The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 9, 2008 - 5A Wildcats hope to remain undefeated By ANDY REID Daily Sports Editor Based on the number of Mich- igan-Toledo tickets posted on Facebook Marketplace, is it safe to assume that many Wolverine fans believe there are better ways to spend this.Saturday afternoon than at the Big House? If the Rockets' first-ever trip to Ann Arbor doesn't excite you, there's plenty of other Big Ten action this weekend that might catch your attention. The conference title race is start- ing to take shape, and three games on this Saturday's slate could go a long way in determining which Big Ten team (or teams, if one sneaks into the championship game) will represent the Midwest in the BCS. NO.23 MICHIGAN STATE AT NORTHWESTERN Who would have thought that at this point in the season, a Big Ten team could be undefeated and still unranked? The Wildcats are get- ting no love from the voters - Ball State is ranked ahead of them, for crying out loud - but they just keep on winning. And if Northwestern can slip past a tough Spartan squad, only underachieving Purdue, Indi- ana and Minnesota stand between the Wildcats and a 9-0 record when S Ohio State comes to Evanston on Nov. 8. I'm finding it hard to believe that both the Wildcats and Spar- tans are legitimate contenders for the Big Ten championship, so I'm " interested in seeing if one or both of them is revealed as a pretender this weekend. NO.6 PENN STATE AT WISCONSIN Wisconsin's Bret Bielema has finally been knocked back to real- ity.After losing just four conference games in two years and joining Fielding Yost and Jim Tressel as the only Big Ten coaches to ever post 21-plus wins in their first two seasons, Bielema is just starting to learn how tough the conference really is. Blowing a 19-point lead against Michigan - ouch. Blow- ing a late lead against Ohio State at home - double ouch. And just like that, the Badgers went from conference- and possible national-title hopefuls to a team facing an 0-3 start in the Big Ten if they lose to Penn State. And let's be honest, with the way the Nittany Lions are playing, they most likely will. I feel like this one has all the makings of a blowout, especially considering Wisconsin has to shake two consecutive heartbreaking losses. But Michigan fans should be a little excited to get a look at Penn State's "Spread HD" offense the week before it shreds the Wolver- ine secondary. PURDUE AT NO.12 OHIO STATE Love him or hate him (and I'm sure most Michigan fans fall in the latter category), Terrelle Pryor is a lot of fun to watch. His progression and maturation has been astound- ingly fast, especially in the pass- ing game - not just getting the job done with his legs, but he's already developed into a dangerous throw- er, recording a 100-plus passer rat- ing in five of his six games. I've loved watching Pryor trans- form from a recruiting-season phe- nomenon into a legitimate college football player, and this week will provide another chance for him to add to his growing stardom. The Boilermakers rank dead last in the Big Ten for both passing and rush- ing defense, so watch for Pryor to put up his biggest numbers yet this season. But even with a marquee player like Pryor to watch, this game will no doubt be a blowout. Michigan head coach Rich Rodriguez will try to keep Michigan's streak of consecutive bowl appearances alive by winning at least four of his last seven games. Will the Michiganfootball team mak a bowl. this year T he Michigan football If the Wolverines win at least team's six-game win streak seven games, they will make a against Illinois? Snapped. bowl. If they win five or less, they Its 17-year streak of holding won't. opponents under 45 points at But what about a 6-6 season? home? Snapped. There are a couple rules that make Its 33-year it tougher for a .500 team to make bowl streak? a bowl. Well, we'll see. 1. When a bowl is selecting a The Wol- team from a conference that has a verines have tie-in to that bowl, it must pick a reached 33 team with a winning record if one straight bowls, is available. and are just 2. When a bowl is selecting an two short of DAN at-large team, it must pick a team Nebraska's FELDMAN with a winning record if one is record 35-year available. run from 1969- Just five of 12 teams with a 6-6 2003. record made a bowl last year, and But for Michigan (2-3) to eke out all of them had a conference tie- a 34th straight appearance, it will in. The Big Ten's Iowa and North- have to win four, maybe five, more western were left out with .500 games in a year of transition under records. new coach Rich Rodriguez. But two more bowl games were Michigan's play has been unpre- added this year, making it more dictable. The favorite is 1-4 in the likely a 6-6 team gets an at-large Wolverines' games this year. It's berth. nearlyimpossibleto tell ifthis team And of the teams that could will come together or collapse. finish .500, Michigan - with its Here's a simple way to look at it: national prominence and traveling assuming Michigan loses at No. 6 fan base - will be the second most Penn State and No. 12 Ohio State, coveted behind Notre Dame. it must win its other five games to But the Wolverines might not finish 7-5: need to hope for an at-large bid. That means winning at home As much as the conference is against Toledo, Michigan State criticized nationally, the Big Ten and Northwestern and on the road will likely fill two of the 10 BCS at Purdue and Minnesota. This slots. team hasn't shown it can play con- The winners of the six major sistently enough to sweep those conferences - the Big Ten, SEC, games, but winning four of five is Big 12, ACC, Pac 10 and Big East - certainly reasonable. That leaves will get automatic bids. The SEC them at 6-6. and the Big 12 will both get one at- large bid, only because conferenc- es aren't allowed to have more. At least one of No. 9 Brigham Young, No. 14 Utah and No. 15 Boise State will probably go unde- feated and grab another BCS spot. So that leaves one BCS spot to go the best of the No. 2 teams in the Big Ten, ACC, Pac 10 and Big East.. Right now, that's far and away the 12th-ranked Buckeyes. No. 21 Wake Forest is the next best. In addition to the BCS, the Big Ten has six bowl tie-ins. If Michi- gan finishes 6-6, and fewer than eight Big Ten teams win seven games, the Wolverines should get an automatic bid to a bowl. But it's possible that eight teams - Penn State (6-0), Michi- gan State (5-1), Ohio State (5-1), Northwestern (5-0), Minnesota (5-1), Illinois (3-2), Wisconsin (3-2) and Iowa(3-3) - could all get seven wins. If that happens, or if seven of them reach seven wins and only one nabs a BCS spot, Michigan won't have an automatic tie-in and will have to search for an at-large bowl spot. There are 24 non-BCS bowls this year. Most notably, the ACC may struggle to fill all nine of its tie-ins. The conference's ninth spot is the EagleBank Bowl in Washington, one of this year's two new postseason games. According to the Washington Times, the bowl would select between Big Ten, Big East and Conference USA teams if FAN GUIDE It's too early to tell how everything will shake out, but a few conferences might not fill their bowl tie-ins. Here's an early look at where Michigan fans' rooting interests should lie. " FOR: Penn State, Ohio State, Georgia, Alabama, Vanderbilt, Wake Forest, USC, Oregon, California, Virginia Tech, North Carolina, Western Michigan, Ball State, Tulsa, San Diego State and Arkansas State. * AGAINST:Iowa, Mississippi, Ten- nessee, Stanford, UCLA, Oregon State, Arizona State, Duke, Virginia, Maryland, Miami, Central Michigan,.Colorado State. New Mexico, Florida International, Louisiana-Lafayette and Troy. the ACC can't provide ateam, but it has no formal agreement with any of those conferences. Navy (4-2), an independent, has agreed to play in the game assuming it becomes bowl eli- gible. Michigan is 12-5-1 against the Midshipmen but hasn't played them since 1981. The game, originally dubbed the Congressional Bowl, will be this year's first bowl game and will be played at 11 a.m. on Dec. 20. It might not be the most desir- able destination, but it sure beats having to start the streak over. -Feldman can be reached at danfeld@umich.edu. Fellows emerges from older brother's shadow By NICK MATTAR For the Daily With its top three runners out due to injury, Michigan needed someone to step up at the Notre Dame Invitational last weekend. Luckily for the Wolverines, redshirt junior Brandon Fellows answered the call. Fellows finished first among Michigan runners and 22nd over- all while the Wolverines took ninth place out of 25 teams. "He definitely ran his best race of the season at Notre Dame," men's cross country coach Ron Warhurst said. Last weekend was one of Fel- lows's best races to date. But if genetics are any indication, he has many more ahead of him. Fellows's brother, Donnie, ran for Purdue from 1998-2002. In 2001, he was an All-American cross country run- ner and Big Ten Champion in the 10-kilometer run. Throughout his childhood, Fel- lows traveled from his home in Mercer Island, Wash. to see many of his brother's races, and enjoyed watching all of the Big Ten schools. When Fellows entered high school, he decided to run cross country and track. As a senior, Fellows looked at several schools, including a few in the Big Ten. "One day, my mom had a vision that I was running at Michigan" Fellows said. "So I checked it out." Fellows then contacted War- hurst about running for the Wol- verines. "When I learned that Donnie's brother contacted me, my first thought was, 'We got some genet- ics here,"' Warhurst said. Warhurst was very familiar with the elder Fellows, who ran several races against Michigan. He remembers when Donnie had several -close finishes against the Wolverines' top runner at the time, Mike Wisniewski. But Warhurst has never made comparisons between the two brothers, and named Fellows a captain this season because of his leadership and respectability among teammates. "Brandon is a vocal leader and he is a very bright student," War- hurst said. Fellows is currently enrolled in the Ross School of Busi- ness in addition to running for the Wolverines. Fellows still sees his brother as a role model and, attimes, a source of extra motivation. Both ran similar times in high school and have run similar times in races during their first few years in the Big Ten. Out of college now for more than six years, Donnie is a volunteer coach for the Boilermakers and continues to run. He participated in the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials. "I've always been in the shadow of Donnie," Fellows said. "But to see him still motivated and run- ning by himself gives me some motivation as well." And that motivation has helped the younger Fellows create a name for himself at Michigan. --U,00 Charge by Phone 734-763-TKTS, or www.ticketmaster.com Special thanks to eih d Ac 0iian aIM