The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com September 21, 2009 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom September 21, 2009 - 3B GAME STATISTICS TeamStats MICH E.MICH Rinso says he's ot jst a runner FistDons Rush/Yds Passing Yards Comp/Att/Int Offensiv'ePlays Total Ofese Kikreturn/ Yds Puntreturn/ Yds PuHn/Avg Fmbles/Lost Pnalties/Yads TimeB of PossN 17 39/380 68 7/17/2 56 448 3/60 1/-2 4/45.5 1/0 2/20 19:58 M I C H I G A N C-A Yds 7-13 68 0-4 0 7-1 68 177 48/179 106 15/26/1 74 285 6/81 1/6 7/424 1/1 4/30 40:02 PASSING Player Forcir Robinson Totals RUSHING Player Brown Robinson Shaw Odoms Smith orcier RECEIVING Player f Odoms Grady, Kel. Stonum Hemigwy Totals PUNTING Player KCKOFF RETURNS Player Stonum ' Totas PUNTRETURNS Player Mathews Totas TACKLES Player Leach Ezeh Ga Willams Herron wooPlk - Martin assoko Simmons Johnson Smith, V. Panks Smith,B. Fitzgerald Campbell Koger Ea PASSING Payer Totals SHING Priest Gillett Schmitt SSherer we"ch Tem Totals RECEIVING Player VSanders Gage Priest ,her-r Twtals - PUNTING Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player Totas PUNT RETURNS Player Tta TACKLES Hatchet Downrd Ohran Mwa Cordick Hicks Gowns Palsrok Mulumba Rose Leonard Totals TD 0 0 0 Att 13 3 9 2 3 1 2 6 38 No. 2 2 1 1 1 7 Yds 191 60 53 31 21 13 10 5 190 Yds 33 14 10 7 4 68 Avg 14.4 20.0 5.9 5.0 .8 5.0 Avg 16.5 7.0 10.0 70 10.4 Lg 90 36 22 24 13 13 10 21 32 Lg 26 11 10 7 4 26 int 0 2 2 TD 2 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 No. Yds Avg 28 NK HAN 45I. GB5 T No. Yds Avg lg TD 3 60 20.0 25 0 3 60 20.0 2s5 0 No. Yds Avg lg TD 1 -2 -2.0 -2 0 1 -2 -2.0 -2 0 Solo 3 2 4 2 4 2 1 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 40 astern C-A 13.22 2.4 15-26 Asst Tot 7 10 7 9 4 8 5 7 2 6 4 6 4 5 1 4 1 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 0 2 0 2 1 2 2 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 50 90 n M i c h i g a n Yds TD 97 0 9 0 106 0 Att 27 6 5 5 t 2 1 1 48 No. 4 4 2 2 t 1 1 75 Yds 91 36 26 3 -3 41 179 Avg 3.4 6.0 5.2 15 -30 3.7 Avg 8.0 7.75 7.0 9.0 7.0 134 Lg 11 14 24 2 24 L9 14 10 12 9 7 14 Int 1 a 1 TO 1 0 1 a 0 0 0 0 2 TO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Editor Quarterback Denard Robinson's blazing speed has already beer well-documented and highly publi- cized. But after having almost foul fewer months than fellow fresh- man quarterback Tate Forcier tt learn the offensive playbook, Rob- inson's passing game hasn'tobeen ir the spotlight. "Denard always wants to prove he can throw the ball," Michigar coach Rich Rodriguez said afte Saturday's 45-17 win over Easterr Michigan. "He made a couple NOTEBOO} decisions today that maybe weren't the best, but he can make all the throws. As coaches, we have to remember he's only three games into his career." Robinson disagreed with Rodri- guez's assessment. "I'm not trying to prove noth- ing," Robinson said. "I'mnot trying to prove to nobody, just myself" When Robinson tried to thros in this week's game, the results weren't pretty. He finished 0-for-4 with two interceptions Saturday though his best pass was one tha was negated. He currently has a -6.10 passer rating through three games. The freshman came in at quar- terback with Michigan up 24-10 late in the first half and lofted a beautiful 24-yard pass to wide receiver Martavious Odoms, who caught the ball before running ou of bounds. But when the play was reviewed, Odoms was found to nol have full possession of the ball and the catch was overturned. Robinson tried again, this time throwing a pass about 35 yards down the field for Odoms. But East- ern Michigan defensive back Chris May leaped in front of Odoms fo the interception, and the Eagles scoredontheensuingdrivetobring the game within seven by halftime His other interception came again at the hands of May with about fou minutes left in the game. "One of them was a misread, and one of them wasn't," quarterbacks coach Rod Smith said of the inter- ceptions. "But like Isaid,that's how you cut your teeth. He's going to be 'D' looks in sluggis By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Editor Judging by the scoreboard at halftime Saturday, it seemed like Michigan still hadn'tgotten over its Notre Dame hangover. By the end of Saturday's first half, the Wolverines led Eastern Michigan by just seven points. The Eagles had 11 first downs to Michigan's nine. After averag- ing 106 rushing yards through their first two games, Eastern Michigan had already racked up 128 rushing yards in the first half alone. It seemed like the Wolverines were primed for a letdown after all of last week's hype following Michigan's 38-34 comeback win against the Fighting Irish. But listening to redshirt junior linebacker Obi Ezeh, it sounds like the slow start simply might be because the Wolver- ines aren't morning people. "You try to avoid it, but it was an early game," Ezeh said. "We've been used to these 3 p.m. games. I don't want to use that as an excuse, but guys get used to things, and you change it up and you have to give them time to grow accustomed to it. I'm glad we survived this one, but we have to be ready in the first quarter next time." Regardless of the underlying mental reasons, the Wolverine defense was missing reads, hav- ing difficulty anticipating plays and not controlling gaps in the first half. The Eagle offense ran plays the Wolverines hadn't seen on tape, and the defense was ini- tially slow to adjust. One of those missed reads led to Eastern's first touchdown, on a play-action fake from the Michigan 11-yard line. Eagles quarterback Andy Schmitt faked a handoff to Eastern Michigan running back Terrence Blevins, and as senior defensive end Brandon Graham fell for the play, Schmitt rolled to the right and easily ran into the corner of the end zone. The touchdown tied the score at 10 with 11 min- utes left in the first half. "We was killing ourselves, we was missing assignments early in the game," Graham said. "We was thinking too much out there. We went out there, we weren't calm." After the defense's uninspired first half, it came out in the third quarter ready to play. The Wol- verines held the Eagles scoreless with just 51 rushing yards and six first downs in the whole sec- ond half Late in the third quarter, Schmitt, under pressure, threw the ball as Obi Ezeh flew toward him. Ezeh's hit knocked the ball S 1 r i 1 r i K a S or s t, Freshman Denard Robinson ran for 60 yards and two touchdowns on three carries agairst Eastern MiChigan Saturday. Yds 32 31 14 9 7 106 i fine, and we'll keep working him and getting him ready." Robinson came to Michigan partially because it was one of the - only schools that recruited him as a quarterbackandplannedtousehim a for more than just his speed. Fol- lowing Forcier's big game against Notre Dame last week, Rodriguez t insisted that Robinson would con- s tinue to take snaps at quarterback t and that the team has no plans to I make him a slot receiver. "Oh, yeah, yes. I'm a quarter- back, I'm not just a running back," A said Robinson after Saturday's - game, when asked if he was pre- s pared to throw 15 to 20 passes in a r future game. "That's the only posi- s tion I play." But Robinson looked like he . could easily play the part of a star a running back Saturday, with 60 r yards and two touchdowns on just three carries. The scores came I when the game was already out of s reach, but Robinson ran the ball in - the end zone both times in impres- sive fashion. On a third-and-two on the East- weak h start off course and freshman Craig Roh fell on the ball for the inter- ception, which gave the Wolver- ines possession at the Eastern Michigan 21-yard line. The Wol- verines scored a few plays later to make the score 38-17 and put the game effectively out of reach. As the Wolverine defense made adjustments and the explo- sive Michigan offense scored 21 unanswered points, the Eagles felt forced to rely more on their passinggame. "It took us out of our running game," Eastern Michigan coach Ron English said. "We just felt that we needed to catch up, so we had to throw the ball a little bit more than we wanted to." But the Eagles could only muster 62 yards in the air during the third and fourth quarters. And on what ended up being its last legitimate scoring chance of the game, with about 11 minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Michigan defense overpowered Eastern Michigan's running game, too. The Eagles couldn't score after reaching the Michi- gan 9-yard line on a first-and- goal. With third down and two yards to go for a touchdown, Eagles running back Dwayne Priest was stuffed behind the line of scrimmage by four Mich- igan defenders. Eastern Michi- gan ended up turning the ball over on downs. Michigan coach Rich Rodri- guez said after the game he wasn't particularly concerned about the defense's play, since the team needs to improve on all three phases. Still, after a sluggish second quarter by the Wolverine defense and an over- matched secondary against Notre Dame last week, this week marks the second in a row that the Michigan defense hasn't dominated for all 60 minutes. Before Saturday's game, the Wolverine defense was second- to-last in the Big Ten in total defense, allowing 301total yards to Western Michigan and 490 to Notre Dame. Though Saturday's game could overall be consid- ered an improvement on paper - Eastern Michigan racked up 285 yards - the defense's tendencies to miss reads and not fill in the gaps could still be a major con- cern come Big Ten season. "They were doing some things to us that we hadn't repped, and that we hadn't seen all week," Ezeh said. "So we just had to make some minor adjustments, you know, and eliminate a lot of the big plays that you saw in the . first half. "We came out in the second half with a kind of renewed energy and just really resolved on stopping Eastern Michigan." ern Michigan 13-yard line, Robin- son came into the game, kept the ball off the snap and shook off four separate Eastern Michigan tackle attempts en route to the goal line. His second touchdown was a dis- play of pure speed as he zig-zagged through the Eagles defense for a 36-yard score. Through three games, Robin- son is the team leader in rushing touchdowns and second in rushing yards. LEACH SURPRISES: Another week, another walk-on standout. Last week, it was open tryouts walk-on Jordan Kovacs, who came in during the second half of the tight game against Notre Dame after safety Mike Williams was injured. This Saturday, walk-on linebacker Kevin Leach started, for the Wolverines after linebacker Jonas Mouton was suspended for one game. Mouton appeared to punch Notre Dame center Eric Olsen in the face during last Saturday's game. The act was a point of con- tention all week, with Rodriguez his tackle total from last year in just one game Saturday, leading the team in tackles with 10 (three solo and seven assisted). One of his notable tackles came on a third-down Eastern Michigan stop and another helped preserve the Michigan defense's second-half shutout after Eastern Michigan had a first-and-goal in the fourth quar- ter with the Wolverines up 38-17. Leach and freshman Craig Roh stopped quarterback Andy Schmitt at the six-yard line, and the Eagles eventually turned the ball over on downs at the Michigan five-yard line. INJURY REPORT: With right guard David Moosman already out against Eastern Michigan, the offensive line couldn't afford to lose another starter. That's why Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez sounded so concerned during the post-game press con- ference when he said center David Molk may have suffered a serious foot injury. Molk told coaches his foot was bothering him in the first half of Saturday's game and left the game inthe second half.IfMolk can't play next week against Indiana,redshirt freshman Rocko Khoury or Moos- man may take his place. At running back, Carlos Brown got the start over senior Brandon Minor on Saturday. Minor had just three carries for21yards, all on the Wolverines' first touchdown drive of the game. Minor has had a frus- trating senior season so far - a nag- ging ankle injury also kept him out of the Western Michigan game. "He tried to go a little bit, but after a few series he said, 'Coach, it's really sore.'So we said we'd hold him out of there," Rodriguez said. As he has all season, though, Minor discounted the idea of any possible injuries. "Oh, yeah," he said, when asked after the game if he is in good health. Safety Mike Williams also left the game with an injury, and fresh- man quarterback Tate Forcier was momentarily stunned on the field after a play in the third quarter but played the next offensive series. Rodriguez said after the game that Forcier was bruised and had the wind knocked out of him. denying he had seen any wrong- doing during Wednesday's press, conference. Michigan lineback- ers coach Jay Hopson said during Thursday night's radio show that the referee was right in front of the play and would have called it if there was an issue, but Big Ten officials announced Friday that the league was punishing Mouton for one game. Leach said the Michigan coach- ing staff told him Thursday after- noon that he would get the start. "I call him the second Kovacs because he came in and he didn't lose a step just like (Kovacs) last week," junior strong safety Troy Woolfolk said. "Actually, Kovacs came in again and did his thing. So we have two good second-string people who can play just like the first string." Though Leach played in six games last year, two of those at linebacker, this Saturday's game was the first he played from start to finish. Last season,he finished with just two assisted tackles. He quintupled MAX COLLINS/Daily Sophomore Mike Shaw ran for 53 yards and a touChdown on nine carries. B. VAN Avg IA 7 297 42.4 54 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 4 VA 10. G7 7 0 6 81 13.5 19 0 No. Yds Avg L.g TD Sob 4 5 b 2 3 3 t 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 35 Asst 5 3 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 Tot 9 8 6 5 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 51 EAGLES From page 1B it's a big momentum-booster," sophomore running back Mike Shaw said. "And it's also letting the Big Ten know, 'Hey, don't just worry about the freshman quarterback. We got a running game that can put up 350 yards'" Senior Brandon Minor, who is still nursing an ankle injury, took limited carries against Eastern Michigan. But the Wolverines pounded the ball with Carlos Brown. Then Mi- nor. Then Mike Shaw, Denard Rob- inson, Vincent Smith and Michael Cox. Even wide receiver Martavi- ous Odoms got into the fun, taking an end-around reverse in for a 13- yard touchdown. It didn't matter who carried the ball - the Eagles couldn't slow any of them down. "We wanted to try to get as many guys in as we could," Michi- gan quarterbacks coach Rod Smith said. "You know, get their feet wet, and get them some playing time. That's important. We think we have a great stable of tailbacks, and we're deep." All told, Michigan posted 380 yards on the ground - the most in the Rich Rodriguez era - and eight players registered at least one dou- ble-digit gainer. The Wolverines av- eraged an outstanding 9.7 yards per rush which was boosted by Carlos Brown's 90-yard scamper, the third- longest rushing play in Michigan football history. And that's exactly how the Wol- verines planned it. "We wanted to come in and es- tablish the run from the beginning," sophomore wideout Darryl Stonum said. "We studied a lot of film and we saw that they left the middle of the field wide open, so that's where all our big runs came from. We just wanted to~gash the middle of the field, and that's what we did today." The Eagles (0-3) have been weak against the run all season, giving up 300 yards on the ground to triple- option heavy Army in an opening- week loss. The offensive line took advan- tage, opening large gaps all game for the running backs to get to the sec- ond level. Once they were there, the Eagles had no answer. "Some of our fast guys did a great job of hitting it north and south, pulled away from defenders and showed some speed, which was nice to see"Rodriguez said. "Butwe weren't particularly sharp throwing the ball, so it was a good thing we could run.' Through three games, the Wol- verines arethe No.1rushing offense in the Big Ten, averaging more than 270 yards a game. That will give op- ponents nightmares as conference play begins next week. "We love it," said Shaw who posted 57 yards and a touchdown. "When (Brown) is in there, we're cheering him on, and then he comes to the sideline and tells us what the defense is doing. Then when it's our time to go, we do what we can do. And we just keep rotating and keep each other fresh. BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Big Ten Overall Michigan 0 0 3 0 Indiana 0 0 3 0 Iowa 0 0 3 0 Penn State 0 0 3 0 Wisconsin 0 0 3 0 Minnesota 0 0 2 1 Northwestern 0 0 2 1 Ohio State 0 0 2 1 Illinois 0 0 1 1 Michigan State 0 0 1 2 S Purdue 0 0 1 2 Big Ten Results Michigan 45, Eastern Michigan 17 Notre Dame 33, Mich. St. 30 Ohio State 38, Toledo 0 Indiana 38, Akron 21 Penn State 31, Temple 6 Iowa 27, Arizona 17 Wisconsin 44, Wofford 14 Northern Illinois 28, Purdue 21 California 35, Minnesota 21 Syracuse 37, Northwestern 34 LINCOLN From page 1B Brown exploded in the Wolverines' eighthloss ofthe season for115 yards. But as the cold mix of rain and snow fell over Michigan Stadium with a bowl game already out of reach, his breakout game went relatively un- noticed. What made his performance Sat- urday so special was the way it hap- pened. With a rushing outburst that earned him Big Ten Offensive Player of the week honors, Brown was fi- nally in the center of it all. Whether he embraced it or not, Saturday was Carlos Brown's day. And for his sake, you have to feel good for him. Although he started because of an ailing Minor, Minor's physicality was not missed Saturday. Instead, it was Brown's characteristic elusive speed and breakout power that drew cheers. Rather than running straight to the locker room following the game, it was Brown who was swarmed by reporters. And he answered every question with the same consider- ation and compassion that's kepthim around Ann Arbor for four years. Following his freshman year, Brown considered transferring. As a high school quarterback turned run- ning back, Brown wasn't sure how he fit in with former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr's offense. "I knew my heart was here and Coach (Carr) always told me pa- tience was a virtue," Brown recalled. "And that iflI waited one day, I would get a shot to play here." Brown's playing opportunities have been few and far between. But he's used his time in the shadows to be a player Michigan fans could be proud of. Before a 2008 Capital One Bowl team event, Brown befriended a five-year old boy named Lonnie and laughed and played with him for the better part of two hours. Lonnie was blind, and that had a special meaning for Brown. "We had a little special connec- tion, because when I was younger, my little brother (Angelo) lost sight in one of his eyes," Brown told The Ann Arbor News in December 2007. "My little brother was younger than that when it happened..It was an accident. He was like 3 years old.... He's got one eye, but now I think he sees better than I can." Brown may have been destined for the spotlight when he came to Ann Arbor. He was supposed to be the one to make 110,000 fans in the Big House feel good. But in passing, he's always been a Michigan Man on the sidelines. It's time for us to feel good for Brown. He's certainly done enough to deserve it. - Lincoln can be reached at lincolnr@umich.edu. '.