The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 2, 2010 - 7A Rodriguez says staff on defense will not change Michigan football coach denies rumors of defensive coordinator Greg Robinson's firing By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer Rumors of staff changes swirled throughout message boards on Sunday after yet another defensive NOTEBOOK * disappointment, Wbut Michigan roach Rich Rodriguez laughed them off yesterday. "I just met with the defensive staff the last three hours or so," Rodriguez said just after noon dur- ing his weekly news conference. "We all feel like we have to do all we can to have success. Our coaches work very hard." Rodriguez repeated that he has not made any changes to his defen- sive staff. He said he first heard of the rumors about a half hour before meetingwiththe media. "We've dealt with quite a few (rumors) over the last few years, haven't we? That happens in sports and life in general," Rodriguez said. "You deal with it, so I don't mind answering the question. We're working hard. We're all frustrat- ed. To everyone's credit, no one is pointing fingers, nobody's got their heads down." Defensive coordinator and line- backers coach Greg Robinson, * who is in his second year with the Wolverines, was the subject of the rumors. Michigan has allowed more than 400 yards of offense to opponents in five games so far this season. The Wolverines are ranked near the bottom of most national defensive statistical rankings - 106th in total defense (440.3 yards a game) and 117th in pass defense (290.5). Michigan leads the Big Ten in total offense and rushing yard- age, so the Wolverines' three con- Michigan defensive coordinator Greg Robinson has been under fire recently due to Michigan's defensive struggles. secutive losses automatically draw attention to the defense. When asked what an offensive- minded head coach like himself can do to help the struggling defense, Rodriguez said he would spend more time with defensive players and in defensive meetings. "I probably should do that because we have more inexperi- enced players over there," Rodri- guez said. "I'm not going to be able to wave a magic wand and fix some of the issues defensively. Some of the problems are not going to get fixed overnight. You can't make a guy experienced just by practicing with them. We have a lot of inexpe- rienced players defensively. "I have a critical view of every- thing - every coach, every player, everything in our program every day. That's what we do. That's what head coaches do." RICH "THE SITUATION" RODRI- GUEZ: Rodriguez's love for Lion King references is well documented by the media. His most recent pop culture ref- erence was a bit more current - and hilarious. "Everybody wants to focus on the negative," Rodriguez said. "Nobody ever wants to talk about the positive. I guess that gets people's interest. It sells papers. It gets people to turn on the TV. If it's a negative story coming on, the world's coming to an end. There's a bombing, something tragic. But if it's positive, it doesn't sell. "It's why everybody watches reality shows, right? To seethem get in cat fights? Jersey Shore, whatever you call it. People want to see two people get into an argument and boy, if they get to the point where they actually try to swing at each other, that's going to get great rat- ings." INJURY UPDATES: Rodriguez said he expects defensive lineman Mike Martin's ankle to heal enough so he could begin practicing yester- day or today. Rodriguez hopes the other injured players will be healthy to practice and play this week. The list includes: offensive tackle Perry Dorrestein (knee), tailback Mike Shaw (knee), tailback Fitz Toussaint (shoulder), cornerback J.T. Floyd (stinger) and quarterback Denard Robinson (hip). Rodriguez also said Shaw's injury limited him against Penn State. sALAM RIDA/Daily Senior defenseman Chad Langlais has played in 137 games in his four years in Ann Arbor. This year, he's in the Wolverines' top defensive pairing, With experience, Langlais serves as defensive mentor By CASANDRA PAGNI of things that rubs off on these Daily Sports Writer players." FALLON'S FIRST SPARKS In his 137-game Michigan TEAM: In Friday night's road career, matching up against some contest at Ferris State - a game of the towering power forwards in which the Wolverines (3-0-1-0 of college hock- CCHA, 4-1-3 overall) were out- ey hasn't been NOTEBOOK played from the start - Fallon's a problem for third-period goal proved to be senior defender Chad Langlais. just the spark that Michigan was While the forwards may win searching for through the first the size advantage, at 5-foot-9- two periods. The freshman's first inches, Langlais usually wins the career goal put the Wolverines puck. on the board, and cut the Bulldog Langlais has anchored the lead to one. Wolverines' top defensive line The goal was quirky - Fallon all season, playing alongside admitted that he was trying to freshman defender Jon Merrill. pass the puck back to sophomore Described as a "workhorse" for center A.J Treais when the goal No. 6 Michigan, the senior has went in. But according to junior seen a ton of ice-time, playing co-captain Luke Glendening, it on both the power play and pen- didn't matter. alty kill, in addition to his even- "That was a huge goal for us," strength spot. Glendening said. "It wasn't pret- "I like playing a lot," Langlais ty, but they don't ask how, they said. "I feel like I ask how many. get into the game It did the job a lot more if I'm and really got us playing a lot more. "He shows you going." Conditioning The team leve, T'feel like he'sa 'senior by sav ''tiae puA I'm fine right now. for Fallon, who Me and Jonny are the way he plays received a flood logging a lot of f text messages minutes, but I feel thegame." andcongratula- like we're playing tory phone calls better and better after netting L. Young Wolverines claim doubles title in impressive showing at Big Tens By MATT RUDNITSKY Daily Sports Writer It didn't take long for the Michi- gan men's tennis team's third- ranked 2010 recruiting class to start making some noise. At the early-season Big Ten Indoor Championships in East Lansing this weekend, the fresh- man duo of Justin Rossi and Bar- rett Franks claimed the flight 'A' doubles title after winning four straight matches. "It was a really big deal," Rossi said. "Me and Barrett have high expectations this year and we knew we could do it, we just had to play well and put everything together and stay focused and energized. "And we did that, and came up with the title." Despite the implications of the tournament, which crowns a player as the Big Ten Champion, a slew of the conference's top play- ers didn't participate. Michigan didn't send any of its top-three competitors - seniors Jason Jung and Chris Madden and sophomore Evan King. "You know, this tournament is interesting," Michigan associate coach Sean Maymi said. "Some teams send a lot of guys and oth- ers don't. When comparing to the bulk, I thought from my perspec- tive that we had a lot of youth. We brought all our freshmen and our oldest guy was (junior Duncan Muil), and it's just as new to him as it is to the rest of them." Rossi - a blue-chip recruit - won three matches in the singles main draw, eventually falling in the quarterfinals to Ohio State's six-foot-seven sophomore Peter Kobelt, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-2. Michigan sophomore Chris Cha made the Round of 16 by winning two consecutive matches, but he dropped his next match, ending the tournament with a 2-1 record. Another freshman, blue-chip- per Shaun Bernstein, dropped his first match, but went on an impres- sive four-match winning streak in the back-draw. His run ended in the semifinals with a 6-3, 6-4 loss to Indiana's Jeremy Langer. The team recorded a respect- able 12-10 overall record in singles and a 6-2 record in doubles. "I think as a whole we repre- sented ourselves well," Bernstein said. "We had one quarterfinal- ist in Rossi, and the kid that beat him is in the final. Cha also beat a really good player from Penn State in the second round. "No one made too huge an impact, so as a team we definitely need to improve, but to this point in the season, when we've all been worried about exams and stuff, I think we've done well overall." And though the team may not have shown its full potential, it showed it's ready to compete for a Big Ten title this season, Maymi said. "I think we're right in the thick of things, as far as the level, in the Big Ten," he said. "And hopefully by the spring, we'll be doing bet- ter." This weekend's event marked the end of the Wolverines' fall season, with the lone exception of King. On Thursday, King will com- pete at the USTA/ITA National Intercollegiate Indoor Champion- ships in Flushing, NY, the site of the U.S. Open. The tournament includes the nation's top 32 colle- giate players. The Wolverines' dual match season commences on Jan. 15, when Western Michigan visits the Varsity Tennis Center in Ann Arbor. each game." In the Wolverines' weekend matchup against Ferris State, Langlais flashed the offensive side to his game as well. Lan- glais picked up two assists on the weekend, on freshman forward Jacob Fallon's lamplighter on Fri- day and sophomore left winger Kevin Lynch's power play goal on Saturday. Langlais's performance Sat- urday night earned him the first star of the game, but the Spo- kane, Wash. native has been a leader for the entire season. With three true freshman defenders in Merrill, Mac Bennett and Kevin Clare, the veteran Langlais is a role model Michigan coach Red Berenson expects the rookies to turn to consistently. "(Langlais) is an experienced player who really shows his experience," Berenson said. "He doesn't show you he's a senior because he looks old or because he's that much bigger than any- body. He shows you he's a senior by the way he plays the game. "The way he competes, the way he battles, the way he plays in situations, how he's got the coaches trust. He goes out there with the ultimate confidence that 'I can do this job.' That's the kind his first goal as a Wolverine. But Fallon won't dwell on that moment, knowing that he still has a ladder to climb to be successful at this level. After playing in just four games this season, Fallon is aware that he - like the other freshmen on the team - need to find a way to match the size and strength of the opponents Michi- gan faces each weekend. "You have to think a lot quick- er," Fallon said. "But the game is a lot more physical too, bigger bod- ies out there. You can't dominate the game the way I used to when I was 15, 16. I just take weight- lifting very serious and try to get bigger and better every day." NOTES: Looking ahead to the Wolverines' upcoming series at Alaska-Fairbanks, Berenson said after yesterday's practice that senior Shawn Hunwick will get the nod in goal on Friday, with senior Bryan Hogan starting Sat- urday. ... In practice yesterday, the top offensive lines remained as they were on Saturday against Ferris State, with seniors Carl Hagelin, Louie Caporusso and Lynch playing together, and senior Matt Rust, junior David Wohlberg, and sophomore Chris Brown on the second line. CHECK ONLINE FOR WEEK SIX OF DAILY SPORTS POWER RANKINGS atraves yreset..ts work across borders Compuls we Liars IMPACrDANE Thursday November 4th 8 PM Angell Hall Auditorium D