8A - Wednesday, September 22, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Stonum grows up fast for 'M'in third season By RYAN KARTJE Daily SportsEditor Last Saturday was a big day for Darryl Stonum. After all, his 87-year-old grandmother, Nettie, boarded a plane for the first time in her life from Houston, Texas to see her grandson play as a Wolverine. "A lot of people in the stands were trying to calm her down because they didn't know if she'd have a heart attack or what;" Sto- num joked on Monday. "But from what I heard, she was screaming and jumping out of her wheel- chair in the stands." Nettie sure picked the right game to watch her grandson. Sto- num exploded for 121 yards on just three receptions, including a perfectly executed screen pass that he took 66 yards to the house. Soon after, he found himself in the endzone again on a nine- yard pass to take the lead over the Minutemen heading into the half. For his first time at Michigan, Stonum, a former four-star wide- out, looked like the deep threat the Wolverines had recruited him to be. "I was always the big-play guy in high school," Stonum said. "I was always the deep-threat guy. And I always wanted that to tran- sition over to Michigan. And I think I showed a lot of people that I can be that deep-threat, big-play guy." But in Stonum's first two years in Ann Arbor, things weren't always going in that direction. On April 8, 2009, Stonum stood in front of a judge at Ann Arbor's 15th district court house and pleaded guilty to operating a vehicle while visibly impaired. He had been driving 60 miles per hour the previous September when his car almost collided with another at the intersection of State Street and Hill Street. He was pulled over and blew a blood alcohol content of .10, .02 above the Michigan legal limit. Stonum served his penalties, which included fines and sub- stance abuse education, but he still had a long way to go to make up with his coaches after having fallen out of their good graces. So he set out to do just that. And after surpassing his yard- age and touchdown total from last year in the Wolverines' SARAH SQUIRE/[ Sophomore Hamoody Saad dribbles the ball in front of the student section in Michigan's game against Notre Dame on Friday The formation of the men's soccer student section and how it intends to live on 0 ARIEL BOND/Daily Junior wide receiver Darryl Stonum had a career day in Michigan's 42-37 victory over Massachusetts on Saturday, catching three balls for121 yards and two touchdowns. third week of the season, Rodri- guez said he's definitely made up ground. "When a guy messes up and everyone wants to throw him out to the wolves...it's pleasing to fans and certainly for coaches when you see a guy grow and mature and he gets it," Rodriguez said. "You see that maturity kind of kick in. Sometimes they grow up and they just get it. " Stonum has used his past mis- takes as motivation to get better, and without any senior leaders at wideout, he feels he's on his way to filling that void. After the Wolverines' loss to Ohio State in the final week of last season, then-senior receiver Greg Mathews approached Stonum and fellow wideout Junior Heming- way and ceremoniously handed the pair his gloves and his helmet. "It's on you guys now," he told the two wideouts. "Greg (Mathews) left, LaTer- ryal (Savoy) left," Stonum said. "A bunch of senior receivers left, so it was like, 'Who's next? Who's going to step up tobe that guy?' "We all learn from our mis- takes in the past. Coach Rod stayed with me, he gave me a chance to prove that I matured, grew up and learned from my mistakes" And as Nettie watched her grandson score a career-high two touchdowns last Saturday, she was able to watch him transform in front of her eyes and Rodri- guez's. "With Darryl's history, he had to show and do the right things off the field as well," Rodriguez said. "I've been proud of him." By ZAK PYZIK Daily Sports Writer International soccer is known to have some of the most diehard fans of any sport known to the world, so it was just a matter of time before a fan base established its roots in Ann Arbor. And in the Wolverines' 0-0 tie against Notre Dame last weekend, 300 Michigan Ultras stood unified in the stands by shirts and scarves. It took the hand and guidance of one motivated fan to get the ball rolling. Fifth-year senior Matthew Peven started scheming for a student fan club in the spring of 2010, knowing that for the coming fall, the new $6 million soccer complex would be ready to go. "The student section bleachers are practically on top of the field," Ultra's event chair Joe Rubino said in an interview Tuesday night. "Especially when there are plays on our side of the field, you can tell the opponents get, well, psyched out." Peven started his efforts by sit- ting down with Michigan men's soccer coach Steve Burns and the Wolverines' marketing department. Together, the team, the school and Peven combined efforts and resources to ignite a student-fan uprising. So far, anyone who has come to the game as an Ultra and sat in the student section received free T-shirts and for the last game, scarves. (At European and interna- tional soccer matches, fans typically hold scarves of their team's colors over their heads to symbolize who they're cheering for, similar to "The Terrible Towel" used in Pittsburgh for the Steelers.) Game by game, Peven started seeing more new faces join the stands in support of the Wolver- ines. It seems as if the Ultras have the support from the entire athletic department as well. "The football team had that pep rally recently and we had Rich Rod say something about the game to the students," Peven said. "We had 300 students at that game. It had a quick uptake this season. Three-thou- sand-five-hundred people came out to that game specifically. That's an absolute 180 from last year." BLUEPRINT FOR ENDURANCE Even Peven knows that it will be difficult for the Ultras to stay alive. A long-lasting fan club can only be solidified if it creates tradition, if the team does well and if there are peo- ple to succeed the previous leaders. "We have some big things planned outside of just match day," Rubino said. "We want this to be more than just a student section, we want it to be a club where soccer fans in general can appreciate the sport." Peven graduates this year, but the man has a plan. "We have a core of young stu- dents that are interested," Peven said. "Most of our fans are actu- ally freshmen. I've been approached by everyone who has come to the game. Everyone says that they can't wait to come back. One of our vice presidents is a freshman. Most are sophomores, so there is potential that this can be longterm." The Ultras are establishing an executive board with positions that will be distributed to a lot of young- er members. Their hope is that the club willbeinstituted enough thatit will never go away. CHANTING THEIR WAY TO HISTORY "I want the student section tobe like every other student section on campus," Rubino said. "I want the games to be like Yost but without the ice." While the Ultras may not turn the soccer stadium into Yost or Crisler overnight, some things are getting pretty close. Specifically - the chants. "We have our own 'bum of the game' chant like Maize Raige," Peven said. "And that's been very effective, like one of the 'bums' moved his position and shifted to the other side of the field in the mid- dle of the game." They also have adopted several of Yost's more controversial plays on words, specifically targeting players by name. Chants are not the only traditions that the Ultras are attempting to sketch into the game-time experi- ence. "We have yet to really figure out what is going to truly be the Ultras tradition," Peven said. "As the seasons and years go, a tradi- tion and theme of the Ultras will come out. There has been a lot of talk of creating a song that we sing at the beginning and ending of the game. Possibly the 'Yellow and Blue' just like Liverpool fans sing 'You'll Never Walk Alone."' THE TWELFTH MAN The Wolverines may have gotten lucky with the Ultras. Not only is it a fan club, but it's a whole new com- ponent on game day. The Ultras have and will influ- ence the team in more ways than simply making the opposing team feel uncomfortable if there's a name on the roster that rhymes with a funny word. First, a big student section and a brand new stadium could be a recruit's paradise. "I think that this generates * excitement on gameday for recruits coming to watch," captain Alex Wood said in an interview Tuesday evening. "This also gets more ath- letes in the area to come to watch the game. Anyone that goes to the game sees the love and that reflects Ann Arbor." Second, the Ultras argue their existence brings momentum to Wolverine soccer that has not ever been seen before. "The players have acknowledged it. After goals they come over to us," Peven said. "I've got a friendly relationship with a lot of the play- ers. They will come up to me, and they'll say, 'thank you so much. I'm so happy that you guys have *! been cheering us on.' Every time that I've talked to them they ask if there's anything they can do to help. Right now I just say, 'bring us results.'" The motivation and sensation that the players feel is obvious. Especially going from regularly having close to an empty house to being over capacity. And so far they've seen results. Michigan has only lost one of five home games this year and the Wol- verines played in front of a record breaking crowd last week against the Fighting Irish. More than 3,500 people showed up - topping the old record by nearly 500 people. "We used to have just parents and maybe our girlfriends and a few students come to the games," Wood said. "Its awesome to walkoutofthe tunnel at the beginning of the game and people are screaming for you. And they'regoingnuts for the entire game - all 90 minutes." MEN'S SOCCER Alashe makes impact on soccer field, despite an empty stat sheet * By MICHAEL WELCH Daily Sports Writer In soccer, the best player on the field isn't always the one who fills up the stat sheet. Last Friday night against Notre Dame, Michigan sophomore mid- fielder Latif Alashe illustrated this with a solid performance in a score- less draw despite finishing with zeroes in the box score. Alashe worked tirelessly on and off the ball to make Michigan men's soccer's offense work. He played with composure and distributed the ball well to the offensive trio of senior forward Justin Meram and brothers Soony and Hamoody Saad. Against a well organized and tough Fighting Irish defense, Alashe's ability to make passes that set up his attacking options in scoring positions became crucial. After the game, Michigan coach Steve Burns said he only wished that Alashe had been able to break through in the first overtime. "Where he needs to continue to go is his finishing. He had a good look out here in the first overtime," Burns said. "But (Alashe) is a player on both sides of the ball that we're countingon." In a close match, the midfield battle becomes the key to gaining the advantage when scoring chanc- es are scarce. Because of Alashe's work, the Wolverines (3-1-5) con- trolled the pace of the game and patiently worked to create their own offensive opportunities. On the defensive end, Michigan had to deal with a potent forward in Notre Dame's Steven Perry. In the midfield, Alashe broke up play well and kept Perry from control- ling the game. Alashe was strong both in the air and on the ground, winning headers and tracking back to make crucial tackles. "You check his pedometer today, and he probably ran eight and a half or nine miles," Burns said. "It's an end line-to-end line game for him and he's very capable of that and we just want to keep him at that level." After a freshman season in which he played in every game, Alashe has been given more responsibility in the team's gameplan. With cre- ative players in abundance for the Wolverines, Burns noted that the formation is more fluid this year. As a result, Alashe is playing all over the midfield, being asked to link up with attackers, defend on the flanks and track back to aid the defense. "Last year I was just kind of the freshman kid trying not to mess it up for everyone," Alashe said. "Now I'm actually going out trying to win the game for my team." Even though he couldn't do that, his play in the midfield helped keep the Wolverines in control of a tight game. Going up against a formida- 0 ble opponent in front of the biggest crowd in Michigan men's soc- cer history, Alashe shined. Burns summed up exactly the contribu- tion he received from his midfielder on Friday. "In this game here, we needed * our big players to play big and that would take the pressure off the guys without experience," Burns said. "I thought (Alashe) played big tonight."