8 - Friday, September 12, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 6 FO TBALL Fiery remarks set stage for rivalry game By DAN FELDMAN Daily SportsEditor Most Michigan fans remember Notre Dame football coach Char- lie Weis's comments on Michigan in April: "Then we'll listen to Michi- gan have all their excuses as they come running in, saying how they have a new coaching staff and there's changes. ... The hell with Michigan,"he said. The comments, made at an alumni function, only became public because an observer took video of Weis's speech and posted it onYouTube. Weis said this week that his remarks were meant as a compliment to legendary Michi- gan coach Bo Schembechler, who famously said "to hell with Notre Dame." Fewer fans know that Michi- gan coach Rich Rodriguez took a shot at the Fighting Irish. And his words, which came in 2002 when he was West Virginia's coach, were made to the media with the intent everyone would hear them. The Mountaineers finished second in the Big East that year. Notre Dame is a member of the conference in most sports besides football. But as part of the part- nership, the Irish can bump a con- ference school from a bowl under certain conditions. The Irish knocked the Mountaineers from the Gator Bowl to the Continental Tire Bowl that season. West Vir- ginia still received the same pay- out had they played in the Gator Bowl, but that wasn't enough to please Rodriguez. "I don't know if 'slighted' is the right term," Rodriguez said at the time. "I do wonder sometimes what Notre Dame's affiliation is with our league. I'm just a foot- ball coach, and our players are just players. ... But I don't under- stand why Notre Dame gets the best of both worlds. "In my opinion, Notre Dame needs to get in or get out." Notre Dame doesn't seem to be using Rodriguez's words as moti- vation, but the Wolverines are certainly keying in on Weis's. Shortly after Weis made his comments, Michigan's student trainers put them up all over the Wolverines locker room. Fifth- year senior defensive end Tim Jamsion hasn't seen the video, but he was reminded about what Weis said besides when he looked around his locker room. "Barwis was mad," Tim Jami- son said of Mike Barwis, the Wol- verine's director of strength and conditioning. To at least one Michigan player, Weis's tone wasn't too surprising. "When Coach Weis used to recruit me, he kind of had an arrogance about him," junior free safety Stevie Brown said. "I fig- ured it's just him being him.". For the record, the only time Rodriguez coached against Notre Dame was in 2001, his first year with the Mountaineers. Notre Dame entered the game 1-3 and beat West Virginia 34-24. Rodriguez has also gone against first-year Irish assistant defensive head coach and linebackers coach Jon Tenuta once. Tenuta, known for his aggressive zone blitzes, was the defensive coordinator at Georgia Tech for the 2007 Gator Bowl, which the Mountaineers won 38-35. When the two teams square off Saturday afternoon at 3:30 on NBC, Michigan will attempt to become the first team in the rival- ry to win three straight games since Notre Dame won four in a row between 1987 and 1990. The Wolverines lead the all-time series 20-14-1, including a 38-0 win last year and a 41-27 win the year before in South Bend. Rodriguez irked a few Wolver- ine fans when he called Michigan- Ohio State "one of the greatest rivalries in college football" at his introductory press conference in December. But the Notre Dame- Michigan rivalry is one he has a better grasp of. Rodriguez was asked Monday whether rooted for the Irish growing up, given their prominence on national televi- sion. "No," Rodriguez said with a disgusted look. "No." 6 Back to .500: With third win, M' matches last year's total Wolverines go to 3-3-1 with win over Oakland By JACK FERNBACHER For the Daily YPSILANTI - The Michigan women's soccer team's 6-2 win over Oakland yesterday at Eastern Michigan's Scicluna Field probably didn't seem out of the ordinary. But the Wolverines (3-3-1) matched their win total from last season, when they went 3-9-6, in only their seventh game of the year. "It has felt really good to win," sophomore Amanda Bowery said. "We have been trying to get to .500 on the season and are extremely happy to reach our goal." Freshman Natalie Horner and Bowery had two goals each. Bow- ery has scored at least one goal in each of the last three games and now has four goals on the season. "It doesn't matter who scores in the game on our team because we have just been trying to get any of the players in the position to score," Bowery said. "Recently, I have had open looks at the net and been able to score." Freshman Kim Siebert had a breakaway down the sideline early in the first half and sent a cross to the far post. The ball slipped past Oakland goalie Shannon Coley and Bowery was there to tap it in the net. Michigan went into halftime leading 4-0 and never lost the lead. In the second half, the Wolver- ines' defense got tired and allowed the Golden Grizzlies to put two balls in the net. Oakland senior Kristi Evans scored a long-range goal, unguarded in the 64th min- ute. Senior goalkeeper Madison Gates held the Grizzlies (1-4-1) scoreless in the first half with five saves, but after allowing two goals on two shots, Gates was replaced by redshirt sophomore Kristen Keane. Keane finished the game for Michigan but didn't face any shots. "We lose focus as the game goes on," Michigan coach Greg Ryan said: "We talked about focusing for the whole game at halftime, but we clearly lost our intensity and focus in the second half." Michigan is a young team and has started to jell in the past couple games. "My expectations were that the team would improve day-in and day-out," Ryan said. "Our team has improved tremendously, and I am very happy with how they have done up to this point." Michigan will try to extend its winning streak when it heads west to take on Arizona and Arizona State next weekend. But Ryan isn't focusing on the coming opponents. "Most of the teams we are play- ing have a lot of seniors and expe- rienced veterans," Ryan said. "We have abunch ofyoungkids and just a few experienced players. I just wanted the team to enjoy today; and next week we are going to keep working on improving and not focusing on winning streaks." Defense key for Blue against Irish By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK and IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Editors Notre Dame rushing offense vs. Michigan rushing defense Notre Dame had just 105 rushing yards against San Diego State last week. That would be bad for the Fighting Irish in a normal season. Consider the Aztecs had seven inju- ries on the defensive line, and the Michigan defensive front should be licking its chops. The Wolverines are giving up just 1.1 yards per carry this season. ArmandoAllen and Robert Hughes, Notre Dame's top two running backs, have to hope their offensive line can find a way to control the line of scrimmage or create holes. But don't expect that to happen. Edge: Michigan Notre Dame passing offense vs. Michigan passing defense Notre Dame quarterback Jimmy Clausen's career is well-document- ed. He was the top quarterback recruit coming out of high school in 2007, struggled in his first sea- son in South Bend, grew his hair out during the offseason and threw two interceptions last week. He has talented receivers in Golden Tate and Duval Kamera. The key is find- ing them. Last year, Clausen didni have enough time, getting sacked 34 times. Michigan already leads the country with nine quarterback takedowns and should get more tomorrow. In its first two games, Michi- gan has been vulnerable to short passes and throws over the middle. Clausen should be able to find these spots, and missed tackles in the secondary have led to big plays in each of Michigan's two games. Edge: Push Michigan rushing offense vs. Notre Dame rushing defense Michigan's running game expo- nentially improved from Week 1 to Week 2. After gaining just 36 yards against Utah, the Wolverines ran over the RedHawks last week to the tune of 178 yards. Fresh- man Sam McGuffie rushed for 74 yards, while his classmate Michael Shaw also showed promise with an impressive 30-yard run. Now, the Wolverines' younger players have to prove they can handle the pres- sure of playing on the road. Notre Dame's defense gave up 345 yards against San Diego State last weekend, and the Aztecs lost to Cal Poly the week before. Michigan should have fun with this one. Edge: Michigan Michigan passing offense vs. Notre Dame passing defense Michigan redshirt freshman quarterback Steven Threet is expected to start for the second week in a row, but neither he nor redshirt sophomore Nick Sheridan has been impressive enough to win the starting job outright. Last week, against the Notre Dame secondary, San Diego State quarterback Ryan Lindley com- pleted just 49 percent of his passes. That statistic looks a little scary for a Michigan team without an expe- rienced quarterbacks. Edge: Notre Dame Special teams With Michigan's offensive struggles this year, redshirt junior punter Zoltan Mesko hasbeen one of the team's most valuable play- ers. Last week, freshman Boubacar Cissoko showed some potential as a kick returner. But it will be inter- esting to see how he responds to a hostile road atmosphere. Notre Dame kicker Brandon Walker hit just half of his field goals last year as a freshman and missed his only chance last week. Allen and Tate share return duties for the Fighting Irish and can be dan- gerous in open space. Edge: Michigan Intangibles It's the first time away from home this season for the Wolver- ines, and there will probably be some road-game jitters. But, then again, Notre Dame almost lost last week to one of the worst teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision. It looks like they really are that ter- rible. Edge: Michigan Score: 13-10 Michigan 01 0I Full salary and benefits. All academic majors. TE. HF RAM ERICA www.teachforamerica.org 4