The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com November 8, 2010 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom November 8, 2010 - 3B GAME STATISTICS Young players step up on defense Team Stats First Downs Rsh/Yds Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Kick retrns/Yds Pnt retrns/Tids Comp/Att/Int Ports/Hog Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss PASSING Plener Robinson, D. Forer Toal RUSHINGy Player Sith Hokn Shawr Forcier otter RECEVNG Player Heesopty SEitho ot PUNTING Player Hagerp, To so ICKaNG Plaer Toas KICKOFF RETURNS player Stonum MCOlgan Totals PUNT RETURNS player Tals TACKLES Player Denns Godo, C Avery an ege " ankso Gord., T PASSING Shlhaae McGee Totals RUSHING FoHrd Totals RECEVING ayson Jekins Leshoure Proch Totas PUNTING Satella Totals KICKING Playr Dike Tols KICKOFF RETURNS Player miliest Pollard Totals PUNT RETURNS Player Ramsey TACKLES Player Bussey oget Wilson Spencea Bella mt Nurse Thornas Hawthorne Green Staples Gully D"''* MICH 33 53/257 419 92 676 9/210 1/14 22/29/3 2/41.5 3/2 4/40 25:39 M I C H I G A N C-A Yds 10-20 305 1219 114 22-39 49 ILL 25 61/315 246 88 561 /tnt 1/21 16/27/A 6/47.0 3/1 10/83 34:21 i TD 3 2 5 Att 13 19 5 9 7 53 No. 9 6 4 2 1 22 No. 2 2 Yds 73 62 44 43 33 273 Yds 246 104 47 19 3 419 Yds 83 83 Avg 5.6 90 4.9 4.7 Avg 27.3 9.5 Avg 41.5 41.5 Lg 13 18 12 Lg 19 14 L9 48 48 Int 2 1 3 TD 0 0 1 3 0 4 TD 2 2 1 0 0 5 By JOE STAPLETON Daily SportsfEditor Throughout this football season, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez has said over and over again that his extremely NOTEBOOK young defense would have to grow up quickly if the Michigan football team was going to be successful. But for weeks, the progress of the young players, especially in the second- ary, has been painfully slow. On Saturday, in Michigan's 67-65 triple-overtime victory over Illinois, they finally grew up. The Wolverine defense got major contributions from many underclassmen, especially from redshirt sophomore linebacker Kenny Demens. Demens, who took over the starting role from senior lineback- er Obi Ezeh against Iowa, made some huge plays against the Illini, most crucially when the defense was playing on a short field because the Michigan offense turned it over, which happened four times on the day. in the game, Vinopal teamed up "I want to be the guy who takes with redshirt freshman Cameron the stress off my teammates' Gordon to charge in from the shoulders," Demens said after the backfield and stop Illinois run- game. "I want to be that guy, and ning back Mikel Leshoure for no I feel like just doing my role to my gain to force a punt. ability, I can really do that." "Ray, he played a great game," But it's been the secondary that redshirt sophomore safety Jordan has experienced the most trouble Kovacs said after the game. "That this season, and it was two of the was a huge stop for us. I was just youngest defensive backs who so proud of the way he played, and made some of the biggest plays. Courtney. All those other young Freshman cornerback Court- guys played well." ney Avery, who made his first start FIVE TURNOVERS AND A VIC- against Illinois, has been preyed TORY: It's very unusual for a team on by opposing quarterbacks to turn the ball over five times all season. But early in the third on offense and come away with a quarter, he hunted some prey of win. his own, making a terrific open- But very little about Saturday's field tackle on Illini freshman game could be considered usual. quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase Michigan's five turnovers on third down to force a field goal, included back-to-back inter- which was missed. ceptions in the first quarter by "There are three true freshmen sophomore quarterback Denard in the secondary, and redshirt Robinson and a fumble on sopho- freshmen underneath," Rodri- more Tate Forcier's first play of guez said. "They battled. They the game. learned some lessons." "My hands were moist when I Another freshman, safety Ray was out there," Forcier said after Vinopal, made a few plays of his the game, adding that he had own. With just over a minute left redshirt junior wideout Junior Hemingway open for a touch- down. "That's what made me mad," he said. The turnovers often put the defense into tough spots, but the unit came through with flying col- ors, especially after the two picks. The defense forced a fumble after the first interception and after the second held the Illini to a field goal. And while the offense made up for these lapses later in the game, players on the defensive side took pride having the offense's back for once, and not the other way around. "It was amazing," sophomore defensive end Craig Roh said. "I felt like we were finally paying them back a little bit." But even though it all worked out on Saturday, the coaches know Michigan can't expect to make that many mistakes and win. "We can't turn the ball over," quarterbacks coach Rod Smith said. "I preach it everyday. Our coaching staff preaches it every- day. We cannot turn the ball over and win on a consistent basis. It's not going to happen, and that's going to be corrected." INJURY REPORT: Robinson was not made available to the media after the game, but when he was injured at the end of the third quarter, speculation turned from a hand injury to a concussion. After the game, Rodriguez said the coaches decided to keep Rob- inson out of the game because he did show concussive symptoms. "Denard got hit somewhere on that last drive. I don't know if it was the helmet-to-helmet - that's probably where it was," Rodri- guez said. "He was dizzy, had a little headache. He had those symptoms so certainly for his safety, you're not going to put him out there." There is no official policy on when Robinson would be allowed to return if he did indeed suffer a concussion. That decision will be up to the Michigan medical staff. Sophomore running back Teric Jones was carted off the field very early in the game and didn't play the rest of the day. FG Pt Lg XP Pts 1.2 s0.0 3s 8 11 1- 50.0 3s 8 11 ROUNDTREE From Page 1B man, he had a real good game today." Fellow wideout Darryl Sto- num said Roundtree's perfor- mance opened the field up for a lot of other guys in the second half - Hemingway especially. With Illinois up by a touch- down in the game's do-or-die second overtime, sophomore quarterback Tate Forcier's third-down throw hit off an Illinois linebacker's helmet and bounced into Hemingway's hands as he ran into the end- zone. "I was lucky," Hemingway said. "He got in front. I wasn't expecting the ball to get bat- ted in the air because he swung down. It just popped in the air and I stayed with the ball and just caught it." The catch put the Wolver- ines in triple overtime, where they clinched the game on a two-point conversion throw- and-catch from Forcier to Hemingway. It was a fitting way to end career days for Roundtree, Hemingway and the entire receiving corps. "I'm very proud of them," Magee said. "Earlier, when we were doing a lot of running in the season, they were just doing their jobs blocking. ... I always knew they had those capabilities and we wanted to start getting them the ball." No. 1 9 Yds 61 210 Avg 30.5 19. '1.0 Lgs 61 61 TD 0- No. Yds Avg Lg TD 1 14 14.0 14 0 1 14 140 14 0 Solo 9 5 6 4 4 5 4 3 2 2 1 2 0 7 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 54 Asst 5 i 5 i 3 L 5 t 3 i 1 t 1 3 2 2 3 2 . 1 1 2 2 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 4 34 ILLINOIS Tot 14 10 9 9 7 6 5 5 5 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 88 ALASKA From Page 1B Treais, who had 13 points last season, hadn't recorded a point in nine games this season coming into Saturday, but responded at a time when the Wolverines needed him. He played well defensively, finishing plus-3, and scored three points. "It's just interesting how hock- ey works that usually when you have a good game, you're working away from the puck, especially the center because the center has to do a lot of work down low in the defensive zone," Michigan assis- tant coach Billy Powers said. "It was a good solid effort all around for A.J., and I think it started with his work ethic without the puck and big things happened with it." Treais's effort in the sec- ond game was needed, because though Michigan had a different cast, with senior goaltender Bryan Hogan playing both games due to senior Shawn Hunwick having a stomach bug, the game wasn't any different from their previous series openers. The Wolverines (4-1-1-0 CCHA, 5-2-3 overall) have now lost three straight Fri- day night games and won three straight Saturday games. On Friday, the same mistakes plagued Michi- gan as in its previous two weekends, as it could not generate a lot of shots and gave up an early goal. In game one, No. 15 Alaska's Cody Kunyk beat senior defense- man Chad Langlais to the puck on the backdoor after it deflected off a skate and put it into the open net. The goal came midway through a first period in which the Nanooks (3-2-1-1, 6-3-1) controlled the play from the opening faceoff, out- shooting the Wolverines 12-5, but could only muster one goal. "They got us on our heels early," Michigan coach Red Berenson said after Friday's game. "Whether it was the penalties or the turnovers, the first period the chances were something like 12-2 (for Alaska). We were lucky to sur- vive the first period." That goal was all the Nanooks needed, as their defensive style, which had Alaska second in the nation in goals against, suffo- cated Michigan in the neutral zone. Their style, combined with a key 5-on-3 penalty kill midway through the second and a few unlucky post shots for the Wol- verines, shut out Michigan for the first time in 35 games. As unlucky as Friday was with hitting the posts, Michigan had two goals, including Treais's, go in off deflections on Saturday. Mich- igan is now 1-2-1 on Friday nights and 4-0-2on Saturday. "I know it's been a little bit of a trend on Friday, but this is a unique deal," Powers said. "Com- ing out on Friday, they just had more jump and we didn't have our legs. As the Friday game wore on we were getting better and better and I think it was just kind of get- ting the travel fatigue or whatever you want to call it out of your sys- tem." 14.25 2-2 16-27 Yds TD Int 211 3 0 35 0 0 246 3 0 att 24 21 10 2 3 1 61 No. 5 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 16 Yds 120 101 91 5 1 -3 246 Yds 79 49 52 18 33 14 1 0 246 4 9.1 2.5 .2 Avg 15.8 16.3 26.0 33. 1.4 14 9 4 20 L9 2s 34 27 13 14 34 TD 3 1 1 0 0 0 5 TD 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 3 No. Yds Avg Lg 6 282 47.0 62 6 282 47.0 62 FG Pct. Lg XP Pts 3-4 75.0 44 6 15 3.4 75.0 44 6 1s5 No. 3 7 Yds 80 171 Avg 26.7 24.4 Ls 36 36 TDO 0 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 21 210 2,o o 21 21.0 21 0 with an exclamation point HEROES on a 75-yard touchdown pass From Page 1 B to redshirt sophomore wide receiver Roy Roundtree. Who would've thought The two connected for two that the defense could be more big plays in the second a hero when the halftime quarter: first on a 33-yard score (31-31) and the yardage touchdown pass that came looked more like those of a on a crucial fourth-and-long whole game? and later on another 75-yard But the Wolverines forced bomb that brought the ball Illinois to punt five times inside the five-yard line. in the second half and gave Roundtree set a Michigan Forcier that chance to win it record for receiving yards in in regulation. The spotlight a game, finishing with nine shifted again to the unit that catches for 246 yards and entered the game 106th in two touchdowns. total defense in Division-I "We saw some things on FBS football. film we thought we could try Now, with the ball placed them vertically," Magee said. on the three-yard line for a "Nobody had really done that two-point conversion that so we wanted to challenge same defense blitzed seven them down the field and see defenders and had Illinois how they play the deep ball. quarterback Nathan Scheel- And our boys performed and haase caught dead-to-rights, executed that pretty good." scrambling for hope. He Robinson overcame his desperately tossed the ball own mistakes to set a Michi- underhanded toward no one gan record for passing yards in particular and the celebra- in a half with 262. He threw tion ensued. interceptions on consecutive "We called a man blitz," drives after that first pass to redshirt sophomore line- Roundtree, and Michigan backer Kenny Demens said. finished the game with five "Throughout the whole turnovers. game, we were just having "That's how (the offense fun ... I have no idea (how is) supposed to look, minus many guys were blitzing). It the turnovers," Magee said was an all-out free blitz." of his unit, which outgained Added junior defensive Illinois in yards, 676 to 561, tackle Mike Martin: "I knew on Saturday. we had to make the play, Then there was Heming- and I don't think anyone on way, who caught a miracle the defense heard a word. It touchdown in the second was just silent for all of us, overtime off a ball that was because we were all in the tipped by a Fighting Illini zone. And when we made the defender on third down. And play we were like, 'Wow, we the Wolverines' running just won.' backs, who have acted more Michigan won its sixth like sidekicks to Robinson's game of the season, ended starring role in the running a three-game losing streak game, picked up the slack and became bowl eligible as Robinson finished with a all in one fell swoop. There season-low 62 yards rush- were plenty of reasons the ing. Junior running back Michigan sideline looked as Mike Shaw rushed for three if it had won the Super Bowl touchdowns, including two when Scheelhaase's pass fell in overtime, and sophomore incomplete. running back Vincent Smith "Everybody was screaming, ran for 73 yards on 13 carries. 'Back to the bowl, back to the Against Illinois, these bowl,"' fifth-year senior guard weren't your father's or even Steve Schilling said. "To have your grandfather's Wol- it my senior year and to know verines on the field - this we're goingback and be able to game was different, and the go out not havingto watch the heroes were as unlikely as games on TV, it's huge." the result. Of course, other charac- "It's a great game," Schil- ters played a role in this epic. ling said. "Just kinda breathe Robinson started the game a sigh of relief." AXct tnow, jhraofit I A F R ED L. E ROSS SCHOOL OF RUSIN 'RUTI TIN G O P P C ater: Register for the Alfred l, I og oheason D lit p\1 d:a Soto 7 8 5 6 4 4 4 2 3 3 3 2 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 61 Asst a 2 2 0 2 1 1 3 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 22 Tat 11 10 6 6 5 5 5 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 t 83 sthlOf lers ine: lNTRI3P ' slItn tli s G I G _aq 11 LTiN. . 9 ;'.PM FOLLOW US MON TWITTER @MICHDAILYSPORTS