The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 25, 2007 -- 5A Buckeyes face tough test in Happy Valley ANGELA CESERE/Da Redshirt freshman Steve Schilling and the rest of the Michigan offensive line have had to deal with a myriad of injuries throughout this season. M' deals with injured line By DANIEL BROMWICH Daily Sports Editor The Michigan football team has thrived on turnovers this season. The Wolverines have forced more fumbles and inter- cepted more passes than any other Big Ten team. But there's a different kind of turnover that has plagued Michigan this season. The offensive line has just one member who has played the same position through all eight games of this season - cap- tain Jake Long. The senior has started every game at left tackle for the past two-plus seasons, a string of 25 straight games. The rest of the line, however, has struggled with injuries and consistency throughout the year. The problems began with the right side of the line. Pre- sumed starter Alex Mitchell was injured before the season, and the coaches didn't expect him back for several weeks. But after replacement Jeremy Ciulla went down with an inju- ry against Appalachian State, Mitchell returned and played against Oregon and Notre Dame. He was injured again against Penn State, though, and just a couple plays after Ciulla came in to replace Mitchell, Ciulla was on the ground with injury again. Mitchell returned, but re-injured himself later in the same game. At that point Michigan was down to its third-string right guard, redshirt sophomore Tim McAvoy. While he performed admirably in his teammates' absence for the second half against Penn State and then in his first career start at North- western, the Wolverine coaches weren't getting the production they wanted from the position. Before facing Eastern Michi- gan, the coaches decided they preferred shuffling the deck to playing with worse cards. Right tackle Steve Schilling, who had started every game of the season to that point at right tackle, moved over one spot to guard, and junior Mark Ortmann replaced Schilling at tackle. For Schilling, the switch was tough. "Two weeks ago, three weeks ago, when he got his first start at guard, it was not something that he relished," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said Monday. "There's a degree of feeling comfortable that he didn't have then." Schilling never complained aboutthe switch, but he did note that shifting to guard brought with it some challenges. "There's some things that are difficult," Schilling said after his first start at guard against Eastern Michigan. "As far as assignment-wise, it's not as dif- ficult, but technique-wise, as far as pass blocking, it's a little bit different." With Ciulla's return to the lineup against Illinois, Schilling has moved back to his original spot at tackle, where he's more comfortable. But the experience the sopho- more gained at guard will prove invaluable. "I think eventually Schilling could end up at guard," Carr said after the game against Pur- due. "He could be a great guard or a great tackle. (He's) started at both guard and tackle, and I think in the long run that will be a great thing for his develop- ment because he'll understand what the guy next to him is doing because he's done it, not because he sees it on film." The left side hasn't been immune to the switching, though. The season started with senior Adam Kraus entrenched as the left guard and sophomore Justin Boren playing center. But when quarterback Chad Henne had to sit out with injury, fresh- man quarterback Ryan Mallett's insertion into the lineup shook things up. Mallett fumbled two snaps against Notre Dame, and after the second one, the coaches switched Boren and Kraus. Carr attributed the switch to the fact that Boren is left-hand- ed, which changes the center- quarterback exchange. But another reason might have been simpler. "Sometimes you got to. remember to get the snap up every time," Boren said. "Just concentrate on getting the ball up. Ryan worked a couple dif- ferent things with his hands and I think he finally got it down, with some little stuff like interlocking his thumbs ... Basi- cally as the center you just got to make sure it's in the middle where he can get it. Other than that, it's pretty easy." Boren switched back to center against Penn State, and Mallett fumbled just one snap against the Nittany Lions. The troubles returned against Illinois, how- ever. Mallett fumbled two of his limited snaps, and Kraus was switched back to center while Mallett was in the game. The constant shuffling of the line has had its costs. Running back Mike Hart has already lost more yards from scrimmage this season than he has in any other of his career. Henne has been hurt twice, and was seem- ingly knocked down every time he dropped back in the second half against Illinois. With Michigan undefeated in the Big Ten but trailing Ohio State overall, the Wolverines can't afford any losses down the stretch of their season. The same can be said of the offensive line. By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer What do you know? The famous saying "the more things change, the more they stay the same" rings true once again. Five weeks have passed in the Big Ten conference race, and the top of the standings has a famil- iar ring to it. Just like last year, Michigan and Ohio State are the only two teams in the Big Ten without a conference loss. In fact, the Wolverines and Buck- eyes are the only Big Ten teams to have fewer than two losses within the Big Ten. But don't go circling Nov. 17 - the date No. 1 Ohio State and No. 19 Michigan will play - as the deciding game in the confer- ence race just yet. We all know what lies ahead for the Wolverines - road games with Michigan State and Wis- consin - but the Buckeyes have a test of their own when they travel to State College to face No. 25 Penn State and its notori- ously raucous home crowd Sat- urday night. A loss there, and the Big Ten race becomes wide open again. So without further adieu, here's the two Big Ten games you should be aware of heading into the weekend. No. 1 Ohio State at No. 25 Penn State, 8 p.m. - ABC I'm not really sure what to make of this Ohio State team. It clearly isn't as good as the 2006 version led by Troy Smith and Ted Ginn, Jr. And yet eight weeks into the 2007 season, their records are identical. Part of that is because of the soft schedule the Buckeyes have navigated through. Their most impressive win up to this point is probably last week's 24-17vic- tory over Michigan State. And in that game, some of Ohio State'sdeficiencies were finally revealed. After building a 24-0 lead midway through the third quarter, Buckeye quarter- back Todd Boeckman threw an interception and lost a fumble on consecutive possessions, both of which were returned for Spartan touchdowns. Both were caused by pressure from Michigan State's front seven, revealing a sieve in the Ohio State offensive line that nobody knew about. So expect a lot of blitzes Saturday from the Nittany Lions' talented line- backing corps led by senior Dan Connor. But Ohio State's offense doesn't need to be perfect - not with a defense allowing just six points per contest, excluding Michigan State's two scores off giveaways. That doesn't bode well for a Penn State offense led by incon- sistent quarterback Anthony Morelli, who hasn't progressed as many thought he would as a senior. And it can't help that the Nittany Lions starting running back at the beginning of the sea- son - senior Austin Scott - is suspended indefinitely because of impending rape charges. But lest we forget, the last time Ohio State stepped into the unfriendly confines of Beaver Stadium in 2005, it lost a 17-10 heartbreaker at night that cata- pulted Penn State to the Big Ten title that year. After the game, Buckeye apologist and ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit called the Nittany Lions' faithful "the best home-field advantage in the country." Since becoming coach at Ohio State, Jim Tressel has lost two of three in Happy Valley, and something tells me Saturday will make it three out of four. Troy Smith had trouble han- dling the crowd two years ago, so I certainly don't trust Boeck- man against the boisterous Penn State faithful, who will be liquored up and wild under the bright lights. This could be the defining moment for Morelli, the second-best quarterback in the Big Ten from the state of Pennsylvania behind Chad Henne, of course. Penn State 20, Ohio State 14 Indiana at Wisconsin, Noon - Big Ten Network The Badgers are the perfect example of underestimating the importance of a veteran quar- terback. They collected all sorts of preseason accolades because they returned so many starters from a one-loss team a year ago. But everyone forgot about quarterback John Stocco. While not overly impressive, Stocco kept pass defenses honest a year ago and allowed running back P.J. Hill to run wild. Although Hill has amassed more than 1,000 yards already this season, he couldn't crack 100 yards in either of Wis- consin's consecutive losses to Illinois and Penn State. In the defeats, new quarterback Tyler Donovan was far from impres- sive, throwing two intercep- tions in both games. The Badgers rebounded last week against Northern Illinois, but a loss against the Hoosiers eliminates any chance of return- ing to the Big Ten title race. A win, coupled with my predicted Ohio State upset, puts the Bad- gers right back in it with upcom- ing games against the Buckeyes and Michigan. I don't expect Wisconsin to overlook the very capable Hoo- siers, especially after its 38-7 thrashing at the hands of the Nittany Lions two weeks ago. Indiana quarterback Kellen Lewis will surely make things interesting with his multi- dimensional game as a passer and runner. But I think the Badgers realize they have the opportunity to redeem them- selves in upcoming weeks, so overconfidence shouldn't be an issue. Wisconsin 31, Indiana 17 Quick hits Expect Iowa to take advan- tage of visiting Michigan State. The Spartans will be looking ahead to next week's matchup with measuring stick Michigan. Look for Purdue to get its usual victory over an inferior team like Northwestern. And Illinois should get back on track against David Letterman's alma mater, Ball State. Shutout Sperry leads Blue in win By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer -- _ _.- _ _ _ . ... _. Less than a minute into dou- ble overtime, junior Jake Stacy provided the Michigan men's soccer team with something it had been sorely lacking - a big win against a top opponent. Seconds earlier, Stacy passed the ball to sophomore forward Matt Schmitt. Schmitt made a nearly impossible turn at the goal line to keep control, then sent the ball back to Stacy. Stacy caught both Akron goal- ie Evan Bush and his defender unprepared. "I beat my defender and the goalie was out of position, so I just put it in the goal," Stacy said. "It felt awesome." And just like that, Michigan recorded an impressive 1-0 vic- tory over No. 17 Akron (10-3-2). It was junior goalkeeper Pat- rick Sperry's eighth shutout of the season, setting another new single-season shutout record. Sperry broke his old record of six with his shutout against Northwestern Saturday. Stacy's goal marked the first time Michigan had scored since lastWednesday's S-2win against Bowling Green. "This had all the makings of an NCAA Tournament game, and that's how we billed it to our guys," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. Last night's game was on track to becoming a repeat of the Northwestern game, which ended in a scoreless draw. Neither team could mount an extended attack, even with Sper- ry at his best. His finest moment came at the end of regulation. With most of the crowd already heading to the conces- sion stand and just seconds left on the clock, Akron drove on the goal. Zip forward Steve Zakuani dribbled the ball toward Sper- ry's left, then suddenly passed to a teammate at the far post. Sperry dove all the way to the other side of the goal to keep the game scoreless and send it to overtime. "It really helps to get the shutouts against two top- ranked opponents," Sperry said. "It looks good for us, and we're going to carry that into a big win, hopefully, against a good Ohio State team on Saturday." Though at times Michigan's play was rough, the team made up for any deficiencies with effort, gutting out more than 100 minutes of scoreless play. Burns chose junior midfielder Danny Gray as his man of the match, reflecting the Wolver- ines' fighting spirit. "He did a great job, a tremen- dous job," Burns said. "He was tough, he gave us the steal in the middle of the midfield that we needed, his distribution was great and he really just was a force to be reckoned with in that spot on the field." As soon as Stacy's shot found the back of the net, all the ten- sion among the Michigan play- ers and fans evaporated. The Wolverines (10-4-2) poured gleefully onto the field to cel- ebrate the victory over a ranked opponent. And it couldn't have come at a better time. Michigan needs all the confidence and momentum it can get going into Saturday's game. The Wolverines travel to Columbus to take on their archrival, No. 25 Ohio State. "Ohio State is a team that has a lot of confidence and a lot of weapons, both offensively and. defensively," Burns said. "We're really taking this same atmo- sphere that we had tonight (to) Columbus, Ohio, and it's going to be a great one." I MIDNIGHTMOI % 0 t1 Bo n233 State St at Lbrti3-711679 I t~w11lls T'S DEJA VU ALL OVER AGAIN! Now Extended to 10/31! Monday-Friday Only 4 . .'ST.IS T4I0 M 4,000 NEW CDS AND SOME NEW VINYL TOO. NEW RELEASES AND SPECIAL ORDERS T WO CHAN CES TO SEE IT AT OUR REGULAR DISCOUNT PRICES. Next day delivery on orders. OCT 26 & 27(a @ MI'DNSTARSAT HAAN RU TETBOKGTOEHTSATES FOR MORE INFO VISIT MYSPACE.COM/STATETHEATREA2 d