Junior Brandon Minor leaps over Miami (Ohio) defenders for the game-clinching touchdown on Saturday. JEREMY CHO/Daily - FALLING FORWARD MICHIGAN 16, MIAMI (OHIO) 6 Offense displays potential in first win By DAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Editor When legendary Michigan coach Bo Schembechler came to Michigan from Miami (Ohio) in 1969, his assistants had to hang their jackets on nails. They com- plained they had better facilities at their old job. But Schembechler scolded them, say- ing Michigan had tradition they wouldn't find anywhere else. The latest group making the trek from Oxford, Ohio to Ann Arbor found out the Wolverines still hung onto at least one tradition amidst a regime change - beat-; ing Mid-American Conference teams. With its 16-6 win over Miami on Satur- day, Michigan improved to 24-0 against MAC opponents. But the Wolverines still are not hitting on full cylinders yet. The previous 23 wins came by an average margin of 26.3 points per game. "As I told the team in the locker room afterwards, I'd rather win ugly than lose pretty," Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said. "It certainly wasn't pretty, but the guys played hard and we didn't execute it well." Despite struggling offensively for most of the game, the Wolverines (1-1) found the defensive spark they needed to give Rodriguez his first win with the program. Michigan's defense hasn't allowed a touchdown in 90 minutes and 13 seconds of game time, despite being on the field for more than 54 minutes of that span. On the Wolverines' first possession, it seemed like the offense had finally hit its stride after struggling against Utah last Saturday. Led masterfully by first-time starter Steven Threet, the Wolverines drove 77 yards in 2:04 for a touchdown. Inn narly flwless drive, none of Michi4 gan's five plays went for fewer than five yards. Threet, a redshirt freshman, hit fresh- man Martavious Odoms in the slot on Michigan's opening play. Odoms raced SO yards through space before finally being brought down. On the drive's fifth play, Threet faked to freshman Sam McGuffie and ran in untouched for the score from nine yards out. Threet was no Pat White, but except for a play where he fumbled the ball while trying to pass, he had four carries for 36 yTds. On the ensuing possession, Miami (0-2) fumbled on its own 36-yard line when RedHawk center Josh Satterthwait snapped the ball too early. Michigan used the shortfield to set up a 47-yard field goal by fifth-year senior K.C. Lopata. A nine-play, 57-yard drive set up a missed 41-yard field goal on the Wolver- ines' next possession. But Threet failed to move the offense successfully after that and was pulled for redshirt sophomore See REDHAWKS, Page 4B Let's look beyond the quarterback Last week, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez announced quarterback Justin Feagin was redshirting. The news appeared on the front page of ESPN.com and on the channel's Bottom Line ticker. Feagin is a true freshman, a three-star quarterback recruit according to rivals.com, who has never made it onto Michi- gan's official two-deep depth chart. Is the decision to redshirt IAN him really one of the 10 biggest ROBINSON headlines in sports? It might have been a slow news day, but the Feagin hype just goes to show that there's been too much attention paid to the Michi- gan's quarterback situation. On Saturday, quarterbacks Steven Threet and Nick Sheridan had their ups and downs. Threet started the game strong but couldn't recover his rhythm. He substituted with Sheridan throughout ,the day. In the fourth quarter, Sheridan put togeth- er an 87-yard touchdown drive, but was otherwise unimpressive. The offense couldn't establish the tempo it want- ed, and, after the game, Rodriguez faced several questions about the quarterbacks. "Everybody is grinding on the quarterback thing," Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said. "It's just one position. It's obvious to everybody else that we are still searching at times to get a rhythm on offense. It starts with the quarterback, but it's not only the quarterback." There are, after all, 10 other guys on the field. Because of the nature of the spread offense, the quarterback has a greater responsibility, but it's time to look beyond Threet and Sheridan when judging this offense. Bubble screens to the wide receivers are an important aspect of this timing-based attack, for example. The idea is to get the ball to players with game-breaking ability in open space. It relies on big-play receivers and blocking from other outside receivers to create the initial separation. You saw that on Michigan's first offensive play against Miami (Ohio), when freshman wide receiver Martavious Odoms broke a SO-yard gain on a pass that didn't cross the line of scrimmage. A crucial block from a wide receiver gave Odoms the initial separation he needed. - Threet made the read to get the ball to Odoms, but the throw wasn't complex. The blocking and Odoms's speed werethe keys to the play. When these passes along the line of scrimmage go for little to no gain, it's not always because the quarterback made a bad read. The receiver might have missed a hole, or a receiver might have missed a block. This was evident against Utah, when Odoms caught five passes for seven yards. Against the RedHawks, the Michigan running game showed some of its potential. Freshman Sam McGuffie showed quickness getting to the outside, and junior Brandon Minor broke through multiple tacklers in a fourth-quarter touchdown run. On option plays, the quarterback decides where the ball goes. But beyond that, the running back has to choose which hole to hit. The offensive line's job is to create those holes. But when the running game stalled in the second and third quarters and the quarterbacks switched in and out, how much of the blame should go to the quarterbacks? When watching the game, focusing on the offensive line can be difficult, but when Michigan struggles to reach the line of scrimmage on a run- ning play, the line is probably losing the battle in the trenches. This is an inexperienced offensive line that is already missing two starters and lost another one, Mark Ortmann, on Saturday. Lines need time to coalesce, and they will make mistakes. When the See ROBINSON, Page 4B JEREMY CHO/Uaily Redshirt freshman Steven Threetlthrew forojust 13 more yards after a 50-yard screen pass on the game's first play. A tale of two shots: Bowery nails game-winner By JASON KOHLER Daily Sports Writer YPSILANTI - Sophomore Amanda Bowery collided with Dayton goalie Deana Waintraub and found herself with an open net and the WESTERN MICHIGAN 1 ball at her feet. MICHIGAN 2 Bowrey shuffled towards the goal and rushed a shot that inched just right of the post - a shot that would've tied the game with less than ten minutes left. Instead, Bowery and the Michigan women's soccer team fell, 3-2, to the Fly- ers on Friday night. But yesterday against Western Michi- gan, Bowery pushed herself into a simi- lar position - staring down an empty net. After beating goalie Julia Francy to the ball on a pass through the box, Bow- ery lofted a shot over charging defenders and into the top right corner of the goal. "That was a much harder one today," Michigan coach Greg Ryan said. "She had to lift it over two players into the net. Amanda is going to score goals. She is just one of those kids around the net that the ball just seems to find her foot." Bowery's shot gave Michigan a 2-1 advantage with 12 minutes left in the game, which proved the difference. The Wolverines (2-3-1) played aggressively throughout the game, but they outshot the Broncos 6-1 in the first period but didn't connect with the back of the net. Ryan adopted an aggressive strategy after Friday's game, in which Michigan sat back in the first half and let Dayton control the pace. "I just said, 'the heck with defending. Let's just throw some people forward,' " Ryan said. "We just said the same thing about today. Let's get forward lets take chances, let's take risks." The Wolverines had several quality shots on goal, but never scored off of a set play. Freshman Kelsey Rogind scored two minutes into the second half off a free kick, and Bowery scored on a counter- attack. See BRONCOS, Page 3B Sophomore Amanda Bowery missed an empty-netter Friday, but redeemed herself with a goal on Sunday. A li C