8A - Thursday, October 14, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com T HE By Ben Estes I Daily Sports Writer{ MAXCLL LINS/Uaily Michigan defensive coordinator Greg Robinson has refused to speak with media this season. Coach Robinson, it',s time to start talking As the defensive coordinator of the Michigan Wolverines, you should be willing to answer ques- tions about your unit - even when you give up 45 points and the questions will undoubtedly be negative. Rob- inson should feel compelled JOE to at leastgive STAPLETON an update about the defense every once in a while, even ifit's for nothing else than the 100,000 people packing the stadium every Saturday, for one of the most loyal fanbases in college sports. That was written by former Daily Sports Editor Andy Reid almost one year ago. It was the end to a column asking Michigan defensive coordinator Greg Rob- inson to answer to the media fol- lowing several games in which the defense played extremely poorly. That column was written during one of the worst statistical stretch- es in Michigan history. And a year later, the same thing is happening all over again. The Wolverine defense is cur- rently ranked 112th out of 120 Football Bowl Subdivision teams, allowing more than 450 yards per game. Only one team, Tulsa, is worse against the pass. The Michigan unit allows more than 26 points per game, and the only outlier performance against Con- necticut in the first game of the season keeps that average out of the 30s. And Greg Robinson still isn't talking. After every game, win or lose, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez goes in front of the media and answers questions. Then, there are a select few players who speak. After that, it's a free-for-all in the Crisler Arena parking lot to get other players and coaches. Nearly every coach, win or lose, will stop and talk for at least a few minutes to reporters. But not Robinson. It kind of makes sense, in a twisted way. Why would Robinson want to talk after all these games in which his defense plays so poor- ly? No one wants that job. Certainly not redshirt junior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen. After one of the most disappoint- ing losses in recent memory to Michigan State last Saturday, I'm sure that Van Bergen, along with many of his teammates, wanted to crawl into a hole for a while and not talk to anyone. I certainly would have. But there he was at the podium. The game had clearly taken its toll on him, physically and emotion- ally. His voice was hoarse and soft. His eyes were red and puffy and disbelieving and vacant. It was painfully obvious that right there at that podium was the one place in the world he didn't want to be at that moment. Despite all of this, he stood there and he took questions about the defense, which gave up more than 520 yards to the Spar- tans. "Run defense is simple. Every- body has one gap," Van Bergen said. "You're accountable for that gap, and we weren't in the right one twice. Same play. We have to figure it out, we will figure it out and we'll bounce back from this." I know it's hard, Coach. But if a 21-year-old can do it, so can you. I don't know enough about football to tell you exactly what's wrong with the defense. ButI know enough about sports to know that good coaches make their teams overachieve. And right now, this defense is underachieving on a massive scale. Sure, this defense is playing a lot of freshmen in the secondary and a coach can't force his players to get off blocks. I get it. But they should be playing better than they are. The coaches and players both contribute to what happens on Sat- urdays, and Robinson is contribut- ing far too much to how poorly his defense is playing to not occasion- ally step in front of the media and be held accountable. Even making Rodriguez answer for the defense every week seems a bit unfair to the coach, who has admitted to being mostly con- cerned with the offensive side of the ball. I'm not asking for a pound of flesh. Just a simple quote. The point is that it's Robinson's obliga- tion to speak with the media. Does Rodriguez feel like talking to the media after a loss like that? What about offensive coordinator Calvin Magee? What about sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson (especially after throwing three picks)? No, no and no. But they do. Instead of leaving his defensive players and his head coach totake responsibility for what are undeni- ably at least partly his shortcom- ings, Robinson needs to be held accountable. It's the professional thing to do, and more important, it's the right thing to do. So do it. I t was 1901, and the sun was still nowhere close to setting on the British Empire. And it was Great Britain, the political and social monstrosity of early modernity, diffusing its home- grown games across the planet. So at the turn of the 20th cen- tury Miss Constance Applebee - a member of the British School of Physical Education - came to the United States, stick and ball in tow, and showed off her country's cre- ation at a Harvard Summer School. Field hockey had arrived in America. And 109 years after Applebee, freshman forward Rachael Mack traced Constance's path to the States, though she detoured about 830 miles west and landed in Ann Arbor. Just over a month into her Michigan career, Mack has already become a standout. Only in the U.S. since the summer, the Brit has stampeded past any concerns of a cultural adjustment to help lead the Michigan field hockey team to its best start in several years. Howshegot to Michigan, though, is a somewhat serendipitous story. Mack didn't begin playing the sport until she entered middle school at the age of11-relatively late in English terms, though still early compared to most Americans. But even before she ever picked up a stick, the Bromsgrove, England native had dreamt about crossing the Atlantic. "I actually wanted to come to uni- versity in America since I was about five years old, just purely because I'm a big sports person and sport here is, like, huge," Mack said after a recent September practice. "So I always wanted to come and play. I wanted to experience a new country and play with different people." When it came time to seriously considere her college field hockey options, Mack, who had experience playing for her school (Bromsgrove), Olton, a club team in England's Women's Premier Division, and the English U-18 women's national team, first started to gather infor- mation via U.S. College Prospects, a recruiting company. For Michigan, it's not a rare occurrence to go international to recruit for field hockey - the sport is larger in countries in Europe and even South America. Various mem- bers of the Wolverines' staff have recruited in places like Argentina and Uruguay in years past. In this instance, assistant coach Ryan Langford received a tip from an old coaching friend, Michael Boal. Boal had several players in England who he knew were poten- tially interested (and skilled enough) to play field hockey in the States. Boal was one of Mack's coaches at Olton. He had seen enough of her to know that it was worth Michigan's time to get a closer look at the for- ward. Heeding his advice, head coach Marcia Pankratz sent Langford over to watch Mack in April 2009, as she was playing in a tournament with the U-18 national team. Langford said that Mack played "outstanding" and Michigan was determined to recruit her, but because of NCAA contact rules, he could only communicate with the forward via email. Eventually, though, the coaches were able to get a visit lined up for her. "She and her mother came to Ann Arbor during Art Fair and we got to show them around," Langford said. "(It was) beautiful while they were here, and I think they fell in love with it." Contact continued between both parties until last fall. While Michi- gan was on a road trip to Louis- ville during the season, Langford received a call from the young Brit making it official - Mack would be a Wolverine. From the beginning, if it was going to be America, it was going to be Michigan for Mack. She could have stayed home in England and played collegiately there, or possibly. elsewhere in Europe. But as Pankratz said, "peo- ple know Michigan all over the world." The same combination of athletic success and academic excellence that draws students and athletes from all over the country managed to have the same effect on a girl halfway across the world. "I looked at various other places, but I really like it here because aca- demically it was really good," Mack said. "And I knew I'd be pushed physically and mentally if I came here playing hockey, so it just really appealed to me. The coaching staff and the girls I met when I was here were all really nice, so that kind of inspired me to come here as well." In some cases of international players coming over to play colle- giate field hockey in the States, ath- letes may only stay for a year or two before going back home and con- tinuing their careers there. But Mack says she loves it here too much to do anything but stay all four years and get her degree. For a Wolverine team that already relies on the freshman heav- ily, that's a good thing to hear. "(We) got luckyk you might say, because she's working out outstanding for us," Langford said. Mack made her presence known early on in the season. In just the team's fifth game, she scored twice and assisted on the game-winning goal as the Wolverines defeated then-No. 14 James Madison 4-3 in overtime. She went on to score once more in the team's 4-0 win over Central Michigan two days later and was rewarded by being named the Big Ten Offensive Player and Co-Fresh- man of the Week. But Mack wasn't done yet. After strong performances against then- No. 19 Albany and Quinnipiac, she was named Big Ten Freshman ofthe Week for the second straight time, and collected the award once again for her play last weekend against Miami (OH) and Iowa. "I was really chuffed with (the awards)," Mack said. "I didn't even know they were awards ... I was really, really happy with that. I think I've been playing well, so I'm just chuffed that it's come out like that" Her languagereveals that Mack is a fish outof water of sorts ("chuffed" is British slang for "excited"). So one wouldn't necessarily expect her to be able to have the early impact that she has had. Mack scored in five straight games from Sept. 10 to Sept. 24 and currently leads the team in goals with nine, good for fourth in the Big Ton. She has been key in the Wol- verines' recent run of nine wins in ten games, defeating four ranked opponents in the process and nearly toppling then-No. 1 Maryland on Oct. 3. Part of it is her experience play- ing against top European competi- tion, but it is more a reflection of her skill and personality. She's supreme- ly talented, and also mature enough to jump right in to collegiate action. Pankratz said that the coaches hoped for an early impact from Mack, which is a key reason they recruited her in the first place. "She's a very polished, skilled player," Pankratz said. "We knew that she's a dangerous striker and that's why we recruited her and (her) certainly coming in and hit- ting the ground running, we're not surprised. We're certainly happy that she's been able to do that." Ask Rachael Mack what's been the most difficult adjustment about life in America and she doesn't hesi- tate to give you an answer: the food. "(It's) having to eatreally healthy and not (being able) to eat the stuff that's in the dorms ... I do like it. There's just loads more of it," Mack said, laughing. Her parents, though, were very receptive to allowing Mack to come to America. The family lived in Texas for a year when she was a child because of her father's job. And because her parents knew it was their daughter's dream to play in the U.S., they were happy to let her go. They moved her in like any other freshman, but they can't hop a trans-Atlantic flight every weekend to see their daughter play. Mack communicates with them on Skype whenever she can, and they are planning to visit in the next month. But that's not alot of contact when you consider just how significant Mack's move was. Still, the freshman seems to be handling it all remarkably well. She says that she hasn't been nearly as homesick as she thought she'd be, and a big reason is the open arms with which she's been received. "Sometimes, if you have bad games, it's hard when your parents aren't there but it's been good so far," Mack said. "(Coach Langford's) been great ... and all the freshmen. The three captains have been really helpful just explaining stuff I don't understand or stuff like that." Added Langford: "I think Rachael's a very self-aware per- son. She's not someone who has to be taken by the hand and dragged through. She can take careofherself for sure." The United States women's field ey national teamhasn't qualifiedfor the Olym- pics since 1996, and even then, America - only made the field because it was the host. Yet in Britain, the sport's birth- place, field hockey has enormous influence. So why would Mack - a player with past national experience and future Olympic aspirations - take a competitive step down for her col- lege years? The answer lies in the fact that the quality of play in the U.S. is often understated, she said. "I think it's kind of a miscon- strued idea that (the sport) is not as popular here because I think it's definitely up-and-coming," Mack said. "I did a lot of research into it @ before I came. "I'd say (U.S. and English field hockey) are actually pretty similar. I think actually fitness here is prob- ably better. Skill may be better in England, but on the whole, people work really, really hard both places" That difference in emphasis is commonly noted. Because Europe- ans start playing the sport so much earlier, they tend tobe more skilled, whereas Americans place a greater importance on fitness and endur- ance. Mack struggled early on in meeting the more rigorous train- ing demands at Michigan than she was used to, but is in much better shape now. Adding that element to her game only makes her more well rounded, and puts her one step clos- er to being a complete player - one that can dominate in any country. "Her knowledge of the game is outstanding, whether she's on the ball, whether she's off the ball, she's 0 always moving into good spots," Langford said. "And if she refines herself, makes fitness a goal, she's going to have a great chance to rep- resent England in the Olympics or the World Cup." That's after Mack completes her goal of helping Michigan win the Big Ten for the first time since 2007, of course. Despite her breakout perfor- mance, the Sept. 10 win over James Madison was significant for Mack for a different reason. Everything - her English life, her new American one, her field hockey career - came full circle for the forward. Standing on the opposing side- line with a front-row seat for Mack's goals and game-winning overtime assist was Boal. Her former club coach had start- ed applying for jobs soon after Mack had committed to Michigan and eventually landed an assistant posi- tion with the Dukes. There was Mack: the first home game of her career, playing a nation- ally ranked team, staring down a 3-0 deficit, and seeing the coach of her childhood pacing the sidelines just a few yards away. Mack promptly scored twice in the first five minutes in the sec- ond half - the first two goals of her career - to begin what would become the Wolverines' signature win in 2010. "The interesting thing about that is ... if (Boal) had gotten that job earlier, Rachel probably would've gone there, just (to) fol- low her coach," Langford said. "Who knows?" Luckily for Michigan, she didn't. So began a partnership: England and America, Mack and Michigan, one that Pankratz called a "win-win for everybody." Back in June, England and the United States were set to square off in each team's opening match of the 0 World Cup, the single biggest sport- ing event on the planet. Mack was less than a month from starting her new life in her new country, and here was the first clash between old and New - with thoughts of America looming on her * mind, would she be tempted to root for her soon-to-be adopted home- land? "I was thinking 'Come on Eng- land,' obviously," Mack said. "I'm still a Brit" IC HOCtK EY Caporusso finds scoring stride in season's first few matchups By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Writer Entering the Michigan hockey team's fifth game last season, Wol- verine forward Louie Caporusso NOTEBOOK was still searching for his first point after being a Hobey Baker finalist during his sophomore season. But when it came to postseason hockey, Caporusso was ready to play. He notched five goals and eight assists in an eight-game run during the CCHA Tournament and NCAA regional play. And Caporusso has carried his torrid scoring pace into his senior season, wasting no time in finding his way into the box score. Just fifteen minutes into Wolver- ines' season opener against Mercy- hurst, Caporusso took a pass from senior defenseman Chad Langlais and buried the puck in the back of the net to give Michigan a 1-0 lead. And he hasn't slowed down yet. Through three games this year, Caporusso has a team-high six points - a number he didn't reach the 12th game in 2009. Caporusso acknowledges that his early-season success has taken a load off his shoulders. "I put a lot of pressure on myself coming into (last year)," Caporusso said. "I expected a lotof myself, peo- ple expected a lot out of me, and I got down on myself too much and didn't get a chance to play well because I was so hard on myself." A key turn-around for Caporusso last season was Michigan coach Red Berenson's decision to pair the center with then-sophomores Luke Glendening and David Wohlberg. That line proved tobe the Wolver- ines' strongest throughout the post- season, and Berenson has kept them together in the early-goings this fall. "They have a lot of camaraderie and chemistry on that line rightnow, and Louie isn't the only one playing well, they're all playing well," Beren- son said. Caporusso is the first to credit his linemates for bolstering his per- formance thus far. Wohlberg is tied with Caporusso and senior forward Matt Rust with a team-leading two goals apiece. "When you've got the same guys on your line it helps so much," Caporusso said. "You know what to expect, you know what you're going to get every day. You start to get a feel for each other, and right now I just feel so in tune and in synch with Luke and Wally." DUELING GOALTENDERS: After junior netminder Bryan Hogan went down with a groin injury during the final weekend of the regular season last year, Berenson and the Wolver- ines were forced to live or die by the goaltending of backup Shawn Hun- wick. Fortunately, they lived, riding Hunwick's 5-foot-7 frame all the way to the NCAA regional finals in Fort Wayne, Indiana. When the team reconvened this fall, both goalies were back for their senior years, and the starting job has been up in the air. Through three games and two exhibition matches, Berenson has alternated goaltenders in every game. But he switched up the order this week, playing Hogan in a 4-0 shutout of the U.S. National Team Development Program Under-18 team on Tuesday. That decision has given Hunwick an opportunity between the pipes against No. 9 New Hampshire this upcoming Saturday. Berenson has not discussed any plans to select a starter as of yet - he may continue flip-flopping the two goalies all season if they both continue to perform up to expecta- tions. "We think they're both going to play well, and it gives us a one- two punch in goal," Berenson said. "It was a good game for Hogan (on Tuesday), Hunwick's got a tough game going into New Hampshire. They don't lose much at home, so this will be a good challenge for him." INJURY REPORT: Rust participat- ed in practice yesterday after sitting out earlier this week due to a lower body injury sustained against Bowl- ing Green last Saturday. ... Glenden- ing took a puck to the hand before the U.S. NTDP game and sat out for the game, but he also was back in practice yesterday. ... After ding- ing his shoulder during the second period on Tuesday, sophomore for- ward Kevin Lynch did not practice the following day. But according to Berenson, Lynch will practice on Thursday.