8 - Friday, November 21, 2008n 0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.corn A fresh beginning Seniors hope for first win against the Buckeyes By IAN ROBINSON Daily SportsEditor When Terrance Taylor decided to return for his senior season on the Michigan football team, he had some unfinished business. "I didn't feel right leaving with- out my degree and leaving without beating Ohio State," Taylor said. "It just didn't sit right with me." He still has a chance to go 2-for- 2. Taylor said the degree will come in December. For him and the rest Michigan of Michigan's seniors, the final State at chance against the Ohio State Buckeyes (6-1 Big Ten, 9-2 overall) Michigan 3-8- will come Satur- Ohio State 9-2 day in Columbus. Michigan has lost when: Tomor- four in a row to row, soon Ohio State, and Where: Ohio a loss Saturday Stadium would be Michi- TV: ABC gan's longest los- ing streak in the history ofthe rivalry. This hasn't been the swan song the seniors envisioned when they decided to go to Michigan. The arrival of Rich Rodriguez thrust the program into its most drastic coach- ing transition in 40 years. The chance of a bowl game and a winning season disappeared three weeks ago. Hopes of a conference championship ended well before that. * But beyond the on-field disap- pointment,theseniorshave assumed leadership roles in an unfamiliar system. Some of the changes might seem trivial, but they're not for play- ers who spent three years in a differ- ent culture. There used to be no curfew. Now, there is a 10 p.m. curfew some nights. During team dinners, the upper- classmen used to make new players and coaches sing. Now, they have a gong show before the season where the freshmen perform. The players used to wear suits before the games. Now, they wear warm-ups. The team used to be free to use cell phones at Schembechler Hall. Now, onlythe coaches can. "It's different good," Taylor said of the changes, before lowering his head and bursting into laughter. The laughter brings back memo- ries of clashes between Taylor and the new coaching staff, especially during spring practice. But he has moved past those differences and emerged as one of the team's vocal leaders. "I just wanted to be part of a pro- cess to show the new class and the new recruits that this is what Mich- igan is about," Taylor said. "This is how we handle business. This is what we don't do, and. this is what we do." Former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr used to tell the team Michigan football stories, like the significance of the singed helmet, which was implemented by former coach Fritz Crisler so his quarterback could see his downfield receivers. He also told the story of the Little Brown Jug, which ignited a rivalry between Michigan and Minnesota when a Wolverine left a water jug on the field in 1903. "Coach Rod had given a brief summary of the Little Brown Jug," Taylor said. "What Coach Carr would do, he would tell the whole story. He would give the names of the trainers." Rodriguez hasn't been at Michi- gan very long, and can't be expected to recount all 129 years of Michigan lore. But there are some aspects of the Michigan football team that everyone knows, even for those who haven't been here long at all. One of those traditions is the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry. In fact, the news flash came on Rodriguez's first day when someone sent him a "Beat OSU" button. It sits next to his phone, as a reminder. "Just because I don't say some- thing about that on my first day on the job doesn't mean I don't under- stand the importance of the game," Rodriguez said. This year's Michigan squad (2-5, 3-8) is the biggest underdog in the rivalry's history. The Wolverines will starta quar- terback who had no scholarship offers coming out of high school. The Buckeyes' starting quarter- back was the nation's top-ranked recruit last year. Michigan has set a school record for losses in a season, and Ohio State could go to the Rose Bowl if they win and Penn State loses tomorrow. But this is still the Michigan- Ohio State rivalry. "Until you're there and you see it with your own two eyes, it's totally different," Taylor said. "I really don'tknow. I can'tgetinside (Rodri- guez's) head to tellyou how muchhe fully understands it. But until you're there, it's just kind of different from what you see on film." At the end of his 45-minute talk with the media Monday, Taylor was asked if he has any guarantees for the rivalry game. "No, I don'tgota -," Taylor start- ed. Then, he paused and continued with confidence. "Yeah, I've got a guarantee for you. I'm going to play my heart out, and I'm pretty sure other seniors can guarantee that." NEW YORK - n his most famous song "New York, New York", the late Frank Sinatra sang his famous line, "I'm gonna make a brand new start of it - in old New York. And if I can make it there, I'll make it anywhere." Thursday's 55-52 upset of No. 4 UCLA was the Michigan men's basketball team's verse, its first chance to shine against a domi- nant team. On the storied stage at Madison Square Garden, the Wolverines defied expectations and beat the Bruins with an all-around team effort. And Michigan coach John Bei- lein can add an impressive victory to his slate as he continues build- ing his program in Ann Arbor. Many fans would like to forget last season's RUTH program- INCON record 22 loss- ON -S es. Bybeating ON W I a three-peat Final Four team, the Wolverines found a wayto distance them- selves from that infamy. Last night's win marked a positive start to the season and the first big victory for a coach who has beenheavily criticized in the past year. Beilein's doubters won't be silenced yet, but they can see a quality win and successful execu- tion of his system. "It's good for us, most impor- tantly, it's good for the city of Ann Arbor, let them know that this team is rebuilding, and we're not goingto stop," said junior power forward DeShawn Sims, who called the win the biggest of his Michigan career. Beating UCLA doesn't auto- matically put the Wolverines in the NCAA Tournament. They have plenty of work to do before that happens. But everyone will talk about this game. And for a program that has been little more than a joke for the past decade, some positive attention is wel- come. The victory snaps Michigan's 12-game loss streak against ranked opponents and was its the first' against UCLA in six seasons. "These early season wins are always terrific, but you've got to really putthem in perspective because it's sort of a resume-type of game," Beilein said. After UCLA beat Michigan in Ann Arbor last season, Bruins coach Ben Howland called the Wolverines the "best 4-8 team in Redshirt junior Zack Gibson and redshirt sophomore Anthony Wright smother UCLA wing Josh Shipp last night. the country." They had the talent then, but their youth prevented them from executing consistently. The Michigan team that won last nightplayed solid team defense. It was patient on offense. And it didn'trely on sophomore Manny Harris for all its scoring. Freshman Stu Douglass posted 14 points and Sims had 18. "You can definitely see their improvement - the guys that know the system, the guys that returned from that team," How- land said. "There's definitely a good cohesion amongst the play- ers. I thought they were a really good unit." Although it was technically a neutral site, there were plenty of Wolverine fans wearing maize throughout the Garden. in the second half, you could see the Michigan fans come alive. With just under 15 seconds left, the pep band played "The Victors" and the fight song was audible throughoutthe arena. It wasn't a group of fans singing their fight song out of obligation. For the first time in a long while, Michigan basketball fans actually had something to cheer about. Wolverines show improvement against A&M, but don't finish Michigan aims to support Sauer by scoring on Fridays Benson's final-second 3-point attempt bounces out By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's basket- ball team was inches away from tying the game and forcing over- time in a statement game of its own. A year ago, the Wolverines lost at Texas A&M by 28 points, and faced the TEXAS A&M 59 Aggies MICHIGAN 56 again last night at Crisler Arena. The Wolverines hung with No. 12 Texas A&M (3-0) until a 3-pointer from senior forward Carly Benson bounced off the side of the rim with seconds to play. Michigan lost the game narrowly, 59-56. Michigan (1-2) was coming off a loss against Akron, after which Michigan coach Kevin Borseth called the offense's play "atro- cious." The Wolverines were slightly better against the Aggies. "(Borseth) did exactly what he needed to stop aggressiveness," Texas A&M coach Gary Blair said. "That is to spread the floor and have post players who can shoot the three." Last night, even though Michi- gan was spreading the floor and attacking the lane with purpose and kicking to three-point shoot- ers, the Wolverines didn't knock down open shots. The Wolverines shot 16 percent (4-of-25) from behind the arc and 36 percent (18-of-50) from the field. Borseth didn't regret his team taking so many 3-pointers, although the Wolverines missed 21 6 Despite similar stats, senior has four more losses than Hogan By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Writer The Michigan hockey team's offense is letting down its senior goaltender. Sophomore Bryan Hogan's goal support when he starts Satur- days is remarkable compared to senior Billy Sauer's when he starts Fridays. The ninth ranked Wol- verines (8-4-0 overall, 5-3-0-0 CCHA) have scored 30 goals for Hogan and just 10 for Sauer. With so little offensive support, it's no wonder Sauer is a bit frus- trated. "When you lose Friday night, the team has a chance to redeem themselves Saturday night, but I have to wait to the next week," Sauer said. The Wolverines scored just once in each of SAID ALSALAH/Daily Junior center Krista Phillips, seen here last season, had 13 points and eight rebounds in Michigan's 59-56 loss to Texas A&M. Sauer's past two starts. Michigan fell to a Western Michigan team that had just one previous win and to Alaska, which typically strug- gles on offense. Besides Hogan's 6-0 and Sauer's 2-4 record, both have similar statistics. Hogan has slight Michigan at Miami(Ohio) Matchup: Michigan 8-4; Miami 6-3-3 When: Tonight, 7:30 P.M. Where:rSteve Cady Arena TV: NHL Network of them. He called misses "shots in rhythm," something which Michi- gan didn't have last year at Texas A&M. The Wolverines relied on getting open looks from dribble penetra- tion and high-post screens to hold off the aggressive Aggie defense. With about nine minutes to play in the first half, senior guard Jes- sica Minnfield took a pass from Benson at the top of the key, ran her defender into Benson's screen, drove through two defenders and finished with alay-up. But, whenever Michigan scored a key basket, the Aggies seemed to counter with either a defensive stand or a bucket of their own. Texas A&M had 15 points off the Wolverines 18 turnovers. Michigan played arguably its best defensive game of the season. Holding Texas A&M to 28 percent (9-32) shooting from the field in the first half, the Wolverines had a four-point halftime lead. "We could not run our motion offense, a lot of sets we wanted, because they had one foot in the paint on almost everything we were doing," Blair said. But at crunch time, the Wolver- ines couldn't overcome the steady Aggies, even though Texas A&M's largest lead in the game was just five points. With 21 seconds left in the game, and Michigan down by three points, Borseth called a tim- eout to set up a play. The designed play to get an open 3-pointer was foiled, and Minnfield found junior center Krista Phillips open under the basket for a lay-up. The Aggies made their two free-throws, after Michigan fouled them, to close out the game. Phillips finished with 13 points and 8 rebounds. She also played well beyond the stat sheet by set- ting screens and playing solid defense. Minnfield's 14 points led the team in scoring. With five more games against teams currently ranked in the top 25, the Wolverineswill have plenty of chances to challenge the best of women's basketball. But Borseth sees last night's effort as some- thing to build on. 0 advantages in goals allowed average (2.22 vs. 2.85) and save percentage (.906 vs..893). See REDHAWKS, Page 9