The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 17, 2009- 5A SFantasy football v t w stereotypes ARIEL BOND/Daily Rich Rodriguez said he did not see an infraction on a play during which it appears Jonas Mouton punched a Notre Dame player. No disciplinary action for Mouton's apparent punch One Daily writer's journey through this year 's draft H ailing from Chicago, I have zero loyalty to the Detroit Lions. But when Detroit's Louis Delmas returned a fumble 65 yards to the end zone last Sunday, I threw a hissy fit. Drew Brees was on the verge of his sixth touchdown pass, which in fantasy football terms means "cha-ching." You see, there are few things better than the start of the fan- tasy football season for me. Well, except for the spec- ALEX tacle that is a PROSPERI fantasy foot- ball draft. On the night before this semes- ter commenced, a dozen of my friends gathered for a live draft at my house. After 16 rounds, tons of pizza and the trio of Donte Stallworth, Michael Vick and Plaxico Burress being drafted in the final round ("That would be one sick prison team," one owner said), it became clear that every live draft I've ever done includes the same six types of people. THE UNKNOWN: Simply put, he's unpredictable. His insults are overshadowed by his awful picks, like drafting the Pittsburgh defense in round seven. He chews a Nutri-Grain bar to assure he stays focused, and if members of the opposite sex were present, we would kick him out of the room. But tonight, his ineptness pro- vides the entertainment. Wheth- er it's making fun of Joe Flacco's unibrow or making way-too-soon jokes about Steve McNair, he's hilarious. And just how good is he at drafting? When debating between two backup quarterbacks, he used the "eeny meeny miny mo" tactic. THE BUZZKILL: The draft is blazing along. Insults are flying left and right and potato chip dip is all over the table - courtesy of me. Then it's the buzzkill's turn to pick. His draft strategy is similar to the Minnesota Vikings circa the 2003 NFL Draft, taking for- ever on every pick. Some people think there is skill when drafting players. In reality, a monkey could pick a winner. By round eight, when he takes quarterback Matt Cassel, he is still taking too long, which earns him death stares from the other 1t owners. THE ODD COUPLE: If there was ever a reality show about two col- lege kids who are close friends but absolutely hate each other, these two would be more popular than Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie. Better yet, if there was an award for two fraternity brothers who act most like sorority girls, they would also win. Here is one of their sarcastic exchanges: Owner 1: "He'll get alot of car- ries," after he drafts running back Steven Jackson. Owner 2: "Thanks for that inside analysis." And this: Owner 1: "John Carlson, he'll be good." Owner 2: "Good research." Owner 1: "Mark Schlereth said it, so it has to be true." THE "GREATEST": The oldest member of the group is making his picks over the phone from Boulder, Colo. Although he has told every- one he's taking Adrian Peterson No. 1 overall, he refuses to make it without calling in. This forces the draft to start seven minutes late and throws the whole night into a frenzy. He thinks he's so football-savvy that he took the troubled Brandon Marshall in round five and Chris Henry one pick later. An enormous ego leads him to proclaim that he's not worried about spending his final two picks on guys no one else has heard of. He's the guy who will instant Message you after each pick and chastise it. He even proclaims that the auto-draft is smarter than one of our owners. Sadly, he's the guy who will probably win the league. THE MOM: He's making sure there are plenty of chips and drinks available. He even offers to drive people home after. But his biggest accomplishment in the draft comes in round five. Since it's a live draft, we have a draft board where each person attach- es a sticker corresponding to his pick. Each position is color coordi- nated. So when he drafts tight end Antonio Gates in the fifth round, giving him four different posi- tions, he announces, "I have one of every color. Yes!" His excitement rubs off on another owner, who, after drafting tight end Tony Gonza- lez says, "Oh my god, it's a new color!" THE NOT-SO-SMART ONE: He's in the Business School and has Michael Turner, Marion Bar- ber, Roddy White, Kurt Warner, Joseph Addai and Greg Olsen after round six - not a squad to kill for, but not bad, either. The problem: all his picks have byes during either week four or week six. You can pencil him in for a big "L" those two weeks. Sometimes, cheat sheets just aren't enough. By RUTH LINCOLN Daily Sports Editor Charlie Weis doesn't appear to be a fan of Big Ten officials. Or, as the Notre Dame head coach might see it, Big Ten officials aren't fans of Charlie Weis. During his Sunday press con- ference, Weis complained about the officiating during Michigan's upset win of the Irish on Saturday. As a part of his comments, Weis indirectly referenced a play dur- ing which Michigan linebacker Jonas Mouton hit Irish center Eric Olson. Video replays show that Mouton delivered a quick punch to Olson's chin as play came to a stop at the 8:48 mark of the second quarter. When asked about the episode yesterday, Michigan coach Rich * Rodriguez seemed caught off guard. "What are you talking about? I know they were talking about one incident, and from what we saw on film, we didn't see anybody throw a punch or anything like that," Rodriguez said. "The little I saw on the clip, I saw the guys got tangled up together and Jonas was trying to free himself. There were a whole lot of officials out there. I'm sure if there was an infraction, they would have called it." Rodriguez said Mouton will not receive disciplinary action from the team. It's no secret that Saturday's emotion-filled rivalry game led to some added intensity. Mouton's hit didn't appear to be a serious infraction. It just happened to be caught on camera. It's hard to say if the conference will discipline Mouton. In theory, the league has made a priority in recent years of ensuring such inci- dents are few and far in between. Sportsmanship and player safe- ty have been rallying points for coaches, players, officials and fans for years. And in 2008, the Big Ten officials made, those categories their "points of emphasis" for the season. Who knows how well the Big Ten officials took those sugges- tions to heart. Some oflast season's biggest incidents, like Wisconsin's Jay Valai's helmet-to-helmet hiton Ohio State's Dan "Boom" Herron in October, went untouched by the league and the Badgers. Although Mouton will not by disciplined by the team, the coach added that he and his staff take a stalwart approach to unsports- manlike conduct. "Let me make it perfectly clear - no personal fouls will go unpun- ished," Rodriguez said. "No penal- ties go unpunished. Personal fouls in particular, there is no place for that in the game of football, not only in the game but every day in practice. We take great pride in that." Bill Carollo, the new Big Ten coordinator of football officials, told ESPN.com in June that unsportsmanlike conduct, espe- cially helmet-to-helmet colli- sions, will again be major points of emphasis for Big Ten officials in 2009. "If you're going into the end zone pointing at the guy you just beat on a pass play and taunting him, or making abig hit and stand- ing over him like you just knocked him out, that will not be tolerated," Carollo said. According to ESPN.com, Big Ten officials now will receive video training tapes to high- light proper enforcement. Head coaches will receive similar vid- eos throughout the season, with the first scheduled to arrive next Wednesday. In Michigan's loss to Notre Dame last September, former tight end Carson Butler punched an Irish player in the head after the game was out of reach. Butler was ejected from the game but did not receive a suspension from the Big Ten or Rodriguez. DuringRodriguez's short Mich- igan tenure, Butler has been the only player to have such an inci- dent. Rodriguez would not defend Butler's actions at his Monday postgame press conference. "A guy was grabbing him or something at the end and he retal- iated in the wrong way," Rodri- guez said in September 2008. "He apologized for it, but you've still got to keep your poise better than that." NOTES: Wide receiver Junior Hemingway wore a green jer- sey during Wednesday's prac- tice, denoting limited contact. Rodriguez said Hemingway also practiced Tuesday and "looked pretty good." Hemingway injured his ankle two weeks ago dur- ing his two-touchdown perfor- mance against Western Michigan and missed last Saturday's win against Notre Dame. ...With right guard David Moosman out with a shoulder injury, redshirt junior John Ferrara stepped in with the No. 1 offense during yesterday's practice. Ferrara, who switched from defense to offense midway through last season, started five games last year at left guard. - Prosperi was dejected after his first-round pick - Steve Slaton - scored just four points last weekend. But then he remembered Drew Brees already scored 38. He can be reached at apjp@umich.edu. HVF Yourb Will Blue be back in 2009? that c fit t i Sri 't!! Wolverines, along with super-recruit Evan King, hope to learn from last year By JOE STAPLETON Daily Sports Writer Last year, the Michigan men's tennis team entered its season with high expectations. Fifth-year coach Bruce Berque was erasing years of mediocrity and constructing one of the bet- ter tennis programs in the Big Ten, Michigan was coming off two straight 20-win seasons after not having one since 1988. The team expected success and in the beginning of the season, it came. And then, so did the slump. "We hit a patch where we started thinking, 'We've arrived,' " Berque said. "And we saw what happened when we stopped lis- tening, stopped working quite as hard." Michigan lost 11 of 13 matches from Feb. 7 through March28 and plummeted from No. 14 to No. 51 in the national rankings. And while the Wolverines fin- ished the season on a high note, winning 10 of their last 11, Berque thinks his team expected more. "There were a few brightspots," he said. "But overall, we all feel like it could have been better." This year, Michigan is looking to play well for the fall season, which is centered more around individual improvement, because most tournaments are scored on an individual basis. It is then that veterans, like juniors Jason Jung and Chris Madden and seniors George Navas and Mike Sroczynski, will attempt to prove they learned from last season. They'll need to put those les- sons to work with a tough non- conference schedule during the winter season, in which they play No. 15 Kentucky and No. 17 Wake Forest. Their coach thinks they're ready. "I think they're going to take some of those lessons they learned (last season)," Berque said. "They know that we've got more than enough talent to have a very good season." By "more than enough talent," Berque is referring to the arrival of highly-touted freshman Evan King. The freshman missed the first week of classes to play in the Unit- ed Stpates Open Juniors, where fe beat then-No. 3junior in the coun- try, Augustin Velotti of Argentina. King was the No. 5 recruit nation- ally, according to tennisrecruiting. net, and Berque said he might be the -most high-profile recruit in Michigan tennis history. But through it all, it sounds like King has taken a page out of the book of a fellow high-profile fresh- man, current Michigan quarter- back Tate Forcier: "I don't think the pressure affects me, because I don't put a lot of pressure on myself, anyway," King said. "I just want to help the team play well." King is originally from Chi- cago but moved to Florida after his junior year in high school to train full-time with the United States Tennis Association High Performance program while tak- ing online classes through Laurel Springs Prep Academy. He said it's good to be back in the Mid- west. "I definitely missed it," King said. "In Florida, there really isn't a winter season, and I like indoor tennis a lot." King and the rest of the team will have to play outdoor tennis for at least another month. The Wolverines' season kicks off at the Napa Valley Invitational in St. Hel- ena, California on Frijay. There's, $