The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I October 26, 2009 j {R'ti ll S'.1 0 Penn Statetailback Evan Royster runs past a slew of Michigan defenders during Saturday's fourth quarter en route to a 35-10 Penn State win ft marked Michigan's third straight Big Ten lns PENN STATE 35, MICHIGAN 10 'D' lapses, inability to stop Clark doom Blue By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Editor Michigan deserved an awful review. And the Wolverines provided it themselves. "It's embarrassing," Michigan secondary coach Tony Gibson said. "We missed big play after big play (and) couldn't get anything going." With each of Michigan's previ- ous two losses coming essentially on the game's final play, its deflat- ing 35-10 defeat to No.13 Penn State was the first time all season the Wolverines looked like last year's nine-loss team. "It's reallydisappointingbecause I feel like we've really progressed since then," redshirt sophomore defensive tackle Ryan Van Bergen said about the defense after the game. "To go back and regress at this point in the season is just some- thing that we didn't want to do." And it's hard not to look to the defensive side of the ball when fig- uring out what happened Saturday. Last year, the defense gave up 35 points or more on six occasions. Saturday was the first time the defense gave up that many all sea- son, which left a struggling offense in a hole too deep to overcome in the final 15 minutes. "Obviously we didn't prepare hard enough for our opponent," redshirt sophomore linebacker Brandon Herron said. "You know, (Michigan) coach (Rich Rodriguez) said it all in the locker room: big plays we've given up on the field have kind of hurt us. I just felt like we should've worked a little harder in order to win this game. No one's to blame." But those mistakes Herron echoed are correctable. The most alarming part of that comment is about Michigan's preparation for this critical game. Sophomore Mike Martin said that Rodriguez "told us he didn't prepare us as well as he could, so he took responsibility." Even Penn State quarterback Daryll Clark noticed it in the defense, mentioning the Wolver- ines "had trouble lining up" on a few plays. "They didn't do very much dis- guising coverages," Clark said. "I kind of knew where to throw the football." The lone highlight of the defense was senior defensive end Brandon Graham, who finished with seven tackles - 3.5 of those tackles for loss, which tied a career high - and the first blocked punt of his career. It's hard to pinpoint just one cul- prit, though. The big-yardage gains the Wolverines gave up were due to mistakes by everyone, and Penn State easily took advantage. Senior Stevie Brown, a for- mer four-star prospect, was beat twice on end-zone routes by a for- mer walk-on, Nittany Lions wide receiver Graham Zug. Zug also caught a third touchdown with junior standout cornerback Dono- van Warren covering him. What was wrong with the defense? "I couldn't tell you," Warren said. "I couldn't tell you what went wrong, man. No clue." Warren credited Penn State for calling the right plays based on what Michigan was running schematically, but the huge, back- breaking gains were rooted in the smallest of mistakes. Penn State capitalized on one of them on its first offensive play after the Wolverines gave up a safety late in the second quarter. Herron said he forgot to get his hands on the tight end to slow him down, so See NITTANY LIONS, Page 3B I couldn't tell you what went wrong, man. No clue. - Donovan Warren, junior cornerback Cissoko plays for first time since Sept. 26 By RUTH LINCOLN Daily Sports Editor Boubacar Cissoko found himself in a familiar spot during the waning moments of Michigan's 35-10 loss to Penn State. On the Wolverines' sideline, the sophomore corner- back was lodged between the bench and the team's space heater. Bracing himself with his left hand grip- ping the bench and his right on the heater's handle, the fire from the source hit squarely at his knees. For more than two weeks now, that should feel familiar - strugglingto find his place between the hot seat and his teammates. After starting in Michigan's first four games, Cis- soko was benched in the fourth quarter against Indi- anaanddidn'tplayinthenextthreegames.Hisinjured shoulder had been an issue earlier in the season, but Michigan coach Rich.Rodriguez officially suspended Cissoko before the Wolverines' Oct. 10 matchup with Iowa. The Detroit native began practicing with the scout team, and his status has been day-to-day since. Rodriguez said last Monday that he had met with Cissoko nearly every day to discuss his personal and academic progress, consistently noting that it was "really up to him" when Cissoko would return. But on a Friday mgoblue.com walkthrough video, Rodriguez said Cissoko would participate against the Nittany Lions. "He just kept working the last couple of weeks com- ing off of an injury and hadn't played well early on, but See CISSOKO, Page 3B SAID ALSALAH/Daily VOLLEYBALL Wolverines lose composure and match in four sets By MARK BURNS Daily Sports Writer Frustration is an emotional reaction that can easily get the best of a sports team, which is why a coach hopes it doesn't happen to his players. But Saturday night, Michi- gan volleyball coach Mark Rosen saw it happen to his 11th-ranked Wolverines after they were snakebitten on the road against No. 9 Minnesota in a four-set match (20-25, 25-19, 25-22, 25-10). "We got frustrated," Rosen said. "There'snothingpositive that can come out of getting frustrated when you're play- ing volleyball or any sport." Michigan had some posi- tives, though, it the begin- ning of its match at Williams Arena. After surrendering a 9-2 lead in the opening frame. of the match, the Wolverines (6-4 Big Ten, 18-5 overall) regained their composure and tied the score at 13 before taking the set 25-20. Sophomore Alex Hunt led the offensive attack with four kills in the set while the Wol- verines held Minnesota to a .075 attack percentage, the lowest of all the sets in the match. That's whenthe tide turned for the road team. In the final three stanzas, Michigan had a mere .130 offensive attack average and no blocks. Rosen noted that at the beginningnoftthe fourth set - with his team down 2-1 in the match - the Wolverines had a perfect opportunity to swing the momentum in the match. The Golden Gophers gave Michigan a series of free See GOPHERS, Page 2B LOST CHANCE Find out why a bloody upper lip and a referee's whistle cost Michigan a game-tying goal against Michigan State. Page 2B. REID: R-E-S-P-E-C-T What college football fans can learn about respect from Connecticut's reception in Morgantown. Page 2B. Check out www.michigandaily.com for coverage of women's swimming and field hockey. NN Penalties kill Michigan By MICHAEL FLOREK BOSTON - In a matchup of top- five teams, it was the sixth man that was the problem. It wasn't the Agganis Arena crowd that caused the No. 5 Michigan hockey team's 3-2 loss Saturday as much as it was the Wolverines' own extra man on the ice. No. 3 Boston University (1-2-0) scored two power play goals to take a 2-0 lead, with MICHIGAN 2 both com- BOSTON U. 3 ing after the Wolverines were handed pen- alties for having too many men on the ice in between shifts. "We have to work harder to get off the ice, and we have to be more patient about getting on the ice," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I can't blame our players for tRIBNsD/Daily wnting on, but you hav wa t Junior Bryan Hogan allowed a fluke game-winning goal with 2:31 left in regulation. till the other guy's off or nearly off the box. Freshman Chris Brown switch the lines. and then if the puck's in that vicin- was ejected three minutes into The line change paid dividends ity, it's an opportunity for the ref the third period, and senior Steve minutes later as sophomore Rob- to call it." Kampfer got a 10-minute miscon- bie Czarnik and junior Matt Rust The bench minors were the duct at the same time. Those pen- each scored in a third-period start of a flurry of penalties - the alties, along with Michigan's lack onslaught. teams combined for 66 minutes in of offense, led the coaching staff to See TERRIERS, Page 2B