The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 21, 2010 - 7A Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez has three full recruiting classes since he came to Michigan in 2007 after Loyd Carr left the program. Something is notri ith ยง1V'player developmeq. nt, Despite few goals, Hagelin making presence felt again Berenson not After receiving a pass inthe right corner from fellow senior Matt concerned about Rust, Hagelin looked to return captain's lack of the puck back to Rust. But with CYf a cheating defenseman inching early scoring toward Rust, Hagelin opted to cut to the net, where he saw a Wildcat defender staring him down. By MARK BURNS But Hagelin picked up his head Daily SportsEditor and saw junior defenseman Bran- don Burlon cutting down the left He's been all Swedish and no side of the ice to the back door, finish for the Michigan hockey and with a quick move, dished the team so far this season. puck to Burlon who deposited the Through four games, senior puck short side past the Wildcat forward Carl Hagelin, a native of netminder. Sodertalje, Sweden, has tallied Burlon then proceeded with just one lamplighter - an empty- what Hagelin described as "one net goal against Bowling Green in of the worst celebrations I've ever Michigan's first conference series seen." of the year. All joking aside, that particular "My shot just isn't good enough play had been one the Wolverines to be a goal scorer at the moment," have practiced since last season, Hagelin said, laughing at practice according to Burlon. The secret to this week. "I go through phases the play lies within the non-verbal during the year when I score communication between the two more than get- players. ting assists some- Burlon men- times. I'd like to tioned that score more, but I "My shot just isn't knowing where just haven't been the other player able to make my good enough to is on the ice and chances count. being familiar Michigan be a goal scorer at with his tenden- coach Red ies definitely Berenson com- the m om ent..." helps in orches- mented that trating the play he isn't too con- to perfection. cerned with his "I give credit veteran's lack of production so to Carl and Rust working down on far. But at the same time, he hopes the far side," Burlon said. "I was in "Carl can get his game going as the right place, Carl knew where I quickly as he can" since he is such was and he put it on my tape and an integral part of the offense. luckily I finished." Despite Hagelin's inability to Besides having the ability to finish as frequently a's he would locate a teammate on the ice, like, he has been setting up his Hagelin added that it's crucial teammates all over the ice and has for Burlon to make a subtle move a team-leading four helpers. to the net rather than "drawing Last weekend at then-No. 9 attention to himself" by yelling or New Hampshire, he registered slamming his stick on the ice. two primary assists, both of which And while the play seems rela- came on the power play for the tively inconsequential, it's the Wolverines. His second assist on heads-up move by Hagelin that Michigan's third goal was the type will help place Michigan among of play that Berenson hopes to see the nation's elite as the season more of as the Wolverines host progresses. That type of tic-tac- non-conference opponent Nebras- toe passing and vision on the ice ka-Omaha this weekend. sets apart great players from good "We're telling him, 'Look for players. the open man, and move the puck "He saw the open ice and made quick,' " Berenson said. "Then, it the play," Berenson said. "That takes the patience and the skill to should happen. That's something make the play - it's all timing." all of our top players should defi- Midway through the third peri- nitely be able to do, and Carl's od on Saturday and with the score one of our top players. I'm not knotted at two, Michigan had a surprised or overly impressed, I man-advantage for athird time. expect that." On Tuesday during the weekly Big Ten teleconference, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez announced that former five-star defensive tackle Will Campbell maybe on his way to the other side of the ball. I know, it RYAN sounds insig- KARTJE nificant. Maybe Campbell will indeed help the Wolverines more on offense than he can on defense. He is, after all, a behemoth of a man who was probably too big with too little technique to succeed on the defensive line. Plus, Michigan has a pretty good defensive line, even if everything behind it is below average. But Campbell's move is the straw that broke my camel's back. A move to offensive line? If you watched the replay of the blocked field goal on Saturday, a great deal of the blame was on Campbell's shoulders for faulty blocking, having stood straight up and allowingIowa to get more penetration. So I came to the conclusion: Either there is something wrong with the recruiting experts or the Wolverines are doing a pretty poor job at developingtalent. From 2002-08, aside from play- ers like Brandon Graham, LaMarr Woodley and Chad Henne who are staples in the NFL, Michigan has had a few other recruits flame out similar to how Campbell has so far. Obviously, there's a few transfers who don't really count in this cat- egory. Justin Boren and Ryan Mal- lett especially, since they're doing so well at their respective transfer destinations. But a lot of other transfers might have left because things weren't quite working out in Ann Arbor. Guys like Taylor Hill, Dann O'Neill, Marcus Witherspoon and Cobrani Mixon are all names most Michigan fans probably don't even remember anymore. They were all pretty highly touted four stars, too. Then, there are guys like Camp- bell and Justin Turner and Kevin Grady, who were big-time five-stars and never reached their supposed potential. Prescott Burgess, mean- while, one of the Wolverines other big-time five-stars, had a pretty good career in Ann Arbor. But by no means was it great. So what's going on? Guys like Mike Williams and Boubacar Cis- soko were supposed to be staples in the secondary, a group that defi- nitely needs them right now. But Cissoko is in prison after being a below average cornerback to start, and Williams lost his spot several times over to players in the second- ary now. Any of these recruits blossoming on defense might have been a wel- come help to what the Wolverines have seen on the field so far. What about Jason Kates? Or James McKinney? Or Justin Schi- fano? Or Zion Babb? All four stars, all either slid into obscurity or are no longer in Ann Arbor. Yes, a great deal of that had to do with the Carr-Rodriguez coaching change. A new era at such a tradition-laden college football program is bound to bring some defections. Butthe Wolverines haven't been putting nearly as much talent into the NFL as they used to. Michigan used to be the prince of develop- ment, but now it seems to be the pauper. ESPN's Colin Cowherd called attention to this on his radio show a while ago. And thoughI was initially hostile toward the accusa- tions, maybe there's some founded takeaway points from the Wolver- ines' bizarre lack of success stories. The weirdest part of Michigan's development, however, has been its number of positive accomplish- ments with lower-starred players. Guys like David Harris or Mike Hart, two of the best in the last decade were three-stars. Patrick Omameh, who should start on the offensive line and be a rock in the position group for the next few years, was a two-star. Maybe recruiting just doesn't make sense. But news of Campbell moving seems to be a white flag from the coachingstaff, and it's time for the Wolverines to at least start noticingthat something is not quite right. MpARISSA MCCLAIN/Day Sophomore Will Campbell (73), a 6-foot-5, 333-pound sophomore defensive tackle who was rated a five-star recruit out of high school, might be moved to offense. TME THOMAM LAW SCHOOL 01 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28 You are cordially invited to attend a Cooley Law School fall open house at ourAnn Arbor campus.Cooley administrators, department representatives, students, and faculty members will be available to answer your questions about Cooley Law School, applying to and attending law schooland entering the legal profession. Learn about Cooley at cooley.edulannarbor