The Michigan Daily I michigandailycom I November 2,2009 CHAMPAIGN-FUL Mich'igan 'D' falls apart 'For secondstraight _ season M' squeezed In third quarter at Iioi: by Juice Williams By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Editor CHAMPAIGN - Before Satur- day, Michigan had given up more than three points in the third quarter just once. Against Illinois, that's when everything unraveled. In those 15 minutes, the Wolver- ines surrendered 21 points and 209 yards to a team that had not beaten an FBS team in 364 days. "We are frustrated because we gave it away, we just gave it away," senior defensive end Brandon Gra- ham said after the game. "We was the better team today. Not taking that away from Illinois - they came - but we know we gave it away." The Fighting Illini's 38-13 vic- tory marked just the second time in 52 seasons they have beaten Michigan at Memorial Stadium. For linebacker Stevie Brown, the second-half defensive collapse felt like it took nearly that long. "I never thought it was going to get out of reach like it did, it was just unfortunate what happened," said Brown, struggling to find words. "It's disappointing. That's all I can say. It's disappointing." That disappointment stems from the second quarter, when Michigan held the Illini to minus- 15 total yards and the Wolverine offense built a six-point lead. At halftime, Wolverine coach Rich Rodriguez told Michigan to "just step on their throat and extend our lead," according to junior cor- nerback Troy Woolfolk. And the Wolverines had every expection that they would come out and do just that - a feeling confirmed by quarterback Tate Forcier's apparent 77-yard touch- down bomb to wide receiver Roy Roundtree on the first drive after the half. An official review reversed the on-field touchdown call, though, leaving Michigan with four scor- ing chances from the one-yard line. Roundtree's non-score was inconsequential until, on the next three plays, senior running back Carlos Brown could not extend the football 36 inches across the goal line. Even senior running back Brandon Minor, a player that Rodriguez says transforms the offense's physical play, couldn't punch it in on fourth down. But that wasn't the backbreaker for Michigan. The start of Illinois' next drive looked similar to one of the Wol- verines' second-quarter pos- sessions during last weekend's blowout loss to Penn State. Against the Nittany Lions, Michigan was backed up to its own two-yard line on third-and-long when the snap went through the back of the end zone. The safety proved to be a critical point of the game. Against Illinois Saturday, with the Illini starting at their own one- yard line, the Wolverines were in a position to reverse fates on the goal line. Michigan had ended the previous three Illini drives with .third-down sacks and was playing well. This time, though, was much different. Illinois went 99 yards and scored in less than three minutes on a drive capped by a 70-yard touchdown rush by running back Mikel Leshoure. He was barely grazed on the play. And as the Wolverines' halftime lead dissolved, so did their focus. "We have to have enough resolve to bounce back and not let it affect you," Rodriguez said. "I know the guys on the sideline were tryingto keep guys into it. ... I can't explain everything that goes on in minds of young people all the time." Sophomore defensive tackle Mike Martin said Michigan let up and was too relaxed after half- time. "It hurts, obviously, but we just went back to the sideline, Coach was tellingus to dust it off," Martin said. "We were just trying to have a better series the next series." But the Wolverines looked increasingly worse on the next two Illini drives, giving up a touch- down both times. The third quarter was so differ- ent from the second that, even See ILLINI, Page 3B By RUTH LINCOLN Daily Sports Editor. CHAMPAIGN - During the week heading into last year's Michigan-Illinois game, Illini coach Ron Zook sat down one- on-one with his star quarter- back, Juice Williams. According to Williams, Zook simply told him, "to relax and have fun." Zook's coach-speak sounded cliche, but Williams's result definitely wasn't. He stunned the Big House crowd with a Michigan Stadium record of 431 all-purpose yards (310 passing, 121 rushing). Leaving a dismantled Michigan defense in the dust, he led Illinois to a 45-20 win. Last Monday, Zook met with Williams again. The sit- uation was slightly different, but the conversation didn't stray far from the one the coach and his quarterback had a year ago. "He pulled me aside Monday and said, 'Relax, just let things happen, just let plays come to you,' "Williams said. "And that's what I did." Williams heeded Zook's advice once again, this time to the tune of 220 yards (123 in the air, 97 on the ground). Struggling this season to find any kind of consistency, Wil- liams may have needed Zook's coaxing a little more than last year. And with the plan for Wil- liams to split time with redshirt freshman Josh Charest, no one knewhow much Michiganwould see the senior. But just like last season, he exploded against the Wolverines. For two years in a row, Wil- liams has proven that the Michi- gan defense can't contain the mobile quarterback. And the coaching staff can't quite figure out why. "Juice Williams got alive a lit- tle bit and they had a soft balance with the run and the pass, you know, we just didn't respond," See JUICE, Page 3B Wolverines upset . 12th-ranked Wildcats Caporusso nets first goal of '09 team's most dangerous weapo was dormant during the season' first four games. "You start telling yoursel things that aren't true and worsi things creep into your head, ani you wonder if you're ever goini to score again," Caporusso said "When I did score, I felt like a littl By JAKE FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer The Wolverines' resume was lacking. The Michigan men's soccer team had lost three of its previous four games and boasted only one win over a ranked opponent this season. If they had any intentions of play- ing soccer in the postseason, Mich- igan coaches and players knew they would need to find their identity yesterday afternoon against No. 12 Northwestern. Well, they found it. After beating the Wildcats 1-0 in double overtime, redshirt sopho- more goalkeeper Chris Blais took off his shirt and sprinted the length of the field to rejoice with his team- mates at the U-M Soccer Complex. "We needed this win, and we need next week's win," Blais said. "It was a must-win for all of us if we want to make the NCAA Tour- nament, so I think that's where the intensity came from." Before yesterday's upset, the Wolverines (2-3 Big Ten, 9-5-1 overall) had struggled against Big Ten opponents. They tried to beat opposing teams with pretty soc- cer, pushing up their defenders to sustain long possessions in the attacking half. But this aggressive style left Michigan susceptible to counterattacks and ultimately led to lasses at the hands of Penn State, Indiana and Michigan State. So in yesterday's game against Northwestern (2-2-1 Big Ten, 9-3-4 overall), Michigan changed its style of play and finally learned how to win ugly. "I'm kicking myself for not work- ing with the team in that manner earlier, and it's the way you win in the Big Ten," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "So we sat in, absorbed more of their pressure, allowed them more possession instead of being pressed up on them to deny space behind them." Behind this new philosophy and a 4-4-2 formation, the Wol- verines kept Northwestern's speedy forwards in check. But Michigan's offense floundered without help from its outside backs, and the team struggled to See WILDCATS, Page 2B n 's if e d g e ..., kid again. It was like my first goal in house league." Caporusso and the Wolverines' offensive momentum carried into Saturday, during Michigan's 6-3 win at Taffy Abel Arena. Everyone was on the attack - eight different Wolverines scored in the opening weekend of CCHA play. Fifteen players tallied at least one point over the weekend. "It's good to see some bal- anced scoring," Michigan coach Red Berenson said Friday. "Even though it's a different lineup, we still had the same cast of charac- ters who were playing well. And for our fourth line to score two goals, that's a bonus." On Friday, Michigan (4-2-0 overall, 2-0-0 CCHA) attacked the crease and scored three rebound goals including Caporusso's. Junior Scooter Vaughan and See LAKERS, Page 2B ARIEL BOND/Daily Junior Louie Caporusso was held scoreless through Michigan's first four games but netted one against Lake Superior State. By TIM ROHAN Carl Hagelin and freshman Chris gan offense had come alive. Daily Sports Writer BrownanddefensemenLeeMoffie It was the third goal of Fri- and Steve Kampfer surrounded day's 5-1 win against Lake Supe- SAULT STE. MARIE - Junior him as the red light behind the net rior State, but it represented much Louie Caporusso smiled widely illuminated. more for a fifth-ranked Wolverine as he pumped his fist in celebra- Caporusso had scored his first team that had been previously tion. His new linemates, junior goal of the season. And the Michi- underachieving on offense. The 4