The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 27, 2007 - 5 Meet the Ferentz Name: Kirk Ferentz Education: University of Con- necticut Experience: Head coach, Uni- versity of Maine (1990-92) Offensive line coach, Cleveland Browns (1993-97) Head coach, Iowa (1999-pres- ent) Pros: Ferentz is highly regard- ed as a class act among college coaches. After struggling his first two seasons at Iowa (4-19), he revived the program with four straight New Year's Day bowls. Ferentz has won the Big Ten Coach of the Year award twice since he came to Iowa City and has fared reasonably well in bowl games (3-3, with wins over Loui- siana State and Florida). The one- time assistant coach under Bill Belichick runs a pro-style offense conducive to the Wolverines' cur- rent offensive schemes. Cons: It was just a few years ago that Ferentz was the hot pick rumored to bolt for a variety of NFL openings. Now, he doesn't look so hot. Ferentz's Hawkeyes are coming off a disappointing 6-6 year that includes a season-ending home loss to Western Michigan. He used to be the guy who did more with less, but after recent unin- spiring seasons (6-6 this year and 2006), he hasn't looked like such a motivator. His team has also run into legal trouble in recent years. Ten percent of his roster has found itself on the wrong side of the law this season. Just ask Michigan coach Lloyd Carr how off-the-field issues can distract a team. Why he'll get it: According to some websites,Ferentz has already been offered the job. He has a fan in University president Mary Sue Coleman, who was president at Iowa when Ferentz was hired there in 1998. He graduates play- ers, and on the surface, he runs a clean program. Why he won't: He might not run as clean of a program as once thought. In addition to the current trend of his players tripping up off the field, some dubious practices regarding room and board for his son when he played for Iowa have recently come to light - and he's not looking like a Michigan Man. Add on the way his teams have finished the past few seasons, and he may not be the right guy for the Michigan job. What people are saying: "I think Kirk is one of the better coaches in the country. I think he's doing a really good job, and I think sometimes it's hard to believe that when you just look at the records. I think he does a terrific job, and the program is in great hands." - Gerry DiNardo, Big Ten Net- work color analyst and former Louisiana State and Indiana head coach. BEN ROBEF Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz is an early candidate for the Michigan job. He has coached in Iowa City for nine years. Lacks on-field success A competitor with class Apparently, I'm in the minority in this debate, but that doesn't matter. I've always thrived as a member of the fringe group. Kirk Ferentz should become Michigan's next football coach. OK, he's 16 gone 6-6 the pastx two sea- sons, with an embar- KEVIN rassing WRIGHT home loss - to Western Pro-Ferentz Michigan to keep the Hawkeyes in Iowa City for Winter Break. Yeah, he hasn't done the best in recruiting the top-of-the- line athletes to play for the Hawk- eyes, but should that really count against him? His quarterback this year was Jake Christenson, a redshirt soph- omore in his firstcyear asa starter. Michigan fans, remember what it was like with Ryan Mallett under center? Add to that the suspension of Iowa's top receiver Dominique Douglas just a few games into the season, and at that point, who wouldn't have written off Iowa? But Ferentz rallied the team around a defense that finished third in the Big Ten in scoring (two spots ahead of Michigan), and the Hawkeyes pulled off three straight wins to almost salvage a disastrous season with a bowl- game appearance. Ferentz also beat Illinois this year. Only Michi- gan can say the same in Big Ten conference play. On to recruiting. Yes, Ferentz hasn't fared so well in recent years, especially with Illinois coach Ron Zook dominating in the Chicago area, a geographic area Ferentz used to call a home away from home. But if everyone is so convinced Zook is a shady recruit- er, who could blame a classy guy like Ferentz for losing out? Plus, it's Iowa. Give Ferentz the recruit- ing tools Michigan boasts, and I'm more than confident he can pull in top talent year after year. What's that? He's not classy? He sets his son up in government housing designed for the poor? His players have a nasty habit of getting in legal trouble? I'll give you the latter two, but wasn't Michigan coach Lloyd Carr considered a classy guy? Didn't he have recent problems with players spending more time in the court- room than on the practice field? Yes, he did. I'm not blaming Carr. It's col- lege football. These athletes are still college kids, and they're goingto get into trouble. The key to coaching is how you handle it, and Ferentz hasn't wavered in his decisions. He needed Douglas this season, but after the wide receiver stole some DVDs from Wal-Mart, he was suspended for the year. Period. Don't forget, just two short years ago, Ferentz finished a streak where he took the Hawk- eyes to four straight New Year's Day bowl games with wins against Louisiana State and Florida. Ferentz is a winner, a competi- tor, a standup guy and someone who will succeed at Michigan. But go ahead and doubt Ferentz. Pine over Les Miles. I really don't care. A few years from now, I'll have four words for all of you: I told you so. - Wright can be reached at kpwr@umich.edu. Kirk Ferentz? No thanks. I don't want this to come off as disre- spectful to Lloyd Carr, because I appreciate everything he did for the Univer- sity, but the last thing this program, needs is Carr lite. Sure, SCOTT Ferentz BELL would be Anti-Ferentz another great face for the Michigan football team. He'll do the right thing, say the right thing and uphold a lot of the long-stand- ing traditions Carr emphasized a successor should have at his press conference last week. But this is a head-coaching job, not political office. On-field per- formance needs to be weighed heavily when considering a head coach, and when that's factored in, Ferentz isn't the guy for the job. Were you sick of Michigan's offense consistently under- achieving and being stuck in the stone age in terms of innovation? You weren't alone. And you won't be in the future, either, if Ferentz is hired. Ferentz's offense has failed to break the top 75 in total offense -more than half of the nine seasons he's coached in Iowa City. Maybe I'm just manipulating stats from seasons past to make him look bad like alot of us evil journalists do. Eh, not quite. Iowa is 109th out of 119 Division I teams this season. How about recruiting? He's essentially been pushed out of the Chicago area by Charlie Weis and Ron Zook. Performance in rivalry games? Ferentz is a dismal 3-6 against in-state rival Iowa State. Even though Carr struggled against Ohio State in the later stages of his career, at least he took care of business against Michigan State. So if it's even possible, Mich- igan's offense could get even worse, its recruiting would regress and Little Brother might even start beating us more than once in a blue moon. But all this should be over- looked because Ferentz would be a great face of the program? No, it shouldn't - especially if there are questions Ferentz might not even be the great program head that everyone assumes. This season, nearly 10 percent of Ferentz's players encountered legal trouble off the field. Couple that with the housing controversy some of his players (including his son) were a part of a few years back, and Ferentz might not be Mr. Perfect after all. With all these things consid- ered (and I haven't even gotten to his team's average-at-best record over the past three years), should Ferentz even be a candidate for one of the marquee jobs in all of college sports? I won't insult your intelligence by answering that myself. The Michigan football team has an opportunity to make a statement with this hire. Does it want to look forward and embrace innovation, or does it simply want to try not to fail? Ferentz may be the safe pick, but that definitely doesn't make him the right one. - Bell can be reached at scotte b@umich.edu. Blue seeks to reduce penalties after weekend's tough physical play By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer Michigan may be second in the country right now, but it's been at the top of the list when it comes to drawing penalties. The Wolverines have averaged more than seven penalties and almost 18 and a half penalty minutes per game this season. They trump their opponents in every penalty sta- tistic - a fact Berenson is actively trying to change. "Our team saw all the penalties from Lake Superior (State) weekend (Nov. 16- 17) - we watched them and we critiqued them," Berenson said. "Whacking a guy with his stick rather than skating to him to check him - that's lazy. "There are smart penalties, and there are bad penalties." Berenson said watching film helped the Wolverines before this weekend's games. Still, Michigan tallied nine penal- ties against the Badgers Friday, including a five-minute major for hitting from behind and a game misconduct sophomore Brian Lebler drew in the first period. Michigan's fourth line of Lebler, sopho- more Anthony Ciraulo and junior Danny Fardig had 21 of the team's 29 penalty min- utes Friday, including the 10 minutes of Lebler's misconduct. Both Berenson and captain Kevin Porter said after Friday's game Lebler's penalties weren't entirely justified. Porter called the misconduct "not that great of a call" and the penalty-calling as a whole "a little out of control," but the fourth line's excessive time in the penalty box prompted Beren- son to scratch Fardig, the most experienced player on the line, for Saturday's game. "That's 11 minutes of penalties our team had to kill because of that line," Berenson said. "That can't happen. That's not the purpose of that line, to take penalties. It's supposed to be able to kill penalties and add energy to our lineup." WHERE IS THE LOVE?: The Wolver- ines stayed No. 2 in both polls released yesterday, receiving 10 first-place votes to Miami's 24 in the USA Today poll and six first-place nods to Miami's 44 in the USCHO poll. "I haven't seen (Miami), but obviously, I've heard a lot about them and I think they've got a heck of a hockey team," asso- ciate head coach Mel Pearson said. "Just based on the teams they've played and the teams that we've beat, they're probably deserving of that No. 1." This weekend, Michigan's opponents were far superior to Miami's - Michi- gan defeated the No. 14 and 15 teams in the country in Wisconsin and Minnesota, while Miami beat Canisius (2-9-2) 4-0 and 11-1 - but Miami held onto the top spot. Though the Wolverines have now been No. 2 for weeks, the team avoids discussing its ranking during practice. "The first time I heard we were No. 2, it was in an interview somewhere," fresh- man Scooter Vaughan said. "We don't really think about it. They don't really talk about it much in the locker room." Berenson continued to call Michigan's ranking too high and said he felt his team only moved up "from the top 20 to the top 10" this weekend. Pearson agreed, saying the Wolverines probably aren't second best in the nation. "Until you've seen the Miamis, the Mich- igan States, the Notre Dames ... you never know," Pearson said. "We haven't played any first, second, even third place teams in other leagues, so it's still early to say we're a top team." I'VE SEEN THIS BEFORE: Two more wins led to two more individual honors for the Wolverines. Porter earned CCHA Offen- sive Player of the Week recognition for the second week in a row after finishing with three goals and three assists this weekend. Goalie Billy Sauer was named CCHA Goalie of the Week for the third straight week after allowing just three goals in two games. * Mastering defense a challenge in Beilein's scheme By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer Heading into the season, every- body knew it would take a while for an inexperienced team to grasp John Beilein's complicated offense. Overlooked, though, was how tough it would be for the Michigan men's basketball team to perfect his defense. In their 79-65 loss to Butler last Wednesday, the Wolverines gave up a Great Alaska Shootout record 17 3-pointers. And while some credit should go to the Bulldogs' hot shooting, they also had too many easy looks from long range. Butler hit several momentum- swinging 3-pointers right as Mich- igan fought its way back into the contest early in the second half. "They make threes, they make threes, they make threes and all of a sudden it's a double-digit lead again and we could never recover from that," Beilein said in his post- game radio interview on WTKA. It was supposed to be Beilein's team that drained all the trifectas this season. But on a team without a proven offense, the Wolverines can't afford to look past the defen- sive side of the floor any longer. Along with his backdoor-laden, 3-point-heavy offensive attack, Beilein is also one of the few coaches in America to employ an unorthodox 1-3-1-zone defense on a regular basis. You would think the one player in the back of the scheme would be someone with shot-blocking capa- bilities, like sophomore EkpeUdoh. But Beilein has his point guard patrol around the rim and has him more focused on cutting off pass- ing lanes than swatting shots. Beilein's objective is to pressure the ball out of the hands of a team's normal playmakers and instead force players unaccustomed to making decisions into uncomfort- able situations. At its best, the 1-3-1 causes havoc and turnovers for the opposing team's offense, resulting in easy fastbreak opportunities going the other way. Run it incorrectly, and the opponent is left with wide- open looks because of the aggres- sive nature of the scheme. For just that reason, Eastern Washington came out firing from long distance, trying to emulate the success Butler had two nights ear- lier, but the Wolverines adjusted. The Eagles shot 6-for-17 from 3-point range, including a woeful 2-for-11 in the first half. Michigan held Eastern Washington to under 32 percent shooting overall and won the game, 61-53. "I thought we played terrific defense down the stretch," Beilein said through the athletic depart- ment. "That allowed us to get the scores that we did get." Beilein is not averse to playing classic man-to-man defense, but so far he has used it for just a few possessions at a time to throw off opponents. But as evidenced by the Wolver- ines' regression in Saturday's 73-69 loss to Western Kentucky, in which the Hilltoppers shot more than 57 percent from the field, learning the 1-3-1 is still very much a work in progress. Similar to his penchant for details on the offensive end, Beilein demands mastery of the little nuances on the defensive side. Earlier this season, he noted how freshman Manny Harris needed to rotate his body position so he covered more area on the top of the key while on defense, which maximizes his ability to create steals. With a tough schedule the rest of the way, the Wolverines won't have many games in which they can rely on their talent to win. And with such a young squad, Michigan can't count on its experience. Early on, it's clear that -defense will decide how many wins this team can pull off. "We just need to hang in there and battle," Beilein said following Saturday's defeat. "We will need to now go back and find all the little things that we need to change." CLIF REEDER/Daily Michigan coach John Beilein has implemented a 1-3-1-zone defense this season. I