The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 11, 2010 - 7A With bowl game comes valuable practice time Rust brothers to face off in weekend series ractice? We talkin' 'bout practice? Well...yes. The word "practice" has sort of defined the Michigan football team over the past year and change, due to a thor- ough NCAA investigation that followed from allegations that the team violated limits on mandatory NICOLE practice, among AUERBACH other offenses. At the con- clusion of its own investigation last May, the University instituted self- imposed practice limitations: 130 fewer hours than the allotted time over twoyears.During aNov.4press conference following public release of the NCAA's sanctions - one more year of probation, bringing the total to three, and no additional practice time cuts - Rodriguez said the team had thus far cut 32 hours. That's a lot of talk about practice. There's also been buzz around campus about this little thing we call bowl eligibility. For the first time in three years, Michigan is going to have a postseason. "We talked about it and thought about it," Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said after the Wolverines' sixth win of the season. "That was important for us, and it's important for us now to understand that every game after this is even more impor- tant." But the bowl appearance itself is not the most important part of the bowl-eligibility package. This sea- son will be Rodriguez's first chance to run practices past November, as Michigan will get 15 extra practices to prepare for its bowl game. Each week, Rodriguez says he sees improvement from his young players in practice. He better - eight freshmen and sophomores played last Saturday. And each game gives these young players experience, but so does each practice - more time to learn schemes, understand the playbook, work on fundamentals, all that good stuff. And, of course, more bond- ing for what already appears to be a By MARK BURNS Daily SportsEditor When Michigan hockey senior Matt Rust skates around in warm- ups this upcoming Friday at Yost Ice Arena, he'll see his little brother at the opposite end of the rink - no, not Michigan State. Instead, freshman forward Bryan Rust will be donning Notre Dame's blue and gold, a team cur- rently atop the conference, one point ahead of the Wolverines (4-1- 1-0 CCHA, 5-2-3 overall). It will be the first time besides last year's game against the U.S. National Team Development Pro- gram Under-18 squad - in which the younger Rust played for the Ann Arbor-based program - that the two brothers have faced each other. Prior to playing for the USNTDP, Bryan skated for Honeybaked, a AAA program based out of metro Detroit. While playing for the elite program, Michigan assistant coach Mel Pearson observed Bryan's game. But Pearson and the Wolver- ines didn't successfully secure the younger brother's commitment. "We talked to Bryan, and he was a very good hockey player," Pearson said. "We were well aware of him when he played atcHoneybaked, and then over at the U.S. program. He made an early decision and unfortu- nately, he wanted to get it out of the way, and we didn't get a chance to really talk to him a whole lot about coming to Michigan." Up until now, Bryan has played in all nine games for the Fight- ing Irish (4-1-1-1, 6-2-1), tallying a goal and an assist while play- ing on coach Jeff Jackson's third line. And even though the broth- ers have different styles of play - with Matt playing a more defen- sive brand of hockey compared to Bryan's power-forward style - both have something to prove in the two-game series. According to Matt, it's been the ARIEL BOND/Daily Senior forward Matt Rust will face off against his brother, Bryan, this weekend. ARIEL BOND/Daily Freshman safety Ray Vinopal made his first start in the Wolverines' loss to Penn State. He, as well as the other freshmen, will benefit from extra bowl practices. close-knit team. "That bond you have with your team is pretty tight, and being able to extend that another month for a bowl game I think is really impor- tant for our seniors," Rodriguez said Monday. But while everybody's talking about how great it is for the seniors and coaches that Michigan will be going to a bowl, don't forget about the freshmen and sophomores. They receive something invalu- able from the extra time on the prac- tice field - the potential to improve. After all, isn't that what the coaching staff has said all season? That it's painful to play with youth now, but man, next year they'll be good? Throw in extra practices and a high-profile (or maybe not so high- profile) bowligame, andthat can only help. This is especially important as the team looks to cutback on regular practice time this year and next. Why do some freshmen (like quarterbacks Tate Forcier and Devin Gardner) enroll early? It's not because they're sick of high school or want to miss prom. It's for those extra 15 spring prac- tices at Michigan. The extra time to learn the system. The opportunity to develop chemistry with teammates. That kind of practice is invaluable when, especially for a team so young. Forcier earned the starting job last year in large part because of that extra practice time. He knew the playbook best, and he'd worked with the running backs and wide receiv- ers more than Denard Robinson did when he arrived in August. Fifteen practices makes a huge difference. That's why the bowl game is important - for those December practices, not just the game itself. - Auerbach can be reached at naauer@umich.edu. younger brother who's been "talk- ing a little bit of smack." "He sent me a little text, 'Matt, you better be ready'," the older Rust said. "I think he's a little scared." Matt added that he thinks that in the back of Bryan's mind, "he wants to make sure everyone knows he did this himself" and didn't navi- gate his way to Division I college hockey because of his brother's suc- cess or the name on the back of his jersey. And while it certainly sounds cli- ch6, Matt admitted after Wednes- day's practice, he thinks it's natural for ayoungerbrothertobeovershad- owed by an older sibling.With Bryan finally making it to South Bend, he could vault himself out of his older brother's shadow and cement his own identity in the CCHA. "I personally think my brother is a better player than me," Matt said. "He's got a lot of skills and smarts, and his hard work has paid off. The kid has changed completely from when he was younger until where he is now." As Michigan coach Red Beren- son said Wednesday, both the Wol- verines and the Fighting Irish are trying to bounce back from a year in which they finished in the lower half of the conference, with Michi- gan in seventh place and Notre Dame in ninth. Both teams are "looking to prove something" after the less-than-stellar regular-season finishes last season. Just don't let the big brother fool you - he won't be taking it easy on Bryan. "I've been letting him have it a little bit this week and definitely making sure he knows his role out there." A hot start for club golf team Three months after its founding, team has won its first two tournaments. ByZACH HELFAND For the Daily It started in March with a handshake over lunch in Prague between two University stu- dents studying abroad. There, LSA seniors Roger Sauerhaft and Kevin Buzard decided between bites that the idea that they had been floating around would become a reality. They would bring a club golf team to Michigan. Some 4,400 miles away and four months later in Ann Arbor, incoming freshman John Gordy and sophomore Ryan Alger had the same idea. They began mov- ing forward. "About a couple weeks into it, we realized that two other kids were doing the exact same thing," Gordy said. "So we just teamed up with them." Now, just three months since its inception, the team has earned a trip to the National Colle- giate Club Golf Association Fall Championship at Bryant Park golf course in Greensboro, North Carolina by winning its first two tournaments. Coincidentally, this course was the site of senior var- sity golfer Lion Kim's victory in the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, which earned him a berth in the Masters. "At the beginning of the school year, Roger was saying his goal was for us to win a National Championship, and I thought that was kind of far-fetched," senior Paul Sefcovic, who made the all- tournament team at the second event, said. "But once we won those first two regional tourna- ments, I was kind of thinking, 'We've actually got something pretty good going here.' .. So I think we've definitely got a shot." The team won the first regional tournament by six strokes, beat- ing club teams from Wisconsin, Dayton and Miami (Ohio), among others, and later cruised to a 15-stroke victory in the second. The team is currently undefeated in tournament play, despite not even existing long enough to be included on the NCCGA website. "Because it's our first year, when we went to the Midwest Regional Tournaments, the other teams were kind of surprised that Michigan was even there, because they'd never heard of our team before," Gordy said. Perhaps the biggest reason for the team's success is its depth. During the summer, Sauerhaft, the team's president, who is also a member of the Daily's editorial staff, worked to recruit members to the newly formed club. With help from the other original four, he sent mass e-mails, talked to golfers that he knew, and worked on getting range times and sponsors. Eventually, the pieces started falling into place. "Our biggest event was when we were at Festifall, and we brought out a golf bag, and just seeing a golf bag out there, so many people just came up to us," Buzard said. "We had alot of kids, a lot of upperclassmen who came up and they just said to us, 'Final- ly, Michigan finally got a club golf team.'" As the club was getting off the ground, golf company TourEdge signed as a sponsor, and a local golf facility called Miles of Golf gave the team discounted rates. "I really commend (Sauerhaft) for the effort and the energy that it's taken to follow through with it, and obviously they've been extremely successful," said Doug Davis, vice president and co- founder of Miles of Golf. By the start of the season, the team had enough talent to com- pete with the best club teams in the region. "I know personally a lot of the guys on the team that I played with in high school," Gordy said. "A lot of them were All-Staters in high school and got offers to go play in college, but just for one reason or another wanted to go to the University of Michigan." While talented, the club of about 30 members is not limited to scratch golfers. "We're really hoping ... that someday we can actually work with other clubs, other organiza- tions and also less skilled golfers on our team and really help them in terms of their game and help them fall in love with golf. It's really to improve your game of golf witha bunch of friends," said Buzard. For now, the team is concen- trating on making sure that the idea that began in Prague leads to some nice hardware in Greens- boro. GET YOUR SENIOR PORTRAIT TAKEN November 10-12 and 15-19 in the Sophia B. Jones room of the Michigan Union North Campus November 18-19 in Valley room of Pierpont The sittingfee is just $15! This price includes your portraitfeatured in the 2011 Michignensian Yearbook Sign up online by visiting www.OurYear.com and entering School Code: 87156 Phone 734.418.4115 ext. 247 E-mail ensian.um@umich.edu SPECIAL OFFER Bring in this ad and receive $2 off the sitting fee. WANNA JOIN DAILY SPORTS? Email sports editor Ryan Kartje at rkartje@umich.edu Michiganensian YEARBOOK 1 r