The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 21, 2008 - 9 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, November 21, 2008 - 9 FOOTBALL Breakdown: Ohio State has all-around edge Senior quartet selected as permanent captains for 'M' By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK and NATE SANDALS Daily Sports Editors MICHIGAN RUSHING OFFENSE VS. OHIO STATE RUSHING DEFENSE Junior running back Brandon Minor said Monday he would play regardless of his injuries. With Minor in the backfield and junior running back Carlos Brown coming * off a good game against Northwest- ern, the Wolverines appear to be in good position -until the Ohio State defense is accounted for. The Buckeyes held Michigan State running back Javon Ringer to just 67 yards in a win earlier this season. Ohio State lineback- ers James Laurinaitis and Marcus Freeman have dominated all year, and that won't change Saturday. Edge: Ohio State MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. OHIO STATE PASSING DEFENSE It's only fitting that Michigan's quarterback situation will end the season as precariously as it started. Redshirt sophomore Nick Sheri- dan will start, but freshman Justin Feagin and injured redshirt fresh- man Steven Threet could also play. Sheridan played well against Min- nesota, but poorly against North- western, and he'll be coming into an extremely hostile road environ- ment. The Ohio State secondary is led by cornerback Malcolm Jenkins, a Thorpe Award semifinalist. Last week, Jenkins blocked an Illinois punt for a safety and had three pass breakups and two tackles. The Buckeye passing defense is ranked 13th in the nation. Edge: Ohio State OHIO STATE RUSHING OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN RUSHING DEFENSE Let's put the obvious out there from the start: Beanie Wells is a beast. The Ohio State junior is the best running back Michigan has faced this season, and his combi- nation of size and speed present a huge challenge for the Wolverines' front seven. Wells has rushed for more than 140 yards in each of his last two games and is 43 yards away from 1,000 for the season. He'll probably crash through that mark in the first half Saturday. Michigan's run defense has held opponents under 100 yards the past two weeks, following a miserable three-game stretch against Penn State, Michigan State and Purdue in which it allowed 218 yards per game. The Wolverines' veteran front four will have an impact in REDHAWKS From Page 8 "I honestly think the attitude is we take a loss, and everyone takes it personal," Sauer said. "I don't know why it takes us that loss. It's probably just the feeling that when we play lackadaisical on Fri- day night and get that loss, and we realize we've got to bear down on Saturday." This weekend Michigan will need its offense to show up when it plays No. 7 Miami (6-3-3 overall, 6-2-2-1 CCHA) in Oxford. The Red- Hawks are currently the top teamin the CCHA. The atmosphere at Miami will be electric. When the teams met last year, they were the top two teams in the country. "They had kids camping out two or three nights before the game (last year)," sophomore forward Matt Rust said. "The atmosphere was great." But this time, both the Wolver- ines and RedHawks have lost some tough games to teams they usually what could be each of their last games, but the Buckeyes will still move the ball well, especially the duo of Wells and freshman quarter- back Terrelle Pryor. Edge: Ohio State OHIO STATE PASSING OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN PASSINGDEFENSE Pryor is a runner first and a pass- er second, but he's shown he can make the key throw when his team needs it. Pryor went 6-for-10 with a touchdown in the Buckeyes' 30-20 win over Illinois last Saturday. He has thrown more than 20 passes just once this season (a 13-6 loss to Penn State last month), but Pryor is still the most efficient passer in the Big Ten. Michigan's secondary was a bright spot against Minnesota and in the first half of the Northwest- ern game, but it was victimized in the final two quarters against the Wildcats. Ohio State passes very little unless it's behind in the game, so the secondary's biggest impact could be its ability to tackle runners who break into the defensive back- field. Michigan has struggled with open-field tackling all season, and it'll need to improve on that this week. Edge: Ohio State SPECIAL TEAMS Bothteamshave punterswho are semifinalists for the Ray Guy award, given to the best punter in college football. Michigan redshirt junior Zoltan Mesko had a tough time last week against Northwestern, but his performance the rest of the season suggests last week's game was an anomaly. Ohio State fifth- year senior punter A.J. Trapasso is averaging 41.7 yards per punt, and Mesko averages 44.1 yards. Michigan is still prone to fum- blingonkickreturns, and the Buck- eyes are a team that will capitalize on those mistakes. Edge: Ohio State INTANGIBLES Ohio State actually has some- thing to play for Saturday. A win gives the Buckeyes a share of the Big Ten title. A win and a Penn State loss sends Ohio State to the Rose Bowl. Michigan has already clinched its most losses in program history (that's 129 years, folks) and all it has to play for is the abstract and over- used term, "pride." Shouldn't the team always be playing for pride? It's unclear why that would make a difference this week. Edge: Ohio State Ohio State will win 35-13. beat, which has been a trend in the CCHA this year. In fact, Michigan has lost more games through 12 games than it did last year when it played Miami through28 games. Michigan left Oxford last year with a win and a tie and beat the RedHawks in Detroit to win the CCHA Playoff Championship. This weekend's series will be the biggest so far for Michigan, and to perform in two games instead of just one, the Wolverinesawill have to come out and give Sauer their best. Michigan's series with Miami, along with next weekend's College Hockey Showcase against Minneso- ta and Wisconsin, has the potential to define the Wolverines' season. If the offense, defense and goaltend- ing don't come together, Michigan could quickly find itself as a mid- dling team in the CCHA. "It will give us a better idea of where we are," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "The last big series we had was BU, and obviously we failed that test. We've been trying to bounce back since then, and I can't tell you we're satisfied with where we are." By DAN FELDMAN Daily Sports Editor Senior nose tackle Terrance Taylor was speaking with report- ers Monday when fifth-year senior defensive tackle Will Johnson walked by. "Nobody cares, Terrance," Johnson said. "It's your 42-year-old birthday, Will," Taylor said before turn- ing back to the reporters. ""You see he's losing his hair? You see that?" In the Michigan football team's worst season in 129 years, the seniors have grown especially close. Their teammates reward- ed that camaraderie in a Sunday night vote for captains that was announced to the team Thursday. The Wolverines elected an all- time-most four captains - Tay- lor, Johnson, fifth-year senior defensive end Tim Jamison and fifth-year senior tight end Mike Massey. "These four men have provided tremendous leadership and repre- sented our program at the high- est level throughout the season," Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said in a statement. "Their peers have elected them captain, the highest honor that a Michigan football player can receive. Mike, Tim, Will and Terrance are great ambassadors for this program and will be great alumni." The quartet will serve as game captains against Ohio State on Saturday and will be listed as the permanent captains for the sea- son. Rodriguez didn't name cap- tains before the season, which is what the Wolverines had done in the past. Taylor, Johnson and Jamison make up the first trio of captains ond set of brothers to serve as captains for Michigan. Mike Mal- lory was a captain in 1984 and his brother, Doug, was one in 1987. Rodriguez has used the system of picking captains at the end of the season because it rewards those who step up and lead most effec- tively during the season. Voting at the end of the season also allowed Rodriguez to name all 15 seniors game captains at least once. "I like doing that because then every senior - they put all the work in throughout their career - can say 'Hey, I was a captain for Michigan,' " Rodriguez said this summer. "I think that's a pretty neat thing for them to talk about, put on their resume, and they cer- tainly deserve that." Rodriguez also introduced a system in the summer that identi- fied leaders from each class, called "apostles." The "apostle" system ensured players of all ages had a voice in team affairs. "A freshman or sophomore might see something I don't see, and he can pull one guy to the side and encourage him and get on him hard," Jamison said. "If it was only two (captains), you wouldn't see everything on the team. I feel like it's going to be great." But it was the senior captain Taylor who gave the Wolverines their season-defining speech after losing to Northwestern last Satur- day. In the postgame locker room, he told his teammates he loved them and never to let a season like this happen again. "He's a resilient kid, and he's always fighting," redshirt sopho- more left guard John Ferrara said. "You can tell by his words. His words are very powerful, and they'll stick with me for the rest of my life." CLIF REEDER, RODRIGO GAYA, RODRIGO GAYA, PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily (From top left, clockwise) Fifth-year senior Will Johnson, senior Terrance Taylor, fifth-year senior Tim Jamison and fifth-year senior Mike Massey. who played in the same position group. "Will shows you on the field," Taylor said Monday. "I show you on the field and I'm not scared to say anything that's from my heart. And JMo (Jamison) is somewhere in the middle. It's just a group that you have that's handling different parts of the team. That's one of the things that's really important. "Put together, we're good lead- ers - all three of us." Apparently, Taylor's leader- ship style rubbed off quite a bit on Johnson. "For some reason, Will's start- ing to talk more," Taylor said. "I think he's been hanging around me too long. You see that little outburst he just had? The old Will wouldn't have did that." Massey is the lone senior on offense. He, along with his brother Pat, a defensive tackle who was a captain in 2005, became the sec- FOOTBALL A dozen bold predictions for Michigan's game against the Buckeyes tomorrow DAN FELDMAN: Michigan will continue to possess the ball far less than its opponent. Michigan has had the ball about 55 minutes less than its opponents this year. Unless the Wolverines have more than a 16-minute advantage in time of possession Saturday, they will set the program record for worst dif- ferential in that category. Count on that record falling. Michigan will fallibehind, and with redshirt sophomore Nick Sheridan passing a lotin a comeback attempt, there will be plenty of incomple- tions. Add on Ohio State running back Chris "Beanie" Wells's ability to grind out yards, and the Wolver- ines' offense will spend most of the game on the sideline. Buckeye quarterback Ter- relle Pryor will dominate. The Wolverines have struggled against mobile quarterbacks all season and, with their recent success stopping the run, this game will be in Pry- or's hands. Look for the freshman to surpass his career-high of 232 yards passing and rushing com- bined, which he set in a loss against Penn State. Ohio State will win 50-14. The Buckeyes are healthy and play- ing their best football of the year. Michigan is banged up, and plain and simple, isn't a good team. But don't forget what happened the year after Ohio State beat the Wol- verines by such a margin... COURTNEYRATKOWIAK: Pryor won't finish the game. It's fifth-year senior Todd Boeck- man's last regular-season game, and though Pryor may getthe start, Boeckman will finish. Especially if the Buckeyes are leading by a large margin at the end, Pryor will be on the bench in the second half. Terrance Taylor will have his best game of the season. Though the rest of the Michigan defense will be shredded by the Buckeyes, Taylor willbe lookingto back up all his talk in his final college game. He said Monday that one of the most important reasons he didn't leave for the NFL Draft after last season was because he hadn't beaten Ohio State. And with how this year has turned out, he'll be trying to make sure at least one of his goals will be accomplished. Heart will take him far. Ohio State will win 41-14. Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said after last Saturday's loss to Northwestern that everyone would be saying the Wolverines have no chance tomorrow. And that's true - they don't. They've already upset one ranked Big Ten team, but don't expect them to be so luckythistime around. IAN ROBINSON: Wells will match Wells. In Ohio State coach Jim Tressel's first game against Michigan in 2001, Buckeye running back Jonathan Wells ran for 129 yards and three touchdowns. This year, Chris Wells, though not related to Jonathan, will put on a similarly dominant performance against the Wolverines. Michigan will not success- fully runa trick play. Rodriguez has been apprehensive to look in his bag of tricks this year. It's probably because his players have enough trouble executing their standard offense that they haven't had time for trick plays. Other than two fake punts, nothing has really been out of the ordinary. Anything that Michigan tries this weekend won't work against the Buckeye defense. Ohio State will win 35-10. Rodriguez will become the first Michigancoachsince HarryKipke in 1929 to lose his first matchup with the Buckeyes. Michigan is completely outmatched in the game. It will get ugly. NATE SANDALS: Michigan will lead the game at some point. The Wolverines will surprise a lot of people by scoring a touchdown on their first drive, giving them a 7-0 lead. Ohio State's defense will dominate the rest of the game, but Michigan will come out of the locker room fired up and stun the Buckeyes early. Justin Feagin will throw a pass. Is "why not" enough of an explanation? Probably not. Feagin needs to play more than he did against Northwestern last week. In the last game of the season, Feagin shouldn't be afraid to mix things up a bit. One more caveat though - Feagin won't complete a pass. Ohio State will win 34-13. A dismalend to a dismal season. The Buckeyes are better in all three phases, so this should come as no surprise. But that won't make a fifth straight loss to Ohio State hurt any less. ACROSS THsE NATION Top -five showdown could be year's best matchup A JUST LIKE A SLAM DUNK IN MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. JOIN DAILY SPORTS. E-MAIL SANDALS@MICHIGANDAILY.COM. By NICK COSTON in the Big 12 South for years, but Daily Sports Writer the Red Raiders have taken firm control this season, behind quar- Last week, college football fans terback Graham Harrell and wide across the country witnessed a receiver Michael Crabtree. Saturday without monumental col- Meanwhile, Oklahoma quarter- lapses or upsets for what seemed back Sam Bradford and his Soon- like the first time all season. But ers might be the only offense in any relief fromlast week's pedestri- the country that can match Texas an slate of contests will be annihi- Tech. Oklahoma has delivered par- lated this weekend. The conference titularly cruel defeats this season, races are only getting more heated winning by an average margin of as December approaches. 28 points. With three Heisman candidates, a combined average of NO.2 TEXAS TECH AT NO.5 more than 99 points per game, and OKLAHOMA spots in the Big 12 Championship The first-ever organized game and BCS Championship games on of American football was between the line, this looks to be the game Rutgers and Princeton in 1869. The of the year. final score was 6-4. This Saturday, Texas Tech and Oklahoma could surpass that score within a minute. These two juggernauts boast the NO.14 BRIGHAM YOUNG AT most powerful and efficient offens- NO.7 UTAH es inthe country. Ifitweren'tfor Texas Christian's Texas Tech has been overlooked upset of Brigham Young on Oct. 16. this game might in the BCS Cht But even with on aren't just playin teams have lit up season. Brigham back MaxHall h for 28 touchdow: while Utah's vers produced 22 rus. If the game t tout, it's anyone win. Utah's defe not allowed mor six weeks. If the Utes c Brigham Young contained, Utah ed its BCS quest Arbor. NO. 20 PITTSB have meant a spot Dave Wannstedt would have his ampionship game. Pittsburgh Panthers in contention e loss, the Cougars for a Big East title this season, ig spoiler. The two especially after an ugly loss in the the scoreboard all home opener to Bowling Green. Young's quarter- With underwhelming sea- as already thrown sons from recent Big East powers ns and 3,400 yards, West Virginia and Louisville, the satile backfield has conference is up for grabs, and hing touchdowns. these two unlikely leaders have urns into a shoo- emerged. 's guess who will Thanks to the superb play of nse, however, has sophomore running back LeSean e than 16 points in McCoy, the Panthers have a legiti- mate chance to represent the Big an keep Hall and East in the Orange Bowl. 's aerial assault But they'll first have to get will have complet- through like-minded Cincinnati. that began in Ann These two teams are statisti- cally unimpressive - they beat their opponents by just six points on average. But it could make for a wild fin- URGH AT NO.19 ish at Nippert Stadium. CINCINNATI Raise your hand if you thought 040