a 8A - Wednesday, October 24, 2007 ACROSS THE NATION More mayhem in store for weekend The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Campbell up for any role a By H. JOSE BOSCH Daily Sports Editor What has the college football world come to? The No. 2 team in the nation has lost three straight weeks. A Catholic college not named Notre Dame is undefeated. A traditional basketball power- house (Connecticut) is currentlyin the BCS top 25 for the first time in school history. And, oh my good- ness, Michigan ran a trick play! The soap opera that is the col- lege football season gets more unpredictable with each passing week, so for making my picks, I'm just goingto use a dartboard. No. 2 Boston College at No. 8 Virginia Tech, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. - ESPN Congratulations, Boston Col- lege. You're the new No. 2 team in the nation! Enjoy it while it lasts, because it's meant disaster for any team not named Louisiana State. And Thursday night's game doesn't bode. well for the Eagles. They're also on the road and play- ing a solid Virginia Tech defense. Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan will have to wait to hoist the Heisman, because the Hokies' pass defense is scary good. What does Virginia Tech have going for it? Um, the team is playing at home. Oh, what the heck, it's worked for the last three weeks. Why shouldn't it work for now? The Eagles will lose. No. 8 Virginia Tech 21, No. 2 Boston College 17 No. 12 Southern Cal at No. 5 Oregon, 3 p.m. So it turns out Oregon really is that good. Despite a loss at home to California, the Ducks have been rolling. All of their wins have been blowouts, and their success starts with quarterback Dennis Dixon. He's passed for 1,721 yards and 16 touchdowns and has run for 423 yards and seven touchdowns this season. There hasn't been a week where Dixon failed to show up. Saturday, Southern Cal gets the pleasure of trying to stop Dixon. The Trojans had a rough two weeks when they lost to Stanford and played poorly against Arizona. But as Michigan fans can, Notre Dame is the best cure for poor play. Southern Cal looked more like itself during the 38-0 thumping last week. Autzen Stadium should be rock- ing after the home loss. Oh, and this will be Mark Sanchez's first game against a good team. Expect him to have some trouble. Ducks fly together! No.5 Oregon34, No.12 South- ern Cal23 No. 21 California at No. 4 Ari- zona State Just two teams stand unblem- ished atop the Pac 10 standings - UCLA and Arizona State. The Bruins will be lucky to survive the rest of the season, but the Sun Devils might be a legitimate threat to run the table. Their toughest stretch begins this week when they butt heads with stumbling, bumbling California. Two weeks ago, the second- ranked Golden Bears were to end Southern Cal's reign as confer- ence champs. Since then they've had two embarrassing losses, and many of their fans would love to go into hibernation. Keep you eyes closed, California fans. It's going to be another ugly one. No. 4 Arizona State 35, No. 21 California 17 ByD EVIN WEIGHT Daily Sports Editor When fifth-year senior Anton Campbell visited Michigan as a high school senior, his host told him exactly how his career in Ann Arbor would unfold. Darnell Hood, the then-fresh- man who became a special teams aficionado himself, had gone through a similar transition dur- ing his time as a Wolverine, and he envisioned the same path for Campbell. Campbell was being recruited by Illinois, Nebraska and Michi- gan to play running back, the position he starred at in O'Fallon, Miss. But Hood told him the coach- es would move him to defensive back, the same scenario Hood encountered. At the time, Campbell was less than impressed with the predic- tion. "I was like, 'You don't know what you're talking about,' " Campbell said. "And then it hap- pened, and I was like, 'Wow.' " The switch came during spring drills during his sophomore year, and Campbell, described as an ultimate team player by Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, accepted the move. Campbell never broke into the defensive rotation, so he focused his attention on making an impact any way he could. And because Carr values special teams, Camp- bell knew that oft-overlooked unit was his route to the field. - "When you're a young guy, you want to play now, ASAP," Camp- bell said. "I told the coaches I wanted to play special teams from day one justbecause I did it in high school, and it was always fun." To excel at special teams like Hood did for four years, Campbell has developed a unique mindset. He doesn't get the recognition of the skill players, and his craft is usually praised only within 4 4 JEREMY CHO/Daily Fifth-year senior Anton Campbell has made the most of his decision to return for another season. Schembechler Hall. Still, he knows if he doesn't do his job, it might cost the Wolverines a win. "Special teams is going to win or lose the game eventually," Campbell said. "It might not be this week or next week, but even- tually, it's going to happen, so you have to take pride in it." Campbell's pride has earned him the distinction of special teams captain and the respect of his teammates and coaches, some-. thing he said you have to earn on the field. Over his five years on the foot- ball team, Campbell has appeared in 45 career games, mostly on special teams, but running backs coach Fred Jackson made an interesting proposal last week. With both Mike Hart and Bran- don Minor sidelined with ankle injuries, Jackson asked Camp- bell to return to his former posi- tion this past week to add depth. Campbell was more than happy to oblige, even though it took a day to readjust. "He's one of those guys that is willing to do anything to give his team a chance (to win)," Carr said. "He never complains. He's always had a great attitude." But if Campbell took one thing above all others from the player who laid out his career at Michi- gan, it was to have fun with what he was doing. Whether taking snaps at run- ning back, playing in the defen- sive backfield or anchoring the special teams units, Campbell is just enjoying one final year in maize and blue. "Now that time is winding down,.I'm like, 'Wow, I only have this much time left, I have to take advantage of it,' "Campbell said. One thing left on Campbell's to-do list is to call Hood and let him know he's playing some run- ning back, something Hood didn't predict. 4 4 CROSS COUNTRY Two take Big Ten weekly awards A pair of redshirt freshmen, Rachel Severin and Peter Christ- mas, both received their first Big Ten Conference Runner of the- Week honors of their short careers at Michigan. Severin paced the women's cross country team at the EMU classic CHRISTMAS last Friday with a fourth-place fin- ish. The Chelsea native posted a time of 18:12 in her 5,000-meter race. i Christmas, an Ann Arbor native,. also finished fourth for the Michigan men's cross country team on the same day. He finished the 10,000-meter race in 32:18. Both runners hope the momen- tum from their individual accolades will extend to this weekend's Big Ten Championships in Columbus, Ohio. After two years in shadow, Mitera emerges as leader 0 By NATE SANDALS, Daily Sports Editor Mark Mitera's first two years * at Michigan were relatively quiet with big-name defenseman Matt Hunwick and Jack Johnson on the roster. Well, as quiet as can be for a first-round draft pick with clear- cut NHL talent. Johnson and Hunwick are gone now, and this season, it's the junior's turn to lead a young Wol- verine defensive corps. "We talked about it last spring," MichigancoachRedBerensonsaid, "how our defense would change without Hunwick and Johnson and all the defensemen (four total) we lost, and how challenging and how good it would be for Mark Mitera to now step up and really blossom into this challenge. And I think he's done exactlythat." One of the biggest adjustments for Mitera has been increased ice time. In the past two seasons, Johnson and Hunwick accumu- Dl lated the most playing time, often spending nearly half the game on the ice. Now, Mitera . is a rock on defense, skating on the power play and penalty kill, as well as at even strength. "This summer, I worked hard !on my skating and conditioning," Mitera said. "I knew I'd be play- ing 25-30 minutes a game without those guys here." Just looking at Mitera's play- ing time undervalue's his presence on the team. With four freshman defensemen, Mitera has also taken on a leadership role with the blue- liners. In each of Michigan's four games, the Livonia native has been paired with a first-year player, most often Scooter Vaughan. Mitera is a quiet guy who rarely gets in someone's face to chastise him. Instead, Mitera leads best by example, both on and off the ice. "He works the hardest in the weight room," Vaughan said. "He's one of the strongest guys on the ice at all times. He just plays aggres- sively." Mitera uses his strength to pre- vent opponents from scoring goals when he'son the ice. Last season, despite being hampered by a wrist injury that limited his stick han- dling, Mitera used physical play to finish with a plus-23 rating. His forceful style and 6-foot-3 frame make Mitera an imposing presence on the blue line, but his offensive numbers are unlikely to rival those of Johnson and Hun- wick. Mitera has 29 points as a Wol- verine, including just two goals. While he's not expected to be an offensive force, Mitera has the ability to shoot and pass the puck with the best. So far, it just hasn't always shown up in the score sheet. Those talents made Mitera a good fit on Michigan's second power-play unit the past two sea- sons. Saturday night, Mitera's pres- ence on the power play paid off in quantitative terms when, on the man-advantage, he scored Michi- gan's first goal of the game. The tally came off a flutter- ing wrist shot. Still, it got the job done. "I guess I'll take whatever goals I get," Mitera said after the game. "They're kind of few and far between, but I just got the puck and shot it to the net. I don't think the goalie saw it." Even with the goal, Mitera still garners the most praise for his efforts inhis ownend. Muchofthe credit for Michigan's 3-1-0 start goes to his ability to top opposing forwards. As senior alternate captain Chad Kolarik said over the weekend, Mitera has been, "a man amongst boys" this season. And Kolarik wasn't referring to Mitera's fresh- man teammates. 4 Junior Mark Mitera has emerged as the veteran leader of the defensive corps His physical style has set the tone for the rest of the blueline. CLOTHING WAREHOUSE SALE MEN'S LADIES' 2IA'YiSONLY LADIES' MENS ADIDAS REEBOK SPOTSW BEBE HUREY& $$NORTHFACE SPORTSW QU H SLVER $L99 99 FROM 5 $799 MEN-LADIES MENS MEN'S & LADIES' MEN'S GRAB BAGS ECKOSANJQHN LUCKY ADI ESAWILSON DOCKERS TRAND T-SHIRTS BAECKOAT SOCKS $ M 9 P5 SOUTHPOLE $ 9 $ 99 SUHOE45 !TES PER BAG IMP 4,$ 9 PAlR IMP. IMPERFECTS 1I LADIES' LADIES' LUCKY JEWELRY NI. *. SOFFE - JEANS FAMOUS 99 9 50%OFF sTOREREG. PRICE 2 DAYS ONLY LADIES' Sponsored by Tuesday, Oct. 23 BEBE & BCBG Michigan Union 1Oam -7pm f PURSES FROM Arts & Programs Wednesday, Oct. 24 HANDBAGS 99 2nd Floor Ballroom lam- 6pm BACKPACKS ANN ARBOR A