SANDALS: BIG TE BLUES HIT HARD, PAGE 2B S ortsMonday UThe Michigan Daily I michigandaily corn( September 15, 2008 HOW LOW7 NOTRE DAME 35, MICHIGAN 17 QB and RB shine By DAN.FELDMAN Daily Sports Editor SOUTH BEND - Most of the Michigan football players somberly walked through the tunnel of Notre Dame Stadium after Saturday's loss to the Fighting Irish, but a few talked with each other as they turned toward the locker room. "Anybody got something to bitch about?" Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez barked at them as he jogged past. About an hour later, Rodriguez sat in the first row of the Wolverines' bus with his hand under his chin, leaning forward and frowning. He looked about as unhap- py as could be after his team's loss in a highly charged rivalry game. But even though the Wolverines turned the ball over six times in the 35-17 loss to the Fighting Irish, Rodriguez may have found his quarterback and running back. Redshirt freshman quarterback Ste- ven Threet played with poise, leading the Wolverines to 330 total yards when he was behind center. Michigan averaged just 242 total yards in its first two games. And freshman running back Sam McGuffie had 60 percent of the Wolver- ines' rushing attempts Saturday. He led the team in attempts in its first two games, but never had a majority of the attempts. McGuffie ran successfully inside and out,butusually tried to bounce to the edge. The 5-foot-11, 185-pound back showed See THREET, Page 4B Ffth-year senior safety Charles Stewart attempts to tackle Notre Dame wide receiver Golden Tate in Saturday's loss at Notre Dame Stadium.. Fumbles ruin road debut By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Editor SOUTH BEND - Another fumble shouldn't have been a surprise. The sight had started to become familiar - at least, about as familiar as witnessing seven Michigan fumbles in one game could be. Butlate in the third quarter, the Wol- verines were five yards away from pull- ing within four points of Notre Dame when it happened again. The ball was forced out of running back Kevin Grady's arms and bounced away on the soggy turf, starting a five- second free-for-all. Notre Dame cornerback Terrail Lambert, arms outstretched, dove for and almost grabbed the ball. Michigan wide receiver Greg Mathews trapped it under his chest for half a second before sive plays. it popped loose again, ricocheting away Fromtwo consecutive fumbled kickoff from the pile of sprawled-out players returns in the game's first 10 minutes to toward the Fighting backup quarterback Irish sideline. Nick Sheridan's And then Notre two consecutive Dame safety Ser- "It waS interceptions in gio Brown real- the last 10 minutes, ized nobody was a nwg htmare," Michigan consis- around the ball, ran tently looked sloppy over and grabbed it, Rodriguez said in its 35-17 loss to untouched. * the Fighting Irish "It was a night- Saturday at Notre mare," Michigan Dame Stadium. coach Rich Rodri- After the Fight- guez said about the game. ing Irish had four fumbles in last week- And the statistics were just as fright- end's opener against San Diego State, ening. Six turnovers (including four the Irish were all too happy to quickly lost fumbles). Seven penalties for 79 capitalize on Michigan's mistakes. yards. Twenty-one Notre Dame points "All over the locker room and in all allowed in just seven first-quarter offen- of our meetings, last night, this morn- ing and before we went out, is turnovers were going to determine the outcome of the game," Notre Dame coach Char- lie Weis said. "Fortunately, we won the turnover ratio fairly significantly." The Wolverines looked out-of-sorts from the opening kickoff. The ball hit freshman cornerback Boubacar Cissoko andbouncedaway, leavinghimspinning around in confusion. That mistake didn't cost Michigan the ball, but on the same drive, running back Brandon Minor dropped a lateral pass that was recovered by the Fighting Irish at the Michigan 11-yard line. Fifty seconds and one Notre Dame touchdown later, the Wolverines again fumbled the kickoff - but this time, the ball hit freshman running back Michael Shaw and was scooped up by Notre See IRISH, Page 4B RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Freshman Sam McGuffie separated himself as the No.1 running back with 131 rushing yards. L I; .Fuzetti sparks Wolverines Bauer ties school record as Michigan wins home tourney By NICOLE AUERBACH DailySports Writel' SALINE - The Michiganmen's soccer team missed its spark plug. After scoring a thrilling game- winning goal last weekend to defeatSanDiegoStateinovertime, junior forward Mauro Fuzetti received a red card in the team's double-overtime tie on Sept. 7. The penalty forced him to sit out Michigan's next game - Fri- day's 4-1 loss to No. 16 Illinois- Chicago. But yesterday was a different story. Michigan (4-1-1) edged Buf- falo, 2-1, thanks to another game-winner by Fuzetti, scored with just 6:16 left in the contest. Fuzetti pulled off his jersey and ran around in the torrential rain after his shot into the right side of .the net. "It's always exciting after sit- ting out a game," Fuzetti said. "I wanted to get back out there and help my team out." Fuzetti seemed rusty at the start of the game, leading Michi- gan coach Steve Burns to bench him for a while. Burns said he was waiting for Fuzetti to prove he deserved to be on the field after his red card - a wait that took. almost 84 minutes. With just over 12 minutes left in Sunday's game,; Buffalo con- nected on a free kick to tie the game.A deflated Michigan crowd, already soaked from the constant rain, braced for overtime. "To be honest, I expected that we'd play better today coming off a real solid beating by UIC," Burns said. "They did respond. A win is a win at this point. They had the legs of pianos and the hearts of lions to figure that one out." one thing that remained con- stant through the two games was the less-than-ideal weather. On Friday, the Wolverines played through light rain at their temporary home in Ypsilanti and By ROGER SAUERHAFT. For theDaily Though 13 teams and 75 women participated in the 19th Wolver- ine Invitational, the tournament belonged to Wolverines junior Ashley Bauer. After rain completely wiped away the 36-hole first day on Satur- day, the tournament was reduced to just 18 holes yesterday rather than the usual 54. ominous clouds on Sunday held off just long enough for players to finish. In the 18-hole format, the Wolverines were vic- torious with an aggregate score of 293, highlighted by a career day for co-captain Bauer. After making par on the first. two holes, Bauer did something on the 505-yard third hole that she wouldn't do the entire rest of the day: make a bogey. Bauer then locked in, making the turn at one- under-par and finishing her day at three-under. The Grand Blanc native hit a near-flawless 16 out of 18 greens in regulation and tied the Michigan school record of 68, a record shared by four others. After a tap-in on 18 as the rain picked up, Bauer walked off the green to embrace her father. She called this round one of the high- points in her golf career. "I've never shot in the 60s before, but, after the seventh hole, I just started rolling," Bauer said. "I played almost perfect today, minus those first three holes. I def- initely could have made some putts out there, the back nine especially, but I couldn't have hit the ball any better today." Although she may have hit the ball as well as she ever has, Bauer showed the potential to score sig- nificantly lower than her record- tying 68. She estimated that she had put at least 10 approach shots See BAUER, Page 6B suffered their first loss of the sea- son. The bright red UIC jerseys stood out against the dark gray clouds hovering around the game. The Flames struck first, just over eight minutes into the game, with a goal off a deflected shot. After a controversial penalty kick was awarded for a handball five minutes into the second half, UIC added another goal. Less than two minutes after that, the still-reeling Wolverines gave up a third marker. "We 'tried to build that up for our team as a real statement game," Burns said. "There's dis- appointment, but it's the lessons in the loss that they have to take - those are the big things." See MEN'S SOCCER, Page 2B A