-season title in The win puts Michigan in control of process. its own destiny as it concerns the Big After Michigan was awarded a pen- Ten regular-season crown. Michigan is alty corner four minutes into the extra the lone Big Ten team with an unblem- period, junior Michaela McDermott fed ished conference record. Belassi at the top of the shooting circle. And with games remaining against The seniorthenunleashed ashot, which conference doormats Northwestern deflected off a Michigan State defender and Indiana, it appears a title is within and past Spartan goalie Elissa Unger. the team's grasp. "Thank God (the jinx) didn't hap- "This was like the game for usto win, pen today," said Michigan coach Nancy especially for the Big Ten regular sea- Cox after the game. "It's a very hard son," Belassi said. task having the ball on your stick in an It didn't come easy, though. overtime period and being able to put it See FIELD HOCKEY, Page 6B 1P MAX COLLINS/Daily Freshman Carl Hagelin scored three third-period goals to propel Michigan past Western Ontario, 5-1, at Yost Ice Arena yesterday. Fresh start for Frosh 'Wonderful' night as Blue rolls in three ,.... .._.. _. s ._..,. ... ...._. ... ....,. .._ _... ._.... I -- - --__ __ -- ____.- By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer For the young Michigan hockey team, it was a Swede start to the season. The 10th-ranked Wolverines defeated West- ern Ontario 5-1 in an exhibition game high- lighted by freshman and Sweden native W. ONTARIO 1 Carl Hagelin's third- MICHIGAN 5 period hat trick. Hagelin's heroics came just a day after Mich- igan's top defensive lines bettered Wolverine goalie Billy Sauer and the top offensive lines 6- 3 in the annual Blue-White scrimmage. After two periods yesterday, the Wolverines had outshot the Mustangs 19-10 but led by just one. But four goals in the third period, includ- ing three in fewer than three minutes, put the game away and highlighted the Wolver- ines' offensive talent against a fading Western Ontario squad. Hagelin made a splash in his across-the- ocean collegiate debut, netting three goals in the third period to lead the Wolverines' offen- sive surge. The freshman converted a perfect pass from sophomore Steve Kampfer and found the back right-hand corner of the net a minute and 50 seconds into the period. After Michigan and Western Ontario scored one quick goal apiece, Hagelin notched his sec- ond tally two minutes later on the Travis Turn- bull-Louie Caparusso line that contributed three of the Blue team's six goals in the previ- ous night's Blue-White scrimmage. Hagelin's third goal came with 3:11 remain- ing in the game as he wrapped around the back See OPENER, Page 3B By ALEX PROSPERI Daily Sports Writer No. 16 Michigan made short work of intrastate rival Michigan State, sweep- ing the Spartans (30-21, 30-25, 30-23) in a mere one hour and 41 minutes. Emerging from the locker room after a hot and humid Cliff Keen Arena on Friday night, senior Stesha Selsky was brief in her comments regarding the win over the Spartans: "Oh, wonder- ful," Selsky said. The Wolverines (3-3 Big Ten, 15- 3 overall), who swept their weekend games with a win over Northwestern (1- 5, 10-7) on Sunday (30-24, 30-19, 30-22), wasted notimeonFridaynight,jumping out to a 14-6 lead midway through the first game. Shortly thereafter, Michigan sealed game one behind four kills from senior Lyndsay Miller and three apiece from sophomore Veronica Rood annica Rood and junior Beth Karpiak (who became the third Wolverine on the ros- ter to surpass 500 career kills). In game two, Michigan didn't let down toward the end of the game - a good indication Michigan is steadily improving. Committing untimely errors toward the latter part of games has been one of Michigan's weaknesses during its recent three-match skid. But leading 23-20, the Wolverines finished the stanza with a 7-5 run, capped by a textbook bump-set-spike from Rood to freshman Lexi Zimmerman and then back to Rood for the kill. "We limited our errors," Selsky said. "We are avery high-error teamrecently." Michigan State (1-5, 10-8) had com- munication problems all evening. More than once, a handful of Spartans simply watched the ball fall to the ground after its setter launched the ball into the air. Two picture-perfect Zimmerman sets leading to Miller kills early in the third game made it clear that Michigan was on top of its game. After a Michigan State timeout and another point to cut the score e Spartans looked primed for a comeback. But Rood put all hopes of a comeback to rest as she put the finish- ing touches on a long rally with a thun- derous kill. The Temperance native, who has struggled with inconsistent play, had one of her best games of the year. "I thought Rood was very good tonight," Michigan coach Mark Rosen said. "We spent a lot of time this week working on things to help her do bet- See VOLLEYBALL, Page 6B 4 s r