The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com October 20, 2010 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom October 20, 2010 - 3B GAME STATISTICS Campbell could change to offensive line for next game, Team Stats First Dawns Rush/Yds PassingYards Offensive Plays lTtal Offense Kikretuns/Yds Punt returns/Yds Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Timeof Poss PASSING Player Fortier Robinson, D. Totals RUSHING Player c Hopkins Shaw RECEMVNG Play Heigaey Stonum Koger Stokes Totals PNTING Ples N Hagerup, W. Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player Gallon Totals PUNT RETURNS Player Veotergee TACKLES Rege *Plaer Pass, Placs MohutonC. Gordon,T C. Ron layer stan Aer Roranos PASING Player Player P Hlnyer N Hyndema KDage Nielsen Daniels Ballard Clayborn Shumpert Schulze DiBona Totas MICHI 29 42/187 335 86 522 6/118 3/5 30/44/3 3/50.3 1/1 8/66 31:00 M I C H I G A N C-A Yds 17-26 239 13-18 96 30-44 335 Att Yds Avg 8 38 4.8 3 6 2.0 OWA 21 36/135 248 60 383 2/62 1/a 17/24/0 5/46.2 0/0 5/36 29:00 TD 1 1 2 L8 12 11 15 5 5 15 L9 45 18 13 20 14 12 11 8 3 45 Int 2 1 3 TD 0 0 1 0 1 2 TD 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 No. 9 3 2 30 97 26 10 11 335 10.8 8.7 12 11 3 11.2 No. Yds Avg Lg 3 151 50.3 63 3 151 50.3 63 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 6 118 19.7 27 0 6 118 19.7 27 0 No. Yds Avg Lg TD Solo 6 6 4 2 3 3 3 1 S 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 i 0 0 0 41 Asst 5 2 4 5 2 1 0 2 2 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 30 1 0 W A Tot 71 8 8 7 5 4 3 3 7 2 2 2 2 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 71 Rodriguez says Robinson will be 100 percent for Penn State By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach Rich Rodri- guez has said it's difficult to NOTEBOOK make major in-season adjustments. But that doesn't mean he's not looking for chances to do just that. On Tuesday's weekly Big Ten teleconference, Rodriguez said he's considering moving 6-foot- 5, 333-pound sophomore defen- sive tackle Will Campbell to the offensive side of the ball. "He may be better suited to play guard," Rodriguez said. "He's not playing much on defense. He's got a couple pret- ty good guys in front of him. I don't know if it's possible to switch and learn a position from one side of the ball to the other (for this year); that's hard to do. But we'll probably talk about him (Tuesday)." Campbell, a consensus five- star defensive lineman from Detroit Cass Tech, has seen the field mostly on special teams, and some time for goal-line defense. "Part of it is because (starting defensive tackles) Mike Martin and Adam Patterson are pretty good, stronger, and they're pret- ty active guys," Rodriguez said. "Will is working harder, getting himself in shape. He's got to get better technique-wise, get- ting off blocks and those kind of things. "We're going to talk about it. He's got a great attitude, and he's working and doing every- thing to help the team." Rodriguez said any position switches will likely occur soon and that he would talk to his coachingstaffWednesday about potential changes. HELLO, BYE WEEK: One thing was clear after Saturday's loss to Iowa, a game that left the Wolverines bewildered and bruised: The bye week couldn't have come at a better time. Not only will the extra week off provide players with an opportunity to heal minor inju- ries and study for midterms, but ZIPS From Page 1B "(Akron) is good at exploit- ing gaps," Burns said. "We pushed up a little too high and left too much space behind us with our defense. They were able to do a really good job of finding that gap in behind our right defense, that's where the first two goals came from. (Sar- kodie) is a player that was able recognize that." Michigan freshman forward Soony Saad silenced the Akron crowd with his 12th goal of the season, off a free kick in the 32nd minute - the goal was the first for any road team playing in Akron's home stadium this season. But Saad's goal sparked a flame under the Zips, as they responded with an aggres- sive press. The sudden upstart attack led to a third Akron goal in the 35th minute. As the teams headed into half time, the Wolverines trailed 3-1 and the momentum was fully in it will also give the coaching staff a chance to make midsea- son adjustments. Rodriguez has said that some of the defense's problems, like tackling, can be fixed on a week- to-week basis. Other problems are beyond coaching, he said. "Vince Lombardi could come in and not fix some of the prob- lems on defense," Rodriguez said at his weekly news confer- ence on Monday. Rodriguez's zinger came during a discussion about the team's youth. Seven true fresh- men have seen significant play- ing time on defense so far. "The only way to get expe- rience is to get experience," Rodriguez said. "How can we limit those dangerous freshman moments?" INJURY UPDATES: Rodri- guez said Tuesday that sopho- more quarterback Denard CONTROVERSY From Page 1B but sophomore running back Vin- cent Smith fumbled the ball away. It seemed that no matter who was playing quarterback, the Michigan offense fell victim to momentum-swinging turnovers all day. Robinson threw a devastating interception in the beginning of the second quarter and on Forci- er's second drive of the game, the sophomore threw a pick just as the Wolverines were moving into Iowa territory. "I thought he made some good throws, made some good deci- sions," Rodriguez said. "There's a few he'd like to have back." After the interception, Forcier played well. On the next drive, Forcier completed six of his eight passes on his way to leading the Wolverines to their first touchdown since the first quarter, a two-yard run by freshman running back Ste- phen Hopkins. After a Hawkeye touchdown, Forcier unleashed a 45-yard touch- down bomb to redshirt junior wide receiver Junior Hemingway. The throw probably shouldn't have been made - Hemingway was on Robinson should be near 100 percent healthy for Michi- gan's game against Penn State on Oct. 30. Robinson has been dealing with a nagging shoul- der injury, and he left Satur- day's game in the third quarter. He didn't return. Rodriguez said Monday he expects defensive tackle Mike Martin and center David Molk to return from ankle injuries in time for the Penn State game, too. Running back Michael Shaw, who tweaked his knee and played sparingly against the Hawkeyes, is also expected to be healthy by Oct. 30. Rodriguez said slot receiver Martavious Odoms's surgery to repair a broken foot suffered against Michigan State went well. He doesn't know how long the rehabilitation and recovery will take, though it doesn't seem likely that Odoms will return by the end of the season. ARIEL BOND/Daily Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez leaks oT against Inwa last Saturday. UNH From Page 1B eight minutes into the first period, in the waning seconds of Michi- gan's first power play, when junior forward Luke Glendening shoveled a pass from behind the net to senior forward Scooter Vaughan at the bot- tom of the right circle, who flicked a one-time wrist shot past Wildcat goaltender Matt DiGirolamo. New Hampshire scored early in the second period, but Michigan cashed in on its next power play six minutes later, when sophomore forward Chris Brown set up in front of the net and powered a wrist shot between DiGirolamo's pads to give the Wolverines a 2-1llead. After going the first 25 minutes without receiving a penalty, Michi- gan players started a parade to the penalty box, sending four men in a span of six minutes - creating two separate five-on-three opportuni- ties for New Hampshire (1-1-1). The Wildcats came on strong, peppering Hunwick with shot after shot, but he stood up tall against the onslaught, maintaining the one-goal lead heading into the second inter- mission and finishing with 45 saves. The teams traded goals early in the third period, with Michigan's tally coming from junior defense- man Brandon Burlon on the third power play chance of the evening. But at 15:07 in the third stanza, with the sides already skating four- the opposite side of the field and Forcier was throwingacross his body - but it ended up being one of those big pass plays Forcier has been known to make. "I saw him, he had him beat," Forcier said after the game. "He stacked the corner, so I thought I had him. After I saw what Junior did for Denard against Indiana, I trusted him, so I just threw it up there and he went and got it." After an Iowa punt, Forcier led Michigan down the field yet again, this time eventually running into the end zone from three yards out for the score. Forcier orchestrated a furious comeback by the Wolverines, who scored three times in the fourth quarter of a game that seemed out of reach to bring the deficit to a touchdown. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said his defensive scheme didn't change with the new quarterback, but that Robinson and Forcier present two different styles of play. "You'd never know it but we were trying not to give up any- thing easy or big plays," Ferentz said. "With number five back there it's a little bit more of a throw- ing game ... either guy is tough to defend." on-four, senior defenseman Chad Langlais picked up a holding pen- alty, giving the Wildcats a golden opportunity to tiethe game again. "Four-on-three (power plays) are huge, just about better than a five- on-three - it just works that way," Berenson said. "That was a huge penalty to call. When you're four- on-four, you just about don't want to touch anybody, because you know they're going to call something, and that could really change the game. And it did." Just 20 seconds into the Wild- cat man advantage, forward Paul Thompson drilled a shot from the slot that beat Hunwick to tie the game at three - the fourth power play goal ofthe game. New Hampshire carried its momentum into overtime, but Hun- wick stymied a final Wildcat attack by stonewalling Thompson on a breakaway attempt. Hagelin, who had two assists on the night, attributed the success of both power plays to their patience, but he also mentioned that the larger, Olympic-sized rink in New Hampshire helped to spread out the penalty killing unit. "You get a lot more time with the puck, and if you are able to beat your guy to the net, you have a lot of time in front," Hagelin said. "I felt like both teams were patient with the puck on the power play, and on the penalty kill they weren't patient enough and were running around, so it was easy to create chances." C-A Yds TD Int 17-24 248 3 0 17-24 248 3 0 Att 2 36 No. 4 4 1 1 Yds 143 -3 -5 135 Yds 78 70 61 15 11 9 4 248 Avg -2.5 3.8 Avg 19.5 175 11 9 Ls 20 0 20 La 34 31 11 9 TD 0 2 TD 0 3 0 0 the Zip The out an verineE Chris anothe minute Mies the Zi ss's favor. lackluster offensive attack led second half didn't turn to a 2-1 loss. ay better for the Wol- After falling behind 2-0, s and junior goaltender Saad was the only Michigan Blais, who surrendered player able to break into the r four goals in the last 45 scoring column in the second es. half, and his effort was too lit- higan struggled to keep tie, too late for the Wolverines. ps out of its defensive Sunday's loss snapped Michigan's four-game win- ning streak and marked its second conference loss of the No Yds Aag L 5 231 46.2 56 No. Yds Avg Lg 2 62 31 40 2 62 31 40 Solo 9 5 6 5 4 2 5 3 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 47 Asst 4 8 3 3 4 5 1 2 2 3 3 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 50 Tot 13 13 9 8 8 7 6 5 4 4 4 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 97 "Our players will season. Heading into a Wednesday- respond, just like night matchup against Bowling Green in a week, Burns expects good teams do ... his team to rebound from a tough-luck weekend. we'll be ready." "Our players will respond, just like good teams do and we will be ready for Bowling Green," Burns said. zone, and the offensive was "We are a very strong team unable to find its legs. and we are looking to finish Two Wolverines were given the season with 11 wins, which red cards during the match - we are totally capable of doing. junior midfielder Adam Shaw Now it's just a matter of getting and freshman forward Mal- refocused." ROHAN From Page 1B replaced him. Five hundred yards of offense doesn't matter if you lose. After the game, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez was visibly upset with the mistakes his team made. Iowa had something to do with those mistakes and Michigan State was partially responsible for those miscues two weeks ago. These turnovers weren't an issue when the Wolverines walked up and down the field the first five weeks. Robinson, who was con- sidered the Heisman front-runner, was picking and choosing where to throw the ball back then. The Hawkeyes contained everything - the field didn't look as open. Big plays don't even look possible. And Robinson looked stressed back in the pocket instead of cool, calm and collected. That same tension was present against the Spartans. Robinson wasn't making it look easy any- more, because Iowa and Michigan State both have proven defenses. . On Saturday, Robinson's lon- gest pass play was a 20-yard screen pass and his longest rush was for 12 yards. And he averaged five yards per pass attempt and six yards per carry - his lowest and second-lowest averages on the season. Meanwhile, Iowa exploited the trend of consistent poor play by the Michigan defense. A few quality stops are sprinkled in each game and the Wolverines force a couple of three-and-outs. But when the Hawkeyes got a full head of steam, they scored 21 unanswered points on three consecutive drives to end the first half. Michigan wasn't the one racing up and down the field anymore, it was Iowa. The Wolverines' eight penalties for 66 yards against the Hawkeyes certainly hurt too. I know it's a clich, but it's true: good football teams don't turn the ball over and they don't shoot themselves in the foot. That's what Michigan has done the past two weeks. Seven games into the season, Michigan has had two true tests of whether it is a true Big Ten contender - the Wolverines have failed both. colm Miller. On Sunday, Michigan visited Big Ten foe Indiana (2-0-1, 7-4- 1), but defensive lapses and a For coverage of women's soccer check out MichiganDaily com Tim can be reached at trohanumich.edu WANT MORE SPORTS COVERAGE? * Check michigandaily.com for all the sports you don't see in * SportsWednesday. FEEL BETTER? SO DO WE. TURNOVERS From Page 1B Multiple Michigan players dis- cussed the turnovers following the game, and they had a com- mon perspective: The offense had little trouble moving the ball against Iowa's vaunted defense, but it kept shooting itself in the foot with a bad read, bad throw or bad penalty. "Turnovers were just ridicu- lous," Rodriguez said. "We were so good early inthe year at taking care of the ball. ... We were our own worst enemy in the first half with the silly penalties. That's just ridiculous and we've got to get that cleaned up." Clean-up dutyincludes a lot. According to junior wide receiver Darryl Stonum, it's mak- ing the right reads and being in the right place at the right time. Schilling said it's important the team rallies together after two straight conference losses. Tho and t defens Stat defens - thet ei down week b But on tha proble young tacklie allowi (Iowa concer "Im film ou se statements are accurate, be disappointed," Rodriguez said. hat's not even taking the Michigan will have a bye next e into consideration. weekend, and its nextopponentis istically, it was the Penn State on Oct. 30. During the e's third-best performance next two weeks, the Wolverines unit gave up 383 total yards, look to heal their bodies (Robin- son has had a nagging shoulder injury, and center David Molk ye were our and nose tackle Mike Martin have been banged up) and fix the little mistakes they've been mak- wn worseing. nerny in the Despite the loss and the com- parisons to last season's hot start irst half..." and fizzling finish, the players remained optimistic after Satur- day's loss. "You see my two offsides? from Michigan State's 536 a That's fixable. I can fix that," said before. redshirt freshman offensive tack- the same issues remain le Taylor Lewan, who accounted t side of the ball, the same for three drive-killing penalties ms that have plagued the on Saturday. "The personal foul I defense all season. Poor got? That's fixable. I can fix that. ng, missed assignments and That could have been a turn- ng third-down conversions around in this game. There are was 7-of-13) are all still little things I can change, little ns. things everybody can change. If sure after watching the we can do that, we're going to be a ar defensive staff is going to very special team." Sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson left in the third quarterof Saturday's game.